Board of Supervisors v. People ex rel. Commissioners of Highways

Mb. Justice Weight

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a petition against appellants for a peremptory writ of mandamus to require it to appropriate from the county treasury a sum sufficient to meet one-half of the expenses of a bridge over the Okaw river, in the town of Sullivan, Moultrie county, on condition that the town asking such aid shall furnish the other half of the required amount, in accordance with the provisions of section 19 of the act in regard to roads and bridges in counties under township organization.

The petition to the county board for aid by the commissioners, under the provisions of the statute to which we have referred; showed all the facts prescribed by law as prerequisite to the right to such aid, but the county board refused to make the -appropriation from the county treasury as the law required. After such.refusal by the county board the commissioners of highways, October 19, 1895, entered into a contract with the Indiana Bridge Company to build such bridge, and thereafter, ¡November 1, 1895, filed the present petition for mandamus. Appellant answered the petition, in which answer it relied upon the above stated fact, that the contract had been let for the bridge as precluding the right of the commissioners to thereafter require such appropriation, The court overruled a demurrer to the answer, and appellees abiding by their demurrer, judgment followed against them, from which judgment they appealed to this court where the judgment was reversed for reasons stated in the opinion reported in 71 Ill. App. 348, where it was said:

“ Plaintiffs in error stow, by their petition, that they have done all that was required of them by the statute when they applied to the county board for aid. It was not discretionary with the county board to grant or refuse the aid when the highway commissioners had done all that the statute required of them. The right to it accrued to the commissioners when they presented their petition on the 10th of September, 1895, and was not waived by their entering into the contract for construction with the bridge company. The amount of the appropriation to which they are entitled is one-half of the estimated cost, and not one-half of the contract price with the company.”

Since the cause was remanded to the trial court, appellant obtained leave to amend its answer, in which it is alleged concerning the making of the contract with the Indiana Bridge Company as before, with the additional averment that the bridge had been completed by such company and fully paid for by appellees. Replication was filed to the answer denying its averments, and issue being thus formed, a trial by jury resulted in finding that payment for the bridge had not been made in full and that there was still due on the bridge contract $732.66. After overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial the court gave judgment against it, awarding a peremptory writ of mandamus, by which it was required to appropriate $1,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary to aid in the construction of the bridge and for costs of suit, from which judgment appellant has appealed to this court.

To reverse such judgment it is insisted by counsel for appellant that when the county board refused to grant the appropriation, that it was required of the commissioners if they persisted in their demand for county aid, and before they could be entitled thereto, they should have performed, by themselves, without the co-operation of the supervisors, the provisions of the first and second provisos of the statute, which require all contracts to be made by the commissioners and three members of the board of supervisors, a majority vote of the commissioners and three supervisors being necessary to make any contract or incur any expense, and that all expenditures shall be made by said commissioners and supervisors, and the county board shall not be liable until all the work had been fully com pleted and accepted by said commissioners and supervisors and said facts properly certified to by said supervisors and presented to said county board at a meeting held after the completion of the work, which certificate shall contain an itemized account of the expenditures, and then, after the fulfillment of such requirements, should have made a second application to the count.y board.

We recognize neither force nor merit in this position. The requirement of the statute we have recited from the provisos of the section were intended by the legislature solely for the benefit of the county board, and where, by its own wrongful refusal to make the appropriation in the first instance, it rendered it legally impossible for these requirements to be met as contemplated by the law, it would seem an anomaly, if the party in default should be entitled to assert in a court of justice its own dereliction of duty as a defense, or to cast greater burden upon the person to whom such duty was due. It seems to us clear that the commissioners did all they were required to do. In truth they performed every requirement contained in the provisos, except to certify to the county board the specified facts, and it will be observed, this certificate is required to be made by the supervisors only, an act made impossible by the wrongful act of appellant. The commissioners were entitled to the appropriation when application was made to the county board, as we decided when the case was before us the first time, as may be seen from the quotation above made from our former opinion. By the wrongful refusal of the county board to make.such appropriation, the commissioners were forced to the alternative of abandoning the improvement, or constructing it according to the demands of public necessity, as they had already decided. They properly chose the latter, and no just reason is apparent why the county board should not also perform that which the law requires them to do.

The case of People ex rel. v. Supervisors, 110 Ill. 93, is relied upon by counsel for appellant as an authority to sustain their position. We do not understand that decision in the way it has been urged upon us. The bridge in that case was constructed by the town authorities and paid for out of funds provided by the town before any application was made to the county board for aid, and the court said : “ To have rendered the county liable, the commissioners should, on ascertaining the cost of the bridge, have applied to the county board for aid before proceeding to build the bridge. This the statute required.” This was what the commissioners did in the case presented, and the liability of the county thereby became fixed.

The judgment of the Circuit Court awarding the peremptory writ of mandamus will be affirmed.