163 N.E. 348 | Ill. | 1928
The treasurer and ex-officio county collector of St. Clair county applied to the county court of that county for judgment and order of sale against lands returned delinquent for non-payment of the taxes levied for the year 1926. The Missouri Pacific Railroad Company filed objections to the county tax, the town tax and the road and bridge damages tax of the town of Centerville, and the village of Dupo tax. The objection to a portion of the town tax was sustained and the other objections were overruled. Judgment was rendered for the taxes found to be delinquent, and the railroad company prosecutes this appeal.
Appellee insists, however, that the adoption by the board of supervisors of the resolution reducing and dividing this item cured the defect in the original levy, and to support the contention invokes the last paragraph of section 2 of the act entitled "An act concerning the levy and extension of taxes," as amended, known as the Juul law, (Cahill's Stat. 1925, p. 2050; Smith's Stat. 1925, p. 2157;) which authorizes a taxing body whose levy, in the extension of taxes, must be reduced, to distribute the amount of the reduction, after it has been ascertained, among the items of its appropriations, with certain exceptions, as the taxing body may elect, and in case no such election is made within three months after the extension of the tax the reduction shall be made pro rata. This paragraph is neither a repeal of nor is it inconsistent with the provision of section 121 of the Revenue act which requires the amount asked for each of the several purposes for which a county tax is levied to be stated separately. The paragraph does not authorize the separation of a void gross tax levy into distinct or separate items where the division was not made originally, nor does it purport to provide a method for the validation of a tax levy where a mandatory statutory provision has been ignored. Such a statute is for the protection of *57
the tax-payer, and a disregard of it will render the tax illegal. (People v. Eastern Illinois and St. Louis Railroad Co.supra; People v. Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Co.
Overseer of the poor ............................ $250.00 Board of health ................................. 150.00 Town defense .................................... 500.00 Town officers' compensation ..................... 2500.00 Election expenses ............................... 500.00 Road violation fund ............................. 2500.00 -------- Total ....................................... $6400.00
The certificate was dated the day it was filed, but it did not show either the date of the town meeting at which or the year for which the tax was levied. Pursuant to the town clerk's certificate the county clerk extended the rate of nine cents per $100 of assessed valuation against the taxable property of the town. This rate was necessary to produce $6400. The proportion of the tax extended against appellant's property amounted to $163.59. Appellant objected that the town clerk's certificate, because of its omissions, was insufficient to authorize the county clerk to extend the town tax. The county court sustained the objection to the extent of $72.70 and overruled it as to the balance. *58
The authority of the county clerk to extend a town tax is the certificate of the town clerk. Without that certificate any attempt to extend such a tax is illegal and void. Behind the certificate there must be a levy of the tax, for the reason that only from such a levy can the town clerk obtain the amounts to be certified. (Peoria, Decatur and EvansvilleRailway Co. v. People,
The omissions from the town clerk's certificate of the date of the town meeting at which and of the year for which the town tax was levied might have been supplied to accord with the facts by amendment on the hearing. (People v. Chicago, RockIsland and Pacific Railway Co.
Overseer of the poor .............................. $300.00 Town defense ...................................... 500.00 Election expenses ................................. 500.00 Fumigating ........................................ 150.00 Board of health ................................... 500.00 -------- Total ........................................ $1950.00 *59
A motion was made on the hearing in the county court to amend the town clerk's certificate to conform to the record of that town meeting. The motion was granted but it does not appear that the amendment was ever made. If the amendment had been made it would have been of no avail, for the record of the town meeting afforded no basis for an amendment to the town clerk's certificate filed in the county clerk's office nearly a year before the town meeting was held. The town clerk's certificate was insufficient to authorize the extension of the town tax, and appellant's objection thereto should have been sustained.
Laying out new roads ............................ $12,000.00 Widening roads .................................. 1,000.00 Altering roads .................................. 2,000.00 Vacating roads .................................. 1,000.00 ---------- Total ..................................... $16,000.00
On October 3, 1925, the town clerk made an entry upon his record showing that twenty-three warrants, aggregating $17,953.48, had been issued for right of way, damages to land not taken, attorneys' fees and interest on orders, in anticipation of the levy of $16,000. Only three of these warrants, amounting to $1436.50, were dated prior to September 1, 1925, one bore date October 3, 1925, and the remaining nineteen were dated subsequently to the day on *60 which the town clerk made the entry on his record. It was stipulated that the sums for which these warrants were issued had been agreed upon, or that condemnation suits had been concluded, as the case might be, prior to September 1, 1925. On September 7, 1926, the highway commissioner filed with the county clerk a certificate, in which, after stating the amount necessary for road and bridge purposes, he added that approximately $9000 would be realized out of the levy of $16,000 for road damages made in September, 1925, and that the deficit of $7000 should be levied in the year 1926 for the payment of such damages. Pursuant to this certificate the county clerk extended against the taxable property in the town a rate of nine and two-thirds cents per $100 of assessed valuation. Appellant contends that the road damages tax is illegal because (1) at the time the levy was made the record of the highway commissioner failed to show that any damages had been agreed upon, allowed or awarded, as required by law; (2) the road damages allowed in one year cannot be made the basis of the levy of a tax for the same purpose in any succeeding year; and (3) awards made for the purchase of land to be used as the right of way for a new road are not damages within the meaning of the statute.
Section 58 of the Road and Bridge act (Cahill's Stat. 1925, p. 2080; Smith's Stat. 1925, p. 2197;) provides that "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 and interest on orders issued in payment of such damages, not to exceed for any one year thirteen and one-third cents on each $100 of the taxable property of the town or district shall be included in the first succeeding tax levy" for the construction, maintenance and repair of roads and bridges in such town or road district, and shall "be in addition to the levy for road and bridge purposes." The section further provides that it shall be the duty of the commissioner *61
of highways, at the time of certifying the general tax levy for road and bridge purposes within his town or district, to include and separately to specify in such certificate the amount necessary to be raised by taxation for the purpose of paying such damages. Section 42 of the same act provides that in counties under township organization the town clerk shall act as the clerk for the highway commissioner. By section 51 the town or district clerk is given the custody of all records, books and papers of the town or road district, and is required to record in the book of records of his district all orders and directions of the highway commissioner required by law to be kept. The tax-payer of the town has the right to be informed by the record concerning the liabilities of the town and for what purposes his property is to be subjected to taxation. A valid tax levy cannot be made for the purposes specified in section 58 of the Road and Bridge act unless the record required to be kept by the town clerk shows that damages for some one or more of the purposes specified in that section have been agreed upon and allowed or awarded to the property owner by the commissioner of highways. (People v. Cleveland, Cincinnati,Chicago and St. Louis Railway Co.
Appellee, however, contends that because it was stipulated that the sums for which the warrants were issued had been adjusted or that condemnation suits had been concluded prior to September 1, 1925, when the tax was levied, the objection was properly overruled. Whether the facts are as stipulated is not controlling in the absence of a record *62 showing such facts. The existence of the record at the time the tax is levied is necessary for the tax-payer's protection, and the requirement is mandatory. People v. Cairo, Vincennes andChicago Railway Co. supra.
Appellant's first contention is conclusive of the invalidity of the tax levy for road damages. It is therefore unnecessary to consider its second and third grounds of objection to that tax. The proportion of the tax assessed against appellant's property amounted to $175.71. The objection should have been sustained.
The tax-payer's right to have separately stated the purposes for which a tax is levied is a substantial right, of which he cannot be deprived under the guise of possible needs of the municipality, and to justify the levy of a tax for contingent, miscellaneous or other undefined purposes the sum so levied must be a very small proportion of the entire tax. (People v. Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Co.
The county clerk is a ministerial officer and no judicial acts are required of him in extending taxes. He has no right, nor is it his duty, to determine whether taxes have been legally assessed. (People v. Opel,
The judgment of the county court to the extent that it concerns the tax of the village of Dupo is affirmed. In respect to the other taxes involved in the appeal the judgment is reversed.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part. *64