2019 IL App (1st) 181778 SIXTH DIVISION December 6, 2019 Nos. 1-18-1778 & 1-18-1865 (cons.)
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and may not be cited as precedent by any party except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
GLOBAL MAIL, INC., an Ohio Corporation, ) Appeal from the f/k/a Deutsche Post Global Mail (OH), Inc., ) Circuit Court of and as Successor by Merger with Global Mail, ) Cook County. Inc., a Delaware Corporation, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) No. 16 CH 02657 ) JESSE WHITE, in His Official Capacity as the Illinois ) Secretary of State; and MICHAEL W. FRERICHS, in His ) Official Capacity as Illinois State Treasurer, ) ) Honorable Defendants-Appellants. ) Moshe Jacobius, ) Judge Presiding.
PRESIDING JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Connors and Harris concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: A foreign corporation that merges with another foreign corporation must file articles of merger with the Secretary of State and apply for authority to transact business in the state, but the corporation that ceases to exist following the merger does not continue to accrue Illinois franchise taxes; a misstatement by a corporation as to its state of incorporation on an annual report is a factual error that can be amended by a statement of correction; and the Business Corporation Act does not provide for an interest charge on a late initial franchise tax payment made by a foreign corporation.
¶2 The Illinois Secretary of State (Secretary of State) and the Illinois State Treasurer Nos. 1-18-1778 & 1-18-1865 (cons.)
(Treasurer) (collectively, defendants), appeal from the circuit court’s rulings granting in part a
motion for summary judgment filed by plaintiff Global Mail, Inc. (Global Mail) and denying in
part defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment. Global Mail is now an Ohio corporation,
but at one time was a Delaware corporation. We refer to it here simply as Global Mail, identifying
the state of incorporation where necessary.
¶3 In its ruling, the circuit court found that, pursuant to the State Officers and Employees
Money Disposition Act (Protest Monies Act), 30 ILCS 230/1, et. seq., Global Mail was entitled to
a refund of most of the taxes and penalties that it had paid under protest to the State of Illinois.
The circuit court ruled that Global Mail had already paid the franchise taxes that it owed the State
of Illinois from 2005 through 2016, that Global Mail was still required to pay the initial franchise
tax it would have paid had it applied for authority to transact business in Illinois as an Ohio
corporation, and that Global Mail also owed the State of Illinois a penalty for continuing to transact
business here without paying that initial franchise tax. The circuit court further found, however,
that Global Mail did not owe interest on that initial franchise tax and it rejected defendants’
affirmative defenses. Defendants now challenge those rulings. For the reasons that follow, we
affirm.
¶4 I. BACKGROUND
¶5 On August 4, 1987, Global Mail, Ltd., was incorporated under Delaware law. From 2001
through 2004, the Delaware corporation paid Illinois franchise taxes under the names Global Mail,
Ltd., Deutsche Post Global Mail, Ltd., and finally Global Mail, Inc.
¶6 On December 20, 2004, a wholly owned subsidiary of Global Mail, Inc., was formed in
Ohio, under Ohio law, and called Deutsche Post Global Mail (OH), Inc. On December 30, 2004,
the Delaware corporation merged into the Ohio corporation, which then took on the name—Global
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Mail, Inc.—of the Delaware corporation. The result of all of this was that Global Mail went from
being a Delaware corporation to being an Ohio corporation.
¶7 After the merger, the new Ohio corporation, failed to provide the Secretary of State with a
copy of its articles of merger or to apply for authority to transact business in Illinois. However, the
company continued to pay Illinois franchise taxes as the Delaware corporation and to file annual
reports with the Secretary of State that identified it as a Delaware corporation. In its 2012 annual
report Global Mail failed to identify any state of incorporation and in its 2013 report it finally
identified itself to the Secretary of State of Illinois as an Ohio corporation, something it continued
to do until 2015.
¶8 On February 13, 2015, the Secretary of State sent Global Mail a notice of delinquency and
levied against it a $368,845.32 franchise tax, $73,769.06 in penalties and interest, and a $75 annual
report-filing fee for failing to file an annual report prior to January 1, 2015. Global Mail then
submitted its 2015 annual report again listing Ohio as its state of incorporation. On July 15, 2015,
the Secretary of State returned Global Mail’s annual report from 2015 and the $17,998.93 the
company had paid in franchise taxes for that year, explaining that the report and funds were being
returned because Global Mail incorrectly listed itself as an Ohio corporation, instead of a Delaware
corporation, and Global Mail owed additional franchise taxes.
¶9 The Secretary of State then sent a second notice on October 7, 2015, this time demanding
$627,740.71 in payment. Global Mail responded on October 16, 2015, that it had already paid the
applicable Illinois franchise taxes. As Global Mail explained, Global Mail, the Delaware
corporation, no longer existed after December 30, 2004, and the franchise taxes the Secretary of
State had credited to that now-defunct entity were really paid by the new Ohio corporation—the
only Global Mail entity to survive the 2004 merger. The Secretary of State responded with a third
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and final notice on January 25, 2016, detailing the balance that he believed the Ohio corporation
owed for its application for authority to transact business in Illinois, franchise taxes, and the filing
fee, now totaling $650,072.09. The notice stated:
“According to our review of this matter, the 2004 merger between the Ohio corporation
and the Delaware corporation was never reported to the Secretary of State’s Office. The
Ohio corporation, as the survivor in the merger transacted business in Illinois without
authority. Pursuant to Sections 13.05, 13.15 and 13.70, no corporation may transact
business in Illinois prior to its having received the authority to do so. Thus, the franchise
tax, filing fee, penalty and interest above were correctly calculated. Please make payment
of the above amount within thirty (30) days of the date of this Third and Final Notice to
avoid further action by the Secretary of State’s Office.”
¶ 10 While acknowledging the merger in this notice, the Secretary of State maintained that, from
2005 through 2016, Illinois was owed franchise taxes from both the Ohio corporation and the
Delaware corporation, whose application to transact business in the state had never been formally
withdrawn. In response Global Mail filed its 2016 annual report, reporting its state of incorporation
as Delaware, and, in order to avoid further action by the Secretary of State, paid the $650,072.09
under protest pursuant to section 230/2 of the Protest Monies Act. 30 ILCS 230/2 (West 2016).
Then, on February 24, 2016, Global Mail filed the present action against defendants for a
declaratory judgment or, in the alternative, equitable recoupment, arguing that the Ohio
corporation had already paid all required franchise taxes since 2005—although those taxes had
incorrectly been attributed to the now nonexistent Delaware corporation—and that the Secretary
of State’s failure to acknowledge this fact effectively subjected the Ohio corporation to a double
tax.
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¶ 11 The following day, on February 25, 2016, Global Mail formally withdrew the Delaware
corporation’s authority to transact business in Illinois and filed a certified copy of the certificate
of merger with the Secretary of State. Global Mail then moved for a preliminary injunction
pursuant to the Protest Monies Act enjoining the Illinois Secretary of State, pending the final
disposition of its action, from paying or depositing the $650,072.09 paid under protest to the
Treasurer’s general fund. 30 ILCS 230/2 (West 2016). The court granted Global Mail’s injunction
on March 22, 2016.
¶ 12 Defendants moved to dismiss Global Mail’s complaint, but the circuit court denied their
motion. Defendants then filed their answer, which included seven affirmative defenses: statute of
limitations, voluntary payment doctrine, failure to exhaust administrative remedies, ripeness,
mootness, laches, and equitable estoppel. They also filed a counterclaim arguing that “[t]he
Delaware Corporation and the Ohio Corporation constituted separate and distinct corporations
incorporated under the laws of different states” and thus separately owed franchise taxes for the
privilege of doing business in Illinois.
¶ 13 Global Mail moved to strike defendants’ counterclaim and affirmative defenses and filed
a renewed motion for summary judgment arguing that no franchise tax was due because the
Delaware corporation had not existed after 2004 and the Ohio corporation, as the only Global Mail
still in existence, had been paying franchise taxes since that time. Global Mail argued that the
Secretary of State’s actions were arbitrary and capricious and Global Mail’s payment made under
protest should be returned. Defendants filed their own renewed motion for summary judgment
arguing that Global Mail was not entitled to a refund and that each of their affirmative defenses
precluded Global Mail from pursing its claim. On July 17, 2018, the circuit court issued a 60-page
opinion ruling on these motions.
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¶ 14 The circuit court granted Global Mail’s motion to strike defendants’ counterclaim, finding
that defendants failed to state a cause of action, but denied Global Mail’s motion to strike
defendants’ affirmative defenses. The court granted in part and denied in part both parties’ motions
for summary judgment.
¶ 15 The circuit court found that the Delaware corporation no longer existed under Illinois law
after the December 30, 2004, merger. The court reasoned that while Illinois law does require a
domestic corporation to file articles of merger in order for a merger to be recognized, it does not
require two merging foreign corporations to do the same. Rather, the court determined, it is the
law of the state of incorporation that determines that corporation’s existence. Therefore, as soon
as the Delaware corporation ceased to exist in Delaware, which occurred at the time of the merger,
it ceased to exist in Illinois. The court further held that the Delaware corporation had no franchise
tax liability once it ceased to exist.
¶ 16 The circuit court also determined that the Ohio corporation was required to apply for
authority to transact business in Illinois after the merger and the Secretary of State was correct in
imposing the initial franchise tax of $30,911.64 on it. The court ruled that, although Global Mail
incorrectly listed its state of incorporation as Delaware from 2005 through 2012, this did not
change the fact that defendants accepted the money paid as franchise taxes. As the court explained
in part in its lengthy and detailed opinion:
“Global Mail Delaware could not have transacted any business after the merger
occurred. Therefore, there was no basis for any franchise taxes to be assessed
against Global Mail Delaware after the merger and Global Mail Delaware could
not have been paying franchise taxes when it ceased to exist.
***
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Illinois does not favor duplicate payments or overpayments of taxes.
*** Allowing [the Illinois Secretary of State] to ignore that it accepted franchise
tax payments from Global Mail Ohio from 2005 through 2016, even though it did
so under the belief that it was accepting franchise taxes from Global Mail Delaware
would permit the [Illinois Secretary of State] to receive an overpayment of
franchise tax payments from Global Mail Ohio.”
¶ 17 The circuit court additionally determined that Global Mail should be able to amend those
of its annual reports listing Delaware as its state of incorporation in order to “correct the record
and remove any ambiguity regarding whether Global Mail Ohio or Global Mail Delaware
submitted annual reports for those years.” However, the court also noted that, “the statement of
correction is not necessary to account the franchise taxes paid from 2005 to 2016 to Global Mail
Ohio.” The court granted defendants’ renewed motion for summary judgment against Global
Mail’s claim for equitable recoupment, stating “the circumstances under which equitable
recoupment can apply are not present in this case” and determined that defendants’ actions in
assessing Global Mail franchise taxes were not arbitrary and capricious. Finally, the court rejected
defendants’ affirmative defenses.
¶ 18 In its July 17, 2018, opinion, the court directed the Secretary of State to submit a petition
detailing the amount Global Mail owed because of its failure to file an application for authority to
transact business in December of 2004, following the merger, as required by the Business
Corporation Act. 805 ILCS 5/13.05, 5/13.15 (West 2016). Defendants submitted the requested
petition. According to defendants, Global Mail was required to pay $30,911.64 for the initial
franchise tax, $150 as a filing fee for the application for authority to transact business in Illinois
that the Ohio corporation should have filed, $3,106.16 as a penalty under the Business Corporation
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Act, and $82,843.20 in interest, totaling $117,011.00. Global Mail contested the $82,843.20 in
interest charges.
¶ 19 The circuit court agreed with Global Mail, finding that the Business Corporation Act
“already outlines a specific penalty to be imposed on foreign corporations for transacting business
in Illinois without authority.” The court noted that the section of the Act defendants relied on for
their interest charge applied only to late filings of reports of issuance of shares or reports of an
increase in paid-in capital. The court ordered Global Mail to pay the other amounts and for the
remaining $615,904.29 of the $650,072.09 held in the Protest Monies Fund to be returned to it.
¶ 20 This appeal followed.
¶ 21 II. JURISDICTION
¶ 22 The circuit court entered its final judgment on August 13, 2018, and defendants filed their
timely notice of appeal on August 15, 2018. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to Illinois Supreme
Court Rules 301 (eff. Feb. 1, 1994) and 303 (eff. July 1, 2017), governing appeals from final
judgments entered by the circuit court in civil cases.
¶ 23 III. ANALYSIS
¶ 24 Defendants challenge the circuit court’s rulings specifically as to whether Global Mail
1) still owed franchise taxes for 2005 through 2016, notwithstanding the payments made by it
during that time period that were credited to the no-longer-existing Delaware corporation; 2) could
file a statement of correction as to its state of incorporation; or 3) owed interest for its failure to
make a timely initial franchise tax payment. Defendants also challenge the circuit court’s rejection
of three of their affirmative defenses: the voluntary payment doctrine, the statute of limitations,
and failure to exhaust administrative remedies.
¶ 25 Because this appeal requires us both to construe a statute and to review the circuit court’s
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ruling on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, our review is de novo. Taylor v. Pekin
Insurance Co., 231 Ill. 2d 390, 395 (2008) (statutory interpretation); Williams v. Manchester, 228
Ill. 2d 404, 417 (2008) (review of summary judgment).
¶ 26 A. Global Mail’s Franchise Tax Payments for 2005 Through 2016
¶ 27 Defendants first argument is that Global Mail, the current corporation incorporated in Ohio,
owes franchise taxes for the years 2005 through 2016 and is entitled to no credit for the taxes that
it paid but which were credited to Global Mail, the Delaware corporation. Defendants’ position is
that both corporations owed franchise taxes in Illinois from 2005 through 2016, even though the
Delaware corporation has not existed since the 2004 merger.
¶ 28 Defendants argument rests on the fact that the Delaware corporation failed to withdraw its
authority to transact business in Illinois until February 25, 2016, and the Ohio corporation
transacted business in the State, albeit without proper authority, throughout that same period.
¶ 29 The Business Corporation Act requires foreign corporations to apply for the authority to
transact business in Illinois with the Secretary of State before conducting business in the state. 805
ILCS 5/13.05 (West 2016). Once a corporation receives that authority to transact business, it
“shall, until a certificate of revocation has been issued or an application for withdrawal shall have
been filed as provided in this Act, enjoy the same, but no greater rights and privileges as a domestic
corporation” and “shall be subject to the same duties, restrictions, penalties, and liabilities.” 805
ILCS 5/13.10 (West 2016).
¶ 30 A foreign corporation that fails to meet this requirement is still required to pay those taxes
and is also subject to a penalty. Specifically, a corporation that operates without authority from the
Secretary of State:
“is liable to this State, for the years or parts thereof during which it transacted business in
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this State without authority, in an amount equal to all fees, franchise taxes, penalties and
other charges that would have been imposed by this Act upon the corporation had it duly
applied for and received authority to transact business in this State as required by this Act,
but failed to pay the franchise taxes that would have been computed thereon, and thereafter
filed all reports required by this Act.” 805 ILCS 5/13.70(c) (West 2016).
¶ 31 It is undisputed that Global Mail, the surviving Ohio corporation, failed to file its articles
of merger with the Secretary of State as required by the Business Corporation Act until February
25, 2016, and was thus not authorized to transact business in Illinois. We agree with defendants
therefore that, as a result, the Ohio corporation is liable for “all fees, franchise taxes, penalties and
other charges” that would have been imposed had it filed the appropriate forms.
¶ 32 The parties’ real dispute is over whether the Delaware corporation also continued to owe
taxes during this period. Defendants’ position is that the Ohio corporation cannot get credit for the
taxes that it paid that were credited to the Delaware corporation because—at least according to the
Secretary of State’s records—both the Delaware and the Ohio corporations continued to exist from
2005 through 2015 and therefore both owed franchise taxes for that period. The circuit court
disagreed and so do we.
¶ 33 The parties do not dispute that under Delaware law Global Mail’s Delaware corporation
ceased to exist after the merger. The Delaware statute provides:
“When any merger or consolidation shall have become effective under this chapter, for all
purposes of the laws of this State the separate existence of all the constituent corporations,
or of all such constituent corporations, except the one into which the other or others of such
constituent corporation have been merged, as the case may be, shall cease and the
constituent corporations shall become a new corporation, or be merged into 1 such
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corporations.” 8 Del. C. § 259 (West 2016).
¶ 34 We have long recognized that the law of the incorporating states is controlling as to
corporate existence:
“The manner of doing business in a foreign jurisdiction may be controlled by the statutes
of that jurisdiction, but its organization and the manner of its dissolution and its obligations
thereunder are subject to the control of the State which gave it birth. Under the rule of
comity existing between the between the various States, the rights of the State creating the
corporation are recognized in so far as they deal with its corporate life and existence.”
(Emphasis added.) Perry v. Western Motor Car Co., 279 Ill. App. 195, 203 (1935).
¶ 35 Section 11.40 of the Business Corporation Act regulates the effective date of a merger for
purposes of a domestic corporation’s tax obligations. 805 ILCS 5/11.40 (West 2016) (“The merger
*** shall become effective upon filing the articles of merger *** by the Secretary of State).
However, as Perry and other cases have made clear, the state of incorporation controls as to
corporate existence. See Blankenship v. Demmler Manufacturing Co., 89 Ill. App. 3d 569, 573
(1980) (“A corporation can exist only under the express laws of the state by which it was created.”);
Matter of Morris, 30 F. 3d 1578, 1582 (7th Cir. 1994) (stating “Illinois courts look to the laws of
a company’s state of incorporation when deciding issues regarding a corporation’s existence”).
¶ 36 The Business Corporation Act is fully consistent with this understanding. Section 13.05,
governing foreign corporations, states that “nothing in this Act contained shall be construed to
authorize this State to regulate the organization or the internal affairs of such corporation.” 805
ILCS 5/13.05 (West 2016).
¶ 37 Defendants cite NDC LLC v. Topinka, 374 Ill. App. 3d 341, 365-66 (2007), for the
proposition that Illinois law controls the existence of a foreign corporation, and thus, a non-
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surviving corporation, even one incorporated under another state, continues to exist after a merger
until articles of merger have been filed by the secretary of state. While there is language in that
case to this effect, as the circuit court correctly pointed out, the statement was dicta, since the
outcome there was not controlled by when the corporation ceased to exist. Id. at 366-67. Such
dicta is not binding here (Exelon Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 234 Ill. 2d 899, 907 (2009)),
and read in context there is nothing in NDC LLC to suggest that the second district intended to
disagree with the long line of Illinois cases that have recognized that corporate existence following
a merger is controlled by the state of incorporation. The issue in NDC LLC was whether NDC LLC
was liable for franchise payments owed by a corporation that had clearly existed when the
franchise taxes were incurred, which is completely different from this case, where defendants are
claiming that Global Mail’s Delaware corporation somehow incurred tax liability after it ceased to
exist.
¶ 38 We agree with the circuit court and with Global Mail that Delaware law dictates corporate
existence and, once the Delaware corporation no longer existed under Delaware law, it no longer
existed for purposes of incurring franchise taxes. Thus, the taxes that Global Mail’s Ohio
corporation paid should have been credited to the Ohio corporation, even if they were improperly
designated as being for the Delaware corporation.
¶ 39 Defendants also argue that the circuit court erroneously cited Sinclair Pipe Line Co. v.
Carpentier, 10 Ill. 2d 300, 140 N.E.2d 115 (1957), to find that no franchise taxes were due from
Global Mail’s Delaware corporation when it ceased to exist because it could no longer transact
business in Illinois. Defendants are correct that under the Business Corporation Act, foreign
corporations are taxed for the “privilege of exercising its authority to transact such business in this
State.” (Emphasis added.) 805 ILCS 5/15.65 (West 2016). Defendants are also correct that, in
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1959, the General Assembly added the “privilege of exercising” language to the Act in order “to
change the law as announced in Sinclair Pipe Line Co. v. Carpentier, 10 Ill. 2d 300, 140 N.E.2d
115 (1957), by which foreign corporations owning property in Illinois but doing only an interstate
business had avoided franchise taxes.” (Emphasis added.) Annotations to 1959 Version of 1933
Business and Corporations Act. However, this amendment was targeting corporations who found
a loophole in the tax code by the way they structured their business, not corporations that no longer
existed and thus could not possibly have enjoyed the “privilege” of exercising the authority to
transact business in the state.
¶ 40 Defendants also argue that the circuit court incorrectly relied on principles of equity in
deciding this issue when “[a]ll of the necessary guidance to properly dispose of this matter is
contained in the plain language of the statutory architecture of the [Business Corporation Act].” It
is true that principles of equity are inappropriate where the plain language of a statute resolves the
issue. First Federal Savings & Loan Association v. Walker, 91 Ill. 2d 218, 227 (1982). However,
in interpreting the statute, certain principles of statutory interpretation are appropriate. We have
long recognized that: “Although not constitutionally forbidden, double taxation is never presumed
and is valid only where the legislature has unequivocally intended to impose such taxation.” People
for Use of Bernardi v. Bethune Plaza, Inc., 124 Ill. App. 3d 791, 793 (1984). In addition, “taxing
statutes are to be strictly construed. Their language is not to be extended or enlarged by implication,
beyond its clear import. In cases of doubt they are construed most strongly against the government
and in favor of the taxpayer.” Van’s Material Co. v. Department of Revenue, 131 Ill. 2d 196, 202
(1989). When construed in accordance with these principles, the statutory language fully supports
the circuit court’s rulings.
¶ 41 In sum, Global Mail’s Delaware corporation did not exist after 2004 and was not liable for
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any taxes after that point. Accordingly, the taxes paid by Global Mail’s surviving Ohio corporation,
though incorrectly attributed to the Delaware corporation, satisfied the franchise tax obligations of
the Ohio corporation—the corporate entity that actually paid the taxes and the only one that existed
and could possibly have exercised the “privilege” of doing business in Illinois during the relevant
period.
¶ 42 B. A Statement of Correction as to the State of Incorporation
¶ 43 Defendants also ask us to reverse the court’s finding that Global Mail, the Ohio
corporation, was permitted, under the Business Corporation Act, to file a statement of correction
for its annual reports. The correction that the circuit court allowed was for Global Mail to change
its annual reports from 2005 to 2012 to correctly reflect that its state of incorporation was Ohio,
rather than Delaware. We agree with the circuit court that this was permitted by the Act.
¶ 44 The Business Corporation Act provides a method to correct factual errors in reports:
“Whenever any instrument authorized to be filed with the Secretary of State under any
provision of this Act has been so filed and, as of the date of the action therein referred to,
contains any misstatement of fact, typographical error, error of transcription or any other
error or defect or was defectively or erroneously executed, such instrument may be
corrected by filing, in accordance with Section 1.10 of this Act, a statement of correction.”
805 ILCS 5/1.15 (West 2016).
¶ 45 Section 150.300 of the Illinois Administrative Code provides further amplification on what
an “error” or “defect” means under the statute:
“Matters deemed ‘errors’ or ‘defects’ for which a statement of correction may be filed are
facts that have been misreported in a document filed with the Secretary of State’s Office
and do not include any other matter which in retrospect is considered a mistake or which
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as to the action reported reflects a subsequent event.” 14 Ill. Admin. Code § 150.300(a)
(2007).
¶ 46 Defendants argue that Global Mail, should not be able to file a statement of correction as
to its state of incorporation because “Global Delaware’s failure to comply with the requirements
under section 13.45 of the [Business Corporation Act] to withdraw from Illinois before February
25, 2016 *** is not a matter qualifying for a Statement of Correction.” Defendants’ argument is
essentially that a provision meant to correct clerical errors cannot be used to retroactively excuse
a corporation for failing to file an application for withdrawal when it merges with another entity.
But the error being corrected is not this failure to file the application for withdrawal. As we have
already discussed, that failure did not mean that the Delaware corporation continued to exist and
accrue franchise taxes, notwithstanding that it no longer existed under Delaware law. In keeping
with our holding, that the only corporation that accrued taxes during this period was the Ohio
corporation, and for the sake of accurate recordkeeping, Global Mail’s annual reports should be
corrected to reflect its true state of incorporation. Section 1.15 of the Act provides an appropriate
avenue for doing. The circuit court did not err by allowing such corrections.
¶ 47 C. Interest on the Initial Franchise Tax
¶ 48 The circuit court found that Global Mail was required to pay the initial franchise tax of
$30, 911.64 and to pay penalties, pursuant to the statute, because it failed to file for authority to
transact business as an Ohio corporation. Defendants contend that the circuit court erred in not
also charging Global Mail what defendants calculated was $82,843.20 in interest, at 2% per month
for 134 months, on the initial franchise tax that should have been paid in December of 2004. We
again disagree.
¶ 49 As discussed above, the Business Corporation Act details the consequences of transacting
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business in Illinois without having obtained the proper authority to do so. These include the
requirement that the corporation pay: “an amount equal to all fees, franchise taxes, penalties and
other charges that would have been imposed by this Act *** had the corporation properly applied.”
805 ILCS 5/13.70(c) (West 2016). The Act also imposes “a penalty of either 10% of the filing fee,
license fee and franchise taxes or $200 plus $5 for each month or fraction thereof in which it has
continued to transact business in this State without authority therefor, whichever penalty is greater”
for failures to file an application for more than 60 days. 805 ILCS 5/13.70(c) (West 2016). The
circuit court agreed with defendants that this initial franchise tax and penalty were due and owing.
Defendants’ position is that Global Mail also owes the monthly interest stated above as an
additional penalty.
¶ 50 Defendants rely on section 16.05 of the Business Corporation Act, which states:
“Each corporation, domestic or foreign, that fails or refuses to file a report of issuance of
shares or increase in paid-in capital within the time prescribed by this Act is subject to a
penalty on any obligation occurring prior to January 1, 1991, and interest on those
obligations on or after January 1, 1991, for each calendar month or part of month that it is
delinquent in the amount of 2% of the amount of license fees and franchise taxes provided
by this Act to be paid on account of the issuance of shares or increase in paid-in capital.”
(Emphasis added.) 805 ILCS 5/16.05(b) (West 2016).
¶ 51 It is clear to us from the plain language of this section that the interest charge applies only
to reports of the issuance of shares or an increase in paid-in capital. An application for the authority
to transact business in Illinois is neither of those two things.
¶ 52 Defendants argue that this section must be read in concert with the other sections of the
Business Corporation Act. Specifically, defendants look to section 14.15 of the Act, which
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provides that “the articles of incorporation of each domestic corporation shall be deemed to be the
first report of the issuance of shares of such corporation.” Defendants argue:
“Therefore, in connection with the filing by a domestic corporation of [articles of
incorporation], a domestic corporation pays an initial franchise tax based on the
corporation’s paid-in capital represented in Illinois. [citation] The [articles of incorporation
form] reports the domestic corporation’s first issuance of shares and paid-in capital.
[citation] A domestic corporation is subject to interest under section 16.05(b) for the
untimely reporting of underreported paid-in capital on its Articles of Incorporation.”
¶ 53 Defendants point out that the Business Corporation Act subjects foreign corporations to
the same liabilities as domestic corporations. 805 ILCS 5/13.10 (West 2016). They argue that a
foreign corporation’s application to transact business in Illinois, under section 13.15 of the Act
(805 ILCS 5/13.15 (West 2016)), is “the comparable report” to a domestic corporation’s articles
of incorporation. While these may be similar reports, the Business Corporation Act specifically
states that the articles of incorporation for a domestic corporation “shall be deemed to be the first
report of the issuance of shares of such corporation.” (Emphasis added.) 805 ILCS 5/14.15 (West
2016). There is no similar provision stating that an application for the authority to transact business
in Illinois, under section 13.15, “shall be deemed to be first report” of the issuance of shares for a
foreign corporation. Because the statute does not “deem” the application to transact business in
Illinois to be a report of the issuance of shares, there is no basis on which to find that the interest
provision in section 16.05(b) for a “report of issuance of shares” applies here. Therefore, the delay
in filing this application is not the equivalent of a delay in filing a report on the issuance of shares,
which would subject Global Mail to interest charges under that section.
¶ 54 In short, there is no support in the Business Corporation Act for finding that the legislature
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meant a late “report of issuance of shares or increase in paid-in capital” to be equated with a late
application to transact business in Illinois. We agree with the circuit court that the Business
Corporation Act does not provide for monthly interest as an additional penalty on late applications
for the authority to transact business in Illinois and that the circuit court correctly calculated the
amount that Global Mail owes for its belated initial franchise tax payment.
¶ 55 D. Affirmative Defenses
¶ 56 Defendants also argue that the circuit court erred in rejecting their affirmative defenses.
Specifically, they argue that the voluntarily payment doctrine bars Global Mail’s recovery, Global
Mail violated the Business Corporation Act’s statute of limitations, and Global Mail failed to
exhaust its administrative remedies. We consider each affirmative defense in turn.
¶ 57 1. Voluntary Payment Doctrine
¶ 58 Defendants contend that the voluntary payment doctrine bars Global Mail “from seeking a
refund of amounts it voluntarily paid on behalf of Global Delaware in connection with Global
Delaware’s 2005-2015 Annual Reports.”
¶ 59 Under the voluntary payment doctrine “money voluntarily paid under a claim of right to
the payment and with knowledge of facts by the person making the payment cannot be recovered
back on the ground that the claim was illegal.” Illinois Glass Co. v. Chicago Telephone Co., 234
Ill. 535, 541 (1908). Under this doctrine, a party must “not only show that the claim asserted was
unlawful,” but also “that the payment was not voluntary,” i.e., that the payment “was made under
the influence” of “some necessity which amounted to compulsion.” Id.
¶ 60 Global Mail’s only refund request is for the taxes it paid under protest, a request governed
by the Protest Monies Act. Payments made under this statute are by their very nature involuntary.
Defendants’ claim that Global Mail is seeking a refunded of the taxes it paid from 2005 through
18 Nos. 1-18-1778 & 1-18-1865 (cons.)
2015 rests on the argument that we have already rejected that Global Mail’s Delaware corporation
continued to owe taxes until it withdrew its authority to transact business on February 25, 2016.
Based on the position, which we have accepted, that only the Ohio corporation owed those taxes,
Global Mail is simply asking for the tax payments it already made to be properly attributed to the
Ohio corporation. Because no refund is being sought, the voluntary payment doctrine does not
apply here.
¶ 61 2. Statute of Limitations
¶ 62 Defendants also claim that the Business Corporation’s three-year statute of limitations bars
Global Mail from being refunded franchise taxes that were attributed to its Delaware corporation,
because Global Mail did not file a petition for refund within this three-year deadline.
¶ 63 The Business Corporation Act states that “[n]o refund shall be made unless a petition for
such shall have been filed in accordance with Section 1.10 of this Act within three years after the
amount to be refunded was paid.” 805 ILCS 5/1.17(a)(1) (West 2016). Defendants are correct that
Global Mail did not file a petition for refund within three years. But the point is that Global Mail
is not seeking a refund under the Business Corporation Act. It is merely asking defendants to credit
the franchise taxes paid on behalf of a nonexistent entity to the entity that actually paid those taxes.
The Business Corporation Act’s statute of limitations does not apply.
¶ 64 3. Failure to Exhaust Administrative Remedies
¶ 65 Finally, defendants argue that Global Mail “is not permitted to utilize the Protest [Monies]
Act to avoid exhausting its administrative remedies in seeking a refund for franchise taxes.”
Defendants claim that Global Mail is attempting to use the Protest Monies Act to recoup taxes paid
on behalf of Global Mail, the Delaware corporation.
¶ 66 The Administrative Review Law, which applies to “every action to review judicially a final
19 Nos. 1-18-1778 & 1-18-1865 (cons.)
decision of any administrative agency where the Act creating or conferring power on such agency,
by express reference, adopts the provisions of *** the Act,” bars parties from litigating in court
until they have received a final administrative decision. 735 ILCS 5/3-102 (West 2016).
¶ 67 Under the Business Corporation Act, any revocation of the certificate of authority to
transact business in Illinois by the Secretary of State or any failure by the Secretary of State “to
approve any articles of incorporation, amendment, merger, consolidation, dissolution, petition for
reduction or refund, or any other document required by [the Business Corporation] Act” falls under
the purview of the Administrative Review Law. 805 ILCS 5/1.45 (West 2016).
¶ 68 The Protest Monies Act creates an avenue to immediately challenge money paid to the state
of Illinois. Specifically, under the Protest Monies Act, a taxpayer tenders their payment under
protest and the recipient of the funds—in this case the Secretary of State—then notifies the
Treasurer, who places the money in the protest fund. 30 ILCS 230/2a, 2a.1 (West 2016). After 30
days, the money may be transferred into the appropriate fund it was originally intended for, unless
the party that made the payment under protest secures a temporary restraining order or a
preliminary injunction restraining the transfer of the funds. 30 ILCS 230/2 (West 2016). It is
undisputed that Global Mail followed these procedures.
¶ 69 Our supreme court has made clear that “where a system of agency or departmental hearings
is available and the final decisions of the department or agency is reviewable under the
Administrative Review Act, a taxpayer may seek judicial determination under the Protest [Monies]
Act of the propriety of a disputed tax without exhausting the administrative remedies.” Chicago &
Illinois Midland Ry. Co. v. Department of Revenue, 63 Ill. 2d 474, 478 (1976). The court
specifically held that the Protest Monies Acts provides “an alternative to the departmental hearings
reviewable under the Administrative Review Act.” Id. at 484.
20 Nos. 1-18-1778 & 1-18-1865 (cons.)
¶ 70 Defendants argue that Global Mail is improperly trying to “use the Protest [Monies] Act to
recover franchise taxes previously paid on behalf of its Delaware corporation.” But, again, Global
Mail is not attempting to recover any taxes except the taxes paid under protest. The taxes “paid on
behalf of Global Delaware” were incorrectly credited to Global Delaware because Global Mail,
the Ohio corporation, was the only corporation in existence. Therefore, Global Mail, the Ohio
corporation, is disputing the assessment of additional taxes against it. The Protest Monies Act
applies, and Global Mail, having followed the necessary procedures, was permitted to avail itself
of the Protest Monies Act without exhausting its administrative remedies.
¶ 71 IV. CONCLUSION
¶ 72 For the reasons stated above, we affirm the circuit court’s decision.
¶ 73 Affirmed.