Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. v. People ex rel. Sterling

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The points for decision are, whether the court erred in permitting the certificate to be amended by the addition of the signatures of the said members of the board of education and the substitution of the words “board of education” for the word “directors,” and in holding the certificate, as amended, sufficient to uphold the levy and support a Judgment for unpaid taxes.

In Spring Valley Coal Co. v. People, 157 Ill. 543, we held evidence of the character introduced in the case at bar as to the mode, time and circumstances of the preparation of the certificate was competent to be received, and was sufficient to authorize the court to permit the certificate to be amended by the addition, at the time of the hearing, of the signatures of members of the board thereto, and to permit the certificate to be put in form by striking out the word “directors” and inserting the true name of the municipality. In Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. v. People ex rel. 171 Ill. 544, we held a similar amendment, correcting an error in the corporate name of the municipality, was properly permitted, and. also that the certificate might be properly amended by the addition of the official title of the persons signing the certificate, but held the certificate involved in that case, when so amended, was fatally defective in that, as amended, the certificate did not bear the names of a majority of the members of the board, and it was not made to appear that the certificate, as amended, had been authorized by the board.

In People ex rel. v. Smith, 149 Ill. 549, the certificate, when filed with the county clerk, had appended thereto the names of a minority, only, of the members of the board. The trial court refused to allow it to be amended by permitting other members of the board to sign the same at the time of the trial, and this ruling was affirmed by this court. Counsel for appellants construe this decision to hold that certificates defective when filed with the clerk because not signed by the requisite number of members of the board, cannot, under any circumstances, be amended and made good by the addition of the signatures of a requisite number of the members of the board. All that was held in that case was, that, under the circumstances of the case the certificate could not be in that manner amended. It did not there appear the members who-so desired to sign the certificate at the time of the trial were willing to have signed it when it was made, or that they had assented to the making of the certificate or participated in fixing and determining- the amount to be levied, for which reasons the addition of their signatures at the time would not be to do that which had been merely omitted, but to make at that time a new levy. In order the position of the court should be clearly understood it was there said (p. 555): “To have permitted the amendment proposed would not be to correct a mistake or omission of the municipal body levying the tax, or of its officers, but would have been to then make a valid levy. There is no showing or pretense that any other members of the board knew of or assented to the making of the certificate filed, or that a failure to sign the same was an omission or mistake on their part. Indeed, in the offer accompanying the proposed amendment it is not shown or pretended, or offered to be shown, that any member of the board, other than those signing it, would originally have done so had it been brought to their knowledge.” Permission to subscribe the names of the members at the time of the trial was denied because it did not appear from the proofs that the members of the board who desired to be permitted to attach their names to the certificate at the time of the trial had ever assented to the making of the •levy, or that the omission of their names from the certificate was the result of a mere neglect or default on their part to do that which the law required they should do, and which they were willing- to do but did not do through mistake or ignorance of their legal duty.

In the Spring Valley Coal Co. case, supra, wherein it was held competent to establish by oral testimony the facts, the absence whereof was pointed out in the case of People ex rel. v. Smith, supra, it was held the certificate was properly amended in view of such testimony, and in referring to the Smith case as not being in conflict with the ruling it was said: “It is to be noted that almost or quite everything that was so conspicuously absent in the Smith case is to be found in the record in this case.”

In the case at bar the members of the board who were allowed by the court to subscribe their names to the certificate were present and acting, in their official capacity, as members at the regular meeting of the board at which the amount necessary to be levied was officially ascertained and declared. They there assented thereto and were willing to sign the certificate, but omitted to do so only for the reason they did not understand it was necessary their names should appear to the certificate, but supposed the signatures of the president and secretary of the board fulfilled the requirements of the statute. -That which rendered the certificate insufficient was the mere neglect, default or omission of such members to perform an official duty. The substantial justice of the tax was not affected. The correction of such failures and omissions is clearly authorized by the provisions of section 191 of the Revenue act. The certificate, as amended, conformed to the requirements of the statute. The amendments related back to the time the certificate was signed by the president' and secretary of the board, and operated to render the certificate valid and effectual as from that time. (1 Ency. of PI. & Pr. p. 621.)

The judgment is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.