Ford Motor Co. v. Chicago Department of Revenue

2014 IL App (1st) 130597
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 29, 2014
Docket1-13-0597
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2014 IL App (1st) 130597 (Ford Motor Co. v. Chicago Department of Revenue) 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.

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Ford Motor Co. v. Chicago Department of Revenue, 2014 IL App (1st) 130597 (Ill. Ct. App. 2014).

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Ford Motor Co. v. Chicago Department of Revenue, 2014 IL App (1st) 130597

Appellate Court FORD MOTOR COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. CHICAGO Caption DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, BEA REYNA-HICKEY, in Her Capacity as Director of the Chicago Department of Revenue, and THE CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS, Defendants-Appellants.

District & No. First District, Fifth Division Docket No. 1-13-0597

Filed June 27, 2014

Held The trial court’s decision that plaintiff car maker was not liable for (Note: This syllabus defendant city’s municipal tax on all of the motor vehicle fuel, constitutes no part of the including gasoline and diesel it purchased for its newly manufactured opinion of the court but cars, was reversed by the appellate court, notwithstanding plaintiff’s has been prepared by the contention that it only used a small percentage of the fuel in testing its Reporter of Decisions new cars and then charged its dealers for the balance of the fuel, since for the convenience of under the terms of the tax ordinance, plaintiff was making “use” of the the reader.) fuel and was liable for the tax when it was placed in the tanks of the individual cars coming off the assembly lines, regardless of where or when the fuel was ultimately used in the cars or when the cars were sold to dealers; furthermore, plaintiff did not qualify for any of the exemptions in the ordinance.

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 11-L-51361; the Review Hon. Margaret A. Brennan, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Circuit court reversed; administrative agency affirmed. Counsel on Stephen R. Patton, Corporation Counsel, of Chicago (Benna Ruth Appeal Solomon, Myriam Zreczny Kasper, and Stephen G. Collins, Assistant Corporation Counsel, of counsel), for appellants.

Fred O. Marcus and David S. Ruskin, both of Horwood Marcus & Berk Chtrd., of Chicago, for appellee.

Panel JUSTICE McBRIDE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Gordon and Justice Taylor concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 The issue on appeal is whether Ford Motor Company is liable to the City of Chicago for a tax of $0.05 per gallon for all the fuel the car maker purchased and put into cars it made in Chicago between 2002 and 2008. A local ordinance provides, “A tax is hereby imposed upon the privilege of purchasing or using, in the City of Chicago, vehicle fuel purchased in a sale at retail” and defines “ ‘[u]se’ ” to include dispensing fuel into a vehicle’s full tank and “ ‘[s]ale at retail’ ” as “any sale to a person for that person’s use or consumption and not for resale to another.” Chicago Municipal Code §§ 3-52-020, 3-52-010(B)(9), (8) (added Sept. 24, 1986). The car maker contends the tax is due on only 2% of the gasoline and diesel it purchased from a Chicago fuel distributor because that is the amount used to test run and relocate cars at the Chicago manufacturing plant and the other 98% was neither used nor consumed when it left Chicago in the tanks of cars transported to car dealerships that were billed for the fuel. An administrative law judge determined that the tax applied to 100% of the fuel because “use” occurred when the fuel was dispensed into the new vehicle tanks, but the circuit court of Cook County reversed that determination, and the municipality now appeals from the court’s ruling. ¶2 Ford Motor Company, a Delaware corporation headquartered in Dearborn, Michigan, manufactures some of its automobiles in Chicago and ships these products to car dealers throughout the United States. For the six-year period at issue, fuel maker BP Amoco, which is registered with the City of Chicago (City) as a fuel distributor, delivered about 10,000 gallons of gasoline and diesel per month to the Ford Motor Company facility and did not assess municipal fuel taxes on the deliveries. Ford Motor Company self-assessed and reported fuel taxes to the City only for a small percentage of the fuel it received from BP Amoco and remitted $19,658.08 to the municipality. After an audit, the department of revenue of the City of Chicago (Department) determined Ford Motor Company owed back taxes totaling $356,675.13, and when the car maker declined to pay the assessment, the

-2- Department assessed interest and penalties, bringing the total amount due to $665,539.85. Ford filed a protest and petition for hearing before the Department and filed a separate protest and petition for a refund of the taxes it had paid. ¶3 The two protest actions were consolidated before the administrative law judge (ALJ or hearing officer). Some of the materials submitted to the ALJ included the affidavit of Dennis Curlew, an employee of the car maker, who stated that the company charged car dealerships for the fuel that was put in the tanks of cars delivered to them, and the affidavit of Elaine Herman, an audit supervisor at the Department, who stated that no Ford dealership in Chicago had collected and remitted fuel taxes paid by car buyers or independently paid the fuel taxes to the City. ¶4 The ALJ determined the tax applied to all the fuel placed in the new vehicles and entered summary judgment for the Department, based on the ALJ’s finding that Ford Motor Company “used” all of the fuel, within the meaning of the municipal tax ordinance, when it dispensed fuel into the tanks of its vehicles. Thus, even if Ford Motor Company purported to resell the fuel when it delivered the new cars to its dealerships, the car maker was already liable for the City’s tax. The ALJ rejected the company’s contention that it qualified for at least one of the seven exemptions listed in the municipal tax ordinance. See Chicago Municipal Code § 3-52-110 (added Sept. 24, 1986). Two of these were rejected on the merits–the sale of vehicle fuel by a distributor “to a distributor or retailer of vehicle fuel whose place of business is outside the city” (emphasis added), and “[t]he sale or use for purpose other than for propulsion or operation of a vehicle.” Chicago Municipal Code § 3-52-110(b), (c) (added Sept. 24, 1986). The third exemption–that taxation would violate the United States Constitution–was an argument that the ALJ properly declined to address because an administrative agency lacks authority to declare a statute unconstitutional, or even to question its validity, but a litigant must present its constitutional argument on the record at the administrative stage in order to preserve the issue for subsequent proceedings. Chicago Municipal Code § 3-52-110(e) (added Sept. 24, 1986); Cinkus v. Village of Stickney Municipal Officers Electoral Board, 228 Ill. 2d 200, 214, 886 N.E.2d 1011, 1020 (2008) (an administrative agency lacks authority to resolve a constitutional argument, but procedural default occurs when a party does not first present its constitutional argument in that forum and develop the issue fully for the purposes of administrative review); Smith v. Department of Professional Regulation, 202 Ill. App. 3d 279, 287, 559 N.E.2d 884, 889 (1990) (raising a constitutional issue for the first time in the circuit court is insufficient). For all these same reasons, the ALJ rejected the request for a tax refund. After determining the car maker was liable for the tax, the ALJ then considered and affirmed the assessment of interest and a late penalty and negligence penalty which roughly doubled Ford Motor Company’s tax debt.

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Ford Motor Company v. Chicago Department of Revenue
2014 IL App (1st) 130597 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2014)

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2014 IL App (1st) 130597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-motor-co-v-chicago-department-of-revenue-illappct-2014.