delivered the opinion of the court:
The county collector of Winnebago County made application in the county court for judgment for delinquent taxes for years 1959 and i960. Samuel Lans and his two sons Bertram and William filed objections, alleging their property was so excessively overvalued as to amount to fraud. They requested a refund of a portion of their tаxes, which they had paid under protest. The court granted only a part of the relief prayed, and the objectors appeal directly to this court. The сollector has taken a cross appeal, claiming that only a difference of opinion on value is involved and that an assessment may not be held constructively fraudulent merely because it is excessive.
The subject property consists of a group of six old industrial buildings, all in fair condition, situated in the city of South Belоit. It was purchased in 1938 by Ida Lans, the now deceased wife of objector Samuel Lans, and descended to the present objectors as her heirs upon her death in i960. It was assessed for inheritance tax purposes at a value of $127,500.
For the purpose of the property tax the county treasurer’s office assеssed it at a full, fair, cash market valuation of $385,000. During the years in question in Winnebago County this figure was then equalized for tax purposes by taking 60% thereof and arriving at an equalized value of $231,000. The tax rates applied to this basis produced a tax of $8,865.82 for 1959 and $8,618.30 for 1960.
The assessor testified that in making the assessment he followed the manual of rulеs and regulations put out by the Department of Finance, using a replacement cost less depreciation formula rather than a fair cash market valuе basis. A real-estate expert called by the objectors gave an appraisal of $127,500, or approximately $1 per square foot of building area, as the fair cash market valúe. Evidence was also introduced on objectors’ behalf showing sales of eight other pieces of industrial property in the genеral area within a few years before and after the assessment in question. The prices per square foot ranged between 60^ and $1.80.
The sole question presented is whether an assessment on a basis of $385,000 as the fair market value is so excessive as to amount to constructive fraud. Under section 1 of article IX of the Illinois constitution, the courts, in the absence of fraud, have no power to review or determine the value of property fixed for purposes of taxatiоn by the administrative officers to whom such function has been delegated. It is only when the valuation has been fraudulently made that it is subject to judicial review, and mere overvaluation is not sufficient to establish fraud. (People ex rel. Callahan v. Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad Co.
In support of his cross appeаl the collector asserts that the court substituted its judgment of valuation for that of the assessor, and that the evidence was not sufficient to show constructive fraud. Wе think the judgment must be reversed, but for other reasons. The question of excessiveness and constructive fraud may not be raised in the first instance in the county court proсeedings. Section 108 of the Revenue Act gave objectors ample remedy to have the assessment, if excessive, corrected before the board of review, whether it had been- made by the assessor fraudulently or otherwise. It is provided therein that “On complaint in writing that any property described in such complаint is incorrectly assessed, the board shall review the assessment, and correct the same, as shall appear to be just.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1959, chap. 120, par. 589.) The objеctions involved here fail to recite that any such steps had been taken, nor have we found anything elsewhere in the record to indicate that the statutory remedy had been pursued.
On reconsideration of this question on a petition for rehearing which was allowed at the September, 1964, term, we see no reason for departing from the long established rule that a tax objector must pursue his administrative remedies. This court has frequently expressed the requirement that such remedies bе exhausted before judicial relief is available. Mix v. People,
Since the objectors failed to show they pursued their remedy before the board of review to have the assеssments corrected, the county court erred in sustaining the objections. The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded, with directions to overrule the objections and enter judgment as prayed by the collector.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
