delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs
On September 24, 1986, during a
“Whenever any referred matter *** shall not have been reported back to the City Council by the Committee to which referred, within a period of (60) days, any aider-man may move to discharge the сommittee from further consideration of that matter. The motion to discharge *** shall require the affirmative vote of a majority of all the aldermen entitled by law to be elected.” (Rules of the Chicago City Council, R. 41 (1986).)
The council voted on the motion to discharge, with 25 aldermen voting in favor of discharge and 23 aldermen
A member of the council then moved to substitute a new version of the “Chicago Vehicle Fuel Tax Ordinance” for the version which had been discharged from committee, which motion prevailed by a viva voce vote. In the final vote to adopt or reject the substitute ordinance, 25 aldermen voted in favor of adoption, 23 voted against adoption, and the chair again cast its vote in favor of the ordinance, declaring that it had passed 26 to 23.
The main provision of the ordinance as adopted reads:
“200.10 — 2. A tax is hereby imposed upon the privilege of purchasing or using, in the City of Chicago, vehicle fuel purchased in a sale at retail. The tax shall be at a rate of five cents per gallon of vehicle fuel. The ultimate incidence of and liability for payment of the tax shall be upon the purchaser or user of thе vehicle fuel, and nothing in this chapter shall be construed to impose a tax upon the occupation of selling or distributing vehicle fuel. It shall be a violation of this chapter for any distributor or retail dealer to fail to add this tax to the retail price of vehicle fuel or to absorb the tax. This tax shall be in addition to any and all other taxes.” Chicago Municipal Code, ch. 200.10-2 (1986).
The ordinance imposes on fuel dеalers the duty to collect the tax and keep collection records, and subjects them to various penalties for failure to comply with the
Plaintiffs assert four grounds for invalidating the ordinance: first, section 3 of the ordinance is an invalid delegation of the council’s taxing power; second, the fuel tax is an unauthorized occupation tax that violates the Illinois Constitution; third, the fuel tax, taken with other Chicago taxes, constitutes multiple taxаtion in violation of the Illinois Constitution; and finally, plaintiffs argue that the city council of Chicago failed to follow its own procedures in voting to remove the ordinance from committee. We consider first the plaintiffs’ claim that the ordinance is invalid as an improper delegation of legislative power.
Plaintiffs argue that the fuel tax ordinance is invalid because its real estate tax abatement provisions impermissibly delegate the council’s taxing power to the city comptroller. Additionally, plaintiffs claim that these abatement provisions are not severable from the remainder of the fuel tax ordinance. Section 3 provides:
“(a) The City Comptroller is authorized and directed, on or before March 31, 1987, (i) to determine the amounts received from the imposition of the Chicago Vehicle Fuel Tax which were collected and deposited in and were made available to the Corporate Fund for Year 1986 and (ii) to file in the office of the City Clerk a notification of such determination.
(b) As and to the extent that any of the amounts described in Subsection (a) hereof were so collected, deposited and made available to the Corporate Fund, the City Comptroller is authorized and directed *** to file inthe offices of the County Clerks *** certificates of abatement with respect to the property taxes levied for the Year 1986 which are to be extended for collection in the Year 1987. Such certificates shall refer to the amount of property taxes levied for the Year 1986, shall indicate the amount of such property taxes to be abated resulting from the collection of the Chicago Vehicle Fuel Tax and shall further indicate the remainder of such property taxes which are to be extended for collection in the Year 1987 by said County Clerks.” (Journal of Proceedings of the City Council of Chicago, September 24, 1986, at 6 (Special Pamphlet Edition).)
Plaintiffs contend that the powers of “determination” delegated to the comptroller permit executive discretion in the ultimate calculation of the amount of the tax levy. They assert that this court has narrowly viewed delegations of authority to administrative officials in the area of governmental taxing powers, citing Giebelhausen v. Daley (1950),
In Paper Supply Co. v. City of Chicago (1974),
“The section fixes the interest and late payment penalty rates and confers upon the director only the power to make a finding of fact that ‘the delinquency is not due to any fault on the part of the taxpayer,’ in which event the late payment penalty is not assessed. Such factual determinations by administrative agencies or officials are authorized in countless statutes аnd ordinances, and the provision results in neither an unlawful delegation of authority nor the improper exercise of a judicial function.” (57 Ill. 2d at 579 .)
Similarly, in the case at bar, the ordinance vests in the comptroller no discretion as to who will be taxed or who will receive abatements of their property taxes. The ordinance
The plaintiffs’ reliance on Bowsher v. Synar (1986),
We next consider whether the ordinance imposes an impermissible tax upon “occupations” in contravention of section 6(e) of article VII of the Illinois Constitution of 1970. The trial court concluded that the vehicle fuel tax was not a tax upon occupations and, therefore, it was a proper home rule tax. For the reasons set forth below, we agree with the trial court.
The 1970 Illinois Constitution provides:
“(a) *** Except as limited by this section, a home rule unit may exercise any power and perform any function pertaining to its government and affairs ***.
* * *
(e) A home rule unit shall have only the power that the General Assembly may provide by law *** [2] to license for revenue or [to] impose taxes upon or measured by income or earnings or upon occupations.
* * *
(m) Powers and functions of home rule units shall be construed libеrally.” (Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, §6.)
A major limitation on home rule power is the restriction upon occupation taxes. (Ill. Const. 1970, art. VII, §6(e).) In order for home rule units to tax occupations, the General Assembly must specifically authorize the tax. To determine if a tax constitutes an occupation tax, it must be judged by the standard of whether it regulates and controls a given occupation, or imposes a tax for the privilege of engaging in a given occupation, trade or profession (Reif v. Barrett (1933),
Plaintiffs do not contend that the ordinance was imposed to regulate or control a given occupation; rather, they argue that the practical effect of the ordinance is to placе the legal incidence of the tax on those engaged in the business of selling vehicle fuel. Plaintiffs rely heavily upon our decision in Commercial National Bank v. City of Chicago (1981),
This court, in holding the service tax invalid, relied on the debates of the delegates to the 1970 Illinois constitutional convention. The debates indicated that the constitutional prohibition on local occupation taxes was intended to apply to taxes on services. Therefore, we held that a perfunctory declaration that the legal incidence of the tax was on the purchaser was insufficient to overcome the “consensus of the convention” that home rule taxes on services are within the limitation of section 6(e) of article VII. (Commercial National Bank v. City of Chicago (1981),
This practical-effect analysis, however, is not appropriate in considering the tax now before us because, as disclosed by the constitutional convention debates, it is not a tax which the constitutional convention intended to deny to home rule units. The report of the Local Government Committee of the convention set forth several examples of permissible home rule taxes. Significantly, the report stated that under a city’s home rule power, it could impose a tax at a fixed rate per gallon on gasoline and that taxes upon hotel rooms, liquor, food, drug, etc., were permissible. (7 Record of Proceedings, Sixth Illinois Constitutiоnal Convention 1655-56.) The Chicago vehicle fuel tax is a tax at a fixed rate of five cents per gallon on vehicle fuel. The shifting of the incidence of the tax is not here an attempt to evade the intent of the constitutional convention to prohibit a tax on the sale of services.
We find no merit in plaintiff’s contentiоn that the vehicle fuel tax is an occupation tax because the ordinance imposes certain obligations and burdens upon the seller. This court has sustained the validity of home rule tax ordinances against similar arguments in Paper Supply Co. v. City of Chicago (1974),
Next, we consider whether the Chicago vehicle fuel tax is unconstitutional as multiple taxation, as non-uniform taxation, and as abuse of the home rule tax powers under the due process, equal protection and uniform taxation provisions of the Illinois Constitution. The trial court held that the Chicago vehicle fuel tax was not unconstitutional merely because it was imposed in addition to other taxes. Plaintiffs assert that the city has created an unсonstitutional scheme of taxation — at least two
Section 2 of article IX of the Illinois Constitution of 1970 states:
“In any law classifying the subjects or objects of non-property taxes or fees, the classes shall be reasonable and the subjects and objects within each class shall be taxed uniformly. Exemptions, deductions, credits, refunds and other allowances shall be reasonable.”
The rаther ambiguous argument against “double taxation” stems from the constitutional mandate that taxation shall be uniform. (See Ill. Const. 1870, art. IX, §1.) Plaintiffs argue that “uniformity of taxation is violated by double taxation.” (See People ex rel. Hanrahan v. Caliendo (1971),
Legislative bodies have very broad powers in classifying the objects of taxation, and such classifications will withstand constitutional attack so long as they are reasonable. (Lehnhausen v. Lake Shore Auto Parts Co. (1973),
Finally, plaintiffs challenge the validity of the adoption of the fuel tax ordinance. The plaintiffs assert that Council Rule 41 requires that a motion to discharge a proposed ordinance from a committee receive “the affirmative vote of a majority of all the aldermen entitled by law to be elected.” (Rules of the Chicago City Council, R. 41 (1986).) Plaintiffs allege that the ordinance did not receive a majority vote. Votes supporting discharge consisted of 25 cast by aldermen and one cast by the mayor as chairman of the council. Plaintiffs argue that, under the plain meaning of Rule 41, the chair’s ruling that the motion had carried was erroneous, because the rule required the vote of 26 aldermen. Plaintiffs dispute Mayor Washington’s invocation of the Illinois Municipal Code, which provides that the mayor shall vote “where one half of the aldermen elected have voted in favor of an ordinance, resolution or motion even though there is no tie vote.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 24, par. 3—11— 14.)
We decline to review plaintiffs’ assertions that the fuel tax ordinance was improperly removed from committee and therefore improperly adopted, as the plaintiffs do not claim that improper adoption was a violation of any constitutional or statutory provision. Plaintiffs’ claim is based on an alleged violation by the city council of Rule 41 of its own rules. The general rulе governing judicial review of substantive legislation is that “an act cannot be declared invalid for a failure of a house to observe its own rules. Courts will not inquire whether such rules have been observed in the passage of the act.” (1 A. Sutherland, Statutory Construction §§7.01, 7.04 (4th ed. 1985); see also Rock v. Thompson (1981),
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that the plaintiffs have not demonstrated that the vehicle fuel tax ordinance violates the Illinois Constitution or any Illinois
Judgment affirmed.
JUSTICE SIMON took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
