City of Chicago v. City of Kankakee

2019 IL 122878
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 2019
Docket122878
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2019 IL 122878 (City of Chicago v. City of Kankakee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Chicago v. City of Kankakee, 2019 IL 122878 (Ill. 2019).

Opinion

2019 IL 122878

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

(Docket No. 122878)

THE CITY OF CHICAGO et al., Appellees, v. THE CITY OF KANKAKEE et al., Appellants.

Opinion filed March 21, 2019.

JUSTICE THEIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

Chief Justice Karmeier and Justices Thomas, Kilbride, Garman, and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.

Justice Neville took no part in the decision.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff municipalities brought this cause of action against defendant municipalities and brokers seeking to recover tax revenue purportedly owed to them under the Use Tax Act (35 ILCS 105/1 et seq. (West 2016)). The circuit court of Cook County dismissed plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice and denied plaintiffs leave to file a fourth amended complaint. The appellate court reversed and remanded. 2017 IL App (1st) 153531, ¶ 45. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment of the appellate court and affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 This case concerns two types of Illinois state taxes: a “retailers occupation tax,” more commonly known as “sales tax,” authorized by the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act (ROTA) (35 ILCS 120/1 et seq. (West 2016)), and the “use tax” authorized by the Use Tax Act (UTA) (35 ILCS 105/1 et seq. (West 2016)). Sales tax is imposed on the sale of tangible personal property purchased in Illinois. 35 ILCS 120/2 (West 2016). In contrast, use tax is imposed on the privilege of using in Illinois tangible personal property purchased at retail from a retailer outside the state. 35 ILCS 105/3 (West 2016). Pursuant to UTA, retailers who have a sufficient physical presence in Illinois and have out-of-state facilities from which Internet, telephone, and mail order sales are made of tangible personal property to be used in Illinois must collect a use tax from the purchaser, and that tax is remitted to the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR). The purpose of the use tax is “ ‘primarily to prevent avoidance of [the sales] tax by people making out-of-State purchases, and to protect Illinois merchants against such diversion of business to retailers outside Illinois.’ ” Performance Marketing Ass’n v. Hamer, 2013 IL 114496, ¶ 3 (quoting Klein Town Builders, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 36 Ill. 2d 301, 303 (1966)).

¶4 Under the respective statutes, the general rate set in Illinois for both sales tax and use tax is 6.25% of the sale price of the item with 5% allocated to the State. 35 ILCS 105/3-10 (West 2016); 35 ILCS 120/2-10 (West 2016); 30 ILCS 105/6z-18 (West 2016). At issue here is a dispute about what happens to the remaining 1.25%. Under ROTA, the remaining amount is distributed geographically to the municipality (1%) and county (0.25%) where the sale of the item actually occurred. 30 ILCS 105/6z-18 (West 2016).

¶5 The distribution of funds under UTA is more complicated. Unlike the local share of sales tax, which is distributed entirely where the sale takes place, under UTA, the remaining 1.25% share of the use tax is distributed in the following percentages: 20% of the fund goes to Chicago, 10% to the Regional Transportation Authority Occupation and Use Tax Replacement Fund (RTA Fund), 0.6% to the Madison County Mass Transit District, and $3.15 million to the Build Illinois Fund.

-2- The balance of the fund is distributed to all other municipalities (except Chicago) based on their proportionate share of the state population. Id. § 6z-17. Consequently, a municipality receives a larger amount from a local sale subject to the sales tax than from a comparable sale subject to the use tax.

¶6 In 2011, this litigation began as three separate cases filed by the Regional Transportation Authority (RTA) (No. 11 CH 29744), the City of Chicago (No. 11 CH 29745), and Cook County (No. 11 CH 34266). The cases were consolidated by the trial court. This appeal concerns only the case brought by the City of Chicago and the Village of Skokie, which was added as a plaintiff in 2012.

¶7 In December 2013, plaintiffs filed their third amended complaint against the City of Kankakee and the Village of Channahon (municipal defendants) and MTS Consulting, LLC, Inspired Development, Minority Development Co., Corporate Funding Solutions, and Capital Funding Solutions (broker defendants). Plaintiffs claimed that defendants were unjustly enriched through a scheme under which the situs of retail sales was misreported, which deprived plaintiffs of their statutory share of the Illinois use tax.

¶8 Plaintiffs alleged in the third amended complaint that beginning in 2000, in order to convince retailers to make sales that would be sourced to their towns, Kankakee and Channahon, either directly or through the broker defendants, entered into rebate agreements with retailers under which the municipalities would return a portion of the sales tax to the retailer. Plaintiffs further alleged that defendants used the rebate agreements to divert tax revenue from plaintiffs through a wrongful “use tax-sales tax swap.” According to plaintiffs, defendants encouraged and assisted Internet retailers to manipulate the system by misreporting the situs of the sale in order to swap the state use tax for the state sales tax.

¶9 Plaintiffs further alleged that little or no meaningful sales activity took place in the offices maintained in Kankakee and Channahon on behalf of the Internet retailers. They were maintained for the sole purpose of having the Internet retailers obtain a tax rebate from the municipality. Plaintiffs alleged that, although the Internet retailers’ acceptance of customer orders occurred outside of Illinois, they reported to IDOR that sales took place in Kankakee or Channahon, thus subjecting those sales to sales tax, rather than use tax. These activities, plaintiffs claimed, had the effect of wrongfully taking what should have been plaintiffs’ local share of the

-3- use tax and diverting it to defendant municipalities in the form of their share of the sales tax, thereby unjustly enriching defendants.

¶ 10 Count I of the two-count third amended complaint was against defendants for unjust enrichment. Plaintiffs sought a declaration that certain Internet retailers were subject to the state use tax, rather than the state sales tax; the imposition of a constructive trust on all sales tax revenue received by Kankakee, Channahon, and the brokers as a result of the Internet retailers being subject to the state sales tax rather than the state use tax; and compensatory damages in the amount of use tax revenue plaintiffs lost as a result of the use tax-sales tax swap. 1

¶ 11 In April 2015, plaintiffs sought leave to file a fourth amended complaint. The proposed fourth amended complaint asserted claims against four groups of defendants: the previously identified municipal defendants; the broker defendants; 2 11 Internet retailer defendants; 3 and three groups of operating and procurement company defendants. 4 Counts I, III, V, and VII of the proposed fourth amended complaint sought declaratory relief. Specifically, plaintiffs sought a declaration that certain sales of Internet retailer defendants and certain purchases of operating procurement company defendants were subject to state use tax.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Madison County, Illinois v. Illinois State Board of Elections
2022 IL App (4th) 220169 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2022)
City of Chicago v. City of Kankakee
2019 IL 122878 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 IL 122878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-city-of-kankakee-ill-2019.