146 N.E. 567 | Ill. | 1925
The aggregate tax for county purposes (exclusive of registered bond tax) levied by the county board of Alexander county for the year 1923 required a rate of $1.02 on each $100 assessed valuation, being fifty cents for general county purposes, thirty-two cents for payment of interest and principal of county road bonds and twenty cents for county highway tax. Appellant refused to pay the county highway tax, and judgment was rendered against it on the application of the county collector.
In People v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Co.
The election authorizing the issuance of the bonds and the levying of the additional tax in question was held April 6, 1921. By section 14 of the act establishing a system of State highways, which became effective July I, 1921, the several counties of the State were given power to levy an annual tax of not to exceed twenty-five cents to be known as the county highway tax, which was to be in addition to the maximum tax of fifty cents then authorized for general county purposes. In 1923 the Counties act and the Revenue act were so amended as to except the county highway tax from the general limitation of fifty cents.
Appellee contends, and the trial court held, that a vote authorizing "an additional tax for the payment of interest and principal" of county road bonds authorizes a tax in addition to all other taxes for county purposes authorized by law at the time the levy is made each year, and that in the case at bar the vote authorizing the additional tax of thirty-five cents in effect authorized a tax of thirty-five cents in excess of the constitutional limitation of seventy-five cents where the county levies the full seventy-five cent tax for other authorized county purposes.
Whether the legislature can by an act provide that a tax, if authorized by the voters of a county, shall be in excess of the constitutional limitation where the ballot does not so provide and the attention of the voter is not by direct reference to a statute or in any other manner directed to the fact that the tax will be in excess of the constitutional limitation, it is clear that the vote taken in Alexander county April 6, 1921, did not authorize a tax of thirty-five cents in excess of the constitutional limitation of seventy-five cents. The mere use of the word "additional" in connection with the tax does not mean that the tax is to be levied in excess of the rate allowed for all county purposes. (People v. Cleveland, Cincinnati,Chicago and St. Louis Railway Co.
It seems clear to us that the legislature intended by the act authorizing the county highway tax that the county board in every county should have authority to levy an annual tax not to exceed twenty-five cents on the $100 valuation for highway purposes, but it is equally clear that it did not thereby intend to authorize double taxes in counties where the legal voters had theretofore authorized the county board to levy an additional tax for the same purpose. Therefore, where the legal voters have prior to July I, 1921, authorized an additional highway tax without specifically providing that the additional tax is to be in excess of the constitutional limitation, the county board must take into consideration this additional tax in making its annual levy and not levy an amount to exceed twenty-five cents on the $100 valuation for highway purposes unless the people of the county have by vote on the question authorized it to levy an amount in excess of twenty-five cents.
The judgment of the county court is reversed.
Judgment reversed. *141