People ex rel. Davis v. Mystic Workers of the World

270 Ill. 496
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 270 Ill. 496 (People ex rel. Davis v. Mystic Workers of the World) 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. Davis v. Mystic Workers of the World, 270 Ill. 496 (Ill. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cooke

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county collector of Whiteside county made application in the county court of that county for judgment and order of sale against the real estate of appellant, the Mystic Workers of the World, for delinquent personal and real estate taxes for the year 1914. The objections of appellant were overruled and judgment and order of sale entered, from which this appeal has been prosecuted.

Appellant is a fraternal beneficiary society incorporated under the laws of this State, with its principal office in the city of Fulton, in Whiteside county. The business of appellant is conducted by a supreme lodge and subordinate lodges, in accordance with its by-laws and the statutes governing such societies. Among the officers of appellant is one designated as the supreme banker, ánd this officer is elected for a term of two years. During the year 1914, and for several years prior thereto, the office of supreme banker was held by A. F. Schoch, who resided at Ottawa, in LaSalle county. The supreme banker is the custodian of the funds of the society. As the dues are collected by the supreme secretary, whose office is at- Fulton, from the subordinate lodges, they are transmitted by him to the supreme banker, who holds the funds thus accumulated for the purpose of paying the beneficiary certificates as they become due and the other obligations of the society. A considerable portion of these funds are invested by the supreme banker in various bonds arid other securities and in farm loans.

No objection was made to the real estate tax in the county court, the appellant admitting its liability to pay the same. The controversy concerns only the tax assessed upon the personal property of appellant, which consisted wholly of the moneys and credits in the hands of the supreme banker. The objections made in the county court, the overruling of which is assigned as error, may be grouped under two general heads: (1) That there was no> law under

which the money and credits of a fraternal beneficiary society could be assessed in the year 1914; and (2) that if such money and credits were assessable, the assessment in this case should have been made in LaSalle county, the residence of the supreme banker.

Section 1 of the Revenue act specifies the property that shall be assessed and taxed, except such as is by the act expressly exempted, and includes all the real and personal property in the State, all moneys, credits, bonds or stocks and other investments, the shares of stock of incorporated companies and associations, and all other personal property, including property in transitu to or from this State, used, held, owned or controlled by persons residing in this State. It will be observed that these provisions of section i clearly include all the property of appellant assessed in the year 1914. Section 3 of the act announces the rules for valuing personal property for assessment. Section 6 deals with the manner in which personal property shall be listed for assessment, and paragraph 8 of that section provides that the property of a body politic or corporate shall be listed by the president or proper agent or officer thereof. Section 13 of the Revenue act as it stood prior to 1905 provided that the personal property of various companies, associations and corporations, (naming them, but not specifically including fraternal beneficiary societies,) “and companies not specially provided for in this act,” should be listed and assessed in the county, town, city, village or district where their business is carried on, except such property as should be liable to assessment elsewhere in the hands of agents. This section had to do only with the place where the property should be listed and assessed,, and prior to 1905 all insurance companies and all fraternal beneficiary societies were liable to assessment under the general provisions of the Revenue act, section 13 providing merely where the assessment should be made. In 1905 section 13 was amended by adding thereto provisions which, among other things, provided a method for assessing the property and assets of life insurance companies organized under the laws of this State. By this amendment the taxable property of such life insurance companies is to be computed by deducting the value of the real property on which it pays taxes from its net admitted assets above liabilities as shown by the last report of the insurance superintendent, the remainder to be the amount of the personal property for which the company shall be assessed. The amendment also provided that the term “life insurance companies organized under the laws of this State,” as used in that section, should not be construed to apply to fraternal beneficiary societies. At the same session of the legislature section 2 of the Revenue act, which is the section exempting certain property therein described from taxation, was amended by adding thereto a clause designated as clause eleventh, which was as follows: “All property described in this section, to the extent herein limited, shall be exempt from taxation, that is to say: * * * Eleventh—All the money collected and on hand within this State of every kind and nature of fraternal beneficiary societies and the subordinate lodges thereof which are organized and exist or admitted to do business under the laws of the State of Illinois, and used exclusively for the purposes of such societies, and not for pecuniary profit.” Said clause 11 was held to be unconstitutional and void in Supreme Lodge Modern American Fraternal Order v. Board of Review, 223 Ill. 54, and the action of the board of review of Effingham county in assessing the personal property of the Supreme Lodge Modern American Eraternal Order under the general provisions of the Revenue act was affirmed.

Appellant contends that as it was the evident intention of the legislature, in thus amending sections 2 and 13 of the Revenue act in 1905, to exempt the property of fraternal beneficiary societies from taxation, and as no provision has ever been made for the assessment of such property since the amendment to section 2 was held unconstitutional, there exists no law under which such property can be assessed or taxed. In this connection it insists that the constitutional provision for levying and assessing taxes is not self-executing, and as the legislature has enacted no legislation for the assessment of the property of fraternal beneficiary societies there is no law under which such property can be assessed. This argument is based upon the assumption that section 13 of the Revenue act is the only authority in the statute for assessing the property of life insurance companies and kindred societies. Such an assumption is erroneous. Prior to the amendment of 1905 all such companies and societies were assessed under the general provisions of the Revenue act. By the amendment of 1905 the method by which life insurance companies organized under the laws of this State should be assessed and taxed was prescribed. By this amendment such companies were, to the extent of the provisions of that amendment, withdrawn from the operation of the general provisions of the act, but aside from this, section 13, as amended in 1905, did not do more than specify the place where the property of the companies or associations therein named should be listed for assessment.

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Bluebook (online)
270 Ill. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-davis-v-mystic-workers-of-the-world-ill-1915.