delivered the opinion of the court:
In International Business Machines Corporation v. Korshak,
The Leasing Occupation Tax Act and the Leasing Use Tax Act were repealed by a statute which became effective August 1, 1967, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, chap. 120, pars. 453.101 and 453.121) after the plaintiffs’ original brief was filed. In a prefatory statement, the defendants’ brief quoted the saving clause of the repealing statute “for the purpose of informing the Court of the present status of the Leasing Occupation Tax Act and the Leasing Use Tax Act, and to establish that this cause is not affected by the repealing statute”. In their reply brief the plaintiffs contend that the effect of the repeal is to require that all amounts paid under protest pursuant to the repealed statutes must be refunded to the taxpayers. It is necessary to dispose of the issue thus raised before considering the other contentions advanced by the plaintiffs.
The repealing Act provides: “However, any taxes imposed under the Acts repealed by this Act with respect to transactions consummated before this Act takes effect shall continue to be assessed and collected in the same manner and to the same extent as if said Acts were not repealed. Also, claims for credit or refund of taxes paid pursuant to those Acts with respect to transactions occurring before the effective date of this Act, may continue to be filed and shall continue to be disposed of in the same manner and to the same extent as if said Acts were not repealed.”
We agree with the defendants that the repealing Act has no effect upon the status of this case. The plaintiffs’ argument to the contrary is hard to follow. They seem to say that because the Department of Revenue did not, prior to the effective date of the repealing Act, initiate tax assessment proceedings, they are entitled to the money held in the protest fund. The repealed statutes granted taxpayers a right to an administrative hearing and judicial review to determine the amount of tax due. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1965, chap. 120, pars. 453.106, 453.131.) But we are unable to see why the Department was under any obligation to institute assessment proceedings with respect to the plaintiffs. Their complaint attacks the validity of the taxing statutes upon various constitutional grounds. Apart from the legal issues'thus raised, the complaint does not suggest that any dispute exists as to the amount of taxes due. The Department therefore had no occasion to institute proceedings for the assessment of the tax. It follows that without regard to our decision in Fiorito v. Jones, Docket No. 41099, this contention of plaintiffs is without merit.
Plaintiffs’ first constitutional objection is that the Leasing Occupation and Leasing Use Tax Acts violate section 13 of article IV of the Constitution of Illinois, which provides that “ [n] o act * * * shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title.” (Ill. Const., art. IV, sec. 13.) Plaintiffs note that each Act contains a number of “specific exemptions or exclusions”; and argue that “[t]he fraud and deception sought to be avoided by Section 13, Article 4, of the Constitution of Illinois, arising when the title of a bill fails to give sufficient notice that such bill includes classes which the title of the bill does not embrace, is equally apparent, and just as obnoxious when the bill excludes numerous classes which the title of the bill embraces.” In the I.B.M. case (
The I.B.M. case also disposed of plaintiffs’ contention that section 13 of article IV of the Illinois constitution is violated “because of the vast number of provisions from other statutes incorporated by * * * reference.” In that case we held that the provision that “ ‘no law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title only, but the law revised, or the section amended, shall be inserted at length * * *’ does not prohibit incorporation by reference.”
Plaintiffs argue that the statutes under consideration are unreasonably discriminatory in violation of various provisions of the State and Federal constitutions because only the Leasing Occupation Tax Act, and not the Leasing Use Tax Act, excepts from the definition of taxable gross receipts “amounts received by the lessor which are in excess of the fair market value, which shall not be less than cost to the lessor, of the tangible personal property on the date the lease was entered into * * *.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1965, chap. 120, par. 453.102.) This argument is a restatement of another contention rejected in the I.B.M. case. (
Nor can we accept the plaintiffs’ contention that a leasing use tax cannot continue to be collected in the absence of a complementary leasing occupation tax. Their reliance upon Turner v. Wright,
Both the Leasing Occupation Tax Act and the Leasing Use Tax Act exempt “the renting or leasing of 'real property * * * even though the rental or leasing charge includes the right to use some personal property (such as furniture and furnishings) in connection with the use of such real property.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1965, chap. 120, pars. 453.102, 453.122.) The plaintiffs argue that although an owner of a furnished apartment house or hotel, who purchased furnishings for installation in the apartments or hotel rooms that he rents, pays neither an Illinois Use Tax nor a tax under the Leasing Occupation Tax Act, one of the plaintiffs is a lessee of an unfurnished apartment who was compelled under the Use Tax Act to pay a tax on the furniture he purchased for use in his apartment. Therefore, the plaintiffs argue, the exemption is special legislation which violates section 22 of article IV of the Constitution of Illinois and the due process and equal protection clauses of the 14th amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
Faced with a similar objection in the I.B.M. case, we held that the exemption in question “is a reasonable recognition of the differences between the two kinds of leases, and of the difficulties of allocating value in real estate leases between personal property on the one hand and fixtures and other real property on the other.” (
Plaintiffs attack as “discriminatory and unconstitutional” the statutory provisions exempting from taxation the “leasing in this State of tangible personal property to a lessee where such property is moved by an interstate carrier for hire as rolling stock moving in interstate commerce.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1965, chap. 120, pars. 453.103, 123.) They argue that there is no substantial difference between having goods delivered by vehicles leased by the seller of those goods and having them delivered by vehicles leased by a public carrier.
In the I.B.M. case we declined to rule upon this question because the plaintiffs in that case did not “bring themselves within the class of persons allegedly discriminated against.” (
The governing principles are clear. “It is well established that the legislature has broad powers to establish reasonable classifications in defining subjects of taxation.” (Klein v. Hulman,
The validity of taxation of private and common carriers at different rates has been recognized both by this court (Bode v. Barrett,
The provisions attacked in this case, however, exempt only carriers for hire. The same exemption in the Use Tax Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, chap. 120, par. 439.3) is prefaced by a declaration that its purpose is “[t]o prevent actual or likely multistate taxation.” Clearly, it was incorporated into the statutes before us to serve the same purpose. And in view of the decisions upholding tax laws that have incorporated heavier tax burdens upon carriers for hire, we cannot say that the legislature’s assumption that those carriers are more likely than private carriers to be subjected to multistate taxation, was unwarranted, or that the plaintiffs have met their burden of establishing that the exemption is not reasonably calculated to prevent multistate taxation. Moreover, since “in taxation even more than in other fields, legislatures possess the greatest freedom in classification,” (Madden v. Kentucky,
- Plaintiffs allege another unconstitutional discrimination in the credit provision of the Leasing Occupation Tax Act. Section. 5 provides that ,“[c]redit against leasing occupation-tax liability shall be given for the amount (if any) of Illinois .use tax or service use tax previously paid or incurred by the person incurring such leasing occupation tax liability" on his prior, use of such property, including his prior "use of such property in the capacity of a lessor, on the. condition that such lessor does not charge and collect leasing use tax on the tangible personal property being leased which is the subject of such credit.” Plaintiffs contend that this credit results in a leasing occupation tax being passed on to only those lessees whose lessors did not pay a use tax prior to' August i" of 1965. They contend that the lessees of lessors who did not pay such a prior use tax are discriminated against because they must bear the full burden of a subsequent, leasing occupation tax. This argument overlooks the fact that the lessees whose lessors did pay.a prior use tax sufficient in amount to exempt them from a leasing occupation tax.under the above credit provision are still subject to a leasing use tax. Thus, as defendants statéd in their brief, “[i]n each instance the lessee would be bearing an equal tax burden.”
The County Leasing Occupation Tax Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1965, chap: 34, pars: 409.4, repealed by an act "approved July .20, 1967, S.B. No. 1781) empowered counties to tax lessors one-half of one percent of their gross receipts. Because of the “fair market value” limitation on the definition of gross receipfs; liability under this Act terminated at the same time it terminated under the Leasing Occupation Tax Act. As has been pointed out, thereafter the same tax that was collected under the Leasing Occupation Tax Act was collectible under the Leasing Use Tax Act, but there was no corresponding county leasing use tax. Plaintiffs note that it is common practice for lessors to pass the burdens of these taxes to their lessees, but that lessees have no way of knowing when their lessors are no longer obligated to remit the additional one half of one percent under the County Leasing Occupation Tax Act. They argue that as a consequence, the taxing scheme embodied in these Acts contains the potential for unjustly enriching lessors. We agree, with the defendants: the “bare allegation of unconstitutionality predicated on this argument is totally without merit.” The potential for unjust enrichment is negligible, if it exists at all, for as defendants point out, lessees can ascertain the information necessary to determine when county taxes are no longer collectible in the same way the State does — by asking their lessors.
In view of our denial of each of the plaintiffs’ constitutional challenges to the Acts under consideration, we need not consider plaintiffs’ final two arguments, which are (1) that “the severability clauses of the acts assailed are ineffective, null and void, and violate section 16, of article IV of the constitution of the State of Illinois” and (2) that “the totality and cumulative effect of the objections to which the acts assailed are exquisitely amenable, reveals the repugnancy of those acts to constitutional essentials of valid enactments * * *.” And since we affirm the dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint on the merits, it is unnecessary to consider defendants’ contention that plaintiffs’ “suit * * * can not be brought as a class action.”
The judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
