People ex rel. Lee v. Cincinnati, Lafayette & Chicago Railway Co.

247 Ill. 506 | Ill. | 1910

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Dan G. Dee, county collector of Kankakee county, applied to the county court of the said county for judgment against the property of the Cincinnati, Dafayette and Chicago Railway Company for delinquent taxes for the year 1909, and the railway company filed objections to the different taxes. A county tax of $60,000 was levied, made up- of different items, including building purposes $ it ,000, salary of the officers $12,500 and care of paupers $8000. The objections included the items for building purposes and care of paupers and $5000-of the item for salary of officers. The collector admitted that the item for building purposes was not sufficiently specific, and the court sustained 'the objection to that item and the objections to the other taxes, except the items. for salaries of officers and care of paupers. Judgment was entered in accordance with the finding, and the railway company appealed.

The collector made the formal proof which constituted a prima facie case in his favor and the railway company was called upon to overcome it by evidence. The objection to $5000 of the item of $12,500 for salaries of officers was that $7500 would cover all the salaries which the county was required to pay, and no evidence whatever was offered to sustain that objection. It was stipulated that the item was included in the county tax, but that did not establish the invalidity of any part of it. It is argued that some of the county officers must receive their compensation and office expenses out of the fees of the office and that no tax whatever can be legally levied to pay the same. It is true as to some county officers that they must get their compensation out of fees, but the county is required to pay them fees, under the Fees and Salaries act, for certain services, the amount of which the record in this case does not show. The collector offered in rebuttal, evidence of the salaries allowed to county officers, and included a janitor and a county stenographer. Counsel for the railway company are correct in their claim that a janitor is not an officer under the accepted definition of an office given in the constitution, and there is no authority for the appointment of a county stenographer. If the county officers who receive compensation, either in the form of fees' or salary, require the services of a stenographer they must pay for such services themselves. Excluding these items, however, is not suffiO dent to show that the amount included in the tax for salairies was in excess of the amount for which the county authorities were authorized to levy a tax.

The only evidence relating to the item for care of paupers consisted of a stipulation that certain amounts therein named were levied at the annual town meeting's in the respective towns for the support of paupers; but if the county could not, under any circumstances, levy a tax for the care of paupers, the, objection would be good as a matter of law and no evidence would be required. The several towns in Kankakee county are required to support all paupers residing within their respective limits and all non-resident paupers becoming chargeable, as such, therein. (Laws of 1861, p. 135.) But even where the paupers are supported in that way, the county is authorized to establish and maintain a county poor-house and to fix a rate per day or per week that each town shall pay for the support and maintenance of its paupers therein. The collector proved that there was a poor-house in Kankakee county, with stock on the farm and employees raising garden produce for the paupers, and a superintendent, who, with his wife, was paid a salary of $100 per month. There is also a physician for the paupers who is paid $240 a year, and transient paupers whose homes’ are not in that county and who are not chargeable to any particular town are aided and cared for at the poor-house. It is intended that the charges against the towns for the support of their paupers shall be sufficient to cover the expense of such support, but there may be transient persons requiring temporary relief for which no charge could be made to any particular town, and there might be expenses connected with the poor-house and its maintenance which the county might properly pay and which would be fairly included under the item of care of paupers. The objection was that the county had no power to levy any tax for the care of paupers, and it was not sustained by the evidence.

The judgment is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

midpage