People ex rel. Nash v. Barnett, 360 Ill. 67 (1935)

Feb. 21, 1935 · Illinois Supreme Court · No. 22831
360 Ill. 67

(No. 22831.

The People ex rel. Thomas D. Nash, County Collector, Appellee, vs. Edna E. Barnett, Appellant.

Opinion filed February 21, 1935

Rehearing denied April 9, 1935

*68Robert N. Holt, for appellant.

Thomas J. Courtney, State’s Attorney, and Louis H. Geiman, (Hayden N. Bell, and Jacob Shamberg, of counsel,) for appellee.

Mr. Justice Herrick

delivered the opinion of the court:

The county court of Cook county overruled the objections of the appellant to a tax of $85.47 extended against her property under a tax levy purported to have been made by school district No. 73½. From the judgment against the property and ordering the sale thereof the appellant has prosecuted this appeal.

There is no controversy as to the facts. School district No. 73 on August 6, 1930, levied a tax for the education fund and the building fund aggregating $55,000 and filed its certificate of levy with the' county clerk. On August 15, 1930, a certain portion of school district No. 73 was organized into a new school district known as No. 73Li, and the resolution dividing the district was filed with the county clerk on September 3, 1930. In February and March, 1932, in connection with the general extension of taxes for the year 1930 in Cook county, the county clerk, acting on advice of counsel, extended the entire $55,000 *69against the real estate and property then remaining in district No. 73. On or about October 6, 1931, the school authorities of the two districts met and provided for a division of the school funds between the districts on a basis of fifty-eight per cent- for district No. 73 as reduced and forty-two per cent for the new district No. 73^. This resolution was filed with the township treasurer but not with the county cleric. On October 10, 1930, school district No. 73JX made a levy in the sum of $5730.50 for the purpose of paying interest on bonds, which tax was extended against the property in that district, but the district did not make any other levy in that year. In 1931 school district No. 73^ levied its annual tax in the sum of $30,000 for the education fund and $17,500 for the building fund, and the county clerk extended a rate of 1.55 by virtue of said levy. In addition to the levy made in 1931 by district No. 73 )X a tax rate of .66 was extended by the county clerk as a back-tax levy in the sum of $23,100, being the sum of $10,500 education fund and $12,600 building fund. In explanation of the so-called back-tax levy, the tax extension clerk testified that of his own motion he went back to the levy made by tire old school district No. 73 in 1930 and used that as the basis for the 1930 back taxes extended in 1931 for school district No. 73 *X. He arrived at the amount of $23,100 by taking forty-two per cent of the levy of $55,000 made by district No. 73 on August 6, 1930.

It is the contention of the appellant that the tax levy of $23,100 was wholly without authority of law; that it is in no sense a back tax nor is it omitted property from any tax levy made by school district No. 73 JX, while the appellee argues that it was clearly an error of the clerk in not extending the levy of August 6, 1930, against all the property at that time in school district No. 73, and that the tax here questioned is a back tax erroneously not extended against the property in school district No. 73 JX.

*70The question of the original tax levy of $55,000 and the rights of the same two school districts in the distribution of the funds collected from such tax were before this court in People v. Klehm, 350 Ill. 419, in which proceeding both of the school districts were parties. In that case district No. 73yí made two contentions: (1) That by filing the certificate of tax levy with the county clerk on August 6, 1930, the tax therein ordered levied constituted an asset of the original district No. 73, and that upon the division of that district on August 15, 1930, district No. 73 became entitled to forty-two per cent and the new district No. 73 to fifty-eight per cent of the taxes so levied; and (2) the error of the county clerk, whereby practically all the property in district No. 73^ escaped the particular tax, might be corrected by a subsequent extension of the same tax against the omitted property of the district, and when collected fifty-eight per cent would be available to new district No. 73. Both of these issues were decided adversely to district No. 73^. The court there specifically held that “the proceeds of a tax levy not finally extended or in process of collection until eighteen and one-half months after the school district which made the levy had been divided, cannot be included in the immediate distribution of 'funds in the hands of the treasurer or to which the district may at the time of such division be entitled.’ ”

The provisions of section 64 of the general School law (Smith’s Stat. 1933, chap. 122, p. 2609; Cahill’s Stat. 1933, chap. 122, p. 2494;) that the school trustees “shall make forthwith a distribution of tax funds, or other funds in the hands of the treasurer, or to which the district may at the time of such division be entitled,” do not apply to taxes to be derived from a tax levy until after the levy has been determined, the tax extended and the collection begun. People v. Klehm, supra.

The appellee cites and relies on the case of People v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. 301 Ill. 541, as controlling *71upon the issue here made. He, in substance, states that the clerk failed to extend the school tax levy there involved upon the property of the entire district, and that the tax which should have been extended as a current tax in the entire district was extended as a back tax. We cannot agree with the appellee’s statement that the tax there in question was a back tax. A careful reading of that case discloses that the school tax levied had not been extended against certain real estate which, by contract made without legal authority between two county school superintendents, was agreed to be included within an adjoining school district. The objector urged that because the school tax had not been extended against lands which, though lawfully a part of the district levying the tax, were illegally included by such contract in an adjacent district, the entire tax levy was void and objector’s property was not subject to the payment of the tax extended against it. This court decided that issue against the objector. No question of the collection of a back tax was presented and the case does not support the appellee’s position.

The appellee relies upon section 277 of the Revenue act as authorizing the levy and extension of the present tax. That section provides as follows: “If the tax or assessment on property liable to taxation is prevented from being collected for any year or years, by reason of any erroneous proceeding or other cause, the amount of such tax or assessment which such property should have paid may be added to the tax on such property for any subsequent year, in separate columns designating the year or years.” Cahill’s Stat. 1933, chap. 120, par. 292, p. 2353; Smith’s Stat. p. 2406.

It must be remembered that school district No. 73½ had no power to make a lawful levy of taxes for the year 1930 for the reason that it was organized subsequent to the first Tuesday in August of that year. (People v. Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Raihvay Co. 313 Ill. 249; People *72v. Wabash Railway Co. 296 id. 527, and id. 518.) Levies and extensions of taxes must be made for current and succeeding years; the statute does not authorize the levying of a tax for the past year. (People v. New York Central Railroad Co. 356 Ill. 67.) The tax here is sought to be levied as a back tax. The term “back tax” obviously means that the property was subject to a tax at some date prior to the levying of the so-called back tax by the taxing authorities making such levy. The tax levy which it is claimed was by error not extended against the property within district No. 73 y2 was a tax levied by the old district No. 73, an entirely different taxing authority from district No. 73 y2. District No. 735/2 was not in existence at the time of such levy.

Under the authority of People v. Klehm, supra, school district No. 73 had no vested interest in the tax levy made by school district No. 73 at the time it was so made. If it ever had an interest it was not until after the tax had been determined, the tax extended and the collection begun. (People v. Klehm, supra.) It is manifest that this tax was not levied by district No. 73^ for the purpose of raising an education fund and a building fund solely for district No. 73 y%. The tax is based upon forty-two per cent of the levy of $55,000 originally made by old school district No. 73. The proceeding here is clearly an effort to collect for school district No. 735^ its forty-two per cent of the tax levy of $55,000. There is no statutory authority for the levy on behalf of district No. 73^ of such purported tax of $23,100, and the tax in question imposed thereby upon the objector’s property was void. The county court erred in not sustaining the objections to the tax in question.

The judgment of the county court of Cook county is reversed and the cause is remanded to that court, with directions to sustain the appellant’s objections.

Reversed and remanded, with directions.