28 N.E.2d 109 | Ill. | 1940
This is an appeal from a judgment of the county court of Cook county overruling objections to the application of the county collector for judgment and order of sale for delinquent taxes for the year 1934 against the property of the appellant.
The property assessed consists of four eighteen-hole golf courses together with surrounding lands, buildings and improvements attendant to the usual golf and country club. The property is located about twenty-six miles south of the central business district of Chicago, along the Illinois Central railroad, and is surrounded almost entirely by farming lands. The proper authorities of Cook county assessed the property at amounts ranging from $525 to $575 per acre, while the adjoining farm lands were assessed at from $150 to $363 per acre. The only issue is whether the property of the Olympia Fields Country Club was assessed at so grossly excessive an amount, in comparison with the assessed value of adjoining properties, as to constitute a fraud against the property owner. *103
Appellant claims that the facts show that the taxing authorities have assessed the land for taxation purposes at a value grossly in excess of its market value, and that such assessment was deliberately and wilfully made, which it is claimed gives rise to a constructive fraud. Appellee answers that the lands of appellant are of an entirely different nature, use, and value from that of surrounding farm lands; that the use of the property for golfing and country club purposes, together with its special improvements, is sufficient ground for its segregation as a class of property in a different category from land used only for farming purposes.
Section 1 of article 9 of the Illinois constitution requires that taxation shall be by general law uniform as to the class upon which it shall operate. This court adheres to the doctrine that this provision of the constitution means uniformity as applied to a class. No prohibition against classification of property and taxpayers into different classes can be read into the constitution. (Coal Run Coal Co. v. Finlen,
In People v. Millard,
Concerning the appellant's claim of constructive fraud, the rule is that fraud in the valuation of property for purposes of taxation must be proved by clear and sufficient evidence. (People
v. Millard, supra; People v. Chicago, Burlington and QuincyRailroad Co.
The judgment of the county court in overruling the objections of appellant is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.