City of Chicago v. City of Kankakee

2017 IL App (1st) 153531
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 29, 2017
Docket1-15-3531
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2017 IL App (1st) 153531 (City of Chicago v. City of Kankakee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois 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, 2017 IL App (1st) 153531 (Ill. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

2017 IL App (1st) 153531

FIRST DIVISION September 29, 2017

No. 1-15-3531

THE CITY OF CHICAGO and THE VILLAGE OF ) Appeal from the SKOKIE, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) ) v. ) Nos. 11 CH 29744 ) 11 CH 29745 THE CITY OF KANKAKEE; THE VILLAGE OF ) 11 CH 34266 CHANNAHON; MTS CONSULTING, LLC; ) (cons.) INSPIRED DEVELOPMENT LLC; MINORITY ) DEVELOPMENT COMPANY LLC; CORPORATE ) FUNDING SOLUTIONS; and CAPITAL FUNDING ) The Honorable SOLUTIONS, ) Peter Flynn, ) Judge Presiding. Defendants-Appellees.

PRESIDING JUSTICE PIERCE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Harris and Simon concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 The City of Chicago and the Village of Skokie (collectively, plaintiffs) sued the City of

Kankakee and the Village of Channahon (collectively, the municipal defendants), along with

MTS Consulting, LLC, Inspired Development LLC, Minority Development Company LLC,

Corporate Funding Solutions, and Capital Funding Solutions (collectively, the broker

defendants) to recover tax revenue that was allegedly unjustly retained by the municipal

defendants. Plaintiffs alleged that the municipal defendants, with the aid of the broker

defendants, entered into sales tax rebate agreements with various retailers whereby the retailers

would report to the State that the situs of certain online sales occurred within either Kankakee or No. 1-15-3531

Channahon, when in fact the sales occurred outside of Illinois. Plaintiffs claimed that, as a result

of this scheme, the municipal defendants received a greater share of tax revenue from the sales

by receiving the statutory local sales tax distribution rather than the lower statutory use tax

distribution, thereby depriving plaintiffs of the statutory share of use tax revenue that plaintiffs

would have received had the sales been properly reported as being subject to the use tax.

Plaintiffs claimed that the municipal defendants offered the participating retailer tax rebates from

the sales tax revenue that the municipal defendants received. Plaintiffs’ third amended complaint

asserted claims of unjust enrichment against the defendants, and sought the imposition of

constructive trusts. The Cook County circuit court dismissed plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice

and denied plaintiffs’ motion for leave file a fourth amended complaint. Plaintiffs appeal. For the

following reasons, we reverse and remand.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 The City of Chicago, the Regional Transportation Authority (RTA), and Cook County

initiated separate actions against the municipal defendants and MTS Consulting LLC, Inspired

Development LLC, and Minority Development Company LLC. 1 This appeal concerns only case

No. 11 CH 29745 and the claims brought by Chicago and Skokie against the municipal

defendants and the broker defendants.

¶4 On December 13, 2013, plaintiffs filed a third amended complaint against defendants.

For purposes of this appeal, because the circuit court either dismissed the third amended

complaint for failing to state a cause of action under section 2-615 of the Code of Civil

Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2014)) or for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction

1 The Regional Transportation Authority’s suit was assigned case No. 11 CH 29744, Chicago’s suit was assigned case No. 11 CH 29745 (which the Village of Skokie subsequently joined as an additional plaintiff and to which Corporate Funding Solutions and Capital Funding Solutions were added as additional defendants), and Cook County’s suit was assigned case No. 11 CH 34266. The circuit court consolidated the three cases. 2 No. 1-15-3531

under section 2-619(a)(1) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(1) (West 2014)), we recite and

accept as true all well-pleaded facts alleged in plaintiffs’ third amended complaint and draw all

reasonable inferences from these facts in favor of plaintiffs (Edelman, Combs & Latturner v.

Hinshaw & Culbertson, 338 Ill. App. 3d 156, 164 (2003)) in our de novo review.

¶5 Broadly speaking, Illinois imposes a tax on the sale of tangible personal property sold by

out-of-state retailers that do not have a presence in Illinois where the item is used within Illinois.

This is usually referred to as a “use tax.” Illinois also imposes a tax on retailers that have an

Illinois presence for the privilege of conducting retail sales in Illinois and for the services and

advantages provided by the state and benefitting the retailers. This tax is usually referred to as

the “sales tax.” The retailer is required to file periodic returns with the state reporting its gross

sales subject to either the sales tax or the use tax. The “use tax” and the “sales tax” are both set

by statute at 6.25% of the sale price. From the out-of-state retailers’ perspective, it does not

matter whether the sale is subject to the sales or use tax because the amount the retailer is

required to remit to the state is the same: 6.25%. However, the classification reported by the out-

of-state retailer is important to a municipality because of the statutory scheme that redistributes a

portion of these tax revenues back to the municipalities and, to a lesser extent, other state

entities.

¶6 Under the statutory framework devised by the legislature, sales tax proceeds of 6.25% are

distributed 5% to the state and 1.25% to the municipality and county where the sale occurred.

Under the statutory framework devised by the legislature, use tax proceeds of 6.25% are

distributed 5% to the state, and 1.25% is deposited into a common fund. From this common fund,

the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR) periodically distributes 20% of the fund to Chicago,

10% to the RTA, 0.06% to the Madison County Mass Transit District, and $3.15 million to the

3 No. 1-15-3531

Build Illinois Fund, and the remainder of the fund is distributed to more than 200 municipalities

based on their proportionate share of the state population.

¶7 From this broad general outline of the sales tax and use tax distribution scheme as it

relates to out-of-state retail sales, it should be apparent that how an out-of-state taxable sale is

reported by the retailer to IDOR has a demonstrable effect on the amount of money that a

municipality receives from taxable retail sales: municipalities get more from a local sale subject

to the sales tax and substantially less from a sale subject to the use tax.

¶8 Plaintiffs alleged that beginning in 2000, the City of Kankakee and the Village of

Channahon each sought to convince various out-of-state retailers to declare taxable retail sales as

“sourced” to the respective municipality and subject to the sales tax. In return, the municipal

defendants agreed to rebate portions of the sales tax revenue received from the reported retail

sales declared to IDOR as having taken place within the border of the municipalities. The

municipal defendants entered into rebate agreements with the retailers either directly or through

the broker defendants. By having the retailers declare that the sales took place within the

defendant municipalities, the municipal defendants received 1% of the sales tax revenue from the

sales, 2 which was an amount greater than what the municipal defendants would receive from the

use tax fund based on the municipalities’ proportionate share of the state population. For

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