People Ex Rel. Meade v. Board of Review

160 N.E. 755, 329 Ill. 388
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1928
DocketNo. 18491. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 N.E. 755 (People Ex Rel. Meade v. Board of Review) 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. Meade v. Board of Review, 160 N.E. 755, 329 Ill. 388 (Ill. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

James A. Meade, a citizen and tax-payer of Cook county, filed- a petition against the board of review in the circuit court of that county for a writ of mandamus commanding it to assess the fair cash value of the capital stock of many corporations named in the petition, including the franchise and debt over and above the assessed value of the tangible property of such companies for the year 1926. An answer was-filed, to which the petitioner demurred, the demurrer was overruled, and the petitioner electing to stand by his demurrer the petition was ordered dismissed at his costs, and he has appealed.

The petition alleged, among other things, that the board of assessors had neglected and refused to assess the capital stock of said corporations except as to certain of them, as to which that board had made an arbitrary assessment of so small an amount as to represent a small proportion of the true value of the capital stock, and such assessments were not the result of the honest judgment or discretion of the board but were deliberately and intentionally made with intent to give ah unlawful preference to such corporations, and are unlawful; that the books of the board of assessors were turned over to the board of review about September 1, 1926, and it thereupon became the duty of the board of review to assess the capital stock of each of the companies that was not assessed on its true capital stock according to law; that the board of review failed to assess any of said corporations according to law for the year 1926, but, on the contrary, confirmed the improper and inadequate assessments made against such corporations, and unless ordered by the court will not make any assessment of capital stock value as to such corporations; that on December 1, 1926, there was delivered to the board of review, and each member thereof, a demand in writing setting forth the facts in regard to the failure to assess or the inadequate assessment of the capital stock of said corporations, but the board of review has taken no steps to comply with the petition or demands, and the members thereof have stated to the petitioner that they would not comply with his demands and would refuse to make any changes in the values so made by the board of assessors and confirmed by the board of review. A supplemental and amended petition was filed on February 1, 1927, showing that since the filing of the original petition the board of review had completed its assessments as to the capital stock valuation of the corporations named in the petition and made what it claimed to be the net assessment of capital stock, including the franchise, being the excess of the equalized value of the capital stock and debt over that of the tangible property as found by the local assessors and the board of review. The amount of the net capital stock assessment as to each of the corporations named was set forth in the petition, and it was alleged that the assessment made against each of said corporations was made by the board at so low a figure as to amount in law to no assessment, and it was therefore alleged that the assessments were fraudulent. It was further alleged that the board of review did not follow rule 11 of the State Tax Commission in making its assessment of capital stock and followed no rule, but made a purely arbitrary assessment at a small amount as to some of the corporations and at no amount as to others, and that the capital stock valuations were not the result of any honest judgment or discretion on the part of the board and resulted in almost entirely omitting from taxation the capital stock valuations of the corporations.

The answer denied specifically the allegations of the petition that the assessments of the capital stock of the corporations were below the true value or below the proportion of true value borne by other classes of property in Cook county, or were made arbitrarily or without the exercise of the honest judgment and discretion of the members of the board, or that they were made with intent to give an unlawful preference to the corporations or any property owner. It denied that the board followed no rule in making the assessments, and denied specifically and in detail every allegation tending to show fraud or partiality, dishonesty or neglect of duty. It was alleged that the assessment was made in conformity to rule 11, and the facts in regard to making the assessment are set out, as follows: For many years it has been the well known, established and uniform custom of the different officers and bodies engaged in the assessment of property for taxation in Illinois not to fix the value of property at its full cash value but at a percentage of that value as its value for purposes of taxation, which was fixed at about sixty per cent, the percentage so adopted sometimes differing in different years, according to the valuation which was fair in the judgment of the different boards, commissions and taxing officers, in order to assess all property uniformly, as required by law. This custom was followed by the local assessors in the assessment for 1926, and their action resulted in valuing the property to which it was applied at an average throughout the State of eighty per cent, or less, of its fair cash value. As the valuations of similar property and the percentages used for purposes of taxation of the same or different kinds of property by the various local officials have not been absolutely uniform, it has always been, and is, necessary to have those values equalized by some State board, and now by the tax commission, in order to comply with the law by making taxation uniform throughout the State. The answer further alleged that this custom has been so well known and well established for many years prior to 1926 that it had been recognized and approved as proper by the legislature and the courts as a valid method of securing uniformity in taxation throughout the State, and that the board of review found it necessary to proceed in substantially the manner stated' in rulé 11 of the tax commission, and after it had determined from all proper sources of information the fail-cash value of the capital stock, including the franchises of the corporations subject to assessment by it, and added to the amount so ascertained by it the amount of indebtedness, (except for current expenses, excluding from such current expenses the amount paid for the purchase or improvement of property,) that the board of review should equalize the amount so obtained in order that corporations should be assessed, as near as practicable, upon a uniform basis with other property throughout the State, and all of the methods provided for in rule 11 were in good faith followed by the defendants in making such assessments. In computing the net assessed value of the capital stock of each of the corporations the board ascertained the fair cash value of the capital stock from quotations of such shares in the market over a reasonable period of time and from such information as the board of review had or could obtain by diligent inquiry and by adding thereto the amount of indebtedness of each of such corporations (except indebtedness for current expenses, excluding from such expenses the amount paid for the purchase or improvement of property). It then equalized the amount so obtained by taking sixty per cent thereof, which was the same percentage of value which all local assessors during the years 1925 and 1926, and for many years prior thereto, had taken in order to ascertain and fix the value of tangible property assessed by them.

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Bluebook (online)
160 N.E. 755, 329 Ill. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-meade-v-board-of-review-ill-1928.