1 N.E.2d 855 | Ill. | 1936
The appellants, Louise T. Clarke and Irene T. Bruns, presented a delinquent real estate tax agreement to appellee Jarecki, judge of the county court of Cook county, which they requested him to approve pursuant to "An act in relation to the payment in installments of unpaid, forfeited or delinquent taxes on real estate situated in counties containing 500,000 or more inhabitants, and to provide for enforcement of such payment," in force July 19, 1935. (Laws of 1935, p. 1168.) The judge refused either to approve or to disapprove the agreement, on the ground that the statute was unconstitutional and void. Thereupon the appellants obtained leave to file, and filed in the circuit court of Cook county, a petition formandamus to compel the judge to pass upon the proffered agreement. The appellees filed their motion to strike the petition on the ground that the act was unconstitutional. This is a direct appeal from the order allowing the appellees' motion and the judgment of the circuit court dismissing the appellants' petition.
In substance the act provides in the first section that when real estate shall have been declared forfeited or delinquent for non-payment of general taxes for the year 1932 or any prior years these taxes may be paid in seven annual installments, beginning on August 1, 1935; that the county collector, with the approval of the county court, shall enter into a written agreement with the owner or person interested in the real estate for the payment of such installments, and this section requires that the agreement shall provide that "all interest, forfeitures, delinquencies and penalties against said real estate, as well as all costs, except those costs arising from the forfeiture (including all publication charges,) shall be waived, and in lieu thereof, the tax-payer shall pay interest upon the principal of said *182 taxes at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date of the going into effect of this act and until the several installments are paid in full: Provided, however, that the liability of the person executing said agreement with the county collector shall not be considered a personal liability, but shall attach only to the real estate covered by said agreement." Section 2 provides that when such an agreement is entered into, such forfeited real property "shall not be deemed delinquent as provided in section 177 of the Revenue act, until the several installments are due and payable respectively as provided in said agreement." This section also provides for the recording of the agreement. Section 3 provides that when all taxes due under the agreement are paid, the county collector shall cancel it and give the tax-payer a tax receipt in full. Section 4 furnishes the form of agreement, which includes the clause, "This agreement must be approved by the county court." Section 5 provides that if a default be made in payment of any installment and the default continues for six months, or if default be made in payment of current or general taxes and the property be forfeited or sold to pay current taxes, "the said property shall not be entitled to the benefits of this act, and said property shall be subject to the provisions of 'An act for the assessment of property and for the levy and collection of taxes,' approved March 30, 1872," etc. Section 6 provides that if the tax-payer fails to pay the current taxes in each of the seven succeeding years he shall not receive the benefits of the act and amounts previously paid shall be credited to the past due taxes, and in that event the county collector shall accept no further installments, and "provided, however, that nothing in this section contained shall deprive any tax-payer of the right to avail himself of any rights or privileges set forth in section 191 of 'An act for the assessment of property and for the levy and collection of taxes,' approved March 30, 1872, as amended." *183
The appellees contend that the act contravenes section 22 of article 4 of our State constitution, which prohibits the legislature from enacting local or special laws remitting fines, penalties and forfeitures. The appellants contend that section 22 of article 4 deals only with punishments by fines, penalties and forfeitures for criminal offenses, and that the act is general.
The appellants rely on a rule of construction that words must be given the same meaning wherever used in the same document unless the context does not permit, and say that the meaning established by the use of the words "penalties" and "forfeiture" in section 11 of article 2 of the constitution, where it is provided that all penalties shall be proportioned to the nature of the offense and no conviction shall work corruption of blood or forfeiture of estate, etc., requires that the words "penalties" and "forfeitures" must be given the same meaning and be held to relate only to punishment for crimes when these words are used again in section 22 of article 4.
The appellees point out that in section 2 of the schedule of the constitution of 1870 it is provided "that all fines, taxes, penalties and forfeitures, due and owing to the State of Illinois under the present constitution and laws, shall inure to the use of the People of the State of Illinois, under this constitution," and that if the appellants' argument is carried to its logical conclusion, "taxes" would have to be construed to be punitive in their nature, for the reason that words other than the word "taxes" are used elsewhere in the constitution with reference only to punishment for crimes.
The word "forfeitures," in section 22 of article 4, can not be limited to criminal offenses, since section 11 of article 2 prohibits the forfeiture of estates for criminal offenses. "Forfeiture," as there used, must be civil in its meaning, and by the rule of ejusdem generis it follows that the "penalties" there mentioned must also mean penalties *184
of a civil nature. In People v. Peacock,
The remaining question involved in this point is whether this act is general, or special and local. We take judicial notice that Cook county alone has a population of 500,000, and that the second county in size in this State (St. Clair) has less than 158,000 inhabitants. The leading decision on the question as to whether such an act as this is local and special is the case of Devine v. Cook County Comrs.
To be general a statute must not only be general in its terms but it must also be uniform in its operation upon all persons and subject matter in a like situation. (Cummings v. City ofChicago,
The act in question is also in contravention of section 1 of article 9 of the constitution, which provides that the General Assembly may provide revenue by levying a tax by valuation, "so that every person and corporation shall pay a tax in proportion to the value of his, her or its property." The words "tax" and "taxes" are defined as "any tax, special assessments or costs, interest or penalty imposed upon property." See section 292 of the Revenue act of 1872. 120 S. H. A. 277; Ill. State Bar Stat. 1935, p. 2667. *186
But the appellants insist that interest and penalties do not apply to the process of valuation. This is true; but the fact remains that the interest on delinquent taxes is charged on a tax which is based on the assessed valuation of the tax-payer's real estate, and this act, by waiving the penalties as above set forth, does produce a want of uniformity. This principle of uniformity of property taxes is one of the cardinal principles of our form of government, and attempts by the legislature to upset this rule have been thwarted in numerous cases.Primm v. City of Belleville,
The act violates section 13 of article 4 of the constitution of 1870 in that it contains a subject not expressed in its title. It purports to be an act in relation to the payment, in installments, of unpaid, forfeited or delinquent taxes on real estate. No one reading the title would suspect that the effect of the statute is to waive substantial amounts of interest, forfeitures, delinquencies, penalties and certain costs which may have accumulated over a period of years. This is the kind of thing that comes within the restriction contained in section 13 of article 4. People v. Clark,
The act also violates section 13 of article 4, in that it amends section 177 of the Revenue act of 1872 without the insertion of that section in the new act. In People v.Borgeson,
Section 177 of the Revenue act of 1872 as amended has for many years covered the subject of delinquent real *187 estate taxes. The act now in question must be read in connection with that section to determine the rights of parties seeking relief under the new act. In case of default in making the payments authorized by this act the parties are remitted to section 177 for their rights. In the meantime the act in question suspends the force of section 177. It is apparent that the act is not complete in itself but is, in fact, an amendment of section 177 and is void.
Other points are urged against the constitutionality of the act, but it is not necessary to consider them.
The judgment of the circuit court of Cook county is right, and it is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.