People ex rel. Lindblom v. Sears Brands, LLC
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Opinion
2024 IL App (1st) 231163-U
SECOND DIVISION September 30, 2024
Nos. 1-23-1163 and 1-23-1177, Consolidated
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ex rel. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of RICHARD LINDBLOM and RALPH LINDBLOM, ) Cook County. ) Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-Appellees, ) ) ) v. ) ) No. 15 L 50776 ) SEARS BRANDS, LLC, HOME DEPOT U.S.A., INC., ) LOWE’S HOME CENTERS, LLC, BEST BUY STORES, ) L.P., and GREGG APPLIANCES, INC., ) ) Defendants, ) ) Honorable Catherine A. (Lowe’s Home Centers, LLC, ) Schneider, Judge Presiding. Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant). ____________________________________________________ JUSTICE HOWSE delivered the judgment of the court. Justices McBride and Ellis concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: We affirm in part and reverse in part the trial court’s judgment finding the defendant liable for violating the Illinois False Claims Act. We find that the trial court erred in its calculation of damages; therefore, we remand for a new trial on the issue of damages. 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶2 Plaintiffs Richard and Ralph Lindblom, on behalf of the State of Illinois, filed this suit
against Lowe’s, a company that operates numerous home improvement retail stores in Illinois.
The Lindbloms claim in their suit that from 2009 to 2015 Lowe’s violated the Illinois False
Claims Act when it failed to collect and remit sales tax for sales of dishwashers and microwaves
purchased with installation services. Following a bench trial, the trial court agreed with the
Lindbloms and found that Lowe’s knowingly avoided its obligation to collect and remit sales tax
to the State for the subject transactions. After finding Lowe’s liable, the trial court held a
separate trial on damages and ultimately awarded the Lindbloms $4,148,887. The Lindbloms
appeal several of the trial court’s rulings on damages. Lowe’s cross-appeals challenging the trial
court’s ruling on liability as well as one issue relating to damages. For the following reasons, we
affirm in part and reverse in part the trial court’s judgment of liability, and we reverse and
remand for a new trial on the issue of damages and a recalculation of attorney fees. 1
¶3 BACKGROUND
¶4 Plaintiffs Richard and Ralph Lindblom own and operate Advanced Appliance Service, a
retail appliance store located in Schaumburg. The Lindbloms’ father opened Advance Appliance
Service in 1956. The Lindbloms’ store is a direct competitor of Lowe’s. The Lindbloms,
however, alleged that the competition between their store and Lowe’s was unfair because the
Lindbloms at all times charged sales tax on the sale of dishwashers and microwaves, but Lowe’s
was able to offer its customers lower prices because it was, according to the Lindbloms, illegally
not charging its customers sales tax.
1 Lowe’s filed a motion seeking leave to cite additional authority. We took the motion with the case. We now grant Lowe’s motion; we have considered the additional authority cited therein and we have accorded it due weight.
2 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶5 In Illinois, retailers are required to collect and remit the State sales tax in the amount of
6.25% of gross receipts from sales of tangible personal property. 35 ILCS 120/2-10 (West 2022).
In addition, retailers collect local sales tax which is added to the State sales tax. In Chicago, for
example, retail sales of consumer goods are taxed at a rate of 10.25% which is made up of the
6.25% State sales tax and 4% of local sales taxes. Some sales of personal property are, however,
exempt from the general sales tax and instead incur Illinois’ use tax. Illinois imposes a use tax of
6.25% on either the selling price or the fair market value of the tangible personal property. 35
ILCS 105/3-10 (West 2022). “This use tax is intended to serve as a complement to the Retailers’
Occupation Tax Act (35 ILCS 120/1 et seq. (West 2008)), which is the primary means by which
Illinois taxes retail sales of tangible goods.” Shared Imaging, LLC v. Hamer, 2017 IL App (1st)
152817, ¶ 24. “The purpose of the use tax is to preclude buyers from avoiding the retailers’
occupation tax by making purchases from out-of-state vendors and to protect Illinois vendors
from lost sales to those out-of-state vendors.” Id. (citing Irwin Industrial Tool Co. v. Department
of Revenue, 238 Ill. 2d 332, 340 (2010)).
¶6 Construction contractors do not need to collect sales tax when they incorporate tangible
personal property into real estate under a construction contract. Instead, under Illinois law, the
construction contractor himself is considered to be the end user of the product. Rather than the
sales tax generally paid on the purchase of consumer goods, a construction contractor instead
incurs the Illinois 6.25% use tax, which the contractor must pay to the State.
¶7 When a construction contractor sells and installs a water heater, furnace, roofing
materials, or other materials and fixtures that are incorporated into the structure, the contractor
does not incur sales tax liability but instead pays the State use tax. But when a construction
3 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. contractor sells and installs a refrigerator, washing machine, or other portable equipment, the
contractor incurs state and local sales tax liability.
¶8 Lowe’s claims it acted as a construction contractor in those instances where a customer
purchased installation services from Lowe’s for dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves.
When Lowe’s installs purchased appliances as part of its “contractor business” Lowe’s paid the
use tax to the State but did not collect and remit sales tax. Lowe’s concluded when it supplied
and installed built-in dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves it was only required to pay use
tax because it was acting as a construction contractor rather than a retailer in those instances.
¶9 Conversely, when Lowe’s sells a dishwasher or microwave to a customer who takes the
appliance from the store at the time of purchase or has it delivered, Lowe’s collected the State
and local sales tax and remitted the collected tax to the State.
¶ 10 The issue presented in this case is whether Lowe’s was required to collect sales tax on the
dishwashers and microwave ovens it sold when the customer also paid for installation of the
appliances from Lowe’s.
¶ 11 According to the record, the Lindbloms specifically informed the Illinois Department of
Revenue about Lowe’s tax practices in February 2015. The Lindbloms explained in an email to a
representative from the Department of Revenue that, for approximately 30 years, non-party Sears
has been telling its customers that it does not have to charge sales tax on the sale of a built-in
dishwasher if the customer also orders installation. The Lindbloms informed the Department that
Home Depot and Lowe’s were engaged in the same practice and were obtaining an unfair
competitive advantage. The Lindbloms stated that their own accountant advised them against
adopting the same tax practice. The Lindbloms explained that, for the past 10 years, Lowe’s has
had an unfair competitive advantage over every appliance seller in the State who is playing by
4 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons.
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2024 IL App (1st) 231163-U
SECOND DIVISION September 30, 2024
Nos. 1-23-1163 and 1-23-1177, Consolidated
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, ex rel. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of RICHARD LINDBLOM and RALPH LINDBLOM, ) Cook County. ) Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-Appellees, ) ) ) v. ) ) No. 15 L 50776 ) SEARS BRANDS, LLC, HOME DEPOT U.S.A., INC., ) LOWE’S HOME CENTERS, LLC, BEST BUY STORES, ) L.P., and GREGG APPLIANCES, INC., ) ) Defendants, ) ) Honorable Catherine A. (Lowe’s Home Centers, LLC, ) Schneider, Judge Presiding. Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant). ____________________________________________________ JUSTICE HOWSE delivered the judgment of the court. Justices McBride and Ellis concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: We affirm in part and reverse in part the trial court’s judgment finding the defendant liable for violating the Illinois False Claims Act. We find that the trial court erred in its calculation of damages; therefore, we remand for a new trial on the issue of damages. 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶2 Plaintiffs Richard and Ralph Lindblom, on behalf of the State of Illinois, filed this suit
against Lowe’s, a company that operates numerous home improvement retail stores in Illinois.
The Lindbloms claim in their suit that from 2009 to 2015 Lowe’s violated the Illinois False
Claims Act when it failed to collect and remit sales tax for sales of dishwashers and microwaves
purchased with installation services. Following a bench trial, the trial court agreed with the
Lindbloms and found that Lowe’s knowingly avoided its obligation to collect and remit sales tax
to the State for the subject transactions. After finding Lowe’s liable, the trial court held a
separate trial on damages and ultimately awarded the Lindbloms $4,148,887. The Lindbloms
appeal several of the trial court’s rulings on damages. Lowe’s cross-appeals challenging the trial
court’s ruling on liability as well as one issue relating to damages. For the following reasons, we
affirm in part and reverse in part the trial court’s judgment of liability, and we reverse and
remand for a new trial on the issue of damages and a recalculation of attorney fees. 1
¶3 BACKGROUND
¶4 Plaintiffs Richard and Ralph Lindblom own and operate Advanced Appliance Service, a
retail appliance store located in Schaumburg. The Lindbloms’ father opened Advance Appliance
Service in 1956. The Lindbloms’ store is a direct competitor of Lowe’s. The Lindbloms,
however, alleged that the competition between their store and Lowe’s was unfair because the
Lindbloms at all times charged sales tax on the sale of dishwashers and microwaves, but Lowe’s
was able to offer its customers lower prices because it was, according to the Lindbloms, illegally
not charging its customers sales tax.
1 Lowe’s filed a motion seeking leave to cite additional authority. We took the motion with the case. We now grant Lowe’s motion; we have considered the additional authority cited therein and we have accorded it due weight.
2 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶5 In Illinois, retailers are required to collect and remit the State sales tax in the amount of
6.25% of gross receipts from sales of tangible personal property. 35 ILCS 120/2-10 (West 2022).
In addition, retailers collect local sales tax which is added to the State sales tax. In Chicago, for
example, retail sales of consumer goods are taxed at a rate of 10.25% which is made up of the
6.25% State sales tax and 4% of local sales taxes. Some sales of personal property are, however,
exempt from the general sales tax and instead incur Illinois’ use tax. Illinois imposes a use tax of
6.25% on either the selling price or the fair market value of the tangible personal property. 35
ILCS 105/3-10 (West 2022). “This use tax is intended to serve as a complement to the Retailers’
Occupation Tax Act (35 ILCS 120/1 et seq. (West 2008)), which is the primary means by which
Illinois taxes retail sales of tangible goods.” Shared Imaging, LLC v. Hamer, 2017 IL App (1st)
152817, ¶ 24. “The purpose of the use tax is to preclude buyers from avoiding the retailers’
occupation tax by making purchases from out-of-state vendors and to protect Illinois vendors
from lost sales to those out-of-state vendors.” Id. (citing Irwin Industrial Tool Co. v. Department
of Revenue, 238 Ill. 2d 332, 340 (2010)).
¶6 Construction contractors do not need to collect sales tax when they incorporate tangible
personal property into real estate under a construction contract. Instead, under Illinois law, the
construction contractor himself is considered to be the end user of the product. Rather than the
sales tax generally paid on the purchase of consumer goods, a construction contractor instead
incurs the Illinois 6.25% use tax, which the contractor must pay to the State.
¶7 When a construction contractor sells and installs a water heater, furnace, roofing
materials, or other materials and fixtures that are incorporated into the structure, the contractor
does not incur sales tax liability but instead pays the State use tax. But when a construction
3 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. contractor sells and installs a refrigerator, washing machine, or other portable equipment, the
contractor incurs state and local sales tax liability.
¶8 Lowe’s claims it acted as a construction contractor in those instances where a customer
purchased installation services from Lowe’s for dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves.
When Lowe’s installs purchased appliances as part of its “contractor business” Lowe’s paid the
use tax to the State but did not collect and remit sales tax. Lowe’s concluded when it supplied
and installed built-in dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves it was only required to pay use
tax because it was acting as a construction contractor rather than a retailer in those instances.
¶9 Conversely, when Lowe’s sells a dishwasher or microwave to a customer who takes the
appliance from the store at the time of purchase or has it delivered, Lowe’s collected the State
and local sales tax and remitted the collected tax to the State.
¶ 10 The issue presented in this case is whether Lowe’s was required to collect sales tax on the
dishwashers and microwave ovens it sold when the customer also paid for installation of the
appliances from Lowe’s.
¶ 11 According to the record, the Lindbloms specifically informed the Illinois Department of
Revenue about Lowe’s tax practices in February 2015. The Lindbloms explained in an email to a
representative from the Department of Revenue that, for approximately 30 years, non-party Sears
has been telling its customers that it does not have to charge sales tax on the sale of a built-in
dishwasher if the customer also orders installation. The Lindbloms informed the Department that
Home Depot and Lowe’s were engaged in the same practice and were obtaining an unfair
competitive advantage. The Lindbloms stated that their own accountant advised them against
adopting the same tax practice. The Lindbloms explained that, for the past 10 years, Lowe’s has
had an unfair competitive advantage over every appliance seller in the State who is playing by
4 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. the rules and that the State and its taxpayers have “been screwed out of millions of dollars of tax
revenue that we were entitled to year after year.”
¶ 12 Dan Hall, audit bureau manager for the Department of Revenue responded to the
Lindbloms’ email, stating that the Lindbloms “have it all pretty well correct from a tax
perspective.” Hall explained that the Department was going to send out a compliance alert to
retailers to clarify when sales tax needed to be collected on the sale of appliances.
¶ 13 In June 2015, the Department of Revenue issued a compliance alert on the issue. The
Department explained that an “investigation has revealed that some taxpayers are incorrectly
treating sales of appliances and other tangible personal property as construction contracts and
failing to remit Retailers’ Occupation Tax (ROT).” The Department explained that the
compliance alert was intended to assist taxpayers in determining if they are acting as retailers or
construction contractors and clarify the tax liabilities for each type of transaction. The first line
of the alert states that “[m]ost retailers will not act as a construction contractor.” One particular
paragraph of the compliance alert is particularly relevant here because it specifically uses the
example of a dishwasher.
“The sale of tangible personal property with a separate agreement to install it does not
convert the retail sale to a construction contract. This frequently occurs when an
appliance is sold, the purchaser requires installation of the appliance, and the invoice lists
the charge for Installation separately. For example, a person may purchase a dishwasher
at an appliance store and the seller and purchaser enter into a separate agreement for the
installation of the dishwasher. The seller in this case would pay [sales tax] on the receipts
from the sale of the dishwasher.”
5 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 14 The Lindbloms discovered that, even after the June 2015 compliance alert was issued,
Lowe’s continued to not charge sales tax on installed dishwashers and over-the-range
microwaves. The Lindbloms filed suit against Lowe’s under the Illinois False Claims Act
alleging that Lowe’s was knowingly avoiding its tax obligations and presenting the State with
false monthly tax returns.
¶ 15 The parties agreed to have a trial solely on the issue of liability and then, if necessary,
have a subsequent trial on the issue of damages. The trial court conducted a bench trial over the
course of three days. Several live witnesses testified, and voluminous documentary evidence was
admitted.
¶ 16 At trial, Lowe’s sought to prove that it acted as a “contractor” when it sold and arranged
for the installation of built-in dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves. Lowe’s explained
that it primarily engages in two separate lines of business: (1) over-the-counter retail sales, which
did not require contracts; and (2) real property improvements performed via written contract.
Lowe’s maintains that when it provides contracted-for real property improvements, providing
installation services, it acts as a general contractor. Lowe’s claims that when it installs
dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves as part of its “contractor business” it takes
ownership and control of the appliances before installing them and transferring ownership to the
end-using customer.
¶ 17 When a customer wanted to purchase a dishwasher or an over-the-range microwave with
installation, the customer would sign a written contract, pay in full, and leave the store with no
tangible personal property. Lowe’s would then assign a subcontractor, or installer, to perform the
installation at the customer’s property. Once the project was done, Lowe’s would pay the
6 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. installer. From November 2009 to November 2015, Lowe’s contracted to furnish and install
34,594 dishwashers and 12,429 over-the-range microwaves in Illinois.
¶ 18 The contracts that Lowe’s used for dishwashers and microwaves were single written
agreements that included entries for both merchandise and installation. The contract first lists the
merchandise and includes the merchandise price. The contract then lists the installation
description with the price for the labor. Then, the contract provides the total charges which lists
the subtotal, followed by the amount of sales tax, and then the order total. Because Lowe’s
charged no sales tax, the subtotal and order total were the same. The contract then lists the terms
and conditions which explain, among other things, that the “[p]rice owed by [the] Customer to
Lowe’s covers the Goods, Installation Services, and applicable taxes.” The contract further
provides that Lowe’s is responsible for acquiring any licenses and permits necessary and that
Lowe’s warrants the work of the installer.
¶ 19 Lowe’s submitted evidence about the process required for installing dishwashers and
over-the-range microwaves in an attempt to show that the installation of these appliances was
more like the permanent fixtures for which use tax is appropriate than the portable-type
appliances for which sales tax is appropriate. Built-in dishwashers are installed in a cabinet
opening under a countertop and must be secured to the cabinet or countertop and hard-wired into
a building’s electrical system. The installation project requires that three holes, up to 1.5”, be cut
into the cabinetry for a water supply line, drain hose, and electrical supply. According to Lowe’s,
removing built-in dishwashers causes damage: an empty opening in the kitchen cabinetry; large,
visible holes in the cabinetry, and holes from the dishwasher being secured to the cabinetry or
countertop.
7 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 20 Over-the-range microwaves are installed above a range and under cabinetry. The
installation project requires holes to be drilled into the wall to accommodate toggle bolts for
affixing the microwave. Holes must also be drilled into the bottom of the upper cabinet to
connect the microwave via screws. A 1.5” hole must be cut in the bottom of the cabinet for the
power cord. According to Lowe’s, removing such microwaves causes damage: an empty opening
in the kitchen cabinetry, and visible, substantial holes in the wall and cabinet.
¶ 21 Lowe’s explained at trial that, in the event of the sale of a home, removing either built-in
dishwashers or over-the-range microwaves would be contrary to a home buyers’ expectations as
consumers leave both those types of appliances in their home when they move.
¶ 22 Lowe’s provided evidence at trial about the efforts it made to determine its tax
obligations. Craig Price, a certified public accountant, was Lowe’s Director of Sales and Use Tax
during the relevant period. In the late 1990s, Price and others conducted a state-by-state analysis
and generated a report of Lowe’s sales and use tax responsibilities in each state depending on the
laws in the given jurisdiction. The report lists some states where regular sales tax is due for built-
in appliances and some states where use tax was Lowe’s obligation. For Illinois, the report states
that Lowe’s was required to remit use tax for built-in dishwashers and over-the-range
microwaves. Price considered Illinois’ administrative regulation governing construction
contractors, along with daily tax news and Department of Revenue informal guidance, and he
compared that information with Lowe’s contracts and practices to conclude that it was
appropriate to remit use tax rather than sales tax.
¶ 23 Also in the late 1990s, Lowe’s hired Martin F. Poer and Company, an accounting firm, to
provide guidelines for the tax treatment of installed improvements to realty. Poer and Company
included a list of examples of items that, “when sold on an installed basis *** constitutes
8 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. improvements to real property.” The list includes built-in dishwashers. The report from Poer and
Company does not mention microwaves in any way, but Lowe’s claims that it “understood this
advice to include over-the-range microwaves.”
¶ 24 In 2005, Lowe’s retained Pricewaterhouse Coopers LLP (PwC) to consider whether
Lowe’s is “subject to sales tax or use tax in the context of certain installed sales.” PwC stated
preliminarily in its analysis of Lowe’s tax obligations in Illinois that, based on its review of the
applicable regulation, “it is reasonable to conclude that most of Lowe’s installed sales, other than
those of appliances and freestanding items, result in permanent installation.” PwC’s report
continues by explaining why most of Lowe’s installed sales in Illinois would fall within the
scope of the regulation such that use tax would be Lowe’s obligation.
“Most items sold by Lowe’s as part of installed sales are bolted, glued, or
otherwise attached in a manner that would cause damage to realty if removed. The
items are home improvement products and, therefore, are adapted to the use of the
realty. Finally, it is reasonable to assume that the installation is intended to be
permanent because the items are of the sort that would not normally be removed if
the realty were transferred.”
Lowe’s asserts in its brief on appeal that PwC “confirmed that built-in dishwashers and over-the-
range microwaves were subject to Use Tax in Illinois.” The report in the record on appeal
remains redacted, so that assertion cannot be verified. Nevertheless, Lowe’s claims that both
PwC and Poer and Company agreed with Lowe’s tax treatment of dishwashers and over-the-
range microwaves, and it claims that it relied on that advice when paying use tax rather than
sales tax in Illinois.
9 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 25 The Illinois Department of Revenue audited Lowe’s tax practices in 2010. The audit was
initiated to review Lowe’s financial records from January 2008 to June 2010, and the purpose of
the audit was to review Lowe’s sales and use tax practices during that period. The Illinois
Department of Revenue completed and closed the audit in 2016 and concluded that, “[a]fter
reviewing [Lowe’s] tax returns and corresponding records” the Department “determined that
adjustments were needed.” The Department assessed $85,865.54 in additional tax against
Lowe’s. The Department did not specifically address Lowe’s taxation of built-in dishwashers or
over-the-range microwaves, but that data was included in the data provided to the Department
and no additional taxes were assessed for those installation items. Lowe’s subsequently
requested that its tax penalty be abated, and the Department granted Lowe’s request explaining
that Lowe’s demonstrated “ordinary business care and prudence in executing [its] Sales & Use
Tax obligations,” it paid a substantial amount of taxes, and it was cooperative throughout the
audit.
¶ 26 When the Illinois Department of Revenue’s compliance alert was issued in 2015, Lowe’s
took the position that the Department was not casting doubt on or repudiating its tax practices.
As stated above (supra ¶ 13), the compliance alert stated that “[t]he sale of tangible personal
property with a separate agreement to install it does not convert the retail sale to a construction
contract.” Lowe’s understood its practices to not fall within such a definition because it used a
single contract for both the sale of the good and the installation—not a separate agreement.
Lowe’s continued its practice of only paying use tax for installed dishwashers and over-the-range
microwaves until the time of trial.
¶ 27 At the trial on the issue of liability, the trial court ruled in favor of the Lindbloms and
against Lowe’s. The trial court found that Lowe’s is almost exclusively a retailer and Lowe’s is
10 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. not a contractor. The trial court explained that with regard to the installed appliance sales at
issue, “the predominant or sole transaction is the retail sale and purchase of an appliance.” The
trial court further explained that Lowe’s “is a retailer who sometimes installs appliances and not .
. . [a] contractor who sometimes sells appliances.” The trial court found that Lowe’s “services of
installation are incidental to their retail sales.” Accordingly, the trial court concluded that Lowe’s
was obligated to have collected sales tax on these sales and did not.
¶ 28 The trial court additionally found that Lowe’s distorted the law to its advantage and
worked with tax consultants to construct arguments in favor of its desired interpretation. The trial
court found Lowe’s disregard of the Department of Revenue’s compliance alert particularly
problematic. Accordingly, the trial court found that Lowe’s violated the Illinois False Claims Act
(740 ILCS 175/1 et seq. (West 2022)) when it filed false tax returns with the State.
¶ 29 The case was then set to proceed to a separate trial on the issue of damages. During
discovery, the Lindbloms had requested sales data from Lowe’s from 2009 up to the time the
discovery request was made. However, Lowe’s refused to produce sales data for any period after
2015, when the Lindbloms filed their initial complaint. Lowe’s took the position that there is a
six-year statute of limitations period on the claims asserted by the Lindbloms, so they could only
recover damages for the period from November 9, 2009 until November 9, 2015—the
approximate date the initial complaint was filed.
¶ 30 At the liability trial, testimony was admitted in which Lowe’s acknowledged it was
continuing the challenged tax practice at the time of trial. On the basis of that testimony, the
Lindbloms moved to conform their pleadings to the proof and amend their complaint to extend
the period of damages through the time of trial.
11 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 31 The trial court granted the Lindbloms’ motion to amend their pleadings, finding that there
would be no prejudice or surprise to Lowe’s. The trial court acknowledged that, after the
complaint was amended, Lowe’s would still have the opportunity to argue that the Lindbloms are
not entitled to damages outside the original period.
¶ 32 The Lindbloms filed their amended complaint and continued to seek sales data for the
extended period. Lowe’s moved to dismiss the then-operative complaint but not based on any
issue related to the period of allowable damages. While the motion to dismiss was pending,
Lowe’s informed the Lindbloms that, if the trial court denied its motion to dismiss, “then Lowe’s
will produce documents and/or information, by an agreed upon date, regarding the number of
built-in dishwashers and over-the-range microwave ovens it furnished and incorporated pursuant
to installation contracts from December 2015 through October 2019 ***.” Lowe’s reiterated that
message at the hearing on the motion to dismiss.
¶ 33 After the trial court denied Lowe’s motion to dismiss the newly amended complaint, the
Lindbloms moved to compel Lowe’s to produce sales data for the additional period covered by
the amended complaint. The trial court denied the Lindbloms’ motion to compel. The trial court
explained that it was not going to reopen discovery and, because the Lindbloms’ request for
supplemental discovery was untimely, it was denying the motion to compel.
¶ 34 Proceeding to the trial on damages, the parties submitted written arguments for the trial
court to consider in making a determination on the amount of damages to be awarded. The trial
court entered judgment for $4,148,887 in unpaid sales tax in favor of the Lindbloms. The trial
court declined to award damages for the amount of the municipal taxes that Lowe’s would have
paid on top of the State’s portion of the sales tax. The trial court held that the Lindbloms were
not entitled to damages for the period subsequent to the filing of the complaint from October
12 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. 2015 to November 2019. The trial court held that the Lindbloms are not entitled to prejudgment
interest, that Lowe’s is not entitled to a set off for the use tax it paid during the damages period
before trebling, and that the Lindbloms were entitled to a single penalty payment of $11,000 for
one single and continuous tax avoidance.
¶ 35 The Illinois False Claims Act contains a provision for the recovery of reasonable attorney
fees, costs, and expenses for a prevailing plaintiff. 740 ILCS 175/4(d)(2) (West 2022). The
Lindbloms sought $2.5 million in attorney fees and costs and $31,391.35 in expenses. In its order
on attorney fees, the trial court set forth, with citation, numerous of the considerations and rules
by which courts generally set fee awards. The trial court listed what it determined to be the
reasonable rate for each attorney that worked on the case and then listed an amount each attorney
was to receive for the work. The grand total of the fees awarded to those attorneys was
$1,321,014.97, which was slightly less than half of the requested fees. In that fee order, the trial
court indicated that the order was the final order in the matter.
¶ 36 Both parties appealed. The Lindbloms argue the trial court erred in calculating damages
and the reductions the court made in the attorney fee award. Lowe’s challenges the trial court’s
liability ruling and challenges the trial court’s ruling refusing to give it a set off for the amount of
use tax paid during the damages period before trebling damages under the Act.
¶ 37 ANALYSIS
¶ 38 I. Liability
¶ 39 A person violates the Illinois False Claims Act if they make, use, or cause to be made or
used, a false record or statement material to an obligation to pay or transmit money to the State,
or if the person improperly avoids or decreases an obligation to pay or transmit money to the
State. 740 ILCS 175/3(a)(1)(G) (West 2022). Under the Act, an “obligation” to pay means an
13 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. “established duty” to pay arising from a statute or regulation. 740 ILCS 175/3(b)(3) (West 2022).
Lowe’s contends that it cannot be considered to have made a “false” record because 1) it did not
have a duty to collect and remit sales tax or, 2) at a minimum, there was genuine uncertainty
about its obligation to pay.
¶ 40 The parties disagree about the standard of review we should apply when considering
whether Lowe’s had an obligation to collect sales tax on the dishwashers and microwave ovens it
installed. Lowe’s argues that “the interpretation of what tax Lowe’s was required to pay is a
question of law that this Court reviews de novo” (citing Best Buy Stores, L.P. v. Department of
Revenue, 2020 IL App (1st) 191680, ¶17). The Relators argue that we are reviewing the trial
court’s factual finding following a bench trial so we should uphold the trial court’s findings
unless they are against the manifest weight of the evidence (citing Staes and Scallan, P.C. v.
Orlich, 2012 IL App (1st) 112974, ¶ 35). To the extent we are required to interpret the law and
determine Lowe’s tax obligations, we agree the standard of review is de novo.
¶ 41 However, to determine the tax obligation, certain threshold questions of fact were
decided by the trial court. Additionally, when the trial court was determining whether Lowe’s
acted “knowingly” for purposes of the Illinois False Claims Act, the analysis required the trial
court to resolve factual questions about what Lowe’s knew or should have known and to assess
the credibility of the witnesses who testified about Lowe’s knowledge and institutional thinking,
among other considerations. We apply the manifest weight of the evidence standard when
reviewing such factual determinations. People ex rel. Beeler, Schad & Diamond, P.C. v. Relax
the Back Corp., 2016 IL App (1st) 151580, ¶ 18; People ex rel. Schad, Diamond & Shedden,
P.C. v. My Pillow, Inc., 2017 IL App (1st) 152668, ¶ 62.
14 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 42 Lowe’s argument requires us to interpret a statute, the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act (35
ILCS 120/1 et seq. (West 2022)), and part of the Illinois Administrative Code. Administrative
regulations, which have the force and effect of law, are interpreted as if they were statutes. Best
Buy Stores, 2020 IL App (1st) 191680, ¶ 15. When construing a statute, our goal is to ascertain
and give effect to the intent of the legislature. Kean v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 235 Ill. 2d 351, 361
(2009). We review the trial court’s interpretation of an administrative regulation or statute de
novo. Cigna v. Illinois Human Rights Commission, 2020 IL App (1st) 190620, ¶ 23.
¶ 43 The challenge to the liability finding is brought by Lowe’s, the appellee-cross appellant
as part of its cross-appeal in this case. However, we will begin our analysis by addressing
Lowe’s arguments on the issue of liability because if Lowe’s prevails on that issue and there is
no liability, any issues regarding damages and attorney’s fees become moot. To prevail under the
Illinois False Claims Act, plaintiff must first prove that Lowe’s had an obligation to pay sales tax
and second, that Lowe’s knowingly filed false returns.
¶ 44 A. Lowe’s Obligation to Pay Sales Tax on Installed Appliances
¶ 45 Under the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act (35 ILCS 120/1 et seq. (West 2022)), sellers of
goods are required to collect and remit sales tax for all “sales at retail.” Under the Act, “sale at
retail” means any transfer of the ownership of or title to tangible personal property to a
purchaser, for the purpose of use or consumption.” 35 ILCS 120/1 (West 2022). It is “presumed
that all sales of tangible personal property are subject to tax under this Act until the contrary is
established, and the burden of proving that a transaction is not taxable hereunder shall be upon
the person who would be required to remit the tax to the Department.” 35 ILCS 120/7 (West
2022). The construction contractor regulation is an exception to the general rule that all sales of
tangible personal property incur sales tax liability.
15 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 46 In Illinois, taxation is the rule; tax exemption is the exception. Best Buy Stores, 2020 IL
App (1st) 191680, ¶ 18. A statute, or a regulation, providing a tax exemption is strictly construed
in favor of taxation and against exemption. Id. The party seeking the exemption must prove that
it is entitled to it, and it is a “very heavy burden.” Id.
¶ 47 Under the construction contractor exception, “Contractor” means any person who is
engaged in the occupation of entering into and performing construction contracts for owners. 86
Ill. Admin. Code § 130.1940 (West 2022). “A contractor holds himself out to the public as
having the skill and knowledge necessary to the construction of certain improvements. He does
not represent himself as being engaged in the business of selling building material.” J. H.
Walters & Co. v. Department of Revenue, 44 Ill. 2d 95, 103 (1969). Lowe’s represents itself to
the public as being a retailer. It holds itself out as, in its own words, the “world’s second largest
home improvement retailer.” It refers to its stores as “retail selling spaces.”
¶ 48 The definition of “contractor” in the relevant administrative regulation states that a
contractor is a person who “is engaged in the occupation of entering into and performing
construction contracts for owners (emphasis added).” 86 Ill. Admin. Code 130.1940 (West
2022). While Lowe’s offered some contracted-for installation services, it was never engaged in
the occupation of doing so. With regard to dishwashers and microwaves, it was a retailer of the
goods, sometimes providing installation. The “primary” or “real” occupation of the taxpayer
determines the tax classification. Best Buy Stores, 2020 IL App (1st) 191680, ¶ 21 (citing
Ingersoll Milling Machine Co. v. Department of Revenue, 405 Ill. 367, 370 (1950)). When giving
a written quote to customers for the sale of an installed appliance, Lowe’s affirmatively
disclaimed it was a contractor, telling the customer “Lowe’s is a supplier of materials only.
16 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. Lowe’s does not engage in the practice of engineering, architecture or general contracting
(emphasis added).”
¶ 49 For the relevant transactions, the installation of the appliances was incidental to the
transfer of the appliance to the customer. The overwhelmingly predominant part of the
transaction here was the sale of a good at retail. For tax purposes, Lowe’s treated the sale with
installation of a single dishwasher or microwave as a construction project. The reality is that
Lowe’s was selling an appliance at retail while also making an agreement to install the item
which does not transform the transaction into a construction contract. See Best Buy Stores, 2020
IL App (1st) 191680, ¶¶ 22-23.
¶ 50 Lowe’s did not hold a contractor license in Illinois or in Chicago, in the area it competed
with the Relators. When it sold a single dishwasher or microwave to be installed, Lowe’s did not
utilize its design services or otherwise use engineering services or specialized services for the
customer. It contracted for a simple installation that required no special skills, permits, or
licensing. Lowe’s sales of dishwashers and microwaves with optional installation were identical
in almost every respect to its sales of those appliances without installation and to all its other
retail sales.
¶ 51 The evidence at trial demonstrated that all dishwasher and microwave customers at
Lowe’s purchased the appliances in the same location, from the same stock of goods, and from
the same sales personnel regardless of whether they also purchased installation. All purchasers of
dishwashers and microwaves paid at the same cash register and received the same receipt
whether they purchased installation or not. The cost of the appliance itself was the same
regardless of whether the customer purchased installation services from Lowe’s. Customers who
wanted installation paid a separately identified, fixed charge for the installation service, but the
17 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. appliance price was the same for everyone. Lowe’s installed only those appliances that it sold. 2
A customer could not buy stand-alone installation services from Lowe’s. Lowe’s would not
install a dishwasher bought at another retailer as a contractor engaged in the business of
installing would do. Customers could and often did purchase dishwashers and microwaves
without installation which is quintessential retailing and the antithesis of a construction
contractor. Lowe’s transactions did not meet the requirements to be exempt from sales tax under
the construction contractor exception.
¶ 52 In Best Buy Stores, 2020 IL App (1st) 191680, we addressed and rejected many of the
same arguments Lowe’s raises here. We rejected Best Buy’s contentions that it was acting as a
construction contractor when it made retail sales with installation of dishwashers and over-the-
range microwaves. Id. at ¶¶ 4, 22. Although the Best Buy Stores ruling was issued in 2020, after
the events in this case occurred, that case is illustrative of the difficulty a retailer has in
establishing that it is acting as a construction contractor when selling appliances at retail and then
installing them. While there are some differences that make Best Buy Stores not precisely
analogous to this case, the general principles, as cited above, hold true here and apply to the
transactions at issue such that the case is quite persuasive.
¶ 53 Based on the foregoing, we hold that the trial court’s determination that Lowe’s did not
qualify as a “contractor” for purposes of the applicable administrative regulation was not against
the manifest weight of the evidence. Even if we applied the de novo standard of review to this
question, we would find that the trial court did not err in its conclusion that Lowe’s was not
2 Lowe’s contends that the evidence actually shows it would install dishwashers other than those bought at its stores. This contention is not supported by the record. During one witness’s trial testimony, Lowe’s identified a single contract under which a dishwasher installation was paid for without a dishwasher purchase. In that case, however, Lowe’s was doing a full kitchen remodel, and it disconnected and then reconnected the customer’s dishwasher and charged a fee. Lowe’s did not “install” a dishwasher purchased elsewhere, it merely reconnected the appliance.
18 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. acting as a construction contractor in these transactions. Accordingly, Lowe’s was required to
collect and remit sales tax for its sale of dishwashers and microwaves with installation.
¶ 54 B. Liability Under the Illinois False Claims Act
¶ 55 On appeal, Lowe’s argues that there was no Illinois statute, caselaw, or binding
administrative guidance about the tax treatment for dishwashers and microwaves during the
period relevant to this case. Lowe’s argues that the trial court therefore erred in finding there to
have been an established duty to collect sales tax on those items. It argues that, at most, it was a
disputed question whether sales tax needed to be collected, which means there could be no
“established duty” on its part and, therefore, it did not knowingly file false returns.
¶ 56 Lowe’s argues that its sale and installation service falls within the administrative code
section where it is not obligated to collect sales tax because “[a] construction contractor does not
incur Retailers’ Occupation Tax liability as to receipts from … tangible personal property …
incorporated into a structure as an integral part thereof … when furnished and installed as an
incident of a construction contract.” The Relators meanwhile contend that Lowe’s was a retailer
when it sold dishwashers and microwaves with installation and, therefore, it was required to
collect and remit sales tax. The Relators contend that Lowe’s acted with knowledge for purposes
of the Illinois False Claims Act and, thus, was correctly found liable under the Act for filing false
tax returns.
¶ 57 For the following reasons, we conclude that the Relators failed to prove that, prior to the
June 2015 compliance alert issued by the Department of Revenue, Lowe’s knowingly avoided its
obligation to transmit sales tax to the State. The trial court’s finding that Lowe’s acted with
knowledge or reckless disregard for the truth in determining its tax obligations during the period
before the 2015 compliance alert was issued is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
19 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 58 The Illinois False Claims Act defines “knowingly” as: having actual knowledge, acting in
deliberate ignorance of the truth, or acting in reckless disregard of the truth. 740 ILCS
175/3(b)(1)(A) (West 2022). It is not enough for a relator to show “mere ‘[i]nnocent mistakes or
negligence.’ ” State ex rel. Schad, Diamond & Shedden, P.C. v. National Business Furniture,
LLC, 2016 IL App (1st) 150526, ¶ 33. Rather, the Relators must prove that Lowe’s “ignored
obvious warning signs, buried its head in the sand, and refused to learn information from which
its duty to pay money to the State would have been obvious.” Id. at ¶ 39. Lowe’s contends that it
honestly assessed its tax obligations, engaged its own accounting department and outside
professionals on the issue, relied on the outcome of its Department of Revenue audit, and
otherwise made good faith efforts to comply with its tax obligations so that it cannot be found to
have acted with the requisite scienter under the Illinois False Claims Act. We agree.
¶ 59 An initial consideration which supports our conclusion that the Relators failed to prove
Lowe’s acted with the requisite knowledge to be found liable under the Illinois False Claims Act
prior to the Department of Revenue’s compliance alert, is the audit covering the period from
2008 to 2010. The Illinois Department of Revenue conducted an audit of Lowe’s sales and use
tax returns. The express purpose of the audit was to review Lowe’s sales and use tax practices in
Illinois. Lowe’s treatment of sales and use tax were the same as the period involved in this case.
Lowe’s submitted all the data regarding its treatment of sales and use tax to the Department of
Revenue and the data was scrutinized by the auditors. The data specifically included entries
concerning Lowe’s tax treatment of installed dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves. The
Illinois Department of Revenue completed and closed the audit in 2016. While it made
corrections on the returns, the Department did not assess any additional taxes for Lowe’s tax
treatment of installed dishwashers or over-the-range microwaves. The Department did not raise
20 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. any issues during the entirety of the audit about Lowe’s tax practices for the transaction types
relevant to this case.
¶ 60 Under Illinois law, the findings of the Department after an audit is evidence the proper
amount was paid by the taxpayers: “In the event that the return is corrected for any reason other
than a mathematical error, any return so corrected by the Department shall be prima facie correct
and shall be prima facie evidence of the correctness of the amount of tax due, as shown therein.”
35 ILCS 120/4 (West 2022). Here, the Department made changes to the returns that were not
simply mathematical errors. Under Illinois law, the audit was prima facie proof that the proper
amount of taxes was paid. Id.
¶ 61 Lowe’s argues it relied on the fact that the Department of Revenue had just reviewed its
sales and use tax practices, and the Department did not find Lowe’s to have been in violation of
its tax obligations for the relevant transactions. Therefore, Lowe’s did not fraudulently file the
returns at issue. Indeed, the result of the audit demonstrate that State auditors found no fault with
Lowe’s practice when the audit was completed in 2016. Since State auditors gave the green light
to Lowe’s practices in the audit, it is difficult to reason how Lowe’s knowingly filed false returns
following the same procedures that were reviewed by the auditors.
¶ 62 Additionally, in the words of the Relators themselves, the tax obligations on installed
dishwashers and microwaves had been disputed in the industry for many years. There was
significant evidence introduced at trial that Lowe’s genuinely believed it was complying with
Illinois tax law. Lowe’s undertook significant internal and external independent review of its tax
practices in an effort to determine its true tax obligations.
¶ 63 At trial, the Relators’ own evidence showed that there was disagreement in the industry
about the tax consequences for sales of dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves where the
21 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. seller provided installation. The Relators acknowledged that the issue “has been a subject of
debate for years within our industry.” The Relators submitted evidence showing that Sears had
been failing to collect and remit sales tax on installed dishwashers for 30 years. The Relators
added that Lowe’s and Home Depot had been failing to collect and remit sales tax on installed
sales of dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves for 10 years. The state of the industry
showed there was no consensus about the proper way to collect taxes on the relevant
transactions.
¶ 64 Lowe’s demonstrated at trial that it had made good faith efforts to determine its tax
obligations, and the Relators did not prove that Lowe’s ignored signs, buried its head in the sand,
or refused to learn information about its true tax obligations. See National Business Furniture,
2016 IL App (1st) 150526, ¶ 39. Lowe’s provided the testimony of Craig Price who testified that,
as Lowe’s Director of Sales and Use Tax, he and the employees in his department conducted a
state-by-state analysis of Lowe’s sales and use tax responsibilities depending on the laws in the
given jurisdiction. For Illinois, Price and his department found that Lowe’s was required to remit
use tax for built-in dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves. They reviewed Illinois’
administrative regulation governing the construction contractor tax exemption, Department of
Revenue rulings and general information letters, and daily tax news, and they concluded that it
was appropriate to remit use tax rather than sales tax for the relevant transactions. In other states,
Price and his team found that the laws there dictated regular sales tax was due on the sale of
built-in appliances, so Lowe’s proceeded to pay sales tax in the places it genuinely believed such
taxes were due.
¶ 65 Not relying solely on the analysis of its internal sales and use tax team, Lowe’s hired both
Martin F. Poer and Company and Pricewaterhouse Coopers, outside accounting firms, to
22 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. determine the appropriate tax treatment for installed dishwashers and over-the-range
microwaves, among other items. Both firms concluded that Lowe’s was acting in accordance
with Illinois law when it was paying use tax rather than sales tax. An auditing firm, Deloitte, also
reviewed Lowe’s sales under installation contracts and did not raise any issue that Lowe’s might
be incorrectly applying Illinois tax law on its installed sales. The overwhelming weight of the
evidence at trial showed that Lowe’s made significant well-intentioned efforts to determine its
tax obligations with regard to these installed sales. Those efforts along with the prima facie
evidence provided by the audit results that their practice for installed appliances was prima facie
correct lead us to conclude that the trial court’s finding that Lowe’s knew or should have known
it was acting improperly prior to June 2015 is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
¶ 66 The trial court found that Lowe’s acted dishonestly, inventing knowingly false
distinctions to contort the law while working to craft ways to fall within the exception to the tax
rather than making an honest effort to comply. The trial court found that Lowe’s offered
“knowingly false distinctions” to support its decision to avoid charging sales tax and that, if
Lowe’s honestly assessed its tax obligations, it would have concluded it owed sales tax for the
installed appliance sales at issue. We conclude that the trial court’s finding in that regard is not
supported by the evidence. Instead, it is clearly evident that Lowe’s made good faith efforts to
determine its tax obligations and did not act “knowingly” for purposes of the Illinois False
Claims Act. See In re Deborah S., 2015 IL App (1st) 123596, ¶ 29 (a decision is against the
manifest weight of the evidence when the opposite conclusion is apparent or when the findings
are unreasonable, arbitrary, or not based on the evidence).
23 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 67 C. Effect of the Compliance Alert
¶ 68 Our finding with regard to Lowe’s knowledge changes for the period after the
Department of Revenue made it clear that the relevant transactions incur a sales tax obligation. In
June 2015, the Department explained in a compliance alert that it conducted an investigation
which revealed that some taxpayers were incorrectly treating the sale of appliances as
construction contracts and failing to remit the required sales tax. Lowe’s acknowledges that it
received the Department’s compliance alert. The Department explained prominently in its alert
that “[m]ost retailers will not act as a construction contractor.” The Department further explained
that “[i]f a customer that is the end user of the tangible personal property comes in and makes a
retail purchase and enters into a separate agreement for installation, the sale is an over-the-
counter transaction subject to [sales tax].”
¶ 69 The Department stated in its compliance alert that a person acts as a retailer and not a
construction contractor when the person sells “tangible personal property over-the-counter to the
end consumer regardless of a separate contract to install the tangible personal property; he incurs
[sales tax] on his gross receipts regardless of the tangible personal property being attached to real
estate or not.” The compliance alert provides two examples, both which directly address
dishwashers. First, the Department explains in the alert that “if a contractor enters into an
agreement with a person to remodel a kitchen and furnish and install cabinets and a dishwasher
as part of the construction contract, the contractor pays Use Tax to his supplier, even if the
contract breaks out the charges for the cabinets, dishwasher and installation.” Second, the
Department explains in the alert the type of transaction in which sales tax needs to be collected.
“a person may purchase a dishwasher at an appliance store and the seller and
purchaser enter into a separate agreement for the installation of the dishwasher.
24 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. The seller in this case would pay [sales tax] on the receipts from the sale of the
dishwasher. If the purchaser buys an appliance and requests a list of persons that
can install the item and the purchaser contracts with the person separately for the
installation, the seller must pay [sales tax] on receipts received from the sale of
the dishwasher.”
¶ 70 The Department stated in the alert that “the sale of tangible personal property with a
separate agreement to install it does not convert the retail sale to a construction contract. This
frequently occurs when an appliance is sold, the purchaser requires installation of the appliance,
and the invoice lists the charge for installation separately.” Taking these two statements together,
it is clear that the Department was notifying interested parties that when an appliance is sold and
the invoice lists the sale of the good and then lists the charge for installation, the retail sale is not
converted into a construction contract just because there is an agreement for installation of the
good.
¶ 71 We find that the compliance alert should have caused Lowe’s to revisit its tax practices
for the subject transactions and that its failure to do so can be considered evidence of its desire to
not learn about the proper interpretation of its tax obligations. The compliance alert specifically
put Lowe’s on notice that its assumptions about its tax obligations for installed dishwashers and
over-the-range microwaves were incorrect, but it failed to change its practices. Despite Lowe’s
prior inquiries to outside advisors regarding its sales tax obligations for installed appliances,
Lowe’s did not engage with any such experts following its receipt of the compliance alert.
Lowe’s inaction after receiving the compliance alert evidences that it “ignored obvious warning
signs, buried its head in the sand, and refused to learn information from which its duty to pay
25 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. money to the State would have been obvious.” National Business Furniture, 2016 IL App (1st)
150526, ¶ 39.
¶ 72 The trial court found that the evidence showed Lowe’s consciously disregarded the words
and meaning of the compliance alert to suit its position that it was not required to collect and
remit sales tax. The trial court concluded that the way Lowe’s responded to the compliance alert
showed that it was actively seeking out ways to avoid its tax obligations. The trial court
disagreed that Lowe’s interpreted the compliance alert in good faith and instead found that the
Lowe’s ignored the alert in furtherance of its desire to interpret its tax obligations in a particular
way. The trial court further found that Lowe’s was employing a self-serving interpretation of the
alert and elevating form over substance. We cannot say those findings are against the manifest
weight of the evidence.
¶ 73 Lowe’s contends that the compliance alert continued to reinforce its understanding that
use tax was its obligation and was not a break from any previous indications of the Department
of Revenue’s position on the issue. Particularly, Lowe’s argues that its practice of having a
single agreement to furnish and install a dishwasher means that it was not required to collect
sales tax. Lowe’s introduced evidence at trial that its internal tax professionals reviewed the
compliance alert and were satisfied that Lowe’s was doing exactly what was necessary to avoid
paying sales tax, namely selling the good and contracting for installation on a single sheet of
paper rather than separate ones. Lowe’s maintains that, even if it misinterpreted the compliance
alert, it did not do so recklessly.
¶ 74 The trial court found that Lowe’s did act recklessly; that it acted with the necessary intent
to be found liable under the Illinois False Claims Act when it disregarded the compliance alert
and continued to employ the same tax practices it employed prior to the alert. Based on the
26 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. evidence, both documentary and trial testimony, and in consideration of its findings of fact and
its credibility determinations, the trial court concluded that Lowe’s purported reasons for failing
to pay sales tax were “knowingly false” or at least revealed “a failure to exercise prudent
judgment to discover the applicable standards.” We find sufficient evidentiary support to sustain
the trial court’s conclusion that, after the Department of Revenue’s compliance alert was issued,
the alert should have caused Lowe’s to revisit its tax practices and that its failure to do so
constituted evidence of its desire to not learn about interpretations of the Act and Regulation. For
that period, the trial court’s factual findings are not against the manifest weight of the evidence.
¶ 75 To conclude, on the issue of liability, we hold that the trial court’s finding that Lowe’s
acted with sufficient knowledge to violate the Illinois False Claims Act for the period from
November 2009 to June 2015 is against the manifest weight of the evidence. We reverse the
finding of liability against Lowe’s that covers the period prior to June 2015. However, for the
period beginning in June 2015 after the Department of Revenue’s compliance alert was issued,
the trial court’s finding that Lowe’s acted knowingly for purposes of the Illinois False Claims
Act was not against the manifest weight of the evidence. The Relators proved that Lowe’s was
obligated to pay sales tax on its installed sales of dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves,
and they submitted sufficient evidence from which the trial court was justified in concluding that
Lowe’s acted knowingly, in violation of the Illinois False Claims Act. 3
3 The Taxpayers’ Federation of Illinois, the Illinois Chamber of Commerce, and the Illinois Retail Merchants Association submitted an amicus brief in support of Lowe’s. In the amicus brief, the organizations ask us to establish a rule that qui tam actions and tax audits are mutually exclusive. The amici suggest that qui tam actions should not be available against a taxpayer who has already been audited by the Department of Revenue. We appreciate the amici’s helpful and thoughtful brief, but we decline to adopt the bright-line rule for which they advocate. We acknowledge taxpayers’ interests in the transparent and uniform application of tax laws, and we understand how such interests might be threatened by qui tam actions proceeding after or during a tax audit. We also recognize that, like in this case, an audit may conclude without specifically addressing the allegedly improper tax practice and qui tam proceedings can serve to answer questions of law unresolved by an audit. The rule that the amici urge us to adopt is a policy argument that is likely better left to the legislature to determine.
27 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 76 II. Damages
¶ 77 Both parties raise issues concerning the trial court’s ruling on the question of damages.
The Relators argue that: (1) the trial court improperly denied its motion to compel prior to the
damages trial; (2) the trial court erred when it refused to award them damages for the local tax
portion of the sales tax; (3) the trial court erred when it did not award them prejudgment interest;
(4) the trial court erred when assessing only a single penalty for Lowe’s numerous individual
false claims; and (5) the trial court erred when it awarded them less than half of the attorney fees
sought. On the other side, Lowe’s argues that the trial court erred when it failed to credit and
deduct the use tax Lowe’s paid before trebling the damages in accordance with the Illinois False
Claims Act’s requirements (740 ILCS 175/3(a)(1) (West 2022)). We address the parties’
contentions as set forth above.
¶ 78 A. The Relators’ Challenges
¶ 79 1. Damage Limitations Period
¶ 80 Before the case went to trial, the parties agreed that they would first have a trial on the
issue of liability and then, if necessary, have a trial on the issue of damages. The parties agreed
that the damages calculation was going to be mostly formulaic in that the parties and the court
would just need to examine Lowe’s sales data to compute the amount of tax owed on its sales if
it was found to be liable.
¶ 81 Since at least the time of discovery before the initial trial on liability, the Relators
expressed an intent to expand the period of damages from the period initially set forth in their
complaint. At trial, the Relators were able to elicit from Lowe’s employees that their tax
practices with regard to dishwashers and microwaves continued beyond the time the original
complaint in this case was filed and, in fact, continued up to the point of the liability trial. Based
28 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. on those admissions, the Relators moved to amend their pleadings to the proof by expanding the
period for which they sought damages.
¶ 82 The trial court allowed the Relators to amend their complaint. However, when the
Relators sought to compel Lowe’s to produce the sales data for the extended damages period, the
trial court made a seemingly contradictory ruling. Lowe’s had made oral and written
commitments that it would provide the Relators with the additional sales data if the trial court
enlarged the damages period. However, Lowe’s later refused to produce the data, and the trial
court denied the Relators’ motion to compel the production of the sales data for the later period
now covered by the amendment to the complaint.
¶ 83 In denying the motion to compel, the trial court reasoned that the trial was ongoing.
However, the parties were not in the middle of an ongoing trial at the time the Relators made
their discovery request. The parties and the trial court all agreed to conduct separate trials on the
issue of liability and damages. Thus, the parties were in the pretrial phase of the upcoming trial
on damages.
¶ 84 As a further reason for denying the Relators’ motion to compel, the trial court found that
the Relators were not entitled to the additional discovery because they had not secured the
relevant evidence before the liability trial and their current request was untimely. But the
evidence at issue became pertinent because of what happened during the liability trial when
Lowe’s employees admitted their continuation of the tax practice that the trial court found to be
improper. The information sought is clearly relevant to the then-unresolved issue of damages and
was, in fact, necessary for the Relators to prove their allegations. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 201(b) (eff.
Mar. 17, 2023) (West Supp. 2023). It is impossible to reconcile the trial court’s decision to allow
29 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. the Relators to amend their complaint to allege additional damages with its subsequent decision
to prevent the Relators from securing the proof necessary to substantiate the amendment.
¶ 85 We find that the trial court’s decision to deny the motion to compel lacks a legitimate
basis and was manifestly unreasonable such that it constitutes an abuse of discretion. See Favia
v. Ford Motor Co., 381 Ill. App. 3d 809, 815 (2008) (an abuse of discretion occurs when the
ruling is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable, or when no reasonable person would take the same
view). Accordingly, on remand, the Relators are entitled to seek discovery of the sales data for
the period in which they are entitled to pursue damages. As expressed in Part I of this order, the
Relators are not entitled to damages for the period preceding the issuance of the Department of
Revenue’s compliance alert, but they are entitled to pursue damages for the period from June
2015 to the point Lowe’s was adjudged liable in this case, March 31, 2021.
¶ 86 2. Local Tax Portion of the Sales Tax
¶ 87 The Relators argue that the proper measure of damages in this case includes both State
and local sales tax. They contend that Lowe’s failed to collect or remit any sales tax and that, by
allowing Lowe’s to avoid paying the local portion of the tax, the trial court permitted Lowe’s to
keep a significant portion of the tax money it failed to collect and remit to the State.
¶ 88 The Relators point out that the Illinois False Claims Act requires that a relator bring its
action “in the name of the State.” 740 ILCS 175/4(b)(1) (West 2022). The Act defines the
“State” to mean the State of Illinois itself as well as “any agency of State government; *** [and
any] county, municipality, municipal corporation, [or] unit of local government ***.” 740 ILCS
175/2(a) (West 2022). Thus, according to the Relators, when they sue under the Illinois False
Claims Act, they must name only the “State,” but they bring the case for the benefit of all the
State’s public entities, including any county, municipality, or other unit of local government
30 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. injured by the unlawful conduct. The Relators argue that “[t]he damages the ‘State’ incurred
include the amounts the State would have distributed to local governments.”
¶ 89 The Illinois Attorney General filed a statement of interest regarding the Relator’s pursuit
of the municipality portion of the sales tax that Lowe’s failed to pay. The Attorney General set
forth its position that the Relators here are correct: the Relators are entitled to recover for both
the State and the municipalities that were defrauded by Lowe’s failure to pay the appropriate tax.
The Attorney General explained that Lowe’s argument to limit the recovery to only the amount
owed to the State is flawed because it ignores the expansive definition of “State” in the Illinois
False Claims Act. The Attorney General explained that he is the sole authority to bring a False
Claims Act case as the representative of the State, even if just a municipality or other smaller
unit of government is allegedly defrauded. Thus, the Attorney General urged the trial court to
include Retailers’ Occupation Taxes owed to municipalities in the calculations for damages,
fines, and fees, and reject Lowe’s arguments that municipalities should be excluded from any
such calculation.
¶ 90 Lowe’s argues that the trial court correctly rejected the Relators’ attempt to collect the
local portions of the tax because the Relators did not separately allege in their complaint that
they were seeking recovery of local taxes. Lowe’s contends that the Relators’ position that they
were entitled to recover local taxes because they alleged a failure to pay State taxes is
inconsistent with the requirement that a plaintiff, particularly in a fraud case, is required to plead
facts supporting each element of liability (citing Rodriguez v. Illinois Prisoner Review Board,
376 Ill. App. 3d 429, 434 (2007); Board of Education of City of Chicago v. A, C & S, Inc., 131
Ill. 2d 428, 457 (1989)).
31 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 91 Lowe’s points out that the Relators have never identified or attempted to identify which
local governments were defrauded. In their complaint, the Relators repeatedly allege that Lowe’s
violation of the Act was its knowing failure to remit the proper sales tax to the “State of Illinois.”
The Relators make allegations such as that defendants “knowingly failed to remit to the state”
the required tax and that “[e]ach and every sale of a dishwasher and over-the-range microwave
oven by each Defendant on which the Defendant failed to remit [sales tax] on the gross receipts
of its sales to the State of Illinois is a violation of the Illinois False Claims Act.” The Relators
dedicate a section of their complaint to “Harm to Illinois and Its Citizens,” but they do not
address any harm to local governments. The Relators conclude their complaint by alleging that
“[a]s a direct result of Defendants’ conduct, Defendants have caused the State of Illinois to suffer
a great financial loss.” They do not specifically mention any financial losses for municipal units.
The Relators make just one reference to the local portion of the sales tax in their complaint, but it
has nothing to do with any fraud in failing to collect and remit local taxes. The trial court
explained in its ruling on this issue that “the Relators have never made [any] allegation that they
were whistleblowers or have knowledge regarding municipal government taxation.”
¶ 92 While we agree with the Relators and the Attorney General’s interpretation of the
relevant statutes and acknowledge that the Attorney General or a relator has the ability to recover
local taxes in a qui tam tax case, we do not find that the trial court erred when it limited the
Relators’ recovery to the State portion of the taxes in this case. The Relators simply failed to
include sufficient substantive allegations about any fraud perpetrated on local governments. “The
facts which constitute an alleged fraud must be pleaded with sufficient specificity, particularity
and certainty to apprise the opposing party of what he is called upon to answer.” A, C & S, Inc.,
131 Ill. 2d at 457. “A plaintiff must at least plead with sufficient particularity facts establishing
32 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. the elements of fraud, including what misrepresentations were made, when they were made, who
made the misrepresentations and to whom they were made.” Id. Here, the Relators failed to plead
any facts that would establish anything about the supposed misrepresentations that were made
regarding local taxes.
¶ 93 The Relators suggest that their allegations about State taxes are sufficient to encompass
local taxes. However, local sales taxes are imposed by completely different statutes and
ordinances than the State sales tax. The Relators did not put forth any evidence at trial
concerning what municipalities were defrauded or what specific losses were incurred by
municipalities. A defendant cannot be required to anticipate and defend against unspoken fraud
claims just because the unspoken claims have some relation to the spoken claims. Simply put,
the Relators’ allegations about Lowe’s false statements with regard to State tax were not
sufficient to put Lowe’s on notice that it needed to defend a claim for local taxes as well. And the
Relators did not submit the necessary evidence at trial to prove such a claim. The trial court did
not make any finding in its liability ruling that the Relators proved any fraud on Lowe’s part with
regard to local governments and we conclude that the trial court did not err when it limited the
Relators’ damages to the State portion of the Retailers’ Occupation Tax.
¶ 94 The Relators contend that Lowe’s waived any objection to its pursuit of local taxes
because it answered the complaint and because evidence of the full amount of both the State and
local portions of the tax was admitted at trial. Lowe’s, however, answered a complaint that had
no substantive allegations about any false statements concerning local taxes. It could not waive
an objection to an issue not in the complaint by answering the other allegations. The party
claiming implied waiver has the burden of proving a clear, unequivocal, and decisive act of the
33 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. opponent manifesting his intention to waive his rights. Greene v. Helis, 252 Ill. App. 3d 957, 962
(1993).
¶ 95 Moreover, Lowe’s preserved its objection to the issue by including it in a motion in
limine. We reject the Relators’ contention that Lowe’s waived this objection, and we similarly
disagree with the Relators’ contention that they remedied any pleading defect with the evidence
introduced at trial. While the Relators sought to amend their complaint to include allegations
about an additional period for which Lowe’s should be liable based on trial evidence, they never
sought to amend their complaint to include any allegations about local taxes or provide any
information about local government units that were defrauded.
¶ 96 The Relators rely on our decision in My Pillow, 2017 IL App (1st) 152668 to argue that
their allegations were sufficient to include all Retailers’ Occupation Tax, both State and local.
The Relators contend that it is not credible to believe that Lowe’s was unaware that the Relators
would be seeking damages that encompassed municipal government taxation (citing My Pillow,
2017 IL App (1st) 152668, ¶ 93). The case the Relators rely upon does not discuss local or
municipal taxes. More importantly, the Relators are misguided to focus on the credibility of
Lowe’s beliefs as an attempted substitute for pleading, with particularity, the elements of a fraud
claim.
¶ 97 We recognize that the current State sales tax rate is 6.25% and the current use tax rate is
likewise 6.25%. By finding that the Relators are not entitled to damages for the local sales tax
Lowe’s did not remit, there may be no damages for the subject transactions for which Lowe’s
already paid the use tax. However, the taxes are computed differently (see 35 ILCS 120/2-10
(West 2022); 35 ILCS 105/3-10 (West 2022)) and Lowe’s concedes in its briefing that, for the
period covered by the original complaint, it paid $960,866 in use tax while it would have owed
34 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. $1,297,542 in State sales tax. The issue of the difference between the State portion of the sales
tax Lowe’s should have paid and the use tax Lowe’s did pay after June 2015 must be resolved on
remand in a new trial on the issue of damages.
¶ 98 3. Prejudgment Interest
¶ 99 The Relators contend that the trial court erred when it refused to award prejudgment
interest. The Relators argue that a taxpayer that fails to pay sales tax “owes the State the unpaid
tax with accrued interest ‘from the date when such tax becomes past due (emphasis omitted).’ ”
35 ILCS 120/5 (West 2022); see also 35 ILCS 735/3-2 (West 2022). Generally, a trial court’s
decision about whether to award prejudgment interest will not be disturbed on appeal absent an
abuse of discretion. Lyon Metal Products, L.L.C. v. Protection Mutual Insurance Co., 321 Ill.
App. 3d 330, 348 (2001).
¶ 100 Under the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act and the Uniform Penalty and Interest Act,
prejudgment interest is generally recoverable because interest for a delinquent tax payment is
required to make the government whole for the period of delinquency in which the taxpayer
wrongfully retained the money. 35 ILCS 120/5 (West 2022); see also 35 ILCS 735/3-2 (West
2022). Here, however, the Relators’ claim is brought under the Illinois False Claims Act, not the
statutes cited above that the Relators rely upon for their claimed entitlement to prejudgment
interest.
¶ 101 The Illinois False Claims Act, like the federal False Claims Act, does not provide for the
recovery of prejudgment interest. See Cook County, Illinois v. U.S. ex rel. Chandler, 538 U.S.
119, 131 (2003). Like the parties, our independent research reveals no case in Illinois in which
prejudgment interest was awarded under the Illinois False Claims Act. There is no statutory
provision for prejudgment interest in the Act. We are persuaded by Lowe’s citations to federal
35 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. False Claims Act cases wherein courts have concluded that prejudgment interest is unavailable
under the Act. See, e.g., U.S. ex rel. International Brotherhood of Electric Workers Local Union
No. 98 v. Fairfield Co., 5 F.4th 315, 337 (3rd Cir. 2021); U.S. v. McLeod, 721 F.2d 282, 285 (9th
Cir. 1983). Moreover, it seems that the Illinois False Claims Act’s requirement that the
established damages be trebled may be a form of a substitution for the recovery of prejudgment
interest and, in any event, the trebling of damages is very likely to make the plaintiff whole.
¶ 102 The Relators have failed to point to any statute or case law that would entitle them to
prejudgment interest. The weight of the case law on false claims cases indicates that such interest
is not available to a false claims plaintiff. The Relators have failed to show that the trial court
erred or abused its discretion when the court denied the Relators’ request for an award of
prejudgment interest.
¶ 103 4. Penalty for False Claim
¶ 104 The Relators argue that Lowe’s is liable for each false statement it made, and the trial
court should have assessed the statutory penalty against Lowe’s for each false claim. When
assessing the required statutory penalty in this case, the trial court assessed one penalty against
Lowe’s for “a single and continuous tax avoidance strategy or scheme.” The trial court penalized
Lowe’s for its scheme and not for each tax filing that was a part of the scheme.
¶ 105 The Illinois False Claims Act provides that any person who “knowingly makes, uses, or
causes to be made or used, a false record or statement material to an obligation to pay or transmit
money or property to the State, or *** improperly avoids or decreases an obligation to pay or
transmit money or property to the State, is liable to the State for a civil penalty.” 740 ILCS
175/3(1)(G) (West 2022). The Relators argue that the trial court should have imposed more than
36 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. 100 separate statutory penalties against Lowe’s, one for each tax return filed during the period
¶ 106 Lowe’s concedes here, as it did in the trial court, that the Illinois False Claims Act
“imposes one penalty per violation.” Lowe’s further concedes that “[i]n a typical [Illinois False
Claims Act] case, in which a defendant submits false claims for payment from the state, each
submitted claim results in a penalty. But in a ‘reverse’ false claims case, like this case, the
defendant does not submit false claims at all. Rather, the defendant ‘knowingly conceals or
knowingly and improperly avoids or decreases an obligation to pay or transmit money or
property to the State.’ ” Even though this is a “reverse false claims case,” the Relators have
proved that, for the period after the June 2015 compliance alert was issued, each individual tax
return filed by Lowe’s constituted a false statement of its tax obligations. Because Lowe’s was
not collecting or remitting sales tax on its sales of dishwashers and microwaves with installation,
each monthly tax return it filed after June 2015 falsely understated its sales tax liability.
¶ 107 Under the federal False Claims Act, “each individual false claim or statement triggers the
statute’s civil penalty” (U.S. ex rel. Schwedt v. Planning Research Corp., 59 F.3d 196, 199 (D.C.
Cir. 1995) (citing United States v. Bornstein, 423 U.S. 303, 313 (1976))) and the Illinois False
Claims Act dictates the same result (740 ILCS 175/3(a)(1)(G) (West 2022)). We conclude that
the trial court erred when it decided to impose a single penalty when its liability finding
establishes the proposition that Lowe’s made a false statement each time it filed a tax return.
¶ 108 Both in the trial court and here, Lowe’s argues that the Relators waived their right to seek
a penalty for each violation because the Relators asserted that their claim was comprised of a
single violation. Indeed, the Relators made some statements that support Lowe’s argument. The
Relators stated that Lowe’s violation is “a consistent, long term policy from 2009 through trial[.]
37 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. … That’s our claim. That’s our cause of action. That’s our theory of recovery. We’re not
changing it, we’re not adding to it, we’re not altering it in any way.” Lowe’s argues that the
Relators are making inconsistent allegations wherein the Relators frequently say they are only
prosecuting a single claim, but then they also state that there were more than 100 violations.
¶ 109 We do not find the Relators allegations to be inconsistent. The Relators have one claim
for a violation of the Illinois False Claims Act. Within that single claim, the Relators are alleging
multiple individual false statements to the State, individual violations of the Act. Moreover, the
Relators’ submissions in this case indicate their clear intent to pursue a penalty for each violation
of the Act, and we find no waiver.
¶ 110 In their complaint, the Relators stated that “The Illinois False Claims Act requires a
violator to pay the State a civil penalty of not less than $5,000.00 and not more than $11,000.00
for each violation of the Act.” They continue, “[e]ach tax return that conceals or avoids the
obligation to remit [sales tax] on gross receipts from the sales of dish washers [sic] and over-the-
range microwave ovens; each failure to make a required tax payment; and each accounting
record that concealed the tax due the State of Illinois by Defendants, constitutes a separate
violation.” In their prayer for relief, the Relators requested that the trial court “impose on each
Defendant civil penalties of no more than $11,000.00 and no less than $5,000.00 for each
violation pursuant to 740 ILCS 175/3(a)(1)(g).”
¶ 111 In subsequent submissions to the court, the Relators explained to Lowe’s and to the trial
court that “each tax return is a … false request for payment, but … separate requests under the
False Claims Act matter because each separate request is tied to a penalty[.] So, each one of
these claims [or] requests for payment results in a penalty.” The Relators further informed
Lowe’s and the trial court that “[p]enalties will attach to each return because each return is a
38 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. claim for payment.” The Relators also stated that “each tax return is a violation of the False
Claims Act for purposes of calculating penalties. Every time [Lowe’s] submitted a tax return that
did not disclose truthfully [its] tax obligation, [it is] subject to a penalty for that. So that’s a
violation.” Finally, the Relators explained to Lowe’s and to the trial court that, “[b]ecause there
were 119 separate returns (November 2009 through October 30, 2019) during the damage period,
the Court must impose 119 penalties.”
¶ 112 We reject Lowe’s claims of waiver, and we conclude that the trial court erred when it
only assessed a single penalty. In light of Lowe’s concessions on this topic and the evidence and
arguments put forward by the Relators, the trial court should impose a penalty for each false
record submitted by Lowe’s from June 2015 to March 2021—each violation of the Illinois False
Claims Act. See U. S. ex rel. Marcus v. Hess, 317 U.S. 537, 552 (1943) (superseded by statute on
other grounds); Planning Research Corp., 59 F.3d at 199.
¶ 113 5. Attorney fees
¶ 114 The Illinois False Claims Act contains a provision for the recovery of reasonable attorney
fees, costs, and expenses for a prevailing plaintiff. 740 ILCS 175/4(d)(2) (West 2022). The
Relators sought $2.5 million in attorney fees and costs and $31,391.35 in expenses. The trial
court awarded a total of $1,321,014.97 in attorney fees, which was slightly less than half of the
requested fees.
¶ 115 The Relators raise several arguments regarding the propriety of the trial court’s attorney
fee order, but it is unnecessary to specifically address the issues here because the liability for
attorney fees will necessarily change because of our order. On remand, we direct the trial court to
consider the issue of attorney fees, costs, and expenses anew. If, following a new hearing on
attorney fees, the trial court believes deductions to the fee request are warranted, the trial court is
39 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. directed to state on the record the reasons for such deductions so we may review said deductions
in case of an appeal. Because the issue must be considered anew on remand, we make no specific
findings regarding the propriety of the trial court’s fee award, and we vacate the trial court’s
order awarding attorney fees, costs, and expenses.
¶ 116 B. Lowe’s Challenge to Damages
¶ 117 Lowe’s argues that the trial court erred when it refused to grant a setoff before trebling
damages. When a defendant is found liable under the Illinois False Claims Act, it is liable for 3
times the amount of damages that the State sustains because of the relevant conduct. 740 ILCS
175/3(a)(1) (West 2022).
¶ 118 In finding that Lowe’s is liable in this case, the trial court found, and we agree, that
Lowe’s violated the Illinois False Claims Act for the period after June 2015 when it paid only
use tax to the State rather than sales tax, which was its rightful obligation. According to the
Relators, “[t]he amount of damages is the amount withheld from the government” (citing U.S. v.
Rogan, 517 F.3d 449, 453 (7th Cir. 2008)).
¶ 119 We agree with Lowe’s that damage award in this case should not have been trebled until
after the trial court set off the use tax Lowe’s paid. The State’s measure of damages was never
the total amount of sales tax Lowe’s should have collected and remitted to the State. The State’s
measure of damages is the amount Lowe’s should have collected and remitted for sales tax less
the amount that it already remitted when it was contemporaneously paying use tax.
¶ 120 The parties both discuss the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Bornstein. The
Relators argue that, under Bornstein, when a wrongdoer is caught submitting a false claim, the
prepayment of some of the damages should not be deducted from the damages that are doubled
(now trebled). Bornstein, 423 U.S. at 316. But the Bornstein court’s determination to disallow a
40 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. setoff before trebling damages is nonetheless framed in terms of trebling “actual damages.” Id.
The Bornstein court explained that, in that case, “the Government’s actual damages are equal to
the difference between the market value of the tubes it received and retained and the market
value that the tubes would have had if they had been of the specified quality.” Id. at 317 fn. 13.
Here, the government’s actual damages are equal to the difference between the taxes Lowe’s
should have paid and the taxes it did pay.
¶ 121 Going all the way back to the Relators’ pre-suit email exchange with Dan Hall from the
Department of Revenue, Hall informed the Relators that “if [Lowe’s] paid use tax, we would
give them credit for that.” The Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act provides that a taxpayer who
erroneously pays Use Tax on goods when it should have charged and paid sales tax is entitled to
credit the Use Tax against any sales tax liability. 35 ILCS 120/6 (West 2022). We are cognizant
of the considerations the Relators point out about why trebling damages before giving any setoff
is often appropriate: such as maximizing the deterrent impact and ensuring not to reward a party
who has committed fraud against the government. Nevertheless, we think it is appropriate to
award 3 times the amount of damages the government sustained as a result of Lowe’s tax
avoidance.
¶ 122 The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit examined this question
several years ago and discussed whether “net trebling” or “gross trebling” was proper under the
federal False Claims Act. United States v. Anchor Mortgage Corp., 711 F.3d 745, 749 (7th Cir.
2013). Net trebling would be the result Lowe’s advocates for here, while gross trebling is what
the Relators advocate for and the approach the trial court adopted. The Seventh Circuit explained
that net trebling was the norm under statutes that require multiplying damages. Id. at 749-50. We
find the net trebling approach to be appropriate under these facts.
41 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 123 Lowe’s paid use tax to the government and the government retained that money. The
government received an incontrovertible benefit from Lowe’s use tax payments, even if Lowe’s
was at the same time avoiding its true tax obligation. Illinois was only deprived of the difference
between the amount Lowe’s was obligated to pay and the amount it did pay. The Illinois False
Claims Act provides for the amount the court is supposed to treble: “the amount of damages
which the State sustains because of the act of that person.” 740 ILCS 175/3(a)(1) (West 2022).
That provision comports with Bornstein’s discussion of “actual damages” and Anchor
Mortgage’s net trebling approach.
¶ 124 The Relators rely on our decision in My Pillow, 2017 IL App (1st) 152668, ¶¶ 74-87 to
argue that Anchor Mortgage is not applicable and that the trial court here correctly only gave
Lowe’s a setoff after trebling the damages. While My Pillow is similar to this case in many
respects, there are some crucial differences that mandate a different result. Crucially, the My
Pillow court observed that “My Pillow started remitting taxes only after [the] relator sued it for
failing to do so. It was a preemptive, partial payment of the State's actual damages. If we allowed
that to serve as a credit against the damages award before being trebled, we would render the
treble-damages provision meaningless.” Id. at ¶ 86 (emphasis in original). The My Pillow court
followed the rationale in Bornstein in which the U.S. Supreme Court expressed a concern that a
wrongdoer could simply pay its arrearage before judgment was entered against it and avoid the
trebling effect of the False Claims Act. See Bornstein, 423 U.S. at 316. The My Pillow court
explained that it agreed with the trial court “that, at the time My Pillow failed to pay the sales tax
it owed, the State was deprived of the sales tax My Pillow owed to Illinois [irrespective of the
amount My Pillow paid before the judgment.] (emphasis added).” My Pillow, 2017 IL App (1st)
152668, ¶ 87. Such is not the case here.
42 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 125 The rationale expressed for trebling before granting a setoff in Bornstein and in My
Pillow is not applicable in this case. Here, Lowe’s started remitting taxes long before the Relator
filed suit. At the time Lowe’s failed to pay the sales tax it owed, it was simultaneously paying the
use tax so that the State was only deprived of any difference in the obligations between the two
forms of taxation. While the actual damages in My Pillow constituted the entire amount of
unpaid sales tax, the actual damages here amount to the unpaid sales tax less the use tax that was
paid. Therefore, we find that the trial court erred in trebling the damages before setting off the
amount of use tax Lowe’s paid during the relevant period. Instead, the trial court should have
taken the total amount Lowe’s should have paid in sales tax and then granted Lowe’s a setoff for
the use tax it paid and then trebled the difference—the amount of the government’s actual
damages.
¶ 126 III. Summary of Holdings
¶ 127 We reverse the trial court’s judgment of liability against Lowe’s for the period from
November 2009 to June 2015. We affirm the trial court’s judgment of liability against Lowe’s
from the period of June 2015 to the point that the judgment of liability was entered on March 31,
2021.
¶ 128 We remand for a new trial on damages. Prior to the damages trial, the Relators are
entitled to discovery of Lowe’s sales data for installed dishwashers and over-the-range
microwaves from June 2015 through March 2021. The Relators are not entitled to an award for
the local portions of unpaid sales tax. The Relators are not entitled to prejudgment interest. A
penalty must be assessed against Lowe’s for each false tax return made from June 2015 to March
2021. The amount of attorney fees to be awarded under the Act’s prevailing plaintiff provision
must be considered anew.
43 1-23-1163) 1-23-1177) Cons. ¶ 129 Lowe’s is entitled to a setoff for the use tax it paid before the damages in the case are
trebled. The trial court must treble the difference, if any, between the sales tax Lowe’s was
supposed to pay to the State and the use tax it did pay to the State for the same period.
¶ 130 CONCLUSION
¶ 131 Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings
consistent with this order.
¶ 132 Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.
Related
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