159 N.E. 797 | Ill. | 1927
The Springfield Sanitary District was organized April 18, 1924, under the act of June 22, 1917. Section 12 of the act authorizes the board of trustees to levy and collect taxes for general corporate purposes upon property within the territorial limits of the district, the aggregate amount of which for each year shall not exceed one-third of one percentum of the assessed value of the taxable property within the district, with a proviso that a like sum in addition to such regular annual tax may be levied when such additional tax has been authorized by the voters of the district at an election called therefor. A proposition for the levy of such additional tax was submitted to the voters of the district at an election held November 4, 1924, and was carried. In 1925 the additional tax was levied and extended pursuant to the authority granted by the voters, and this tax was held valid in People v. CentralIllinois Public Service Co.
There is no inherent power in municipal corporations created by authority of the State to levy taxes. (People v. WabashRailway Co.
Appellee contends that the last sentence of the section indicates a legislative intent to grant a continuing authority *443
to levy the additional tax after it has once been authorized by the legal voters. This sentence reads: "The annual tax provided for herein and the taxes levied hereunder for the payment of the principal of and the interest upon bonded indebtedness of the district shall not be included in the aggregate of all the taxes required to be reduced under the provisions of" the Juul law. The argument is that the legislature would not have excluded the regular tax for corporate purposes from the provisions of the Juul law without excluding the additional tax where it had been authorized by the voters of the district, and that "annual tax" therefore refers to all the taxes to be collected for general corporate purposes, whether the regular tax of thirty-three and one-third cents on the $100 or the enlarged tax of sixty six and two-thirds cents. We agree that "annual tax" includes all of the tax levied in any one year for general corporate purposes, and it was so treated inPeople v. Wabash Railway Co.
Appellee's contention that People v. Chicago, Milwaukee andSt. Paul Railway Co.
In 1927 there was added to the first paragraph of section 12 of the Sanitary District act of 1917 this sentence: "The right to levy such additional tax heretofore or hereafter authorized by the legal voters may at any time, after one or more tax levies thereunder, be terminated by a majority vote of the electors of such district at an election called for such purpose by the trustees of such district." From a reading of the entire section as amended it appears that the legislature now intends that an additional tax authorized by the voters of a district shall be levied annually after it has been authorized, until such voters, at an election called for the purpose, terminate the authority to levy the tax. Appellee contends that this amendment removes all doubt as to the meaning of the original act "both (a) as recognizing and confirming any taxing power theretofore voted, and (b) as a legislative construction of *445
the act, which should be accorded great weight and followed by the courts." Answering the second point of the argument first, it might as well be contended that the Fifty-fifth General Assembly recognized that the Fiftieth General Assembly had not by the act of 1917 granted a continuing power to levy the additional tax, and so it made the change in 1927 so that the power might be continuing until the voters terminated it. The intention of the Fiftieth General Assembly, which passed the act of 1917, can not be determined by the action of the Fifty-fifth General Assembly in amending the original act. Past or concurrent legislation in pari materia may be considered in interpreting a particular statute, but not subsequent legislation. If this were not true the same law might have a different meaning with each passing General Assembly. In answer to the first point, it is suggested that the validity of the tax in question must be determined as of the time the tax was levied. (People v. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St.Louis Railway Co.
The judgment of the county court of Sangamon county is reversed.
Judgment reversed. *446