People Ex Rel. Parker v. Board of Appeals

12 N.E.2d 666, 367 Ill. 559, 1937 Ill. LEXIS 536
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1937
DocketNo. 24191. Order affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 12 N.E.2d 666 (People Ex Rel. Parker v. Board of Appeals) 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. Parker v. Board of Appeals, 12 N.E.2d 666, 367 Ill. 559, 1937 Ill. LEXIS 536 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

Mr.-Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court:

An appeal has been perfected from an order of the circuit court of Cook county striking and dismissing a complaint of Harrison Parker for a writ of mandamus.

The original complaint was amended and stricken. A second amended complaint was filed and the parties defendant named were the members of the board of appeals, the county clerk, the county treasurer, and the assessor of Cook county. The Tribune Company was also made a party defendant. The second amended complaint alleged that Parker is a citizen and tax-payer in said county; that the Tribune Company is a domestic corporation chartered in 1861 and is engaged in publishing a newspaper in Chicago ; that the company is capitalized at $200,000, divided into 2000 shares of $100 each; that the assessor is, by statute, required to list and tax all capital stock of corporations; that the board of appeals is under statutory duty to list and assess all omitted property, when discovered, and order the assessor to assess it; that, under the statute, the State Tax Commission is empowered to issue binding rules to govern the assessor, and under that authority the commission' adopted “rule 11” to be used as the exclusive rule in computing the capital stock assessments of all Illinois corporations subject to assessment; that the Tribune Company is under duty to pay a capital stock tax computed under that rule; that the company has never paid or offered to pay a capital stock tax; that on May 24, 1935, relator filed a complaint with the board of appeals setting out that the capital stock of the company from 1873 to 1934 had never been assessed according to rule 11 and asked that the board order it assessed as omitted property; and that on June 22, 1935, the relator presented a demand to said board setting forth that no capital stock tax had been paid by the Tribune Company from 1872 to 1902, when its value was $6,000,000, and that the tax and penalties then due, if computed according to rule 11, would have been $6,937,056. The complaint also set out various other groupings of time periods and amounts of taxes and penalties due in such periods. A summation was made of all amounts claimed to be due in taxes and penalties and resulted in the allegation that there was due from the Tribune Company the sum of $87,000,000; that the sum is so great the Tribune Company cannot pay it and the court should conserve its property to enable the State to collect the taxes due.

The complaint further charged that Parker was business manager of the Chicago Tribune in 1905 and for some subsequent years; that cash dividends had been paid uninterruptedly for many years which, if capitalized in the year 1905 at the rate of six per cent per annum, would have established the fair cash value of the stock at not less than $6,000,000; that had the dividend paid out by the relator to the stockholders in the year 1909 been capitalized at the rate of six per cent per annum, it would have established a fair cash value of $15,000,000; that the capital stock has increased every five years since 1909 in the same proportion that it increased during the five years from 1905 to 1909, inclusive; that the fair cash value of the Tribune Company stock is now $53,600,000; that the official appraisers of the State of Illinois, for the purpose of fixing the inheritance tax for the year 1926, fixed the full cash value of the stock at $19,000,000, and that, since that date, it has increased nearly three-fold. It is also alleged that a conspiracy exists between the Tribune Company and the Cook county assessor, and that a conspiracy has existed between the company and each of his predecessors in office and between the Company and the members composing the board of tax appeals, and with their predecessors in office, to cheat, defraud, swindle and violate the tax laws of the State of Illinois, and that they conspired together so that the State of Illinois was defrauded of said sum of $87,-000,000 due it for taxes on capital stock.

Prior to bringing this suit, Parker made a demand upon the board of appeals to order the assessor to list and assess the capital stock of the Tribune Company. This demand was supported by an affidavit, later amended and amplified. All of the parties who are defendants in the complaint in the circuit court were .notified to appear before the board of appeals in reference to Parker’s demand. They appeared and a hearing was had on three different days, to-wit: May 31, 1935, July 1, 1935, and July 16, 1935. On the second day of the hearing the Tribune Company submitted an answer and Parker announced that he had nothing to offer except his affidavits which were already on file. On the third day of the hearing, the assessor made a report that it was impossible for him to complete an investigation covering a period of sixty-three years before the expiration of the time fixed by law for the adjournment of the board of appeals. He asked that the completion of the investigation be deferred until a future time when any omission found could be added to a subsequent tax roll. He stated that the assessment of the capital stock for the year 1934 had been determined in a uniform and like manner as other property of the same class and recommended that no change be made in the assessment for that year. The board of appeals thereupon entered an order confirming the assessment of that year, and directing the assessor to investigate the possibility of back taxes for all years from 1872 to 1:933, both inclusive, and to list any property in a subsequent assessment roll which he might find ought to be listed and to make report to the board of appeals. In the following month, Parker filed his complaint for mandamus as above set forth. On February 3, 1937, the assessor, having made his investigation, filed a report with the board of appeals, in which he stated that an assessment for back taxes against the Tribune Company would not be justified under the facts and circumstances set forth in his report.

All of the defendants entered motions in the circuit court to strike and dismiss the complaint. Later the Tribune Company was granted leave to file an affidavit in support of its motion. The affidavit incorporated the entire record of the proceedings before the board of appeals, including the report of the assessor. A motion by Parker to strike the affidavit was denied, but in the listed “Errors relied upon for reversal” no complaint is made of the court’s ruling on the motion. The cause having come on to be heard on the motions to strike and dismiss, the court granted them and delivered a written opinion holding that the complaint was insufficient and did not state a cause of action, and that the court was without jurisdiction to review and supervise the action of the board of appeals. From this order the present appeal was taken.

A petition for mandamus must set forth every material fact necessary to show that it is the duty of the persons against whom the writ is sought to perform the act or acts sought to be compelled. People v. Board of Review, 326 Ill. 124.

If a capital stock assessment was to be made against the' Tribune Company, it was the duty of the assessor to list it and assess it in Cook county, under the Revenue act of 1898. (State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 120, sec. 7, par. 318.) However, he has no authority to assess property for back taxes except upon the order of the board of appeals.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.E.2d 666, 367 Ill. 559, 1937 Ill. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-parker-v-board-of-appeals-ill-1937.