People Ex Rel. Brown v. Stelle

196 N.E. 816, 361 Ill. 45
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1935
DocketNo. 22531. Writ awarded.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 N.E. 816 (People Ex Rel. Brown v. Stelle) 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
People Ex Rel. Brown v. Stelle, 196 N.E. 816, 361 Ill. 45 (Ill. 1935).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Farthing

delivered the opinion of the court:

By leave granted, an original mandamus petition was filed here in which the petitioner, Pearl Billings Brown, executrix of the last will and testament of Frank A. Brown, deceased, seeks to compel the State Treasurer and Auditor of Public Accounts to re-pay $2940.26, with interest thereon at three per cent from July 13, 1933. She claims this amount was over-paid as inheritance tax on the testator’s estate and that it is unjustly withheld.

Frank A. Brown died testate August 14, 1929, a resident of Cook county. The petitioner was appointed executrix August 21, 1929. Brown’s will created a trust in favor of his three children. The trust was to terminate when the youngest child became twenty-five years old. At that time the property so held was to be divided among the surviving children, the child or children of a deceased child taking in his stead. The youngest of the three children became twenty-five July 1, 1932, and all three were then living. Because of the contingency the inheritance tax was assessed on the theory that the entire corpus of the trust would pass to one grandchild, in accordance with the rule laid down in People v. Byrd, 253 Ill. 223, and section 25 of the Inheritance Tax act.

The county treasurer of Cook county received $43,588.47 from the petitioner on April 14, 1930, the last day of the eight months’ period immediately following the testator’s death. This sum exceeded the inheritance tax due the State. She received the following receipt:

“$43,588-47/100. Chicago, April 14, 1930.

“Received of estate of Frank A. Brown forty-three thousand five hundred eighty-eight 0and 47/100 dollars as a deposit to apply in payment of inheritance tax to be subsequently fixed by county judge.

George F. Harding, County Treasurer."

The county judge entered an order September 25, 1930, assessing the total inheritance tax against the estate in the amount of $38,466.45. September 25, 1930, the county treasurer re-paid the petitioner $7045.34, which was made up of the difference between the amount he had received and the amount assessed, less a discount of five per cent. On that day the county treasurer issued a receipt for $36,543.13, acknowledging payment in full of the inheritance tax.

Shortly after July 1, 1932, when the youngest of the three children of Brown became twenty-five years old, the petitioner filed a petition for a re-assessment of the tax in the county court in accordance with the statute. On February 17, 1933, that court ordered the tax re-assessed at $24,299.14. On February 28, 1933, the petitioner presented her claim to the State Treasurer for a refund of $13,458.95, with interest at three per cent per annum from April 14, 1930. The claim was allowed only to the extent of $10,620.01, with three per cent interest thereon from September 25, 1930. The State Treasurer added to the amount of the re-assessed tax ($24,299.14) $1623.98, which represented interest at six per cent per annum on $24,299.14 from the date of Brown’s death, August 14, 1929, to September 25, 1930, the date of the original assessment of the inheritance tax, and deducted this total from the tax of $36,543.13 paid. The petitioner received a warrant July 13, 1933, for $11,829.81 in payment of her claim, with interest. The petitioner says that on July 13, 1933, there was due her, instead, the sum of $14,770.07, or a difference of $2940.29, which she claims is due her, with interest at three per cent per annum from July 13, 1933. She claims a right to a discount of five per cent on $24,299.14. This leaves a balance of $23,084.18. This deducted from the amount actually paid, $36,543.13, produces $13,458.95, which she claims is due, and which, with interest at three per cent per annum from April 14, 1930, to July 13, 1933, totals $14,770.07. The respondents filed a motion to dismiss. By leave the motion stood as an answer, and to that answer the petitioner demurred.

The respondents say the county treasurer had no authority to accept anything by way of deposit out of which the inheritance tax was to be later paid, since the Inheritance Tax act made no such provision when the money was paid by the petitioner to the county treasurer, and that since it was unauthorized by the act, his acceptance of the money from the petitioner and the giving of the receipt therefor quoted above did not affect the rights of the State

as against the petitioner. In People v. Baldwin, 287 Ill. 87, the county court had by its order, and without statutory authority, attempted to remit interest for certain years on inheritance tax due on the transfer of certain real estate under the will of the testatrix, Mary E. Gardner Baldwin. We held that such order, in so far as it purported to remit interest, was void. The respondents here rely upon that holding to support their contention that the facts here justify a charge of interest at six per cent per annum from the date of death of Brown to the 25th of September, 1930, the date the original assessment of inheritance tax was made, and also the date the county treasurer refunded thover-payment to the petitioner in accordance with the order fixing the tax at the highest possible rate because of the contingency above set out. In the Baldwin case we held that the interest provided for is not in the nature of a penalty but is compensation fixed by the legislature for the State’s loss of use of the money represented by the tax. There was no payment of tax in that case within the period wherein a discount was allowed, which was then six months and which was later changed to eight months.

The Baldwin case, supra, is only applicable in so far as it supports the general rule that statutory authority must be found for the acts of taxing bodies and collectors. The third section of the Inheritance Tax act malees inheritance taxes due and payable upon the death of the decedent. Section 6 makes the county treasurer the receiving officer to whom the tax shall be paid, and section 20 requires him to remit to the State Treasurer on the first day of each month the inheritance tax collected before that date. This section provides a penalty of one-tenth of one per cent per day on all inheritance tax so collected and unremitted by the county treasurer. Section 11 makes it the duty of the county judge to appraise estates and to assess inheritance taxes. It makes it the duty of the Attorney General to exercise general supervision over the assessment and collection of such taxes, and it is made the duty of the several State’s attorneys to render him such assistance as he may require. Any interested party is permitted by this section to make application for an appraisal and the assessment of the tax, but there is no provision in the act making it his duty to make such application. By the amendment of 1929 section 3 not only provided, at the time here in question, that interest should be charged at six per cent per annum from the date the tax was due and payable, viz., the date of death of the decedent, but it also provided that if it were paid within eight months from that date a discount of five per cent of the tax should be allowed and no interest should be charged.

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196 N.E. 816, 361 Ill. 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-brown-v-stelle-ill-1935.