Gorman v. Tidholm

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

Hone of the defendants to the bill except appellant has appealed from the injunction order, so it may be assumed that, of all the defendants, he only objects to the order. The specific assignments of error are, that the court exceeded its' jurisdiction in making the order, and that there is no evidence to support the order. Appellant’s counsel contend that the bill is insufficient in that it does not allege fraud on the part of the officers. The bill is filed by a resident-taxpayer of the town to enjoin the illegal appropriation and threatened expenditure by the town officer of town money raised by taxation for purposes unauthorized by law, thus increasing the burdens of the taxpayers of the town. If municipal or quasi municipal officers are about to expend public money raised by taxation for a purpose or purposes unauthorized by law, this itself is a threatened fraud on the taxpayers, and a court of equity, at the suit of a taxpayer, has ample jurisdiction to enjoin the threatened unlawful expenditure. City of Chicago v. Nichols, 177 Ill. 97: McCord v. Pike, 121 Ib. 288; Colton v. Hanchett, 13 Ib. 615.

The question to be determined is, whether the bill is sufficient to warrant the order appealed from, and, for the purpose of determining this question, the facts averred in the bill, in so far as they are well pleaded, must be assumed to be true. It is averred that the town board of auditors adopted a resolution and entered the same on their record, fixing the sum of $11,500 as the amount authorized to be paid to Martin J. Murphy, the collector, including rent, stationery, etc., for the year 1900 and 1901; and it is also averred that no office rent was paid by the collector; that the office used by him was furnished free of rent by the county treasurer, and that the collector’s legitimate expenses wrnre not such as to require the expenditure of so large a sum, etc. It is clear that if the collector paid no office rent, an office having been furnished him rent free, an allowance to him for office rent by the auditing board was unlawful, and the payment of such allowance would be an unlawful expenditure.

It is averred that the board of auditors has, by said resolution, fixed the sum of $10,000 as the amount which the supervisor was authorized to pay for salaries to Murphy, collector, Gorman, supervisor, and Sraolka, clerk, and that said amount is in excess of that authorized by law.

.The statute in relation to the compensation of the supervisor and town clerk is as follows:

“ The town clerk and supervisor shall receive for their services two and a half dollars per day when attending to town business out of town; one dollar and fifty cents for town business in their town. Provided, that the town clerk shall receive fees, and nota per diem, for the following services:
For serving notices of election upon town officers, as required by law, twenty-five cents éach.
For filing any paper required by law to be filed in his office, ten cents each.
For posting up notices required by law, twenty-five cents each.
For recording any order or instrument of writing authorized by law, eight cents for each one hundred words.
For copying any record in his office and certifying to the same, eight cents for every one hundred words, to be paid by the person applying for the same.
For copying by-laws for posting or publication, eight cents for each one hundred words, to be paid by the town.” Hurd’s Rev. Stat. 1899, p. 1716.

Even if the supervisor and town clerk attended to town business 300 days in the year out of town, their combined salaries would be only §1,500. .

The compensation of the town collector is fixed by statute as follows:

“ Each town or district collector shall be allowed a commission of two per cent on all moneys collected bv him, to be paid out of the respective funds collected: Provided, that in any case where the compensation so allowed shall be insufficient, the town or county board may allow an additional compensation or per diem, in lieu of other or greater commissions, in which case said additional com pensation shall be paid out of the town or county treasury, as the case may require. And, provided, further, that all excess of commissions and fees over fifteen hundred dollars shall be paid into the town or district treasury.” Hurd’s Rev. Stat., 1899, p. 888.

It is contended by appellant’s counsel that this provision of the statute does not limit the compensation of the collector to $1,500. We think it plain that the total compensation of the collector for bis personal services is limited by the provision quoted to $1,500. Therefore, the combined salaries of the supervisor, clerk and collector, even on the unreasonable hypothesis that the supervisor and clerk should attend to town business out of town for 300 days in the year, would be only $3,000. Yet their combined salaries are fixed by the auditing board at the sum of $10,000, and that amount is threatened to be paid on account of their salaries. The fact that the board fixed the salaries at that amount is pretty good evidence that the board will order that amount to be paid unless enjoined.

The remainder of the resolution of the board is that fixing the sum of $1,800 as the amount to be paid to the attorney, and the sum. of §900 as the amount to be paid to one James J. ¡McUarney for rent of township offices. As we construe the order of injunction, it (except perhaps in a single instance hereinafter mentioned) merely enjoins the board of auditors from allowing expenditures in excess of such as are lawful. In this respect it merely enjoins expenditures impliedly prohibited by law. For instance, the statute fixes the compensation of the supervisor, of the town clerk and the collector, and thereby impliedly prohibits compensation additional to that so fixed. The injunction order enjoins the auditing board from allowing for salaries to the supervisor, the collector and the clerk, the sum of $10,000, or any part thereof, except to the collector, the sum of $1,500 being the maximum sum allowed him by statute, etc. In the case of the attorney, it enjoins the payment of $1,800, or any part thereof, except sums shown to have been legally and necessarily incurred. If the attorney was employed at a reasonable salary, regularly and fairly fixed by agreement between him and the town, acting by the proper officer or officers, the injunction leaves the board free to pay such salary, or if no salary was agreed on, and the attorney has been regularly employed to perform and has performed services for the town, the board is left free by the injunction to audit and order paid a bill for the reasonable value of such services.

As to the rent for town offices, the injunction leaves the board free to audit and pay, as rent, the reasonable value of the rented premises. If the premises were necessary for a town office and were fairly and regularly rented at an agreed rental for town offices, the injunction, as we think, leaves the board free to audit and order paid a fair bill for the agreed rent unpaid.

The injunction, as to the supervisor and the clerk, contains this language : “ And to Al. F. Gorman, supervisor, and John W. Smolka, clerk,the maximum sum allowed by law far diem to be paid to supervisors or clerks, respectively, for each day necessarily devoted by them, or either of them, severally, to the service of the town, attending to its business.” This excludes from the clerk’s compensation the fees allowed by section 1, article 15 of the statute, in addition to the per diem compensation. Hurd’s Stat. 1899, p. 1716.

The injunction, therefore, should be modified in this respect.

Had the defendants filed an answer to the bill and affidavits in support thereof, and moved for a dissolution of the injunction, as they had a right to do, and as we think they should have done, the matter being a public one requiring speedy determination, all the questions involved could have been fully presented to the chancellor and perhaps satisfactorily determined. It may be that this course was prevented by the appeal of the supervisor, who seems to have no personal interest in the matter, except so far as his own salary is concerned, and that is fixed by the statute.

The order will be affirmed except in so far as it enjoins the board of town auditors from auditing, or allowing to the town clerk any more than the maximum sum per diem allowed him by law, with directions to so modify the order as to permit the board of town auditors to audit and allow to said clerk the fees allowed by law to be paid by the town, and earned by him, in addition to the maximum per diem allowed by law for each day devoted by him to attending to the town business. Appellant to pay the costs of this court. Affirmed, with directions.