The People v. C. A. R. R. Co.

154 N.E. 893, 324 Ill. 179
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1926
DocketNo. 17776. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 154 N.E. 893 (The People v. C. A. R. R. 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
The People v. C. A. R. R. Co., 154 N.E. 893, 324 Ill. 179 (Ill. 1926).

Opinion

Appellees, the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company and the receivers thereof, filed objections to certain items of tax levied and assessed against the property of the railroad company in the county of Sangamon. On hearing before the county court these objections were in part sustained. The People have appealed from the decision of the county court. Appellees have filed cross-errors, claiming that their objections should have been sustained in toto.

The tax objected to was what is commonly known as the State tax, consisting of five items: the general State tax, referred to in the statute as the revenue fund, the soldiers' compensation bonds, the State school fund, the waterway bonds and the University of Illinois. The rates of *Page 181 taxation for these items as fixed by the State levy board were as follows: Revenue fund, 45 cents on each $100 valuation; soldiers' compensation bonds, 11 cents; State school fund, 19 2/3 cents; waterway bonds, 2 2/3 cents; University of Illinois, 6 2/3 cents, — making a total of 85 cents. The amount necessary to be raised in the revenue fund was $14,000,000; in the soldiers' compensation bonds, after deducting fund on hand December 1, 1925, $3,684,519; and in the State school fund, $8,000,000. As no complaint is made of the rate levied by the levy board for waterway bonds and University of Illinois, no further attention need be paid to those items.

The assessed valuation of the property within the State subject to tax was shown to be $4,194,769,417. The evidence and computation show that the rates necessary to produce the amounts of the various funds required are as follows: Revenue fund 33.38 cents; soldiers' bonus 9.15 cents; State school fund 19.07 cents, which, together with the waterway bonds and University of Illinois, plus .06 cents to make an even rate, results in a total necessary State tax rate of 71 cents, showing an excess amounting to 14 cents on each $100 assessed valuation. The county court sustained the objection as to 11 cents of the 14 cents and overruled the objection as to 3 cents.

Appellant contends, first, that the levy board is required to raise each year an amount sufficient to meet the amounts appropriated for or to be paid out during that year, and that in the performance of this duty said board is required to exercise its judgment in fixing a rate high enough to insure such amounts over and above loss and cost of collection, regardless of any back taxes collected. The legislature in 1925 passed an act providing that the revenue fund and school fund for the biennium be raised by levying a direct tax by valuation upon the assessed taxable property of the State, and directed that the Governor, the Auditor of Public Accounts and the State Treasurer, as the levy *Page 182 board, "annually compute the several rates per cent required to produce not less than the above amounts," etc. The act further directed that the Auditor of Public Accounts certify to the county clerks of the various counties the proper rate for such levy and for other purposes for which State taxes are provided by law to be levied and collected. (Smith's Stat. 1925, chap. 120, secs. 415, 416.) Section 11 of chapter 126 1/2 (Ibid. p. 2418,) relates to the soldiers' compensation bonds, and provides that there shall be levied each year, and included in the tax levied for State purposes, such amount as shall be necessary and sufficient to pay the interest, annually, on the bonds issued under the provisions of that act and to pay and discharge the principal of such bonds at par value as they shall fall due, but that no such direct tax shall be levied for any year in which a sufficient amount of money from other sources of revenue has been appropriated and set apart to pay the interest and principal of such bonds. It was the duty of the levy board to fix a rate which would produce the various amounts required, and appellant contends that before the court will interfere with the discharge of this duty an objector must show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the rates fixed by the board were so grossly excessive and unreasonable as to constitute fraud.

On the hearing the county court, over the objection of the People, permitted objectors to show the percentage of loss and cost of collection for the years 1919 to 1923, inclusive. The following table of such percentage was introduced in evidence: 1919, 3.43 per cent; 1920, 3.50 per cent; 1921, 4.81 per cent; 1922, 4.13 per cent; and 1923, 4.60 per cent. The average percentage of loss and cost for the five years was 4.09 per cent. The average percentage for the last three years of the five-year period was 4.51 per cent. The county court held the latter computation to be the proper percentage to allow for loss and cost of collection, and that when reduced to the rate of tax on the assessed *Page 183 valuation of the property of the State it amounted to 3 cents for each $100 thereof, and the order overruled the objection to 3 cents of the 14 cents excess.

It has been many times held by this court that taxing authorities have power to make a reasonable allowance for loss and cost of collection and that they should use sound business judgment in estimating such allowance. Courts will not interefere with the exercise of sound business judgment on the part of such public authorities except to prevent an abuse of that discretion. People v. Chicago and Northwestern Railway Co.322 Ill. 150; People v. Wabash Railway Co. 296 id. 527; People v. Chicago and Alton Railway Co. 289 id. 282;People v. Sandberg Co. 277 id. 567; Chicago and Alton RailroadCo. v. Baldridge, 177 id. 229; Edwards v. People, 88 id. 340.

Appellant contends that the holding in the above cases has been that there must be a showing of fraud in order to justify the court's interference with the levy made by public authorities. While it was said in People v. Sandberg Co. supra, that the fact that in estimating the amount necessary for any purpose a larger amount is levied than that actually needed is no reason why a tax-payer should refuse to pay his taxes unless the amount levied is so grossly excessive as to show a fraudulent purpose in making the levy, such language is not to be understood as requiring the showing of actual fraud, as the rule referred to in that case, and laid down in cases here cited and others, is, in effect, that the courts will interfere with the decision of public authorities to prevent a clear abuse by such officials of their discretionary powers. (People v. Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Co. 276 Ill. 208; Same v. Same, 261 id. 33.) It is incumbent on the objector to show an abuse of discretion. What is such an abuse of discretion as to justify the interference of the court is a matter depending largely on the facts of each case. This court has always held that the levy of a tax to cover loss and cost *Page 184 of collection must be small in proportion to the entire tax.People v. Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Co. 319 Ill. 415; People v. Wabash Railway Co. 314 id. 388; People v.Millard, 307 id. 556.

In the early case of Edwards v. People, supra

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Bluebook (online)
154 N.E. 893, 324 Ill. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-c-a-r-r-co-ill-1926.