201 Ill. 365 | Ill. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court:
The only question involved in this case, as is conceded .by both sides, relates to the proper construction of sections 62 and 64 of the act, approved May 4, 1887, to provide for the organization of road districts, etc., in counties not under township organization. The highway commissioners of road district No. 7 made a levy of fifty cents on each §100.00 of the property of the road district for “road and bridge purposes and for the payment of any outstanding orders drawn on them by their treasurer;” and also the rate of forty cents on each $100.00 “to liquidate road and ditch damages.” The fifty cents levy was under said section 62, and the forty cents levy was made under section 64. The railroad company paid the taxes under the fifty cents levy, but refused to pay the taxes under the forty cents levy, the latter amounting to $195.47.' The objections of appellee state that the sum of $195.47 is a portion of the taxes for road and bridge purposes, and for damages agreed upon, allowed or awarded for laying out, widening, altering or vacating roads, or for ditching to drain roads. The position of appellee is, that the total road and bridge tax, including the taxes to pay damages, has thus been levied at the rate of ninety cents on each $100.00 valuation, while the tax, which can be legally extended for such purpose, is limited by law to fifty cents on each $100.00 valuation, thereby making said levy excessive by forty cents on each $100.0Ó valuation. We are of the opinion that the objection, made by the appellee to the entry of judgment and sale, was properly sustained by the county court.
Section 62 above referred to is as follows: “At the meeting to be held in September, the commissioners shall determine what per cent shall be levied on the property of the district for roads and bridges, which levy shall not exceed fifty cents on each $100.00: Provided, that the county board shall make the first levy provided for by this act.”
Section 64 is as follows: “When damages have been agreed upon, allowed or awarded for laying out, widening, altering or vacating roads, or for ditching to drain roads, the amounts of such damages shall be included in the first succeeding tax levy, provided for in section 62 of this act; and when collected shall constitute and be held by the treasurer of the commissioners as a separate fund to be paid out to the parties entitled to receive the same.” (3 Starr & Curt. Ann. Stat.-—2d ed.—p. 3616).
Section 62 limited the per cent to be levied on the property of the district for roads "and bridges to fifty cents on each §100.00; section 64 provided that damages to be agreed upon, allowed or awarded for laying out, widening", altering or vacating roads, or for ditching to drain roads, should be included in the levy prescribed in section 62, which was not to exceed fifty cents. The evident meaning of these two sections is, that the commissioners shall bring the total of the two levies, one for roads and bridges, and the other for damages, within the limit, provided for in section 62, that is, fifty cents on each §100.00. To our minds the language is clear and unmistakable that the limit of both taxes was to be that which is provided in section 62. What the commissioners of highways actually did, however, was to make a levy of ninety cents, that is to say, one levy of fifty cents for roads and bridges, and another levy of forty cents for damag'es. The latter was clearly invalid.
Where a statute is plain and unambiguous, there is no need of construction. (Paltzer v. National Bank of Illinois, 145 Ill. 177). A statute, which grants power to a municipal authority to levy a tax, must be construed strictly, and only such power can be exercised as is granted in clear and unmistakable terms. In determining the extent, to which the power to levy a tax can be exercised when conferred, the rule of strict construction must necessarily be followed. (Town of Drummer v. Cox, 165 Ill. 651). The power of taxation cannot be exercised, unless the authority clearly appears from the law. (Hopkins v. People, 174 Ill. 416). If these rules of construction be applied to the interpretation of sections 62 and 64 above quoted, their language can have no other ¡meaning than that which has been already indicated.
The fact, that sections 13 and 15 of the act of 1883 in regard to roads and bridges in counties under township organization provide that the levy for damages was to be in addition to the levy for road and bridge purposes, can have no bearing as interpreting sections 62 and 64 in the act in regard to roads and bridges in counties not under township organization. The- condition of counties' not under township organization is different from that of counties under township organization. It must be presumed, therefore, that the difference in the limit of taxation for road and bridge purposes, as applied to counties of the respective classes, was intentional on the part of the legislature. The act in regard to roads and bridges in counties under township organization was passed in 1883, while that in relation to roads and bridges in counties not under township organization was passed in 1887. Therefore, when the legislature passed the act of 1887, it had the act of 1883 before it, and, inasmuch as it left out in the act of 1887 words in the act of 1883, which indicated that the levy for damages was to be in addition to, and not included in, the levy for roads and bridges, the conclusion is inevitable that it was intended to make the two acts different in the respect thus pointed out.
When the act of 1887 was originally passed, section 62 contained the words “one hundred cents on each §100.00;” but the act of 1887 was amended in 1889 by substituting the word, “fifty” for'the words, “one hundred.” As the act of 1887 originally stood, it could not be claimed that the amount to be raised under section 64 for road damages was not to be included within the limit of one hundred cents on the §100.00, as fixed by section 62. It would appear from this amendment, that one hundred cents on §100.00 was regarded by the legislature as too large a tax, and, therefore, it was reduced in 1889 to fifty cents on §100.00. No change, however, was made in section 64, but it was left to read as it now reads, that is to say, providing that “the amounts of such damages shall be included in the first succeeding tax levy, provided for in section 62 of this act.”
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.