178 Ill. 74 | Ill. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court:
The complaint the court erred in holding the special plea did not present a legal defense to the action involves the construction of certain provisions of the constitution and of certain statutes in relation to the power of the appellant town to incur indebtedness.
It is urged that under the provisions of section 12 of article 9 of the constitution of 1870 the town could not lawfully become bound for the payment of any indebtedness unless it should, before incurring such indebtedness, or at the time of doing so, have provided for the collection of a direct annual tax for the payment of such indebtedness. Said section 12 of the constitution is as follows: “No county, city, township, school district or other municipal corporation shall be allowed to become indebted, in any manner or for any purpose, to an amount, including existing indebtedness, in the aggregate exceeding five per centum on the 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. Any county, city, school district or other municipal corporation incurring any indebtedness as aforesaid, shall, before or at the time of doing so, provide for the collection of a direct annual tax sufficient to pay the interest on such debt as it falls due, and also to pay and discharge the principal thereof within twenty years from the time of contracting the same. This section shall not be construed to prevent any county, city, township, school district or other municipal corporation from issuing their bonds in compliance with any vote of the people which may have been had prior to the adoption of this constitution, in pursuance of any law providing therefor.”
While it may reasonably be insisted the words “any indebtedness,” employed in the construction of the second sentence of this section of the constitution, are broad enough, in general meaning, to include every species of indebtedness within the legal capacity of the appellant town to incur, yet the further reading of the sentence renders it manifest the annual tax required to be raised is only to be applied to the discharge of that character of indebtedness which does not fall due until a future time, and which bears interest. The constitutional intent is plain. It is to control towns with reference to that species or character of indebtedness the payment whereof has been deferred to a fixed time in the future, and which bears interest. As to such indebtedness the provision of the sentence is, the payment of the principal thereof shall not be deferred beyond a period of twenty years, and that before or at the time of contracting any such indebtedness the town shall provide for a direct annual tax sufficient to pay the interest as such interest falls due. If carried into full operation these requirements would have no application to current indebtedness or obligations of the town the payment of which had not been deferred to some fixed period and was not interest bearing. The true construction of the sentence therefore is, that the words “any indebtedness,” before referred to, mean any indebtedness of the character affected by the provisions of the sentence. The first sentence of the said section operates to prohibit a town from becoming in- . debted to an amount in the aggregate exceeding five per centum on the value of the taxable property within-its limits, as ascertained by the last assessment for State and county taxes. Within that limit debts within the lawful power of 'the town to incur may be contracted without providing for a direct annual tax, unless payment of such indebtedness is deferred to a fixed future period.
'Nor is it true that the town may not become lawfully indebted at a time when it has no money in its treasury and no tax then levied and in the course of collection. In such condition the town cannot draw warrants on its treasurer, for the issuing of warrants in that state of case is prohibited by sections 1 and 2 of chapter 146a. (Hurd’s Stat. 1889, p. 1393.) The law, however, charges upon towns such as the appellant corporation the performance of certain duties which involve the creation of obligations and indebtedness, and authorizes them to exercise powers which may result in the creation of legal demands against them. The performance of these duties may be imperative, and the exercise of such powers may be desirable and advisable at times when the treasury of the town is empty and when there is no tax in process of collection; yet the town may not for these reasons avoid the performance of the duties legally cast upon it, nor is it deprived of the right to exercise powers of which it is legally possessed. In such cases a town should discharge its legal duties, and may exercise its lawful powers unless so doing would necessitate expenditures in. an amount which, together with existing indebtedness of the town, would exceed the limitation imposed by the constitution. The restrictions of said sections 1 and 2 of chapter 146 a are upon the power of the town to draw warrants for the payment of money,—not upon its power to incur obligations and indebtedness.
Some of the items included in the amount of the judgment here sought to be reversed were for supplies of coal, etc., for the poor of the town. Section 15 of chapter 107 of the Revised Statutes, entitled “Paupers,” is as follows: “Every town in counties in which the poor are supported by the towns (as provided by law) shall relieve' and support all poor and indigent persons lawfully resident therein, except as herein otherwise provided.” A town having such duty to poor and indigent persons lawfully resting upon it could not refuse to discharge the duty upon the ground it had no money in its treasury and had no tax in course of collection, but, upon the contrary, should relieve and care for such poor and indigent persons, and in doing so may create obligations and indebtedness to enforce and collect which the aid of the courts of law may be successfully invoked. We are not aware of any provision of the statute which requires that a town, in such state of case, shall be authorized by a vote of the legal electors of the town to contract or incur indebtedness. That the aggregate indebtedness of the town shall not exceed the constitutional limitation is the only restriction upon the power of a town to become indebted to discharge such duties devolved upon it by law.
Upon the hearing of the case it appeared the appellee presented to the board of auditors of the appellant town, on the first day of April, 1898, accounts against the town in favor of divers persons, amounting in the aggregate to the amount of the judgment herein appealed from, and that the same were audited by the said board and found to be correct, and a warrant for that amount was ordered to be drawn, and was drawn, in favor of the appellee upon the treasurer of the said town for the payment thereof. There was then no money in the treasury and tlieje was no tax in the course of collection, and for those reasons the warrant was void. It was stipulated between the parties that the fact that the total of appellee’s claim was made up of demands of other persons against the town transferred to him should not be considered, but that the appellee should be conceded to be entitled to recover if the original holder of the claim could have recovered. The warrant was offered and received in evidence, but the appellee did not rely upon it as legal evidence of indebtedness, but introduced the record kept by the board of auditors showing that various accounts and demands against the town, which constituted, in the aggregate, the amount the warrant professed to order to be paid, were presented to the board of auditors and found to be correct and audited by the board as just demands against the town, and that the total therefor was due and payable to appellee. The record of these proceedings of the board was offered as evidence of an accounting, and was accepted by the court as sufficient to sustain a rig'ht of recovery under the count of the declaration averring liability by reason of an accounting between the parties.
The statute requires the board of auditors shall make a certificate specifying the nature and amount of all claims and demands allowed at each meeting of the board, and shall deliver such certificate to the town clerk, to be kept on file by said clerk “for the inspection of any of the inhabitants of such town.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1889, par. 124, chap. 139, entitled “Township Organization.”) It seems such certificate was not made in this instance. Appellant contends the certificate so required is the only legal evidence of the action of the board. This is a misapprehension. The purpose to be served by this certificate is to furnish information to the inhabitants of the town as to the indebtedness of the town. Paragraph 126 a of said chapter 139 provides that a record of the proceedings of the board of town auditors shall be kept in a book to be provided for that purpose. This record constitutes the best evidence as to the proceedings of the board, and it was produced before the court. It established prima facie an accounting between the parties. We find no evidence in the record tending to overcome the prima facie case thus made by appellee.
It appeared some of the demands included in the amount audited by the board in favor of the appellee were for coal, and perhaps other supplies, furnished to poor and indigent persons in the town. The third proposition presented by the appellant to be held as the law applicable to such demands was refused by the court. This action of the court is assigned as for error. The contention of the appellant upon the point is stated in the brief in its behalf as follows: “The third proposition presents the question whether the overseer of the poor can bind the town by giving orders to persons who do not come within the description of ‘poor persons,’ as defined by the Pauper act of this State. Our position is, that when a party seeks to obtain a judgment against a town for goods furnished to residents therein he must show that the goods were furnished to such persons as the law contemplates are proper subjects for public support.”
In the county of Kankakee, which embraces the appellant town, the duty of providing for the poor rests upon the various towns. Section 1 of chapter 107 of the Revised Statutes, entitled “Paupers,” provides that every poor person who shall be unable to earn a livelihood on account of idiocy, lunacy or other unavoidable cause shall be supported by certain specified relatives in order as stated; but section 20 of the same act provides the overseers of the poor shall have the care and oversight of all such persons in their towns as are unable to earn a livelihood in consequence of any bodily infirmity, idiocy, lunacy or other unavoidable cause, Und as are not supported by their relatives or at the county poor house, and shall see they are suitably relieved, subject to such restrictions and regulations as may be prescribed by the town. The overseer cannot refuse to fulfill the duties thus cast upon him upon the ground the unfortunate person entitled to assistance has relatives who are liable, under the first section of the chapter, to provide and care for them. Section 3 of the same chapter makes it the duty of the State’s attorney to enforce performance by such relatives of the duty cast upon them by law to assist such poor or indigent persons, and the succeeding sections, to and including section 12, direct in detail the course of procedure in the courts against such relatives and the manner of enforcing their obligation to their unfortunate poor kinsmen. The necessities of the unfortunate class designed to be relieved by the law do not, however, admit of delay. Pain and suffering must be relieved; food, fuel, clothing and shelter must be furnished to those in need; the dead must be buried. Prompt relief is imperative, and the overseer of the, poor may not await the action of the State’s attorney and the termination of proceedings in court, but, as the representative of the town, must care for those who are so unfortunate as to be entitled to assistance from the public. The express provisions of section 20 make it the duty of such overseer to relieve the wants of those who fall within the legal denomination of paupers, and “as are not supported by their relatives or at the county poor house.” If there be no funds for the purpose, the overseer must, of necessity, have power to pledge the credit of the town in that behalf, and may procure supplies for such poor persons from merchants, grocers and tradesmen, who, in the absence of fraud or actual knowledge to the contrary, may deliver such supplies upon the order of the overseer and hold the town liable therefor without being required to show that such person so receiving support was in fact actually entitled thereto. It is the official duty of the overseer to determine as to that, and his action must conclude the town, so far as those who in good'faith furnish supplies upon the faith of it are concerned. Board of Supervisors v. Plant, 42 Ill. 325.
The special plea did not present a good defense to the action, nor did the court err in ruling as to the admissibility of evidence or as to the rules of law applicable to the case.
The evidence supported the finding and judgment of the court. The’judgment must be and is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Magruder, dissenting.