People Ex Rel. Harding v. Bender

161 N.E. 775, 330 Ill. 446
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1928
DocketNo. 18764. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 N.E. 775 (People Ex Rel. Harding v. Bender) 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. Harding v. Bender, 161 N.E. 775, 330 Ill. 446 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county court of Cook county sustained an objection of M. A. Bender to the application of the county collector for judgment and order of sale against certain real estate in Cook county for the taxes of 1926, and the collector has appealed.

The objection was that at the June term, 1926, the county court sustained the appellee’s objection to that part of the tax of 1925 based upon an increase of the assessment made by the board of review in that year, on the ground that the increase made by the board of review of the assessment made by the board of assessors on the improvements on the property from $60,000 full value to $95,000 full value was without notice to the owner and was void, and that the board of assessors carried over and entered on the assessment record in 1926 the void increased assessment as the assessment for 1926, and that the tax extended on the fraudulently increased assessment was void. The appellee paid the taxes on the amount of the original assessment and objected to the amount extended on the void increase. It was stipulated that in the year 1925 the board of assessors assessed the improvements on the land of the objector at $60,000 full value, and that afterward, without any notice to the objector, the board of review increased the valuation to $95,000 full value; that at the June term, 1926, of the county court the objector filed an objection that the increase in value on his improvement from $60,000 to $95,000 was void on the ground that it was made without notice; that there were no physical changes in the property by reason of any injury to, alteration in or addition to the improvement thereon after April 1, 1924, and prior to April 1, 1925; that on July 16, 1926, after a hearing, the court adjudged the increase from $60,000 to $95,000 on the improvement null and void on the ground that the increase was made without notice, and sustained the objection on all in excess of $60,000, full value, on the improvement; that no appeal was taken from this order; that on September 1, 1926, the board of assessors attached the affidavit required by law to the assessment book containing the objector’s assessment; that the board of assessors for the year 1926, without giving notice to the objector, carried forward the valuation made by the board of review in 1925, and thereafter the board of review, without giving notice to the objector, confirmed that valuation; that the improvement of the objector so assessed in 1926 was the identical improvement assessed in 1925 and increased by the board of review without notice in 1925 .and is the identical property for which objection was made and sustained in 1926; that after the judgment of the county court in 1926 the objector made no application to and filed no complaint with the board of review in relation to the assessment of the property, and that there were no physical changes in the property by reason of any injury to, alteration in or addition to the improvement thereon after April 1, 1925, and prior to April 1, 1926.

Section 9 of the Revenue act of 1898 requires an assessment of all real property, to be known as the general assessment, to be made in 1899 and every fourth year thereafter, with reference to the amount owned on April x of the year in which the assessment is made, and that such general assessment, as modified or equalized or changed as provided by law, shall be the assessment upon which taxes shall be levied and extended during the quadrennial period for which the assessment is made. Section 12, as amended in 1923, requires the assessor, before June 1 in each year in which the general assessment is to be made, actually to view and determine the value of each tract or lot of land listed for taxation as of April 1 and assess it at the value required by law. Between April 1 and June 1 in each intervening year he is required to “list and assess in like manner, all real property which shall become taxable and which is not upon the general assessment, and also make and return a list of all new or added buildings, structures or other improvements of any kind, the value of which shall not have been previously added to or included in the valuation of the tract or lot on which such improvements have been erected or placed, specifying the tract or lot on which each of said improvements has been erected or placed, the kind of improvement and the value which, in his opinion, has been added to such tract or lot by the erection thereof; and in case of the destruction or injury by fire, flood, cyclone, storm or otherwise, or removal of any structures of any kind, or of the destruction of, or any injury to0 orchard, timber, ornamental trees or groves, the value of which shall have been included in any former valuation of the tract or lot on which the same stood, the assessor shall determine as near as practicable how much the value of such tract or lot has been diminished in consequence of such destruction or injury, and make return thereof. And in case any assessor shall fail or neglect so to do, then the supervisor of assessments shall, in the case of such new or added improvements, assess the same according to the assessment of the same property in the general assessment, and in the case of such destruction shall abate from the assessment of the tracts or lots so damaged or lessened, the proper proportion thereof, estimated according to the same principles.” Section 14, as amended in 1905, provides: “On or before the first day of June in each year, other than the year of the quadrennial assessment, the assessor shall determine the amount, in his opinion, of any change in the value of any tracts or lots of land by reason of any injury to, alteration in or addition to, the improvements thereon since the first of April in the preceding year and prior to the first of April in the current year, and add to or deduct from the assessment accordingly, setting down the amount of such change in a proper column in the assessment books. The value of lands and improvements shall be separately fixed, and shall in any assessment made hereafter be set down in separate columns in said assessor’s books. The assessors shall not in any }>-ear, except the year of the quadrennial assessment, change the valuation of any real estate or improvements or the division thereof, except as above provided in this section.”

In Crozer v. People, 206 Ill. 464, it was held that the assessor and the board of review are without power, in the years intervening the years of the general assessment, to increase the assessed valuation of real estate except in instances where new or added buildings, structures or other improvements of some kind shall have been placed upon the real estate in question after April 1 of the year of the general assessment, and are without power to decrease the valuation during the intervening years except where the value of the real estate has been diminished after April 1 of the year of the general assessment by the destruction or injury by fire, flood, cyclone, storm or otherwise, or removal, of any structure of any kind, or by the destruction of or injury to orchard, timber, ornamental trees or groves. This case was overruled in People v. St. Louis Bridge Co. 281 Ill. 462, so far as it concerns the board of review, but the. board of review was without authority in the present case because of the want of notice.

From the stipulation it appears that there was a valid assessment in 1925, which the board of review in that year increased without notice.

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Bluebook (online)
161 N.E. 775, 330 Ill. 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-harding-v-bender-ill-1928.