People Ex Rel. Smith v. National Plate Glass Co.

176 N.E. 319, 344 Ill. 340
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1931
DocketNo. 20590. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 176 N.E. 319 (People Ex Rel. Smith v. National Plate Glass Co.) 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. Smith v. National Plate Glass Co., 176 N.E. 319, 344 Ill. 340 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county treasurer and ex-officio county collector of LaSalle county, Illinois, made application to the county court at its June term, 1930, for judgment and order of sale against the real property of the National Plate Glass Company, a corporation, for delinquent real, estate and personal property taxes for the year 1929, amounting to approximately $29,000. Many objections to the application were filed in the county court by the company. It paid part of its taxes prior to the hearing upon the objections thereto, leaving a balance of $18,004.18 assessed for real estate tax and $1500.17 for personal tax. The county court abated the real estate tax in amount of $3604 on account of an error caused by the inadvertence of the county clerk in extending the taxes against the company’s property, overruled the remaining objections, entered judgment against the property for delinquent taxes in amount of $15,900.35, and ordered that the property be sold to satisfy the judgment. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled. The company deposited the amount of delinquent taxes with the county treasurer and perfected an appeal to this court to review the judgment.

The contentions of appellant are, in substance, (1) that the tax is void because the county clerk did not place in separate columns of the collector’s book the respective amounts of State, county, town, city or village, road and bridge and school tax but extended the total amount of the taxes for all purposes in the column, “Total amount of tax;” (2) that appellant was doubly assessed on certain manufacturer’s tools, implements and machinery, and that the court refused to admit evidence offered by appellant to show such double taxation; (3) that appellant’s property was not assessed in uniformity with the property of other corporations in LaSalle county, and the court refused to admit evidence offered by appellant for the purpose of showing that fact; (4) that the evidence showed the board of review of LaSalle county assessed appellant on the book value of its property, and that if other corporations in the county were not likewise assessed then the assessment against appellant’s property was void because made by a different method and upon a different principle.

For an understanding of the case it will be necessary to state the material facts disclosed by the record.

Appellant is a subsidiary of the General Motors corporation and engaged in the manufacture of plate glass at Ottawa, Illinois. Its industrial plant there consisted of three divisions or units and about one hundred dwelling houses, all of which were located upon a 207-acre tract of land. The last quadrennial assessment of this property was made by the local assessor in 1927. The board of review apparently made some effort that year to place a fair valuation upon the properties of all corporations within the county and sent out notices asking that each corporation bring in its books in order that the board might place a fair valuation upon their respective properties. No books were brought in by any of the corporations but figures were presented by several of the companies. The board of review endeavored to use a rule or plan of taking one-third of the full value of property as a fair cash value for assessment purposes. The figures presented by appellant’s agents were not accepted by the board of review, and after some investigation by the board it materially increased appellant’s personal property and real estate assessments, making the total assessment in excess of $3,000,000. Appellant paid part of its taxes extended on that assessment and refused to pay the balance. Upon application for judgment and sale for delinquent taxes for 1927 in amount of $24,562 a trial was had and judgment and order of sale were entered by the county court. An appeal was prosecuted to this court and the judgment reversed. The increase made by the board of review was declared to be invalid because it was a lump sum assessment. (People v. National Plate Glass Co. 332 Ill. 599.) The opinion in that case was filed December 20, 1928. Appellant’s agent filed a personal property schedule for 1928, which was materially increased by the assessor, and its total real and personal property assessment for 1928 was $3,178,170. Appellant filed a complaint with the board of review as to its 1928 real and personal property assessment, and through its attorney on December 6, 1928, secured a reduction thereon of approximately $1,000,000. Two months later the board of review reconsidered the real estate assessment and increased it $71,830, thereby making appellant’s personal property assessment the sum of $748,740 and its real property assessment $1,501,260, or a total of $2,250,000. Appellant paid part of the taxes based on this assessment and objected to the balance, which was returned delinquent. When application for judgment and order of sale for delinquent taxes for 1928 was made by the county collector in the county court, it appears from the statement of counsel for appellant and the testimony of one of the members of the board of review that a compromise was reached between the parties, an abatement of $78,000 was made in the assessment and the delinquent taxes for 1928 were paid. In 1929 P. R. Millerschin, the assistant secretary and treasurer of the glass company, filed its personal property schedule with the local assessor. This schedule was in amount of $634,740 and was $11,000 to $15,000 less than its personal property schedule filed in 1928 and 1927. The local assessor accepted the company’s schedule and the personal property taxes for 1929 were extended on that basis. The real property assessment of $1,501,260 remained as it was for the previous year. Appellant filed a complaint on September 7, 1929, with the board of review relative to this assessment, wherein it fixed the value of its real estate at $1,014,715 and its personal property at $634,740, which latter amount was the same as that shown in its 1929 schedule and as accepted by the assessor. Several conferences were had by members of the board of review, appellant’s attorney and Millerschin, one of appellant’s officers. These conferences and hearings resulted in a reduction of $136,000 in appellant’s real estate assessment, and there being no change made in the assessment of its personal property the total 1929 assessment was $2,000,000. Appellant paid a portion of the tax extended thereon for 1929 and refused to pay the balance. Thereafter judgment and order of sale for 1929 delinquent taxes were entered against appellant’s property by the county court as previously stated.

It is first contended by appellant that the tax is invalid because the county clerk extended the taxes against appellant’s property in one column as a total sum instead of placing the amount of each different kind of tax in a separate column. Section 125 of the Revenue act, (Smith’s Stat. 1929, p. 2383,) as well as other provisions found in the City and Village act and the School act, makes it the duty of the county clerk to make out for the use of the tax collector, in books to be furnished by the county, correct lists of taxable property as assessed and equalized, and such books shall contain proper columns for the extension of the several kinds of taxes. The statutory provisions contemplate that the county clerk, except in counties over 500,000 inhabitants, shall extend the respective kinds of taxes in separate columns to be provided therefor in the collector’s book.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.E. 319, 344 Ill. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-smith-v-national-plate-glass-co-ill-1931.