delivered the opinion of the court:
The only errors alleged necessary to be considered are those assigned on the rulings of the court below in sustaining the demurrer of the plaintiffs below to the defendants’ special pleas, and in giving to the jury certain instructions on behalf of the plaintiffs and in refusing others asked by the defendants. It is not disputed that plaintiffs in error removed the bridge and widened and deepened the creek where the bridge crossed the same, and thereby rendered said bridge useless as a bridge over said creek; but if they did nothing more in the premises than what they were authorized to do by law as the corporate authorities of .the drainage district, they were not liable and the rulings of the court were erroneous.
We have been favored with able briefs and arguments by counsel, which we have carefully considered.
The principal question for us to consider is whether section 55, and especially the third proviso to it, of the Drainage and Levee act, approved and in force May 29, 1879, as amended in 1885, is constitutional or not. Said amended section 55 provides, in effect, that when any ditch, drain or levee will benefit any public or corporate road or railroad, the commissioners shall apportion to the county, State or free turnpike road, to the township if a township road, to a company if a corporate road or railroad, “such portions of the cost and expenses thereof as to private individuals,” and in case such apportionment is resisted the matter shall be submitted to the jury. The first proviso to the section authorizes the drainage commissioners and “the corporate authorities of the county, State or free turnpike, township road, corporate road, or railroad, or any of them,” to stipulate as to the amount of such benefits. The second proviso is, “that the amount so assessed against any railroad company or private corporation shall”, become a lien, and provides for the collection and for the payment of assessments against public corporations. The third proviso to the section is as follows: “And, provided, further, that the sum assessed against either of said corporations shall not include the expense of constructing, erecting or repairing any bridge, embankment or grade, culvert or other work of' the roads of such corporations, crossing any ditch or drain constructed on the line of any natural depression, channel or water-course; but the corporate authorities of such road or railroad are hereby required, at their own expense, to construct such bridge, culvert, or other work, or to re-place any bridge or culvert temporarily removed by the commissioners in doing the work of such district. Pull power and authority are hereby given the drainage commissioners to remove such bridges or culverts for the purposes aforesaid, if they, in their judgment, find it necessary.” (Hurd’s Stat. 1899, p. 682.)
The first contention made by defendants in error is, that the third proviso does not include public highways or public corporations having control of public roads, because, as it is said, the' second proviso relates only to railroad corporations and to private corporations, and that the third proviso, immediately following it, by its terms referring, as it does, to “either of said corporations,” limits its application to the corporations mentioned in the second proviso. We cannot agree to such a construction of the statute. Public corporations are specifically referred to in the principal part of the section and in the first proviso, and townships in the second, and they are separately mentioned in the second proviso because the effect of the judgment and manner of collection against the different kinds of corporations' are not the same. A lien and execution are provided for to enforce collection of judgments against railroad companies and the owners of private roads, but other methods are necessary to enforce payment against municipal or quasi municipal corporations. The grammatical construction would have been better if instead of “either” of said corporations the term “any one” had been used, but the legal construction of the statute cannot be controlled by such considerations when its true meaning otherwise appears from the context. We are of the opinion that the third proviso relates to all the different kinds of corporations mentioned in the section.
We need not inquire, and do not therefore decide, whether the legislature has the power to require private corporations to construct or re-place, at their own expense, bridges belonging to them, temporarily removed by drainage commissioners in prosecuting the work of enlarging a natural stream or water-course for drainage purposes, for the question involved in this case relates only to the power of the legislature to authorize the corporate authorities of drainage districts to remove bridges over streams crossing public highways, when necessary for drainage purposes, without paying to the public road authorities damages for such removal.
By the amendment adopted in 1878, and incorporated in the constitution as section 31 of article 4, it is provided: “The General Assembly may pass laws permitting the owners of lands to construct drains, ditches and levees for agricultural, sanitary or mining purposes, across the lands of others, and provide for the organization of drainage districts and vest the corporate authorities thereof with power to construct and maintain levees, drains and ditches, and to keep in repair all drains, ditches and levees heretofore constructed under the laws of this State, by special assessments upon the property benefited thereby.” Under this amendment to the constitution the statute in question was enacted. Its constitutionality as a whole is not denied, nor, as we understand counsel, is it denied that the legislature has the power to include public highways in drainage districts, and to authorize the commissioners of such districts to cut ditches and to enlarge water-courses across such highways when necessary for drainage purposes, and to apportion to the road authorities, according to benefits, their due proportion of the cost and expense of the drainage work, but the position taken by counsel for defendants in error, and which was sustained by the circuit court, is, in effect, that the drainage authorities must pay all damages to the public road authorities caused by the removal of the bridge, made necessary in order to widen and deepen the channel of the creek across the highway, and that so much of said proviso as purports to authorize such commissioners to remove any such bridge without payment of damages or requiring its re-placement violates the constitution, and that the commissioners, having proceeded without lawful authority, are personally liable in trespass for such damages. It is not contended that the drainage district was not duly organized, nor that the commissioners were not duly appointed as such. Some contention is made, however, that the bridge was not in the district; but we think the evidence was sufficient to authorize a finding that it was situated in the district.
The proviso in question is similar to, but not identical with, section 40} of the act of June 27, 1885, providing for drainage for agricultural and sanitary purposes, one difference being that said section 40} authorizes the drainage commissioners to build all necessary bridges along or across any public highway which may be deemed necessary for the use or protection of the work, the cost to be paid out of the road and bridge tax. (Hurd’s Stat. 1899, p. 697.) Said section 55 does not authorize drainage commissioners proceeding under the drainage and levee act, to construct or re-place bridges across ditches or streams and to collect the cost from the public road authorities, but leaves such work to be done by the road authorities themselves.
It is claimed that said proviso is in conflict with section 13 of article 2 of the constitution, which provides: “Private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation. Such compensation, when not made by the State, shall be ascertained by a jury, as shall be prescribed by law.” We are unable to see that this constitutional provision relates in any way to the question in controversy. The bridge in question in this case was not private property, but belonged to the public. In no legal sense can it be said that roads and bridges in counties are private property. Counties are but political subdivisions of the State, and are subject to the full 'Control of the State acting through the legislature by general law, and the property they hold is not private but is public property. In Harris v. Board of Supervisors, 105 Ill. 445, this court said (p. 451): “Counties are mere political divisions of the territory of the State, as a convenient mode of exercising the political, executive and judicial powers of the State. They were created to perform public, and not private, functions. They are wholly public in their character, and are a portion of the State organization. All their.powers are conferred, and duties imposed, by the constitution and statutes of the State. They are public, and all the property they hold is for public use. It belongs to the public, and the county is but the agent invested with the title, to be held for the. public. * * * The property held by the county was only acquired and held by authority conferred by the legislature, and for public use, and the property being held for the public is under the uncontrolled power of the General Assembly, as it is not inhibited in its absolute control. The county could neither hold nor dispose of property unless authorized by the constitution or statute, and the legislature has the power to sell or dispose of it without the consent of the county authorities.” See, also, People v. Power, 25 Ill. 169, Wetherell v. Devine, 116 id. 631, and Marion County v. Lear, 108 id. 343. In the latter case this court said (p. 349): “A county is a public corporation, which exists only for public purposes connected with the administration of the State government, and it and its revenues are alike, where no express constitutional restriction is found to the contrary, subject to legislative control.”
Such being the law, it is clear that the constitutional provision invoked has no application to this case, and that the legislature has full power to authorize another public corporation to remove a public bridge over a stream which runs across a public highway without compensation, although such bridge may have been constructed by the county. Defendants in error, Morgan and Cass counties, are without township organization, and they claimed to own and have control of the bridge which the drainage commissioners removed. Had the bridge been destroyed by fire or had no bridge been built there, and the drainage commissioners had then widened the channel of the creek, it could not be contended that it would be their duty to construct a bridge. The rule would be the same if they removed the bridge by authority of law. In the case at bar the commissioners of the drainage district had the lawful power to widen and deepen the stream for drainage purposes, and it appears that they could not do this without removing the bridge. In other words, the removal of the bridge was necessary for the proper performance of the work for which they were appointed and for which the drainage district was organized, and it is difficult to see how the statutory provision authorizing them to-remove the bridge, which was public property subject to the control and disposition of the legislature, could be in conflict with this provision'of the constitution. As we have seen, the legislature has the power to provide by law for the construction, control and disposition of public bridges or other public structures, and we see no reason why the law-making power may not subject public property to more than one kind of public use, and if it becomes necessary for a public purpose to widen a stream, so that it becomes necessary to build a new and greater bridge to enable the public to pass over on the public highway, the constitution is not violated by requiring the public road authorities to construct it.
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It is, however, contended that the proviso undertakes to authorize the destruction or damaging of the property of these counties for the mere private benefit of the individual land owners who were seeking, by the agency of the drainage district, to re-claim their lands. We can not hold that the drainage of lands for agricultural and sanitary purposes by means of organized corporate districts is for private purposes only. Since the amendment to the constitution adopted in 1878 we have held that corporations formed for drainage purposes are public corporations. In Elmore v. Drainage Comrs. 135 Ill. 269, it was said (p. 275): “It will be noted that both the amendment and the act require that the objects to be. effectuated by the drainage districts, contemplated by them, were to be accomplished with funds raised ‘by special assessment upon the property benefited thereby.’ The power to make special assessments is referable to and included within the taxing power. * * * And one of the requisites of lawful taxation is, that the purpose for which contributions are demanded shall be public in their nature. * * * It is insisted that * * * the formation of the district was the voluntary, affirmative act of the land owners, and that its organization was for their benefit, and that, therefore, the corporation is, in its character and aims, essentially a private corporation, and in no sense a corporation in invitum. * * * As matter of course, the organization is, in part, for the benefit of the land owners in the district, for the special assessments which may be made are limited to the property actually benefited, and further limited to the extent of such benefits; but, as we have already seen, there is also a public benefit, and it is only by virtue of the drainage being a matter of public importance that the involuntary land owner can be taxed for the improvement. The conclusion must be, that a drainage district formed under the statute in force July 1, 1879, is not a private corporation, but is a public corporation.” See, also, Board of Supervisors v. People ex rel. 110 Ill. 511.
But counsel insist, also, that this proviso violates sections 9 and 10 of article 9 of the constitution. So much of section 9 as might be supposed to affect the question provides that all municipal corporations may be vested with authority to assess and collect taxes for corporate purposes, but such taxes shall be uniform in respect to persons and property within the jurisdiction of the body imposing the same. Section 10 is as follows: “The General Assembly shall not impose taxes upon municipal corporations, or the inhabitants or property thereof, for corporate purposes, but shall require that all the taxable property within the limits of municipal corporations shall be taxed for the payment of debts contracted under authority of law, such taxes to be uniform in respect to persons and property, within the jurisdiction of the body imposing the same. Private property shall not be liable to be taken or sold for the payment of the corporate debts of a municipal corporation.”
Assuming that counties are included in “municipal corporations” mentioned in these sections, still so much of this proviso as authorizes the drainage commissioners to remove a public bridge in cases like the one we are considering, without requiring them to re-place the bridge or to build a new one, is not in conflict with said sections 9 and 10 of the constitution. These drainage commissioners did not, in removing the bridge, levy any tax on the county or upon its inhabitants. Nor did they thereby create any debt against the county, but merely removed a public bridge from- a public highway by authority of a public law; and even if the legislature did not have the power to compel the county to build another, it would not follow that it had no power to authorize the removal of the old bridge by a public corporation engaged in a work of a public character. We are of the opinion that no provision of the constitution deprives the General Assembly of the power to determine which of these public corporations should pay for the construction of a new bridge. Public highways, and bridges on them, do not belong to the counties or towns which construct them, but are held by them in trust for the entire public. (Elliott on Roads and Streets, 34.) Public corporations, like counties and towns, being subdivisions of the State for governmental purposes, are really a part of the State government, and their authorities are charged with certain duties, which may be changed, enlarged or diminished by the General Assembly by general law, subject, of course, to any restriction imposed by the constitution. The legislature has all the power of the people not denied to it by the State or Federal constitution, and a statute cannot be declared invalid because it may appear merely to be unjust or inexpedient.
We cannot agree to the proposition that to deny the right of action in this case would be to allow a corporate body npt the corporate authorities of the counties in question to impose taxes on them without their consent, or to authorize the General Assembly to impose taxes on these counties and their inhabitants for corporate purposes, in violation of said sections 9 and 10 of the constitution. In Board of Supervisors v. People ex rel. 110 Ill. 511, we held that the raising of money by taxation in towns and counties under a general law, for building bridges and maintaining highways, and purposes of a similar character in which the people of the State at large are interested, is not, within the meaning of the constitution, the levying of a tax for strictly a local corporate purpose; that a town, in levying taxes for such a purpose, is in a large sense an agency of the State in carrying into effect general laws which have been enacted for the common good; that such towns are a part of the general machinery of the State and county governments. The public highways are of general concern to the people of the whole State, (Cooley on Taxation, 478,) and in the case cited it was decided that the provisions of the constitution quoted were not violated by the statute requiring counties to pay one-half the cost of building a bridge, where the town had provided for the other half and had brought itself within the provisions of the statute, and mandamus was awarded against the board of supervisors of the county in favor of the People, on the relation of the commissioners of highways of the town, commanding said board to levy the tax. It was further said in that case that the commissioners of highways in such a case do not levy the tax on the tax-payers of the county, but only perform the duties required of them by the statute on behalf of the county as well as the town. See, also, Wetherell v. Devine, 116 Ill. 631, and Wilson v. Board of Trustees, 133 id. 443.
Counsel make the further point that the drainage amendment to the constitution expressly provides that the cost of the drainage work shall be paid for by special taxation upon the property benefitedi thereby, and that it is a necessary implication that a county or a town cannot be compelled to levy a general tax to pay for the building of a bridge on a public highway, rendered necessary by the work of the drainage commissioners. We do not understand that by effect of this statute any part of the cost of the drainage work is imposed on the county, nor is any part of its revenues disposed of for the benefit of the drainage district. The cost of removing the bridge was a part of the cost of the drainage work, and that was paid by such district out of its fund derived from special, assessment on the lands benefited. But it does not appear that the building of a new bridge was of any special benefit in draining the lands of the district. It was of general benefit to the public, and the cost of it might well be required to be paid out of the public revenues of the county. The General Assembly, representing the public, has so provided, and we have no doubt it had the necessary power. The suit was not brought to recover the value of the bridg'e removed and thereby rendered useless, but for the cost of building a new and larger one. But if it had been, it was, as before said, public property and subject to control and disposition of the law-making power, and the loss was damnum absque injuria.
Inasmuch as the rulings of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to the special pleas and in instructing the jury were contrary to our views of the law, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Cartwright, Boggs and Hand, JJ., dissenting.