Glassford v. Dorsey

2 Ill. App. 521
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 15, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ill. App. 521 (Glassford v. Dorsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glassford v. Dorsey, 2 Ill. App. 521 (Ill. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Lacey, J.

This was a bill in equity, filed by the appellant against the appellee, Dorsey, who was tax collector for the town of Pekin, Tazewell county, Illinois, to enjoin him from collecting a tax of $628.59, extended on the tax books of that town for the year 1877, and charged as personal property tax for the year 1875.

It appears that one Stout was assessor for Pekin town for the year 1875. That he called on appellant to assess his property, and gave him a blank statement, which was immediately filled out and returned to Stout, duly signed by appellant, and contained what appellant claimed to be all his personal property, amounting to some $1,100.

This list was received and accepted by Stout without objection, and the amount was by him entered on his books as the assessment of all -the personal property of appellant, for the year 1875.

Appellant then left the State on a visit, and was absent until July 1st, A. D. 1875, when he returned to Pekin. The township board of review met on the 28th day of June, and adjourned on the 30th day of the same month, in the year 1875. On the 5th day of July, A. D. 1875, without any notice to appellant, the assessor, Stout, ordered his clerk to raise appellant’s assessment $15,000, making his whole assessment $16,100 instead of $1,100. On the 12th day of July, the county board for revising assessments met, and no objection was then made by appellant to his assessment. But in January, A. D. 1876, the tax having been extended on the assessment so raised, and the collector’s book put into the hands of the collector, appellant claims, and we think such claim is sustained by the proof, that he then discovered for the first time that his assessment had been raised, and that on the amount of the raised assessment there was an additional tax levied of $628.59.

At the February term of the board of supervisors following, appellant made complaint before the board of this increased assessment, and asked to have the erroneous tax remitted, which the board granted, and passed a resolution remitting the tax. When the taxes for year 1877 were extended, the county clerk extended' this back tax of 1875 on personal property of $628.59 against appellant. When the books came into the hands of the collector, he proceeded to collect this tax; appellant paid all other taxes levied against him except this, and brought his suit in equity in the Tazewell Circuit Court, setting up the above facts, and alleging that the collector, Stout, fraudulently raised his assessment, and that the act of Stout in raising his assessment in the manner in which he did, as well as the acts of Shertliff, the county clerk, and Dorsey, the collector, were fraudulent, unjust and revengeful.

He avers also that at no time in the year 1875 was he liable for assessment for more than the sum listed by him for that year; that he was ignorant of the fraudulent assessment for the year 1875 until in January of the year 1876.

Hpon a hearing of the cause, the court below dismissed the bill, and assessed damages on the injunction bond. Appellant now brings the cause .to this court, and assigns' for error the action of the court below.

. It appears from all the testimony that appellant had listed all his property to Stout when he was called upon, and that some outside influence or some improper pressure had been brought to bear against Stout, which caused him improperly and without an honest belief that- appellant was justly liable to be assessed an additional sum, to raise the assessment §15,000.

This was done in a secret manner and without notice to appellant.

Stout told M. D. Beecher at the time he, as a member of the committee raised by the board of supervisors to examine into this assessment, that he, Stout, had raised appellant’s assessment $15,000 without giving appellant notice; that appellant ought not to pay the tax, because he, Stout, was forced into raising the assessment.

Appellant testified that Stout, at the time the $628.59 tax was first demanded of him, told appellant that he ought not to pay it; it was unjust, and he would not have raised it, but Kellogg had sued him as assessor.

We are aware that an effort was made to show that appellant did not give in to the assessor all his property, but that he held a large chattel mortgage on some cattle, which he should have listed; but we are satisfied that the amount of the chattel mortgage did not belong to appellant, but to another party, and that appellant was not liable to be assessed for it. '

As the law stood prior to the year A. D. 1873, appellant had the unquestioned right to maintain this bill. An assessor had no right after he had once made an assessment to raise it without notice to the party assessed, and if he did so it was fraudulent and void, and a hill in equity would lie to restrain the collection of the tax levied on it. Cleghorn v. Postlewaite, 43 Ill. page 428; McConkey v. Smith, 73 Ill. 313; Darling v. Gunn, 50 Ill. 424; First National Bank of Shawneetown v. Cook et al. 77 Ill. 622.

It is claimed by counsel for appellee that the statute has been so changed by the act of 1873, that the assessor may, after he has once made an assessment, change it at will without further notice to the party assessed. We do not think this jmsition is tenable.

The statute now provides that the assessor shall assess in the manner following:

“ He shall call at the office or place of doing business, or residence of each person required by this act to list pro¡3erty, and list his name, and shall require such person to make a correct statement of his taxable property, in accordance with the provisions of this act; and the person listing the property shall enter a true and correct statement of such property in the form prescribed by this act, which shall be signed and sworn to, to the extent required by this act, by the person listing the property, and delivered to the assessor, and the assessor shall thereupon assess the value of such property and enter the same in his books. Provided if any property is listed or assessed on or after the 1st day of July, and before the return of the assessor’s books, the same shall be as legal and binding as if listed and assessed before that time.” E. S. 1874, page 870, Sec. 78.

Sec. 79 provides for the assessor notifying the taxpayer (in case he is sick or absent when the assessor calls, after leaving the list), to make out his assessment by a day fixed.

Sec. 80 provides for taking testimony in case any person refuses to list as to the value of his property.

Sec. 83 provides: “In all cases of failure to obtain a statement of personal property from any cause, it shall be the duty of'the assessor to ascertain the amount and value of such property, and assess the same as he believes to be the fair amount and value thereof,”'

Sec. 81 provides that the assessor shall when requested deliver to the person assessed a copy of the statement of the property hereinbefore required, showing the valuation of the assessor of the property so listed; which copy shall be signed by the assessor.

Sec.

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Related

Darling v. Gunn
50 Ill. 424 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1869)
McConkey v. Smith
73 Ill. 313 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1874)
First National Bank v. Cook
77 Ill. 622 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ill. App. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glassford-v-dorsey-illappct-1878.