Justice McDADE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
¶ 1 The underlying dispute arises as the result of an audit determination made by the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR) that sales of Hartney Fuel Oil Co. (Hartney) were subject to state and local sales taxes in Forest View in Cook County, Illinois, rather than being subject only to state sales tax (as there are no applicable local sales taxes) in Mark, Putnam County, Illinois, during the subject audit period.
¶ 2 Hartney, the Village of Mark and the County of Putnam (hereinafter referred to collectively as plaintiffs) sought declaratory and injunctive relief to (1) determine that the situs of Hartney's sales had been in Mark, (2) redirect the local share of collected state sales taxes to the Village of Mark and the County of Putnam, and (3), as to Hartney, provide relief from tax, penalties and interest assessed against Hartney, and return of sales taxes paid under protest and held in the State of Illinois's protest fund. After a bench trial, the trial court granted the requested relief.
¶ 5 Hartney is a fuel marketing company that purchases fuel oil from large fuel suppliers and sells it to customers such as railroads, trucking companies, gas stations and other fuel distributors. In or around 1985, Hartney moved its sales operations out of its headquarters in Cook County (Forest View) to Du Page County (Elmhurst) because the lower tax rates in Du Page County allowed it to offer competitive prices to customers. Hartney moved its sales office several other times over the ensuing years, finally locating it in Putnam County (Mark), in 2003. Hartney's headquarters, however, remained in Forest View until November 2008, when Hartney also moved its corporate and accounting staff to Mark.
¶ 6 Upon moving its sales operations to Mark, Hartney contracted with Putnam County Painting (Putnam Painting) to provide office space and personnel. The agreement named Putnam Painting to be its managing sales agent and to provide Hartney with a sales representative to receive, accept and process fuel purchase orders from Hartney customers. Hartney paid Putnam Painting $1,000 per month for personal sales services and for office space.
¶ 7 The owners of Hartney also owned Energy Transportation, Inc. (ETI), a separate corporation providing the services of a common carrier. During the relevant time frame, the two corporations (Hartney and ETI) shared corporate headquarters in Forest View, while Hartney maintained a separate designated sales office elsewhere. Peter Hartney was the president of Hartney. Gary Hartney was the president of ETI. While Hartney moved its corporate and accounting staff to Mark in November 2008, ETI continued to operate from its sole offices in Forest View.
¶ 8 Ever since Hartney first moved its sales operation out of its headquarters in Forest View in 1995, it has conducted its sales in the same manner. Those sales can be broken down into two main categories: (1) ad hoc sales made to established customers who, on any given day, call Hartney's sales office and place an order for a specific quantity of fuel oil to be delivered at a specific time and location (daily purchase orders), and (2) sales made to customers via long-term requirements contracts, with the terms of sale — such as price and location of delivery — established in advance (long-term purchase orders).
¶ 10 With respect to ad hoc purchase orders, Hartney customers were informed nightly via facsimile or some other form of electronic communication of the next day's price for fuel oil. These customers also received similar solicitations from competing fuel marketers in the area. If a customer wished to purchase fuel from Hartney, the customer contacted its sales office to place the order. The customer provided the sales office with the type of fuel, the quantity, and the time and location where delivery was needed, as well as any special instructions. In a majority of circumstances, Hartney's sales agent in Mark accepted a customer's order on the spot,
¶ 11 On rare occasions (principally where the customer had not previously passed a credit check or had been placed on credit hold), the sales agent in the Mark office would reject a customer's purchase order. The sales agent knew in advance which customers had been pre-approved or placed on credit hold, so it was not necessary for the agent to check with Hartney's headquarters to determine whether to accept or reject the orders.
¶ 12 From the time an order was placed with the Mark sales office until a bill was prepared by Hartney's accounting staff, the sales agents (located in Mark) were the sole individuals involved in processing the order. Fuel deliveries were the responsibility of ETI, which had no ability to reject or otherwise affect Hartney's acceptance of that order.
¶ 14 Long-term purchase orders were negotiated with customers by Peter Hartney. Peter generally signed the agreement first and then sent the agreement to the customer. The customer then signed the agreement and sent it back to the Mark sales office. If Peter had not signed the contract first, the customer mailed the partially executed agreement to the Mark sales office. Peter would then travel to the Mark sales office to sign the contract. The fully executed contract would then be mailed from the Mark sales office to the customer. The originals of the sales contracts were stored at the Mark sales office, with copies sent to the customer as well as to Hartney's accounting department in Forest View. The price for some long-term purchase order customers did not include freight. These customers often hired a common carrier to retrieve their fuel from a Hartney terminal. In some cases, the common carrier selected by the customers was ETI.
¶ 16 Between 1990 and the present appeal, IDOR audited Hartney's operations eight times. Five of those audits covered periods during which Hartney had a sales office separate from its Forest View headquarters.
¶ 17 In 1998, IDOR audited Hartney's payment of both retailers' occupation tax (ROT) and motor fuel tax (MFT) in connection with Hartney's sales out of its Du Page County office. In connection with that audit, Joseph Stratman, an agent with IDOR's Bureau of Criminal Investigations, visited Hartney's sales office in Du Page County. Stratman concluded that Hartney was accepting orders in Du Page County and thus subject to the Du Page County MFT.
¶ 18 The auditor, having consulted Stratman, concluded that all orders were accepted in Du Page County and thus agreed that Hartney was subject to Du Page County MFT. Hartney and IDOR litigated the assessment. While both agreed that Hartney's sales were accepted at the DuPage County sales office, Hartney interpreted the Du Page County MFT as applying to sales made only to locations within Du Page County. IDOR, however, interpreted the DuPage County MFT as being a point-of-acceptance tax like the ROT. As a result of finding that Hartney accepted all purchase orders at its sales office in Du Page County, IDOR levied a $3 million assessment against Hartney.
¶ 19 In late 1998, Hartney moved its sales office to La Salle County — a county that did not charge additional MFT on any sales. Hartney operated its sales office in La Salle County in substantially the same
¶ 21 In August 2003, Hartney opened the Mark sales office, which operated in the same manner as had the La Salle and Du Page County offices.
¶ 22 IDOR audited Hartney from January 1, 2005, until June 30, 2007. Gerise Ricard was assigned to the Hartney audit. Ricard completed an audit history worksheet, and she and her supervisor, Robert Szymanski, also prepared an audit narrative setting out the bases for the IDOR's audit conclusion. In conducting Hartney's audit, Ricard did not review any of Hartney's past audit files. Neither Ricard nor anyone else from IDOR ever visited the Mark sales office or spoke to any of the individuals who worked in that office in connection with the audit. In May 2008, as the audit was nearing its completion, IDOR destroyed the prior audit files relating to its investigations of Hartney.
¶ 23 Ricard ultimately determined, based on nine audit conclusions, that Hartney's sales were attributable to Forest View, not Mark. As a result, on September 5, 2008, IDOR issued a notice of tax liability (NTL) for the 2005-07 audit period. The NTL reflected Forest View's 1% ROT rate, Cook County's 0.75% ROT rate, and the Regional Transportation Authority's (RTA) 0.75% ROT rate, as well as interest and penalties, for a total of $23,111,939.11 (the disputed tax).
¶ 25 Hartney paid the disputed tax under protest. On November 7 and 17, 2008, Hartney initiated two lawsuits (cases No. 08 MR 13 and No. 08 MR 15) pursuant to the State Officers and Employees Money Disposition Act (Protest Monies Act) (30 ILCS 230/2a.1 (West 2008)). The first of these cases related to the disputed tax, and the second to IDOR's refusal — starting in the fall of 2008 — to remit the local portion of Hartney's tax payments to Mark and Putnam County. Earlier, on October 3, 2008, the board of commissioners of Putnam County and the board of trustees of the Village of Mark had filed suit (case No. 08 MR 11) seeking relief from IDOR's refusal to remit the local portion of Hartney's tax payments to those entities. The three cases were consolidated on February 9, 2009.
¶ 26 After a bench trial, the trial court issued judgment in favor of plaintiffs. The court held that plaintiffs showed by a preponderance of the evidence that (1) Hartney's daily purchase orders "were completed and accepted at its dedicated sales office in Mark, Illinois," and (2) the long-term purchase orders "became binding upon execution and return to the Mark sales office, whether signed first or later
¶ 27 Regarding the audit itself, the court determined that "the audit process was, in several determinative aspects, flawed, incomplete, factually unsupported, and legally in error." Ultimately, the court stated that "the subject audit was premised upon incomplete, factually wrong, and legally misunderstood findings, but for which the audit result would likely have favored [Hartney's] continued and previously condoned practice of operating a separate dedicated sales office in a tax venue of its choice." Specifically, the court stated:
¶ 30 As the trial court correctly observed, the instant case does not involve administrative review.
¶ 31 The Protest Monies Act provides a mechanism for a party to challenge the propriety of its required payment of money to the State of Illinois. 30 ILCS 230/1 et seq. (West 2010). To do so, the party must tender the money under protest. 30 ILCS 230/2a (West 2010). The recipient of funds paid under protest must then notify the Treasurer of the State of Illinois (30 ILCS 230/2a (West 2010)), who then places the money in a special fund known as the protest fund (30 ILCS 230/2a (West 2010)). Thirty days after payment, the money may be transferred out of the protest fund and deposited into the fund in which it would have been placed had there been payment without protest, unless the party making the payment under protest has filed a complaint and secured a temporary restraining order or a preliminary injunction restraining the transfer of the money. 30 ILCS 230/2a (West 2010). Once a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction is issued, the money must remain in the protest fund until the final judgment of the trial court. 30 ILCS 230/2a (West 2010).
¶ 33 Because the parties appear to agree that the trial court below applied the correct standard we offer no opinion on this issue. Our discussion of the applicable standard is for the sole purpose of giving context to the trial court's factual findings and its ultimate disposition.
¶ 34 On appeal, we apply a dual standard of review. We review legal issues de novo and factual issues under a manifest weight of the evidence standard. Corral v. Mervis Industries, Inc., 217 Ill.2d 144, 153, 298 Ill.Dec. 201, 839 N.E.2d 524 (2005). We note that the supreme court has only applied the clearly erroneous standard to decisions of administrative agencies. Samour, Inc. v. Board of Election Commissioners, 224 Ill.2d 530, 542, 310 Ill.Dec. 326, 866 N.E.2d 137 (2007). It has expressly chosen to apply the above dual standard "[i]n all other civil cases." Samour, 224 Ill.2d at 542, 310 Ill.Dec. 326, 866 N.E.2d 137.
¶ 36 The issue in the present case is whether the trial court erred in finding that Hartney's daily and long-term sales throughout the subject audit period were sitused and taxable at its dedicated sales office located in the Village of Mark, County of Putnam, Illinois. The trial court correctly explained that there are three relevant sections of title 86 of the Administrative Code, which involve levying local sales taxes: (1) one section permitting a home rule county to levy its own ROT (86 Ill. Adm.Code 220 et seq.), (2) another permitting a home rule municipality to levy its own ROT (86 Ill. Adm.Code 270 et seq.), and (3) a third specifically permitting the regional transit authority to levy its own separate ROT (86 Ill. Adm.Code 320 et seq.).
¶ 37 For a seller to incur the relevant ROT in a given county, municipality or metropolitan region, the sale must be made in the course of such seller's engaging
¶ 38 Each of the above three sections expressly provides that "the seller's acceptance of the purchase order or other contracting action in the making of the sales contract is the most important single factor in the occupation of selling." See 86 Ill. Adm.Code 220.115(c)(1), 270.115(b)(1), 320.115(b)(1) (2000). Specifically, section 220.115(c)(1) states:
Section 270.115(b)(1) states:
Section 320.115(b)(1) states:
¶ 39 Each of the above three sections also provides that under a long-term purchase order agreement which must be implemented by the purchaser's placing specific orders when goods are wanted, the seller's place of business with which subsequent orders are placed (rather than the place where the seller signed the master contract) will be determinative of the sales situs. See 86 Ill. Adm. Code 220.115(e), 270.115(d), 320.115(d) (2000). Delivery of the property within the county, municipality or metropolitan region is not necessary to incur the relevant ROT. See 86 Ill. Adm.Code 220.115(d)(1), 270.115(d), 320.115(d) (2000).
¶ 41 Initially, defendants challenge the trial court's interpretation of the above sections. Specifically, the court found that ROT liability is determined according to where acceptance of the purchase orders took place. The interpretation of a statute presents a question of law that this court reviews de novo. Corral, 217 Ill.2d at 153, 298 Ill.Dec. 201, 839 N.E.2d 524
¶ 42 While defendants concede that the seller's acceptance of the purchase order is "the most important single factor" in determining ROT liability, they call our attention to the fact that the above sections do not expressly provide that it is the only factor. Therefore, defendants assert that ROT liability should be determined only after considering a plethora of selling activities, including where fuel prices were set, where price sheets were sent to customers, where credit decisions were made, where specific customer decisions were made and where the timing of deliveries was determined. Ultimately, defendants argue there was not "enough" selling activity in Mark to justify the trial court's finding that Mark was the relevant ROT jurisdictions.
¶ 43 As noted above, the subsection, entitled "Mere Solicitation of Orders Not Doing Business," is found in each of the three relevant sections. See 86 Ill. Adm. Code 220.115(b), 270.115(a), 320.115(a) (2000). Again, this subsection expressly provides that enough of the selling activity must occur within the county, municipality or metropolitan region to justify concluding that the seller is engaged in business within the county, municipality or metropolitan region with respect to that sale. See 86 Ill. Adm.Code 220.115(b)(1), 270.115(a)(1), 320.115(a)(1) (2000). We find this language establishes a minimum threshold for making sales activity potentially subject to ROT liability. We view this language as similar to the concept used by courts when faced with the personal
¶ 44 The "Mere Solicitation of Orders Not Doing Business" subsection makes clear that a sale cannot be taxed in any given jurisdiction unless enough of the seller's selling activity occurs within that jurisdiction. This policy is analogous to the personal jurisdictional policy that a party cannot be haled into court in a specific jurisdiction absent sufficient contacts. See Duncan v. Duncan, 94 Ill.App.3d 868, 870 [50 Ill.Dec. 592, 419 N.E.2d 700] (1981) (determining that defendant did not have sufficient contacts with Illinois for purposes of personal jurisdiction where parties were married in Illinois and briefly lived in Illinois after marriage but then moved to Virginia and had no contact thereafter with Illinois). While this subsection expressly protects a person or business from being unfairly subjected to ROT liability, it does not set out the applicable test (or in the parallel personal jurisdiction context — what constitutes sufficient contacts) for determining the situs for ROT liability. That applicable test is found in the following subsection, entitled "Seller's Acceptance of Order."
¶ 45 The "Seller's Acceptance of Order" subsection, which can be found in each of the three relevant sections, creates a bright-line test: where acceptance occurs, ROT liability is fixed. See 86 Ill. Adm.Code 220.115(c)(1), 270.115(b)(1), 320.115(b)(1) (2000). Only two conditions are placed upon this mandate: (1) the sale must be at retail, and (2) the purchaser must receive physical possession of the property in Illinois. See 86 Ill. Adm.Code 220.115(c)(1), 270.115(b)(1), 320.115(b)(1) (2000).
¶ 46 Defendants fail to cite any relevant authority supporting their claim that ROT liability should be determined only after considering a plethora of selling activities, including where fuel prices were set, where price sheets were sent to customers, where credit decisions were made, where specific customer decisions were made and where the timing of deliveries was determined. Such a position is contrary to the express language of the "Seller's Acceptance of Order" subsection. We therefore do not consider any of these factors when determining where ROT liability should be fixed.
¶ 47 The primary objective of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of our legislature. Midstate Siding & Window Co. v. Rogers, 204 Ill.2d 314, 320, 273 Ill.Dec. 816, 789 N.E.2d 1248 (2003). "This inquiry `must always begin with the language of the statute, which is the surest and most reliable indicator of legislative intent.'" (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Marshall, 242 Ill.2d 285, 292, 351 Ill.Dec. 172, 950 N.E.2d 668 (2011) (quoting People v. Pullen, 192 Ill.2d 36, 42, 248 Ill.Dec. 237, 733 N.E.2d 1235 (2000)). We construe the statute as a whole and afford the language of the statute its plain and ordinary meaning. Rogers, 204 Ill.2d at 320, 273 Ill.Dec. 816, 789 N.E.2d 1248. "Where that language is clear and unambiguous, we must apply the statute without further aids of statutory construction." Marshall, 242 Ill.2d at 292, 351 Ill.Dec. 172, 950 N.E.2d 668.
¶ 48 We afford the "Seller's Acceptance of Order" subsection its plain and ordinary meaning: If Hartney accepted the daily and long-term purchase orders in Mark, then the applicable ROT liability is fixed in Mark. Moreover, we find that acceptance of the daily and long-term purchase orders would satisfy the minimum "selling activity" requirement found in the "Mere Solicitation of Orders Not Doing Business" subsection.
¶ 50 Unlike Hartney, the seller in Chemed Corp. did not have a business office in Illinois. No offers were accepted in Illinois. Instead, all offers were accepted at the seller's business office in Ohio. The seller did, however, have a warehouse in Illinois, which it used as a base of operation for its Illinois sales. Specifically, goods would be shipped from the Illinois warehouse after acceptance of an order in Illinois.
¶ 51 The seller filed claims for refunds of money it paid in relation to additional municipal ROT and authority ROT liability. In reversing the trial court's decision, the Fourth District found the seller liable because the seller was attempting to evade ROT liability altogether and the additional taxes were within the scope of the applicable ROT acts (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 120, ¶ 441; Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 111 2/3, ¶ 704.03(e)). Specifically, the court stated:
¶ 52 While the Fourth District appears to support defendants' argument in the instant case that the absence of "a complete list" in the "Seller's Acceptance of Order" subsection (Chemed Corp., 186 Ill. App.3d at 417, 134 Ill.Dec. 313, 542 N.E.2d 492) justifies application of a totality of the circumstances test, we note that such an interpretation renders the exception found in section 270.115(b)(3) superfluous. If a totality of the circumstances test were the de facto test, there would be no justifiable need to create an exception for when a seller's acceptance is consummated outside of Illinois. Instead, one would just analyze the totality of the circumstances. Thus, we believe the existence of the exception found in section 270.115(b)(3) actually supports our interpretation that acceptance governs ROT liability.
¶ 53 Moreover, we again stress the plain language found in the "Seller's Acceptance of Order" subsection: If the purchase order is accepted at the seller's place of business within the county, municipality and/or metropolitan region; ROT liability is fixed in that respective county, municipality and/or metropolitan region. See 86 Ill. Adm.Code 220.115(c)(1), 270.115(b)(1), 320.115(b)(1) (2000). The dissent and defendants would have us ignore this plain language and instead apply a test that is neither articulated or defined by a "complete list" or express factors. We refuse to create such legal fiction.
¶ 55 Defendants next challenge the trial court's factual findings that Hartney accepted both daily purchase orders and long-term purchase orders in Mark. This court will not disturb these factual findings unless they are against the manifest weight of the evidence. Samour, 224 Ill.2d at 542, 310 Ill.Dec. 326, 866 N.E.2d 137. In light of this standard, we set out the trial court's express findings:
¶ 56 We cannot say that the trial court's factual findings that Hartney accepted both daily purchase orders and long-term purchase orders in Mark were against the manifest weight of the evidence. We reject defendants' contention that "Mark was the point of contract `acceptance' in name only." The record reveals that Hartney entered into an agreement with Putnam Painting in 2003 that vested Putnam Painting and its employees with the explicit authority to "receive, accept and process" purchase orders on behalf of Hartney. The record confirms that all daily purchase orders were accepted in Mark. The record also confirms that all long-term purchase orders were accepted in Mark. Consequently, ROT liability is fixed in Mark.
¶ 57 In coming to this conclusion, it seems clear to us that Hartney has intentionally structured its sales locations and procedures in a deliberate attempt to minimize its tax liability. We find no indication in the statutory authority before us or in the Administrative Code of legislative intent to prohibit such business decisions. Nor does it appear, after a review of the record presented to us, that past decisions by the IDOR have attempted to punish Hartney for its previous efforts to minimize its costs of doing business by implementation of the same sales practices employed in Mark or to require its ROT payments to benefit any municipal entity other than the one(s) in which its sales office is currently located.
¶ 58 We note in this regard that prior IDOR audits might have shed additional light on its decisional history, but they were destroyed by the agency after the filing of this lawsuit. Their only relevance in this litigation is the fact that the trial court allowed Hartney to argue a negative inference from the State's failure or inability to produce prior audit evidence at trial. The audits are not part of our record, we have not been able to review them, the parties strongly disagree on their content and import, and our standard of review as to factual issues is not de novo. For these reasons, the previous audits have not factored in any way into the panel's decision.
¶ 59 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
¶ 60 Affirmed.
Presiding Justice SCHMIDT concurred in the judgment, with opinion.
Justice CARTER dissented, with opinion.
¶ 61 JUSTICE CARTER, dissenting.
¶ 62 I respectfully disagree with the majority's conclusion in the present case. Unlike the majority, I would find that the trial court erred in determining that Hartney's situs was in Mark for the purpose of the retailers' occupation taxes (ROTs) and in entering judgment in favor of plaintiffs on that basis. I would, therefore, reverse the trial court's ruling and remand this case for the trial court to enter judgment in favor of defendants.
¶ 63 Neither the statutes nor the regulations involved in this case specifically define the phrase "engaged in the business of selling." The regulations make clear, however, that a totality of the circumstances test applies. See 86 Ill. Adm.Code
¶ 64 In addition, in considering the definition of the phrase "engaged in the business of selling," the Illinois Supreme Court stated:
Thus, it is clear from the supreme court's discussion that the term must be evaluated on a case by case basis. See Ex-Cell-O Corp., 383 Ill. at 321-22, 50 N.E.2d 505.
¶ 65 In the present case, the evidence showed that virtually all of the sales activity took place at Hartney's main office in Forest View. The Mark "sales" office was created in an attempt to avoid paying the additional ROTs. The Mark office merely served as a mailbox and a fax line for Hartney, where an order-taker would take the orders from customers and fax those orders to the main office in Forest View. As to the daily purchase orders, the order-taker in Mark did not negotiate the sales, had no authority to approve financing, and was not even aware of the prices of the fuel being sold. Furthermore, as to the blanket orders, the order-taker in Mark had almost no connection to those sales whatsoever. Under these circumstances, I would conclude that Hartney's situs for ROTs was the Forest View office. See Marshall & Huschart Machinery Co. v. Department of Revenue, 18 Ill.2d 496, 501-02, 165 N.E.2d 305 (1960) (ROT liability upheld where seller had merely created a complicated subterfuge to avoid the application of the ROT). In my opinion, the trial court erred in reaching the opposite conclusion.