110 Ill. 511 | Ill. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This appeal brings before us for review a judgment of the circuit court of Will county, awarding a peremptory writ of mandamus, commanding the board of supervisors of said county to cause to be levied and collected, upon the taxable property of the county, a tax sufficient to realize therefrom the sum of $9088.50, to aid the commissioners of highways of the town of Wilmington, in said county, to build an iron bridge across Kankakee river, in the city of Wilmington, in said town, said sum being one-half of the estimated cost of said bridge. The petition is in due form, and clearly brings the case within the provisions of section 110 of the act of 1879, entitled “Roads and Bridges, ” which is as follows: “When it shall be necessary to construct or repair any bridge in any town, or to build a bridge over any stream between towns, or over streams or roads between towns in the same county, which would be an unreasonable burden to the same, the cost of which will be more than can be -raised in one year by ordinary taxes for bridge purposes in such town or one of such towns, the commissioners of highways of either town .desiring to build such bridge shall present a petition to the county board of the county in which such town or towns is situated, praying for an appropriation from the county treasury, to aid in the building, constructing and repairing of such bridge; and such county board shall, when one-half the necessary funds have been provided for by the town authorities of either or both such town or towns, appropriate the other half: Provided, that all unexpended surplus of any appropriation that may be granted by the county under the provisions of this section, shall be paid back into the treasury. And all funds provided to be raised under this section shall be expended by and under the joint control of the commissioners of highways of the town asking such aid, and two persons appointed by the county board of the county granting the same. ”
The result of this appeal depends upon the validity and construction which must be given to the above section of the statute. No question is made as to the necessity of the bridge, or as to the fact its cost would be more than could be raised in one year, by ordinary taxes for bridge purposes, in said town of Wilmington,—nor, indeed, is any defence of that character interposed. But the contention of the board of supervisors is, that notwithstanding the peremptory terms in which the above section is drawn, it imposes no absolute obligation upon the county authorities to assist highway commissioners in building a bridge; that in all cases of such application they are clothed with an ultimate discretion, in the exercise of- which they are answerable to no one,—or, more shortly put, the contention is, the statute is merely directory, and not mandatory.
Assuming this position to be correct, we agree with counsel for appellants mandamus would not lie to compel county authorities to assist in the building of a bridge, in any case. (The People ex rel. v. LaSalle County, 84 Ill. 307.) We are unable, however, to concur in this view of the subject. We have no doubt the legislature intended, by the section in question, to impose an absolute duty on counties to aid in the building of bridges whenever a case was clearly brought within its provisions, as was done here. If there was any well founded doubt as to the correctness of this construction, it would certainly be removed by comparing the 111th section of the act of 1872, on the same subject, with the section now under consideration, the latter being nothing more than the former section amended. The only substantial difference between the acts of 1872 and 1879, with respect to the present question, is, that by the former the county authorities were simply authorized to aid commissioners of highways in building bridges, under circumstances like the present. The whole subject is, by that act, left to the discretion of the board of supervisors. Under the act-of 1879 they have no discretion in the premises. The language of the former act is, “may make an appropriation, ” etc., while that of the latter is, “shall * * * appropriate, ” etc. It is thus clear the very object of the amendment was to make the act imperative on the county authorities.
Assuming the section in question to be imperative, as we hold it is, appellants then insist it is in violation of sections 9 and 10, of article 9, of the present constitution, which are as follows:
“Sec. 9. The General Assembly may vest the corporate authorities of cities, towns and villages with power to make local improvements, by special assessment, or by special taxation of contiguous property, or otherwise. - For all other corporate purposes all municipal corporations may be vested with authority to assess and collect taxes; but such taxes shall be uniform in respect to persons and property within the jurisdiction of the body imposing the same.
“Sec. 10. The General Assembly shall not impose taxes upon municipal corporations, or the inhabitants or property thereof, for corporate purposes, but shall require that all the taxable property within the limits of municipal corporations shall be taxed for the payment of debts contracted under authority of law, such taxes to be uniform in respect to persons and property within the jurisdiction of the body imposing the same. Private property shall not be liable tb be taken or sold for the payment of .the corporate debts of a municipal corporation. ”
Judging from the space given to this question in the argument, we presume it is mainly relied on for a reversal.
The reasons assigned why this section of the statute conflicts with the above provisions of the constitution are, that it attempts to confer discretionary power of local taxation upon persons other than the corporate authorities of the district to be taxed; that it authorizes the levy of a tax for township purposes on property not subject to the jurisdiction of the authority levying the tax; that the legislature is powerless to grant the right of corporate or local taxation to any other persons than the local authorities elected by the people of the municipality, or appointed in some manner to which they have given their assent, or to impose a debt upon a municipal corporation without its consent. When properly limited, the propositions embodied in the foregoing reasons, in so far as they purport to be propositions of law, may be admitted to be correct. But we do not concur in the application which is sought to be made of them in this case. It is not true, as is assumed by counsel, that the raising of money by taxation in towns or counties, in pursuance of a general law of the State, for the purpose of building bridges, maintaining public highways, and for other objects of a similar character in which the people of the State at large are directly interested, is the levying of a tax for a strictly local corporate purpose, within the meaning of the constitution, as construed in Marshall v. Silliman, 61 Ill. 218, and other eases of like character cited in appellants’ brief, and hence the authorities in question have no controlling influence in the decision of this case. Municipal authorities, in levying taxes for such purposes, are, in a large sense, mere agencies of the State in carrying into effect general laws which have been enacted for the common good. They are, in fact, when thus acting, but parts of the general machinery of the State and county governments. As to the mere private concerns of a municipality, in which the people at large have no interest, and which are strictly local in their character, of course the rule is different. The distinction here recognized is fully sustained by both reason and authority. (Cooley on Taxation, 478.) The author here says i “Elsewhere in this work the public highways have been spoken of as matters of general concern to the people of the whole State. In a certain sense they are of local concern, because the local organizations construct and support them; but they are constructed for the general benefit and use of all the people, and only turned over to the localities as a matter of apportionment. This being the case, any town, city or county that neglects its duty in this regard may be compelled, by the interference of the State, and on State account, to perform it. This doctrine applies to common highways. Whether it can be extended to exceptional means of passage and transportation, will be considered further on. ”
While it is true commissioners of highways, in counties under township organization, are corporate bodies, whose powers and jurisdiction are limited territorially to the respective townships to which they belong, yet they are a part of the machinery of the county and State governments, and as such, under certain contingencies, are required to act in concert with the county authorities proper, in the building and maintaining of bridges within their respective jurisdictions. In certain contingencies, which the law specifies, the supervisors are required to bear one-half of the expense of building bridges. The duty thus imposed on them is just as obligatory as that which requires them to build jails, court houses and the like, and the levying of a tax for one of these objects is just as much for a corporate purpose as it is for the other. In these cases the commissioners of highways do not, as is assumed throughout appellants’ arguments, levy a tax upon the property of the tax-payers of the county. They simply determine, in pursuance of the statute, when the contingencies have arisen requiring the county to contribute to the building of a bridge, and ascertain and report to the county authorities the cost of the construction, one-half of which the law itself requires them to pay; and in such case it is their duty to levy a tax to raise the required amount. The commissioners of highways, in discharging the duties which the law has imposed upon them in a case like this, are acting just as much on behalf of the county as of the town, and the county is therefore equally bound to respond for its share of the expense. Such being the law, it follows the whole theory of the defence must fail.
Other objections of minor importance are made in the argument, but we do not think there is any merit in them, or regard them of sufficient importance to require a discussion at our hands.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.