delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiffs, the Little Sister Coal Corporation and the Truax-Traer Coal Company, brought an action against Paul Dawson, the treasurer of Fulton County and, ex officio, the county collector, to recover personal property taxes paid undеr protest. The asserted basis for recovery was allegedly improper increases in assessments made by the supervisor of assessments on personal property of the plaintiffs. The circuit court of Fulton County denied the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and entered judgment for the defendant. Since both the revenue and a constitutional question are involved, the appeal by the plaintiffs was taken directly to this court. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 110A, par. 302(a).
Four cases were consolidated for appeal and the underlying facts have been stipulated by the parties. The plaintiffs are coal mining corporations with substantial personal property in three Fulton County townships. In 1962 they prepared schedules of personal property and filed them with the appropriate township assessor. The schedules contained the plaintiffs’ own estimates or assessments of the value of their personal property. The township assessor then “returned” the schedule by listing these entries in his records. The supervisor of assessments later, which is the plaintiffs’ complaint, increased the assessment of their personal property above the amounts returned by the township assessor without giving notice to the plaintiffs and an opportunity to be heard. These new assessments, as well as all оther assessments of personal property, were subsequently published in various newspapers circulated in Fulton County. The plaintiffs paid the taxes on the basis of the increased assessments under protest and within one year filed petitions for a refund of thе taxes attributable to the increased assessments.
The issues presented are whether under the due-process clause or under the provisions of the Revenue Act, notice to the taxpayer and an opportunity for him to be heard are required before the supervisor of assessments may increase assessments upon personal property which have been returned by a township assessor.
The Revenue Act requires that the owners of taxable personal property in Illinois list propеrty owned on April 1st of each year upon a schedule prescribed by the Department of Revenue, which is available at the offices of local assessors. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, pars. 528-534.) The taxpayers must execute the schedule under oath and return it to the assessor. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, pars. 529, 532.) It is then the duty of the assessor to determine and fix the fair cash value of all listed items of personal property. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, par. 532.) The Act further provides that in counties under 150,000 population after the township assessor hаs made his return as described : “The supervisor of assessments shall have the same authority as the township assessor to assess and to make changes or alterations in the assessment of property, and shall assess and make such changes or alteratiоns in the assessment of property as though originally made. Such changes by the supervisor of assessments in valuations returned by the township assessor shall be noted in a column provided therefor, and no change shall be made in the original figures.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, par. 576.) After the supervisor of assessments has processed the schedules, the assessment list must be published in a newspaper of the county. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, par. 584.) The taxpayer has a statutory right, following publication, to appear before the board of review and be heard as to the correctness of the assessment placed upon his property. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, pars. 588, 589(4).
This court in Dietman v. Hunter,
Since no statutory or constitutional ground for distinguishing, insofar as the notice and hearing provisions are concerned, the assessment procedure for real property from that for personal property, it wоuld appear that we must hold, based on Dietman, that no notice and opportunity for a hearing need be given a taxpayer prior to the supervisor’s increasing the assessment on personal property. However, the plaintiffs argue that cеrtain language from Dietman discloses that the court intended its holding to be limited to increases in real-estate assessments. It intended, the argument is, to retain the rule, expressed in early cases that when a schedule of personal property has been accepted by the township assessor, there could be no subsequent change in the assessment without notice to the taxpayer. The language relied on is : “Neither by statute nor by custom does the taxpayer place his own value upon his real еstate for taxing purposes. The element of reliance upon a valuation accepted by the assessor is absent in the assessment of real property. The real property owner first learns of his assessed valuation when he reads the published statutory notice after the supervisor of assessments has examined the assessor’s books and turned them over to the board of review.”
But a reading of Dietman discloses that the court did not reconsider the rule expressed in earlier personal property decisions which required that notice and an opportunity for hearing must precede an assessment increase at any stage of the personal property procedure. The justification for that rule was that the assessor by acсepting the valuation set by the taxpayer represented thereby that it was satisfactory to him and entitled the taxpayer to rely on this implicit representation. The quoted comment by the Diet-man court was made to show that this basis for decision did not exist in the case of real-property assessments. The question of the validity of that rule was simply not before the court.
Here, however, the question is squarely presented and a re-examination of what was our rule from earlier cases is appropriate.
There never has been an express statutory requirement that notice and a hearing be afforded a taxpayer as a necessary preliminary to an increase in a personal property assessment by the supervisor of assessments. The rule that notice and hearing were required in these personal property assessment cases came from judicial declarations beginning in 1867 with Cleghorn v. Postlewaite,
As has been stated, due process requires only that the property owner be given notice and an opportunity to be heard upon the valuation of his property at some point in the taxing process before his liability to pay the tax becomes finally established. (Central of Georgia Railway Company v. Wright,
The plaintiffs’ сontention that taxpayers are entitled to assume from the acceptance by the township assessor of personal property schedules that no increase in assessment will be proposed without prior notice to them must be rejected. The requirement, which existed when Cleghorn was decided, that the assessor must issue a new certificate to the taxpayer if the assessment was to be increased no longer appears in the statute. Further, the supervisor of assessments is given the express statutory authority to make changes or alterations in the valuations of property returned by the township assessor. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, par. 576.) There is no requirement in the statute that notice and an opportunity for hearing precede these alteratiоns. In addition, provisions appear in the Revenue Act for informing the taxpayer of any altered valuation by newspaper publication before the valuation becomes final or by reply to the taxpayer’s personal inquiry. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, pars. 576, 583, 584.) Considering this, a taxpayer is not justified in assuming that his self-assessment, once accepted by the township assessor, cannot be altered by the supervisor of assessments without prior notice to him and an opportunity for a hearing. There is neither constitutional nоr statutory support for such an assumption.
The last argument presented by the plaintiffs relates to the manner in which the increases in the assessments were recorded. It is said that the supervisor of assessments did not note the changes in assessment in a specific column provided for such changes as the statute requires. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969, ch. 120, par. 576.) However, this question was not raised in the trial court and cannot, therefore, be considered for the first time on appeal. Benson v. Isaacs,
The judgment of the circuit court of Fulton County, for the reasons appearing here, is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Crebs took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
