People Ex Rel. Toman v. Chicago Union Station Co.

48 N.E.2d 524, 383 Ill. 153
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1943
DocketNo. 26837. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 N.E.2d 524 (People Ex Rel. Toman v. Chicago Union Station 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. Toman v. Chicago Union Station Co., 48 N.E.2d 524, 383 Ill. 153 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal involves the validity of a tax assessed for 1936 against appellant’s property in the city of Chicago, known as the Union Railway Station. The amount of the tax, $1,728,070.40, was levied on an assessed valuation of $18,152,000, computed as follows: Main track right of way and improvements on right of way, $5,408,600; second track, $4,406,400; side track and turnouts, $8,337,000. The appellant paid, under protest, 85 percent of the total tax, or $1,477,500.19. It concedes liability for 60 per cent of the entire tax but claims refund to 25 per cent. Its objections go to 40 per cent of the entire tax, on the ground that the valuation placed on the property was arbitrary, discriminatory and so grossly excessive as to be illegal and void to the extent of 40 per cent of such valuation.

Appellant filed twenty-eight objections centered about the following points: (1) The Tax Commission systematically, intentionally and arbitrarily placed on the property an excessive valuation without any reasonable basis in fact, and such valuation constituted constructive fraud in violation of the fourteenth amendment and the commerce clause of the United States constitution, and section 2 of article II and sections 1, 9 and 10 of article IX of the Illinois constitution, and likewise violated the statutes of this State. (2) The Tax Commission used an illegal basis in arriving at the assessed value in that it considered factors that could not be reasonably or legally considered in fixing the assessed value, and refused to recognize that over $33,000,000 of the original expenditures represented not property of appellant but taxes, engineering, changes of street grades, relocation of tracks of other railroads, building of bridges, and the like, which were required under an ordinance of. March 23, 1914. (3) The Tax Commission refused to consider obsolescence or depreciation accrued but based its value in part on a valuation made in 1927 by the Interstate Commerce Commission. (4) The valuation for taxing purposes placed by the commission on the appellant’s property was arbitrary and grossly excessive as compared with the values placed by it on other like corporations in the State and in Cook county, and a debasement percentage was used which resulted in violation of constitutional provisions requiring uniformity of taxation. And (5) it is earnestly argued that appellant is not a railroad as that term is generally used, and that its property should be assessed as other property in Cook county is assessed.

Appellee urges on the other hand that appellant is & railroad company and was properly assessed as such by the Tax Commission which made its assessment on all evidence available to it, and on the same basis as that used in the case of all other railroads; that it was bound to and did use three factors, i.e., market value of stocks and bonds, capitalized earnings, and depreciated reproduction costs, and that these factors, when used with an honest exercise of judgment, resulted in a proper and reasonable assessment.

. Appellant urges that while its property is taxable by the Tax Commission as railroad property, the formula and method of valuation, generally used as applicable to railroads, are wholly inapplicable to it for the reason that its property, while having certain characteristics of a railroad, has greater similarity to other parcels of improved commercial real estate in the city of Chicago, all of which characteristics were ignored by the Tax Commission and an arbitrary formula, as applied to railroads generally, was used. In support of this contention appellant urges: (1) that it is unlike a railroad corporation; (2) it is not engaged in any kind of transportation and is the only so-called railroad in Illinois not so engaged, and (3) it receives only passenger business, and no freight.

Appellant is a corporation chartered under an act called “The Union Depot Act,” enacted “for the formation of corporations for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating union depots, and to repeal” other acts relating thereto. This act was passed in 1913. (Laws of 1913, p. 196; Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939, chap. 114, p. 2598.) Section 1 of that act provides that in order to facilitate the public convenience and safety in the transmission of goods and passengers from one railroad to another, any number of persons, not less than five, or any two or more railroad companies of themselves with individuals, may form a corporation for the purpose of “constructing * * * a union station for passengers or freight depots, or for both,” etc. This section also limits the life of the corporation and the amount of its stock.

Section 4 of the act enumerates the powers of such corporation to own real estate, acquire title by condemnation, lay tracks, with the consent of a city, upon or under streets, and make necessary connections with railroads proposing to use the said union depot. Section 6 of the act provides that there shall be no discrimination against any railroad company using or desiring to use the depot, either as to terms, conditions or regulations.

The Chicago Union Station Company is an Illinois corporation organized under this act. All of its stock is owned by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad Company, the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad Company, and the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and its depot and track facilities are used by those railroads and the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company. Such use is under leasing agreements by which the railroad companies agree to pay as a gross annual rental for the use of these facilities, a sum of money sufficient to pay interest on bonds, other capital' obligations of the appellant, all taxes and special assessments, and a dividend of not less than five percent annually on the outstanding stock, in the manner and in the proportion set out in those agreements. Appellant has no income except that paid by the railroads using its facilities under those agreements. It has a bonded indebtedness of $69,100,000 par value, all of which bonds are guaranteed both as to payment of principal and interest by the proprietary companies jointly and severally.

The question first presented is whether appellant’s property is properly assessable as railroad property. Appellant owns 21.12 acres of right of way on which it has constructed and owns 12.53 miles of first, second, third, fourth and additional railroad tracks and seven buildings consisting of its depot, concourse and train sheds, one powerhouse, two signal towers, two signal shops and one shelter. Section 40 of the Revenue Act, as it existed at the time this assessment was made, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1935, chap. 120, par. 45, p. 2616,) requires that every person, company or corporation owning, operating or constructing a railroad in this State, shall return sworn lists or schedules of the taxable property of such railroad as in the act provided. Section 42 of that act defines “railroad track” as including the superstructures on main, side or second tracks and turnouts, and the station and improvements of the railroad company on such right of way, and declares that such shall be held to be real estate for the purpose of taxation and be designated “railroad track.” The Tax Commission is required by that act to assess railroad property designated as “railroad track” and “rolling stock.”

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E.2d 524, 383 Ill. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-toman-v-chicago-union-station-co-ill-1943.