delivered the opinion of the court:
The People of the State of Illinois, on the relation of Henry Stuckart, township assessor of the town of South Chicago, in Cook county, filed a petition in the circuit court of said county, alleging that the relator was elected assessor of said town at the annual town election on the first Tuesday of April, 1899, and on May 1,1899, demanded of Philip Knopf, county clerk of said county, the books and blanks for the assessment of property in said town for the year 1899 under the provisions of sections 69 and 70 of the Revenue law in force prior to 1898, and praying for a writ of mandamus to compel said county clerk to deliver the books and blanks aforesaid to the relator. The defendant answered with a denial of the election and qualification of the relator as assessor of said town, and averred that on April 1, 1899, he delivered the necessary books and blanks for the assessment of property in Cook, county to certain persons alleged to have been elected and qualified as the board of assessors of said county under and pursuant to an act of the legislature entitled “An act for the assessment of property and providing the means therefor, and to repeal a certain act therein named,” in force July 1, 1898. A replication was filed alleging that the relator was the regularly elected and qualified assessor of the town of South Chicago. The defendant, admitting the replication to be true, then moved the court to dismiss the petition upon the face of the pleadings. The court sustained the motion and dismissed the petition at the cost of the relator. The case involved the question of the validity of the above mentioned act of 1898, creating a board of assessors and authorizing them to assess property and taking the power from the township assessor, and an appeal is therefore taken directly to this court for the determination of that question.
The averments of the answer that the persons named therein had been elected and qualified as the board of assessors of Cook county, and that defendant had delivered the books to them, were not denied by replication and were therefore admitted. On the basis of these facts it is argued, that, having.delivered the books to officers defacto, the act of the defendant could not be questioned; that the assessment made by such board of assessors for the year 1899 would be conclusive and binding upon all persons and have the same credit and effect as if the board were officers de jure, and that there can be no relief for the relator whether the act of 1898 is valid or void. This argument is unsound, in failing to distinguish between cases where there is an existing office to be filled and one where there is not. An unconstitutional act can not create an office. If the law under which the board of assessors of Cook county were elected and qualified is unconstitutional and void, then there was no such office known to the law as a board of assessors, and there could be no officer defacto of that kind. Prior to the act of 1898 there was the town office of township assessor, and this office is retained in express terms by that act. That officer is left to discharge every duty before imposed upon him, except the assessment of property in certain specified localities. It is admitted that the relator filled that office in the town of South Chicago. This board of assessors were not filling or claiming to fill that office, but the creation of the board was the creation of a new office. Where an office exists by law, an act providing for filling it may be void and yet one who is in occupancy of the office, holding it under color of title and discharging its duties, is an officer defacto. The acts of such an officer will be binding upon the public and third persons, but if the office itself never existed there can be no officer in fact. The authorities in support of this rule are very numerous and need not be referred to at length. The rule is stated in Dillon on Municipal Corporations, (sec. 76,) as follows: “In this country the doctrine is everywhere declared that the acts of de facto officers, as distinguished from acts of mere usurpers, are valid, and the principle extends not only to municipal officers generally, but also to those composing the council, or legislative or governing body of municipal corporations. But in order that there may be, within the meaning of the above rule, a de facto officer there must be a de jure office; and the notion that there can be a defacto office has been characterized as a political solecism, without foundation in reason and without support in law, and therefore a person cannot claim to be a de facto officer of a municipal corporation when the corporation or people have, in law, no power, in any event, to elect or appoint such an officer."” The case of Leach v. People,
In the case of People ex rel. Green v. Commissioners of Cook County,
In the case of People v. Wright,
Section 55 of the act of 1898 expressly provides that all the provisions of the general Revenue law in force prior to the taking effect of the later act shall remain in force and be applicable to the assessment of property, except in so far as is otherwise expressly provided. Several other sections of the act refer to existing laws which have relation to assessing property as remaining in force, notably sections 7, 8, 9, 10 and 18. It is apparent that it would be impossible to determine what the law is relating to what property is subject to assessment and taxation and what is exempted, and other branches of the general subject as to which the old law remains in force, without reference to such old law. The act of 1898, however, provides for an entire new system of making the assessment, and the basis.of it, with new modes of procedure and a new system of review, and as to that subject it is substantially complete in itself, constituting an entire plan for the making of the assessment. “Two or more laws relating to the same subject or different parts of the same subject matter are not necessarily amendatory of each other, within the meaning of this clause of the constitution, although they may be construed' together as in pari materia. ” (School Directors v. School Directors,
The next ground upon which the validity of the act is challenged is, that it is a local and special law upon a subject on which special legislation is prohibited by the constitution. The objection is, that while the act assumes to classify the counties of the State by population as a basis for legislation concerning the assessment of property, it also undertakes to classify various cities, townships, school districts and municipal corporations within such counties, not upon any legitimate basis of classification, but on grounds wholly inconsistent with the principles upon which classification by population is founded and justified, and that the whole act is thereby rendered void. The argument that the act is special in its division of counties into classes for thé purposes of assessment was considered in People v. Commissioners of Cook County, supra, and it was held not subject to the general objection then made. So far as the classification into counties for the creation of boards of assessors and methods of procedure as. to each class is concerned, the act was found to be uniform throughout the State; but the objection that the act arbitrarily restricts the powers of municipalities situated in certain counties in respect to incurring indebtedness and levying taxes was not made or considered. It is not doubted that a classification of the counties of the State by population as a basis for legislation is valid. Such a classification is in accordance with material distinctions between populous districts and sparsely settled communities. Additional powers may be required in large cities, and the performanee of additional duties, such as the maintenance of an adequate police force, protection against fire, water supply, and other things, might call for legislation different from that required in less populous centers. The increased responsibilities and duties of a city which is required to afford protection to and supply the needs of a great population may require a greater revenue and a higher rate of taxation than would be needed in a small town or village. But all legislation on that subject must be by uniform and general laws. In the case of People v. Cooper,
The particular portion of the act now questioned consists in the provisions contained in section 49, as follows: “In counties containing one hundred and twenty-five thousand (125,000) or more inhabitants the amount to which any county, city, township, school district or other municipal corporation shall be allowed to become indebted in any manner or for any purpose, shall not hereafter exceed two and one-half per cent on the assessed value of the taxable property therein, to be ascertained by the last assessment for State and county taxes previous to the incurring of such indebtedness. In any municipality or taxing district in any county or counties containing a population of 125,000 or more inhabitants in which the aggregate of the levies or taxes certified to the county clerk exceeds five per cent, a reduction shall be made by the county clerk in the taxes so certified, so as to reduce the aggregate of such taxes to five per cent in the manner following, viz.: The rate of county taxes throughout the county shall be fixed by reducing the aggregate rate of taxation in the municipality or taxing district within the county in which such aggregate rate is the highest, to five per cent by a pro rata reduction of all the levies certified therein, exclusive of the State taxes. The rate of each of the other kinds of tax levies shall be fixed in the same manner, taking the highest rate of taxation in any part of the municipality or other taxing district, or part thereof, as the basis of ascertaining the rate of taxation to be levied by such municipality or taxing district, and making the rate of taxation within the limits thereof uniform, and reducing the aggregate rate of taxation in each district in which it exceeds five per cent to five per cent. In ascertaining the aggregate rate of taxation, and reducing the same under the foregoing provision, taxes certified or levied for school building purposes shall not be included or taken into account in any manner, or for any purpose. The limitations herein contained shall apply only to assessments of property made under the provisions of this act.”
By these provisions there is an attempt to limit the power of every municipality in counties of a certain population to incur indebtedness to the amount of two and one-half per cent of the assessed valuation, and to limit the aggregate rate of taxation in every municipality or taxing district located in such a county to five per cent of such valuation. In the recent case of People v. Martin,
It is also contended that these provisions are void because they relate to a matter not expressed or referred to in the title of the act, and for other reasons; but it is unnecessary to consider such further objections.
The remaining question is, whether the invalidity of said provisions necessitates the destruction of the entire act. The fact that a part of the act is unconstitutional does not require that the remainder shall be held void, unless all the provisions are so connected as to depend upon each other. “The constitutional and unconstitutional provisions may even be contained in the same section and yet be perfectly distinct and separable, so that the first may stand though the last fall. * * * If, when the unconstitutional portion is stricken out, that which remains is complete in itself and capable of being executed wholly independent of that which was rejected, it must be sustained.” (Cooley’s Const. Lim. 178.) It is urged that the whole law must fail under this rule, because, by striking out the restriction, there is no provision for extending the taxes in counties of 125,000 or more inhabitants. We do not think that is so. The first clause of section 49 is general in its terms and covers all counties in the State, and, with the objectionable provision stricken out, the same rule for extending the taxes applies to all counties in the State. If it can be said that the void provisions are germane to the general subject embraced in the title, they are certainly foreign to every other provision of the act and wholly independent of them. We hold, therefore, that the act, as a whole, is not rendered invalid by striking out the void provisions, and that the office of board of county assessors was lawfully created. The pleadings admit that the persons named in the answer were duly elected and qualified as such board of county assessors, and that the county clerk delivered the books to such board.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
