Koester v. McDonough

184 N.E. 826, 351 Ill. 492
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1933
DocketNo. 21584. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished

This text of 184 N.E. 826 (Koester v. McDonough) 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
Koester v. McDonough, 184 N.E. 826, 351 Ill. 492 (Ill. 1933).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Duncan

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant, George F. Koester, Jr., on July 16, 1932, filed a bill in the circuit court of Cook county praying that appellee, Joseph B. McDonough, county treasurer and ex-officio county collector of Cook county, be enjoined from taking judgment against and selling appellant’s property for real estate taxes for the year 1930. A general de-. murrer to the bill filed by appellee was sustained by the court, and from the resultant decree dismissing the bill for want of equity this appeal is prosecuted.

After a description of the real estate owned by appellant, allegations of the assessed valuation thereof and of the amount of taxes for 1930 extended against it, and allegations of the official capacity and duties of appellee, of ■the board of assessors and board of review of Cook county and of the State Tax Commission, the appellant in his bill makes substantially the following allegations: For many years prior to 1930, and particularly in assessing and levying taxes in Cook county for 1930, the tax commission, the board of assessors and the board of review of Cook county, and the members of said bodies, deliberately and fraudulently conspired together to discriminate against real estate and in favor of personal property and made greatly excessive assessments upon real estate in Cook county which were not in uniformity with assessments upon personal property of like value in that county. A vast amount of personal property subject to taxation for 1930 was omitted from assessment or assessed by said taxing bodies at an amount far below its true value. Said taxing bodies, acting in collusion and conspiracy, intentionally placed upon the real estate of appellant and of other owners of real estate in Cook county an assessment for the year 1930 which systematically and intentionally discriminated against their real estate and which was greatly in excess of the uniform and legal assessment guaranteed by the constitution and statutes. On April 1, 1930, the fair cash value of real estate subject to taxation in Cook county was twenty-three per cent and of personal property in that county not exempt from taxation was seventy-seven per cent of the value of all the taxable property there on that date, but said taxing bodies placed an assessment on the real estate that was eighty-two per cent and on the personal property that was only eighteen per cent of the total assessment on all the taxable property in that county on April 1, 1930. On August 28, 1931, while the assessment books for the year 1930 were still in the hands of the board of assessors and the assessment of Cook county property for that year was still incompleted, appellant caused to be served on the board of assessors a demand that certain known groups of taxable personal property which had been omitted from assessment for the year 1930 should be assessed on a basis uniform and equal to the assessment being made on real estate. The demand called attention to taxable personal property of estates being probated in the probate court of Cook county, to taxable personal property held in trust by Cook county banks and trust companies, to accounts in banks of Cook county that were subject to taxation, to vast stores of taxable merchandise in warehouses, wholesale and retail mercantile establishments and manufacturing institutions, and to various clubs, the Chicago Board of Trade, the Chicago Stock Exchange, and other like institutions whose memberships were subject to assessment for taxation, all of which personal property was omitted from assessment. The board of assessors ignored the demand and refused to assess said personal property for taxation and deliberately and intentionally made assessments on personal property in Cook county so far below the actual value of said personal property that said property was relieved of its just and uniform portion of the tax burden for 1930 and the real estate of appellant and other owners of real estate in Cook county was forced to bear a large portion of the tax burden that should have been borne by personal property. The board of assessors disregarded all complaints of tax-payers as to the assessment of their property for 1930, and without granting any hearings on the complaints and without changing, revising or altering any assessments, on or about June 30, 1931, turned the assessment books over to the board of review. The board of assessors deliberately and intentionally denied tax-payers an opportunity to be heard in their protest against the discrimination in favor of personal property and against real estate. On October 5, 1931, appellant served upon the board of review a demand that it assess for taxation for the year 1930 personal property in Cook county which was described particularly and in detail and was of the value of more than $15,000,000,000 and was not exempt from taxation. The board of assessors made a total assessment of $944,-430,320 on the taxable personal property in Cook count}/ on April 1, 1930. The value of taxable personal property in Cook county on said date was many times that sum, and the board of review so knew the fact to be, but said board, notwithstanding it had been served with the demand of appellant, failed and refused to assess the omitted taxable personal property described in the demand but reduced the total asessment on personal property to $769,842,262. The real estate in Cook county subject to taxation on April 1, 1930, had a value of approximately $6,000,000,000 and the personal property in said county on said date had a value of approximately $20,000,000,000. The board of assessors and the board of review, contrary to their duty to make an assessment that would be uniform, made a total assessment on the real estate of $3,459,088,569 and on the personal property of $769,842,262. Appellant filed a complaint before the board of review protesting against the assessment on his real estate and appeared before the board in support of the complaint, but the board failed and refused to give him any relief or redress against the illegal and intentional discrimination of the taxing bodies but confirmed the assessment on appellant’s real estate.

Following the foregoing allegations, there are in the bill allegations substantially identical with the allegations in paragraphs 8 to 18, inclusive, of the petition for a writ of mandamus in the case of People v. Board of Review, (ante, p. 301.) These allegations are set out somewhat in externo in the opinion in that case, and reference is made to that opinion for the substance of those allegations. It is further alleged in the bill that on the petition in that case the superior court of Cook county had ordered that a writ of mandamus issue commanding the board of review to place upon the assessment rolls for 1930 the omitted personal property described in the petition, which was of the approximate value of $15,000,000,000, but that the writ had not been issued because of the appeal to this court prosecuted in that case by the board of review; that the assessment of the personal property for the year 1930 would have the effect to reduce the tax on appellant’s real property more than seventy-four per cent; that the taxes against appellant’s real estate had been levied and extended on the fraudulent, illegal and non-uniform assessment, and that appellee has threatened to collect the taxes so extended against appellant’s real estate by seizure, levy and sale of his real and personal property, and will do so unless enjoined.

In Bistor v. McDonough, 348 Ill.

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Related

People Ex Rel. McDonough v. Cesar
182 N.E. 448 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1932)
Bistor v. McDonough
181 N.E. 417 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1932)

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184 N.E. 826, 351 Ill. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koester-v-mcdonough-ill-1933.