People Ex Rel. Nelson v. Marion Trust & Savings Bank

179 N.E. 893, 347 Ill. 445
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1932
DocketNo. 21166. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 179 N.E. 893 (People Ex Rel. Nelson v. Marion Trust & Savings Bank) 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. Nelson v. Marion Trust & Savings Bank, 179 N.E. 893, 347 Ill. 445 (Ill. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Orr

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Marion Trust and Savings Bank was closed by the Auditor of Public Accounts on April 12, 1930. Thereafter the bank was in charge of O. A. James, a representative of the Auditor, until January 8, 1931, when he was appointed receiver to liquidate its affairs. On January 12, 1931, a bill in chancery was filed in the circuit court of Williamson county on relation of the State Auditor for the purpose of liquidating the affairs of the bank. On March n, 1931, Grant Cruse, as county collector of taxes of Williamson county, filed an intervening petition in the same court, alleging that at the time the bank closed there was on deposit in his name, as county collector, the sum of $75>°30.5T> which represented undistributed taxes collected by him in which the State of Illinois had an interest, and praying that the receiver be ordered to pay this deposit as a preferred claim. The answer of the receiver denied that any deposit in the bank at the time it was closed represented collections made by Grant Cruse as collector of taxes, and further denied that any such deposit represented undistributed taxes in which the State of Illinois had an interest. The answer further alleged that prior to the appointment of the receiver neither Grant Cruse nor the People of the State, by legal proceedings or otherwise, had asserted or attempted to assert a preference or priority, and for that reason any preference that might have existed was waived. A hearing was had before the chancellor and a decree entered finding that Cruse, as county collector, was entitled to priority in the sum of $74,775.35, that being the amount found to have been on deposit and entitled to preference on the day the bank closed. From that decree the present appeal was taken by the receiver.

The evidence shows that Grant Cruse in September, 1929, opened a checking account in the Marion Trust and Savings Bank in the name of “Grant Cruse, County Treasurer.” Some time before the bank closed this account was changed on the books by the cashier to “Grant Cruse, Co. Tax Collector.” On March 19, 1930, there was a balance in this account of $708.95. ' According to the undisputed testimony of the collector and his deputy this represented redemption money collected from tax forfeitures, penalties, interest and costs for previous years, undistributed at that time. On March 19, 1930, Cruse began collecting taxes for the tax year 1929, having previously announced through the newspapers that as collector he was ready to receive the taxes at designated places. The books were opened for the payment of taxes of five near by townships at the collector’s office in Marion. Between March 19 and April 12, the date the bank closed, eight deposits were made in this account by the collector. The uncontradicted testimony of the collector and his deputy is that these deposits represented taxes levied and collected for the tax year 1929 for State, county, road and bridge, city and village, district school, high school, rock road, special assessments and dog taxes, and that at the time the bank closed, the entire balance of $74,775-35, including the item of $708.95 above mentioned, represented money collected as taxes which had not been distributed to the various taxing bodies to which it belonged.

We have carefully examined the record and find no evidence which controverts the principal finding of the chancellor that the sum of $74,775-35 was on deposit to the credit of Grant Cruse, county collector, at the time the bank closed, and that such sum was then undistributed tax money belonging to the State and its various political subdivisions. The fund of $708.95 on deposit on March 19 was shown to have been money collected to redeem from back taxes certain property forfeited to the State. This item included some interest and printer’s fees, but this fact did not change the character of the fund, which at that time had not been distributed. This court is committed to the doctrine that all taxes collected belong to the State until their distribution. (People v. Farmers State and Savings Bank, 338 Ill. 134.) As the political divisions of the State, whether counties, towns, cities or school districts, are subject to the supervision and control of the State, their property and revenue are subject to the control of the legislature, and, until distribution to the various municipalities and political subdivisions, money collected for taxes is the property of the State. (People v. Farmers State Bank, 335 Ill. 617.) The preference of the State is not limited to that portion of the taxes which is to be paid the State as a State tax but extends to all taxes of every kind and character which are undistributed. People v. Bank of Chebanse, 340 Ill. 124.

It is contended by the appellant that because the total deposit may have contained some special assessments and dog taxes, the whole claim, or at least those portions of it, should be treated as a common claim. The statute provides (Caliill’s Stat. 1931, chap. 24, par. 199,) that it shall be the duty of the county collector to collect special assessments in the same manner as he collects other taxes and that the general revenue laws of the State apply thereto. Whether the collector receives from a tax-payer his State taxes, his school taxes or his special assessments, he is acting under statutory authority as an agent of the State of Illinois, and the money collected, while in his hands and undistributed, is the property of the State. There is no difference between special assessments and taxes levied by a township or a school district or a park board. They are all public revenues assessed and levied to carry on the government, collected for all divisions of government by one individual, the county collector, who, while so acting, proceeds under the general Revenue act of the State and is subject to the control and will of the legislature. Under the authority of People v. Farmers State Bank, supra, the money collected for special assessments, while it remains undistributed in the hands of the county collector, is the property of the State. The same rule applies to dog taxes. The statute provides (Cahill’s Stat. 1931, chap. 8, par. 111,) that if the assessor does not collect the dog tax at the time he makes the assessment it is the duty of the county clerk to charge such amount on the tax books which he delivers to the county collector, “which fee shall be collected at the same time, and in the same manner, as taxes upon personal property.” Later, when he distributes the tax money on hand, the collector is required to pay the fees collected for dog taxes into the county treasury, to be kept in a special fund. Thus it appears that dog taxes are collected by the county collector along with other taxes and are entitled to no different treatment until segregated out of the general deposit into a special fund.

It is urged by appellant that since the county collector did not assert his right to a preference during the eight months intervening between the closing of the bank and the appointment of the receiver the prerogative right of the State to preference over the debts of other creditors was lost, and that the appointment of a receiver had the legal effect, under the common law, of divesting title of a creditor .to the fund before its preference was asserted. This question, so far as we have been able' to find, has not been presented to this court in any previous case.

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179 N.E. 893, 347 Ill. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-nelson-v-marion-trust-savings-bank-ill-1932.