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Introduction
In the spring of 2013 the Lake County Board of Review adopted a rule confirming that taxpayers may be represented in property tax assessment appeal proceedings before that tribunal either pro se or through attorneys licensed to practice law in Illinois.1
The initial pronouncement of the intended adoption of the rule reinvigorated in Illinois the national debate concerning unlicensed practice of law (“UPL”) issues in the field of real estate tax assessment appeals. The leading case on the topic in Illinois, In re Yamaguchi, 118 Ill.2d 417 (1987), held that the completion and filing of a complaint form to invoke the jurisdiction of the board and the appearance before the board as taxpayer’s representative2 constituted the practice of law. 118 Ill.2d 426. Proponents of the rule argued that based on Yamaguchi the rule merely declared existing law. Opponents of the rule advanced the argument that Yamaguchi was not applicable and that appeals at boards of review are informal, usually non-adversarial and consist merely of uncontested informational exchanges between the taxpayer and the assessment tribunal. It was also argued that the proposed rule would simply perpetuate the stranglehold of lawyers upon the marketplace thereby subjecting consumers to their oppressive monopoly which would result in greater fees and/or limit access to the board of review.3 The final adoption of the rule settled the issue at least in Lake County but did not end the larger debate.
This article will examine recent developments both in Illinois case law, which may have misperceived the quasi judicial status of boards of review, and proposed legislation on the issue. This article will also discuss recent developments relating to the dangerous consequences of UPL when unlicensed individuals run afoul of Yamaguchi.
The Practice of Law in Illinois
The general rule in Illinois is well settled that in considering conduct which implicates the practice of law, the courts will examine the nature of the act, rather than the forum or the formality involved. People v. Goodman, 366 Ill. 346, 357, 9 N.E.2d 53 (1937); Chicago Bar Association v. Quinlan & Tyson, 34 Ill. 2nd 116, 214 N.E.2d 771 (1966). As a consequence there is no general bright line test for every possible scenario; rather, the facts and circumstances underlying each instance must be examined to ascertain the “character of the act”. 366 Ill. 357.
It is equally well established that the Illinois Supreme Court has the exclusive power to define and regulate the practice of law such that the role of the legislature is exceedingly limited to declaring unauthorized practice of law to be illegal and prescribing punishment for UPL in aid of the power of the court. Goodman, 366 Ill. 346 at 352; King v. Capital Financial Services, 215 Ill. 2nd 9 (2005).
In Yamaguchi, a real estate broker began to file complaints before the Cook County Board of Appeals (now known as the Cook County Board of Review) although the Board’s rule, albeit not strictly enforced, required an attorney signature if not the individual taxpayer’s signature on the complaint. 118 Ill.2d 421. The broker contacted Attorney Yamaguchi who signed “numerous blank valuation complaints” and gave them to the broker. 118 Ill. 2d 422. The broker then completed the rest of the complaints, filed the complaints, and attended the hearing on the complaint at the Board for oral argument. 118 Ill.2d 426. Attorney Yamaguchi was charged with 5 counts of improper conduct, one of which was aiding and abetting the unlicensed practice of law. 118 Ill.2d 420. The defense was that the broker’s conduct was not the practice of law.
The Court rejected the defense stating: “There can be no doubt that (the broker’s) conduct…. was, in fact, the practice of law.” 118 Ill.2d 426 (insert for clarity). A few sentences later the Court underscored the point in the following rather clear and unambiguous language:
Both the unsupervised completion of the complaint and the appearance before the administrative tribunal constituted the unauthorized practice of law.” 118 Ill.2d 426.
In a case unrelated to UPL, BLTREJV3 v. Kane County Board of Review, 2014 IL. App. (2d) 140164 (2nd Dist. 2014), the court was invited to consider a board of review rule promulgated pursuant to Section 16-55 of the Illinois Property Tax Code (35 ILCS 200/16-55) which deemed complaints filed when deposited in the United States mail but not when “mailed” via FedEx or similar third party delivery service. The taxpayer claimed that because boards of review are quasi judicial bodies and because the filing a complaint at the board was the practice of law under Yamaguchi, then it necessarily followed that the board was a court. Therefore, Illinois Supreme Court Rules 11 and 12, which allow for delivery of documents by such commercial carriers, should control the determination when a board complaint should be considered filed. The court noted that Rules 11 and 12 apply only to service of documents and not filing complaints. Thus, even if Rules 11 and 12 applied, it was not dispositive of the issue in the case. The power granted the board under Section 16-55 to make “reasonable rules” implied that the board was not compelled to make rules that mimic others. Slip opinion pg. 5.
The court, in dicta, stated that its decision did not rest upon Yamaguchi and described Yamaguchi as a case in which the attorney was punished for deceiving the tribunal that the complaints had been evaluated by an attorney and that “the board’s rules requiring an attorney…to sign a complaint controlled the result” Slip opinion pg. 6. Too, the Court noted that Yamaguchi did not hold that boards of review were quasi judicial bodies.
The foregoing language overlooks or misperceives the fact that the perpetration of a fraud on the tribunal was only one of the five counts sustained against Attorney Yamaguchi. Moreover, the board rules requiring attorneys to sign complaints did not render that act the practice of law and thereby control the result. Yamaguchi expressly stated the well established rule that it is the nature of the act (“character of the work”) that governed the analysis. 118 Ill.2d 427.
Thus it is incorrect to say the execution of a complaint form is the practice of law because the board in that case had a rule requiring attorneys (or individual taxpayers) to sign them. It was stipulated in Yamaguchi that the board did not strictly enforce the rule. 118 Ill.2d 421. The Yamaguchi court expressly rejected this fact to constitute an excuse. 118 Ill.2d 427. (“No justification” in the assertion the board acquiesced in the conduct).
Finally, it is true that Yamaguchi did not say that boards of review are quasi-judicial because it was not necessary to the analysis. It was already established that Illinois boards are quasi-judicial. Jarman v. Board of Review 345 Ill 248, 253 178 N.E. 91 (1931) (the rule is established that if the officers acting are invested by the legislative with power to decide on the property rights of others they act judicially in making their decision, whatever may be their public character; actions taken by board of review in reviewing an assessment “obviously” judicial in nature); Goodfriend v Board of Appeals 18 Ill.App.3d 412, 418 305 N.E.2d 404 (1973) (Cook County Board of Appeals is vested with the power to decide the property rights of others, a power which when exercised makes their official actions judicial). These cases are conclusive that it is the function performed by the tribunal or officer that determines whether it is quasi-judicial. The ability to determine property rights makes boards of review quasi-judicial, “whatever may be their public character,” that is to say, whether they are judges or lawyers or not.4
So viewed, BLTREJV3 is best understood as standing for the limited proposition that Supreme Court Rules 11 and 12 do not relate to the filing of complaints and therefore do not supersede the reasonable rule making authority of a board of review under Section 16-55 of the Property Tax Code.
The Consequences of UPL
Any judgment, such as an assessment determination, procured through UPL is void and could be set aside under the nullity rule. Downtown Disposal Service v City of Chicago 979 N.E.2d 50; 2012 IL 112040 (2012) and Spreck v Property Tax Appeal Board Docket 5-99-0676 (5th Dist 1999) (assessment appeal filed by taxpayer’s son voided on UPL grounds).
In a recent appellate decision, a divided court vacated a 1999 judgment obtained by the City of Chicago in part because the corporate defendant was represented by a corporate officer and not an attorney. Stone St. Partners v. Chicago Dept. of Administrative Hearings 2014 Ill. App. 1st 23654 (1st Dist 2014) petition for leave to appeal granted Docket #117720 (Ill. Sup. Ct. 9/24/14). In Stone St Partners, the City failed to properly serve a notice of violation upon the corporate respondent. Nevertheless a corporate officer attended the hearing and defended against the charges. The corporation did not become aware that the hearing officer had entered a judgment until 11 years later and then sued to vacate the judgment. A divided court held that the claim that the judgment was void for lack of proper service was not waived by the corporate officer’s attendance at the hearing since corporations must be represented by an attorney. Slip opinion pg. 8. As a consequence, an assessment judgment procured through UPL would be void and could be vacated at any time.
Forming the Right Relationship
In a recent advisory opinion, the ISBA reminded lawyers that they must have the proper attorney client relationship. ISBA Professional Conduct Advisory Opinions 14-03 (May 2014). The ISBA concluded that staff attorneys retained by a non-lawyer business entity are prohibited from providing legal services to the entity’s customers. Staff attorneys employed by a tax consulting firm therefore may not file complaints on behalf of the consulting firm’s taxpayer customers. Too, the Goodman case extends that prohibition to private attorneys who are independently retained by the consulting firm which has contracted with the taxpayer and received the authority to retain counsel on the taxpayer’s behalf. Goodman cautions that the true attorney-client relationship is not present, Goodman 366 Ill. 356. See also In re Gaffen, Supreme Court No. M.R. 18285 (Ill. Sup. Ct. 2002) (attorney disciplined for sharing fees with tax consulting firm).
Recent Legislation
During the recent legislative session Senate Bill 3499 was introduced. 98th Illinois General Assembly Senate Bill 3499. (“SB 3499”) SB 3499 proposed to authorize the following individuals to represent taxpayers at all boards of review, excluding Cook County; a certified public accountant, a licensed real estate agent, an individual who has a certified assessment evaluation certification from the International Association of Assessing Officers, a certified member of the Appraisal Institute, and any others designated by the local county.
One of the issues raised by such bills is who is to be deemed sufficiently qualified to practice law without a license at a board of review. If the work is fairly simplistic as maintained by some, why wouldn’t a college degree alone qualify someone as a representative? A serious flaw in bills like SB 3499 is that it falsely equates an individual’s knowledge or expertise in determining valuation with the skill and training necessary to file and prosecute an appeal within the statutory framework set forth in the Property Tax Code. Under this logic, physicians should be authorized to prosecute medical malpractice claims.
The proposed legislation ignores also that the legislature may not grant a law license nor can it define or regulate the practice of law. That power is reserved in Illinois exclusively to the Supreme Court. Goodman, 366 Ill 352. The resolution of the policy issue therefore is properly the function of the court. See Illinois Supreme Court Rule 711 (supervised senior law students allowed to perform certain services) and Rule 712 (licensing of lawyers from foreign countries).
Yamaguchi is still the law until the Supreme Court says it is not. The applicable rule was stated in Agricultural Transportation v. Carpentier, 2 Ill.2d 19, 27 (1953):
Where the Supreme Court has declared the law on any point it alone can overrule and modify its previous action.
Thus, while opponents of the rule expressed in Yamaguchi may attempt to distinguish or limit the case or suggest Yamaguchi does not mean what it says at 118 Ill.2d 426, or attempt to adopt legislation like SB 3499, such efforts are to no avail until the Supreme Court expressly reverses itself.
Conclusion
Yamaguchi means what it says: the completion and filing of a complaint form at a board of review and the submission of evidence and argument before a board of review is the practice of law. 118 Ill. 2d 426. Judgments resulting from UPL are void. Everyone involved in the appeal process must be aware of these issues so that their conduct conforms to the law while the UPL debate continues and the boundaries of permissible conduct are tested.
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