Warner v. Campbell

87 N.E. 853, 238 Ill. 630
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 87 N.E. 853 (Warner v. Campbell) 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
Warner v. Campbell, 87 N.E. 853, 238 Ill. 630 (Ill. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee, Vespasian Warner, executor of the last will and testament of John Warner, deceased, filed the bill in this case in the circuit court of DeWitt county against appellant, county clerk of said county, praying an injunction to restrain appellant, as such clerk, from extending on the tax books certain taxes on property of the estate of John Warner assessed by the board of review for years previous to that for which the assessment was made. The bill alleges that the board of review of DeWitt county in 1906 assessed against the estate of John Warner for back taxes $300,000 for the year 1903, with three years ten per cent penalty; $400,000 for the year 1904, with two years ten per cent penalty, and $500,000 for the year 1905, with one year ten per cent penalty. These assessments were made against credits of John Warner which the board of review determined had not been assessed in said years 1903, 1904 and 1905. The bill alleged that the said John Warner, deceased, had been assessed for those years on all of his personal property, including his credits, and that taxes had been extended on said assessments and had been paid by the said Warner, and that the back tax assessment made by the board of review was without authority and illegal and void. We deem it unnecessary to set out in further detail the further allegations of the bill or to set out the substance of the answer, as in our view of the case two questions to be determined are decisive of this case, namely: (1) Was John Warner assessed on his credits in the years 1903, 1904 and 1905? and (2) if he was, what effect must be given to said assessments? A temporary injunction was issued upon the filing of the bill, and after answer and replications were filed the case was referred to the master in chancery to take the testimony and report his conclusions of law and fact. The answer denied that John Warner was assessed on credits in the years 1903, 1904 and 1905. The assessment for each of the years mentioned made by the board of review, as shown by the assessors’ books offered in evidence, was in a column headed, “All other property not otherwise listed.—Assessed value.—Dollars,” and the figures made by the board in said column for each of those years to denote the amount of property were, for 1903, 300,000; for 1904, 400,000, and for 1905, 500,000. The master found that John Warner was assessed by the township assessor on credits for the year 1903 $90,980 but was not assessed on credits for the years 1904 and 1905. He also found that the value of the property as shown by the figures made by the board of review was the cash value and not the assessed value, and he recommended that the injunction should be made perpetual as to the assessment for the year 1903, and that as to the assessments for the year 1904 appellant should be enjoined from extending the taxes on a valuation of more than $80,000, or. one-fifth of the cash value of the property assessed as fixed by the board of review, and that he be enjoined from extending the taxes on the property assessed for the year 1905 on a greater sum than $100,000, which was one-fifth of the cash value of the property assessed that year, and that as against extending taxes on said sums of $80,000 and $100,000 for the years 1904 and 1905 the injunction should be dissolved. He also recommended that appellant be enjoined from adding a penalty to the taxes extended. Objections were filed before the master to his report by both parties. They were overruled by him and renewed as exceptions in the circuit court. The court found that in each of the years 1903, 1904 and 1905 said John Warner had listed his personal property, including credits, and delivered schedules thereof in each of said years to the assessor; that in each of said years said assessors had fixed and determined the fair cash value on all of the personal property of the said John Warner, including credits, and that taxes were extended on said assessment and were paid, and a decree in accordance with such findings was entered perpetually enjoining appellant from extending any taxes against the assessment and valuation of the board of review for said years 1903, 1904 and 1905. The appellant prosecutes this appeal, and contends (1) that John Warner was not in the years 1903, 1904 and 1905 assessed on credits; and (2) that if he was assessed on credits in those years the proof shows he was not assessed on all the credits owned by him in those years, and that the board of review had authority, upon ascertaining that fact, to assess credits that had been omitted.

The schedule made by Warner in the year 1903, in the column headed “Full value (as determined by assessor,)” contained the figures 90,980. Said figures are opposite the printed line of schedule numbered 38, which reads, “All other personal property required to be listed,” but immediately above the line is written “Notes, etc.” Taken in connection with the other items listed in said schedule, we think it reasonably clear that the “90,980” was intended to, and did, represent credits. In the “full value” column of the schedule made by John Warner in 1904, opposite line 26, which reads, “Moneys of other than bank, banker, broker or stock jobber,” are the figures 83,000. This item was placed on the assessor’s book in a column headed with the same words. Adam Klarr, who was assessor in the year 1904, testified he assessed John Warner’s personal property and remembered about the item of $83,000; that said Warner gave in notes to the amount of $70,000 and moneys to the amount of $13,000, and that the two were added together and the sum listed in the schedule as $83,000, and that this was due to the ignorance of the witness. In the schedule for 1905, in the “full value” column and opposite line 26, are the figures 65,000. Joseph E. Johnson testified that he was assessor that year and assessed the personal property of John Warner; that he had with him at the time the previous year’s schedule of said Warner, and that Warner said some of his mortgages had been paid off and released and he would have to look up the records before making his schedule; that he did not have as much on hand then as he had the previous year. The witness understood the 65,000 represented mortgages and securities. The testimony of these assessors was objected to by appellant as incompetent.

We are of opinion this testimony was competent, not for the purpose of contradicting the schedules but as explanatory of them. In Keokuk Bridge Co. v. People, 161 Ill. 132, it was contended by the bridge company that the Illinois assessor had assessed as in Illinois a part of the bridge that was in the State of Iowa. The description of the part of the bridge assessed as made by the assessor was such that it could not be determined whether this contention was true or not, and it was held that oral testimony was. competent to explain it. The court said (p. 139) : “The question presented is not one of revising the assessment made by the officer designated by law for the performance of the duty of assessing, but it is a question of the identification of the property that was assessed.” An inspection of the schedules and of the items of property listed in them tends to show that the items mentioned above were, in fact, intended to be listed as credits, and we do not think the court erred in. admitting this testimony. It therefore appears that John Warner was assessed on credits in each of the years 1903, 1904 and 1905.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.E. 853, 238 Ill. 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-campbell-ill-1909.