Aldrich v. Harding

172 N.E. 772, 340 Ill. 354
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1930
DocketNos. 19295, 19285. Decrees affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 172 N.E. 772 (Aldrich v. Harding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aldrich v. Harding, 172 N.E. 772, 340 Ill. 354 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

Frederick C. Aldrich, trustee, filed a bill in the circuit court of Cook county against George F. Harding, county treasurer and ex-officio county collector of Cook county, to enjoin the collection of taxes for 1927 on certain real estate of the complainant in Cook county. A demurrer to the bill was overruled, and the defendant having elected to stand by it, a decree was entered granting the relief prayed for, and the defendant has appealed.

The bill alleged that the complainant in 1927, the year of the quadrennial assessment of real estate, and for some years before, was the owner of the real estate in question, consisting of 13.6 acres of vacant land at Homan avenue and Thirty-first street, in Chicago, and contained the following allegations:

For many years the taxing authorities of the State of Illinois generally have disregarded the provisions of the statutes which require an assessment to be based upon the full, fair cash value of property, and have deliberately and intentionally valued real property for purposes of assessment at less than its full value. In 1919 the State Tax Commission raised the valuations in all counties where the value was fixed by the local assessor at less than 40 per cent and lowered it in all counties where the valuation was higher than 50 per cent of the cash value, by adding or deducting a per cent for equalization that would bring the equalized value of lands in the several counties to a valuation between 40 and 50 per cent of the fair cash value of the lands in each county, and since that time the average valuation for purposes of assessment of real property throughout the State of Illinois outside of Cook county has been about 40 per cent of full value and in the year 1927 remained at substantially 40 per cent of full value. The board of assessors and board of review of Cook county, Illinois, in the year 1927 and for many years prior, have likewise deliberately and intentionally failed to value real estate for purposes of assessment at its fair cash value but have deliberately and arbitrarily assessed it at less than its fair cash value. Some of the real property in Cook county is now assessed at less than five per cent of its fair cash value and other real property at more than 150 per cent of its fair cash value. These differences in valuation and assessment of real property do not arise as the result of the exercise of any honest judgment but are the result of an arbitrary and willful placing of values by the board of assessors and the board of review. In 1927 the assessed valuation of real property in Cook county outside of Chicago averaged approximately 25 per cent of the full value. The average assessed valuation in Chicago in 1923 was 34.5 per cent; in 1924, 31.9 per cent; in 1925, 31.2 per cent; in 1926, 31.3 per cent; in 1927, 35.9 per cent of full value.

There is no uniform assessment or valuation of real property in Cook county or Chicago. In 1927, in the towns in the county outside of Chicago, the town assessors made a valuation of the property within their respective towns and assessed such property on the basis of 15 to 30 per cent of full value, the average being 25 per cent. In Chicago, outside of the down-town district, it is the practice of the board of assessors to divide the city into five districts and to assign to each of the five assessors the task of making land valuations in his district. Valuation is determined by each assessor individually, without the application of any uniform rule or method, or, in fact, of any rule or method whatsoever. In determining assessments for his district the assessor acts independently and upon his own resources and on his own private opinion of values and conditions in the district. Usually the assessor assesses the land in the district in which he has his political roots. It is not the practice of the board or of the assessors to maintain a file of information bearing on land values, and frequently the only information which the assessor possesses is the assessments of the preceding quadrennial. He therefore copies those figures. In 1927 no effort was made to obtain an intelligent appraisal of all real property in Chicago to determine its fair cash value. The valuations determined by the individual assessors were not intended even to represent full value or any uniform fixed percentage of full value. The assessors, it is charged, actually intended to, and in fact did, under-value most of the property, but without system or uniformity, with the result that some property was grossly over-valued and some property grossly under-valued, so that the amount of taxes which any particular parcel, block or district of land was called upon to pay depended solely on the individual assessor’s whim, the amount of the former assessment, the character of the community, the use to which the land was put, and, frequently, the ownership. Complainant charges, upon information and belief, that the board of assessors, without any independent consideration as a board, accepted the valuations and assessments thus made by the individual assessors without the exercise of any judgment with respect thereto by the board of assessors, and that the board of review confirmed substantially all such valuations without consideration thereof but acted thereon as a matter of form. The bill also alleged the board of assessors and board of review knew that for years it had been the practice throughout the State to assess real property at 40 per cent of its value, but despite this knowledge the assessing authorities assessed complainant’s property at 145 per cent of its value. The board of review and board of assessors planned to make unequal and un-uniform assessments in Cook county, and as a part of their plan withheld publication of the assessment lists on the express ground that such publication would reveal the inequalities and lack of uniformity in assessment and enable tax-payers to obtain relief from illegal and unlawful assessments; that knowing the average of assessments of real estate throughout the State was 40 per cent of the full value, the authorities stated publicly that they would assess residence property at 25 per cent of its full value and business property at 60 per cent; that with the knowledge of average assessments throughout the State and being charged with the duty of equalizing assessments, the members of the board of review stated that on certain down-town streets the assessed value was as high as 80 per cent and in some cases 100 per cent of full value.

The valuation of property for taxing purposes must be the result of honest judgment and not of mere will. (Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. Cole, 75 Ill. 591.) An assessing body has the right, and it is its duty, to exercise its own judgment in determining values, but it has no right to fix a valuation by its will, alone, without the exercise of judgment. (People v. Stewart, 315 Ill. 25.) In Pacific Hotel Co. v. Lieb, 83 Ill. 602, the court said that where “the valuation is so grossly out of the way as to show that the assessor could not have been honest in his valuation — must reasonably have known that it was excessive — it is accepted as evidence of a fraud upon his part against the tax-payer, and the court will interpose.” In People’s Gas Light Co. v. Stuckart, 286 Ill. 164, the court said an over-valuation of property may be so excessive and made under such circumstances as to justify the conclusion that it was not honestly made and was known to be excessive.

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Bluebook (online)
172 N.E. 772, 340 Ill. 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aldrich-v-harding-ill-1930.