JOHN E. GILLIGAN еt al., Appellees, v. BERNARD KORZEN, County Treasurer, et al., Appellants.
No. 45488.
Supreme Court of Illinois
January 31, 1974
Rehearing denied March 28, 1974
Defendants have briefed and argued other claims of error but it appears unlikely that they will recur upon retrial of this cause and we do not, therefore, discuss them.
For the reasons set forth the judgments of the circuit and appellate courts are reversed and the cause is rеmanded to the circuit court of Du Page County for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE RYAN, dissenting.
Bernard Carey, State‘s Attorney, of Chicago (Sheldon Gardner, Chief of Civil Division, and John A. Dienner III, and Paul P. Biebel, Jr., Assistant State‘s Attorneys, and Allen Fulkerson (Graduate Law Student), of сounsel), for appellants.
Kreger & Karton, Ltd., and Edward A. Berman, both of Chicago, for appellees.
MR. JUSTICE GOLDENHERSH delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs, John E. Gilligan, Cook County School Bus, Inc., an Illinois corporation, and Prospect Heights Improvement Association, a not-for-рrofit corporation, “individually and in a representative capacity on behalf of all others similarly situated,” filed this action in the circuit court of Cook County naming as defendants Bernard Korzen, County Treasurer and Collector, and the County of Cook, and seeking a declaratory judgment that “an ordinance to provide for a wheel tax on motor vehicles in unincorporated areas of Cook County” was unconstitutional. The ordinance in question, approved and adopted by the Board of Commissioners of Cook County on December 30, 1971, to become effective on January 1, 1972, provided that it was unlawful “for any motor vehicle owner residing within the unincorporated аreas of
Plaintiffs’ complaint alleged that the ordinance violated the equal protection and due process clauses of the Federal Constitution and
Defendants moved to dismiss the action on the grounds that Cook County, as a home-rule unit of government, had authority to impose the tax under
Defendants contended in the trial court and contend here that the ordinance is valid as an exercise of the defendant county‘s power granted under
This leaves for determination the sole question whether the classification which impоses the tax only upon motor vehicle owners residing within the unincorporated areas of Cook County is reasonable. Heartt v. Village of Downers Grove, 278 Ill. 92, involved the validity of an ordinance of the Village of Downers Grove which, in contravention of sectiоn 12 of the Motor Vehicle Act (Laws of 1915, p. 592), which provided that no municipality could require a wheel tax from a nonresident, imposed a wheel tax on the residents of the village and on nonresident users of the village streets. In rejеcting the village‘s argument that the legislative classification in the Motor Vehicle Act based on residence within and outside of a municipality was invalid, the court stated: “Ordinances and statutes that provide different provisions for рeople residing in municipalities from those residing outside are almost universally held valid if the classification is based upon a reasonable distinction.” (278 Ill. 92, 96.) The court held that the fact that village residents used the village streets morе than nonresidents was a “reasonable distinction” for the classification.
The General Assembly created a similar classification in the enactment of the Municipal Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act (
We hold that the adoption of the ordinance was a proper exercise of the power conferred upon the defendаnt county under
The judgment of the circuit court of Coоk County is reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court with directions to dismiss the complaint.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
What is involved in this case was referred to in the constitutional convention as “differential taxation“—the levy or imposition of a tax upon less than all similarly situated property or persons within the boundaries of the governmental unit levying the tax. (7 Record of Proceedings, Sixth Illinois Constitutional Convention 1579.) That kind of taxation is governed, with respect to home-rule units, by parаgraph l of section 6 of article VII, which provides: “The General Assembly may not deny or limit the power of home rule units *** to levy or impose additional taxes upon areas within their boundaries in the manner provided by law for the prоvision of special services to those areas and for the payment of debt incurred in order to provide those special services.” Identical language in
The “sole question” under the Constitution is not, as the opinion states, whether the differential tax is based upon a reasonable classification. The first question is whether the differential tax has been levied or imposed “in the manner provided by law for the provision of special services“, as required by
With respect to the subsidiary question, so long as the proceeds of the tax are effectively segregated and used for the designated special service, a matter that is not disputed in this case, I would not regard the method by which that result is accomplished, legislative or administrative, as particularly significant.
