3 Ill. App. 368 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1879
This was an action of debt, instituted in the name of the People of the State of Illinois to the use of the town of Flora, against the appellee on his official bond, as township collector of revenue. The sufficiency of the declaration was questioned upon general demurrer, in two respects. First: that it did not aver that the town had ever become incorporated. By an act of the General Assembly, in force February 27th, 1867, P. JL. 23, p. 421, a special charter was granted to the inhabitants of the town of Flora, which was to become operative only upon being submitted to a vote of the citizens of the town. The act itself did not confer corporate powers, but enabled the citizens to acquire such at their election, in the manner specified in the act. This was declared to be a public act. We find, however, that the General Assembly in 1869, P. L. 24, p. 284, passed an act amendatory of the act to incorporate the town of Flora, in force February 27th, 1867, in which the acceptance of the charter is clearly recognized. The 2nd section of the amendatory act provides that “ all taxes heretofore levied by the incorporate authorities of said- town remaining unpaid, shall be due and payable, and the town clerk of said town shall certify to the county clerk of Olay county all such taxes as appear by the records of said town to be unpaid; and said county clerk shall thereupon extend the same upon the tax books of the town of Harter, to be collected as other taxes: and all contracts or obligations heretofore entered into by or with the town of Flora, and all transactions under and by virtue of the charter or ordinances of said town, shall be valid and binding as though the boundaries thereof had been correctly described in said act of incorporation; and all ordinances of the town of Flora shall be and remain in force in said town as above described, until repealed according to law.” Section seven declares the amendatory act to be a public act, and to be in force from and after its passage. Thus the charter granted by the original act was virtually declared to have been accepted by the “citizens” of the town of Flora; and of this fact the courts were required to take judicial notice. “ Courts will take judicial notice of the charter or incorporating act of a municipal corporation without being specially pleaded, not only when it is declared to be a public statute, but when it is public or general in its nature or purposes, though there be no express provision to that effect.” Dillon on "Mun. Cor. Sec. 50. “ Courts are bound ex officio to take notice of public acts without being fully set forth, to give them full effect so soon as they are called to their attention.” Sedg. St. and Const, law, 34. We are therefore of the opinion that the pleader was not required to aver the existence of the corporation.
But aside from this view, we think the declaration contains a substantial averment that the town was incorporated. It avers that the appellee was collector of the town of Harter, in Clay county, and as such had given bond and entered upon the discharge of his duties’; as such received the collector’s books, and did collect the taxes extended on the books of said town, against persons residing within the incorporate limits of the town of Flora. These facts are admitted by the demurrer, and .they are equivalent to an averment .that the town was possessed of corporate powers. We next approach a question also raised by the demurrer, of greater difficulty, perhaps, and the main one involved in this controversy. Should the tax collected under and by virtue of the 2nd clause of the 81st section of the act in relation to roads and bridges in counties under township organization, in force July 1st, 1877, be paid to the treasurer of the commissioners of- highways; or should so much thereof as is raised from property existing within the corporate limits of towns and cities having charge of the improvement of bridges, streets and alleys therein, be paid over to the treasurer of such towns and cities? This question was raised and settled adversely to the position of the appellee in this case, in Baird v. The People, etc. 83 Ills. 387. And unless the law has undergone a change in this respect, the construction there given in the act then in force, will be decisive of the case before us. The act now in force is a complete revision of Ohap. 121, B. S. 1874, so far as relates to counties under township organization; and the first .and second clauses of Sec. 81 of the present act, with some changes, compose Secs. 16 and 120 respectively, of the former act. It is not urged that the second clause of Sec. 81 changes Sec. 120 of the old act, so as to hear materially upon the point raised. But it is insisted, in substance, that the changes made in Sec. 16, in forming the first clause of Sec. 81, and applying Sec. 84 of the present act, it then becomes manifest that the General Assembly designed to change the law as expounded in Baird’s case. To ascertain what force there is in this view, we give Sec. 16 and the first clause of sec. 81 in full:
Sec. 16. “ The commissioners of highways shall assess a road tax on all real and personal property liable to taxation of the town, to any amount they may deem necessary, not exceeding forty cents on each one hundred dollars worth, as valued on the assessment roll of the previous year: provided, that the tax on property lying within any incorporated village, town or city in which the streets and alleys are under the care of the corporation, shall be paid over to the treasurer of such village, town or city, to be appropriated to the improvement of roads, streets and bridges, under the direction of the corporate authorities.”
First clause § 81:
“ First. The commissioners of highways of each town shall annually ascertain, as near as practicable, how much money must be raised by tax on real and personal property for the making and repairing of roads only, to any amount they may deem necessary, not exceeding forty cents on the one hundred dollars’ worth, as valued by the assessment roll of the previous year, and certify the same as hereinafter provided: Provided, That the tax on the property levied for road purposes, lying within an incorporated village, town or city, in which the streets and alleys are under the care of the corporation, shall be paid over to the treasurer of such village, town or city, to be appropriated to the improvement of the roads, streets and bridges, either within or without said village, town or city, and within the township, under the direction of the corporate authorities of such village, town or city: Provided, further, that when any of said tax is expended beyond the limits of said village, town or city,- it shall be with the consent of the road commissioners of the township.”
The changes which we deem necessary to notice are that where § 16 provided for levying a “ road tax,” and that the tax on property lying within incorporated towns and cities should be paid to the treasurers of such towns and cities. The first clause of § 81 provides for raising a tax for the “ making and repairing roads only,” and that the tax on property levied for road purposes lying within an incorporated town or city * * * shall be paid to the treasurer of such town or city.” By an examination of our system for working and keeping in repair the public roads, as developed by past legislation, it will be found that the phraseologies “ road tax ” and a tax for “ making and repairing roads only,” are identical in scope and meaning, and have reference to the ordinary working and repairing of roads. This view is not combatted.
But it is strenuously contended that the expression for “road purposes,” has reference solely to the tax raised from property lying within the corporate limits of towns and cities, for the purpose of “ making and repairing roads only,” and therefore does not embrace any portion of the tax raised, by virtue of the 2nd clause of Sec. 81.
We have,reached, after a careful examination of this view, a different conclusion. If the General Assembly had only de-signed that the tax assessed for the “ making and repairing of roads only,” should be paid to towns and cities in which the property existed from which the tax was raised, we are unable to discover the least reason for the change of the language of section 16 of the act repealed by the law now in force. Words more apt than those there used to express such intention cannot be found. After requiring the commissioners of highways to assess a road tax on all the real and personal property in the town or city, this proviso follows: “Provided that the tax on property lying within an incorporated town or city * * * shall be paid over to the treasurer of such town or city.” As sections 16 and 120 of the former act were wholly independent of each other,, the only tax that could have been paid to the town or city treasurers, under the proviso of section 16, was that which was denominated “ a road tax,” in the first part of the section. In Baird’s case it was held that the tax raised under section 120 of the act, from property lying within incorporated towns and cities, should be paid to the treasurers of such-towns and cities, as well as that raised under section 16 of the act then in force. As already stated, these two sections in the order observed in the old act, are united in the present act and form one section, and provide for collecting taxes for the same purposes and from the same sources. Then the phraseology of the proviso in the first part of the section was altered so as to become more comprehensive than it was in the repealed act, in order to embrace the tax raised under both clauses of the section. The phrase “ the tax levied for road purposes,” includes all taxes collected for the payment of damages arising from opening and laying out new roads, the purchase of materials for constructing and repairing roads and bridges, and of machinery for working upon the same, as well as that assessed and collected for the “ making and repairing of roads only.”
“ A tax for the making and repairing of roads only,” is a part of the tax collected for “ road purposes,” and although the first expression, in an abstract sense, may be considered quite as comprehensive as the second, the legislature has seen proper to give it a more circumscribed meaning. The expression “for road purposes,” however, we hold comprehends every step towards the making and improving roads and bridges, as provided for in section 81, and it seems clear that the most comprehensive terms are used in the present act for the purpose of avoiding the necessity of judicial construction. Again, it seems, if the intention of the law-maker was that the taxes provided in the first and second clauses of section 81, should be paid respectively to the treasurers of towns and cities, and to the treasurers of the commissioners of highways, the law would have provided for a separate extension of such taxes on the tax hooks. But the whole of the tax to be collected under this section is certified in the aggregate by the supervisors to the county clerks, and they are required to extend such as one tax in a separate column against each tax-payer. There the collector pays over all the taxes collected for road purposes from property lying within incorporate towns and cities, to the treasurers thereof, and to the treasurers of the commissioners of highways all other taxes collected for road purposes. But by the construction placed upon the act by the appellee, the collector could not pay the money over, either to the treasurers of the commissioners of highways, Or to those of the towns and cities, as the law would afford him no means for making a division, and determining the relative proportion belonging to each.
The 82nd section of the present act provides that the taxes shall be extended and collected the same as state and county taxes, and the 84th section provides that the tax so collected shall be paid to the treasurer of the commissioners of highways (except as provided in the first clause of section 817, this act). What is the proviso of the first clause? Why, that all taxes collected from property lying within incorporated towns and cities for “ road purposes,” shall be paid over to the treasurers thereof.
In Baird v. The People, the court, in deciding the question, remark: “There is, it is true, in this an apparent incongruity, and it may be injustice, but we do not feel called upon to discuss either its wisdom or .justice, but leave these for the consideration of the legislature.”
It is doubtless difficult to distribute equally the burdens of creating and keeping up public highways between the citizens of towns and cities and those who are not, and we are unable to perceive that the construction for which the appellee contends, would produce less hardship and injustice than- the law as it was settled in this case. Perhaps to meet this view of the case the legislature so amended the former law by the present act, as to provide that the money collected and paid over to villages, cities and towns, might be expended on highways beyond, as well as within their corporate limits. The charter of the town of Flora imposes on it the duty of keeping up its streets and alleys, and exempts its citizens from performing labor on roads outside of its corporate limits, or paying any money therefor. The 166 Sec. Chap. 121, B. S. 1874, declares that in no town or city incorporated under general or special law, shall the citizens thereof be required to contribute labor or money, on property within the corporation, for the improvement of roads in the county, different from that required in the charter; but they are required to work and pay a tax to improve the streets and roads, and such improvements as are specified in the charter, or within the limits of the corporation, so long as the charter or incorporation shall remain in force. This section has been in force for more than thirty years, and it clearly shows that the settled policy of our State is not to impose upon the citizens of incorporated towns and cities the duty of maintaining the roads and highways without, as well as within such towns and cities. It is true that this rule may in some instances impose a seemingly unjust hardship upon the inhabitants of the town who do not reside within the corporate limits of towns and cities existing therein; but a contrary rule would in more instances create greater hardship and injustice to the citizens of towns and cities which are charged with the duty of keeping the streets and alleys thereof in repair. We think the Circuit Court erred in holding the appellants’ declaration insufficient in law, and in rendering judgment against them for costs. The judgment will he reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.