Rosehill Cemetery Co. v. Kern

147 Ill. 483
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 147 Ill. 483 (Rosehill Cemetery Co. v. Kern) 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
Rosehill Cemetery Co. v. Kern, 147 Ill. 483 (Ill. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill by the Rosehill Cemetery Company, to enjoin the collection of a general tax levied on the west half of the south-west quarter of section 6, township 4, north, range 14, east, in Cook county. The theory of the bill is, that the property is exempt from taxation.

All parties agree that the company is an existing corporation, organized under a special charter, granted by the legislature of this State in 1859. (Private Laws of 1859, p. 29.) Section 5 of the charter provides: “All lots sold for burial purposes by said cemetery company, when conveyed by the corporation to individual proprietors, shall- be indivisible, but may be held and owned in undivided shares, and shall be free from taxation and from execution and attachment: Provided, that no one person shall hold, at one time, more than four lots so exempted; and all estate, real or personal, held by the company, actually used by the corporation for burial purposes, or for the general use of lot holders, or subservient to burial uses, and which shall have been platted and recorded as cemetery grounds, shall be likewise exempt as above.”

The company acquired, in 1873, the land in question for the purpose of some time using it for cemetery purposes, as a part of its burial grounds, it being contiguous to other lands owned by it, in actual use for such purpose. It is conceded by the bill that it remained subject to taxation up to the year 1890, the tax being paid by the company for each preceding year. It is alleged in the bill “that it became necessary to devote said eighty acres to burial purposes, and on April 28, 1890, the company resolved that the lands-be platted for burial purposes, and for the general use of lot owners, and subservient to burial purposes. The plat was duly made, approved, and on April 30, 1890, filed for record. Book 41, pages 13 and 14. Said plaintiff, since the plat was made, has sold, in said lands, burial lots, and is continuously selling lots, and ever since said plat was made the lands have been actually used for burial purposes, save a small lake and little spaces at intersection of open ways, and such portions are held for the general uses of the lot holders and purchasers of burial lots, mainly for ornamental purposes, subservient to burial purposes, and platted and recorded as such. The space marked ‘dwelling house’ is, and has been ever since the making of said plat, used by the employes of the plaintiff, who are at work in its grounds, and subservient to burial uses. The space marked ‘greenhouse’ is used by the company in connection with the cemetery, and is also subservient to burial purposes.”

This last allegation is denied by the answer, and the real issue in the case is thus formed, viz., was this eighty-acre tract, or any part of it, so platted and used by the corporation for burial purposes as to exempt it from general taxation for the year 1891, under the provisions of section 5, supra. The finding of the court below upon this issue is as follows:

“The court finds that the board of managers of said company, on the 28th day of April, A. D. 1890, resolved that said lands be surveyed and platted into lots for burial purposes, and for the general use of the lot holders. On said day said-lands were platted into burial lots and grounds, for the general use of lot holders. Said plat was duly acknowledged as-required by law, and was on April 29, 1890, approved by H. J. Jones, examiner of subdivisions, Cook county, Illinois, and the said plat was, by the board of -managers of the plaintiff,, ordered to be placed on record in the recorder’s office of said county of Cook, and it was on April 30, 1890, duly filed in the office of said recorder, and was recorded in book 41 of plats,, pages 13 and 14 of the records of plats of said Cook county. The court finds that at the time of the making of said plat, and at the time of the making of said assessment, said lands were not in open, actual use by the said cemetery company for burial purposes or for the general use of the lot holders, nor subservient to said burial uses, so that they did not properly constitute grounds actually used by the corporation for burial-purposes,.or grounds for the general use of the lot holders, or subservient thereto, in the meaning of section 5 of the charter of said corporation, nor were they then used by said-corporation for cemetery purposes, exclusively as a graveyard or grounds for the burial of the dead, or as subservient thereto, except that part of said lands designated in said plat as section 109. The court finds that said section was, in the spring of 1890, made up into grounds for burial lots, the first burial-therein having taken place in June, 1890, and that there were subsequent burials in said section prior to the filing of this-bill. The said section, from the month of June, 1890, to the time of the filing of this bill, was used exclusively for a part of its graveyard and ground for the burial of the dead, and the court finds that said section 109 was not properly assessed for the taxes of 1891, and is exempt from the taxes of that year.”

. The collection of the proportionate part of the tax upon this section was accordingly restrained, and the injunction dissolved as to the balance, thus holding about seventy-six acres of the tract Subject to taxation. Only this latter part of the decree is called in question by this appeal.

The following, substantially the testimony of George H. Scott, called by the complainant, gives in detail the manner in which the grounds have been used prior to and since the platting. He says:

“I am a surveyor in the employ of said complainant, and have been in its employ since 1884. I live on the cemetery grounds now. I am familiar with its grounds and property, and was in 1890. Knew the condition of the grounds in April, 1890. .We were making ground that year.

Q. “In April, 1890, and on the 30th of April, 1890, how many acres were included in complainant’s burial grounds ?

A. “About three hundred acres, and enclosed by a fence.

Q. “On the 30th of April, 1890, how many acres of land did the company own, if you know ?

A. “About two hundred and seventy or two hundred and eighty acres. The cemetery grounds are in Lake View township, now in Chicago. * * * I know the eighty acres of land described in the bill. It adjoins the other grounds of the cemetery company. It is enclosed in one common enclosure with it. Nothing separates it from the rest of the ground of the company. It has been so enclosed since 1884. I repaired the fences in 1884. In 1886 I leveled and plowed nearly forty acres of this eighty-acre'tract, and sowed it with grass seed, to grow sod for the use of the cemetery. In 1884 I put a sewer through it, for the drainage of the cemetery generally. There was no other way by which we could drain the cemetery, with the exception of these twenty-three acres, or thereabouts (referring to the south-east corner of the grounds), than by way of through that eighty acres. The ground in the eighty acres is low, and it forms a general water-shed of the cemetery. We have greenhouses on it also, in which we raisé flowers for cemetery purposes; also barns for housing the horses used for cemetery work, and two houses in which I and the gardner live. I made a survey of this eighty acres in 1889.

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147 Ill. 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosehill-cemetery-co-v-kern-ill-1893.