People ex rel. Rogers v. Caldwell

142 Ill. 434
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 142 Ill. 434 (People ex rel. Rogers v. Caldwell) 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. Rogers v. Caldwell, 142 Ill. 434 (Ill. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shope

delivered the opinion of the Court i

This was a bill in chancery, in the Piatt circuit court, by defendant in error, against the county clerk of Piatt county, praying that said clerk be enjoined from extending upon the tax books of the county a personal property tax against complainant, upon an assessment of personal property returned by the assessor of Sangamon township, in said county, for the year 1890, as the personal property of complainant in said township liable to taxation, at a valuation of $11,381. A temporary injunction was issued, and an answer filed-denyIng the material allegations of the bill. Upon hearing, the circuit court entered a decree making the injunction perpetual.

No extended statement of the pleadings is necessary. It is conceded that the issues are properly presented, and they are sufficient to sustain the decree if otherwise warranted. ■

It appears that Caldwell was the owner of three farms, aggregating sixteen hundred acres, two of which are situated wholly in Piatt county, and one, of which seven hundred and ten acres is in Piatt and one hundred and ninety acres in Champaign county. These lands were largely devoted to ¡pasturage, although considerable portions were in cultivation. One of the farms, known as the “Sangamon Eiver farm,” was occupied by adult daughters of Caldwell, who, it is claimed; owned and listed for taxation the property used on that farjn. Another, known as the “Wabash farm,” Scott Eecord lived upon, and worked by the year for Caldwell, taking care of and feeding his stock while there.-' One of these farms had upon it a good house, large barn, stock scales, etc., and it would appear' that it had, at one time, at least, been the residence of Caldwell. In 1886 Caldwell built a house on the land in Champaign county, near the line, and, as he claims, • then moved into it and has ever since occupied it as his residence, and that since the spring or summer of 1886 his actual residence has been on said land in Champaign county, and that" the personal property assessed by the assessor of Sangamon township, in Piatt county, was liable for taxation only in Champaign county, that being the place of his domicil. To this it is answered: First, that his residence is not in Champaign county, but in Piatt county, and that, his pretense of ■occupying the house on the land in Champaign county is fraudulently made, to escape the listing and taxation of his personal property in Piatt county, for the reason that the rate ■of taxation is higher in the latter than in the former; and second, that if it be conceded that his residence was in Champaign county, yet the property assessed, and upon which the extension of the tax is sought to be enjoined, had its situs in Sangamon township, in Piatt county, for the purposes of taxation.

It would seem that much of the personal property of the complainant had, in previous years, been listed by him in Champaign county, where, as shown, the rate of taxation was less than in Piatt county, and it does not seem improbable that this cause may have led Caldwell to change his abode, and claim his residence in the former county. Be that as it may, it seems clear that from 1886 down he claimed to reside in the dwelling house upon the land in Champaign county. He lived there with his wife, at least part of the time, claimed it was his home, voted in that township, and did many acts indicative of his intention to make it his place of domicil. We have carefully considered all of the evidence, and think the chancellor fully warranted in finding that his place of residence on the first day of May, 1890, and for several years prior thereto, had been upon the land constituting part of what is known as the “Champaign farm,” and in Scott township, in Champaign county. His motive for selecting this domicil can not be important. If he actually resided in Champaign county the same legal consequences would result, whatever may have been his motive for choosing it.

At the common law, personal effects followed the owner, and had their situs with him, or at his domicil, for many purposes, including that of taxation. Thus it is said: “A tax assessed against the person for personal estate is to be assessed to him at the place of his residence, because,' in the contemplation of the law, his movable property accompanies him wherever he goes.” (Cooley on Taxation, 269.) Section 7 of our Revenue act (chap. 120) provides: “Personal property, except such as is required in this act to be listed and assessed otherwise, shall be listed and taxed in the county, town, city, village or district where the owner resides.” Having found the residence of Caldwell to be upon that portion of his land lying in Champaign county, it followed, necessarily, that his personal property was to be there listed, unless it fell within some exception to that general rule, and “is required to be listed and assessed otherwise” by some provision of the statute.

All of the property in question was by Caldwell, on the first day of May, 1890, listed to and assessed by the assessor of Scott township, Champaign county, the same then being upon the “Champaign farm.” On the 19th day of May, 1890, the assessor of Sangamon township, Piatt county, claiming that the property was liable to be assessed in that township, came upon the farm known as the “Champaign farm,” and scheduled five hundred and eighty-five head of cattle, fifty-four horses, six wagons, and a lot of agricultural implements, of the aggregate value of $11,381, and returned the same to the county clerk, etc. No question arises as to the identity of this property with the property listed to the Scott township assessor, except, perhaps, four horses were included in the last assessment belonging to persons other than Caldwell, who were working for him with their teams. It also appears, and is not controverted, that ¡Record, as the agent of Caldwell, about the first day of May listed to Phalan, assessor of said Sangamon township, Piatt county, for Caldwell, eleven horses, five cows, fifty-five hogs, carriage and agricultural tools and implements and grain on the Piatt county farms, aggregating, as valued by the assessor, $1044, which was as claimed by Caldwell and his agent, all of the personal property of Caldwell used and permanently kept upon said Wabash and Sangamon river farms, or either of them. The tax extended upon this •assessment, as well as that extended upon the assessment of the property in question in Scott township, Champaign county, was paid.

It appears, also, and is practically uncontroverted in the .■evidence, that of the cattle assessed by the Sangamon township assessor May 19, one hundred head, known as the “Missouri cattle, ” bad been purchased by Caldwell in the fall of 1889, and shipped via the Wabash railway to the "Wabash farm,” so called, unloaded there, and fed on that farm during the winter of 1889-90, and, upon the feed giving out, in April were removed to the “Champaign farm,” and kept there until in November, 1890, when they were marketed. Both Caldwrell and Record, who was called as a witness by plaintiff in error, testified to their removal in April, and that the reason therefor was that the feed at that farm had been fed out, and that they were never returned to the “Wabash farm” except in transitu in shipping them.

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Bluebook (online)
142 Ill. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-rogers-v-caldwell-ill-1892.