Hussein v. Cook County Assessor's Office , 2017 IL App (1st) 161184 ( 2017 )


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    2017 IL App (1st) 161184
    No. 1-16-1184
    SECOND DIVISION
    September 19, 2017
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    RIBHIEH HUSSEIN,                                        )     Appeal from the Circuit Court
    )     of Cook County.
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                             )
    )
    v.                                                      )     No. 15 L 50407
    )
    COOK COUNTY ASSESSOR’S OFFICE;                          )
    JOSEPH BERRIOS, Assessor; DEPARTMENT                    )     The Honorable
    OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS,                             )     Carl Anthony Walker,
    ERRONEOUS HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION                           )     Judge Presiding.
    DEPARTMENT,                                             )
    )
    Defendants-Appellees.                            )
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE PUCINSKI delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Lavin concurred in the judgment and
    opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1          The plaintiff, Ribhieh Hussein, appeals from the trial court’s affirmance of a decision
    issued by the Department of Erroneous Homestead Exemption Administrative Hearings
    (“Department”), finding that the plaintiff was liable for back taxes, interest, and penalties totaling
    $58,377.54 for erroneous homestead exemptions on four properties that she owned. This amount
    included back taxes, interest, and penalties for tax years 2007 through 2013.
    1-16-1184
    ¶2          On appeal, the plaintiff argues that (1) before the Cook County Assessor’s Office
    (“Assessor”) could collect interest and penalties, it first bore the burden of proof of
    demonstrating that the erroneous homestead exemptions placed on the plaintiff’s properties were
    not a result of clerical error and that the Assessor failed to carry that burden in this case; and (2)
    even if the burden of proving clerical error or omission belonged to the plaintiff, she presented
    sufficient evidence at the hearing to carry that burden. For the reasons that follow, we conclude
    that the burden of proving clerical error or omission belongs to the plaintiff and that she failed to
    sustain that burden. We also find, however, that the portion of the Department’s order finding
    the plaintiff liable for back taxes, interest, and penalties for tax year 2007 exceeded the
    Department’s authority and, thus, must be vacated as void.
    ¶3                                           BACKGROUND
    ¶4          In 2013, the Illinois General Assembly enacted section 9-275 of the Illinois Property Tax
    Code (“Code”) (35 ILCS 200/9-275 (West 2014)), which provides the Assessor the ability to
    place liens on taxpayers’ property for unpaid property taxes, interest, and penalties resulting
    from the application of homestead exemptions to which the taxpayers were not entitled
    (“erroneous homestead exemptions”). As provided in the version of section 9-275 in effect when
    the Assessor sought to collect unpaid taxes from the plaintiff in 2014, the Assessor was entitled
    to record a lien against property for which the property owner received “3 or more erroneous
    homestead exemptions for real property, including at least one erroneous homestead exemption
    granted for the property against which the lien is sought, during any of the 6 assessment years
    immediately prior to the assessment year in which the notice of intent to record a tax lien is
    served.” 35 ILCS 200/9-275(c) (West 2014). In such a situation, the taxpayer is liable for the
    unpaid taxes, 10% interest per annum, and a penalty of 50% of the total amount of unpaid taxes
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    for each year. 35 ILCS 200/9-275(f) (West 2014). A taxpayer may escape liability for the
    interest and penalties, however, where he or she paid the tax bills as received for each year and
    where the erroneous homestead exemption was the result of a clerical error or omission on the
    part of the Assessor. 35 ILCS 200/9-275(h) (West 2014).
    ¶5          In October 2014, pursuant to section 9-275, the Assessor sent to the plaintiff notices of
    intent to record liens (“Notices”) on four properties owned by the plaintiff. We will identify
    these four properties by the last four digits of their property index numbers (“PIN”): 1001, 1002,
    1003, and 1004 (collectively, “the properties”).      The Notices stated that a review of the
    properties revealed that the plaintiff had received erroneous homestead exemptions on each of
    these properties. Accordingly, the Assessor notified the plaintiff that it would be imposing liens
    on the properties for unpaid back taxes, interest, and penalties attributable to the plaintiff’s
    receipt of erroneous homestead exemptions, if the plaintiff did not pay the amounts due within
    30 days. The Notices broke down the amounts claimed due on each of the properties as follows:
    PIN 1001
    EXEMPTION TAX               PRINCIPAL INTEREST           PENALTY       ACCRUING TOTAL
    TYPE      YEAR                        PER                              INTEREST
    ANNUM
    HomeOwner       2013        $881.58   $88.16             $440.79       $0              $1410.53
    HomeOwner       2012        $809.83   $161.97            $404.92       $0              $1376.72
    HomeOwner       2011        $617.88   $185.36            $308.94       $0              $1112.18
    Long-Time       2010        $1609.91  $643.96            $804.96       $0              $3058.83
    Occupant
    HomeOwner       2009        $1716.47       $858.24       $858.24       $0              $3432.95
    HomeOwner       2008        $1578.92       $947.35       $789.46       $0              $3315.73
    HomeOwner       2007        $536.06        $375.24       $268.03       $0              $1179.33
    PIN 1002
    EXEMPTION TAX               PRINCIPAL INTEREST PENALTY                  ACCRUING TOTAL
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    TYPE        YEAR              PER                  INTEREST
    ANNUM
    HomeOwner   2013   $881.58    $88.16     $440.79   $0         $1410.53
    HomeOwner   2012   $809.83    $161.97    $404.92   $0         $1376.72
    HomeOwner   2011   $624.06    $187.22    $312.03   $0         $1123.31
    HomeOwner   2010   $1428.29   $571.32    $714.15   $0         $2713.76
    HomeOwner   2009   $1502.82   $751.41    $751.41   $0         $3005.64
    HomeOwner   2008   $1383.31   $829.99    $691.66   $0         $2904.96
    HomeOwner   2007   $534.51    $374.16    $267.26   $0         $1175.93
    PIN 1003
    EXEMPTION TAX      PRINCIPAL INTEREST    PENALTY   ACCRUING TOTAL
    TYPE      YEAR               PER                   INTEREST
    ANNUM
    HomeOwner   2013   $881.58   $88.16      $440.79   $0         $1410.53
    HomeOwner   2012   $809.83   $161.97     $404.92   $0         $1376.72
    HomeOwner   2011   $617.88   $185.36     $308.94   $0         $1112.18
    Long-Time   2010   $1791.19  $716.48     $895.60   $0         $3403.27
    Occupant
    HomeOwner   2009   $1929.80   $964.90    $964.90   $0         $3859.60
    HomeOwner   2008   $1774.12   $1064.47   $887.06   $0         $3725.65
    HomeOwner   2007   $537.10    $375.97    $268.55   $0         $1181.62
    PIN 1004
    EXEMPTION TAX      PRINCIPAL INTEREST    PENALTY   ACCRUING TOTAL
    TYPE      YEAR               PER                   INTEREST
    ANNUM
    HomeOwner   2013   $881.58   $88.16      $440.79   $0         $1410.53
    HomeOwner   2012   $809.83   $161.97     $404.92   $0         $1376.72
    HomeOwner   2011   $624.06   $187.22     $312.03   $0         $1123.31
    HomeOwner   2010   $1428.29  $571.32     $714.15   $0         $2713.76
    HomeOwner   2009   $1502.82  $751.41     $751.41   $0         $3005.64
    HomeOwner   2008   $1383.31  $829.99     $691.66   $0         $2904.96
    HomeOwner   2007   $534.51   $374.16     $267.26   $0         $1175.93
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    ¶6          Upon receipt of the Notices, the plaintiff requested a hearing. At that hearing, the
    plaintiff stipulated to the fact that she had, in fact, received the homestead exemptions identified
    in the Notices. In addition, the plaintiff offered the following testimony. She resided in a home
    in Burbank, Illinois, and had done so since 1991 or 1992 when she bought that home. The
    properties at issue were four units in a six-unit condominium building in Chicago Ridge, Illinois.
    The plaintiff purchased that building in 1988 and lived there from the time of purchase until she
    moved to Burbank in 1992. Since moving to Burbank, she has not lived in the building in
    Chicago Ridge. The plaintiff acknowledged that she received and paid the tax bills for the four
    properties at issue. When she received the bills, she would only look at them to determine
    whether they were the tax bills for the Chicago Ridge building or for her Burbank home and how
    much she owed.
    ¶7          According to the plaintiff’s testimony, when she purchased the Chicago Ridge building,
    she never applied to receive any homestead exemptions on the properties, and she did not
    subsequently apply for any in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, or 2013. The plaintiff also
    testified that she did not know that any exemptions were being applied to the properties. In fact,
    she did not become aware of the fact that homestead exemptions had been applied to the
    properties until she received the Notices in October 2014.
    ¶8          In closing argument at the hearing, the plaintiff argued that because the Assessor failed to
    demonstrate that the plaintiff had applied for the homestead exemptions on the properties, she
    should be permitted to take advantage of the clerical-error provision of section 9-275(h) and not
    be held liable for the requested interest and penalties. The administrative law judge hearing the
    matter disagreed that the burden was on the Assessor to demonstrate that the plaintiff had applied
    for the exemptions, because nothing in the governing statute required such proof. He elaborated:
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    “There is a provision in the legislation that says that if it is established that this came
    about because of a clerical error, you would only have to pay the back taxes. It could be
    looked at in a couple of ways. The burden of proof is always on the assessor’s office.
    But I don’t know that that requires them to establish there was no clerical error. I don’t
    know how you would go about doing it. The other way of looking at it is that the—if
    you’re going to present an affirmative defense, you would have to present evidence that
    there was, in fact, a clerical error.
    There have been no evidence [sic] presented here that there was any sort of clerical
    error. There has been no evidence presented here that there was some sort of system that
    was supposed to have been followed, that was not followed. The legislation, while it
    doesn’t say so directly, seems to suggest that it is, uh, to be strictly construed, and it does
    set forth for the penalties and the interest that are being sought, so I find by
    preponderance of the evidence that, uh, that the county has established and met its burden
    of proof. I find that there was no evidence presented in the record one way or another
    that would establish the defense that these exemptions were done as a result of the
    clerical error of the assessor’s office.”
    Based on these findings, the Department entered an order holding the plaintiff liable for the
    erroneous homestead exemptions identified in the Notices.
    ¶9          Thereafter, the plaintiff filed in the trial court a complaint for administrative review of the
    Department’s decision. In the trial court, the plaintiff renewed her contention that the Assessor
    bore the burden of proving that the erroneous homestead exemptions were not the result of
    clerical error or omission. She also argued that even if she bore the burden of proving clerical
    error or omission, she had satisfied that burden.
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    ¶ 10          After complete briefing by the parties, the trial court issued its opinion affirming the
    Department’s decision. With respect to the issue of who bore the burden of proof on the alleged
    clerical error or omission, the trial court found that the language and structure of section 9-275
    indicated that the burden of proof of proving clerical error or omission belonged to the plaintiff.
    The trial court also noted that placing the burden of proof on the plaintiff was consistent with the
    Code’s attempts to balance protecting taxpayers from administrative errors with reducing the
    burden on the Assessor. According to the trial court, by placing the burden on the taxpayer to
    make sure that the correct exemptions are applied to a given property, section 9-275 places the
    burden on the person with the greatest knowledge of the property’s use; after all, it would be
    unduly burdensome to charge the Assessor with the responsibility of staying abreast of every
    change in use or ownership of all of the properties in the county.
    ¶ 11          As for the plaintiff’s contention that even if the burden to prove clerical error falls on her,
    she carried her burden, the trial court disagreed, noting that the plaintiff never made any effort to
    correct the erroneous homestead exemptions, despite receiving tax bills that would have
    identified the exemptions applied to each property. In addition, the trial court dismissed the
    plaintiff’s claim that taxpayers do not have access to the documentation necessary to prove
    clerical error, observing that taxpayers could keep copies of the notices and bills sent to them by
    the Assessor and copies of their applications for exemptions.
    ¶ 12          Following the trial court’s decision, the plaintiff brought this timely appeal.
    ¶ 13                                     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶ 14          Under section 9-275(e) (35 ILCS 200/9-275(e) (West 2014)), a property owner is entitled
    to appeal the decision of the Department to the circuit court pursuant to the Administrative
    Review Law (735 ILCS 5/3-101 et seq. (West 2014)). Under the Administrative Review Law,
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    we may review all questions of law and fact presented by the record (735 ILCS 5/3-110 (West
    2014)), but our review is of the decision of the administrative agency, not the trial court (Exelon
    Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 
    234 Ill. 2d 266
    , 272 (2009)).
    ¶ 15                                                   ANALYSIS
    ¶ 16           On appeal, the plaintiff again argues that the Assessor bore the burden of proving that the
    erroneous homestead exemptions were not the result of clerical error or omission, or, in the
    alternative, if the burden belonged to the plaintiff to prove clerical error or omission, she carried
    that burden. We disagree in both respects.
    ¶ 17           First, we note that despite contending that section 9-275 places the burden of proof on the
    Assessor’s office, the plaintiff merely quotes the clerical-error provision of section 9-275(h) and
    fails to provide any analysis of the language. 1 Nevertheless, because the thrust of the plaintiff’s
    argument is apparent and because our review of issues of statutory interpretation is de novo
    (Cuevas v. Berrios, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 151318
    , ¶ 33), the plaintiff’s failure to elaborate on her
    position does not inhibit our review of this matter.
    ¶ 18           The clerical-error provision of section 9-275(h), as it read in the 2014 version in effect at
    the time that the Department issued the Notices to the plaintiff, read as follows:
    “If the erroneous homestead exemption was granted as a result of a clerical error or
    omission on the part of the chief county assessment officer, and if the owner has paid its
    tax bills as received for the year in which the error occurred, then the interest and
    penalties authorized by this Section with respect to that homestead exemption shall not be
    chargeable to the owner. However, nothing in this Section shall prevent the collection of
    the principal amount of back taxes due and owing.”
    1
    In contrast, the defendants have submitted an exceptionally thorough, well-written, and well-reasoned analysis of
    the statutory language and underlying policy.
    -8-
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    35 ILCS 200-9-275(h). In interpreting this language, our goal is to identify and implement the
    intent of the legislature, which is best evidenced by the language of the statute. Cuevas, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 151318
    , ¶ 33. “If the language is clear and unambiguous, we may not depart from the
    plain language and meaning of the statute by reading into it exceptions, limitations or conditions
    that the legislature did not express, nor by rendering any word or phrase superfluous or
    meaningless.” 
    Id.
     We must read all parts of the statute together and not in isolation, so as to
    “produce a harmonious whole.” Dow Chemical Co. v. Department of Revenue, 
    224 Ill. App. 3d 263
    , 266 (1991). Although we are not bound by an agency’s interpretation of a statute that it
    administers, we will typically defer to the agency’s interpretation unless it is erroneous. Cuevas,
    
    2017 IL App (1st) 151318
    , ¶ 33
    ¶ 19          Before turning to the specific language of section 9-275, we note a clear general intent by
    the legislature, throughout section 9-275, to place the responsibility on the taxpayer for
    maintaining accurate property exemptions. For example, section 9-275(b) (35 ILCS 200/9-
    275(b) (West 2014)) required the Assessor, when sending out assessment notices, to include a
    list of homestead exemptions applied to the subject property. In the assessment notice, the
    Assessor was also required to advise the taxpayer that if the taxpayer, within 60 days of
    receiving the assessment notice, notified the Assessor that he or she received an erroneous
    homestead exemption in a previous assessment year and the taxpayer paid the principal amount
    of the resulting unpaid taxes plus interest, then the taxpayer would not be liable for any penalties.
    
    Id.
     In addition, under section 15-20 of the Illinois Property Tax Code (35 ILCS 200/15-20 (West
    2014)), the taxpayer has the obligation to report to the Assessor, within 90 days, any change in
    use, leasehold estate, or titleholder of any property listed as exempt.
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    ¶ 20          With that context in mind, we conclude that although section 9-275 does not explicitly
    place the burden of proof for demonstrating clerical error or the lack thereof on either of the
    parties, the statute’s language indicates that the General Assembly intended to place the burden
    on the taxpayer seeking to avoid liability for the interest and penalties arising from the erroneous
    homestead exemptions.
    ¶ 21          First, section 9-275(c) provided that the Assessor could impose a lien on property that
    meets the following relevant conditions:
    “(1) is located in the county and (2) received one or more erroneous homestead
    exemptions if, upon determination of the chief county assessment officer, the property
    owner received: *** (B) 3 or more erroneous homestead exemptions for real property,
    including at least one erroneous homestead exemption granted for the property against
    which the lien is sought, during any of the 6 assessment years immediately prior to the
    assessment year in which the notice of intent to record a tax lien is served.”
    35 ILCS 200/9-275(c). Section 9-275(f) provides the requirements for the imposition of interest
    and penalties under the current facts:
    “[I]f a lien is filed pursuant to this Section and the property owner received 3 or more
    erroneous homestead exemptions during any of the 6 assessment years immediately prior
    to the assessment year in which the notice of intent to record a tax lien is served, the
    arrearages of taxes that might have been assessed for that property, plus a penalty of 50%
    of the total amount of unpaid taxes for each year for that property and 10% interest per
    annum, shall be charged against the property by the county treasurer.”
    35 ILCS 200/9-275(f).
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    ¶ 22          Read together, these provisions provide that in order to recover the unpaid taxes, interest,
    and penalties in this case, the Assessor was required to prove three things: (1) the property on
    which the lien is to be imposed is in the county; (2) the property owner received 3 or more
    erroneous homestead exemptions, including one on the property at issue; and (3) the erroneous
    homestead exemptions were received in the 6 assessment years immediately prior to the
    assessment year in which the notice was served. Nowhere in these provisions is the Assessor
    required to prove an absence of clerical error or omission before it is entitled to unpaid taxes,
    interest, and penalties. Had the General Assembly intended that the Assessor prove a lack of
    clerical error or omission as part of its prima facie case and before it could recover, we certainly
    would have expected it to include such a requirement when drafting the sections identifying the
    requirements for imposing liability for unpaid taxes, interest, and penalties. Yet, the General
    Assembly did no such thing.
    ¶ 23          In addition, as the defendants point out, section 9-275 speaks only of the taxpayer
    receiving erroneous homestead exemptions and does not concern itself with how or why the
    taxpayer received the erroneous homestead exemptions, i.e., whether they were received as a
    result of the taxpayer’s application or clerical error or omission. Rather, the language imposes
    liability regardless of the manner in which the erroneous homestead exemptions were received.
    This again suggests that the General Assembly did not intend to impose an obligation on the
    Assessor to prove a lack of clerical error or omission.
    ¶ 24          Next, the language of the clerical provision itself indicates an intent that it serve as an
    affirmative defense, not as an element of the Assessor’s cause of action. The provision provides
    that the taxpayer will not be liable for interest and penalties “[i]f the erroneous exemption was
    granted as a result of a clerical error or omission on the part of the chief county assessment
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    officer.” By phrasing it in this manner—as opposed to saying that interest and penalties could be
    imposed only if there was an absence of clerical error or omission by the Assessor—the General
    Assembly expressed an expectation that proof would be adduced of clerical error or omission,
    not the absence of clerical error or omission. Given that it would be the taxpayer, not the
    Assessor, who would assert and benefit from proof of the existence of a clerical error or
    omission, it seems only logical that the taxpayer would also be the one charged with producing
    that proof. See Christenson v. Rincker, 
    288 Ill. App. 3d 185
    , 191 (1997) (burden of proving
    defense by which the defendant could escape liability placed on the party who would benefit
    from it—the defendant); Nevious v. Bauer, 
    281 Ill. App. 3d 911
    , 916 (1996) (same); Gibson v.
    State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 
    125 Ill. App. 3d 142
    , 149 (1984) (referring to “the
    general rule that the party asserting affirmative matter has the burden of proving the issue”).
    ¶ 25           Furthermore, the clerical error provision relieves a taxpayer of liability for “the interest
    and penalties authorized by this Section” (emphasis added), thus assuming that the requirements
    for obtaining interest and penalties have already been met by the time that the issue of clerical
    error or omission is considered. Certainly, if the lack of clerical error or omission were a
    prerequisite for recovering interest and penalties, then there could not be any “authorized”
    interest or penalties until the issue of clerical error had been determined. Thus, because the
    language of section 9-275(h) presupposes the authorization of interest and penalties, it suggests
    that the General Assembly did not intend that the absence of clerical error or omission be a
    requirement for the Assessor’s collection of unpaid taxes, interest, and penalties arising out of
    erroneous homestead exemptions. Rather, it intended affirmative proof of the existence of
    clerical error or omission to serve as an escape hatch or affirmative defense for the taxpayer to
    avoid the liability for interest and penalties.
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    ¶ 26          Moreover, as discussed above, the Code has otherwise placed the burden of maintaining
    accurate property exemptions on the taxpayer. Accordingly, it only makes sense to also place on
    the taxpayer the burden of demonstrating that any error in exemptions was the result of the
    Assessor’s error, not the taxpayer’s.
    ¶ 27          We note that the plaintiff argued below that proof of clerical error or omission rested
    solely in the hands of the Assessor and that a taxpayer did not have such evidence. We disagree.
    Rule 8(e) of the Department’s Rules of Procedure provides that “[u]pon the timely request of any
    party to the proceeding, any person the Hearing Officer determines may reasonably be expected
    to provide material and non-cumulative testimony must be made available for examination prior
    to a final determination of erroneous homestead exemption.” Accordingly, the plaintiff certainly
    could have solicited evidence from the Assessor’s staff to demonstrate clerical error or omission.
    Moreover, we observe that the taxpayer, as the owner of the property, is in the best position to
    know the current and correct use of his or her property, to know what exemptions he or she did
    or did not apply for, and to make any necessary changes or corrections in the application of
    homestead exemptions. Accordingly, the taxpayer is also in the best position to demonstrate that
    an erroneous homestead exemption resulted from Assessor clerical error or omission rather than
    the taxpayer’s failure to report any changes in property use or ownership or to correct any errors
    in the application of homestead exemptions.          See Southwest Federal Savings and Loan
    Association of Chicago v. Cosmopolitan National Bank of Chicago, 
    23 Ill. App. 2d 174
    , 180-82
    (1959) (placing the burden of proof on the party who had access to the information necessary to
    prove or disprove a disputed fact).
    ¶ 28          Having concluded that the plaintiff bore the burden of demonstrating, by a preponderance
    of the evidence, that the erroneous homestead exemptions were the result of the Assessor’s
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    clerical error or omission, we turn to the plaintiff’s alternative argument that she satisfied this
    burden. According to the plaintiff, she sustained this burden by testifying, without contradiction
    from the Assessor, that she did not know she was receiving erroneous homestead exemptions,
    she did not apply for the exemptions, and she otherwise paid the assessed taxes for all of the
    years in question.     As the Department points out, however, none of this affirmatively
    demonstrates that the erroneous homestead exemptions were the result of Assessor clerical error
    or omission. Just because the plaintiff claims to have not known about the exemptions and to
    have not applied for them, that does not mean that the Assessor necessarily committed error or
    failed to follow some procedure. For all we know, the exemptions could have carried over from
    a previous owner or occupant of the properties due to the plaintiff’s failure to fulfill her
    obligation to report changes in the use or ownership of the properties or her failure to correct the
    erroneous application of homestead exemptions upon receipt of assessment notices.
    ¶ 29          The notion that the plaintiff failed to correct the erroneous application of homestead
    exemptions is supported by the evidence here.          The plaintiff testified that she received
    assessment notices for each of the properties. Under section 9-275(b), those notices would have
    listed the homestead exemptions applied to each property. The plaintiff admitted that when she
    received the assessment notices, she only looked at whether they applied to the Chicago Ridge
    building or her Burbank home and the amount due. Thus, she did not look to see whether the
    applied exemptions were correct based on the use and ownership of the units, and she did
    nothing to correct what she now admits were erroneous homestead exemptions. We note that
    although the plaintiff states in her brief on appeal that she is unable to read English, she never
    testified to as much and, thus, it is not part of the evidence to be considered. Accordingly, based
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    on the evidence presented to the Department, the plaintiff’s lack of knowledge of the erroneous
    homestead exemptions appears to have been her doing, not the Department’s.
    ¶ 30          Moreover, with respect to PIN 1001 and PIN 1003, the Notices indicate that the type of
    homestead exemption applied changed in 2010 from HomeOwner to Long-Term Occupant and
    then returned to HomeOwner in 2011. Absent additional evidence, we find it unlikely that, even
    if the initial HomeOwner homestead exemption was accidentally applied to four of the plaintiff’s
    properties, the type of exemption on two of the properties would then, after several years, be
    accidentally changed to Long-Term Occupant for one year and then accidentally be changed
    back to HomeOwner. Based on this, we cannot say that the Department’s determination that the
    plaintiff failed to prove clerical error or omission by the Assessor was against the manifest
    weight of the evidence. White v. Retirement Board of Policemen’s Annuity and Benfit Fund of
    the City of Chicago, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 132315
    , ¶ 23 (administrative agency’s determinations of
    questions of fact to be disturbed only if against the manifest weight of the evidence).
    ¶ 31          Finally, although not raised by either of the parties, our review of the record on appeal
    revealed a third issue that requires our attention because it involves a void order. Delgado v.
    Board of Election Commissioners of the City of Chicago, 
    224 Ill. 2d 481
    , 486 (2007) (courts
    have an independent duty to vacate void orders and, thus, may do so sua sponte); Schak v. Blom,
    
    334 Ill. App. 3d 129
    , 134 (2002) (same). Under the version of section 9-275 that was in effect at
    the time that the Assessor served the plaintiff with the Notices, the Assessor could impose a lien
    in an amount that included unpaid taxes, interest, and penalties if “the property owner received 3
    or more erroneous homestead exemptions during any of the 6 assessment years immediately
    prior to the assessment year in which the notice of intent to record a tax lien is served.” 35 ILCS
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    200/9-275(f) (emphasis added). In this case, the Department awarded the Assessor unpaid taxes,
    interest, and penalties for years 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013.
    ¶ 32          We have previously held that where proceedings under section 9-275 are instituted in
    2014, as they were here, this provision entitles the Assessor to collect delinquent taxes, interest,
    and penalties only for the years 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013, but does not entitle the
    Assessor to collect such monies for 2007. Cuevas, 
    2017 IL App (1st) 151318
    , ¶¶ 37-38. Actions
    taken by an administrative agency that exceed the scope of its statutory authority are void.
    Delgado, 224 Ill. 2d at 485; Mitchell v. People, 
    2016 IL App (1st) 141109
    , ¶19. Accordingly,
    because the Department exceeded its authority under section 9-275(f) by awarding the Assessor
    unpaid taxes, interest, and penalties for 2007, that portion of its order is void and must be
    vacated, as must the portion of the trial court’s order affirming that award.
    ¶ 33                                            CONCLUSION
    ¶ 34          For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed in part and
    vacated in part.
    ¶ 35          Affirmed in part; vacated in part.
    -16-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-16-1184

Citation Numbers: 2017 IL App (1st) 161184

Filed Date: 9/19/2017

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/19/2017