190 N.E. 310 | Ill. | 1934
This case is here on appeal from the circuit court of Whiteside county taken first to the Appellate Court and by it transferred to this court on jurisdictional grounds. The circuit court, on amended and supplemental bills of *160 appellees, entered a decree finding that certain assessments of the Whiteside and Rock Island Special Drainage District were void and enjoining the district from collecting the same on appellees' property. The decree also enjoined the payment, from any funds on hand, of the claims of certain named appellants for services rendered the district.
The formation of the district, as set out in the bill, was under the Farm Drainage act. In 1920 the district made a new classification of lands and levied an assessment for the cost of a new improvement. It was held in People v. Allen,
A supplemental bill was filed in 1930 setting out that a second assessment for the purpose of paying attorneys, engineers and commissioners was made by the commissioners in 1929 and extended against the lands of appellees, which is likewise void. The prayer of the bill and supplemental bill is that the assessment for repairs and interest made each year from 1923 to 1928, inclusive, and the assessments of 1926 and 1929 for the purpose of paying attorneys, engineers, commissioners and other defendants, be declared void, and that the claims of the attorneys, engineers and commissioners and other defendants be decreed invalid as against the district, and that all warrants issued to such persons for services rendered, for which no previous provision had been made for payment, be declared void and that the treasurer be enjoined from paying any such warrants and orders, and that those specifically named be enjoined from collecting or attempting to collect from the district any sum claimed by them to be for services rendered before the assessment was made to provide for such services.
Appellants demurred to the bill and their demurrer was overruled. They thereupon answered, admitting the organization of the district and denying all material allegations of the bill as amended and asserting the validity of the various assessments and warrants. A hearing before a master in chancery was had. The chancellor overruled exceptions to his report and entered a decree granting the relief prayed except as to the levy of a certain deficiency of November 1, 1928, amounting to $2000, no part of which was levied on the lands of appellees and no part thereof paid by them. *162 No cross-errors were assigned and that particular levy is out of the case.
Appellants have filed many assignments of error, which, however, may be grouped under the following heads: (1) The court of chancery was without jurisdiction, as appellees had an adequate remedy at law; (2) the levies involved were legal and valid; (3) as appellees paid no part of the moneys on hand for the various levies but the balances in the various funds of the district were voluntarily paid to meet certain obligations, it was error to enjoin their application to such purposes; and (4) the decree enjoining payment of the warrants issued is erroneous because services performed by the various appellants were legal and valid.
Appellants' first contention — i. e., that a court of chancery was without jurisdiction — cannot be sustained. Though the rule is that in cases where an adequate remedy at law exists a court of equity will not take jurisdiction, (Herschbach v. Kaskaskia Sanitary District,
Appellants, in discussing their claim that the various levies were legal and valid, say that in 1930 the form of organization of the district was changed from the Farm Drainage act, under which it was organized, to the Levee act, which act expressly provides that a levy may be made to pay prior obligations. They concede, however, that the levies in this case were made prior to the change in the organization of the district, and that under the Farm Drainage act the district did not have power to levy assessments for past obligations. The expenses of the organization are not here involved. They also say that levies for repairs made during the various years were so made under section 70 of the Farm Drainage act. (Smith's Stat. 1933, p. 1183.) That section authorizes the levy of a tax only for the purpose of raising such amount as may be "necessary to be levied to keep the work, or any part thereof, in repair for the next year ensuing" and for the payment of any deficiency that may exist in the funds raised in other years to pay for repairs which were made in such years. The statement of the commissioners, however, in their certificate, that the tax levied is one for repairs, is not conclusive, and where it is shown that it is not a tax for that purpose it cannot be sustained as a repair tax under section 70. (People v.McDougal,
Appellants argue that the levies for repairs met the requirements of section 70, and so appellees cannot have the benefit, here, of objections which they could not urge on application for judgment and sale. To this contention there are two answers: (1) No effective opportunity was given appellees to object to the judgment and sale, for when objections to application for judgment on the levies were filed the county collector withdrew his application; (2) as we have seen, the levies for repairs did not comply with section 70 of the Farm Drainage act.
Regarding levies for interest, section 70 of the Farm Drainage act, authorizing such levy, requires that the certificate of levy contain a statement of the dates, number and amount of all outstanding notes, orders or bonds issued *165
and which shall remain unpaid at the time of their maturity and rate of interest thereon, and the amount necessary to be levied to meet the payment of the interest for the ensuing year. The certificate of levy filed in this case recites "that we, as such commissioners, have heretofore issued the notes and written obligations of said district and that the same remain unpaid." The certificate then recites that the number and amount of such notes, together with time of maturity and rate of interest, were correctly shown "in the proper columns, as follows:" The space following, however, is blank, and nowhere in said certificate of levy is there a statement required by the act. Such a statement is mandatory. The tax-payer has a right to be informed for what purpose his property is to be taxed and the amount of the tax. (People v. Peebles,
Concerning the levies of 1926 and 1929 for the purpose of paying bills, counsel seem to concede that of the levy of 1926 for $21,784.82, $16,501.01 is invalid as levied to pay bills previously contracted, but argue that the remainder of that levy, amounting to $4673.81, and the entire levy of 1929, amounting to $10,587.41, are valid because levied prior to the creation of any obligation of the district which they were intended to meet, and that *166 they were levied to enable the district to carry on pending litigation against it and other litigation that may arise by reason of objections to assessments theretofore levied in the district. They also argue that the rule of law prohibiting the levy of assessments to pay previous obligations does not prevent the application of the part of these levies voluntarily paid in, to the purposes for which they were levied.
In Winkelmann v. Drainage District,
Whether the levy of 1929 can be construed, as appellants say, to have been for the future payment of attorneys' fees and expenses is of no consequence here, since there is another reason why the levies of 1926 and 1929 for the purpose of paying these expenses cannot be sustained. No notice was given to the land owners in the district of the levy of the assessments. The Farm Drainage act, under which these levies were made, provides for the formation of the district, planning and doing work necessary to drain all lands in the district and to provide by special assessment the means of paying the cost of draining the lands and the expense incident thereto. After lands have been classified all assessments shall be on the basis of the classification adopted. The only assessments authorized without notice to the land owner, after the assessment to pay *168
for the cost of construction, are for interest and repairs. A levy to raise money for any purpose other than repairs and interest, as shown by sections 41 and 70 of the Farm Drainage act, must be after notice to the land owners. It is not contended that any notice of assessments of 1926 or 1929 was given, nor is it contended that these levies were for interest or repairs, but the certificates, on the contrary, specifically state that they are for the purpose of raising money to pay indebtedness due and accruing, to pay attorneys, commissioners and others, and to provide funds to enable the district to carry on pending litigation. These levies without notice to the property owners were illegal. (Schwartz v. Big Lake DrainageDistrict,
Appellants also urge that the decree is erroneous because it enjoins the payment of funds which have been voluntarily paid in but no part of which was paid in by appellees. Concerning this branch of the case, the decree enjoins the district and its officers from paying any warrants to commissioners or individuals and attorneys, (naming them,) all of whom are appellants, and enjoining the latter from collecting any money from warrants issued for services rendered prior to the filing of the supplemental bill on April 7, 1930. Appellees argue that the decree speaks from the date of filing the original and supplemental bills; that the original bill was filed before any of the assessment of 1926 was paid, and the supplemental bill was filed before any part of the 1929 assessment was paid; that all land owners had notice of the attack on the legality of these assessments, and that since the assessments were void, any money voluntarily paid into the treasury on them belongs to the district and can be paid out only on lawful warrants issued by the commissioners *169
in payment for services to be rendered the district. There is a statement in the record showing various sums that have been collected through voluntary payment under the assessments of 1926 and 1929 and the various assessments ostensibly made for repairs and interest, which, as we have seen, were not valid assessments. On these last named assessments appellees paid during the years 1923 to 1928 the sum of $597 for interest and $1211.64 for repairs. They made no payments, however, on the 1926 or 1929 levies for expenses. The decree has not enjoined the collection of the tax from anyone other than appellees. Appellees, because of their liability to maintain repairs of certain works in the district, are interested in the sum so illegally levied, voluntarily paid in and now on hand from assessments which were purported to be for repairs, and therefore the decree preventing the payment of any sums collected for repairs was a matter in which appellees have a personal interest, because the misappropriation of that fund might result in the levy of further charges against them for repairs. This is a basis of their right to relief in equity as tax-payers. The right of a tax-payer to maintain a bill to prevent the misapplication of public funds is based upon his equitable ownership in the funds and his liability to replenish the public treasury for the deficiency which would be caused by misapplication thereof. Fergus v. Russel,
As to the levies of 1926 and 1929 for expenses appellees are in a different situation. The record shows that of the 1926 levy $16,930.50 was voluntarily paid into the treasury of the district and of the 1929 levy $2149.78 had been voluntarily paid. As to those funds it cannot be said that appellees have any interest either because of having contributed to them or because their application to the purposes of paying expenses of the district might require them to replenish the treasury for such purposes, since the lands of the district are not liable to assessment for the payment of claims such as those of appellants, for which *170 no assessment had been previously made. While the decree has held, and we think properly, that an assessment may not be made for debts previously contracted, yet appellees have no interest in preventing its application to that purpose, for, as we have said, they could not be called upon, as tax-payers, to replenish any funds so used.
In this connection the record shows that prior to the entry of the decree herein, land owners of the district owning approximately 8500 acres thereof, filed, on leave, an intervening petition, in which they represented they had paid the greater portion of the levy of 1926 and a substantial part of that of 1929; that the appellees by their bill sought to give the petitioners a remedy which they, the petitioners, have not sought and do not care to assert, and they ask the court to permit the treasurer to pay out the funds so paid in by them on those levies, in the proportion that said moneys paid bears to the outstanding warrants, to the end that the indebtedness of the district might be reduced by the amounts of the payments made by them. We are of the opinion that as to the money voluntarily paid in on the 1926 and 1929 levies appellees are not in a position to control the expenditure of it. They have paid nothing in, and, we have said, are not interested in how it should be paid out. The petitioners, who ask that those funds be so paid out, do not say that they paid in all of the funds in the hands of the district. They say that they paid in the larger portion of the amount voluntarily paid in. In holding that the appellees do not have such interest in that fund as to enable them as tax-payers to control its expenditure, we are not to be understood as sanctioning the use of it for the purpose of paying the outstanding warrants issued to certain of the appellants. Should a land owner who voluntarily paid any part of the 1926 or 1929 assessments, and who did not join in the intervening petition, seek to enjoin the use of the funds paid in under those assessments a different question would *171
be presented. Such a question this court is not passing upon. Our holding on this point is limited to the proposition that appellees not having contributed to the funds derived from the 1926 and 1929 assessments, and not being affected, either presently or prospectively, by their application to the purpose for which they were levied, are not, as to those funds, in the position of tax-payers with the right to enjoin their use, as such right is defined by this court. Fergus v. Russel, supra;Jones v. O'Connell,
We are of the opinion that the chancellor erred in enjoining, on the application of the appellees, the expenditure of the funds voluntarily paid in under the 1926 and 1929 assessments, and to that extent the decree is reversed. In all other respects the decree is affirmed.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.