People ex rel. Tarman v. Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western Railway Co.

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county court of Clark county overruled objections of the appellant, the Cincinnati, Indianapolis-and Western Railway Company, to the application for judgment against its property for a hard road tax of $308.24 in the town of Casey. The court entered judgment with order of sale, and the appellant prosecuted this appeal.

The- first complaint of appellant is that the proof of publication of notice that application for judgment would be made was insufficient. The law provides for giving notice by publication for the purpose of giving to the court jurisdiction of the person of the owner against whose property judgment is to be asked, and where the owner appears and submits to the jurisdiction it is immaterial whether a notice was published or what it was. The appellant appeared in the county court and filed objections going to the merits and contested the validity of the tax, so that all defects, if there were any, in the notice or proof of publication were waived. People v. Cairo, Vincennes and Chicago Railway Co. 243 Ill. 217; People v. Dragstran, 100 id. 286; People v. Scheifley, 252 id. 486.

The town clerk received a petition praying for an election to vote on the question of levying a special tax of ninety cents on each $100 assessed valuation of all taxable property in the township for the period of five years, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining gravel or rock roads on three different roads particularly described in the petition. Afterward another petition was delivered to the town clerk asking that an election be held to vote on the question of levying a special tax, at the same rate of ninety cents on each $100 assessed valuation of taxable property, for the purpose of constructing and maintaining gravel or rock roads on two other roads described in that petition. The town clerk gave notice that a vote would be taken at the annual town election on April 4, 1911, on the proposition to levy a tax, and included in the notice bpth these petitions. At the election the ballot contained the names of candidates for town offices and a proposition whether the town would continue to be anti-saloon territory, after which the following appeared:

For levying a tax at the rate of ninety (90) cents on each one hundred dollars of the assessed valuation of all the taxable property including railroads in said township for the period of five years for the purpose of constructing and maintaining gravel or rock roads.
Against levying a tax at the rate of ninety (90) cents on each one hundred dollars of the assessed valuation of all the taxable property including railroads in said township for the period of five years for the purpose of constructing and maintaining rock roads.
□ Petition No. 1. (A description of the three roads contained in that petition, which is omitted here.)
□ Petition No. 2. (A description of the roads contained in the second petition,' which is also omitted here.)

A majority of the ballots contained crosses in the square opposite the proposition for levying the tax, and there were more crosses in the square opposite “Petition No. 2” than in the square opposite “Petition No. 1.” The town clerk certified to the county clerk a special tax of ninety cents on each $100 assessed valuation of property, including both petitions, and instead of certifying the levy for gravel or rock roads, according to the petitions, the levy was for rock roads alone.

The statute authorizes the levy of a tax not exceeding one dollar on each one hundred dollars assessed valuation of all taxable property in a town, and the total tax can not exceed that rate. (People v. Cincinnati, Lafayette and Chicago Railway Co. 247 Ill. 446; People v. Cairo, Vincennes and Chicago Railway Co. 252 id. 329.) The limitation cannot be avoided in any manner, and the town clerk having, received a petition for a levy of ninety cents could not afterward lawfully receive another petition for a levy of ninety cents, which would exceed the statutory limit. Counsel are agreed that the second petition was unauthorized and the town clerk ought not to have received it, but they disagree as to the effect of its being received and placed on the notice and ballot. The statute requires the petition to contain a description of the road to be improved, but there is no provision of law for placing the contents of a petition on a ballot. The petition in the clerk’s office is the source of information concerning the road or roads to be improved, (Chicago and Iowa Railroad Co. v. Pinckney, 74 Ill. 277,) and the statute gives the form of the ballot, without any description of a road or the contents of the petition. On this ground it is argued that the second petition as it appeared on the ballot is to be rejected as mere surplusage, and that, the second peti-tion being illegal, the election was carried for the improvement of the roads named in the first petition. It could only be so rejected if it had no influence on the election and the result clearly showed that it was disregarded by the voters. Manifestly that is not so, because the greater number of those who voted for the tax specified that they were voting in favor of the proposition contained in the second and illegal petition. A majority of those who were in favor of levying a special tax voted to expend it on the roads described in the second petition, and as no money can be expended on those roads the will of the majority of the voters would be defeated by rejecting that part of the ballot as surplusage. It cannot be said that a majority of voters would have voted for the tax to be expended upon the roads described in petition No. i, but it is likely that many voters, if they had been aware that the tax was to be expended upon those roads, would not have voted for it, At any rate they did not vote to expend the money there, and the election was invalid.

The proposition was for a tax for the construction of gravel or rock roads, leaving the choice of materials to be determined by the highway commissioners. (People v. Kankakee and Seneca Railroad Co, 248 Ill. 114.) The levy was certified for rock roads¿ depriving the commissioners of any discretion, which was contrary to the intent of the law.

The court'rendered judgment against the property of the appellant in Clark county and did not limit the judgment to its property within the town of Casey. The only property subjéct to the tax was that located in the town, and it is not a satisfactory answer to the objection to say that the payment of a tax on property not subject to it will relieve property that is subject to the tax.

The appellant paid the tax levied for one year by virtue of the election, and it is contended that it thereby acquiesced, in some way, in the validity of the tax and could not afterward object to it.. The tax for each year is a separate tax, and there is no element of estoppel in the payment of a tax for one year which would preclude appellant from objecting to a similar tax the following year.

The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded, with directions to sustain the objection that the election did not authorize the tax.

Reversed and remanded, with directions.