Public Act 90-0288 of the 90th General Assembly

State of Illinois
Public Acts
90th General Assembly

[ Home ] [ Public Acts ] [ ILCS ] [ Search ] [ Bottom ]


Public Act 90-0288

HB0572 Enrolled                                LRB9001143KDks

    AN ACT in relation to taxes, amending named Acts.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section  5.   The State Mandates Act is amended by adding
Section 8.21 as follows:

    (30 ILCS 805/8.21 new)
    Sec. 8.21. Exempt mandate.   Notwithstanding  Sections  6
and  8 of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is required
for  the  implementation  of  any  mandate  created  by  this
amendatory Act of 1997.

    Section 10.  The Property Tax Code is amended by changing
Section 14-15 as follows:

    (35 ILCS 200/14-15)
    Sec. 14-15.  Certificate of error; counties of  3,000,000
or more.
    (a)  In  counties with 3,000,000 or more inhabitants, if,
at any time before judgment is rendered in any proceeding  to
collect  or  to enjoin the collection of taxes based upon any
assessment of any property belonging  to  any  taxpayer,  the
county   assessor  discovers  an  error  or  mistake  in  the
assessment, the assessor shall execute a certificate  setting
forth the nature and cause of the error. The certificate when
endorsed  by  the  county  assessor,  or when endorsed by the
county assessor and board of appeals (until the first  Monday
in  December 1998 and the board of review beginning the first
Monday in December 1998 and thereafter) where the certificate
is executed for any assessment which was  the  subject  of  a
complaint  filed  in  the  board  of appeals (until the first
Monday in December 1998 and the board of review beginning the
first Monday in December 1998 and  thereafter)  for  the  tax
year for which the certificate is issued,  may be received in
evidence  in  any  court of competent jurisdiction.   When so
introduced in evidence such certificate shall become  a  part
of the court records, and shall not be removed from the files
except upon the order of the court.
    A  certificate  executed under this Section may be issued
to the person erroneously assessed.  A  certificate  executed
under  this  Section  or  a  list  of  the  parcels for which
certificates  have  been  issued  may  be  presented  by  the
assessor to the court as an objection in the application  for
judgment  and order of sale for the year in relation to which
the certificate is made. The State's Attorney of  the  county
in  which  the  property is situated shall mail a copy of any
final judgment entered by the court regarding the certificate
to the taxpayer of record for the year in question.
    Any unpaid taxes after the entry of the final judgment by
the court on certificates issued under this  Section  may  be
included   in   a   special   tax   sale,  provided  that  an
advertisement is published and a  notice  is  mailed  to  the
person  in whose name the taxes were last assessed, in a form
and manner substantially similar  to  the  advertisement  and
notice  required  under  Sections  21-110  and  21-135.   The
advertisement  and sale shall be subject to all provisions of
law  regulating  the  annual  advertisement   and   sale   of
delinquent  property, to the extent that those provisions may
be made applicable.
    A  certificate  of  error  executed  under  this  Section
allowing homestead exemptions under Sections 15-170,  15-172,
and  15-175  of  this  Act  (formerly  Sections  19.23-1  and
19.23-1a  of  the Revenue Act of 1939) not previously allowed
shall be given effect by the county treasurer, who shall mark
the tax books and, upon receipt of the following  certificate
from the county assessor, shall issue refunds to the taxpayer
accordingly:

                       "CERTIFICATION
    I,  ..................,  county  assessor, hereby certify
    that the Certificates of Error set out  on  the  attached
    list  have been duly issued to allow homestead exemptions
    pursuant to Sections 15-170, 15-172, and  15-175  of  the
    Property Tax Code (formerly Sections 19.23-1 and 19.23-1a
    of  the  Revenue  Act  of  1939)  which  should have been
    previously allowed; and that  a  certified  copy  of  the
    attached  list  and  this  certification have been served
    upon the county State's Attorney."

    The county treasurer has the power to mark the tax  books
to  reflect  the  issuance of homestead certificates of error
issued to and including 3 years after the date on  which  the
annual judgment and order of sale for that tax year was first
entered  from  and including the due date of the tax bill for
the year for which the homestead exemption should  have  been
allowed  until  2 years after the first day of January of the
year after the year for which the homestead exemption  should
have  been  allowed.  The  county  treasurer has the power to
issue refunds to the taxpayer as set  forth  above  from  and
including the first day of January of the year after the year
for  which  the  homestead exemption should have been allowed
until all  refunds  authorized  by  this  Section  have  been
completed.
    The county treasurer has no power to issue refunds to the
taxpayer  as set forth above unless the Certification set out
in this Section has  been  served  upon  the  county  State's
Attorney.
    (b)  Nothing  in  subsection (a) of this Section shall be
construed to prohibit the execution,  endorsement,  issuance,
and  adjudication of a certificate of error if (i) the annual
judgment and order of sale for the tax year  in  question  is
reopened  for  further proceedings upon consent of the county
collector and county assessor,  represented  by  the  State's
Attorney,  and  (ii)  a  new  final  judgment is subsequently
entered pursuant to the  certificate.   This  subsection  (b)
shall  be construed as declarative of existing law and not as
a new enactment.
    (c)  No certificate of error, other than a certificate to
establish an exemption under Section 14-25, shall be executed
for any tax year more than 3 years after the  date  on  which
the  annual  judgment and order of sale for that tax year was
first entered.
    (d)  The time limitation  of  subsection  (c)  shall  not
apply  to  a certificate of error correcting an assessment to
$1, under Section 10-35, on a parcel that  a  subdivision  or
planned  development  has  acquired by adverse possession, if
during the tax year for which the certificate is executed the
subdivision or planned development used the parcel as  common
area, as defined in Section 10-35, and if application for the
certificate of error is made prior to December 1, 1997.
(Source:  P.A.  88-225; 88-455; 88-660, eff. 9-16-94; 88-670,
eff. 12-2-94; 89-126, eff. 7-11-95; 89-671, eff. 8-14-96.)

    Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  upon
becoming law.

[ Top ]