121 Ill. 616 | Ill. | 1887

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal by the board of supervisors' of Macon county, from a judgment of the Appellate Court for the Third District, affirming a judgment of the circuit court of said county, awarding a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel said board to provide one-half of the cost and expenses of repairing a certain bridge in Decatur township, and of constructing the approaches thereto, in conformity with a petition of the-commissioners of highways of said town.

The proceeding is based on section 19, chapter 121, of the Devised Statutes, which provides: “When it is necessary to-construct or repair any bridge over a stream, or any approach or approaches thereto, by means of an embankment or trestle-work, on a public road in any town, or on, or near to, or across-a town line, in which work the town is wholly or in part responsible, and the cost of which will be more than twenty cents on the $100 on the latest assessment roll, and the levy of the' road and bridge tax for that year in said town was for the full amount of sixty cents on each $100 allowed by law for the-commissioners to raise, the major part of which is needed for the ordinary repair of roads and bridges, the commissioners may petition the county board for aid; and if the foregoing■ . facts shall appear, the county board shall appropriate from the county treasury a sum sufficient to meet one-half the expenses of the said bridge, or other work, on condition that the towu asking aid shall furnish the other half of the required amount. The expenditure of these joint funds shall be made by the commissioners and two persons appointed by the board of supervisors, and any surplus funds appropriated by the county board after the completion of the work shall be paid into, or lapse into, the county treasury: Provided, however, that before any bridge or approaches, as contemplated as above, shall be constructed or repaired under the provisions of this section, the commissioners shall make a careful estimate of the probable cost of the same, and attach thereto their affidavits that the same is necessary, and will not be made more expensive than is needed for the purpose desired, and such estimate and affidavit shall be filed with the petition.”

It is conceded the petition for the mandamus is in proper form, and that it shows upon its face a compliance, on the part of the commissioners, with all the conditions and prerequisites imposed by the statute to entitle them to the relief sought. To be so, it was necessary to set forth, as it did, the substance of the petition of the commissioners of highways to the board of supervisors, together with the accompanying estimates and affidavits, wherein, among other things, it was represented that the repairs and the construction of the approaches to the bridge were necessary, and were not more expensive than was required, and also that the greater part of the levy of sixty cents on the $100, therein averred to have been made, was needed for the “ordinary repairs of roads and bridges.” These two averments were severally traversed by separate clauses in the answer to the petition for the mandamus. The court sustained •a demurrer to each of them, on the ground that they were not traversable allegations. The cause was then heard before the •court upon a single issue of fact, namely, whether the commissioners of highways had, as stated in their petition, made ■a levy to the full amount of sixty cents on the $100 worth of taxable property in their township. The court, upon due consideration, found this issue for the commissioners, and its finding having been affirmed by the Appellate Court, disposes of that question, so far as tins court is concerned.

It remains to consider whether the Appellate Court erred in sustaining the ruling of the trial court upon the demurrer to the two clauses of the answer in question. We have no doubt •of the correctness of the rulings of the lower courts on both these questions. They involve matters which the legislature, in its wisdom, has committed to the discretion, judgment and determination of the commissioners of highways, and not to the board of supervisors. The latter, therefore, wholly misconceived their legitimate powers and functions when they-attempted, as they did, to revise and reverse the action and determination of the commissioners upon these questions. For-the same reason, it was equally incompetent for the lower ■ courts, or either of them, to review or pass upon them. So the ■ finding of the commissioners upon these questions is equally binding upon this court, except, perhaps, where there has been, a manifest abuse of the discretion which the law has reposed' . in the commissioners, and there is no claim of that kind here. By the issues tendered, respondents simply proposed to re-try-questions which had already been settled by the commissioners, and which, under the law, they alone were authorized to determine.

Upon an application by the commissioners- to the board of supervisors for aid to build or repair a bridge, if is the right and duty of the latter to determine, in the first place; whether-the petition and accompanying estimate and affidavits make out such a case, assuming the- facts therein stated to be true, as entitles the commissioners to the relief prayed; and secondly, to satisfy itself of the truth of such of the alleged facts as are-susceptible of positive verification, and do not involve mere-matter of opinion and judgment. Thus they must determine, from their own knowledge or actual investigation, whether the-bridge to be built or repaired is at one of the places specified: in the statute; whether the commissioners have levied a tax; of sixty cents, as charged in the petition; whether the town-represented by the commissioners is responsible, in whole orín part, for the proposed work, and whether the cost thereof' will amount to more than twenty cents on each $100 worth-of taxable property, as shown by the latest assessment roll. But whether the proposed work is necessary, (that is, whether public interests and convenience demand it,)- or whether the major part of the sixty cents tax levied by the- eommissionerswill be required for the ordinary repair of roads- and. bridges-,. being matters within the discretion and judgment of the commissioners, are questions the truth of which the board of supervisors have no right to inquire into or determine. With respect to these questions, all they have a right to do is to determine, from the petition presented to them, whether the commissioners-have acted upon them and decided them in the affirmative. All questions of a similar character, resting upon like considerations, are to tie regarded in the same way.

The conclusion here reached is in conformity with the previous-decisions of this court. People ex rel. v. Supervisors of Iroquois County, 100 Ill. 640; Town of New Boston v. Supervisors, 110 id. 197.

The judgment will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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