Case Information
*1 I LLINOIS O FFICIAL R EPORTS Appellate Court
Jacobsen v. King
,
Du Page, DAN RUTHERFORD, Treasurer of the State of Illinois, and LISA MADIGAN, Attorney General of the State of Illinois, Defendants- Appellees.
District & No. Second District
Docket No. 2-11-0721
Filed June 11, 2012
Held The trial court properly dismissed a complaint alleging that the $5 fee added by the legislature to the cost of a marriage license to fund the ( Note: This syllabus Married Families Domestic Violence Fund was an unconstitutional tax constitutes no part of the opinion of the court on marriage, since there is a reasonable relationship between the class but has been prepared taxed, namely, marriage license applicants, and the object of the tax, by the Reporter of namely, helping victims of domestic violence leave violent marriages, Decisions for the and, further, plaintiff’s tax uniformity challenge was without merit, convenience of the survival of the uniformity challenge inherently fulfilled the requirements reader. ) of the equal protection clause, and due process was not violated by the
nominal tax. Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Du Page County, No. 10-MR-1604; the Hon. Terence M. Sheen, Judge, presiding. Review Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Clinton A. Krislov and Kenneth T. Goldstein, both of Krislov & Associates, Ltd., of Chicago, Mark J. Baiocchi, of Law Offices of Mark Appeal
J. Baiocchi, of Wheaton, Christopher J. Stull, of Law Office of Christopher J. Stull, P.C., of West Chicago, and Bernard Hammer, of Winnetka, fоr appellant.
Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Chicago (Michael A. Scodro, Solicitor General, and Mary E. Welsh, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel), for appellees Dan Rutherford and Lisa Madigan.
Panel JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice Jorgensen and Justice McLaren concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION The plaintiff, Jillian Jacobsen, filed a three-count complaint arguing that a $5 fеe that the legislature added in 2008 to the cost of a marriage license was an unconstitutional tax on marriage. The circuit court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint, and the plaintiff appeals from that order. We affirm. I. General Background In June 2008, in Public Act 95-711, the Illinois General Assembly increased by $5 the
fee for obtaining a marriage license. Pub. Act 95-711 (eff. June 1, 2008). The $5 charge funds the Married Families Domestic Violence Fund (the Fund). See 55 ILCS 5/4-12003, 4- 4001 (Wеst 2010). The General Assembly created the Fund in order to award grants to public and private agencies that facilitate or provide free legal services to currently or formerly married domestic violence victims seeking remedies for domestic violence through civil proceedings (such as dissolution of marriage). It is administered by the Attorney General of Illinois. 30 ILCS 105/6z-72 (West 2010). In June 2009, the plaintiff paid the Du Page County clerk $35 for a marriage license. In
November 2010, the plaintiff filed a suit against the defendants, the Du Page County clerk, the Illinois Treasurer, and the Illinois Attorney General, in their official capacities. The plaintiff also sought statewide certification of a plaintiff class of those who paid the additional $5 and a defendant class of the State’s 102 county clerks. The plaintiff’s complaint, as amended, alleged that the $5 portion of thе marriage license fee that went to the Fund violated the Illinois Constitution’s guarantees of due process and equal protection as well as its tax uniformity requirement. Specifically, the complaint alleged that the $5 charge did not survive strict scrutiny for purposes of due process and equal protection for *3 several reasons: (1) it must be paid and cannot be waived; (2) the fee is an unreasonable burden on marriage because it directly and significantly impedes one’s ability to obtain a marriage license, given that the General Assembly may raise the fee to any amount it wishes; and (3) the charge neither serves a compelling government interest nor is narrowly tailored to achieve the State’s purpose in creating the Fund.
¶ 5 The complaint also asserted that the $5 fee violated the rational basis test becausе (1) it
was a tax on the fundamental right to marry, collected to fund a general welfare program; (2) the relationship between the purchase of a marriage license and domestic violence was too remote; and (3) there was no nexus between the $5 fee on marriage licenses and services for married or formerly married victims of domestic violence. The complaint alleged that the fee viоlated the tax uniformity requirement because it bore no reasonable relation to the statute’s object nor was it based upon a real or substantial difference between those taxed (marriage license applicants) and those not taxed (everyone else). On May 13, 2011, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint
pursuant to section 2-615 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2010)). The defendants аrgued that the fee was constitutional because it was imposed only on those who were getting married and was used to fund programs supporting married or formerly married victims of domestic violence. The defendants further argued that the fee was nominal and that it did not directly or substantially impede the fundamental constitutional right to marry. On June 28, 2011, following a hearing, the trial court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint.
The trial court explаined that the $5 fee was constitutional because it was narrowly tailored to further the compelling government interest of helping victims of marital domestic violence end such abuse. Further, the trial court found that the $5 fee did not violate principles of tax uniformity, because there was a clear and reasonable relationship between marriage license applicants and the Fund for domestic violence victims who are or were married, even though not all license applicants would benefit from the Fund. Following the trial court’s ruling, the plaintiff filed a timely notice of appeal. II. Motion to Strike Plaintiff’s Introduction Section At the outset, we note that the defendants request that we strike the introduction section
of the plaintiff’s opening brief for violating Illinois Supreme Court Rule 341(h)(2) (eff. July
1, 2008). Rule 341(h)(2) sets forth what is to be included in the introductоry paragraph of an
appellant’s brief, describing the nature of the action. The defendants argue that the
introductory “nature of the action” section of the plaintiff’s brief improperly includes
“argumentative matters” in violation of Rule 341(h)(2). We agree with the defendants that
portions of the introductory section of the plaintiff’s brief contain argument that should not
have been included in that section. Nonetheless, wе decline to strike the introductory section
of the plaintiff’s brief but instead will disregard the plaintiff’s comments that should not have
been included in that section. See
SBC Holdings, Inc. v. Travelers Casualty & Surety Co.
,
¶ 10 III. Standard of Review
¶ 11 A motion to dismiss brought under section 2-615 tests the legal sufficiency of the
complaint. On review, the inquiry is whether the allegations of the complaint, when
construed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, and taking all well-pleaded facts and
all reasonable inferencеs that may be drawn from those facts as true, are sufficient to
establish a cause of action upon which relief may be granted.
Napleton v. Village of
Hinsdale
,
presumption is on the party challenging the validity of the statute to clearly demonstrate a
constitutional violation.
O’Brien v. White
,
the fee violates the tax uniformity clause of the Illinois Constitution of 1970 (Ill. Const.
1970, art. IX, § 2). The uniformity clause states that, “[i]n any law classifying the subjects
or objects of non-property taxes or fees, the classes shall be reasonable and the subjects and
objeсts within each class shall be taxed uniformly. Exemptions, deductions, credits, refunds
and other allowances shall be reasonable.” Under the uniformity clause, tax classifications
must (1) be based on a real and substantial difference between the people taxed and those not
taxed, and (2) bear some reasonable relationship to the object of the legislation or to public
policy.
Arangold Corp. v. Zehnder
,
supreme court has already determined that there is no reasonable relationship between
marriage licеnses and domestic violence. In
Boynton
, the supreme court struck down a
similar fee imposed upon those who applied for marriage licenses. The statute required
county clerks to pay $10 of the fee collected for issuance of a marriage license into the
Domestic Violence Shelter and Service Fund. (The charge was raised to $25 by the time the
case reached the supreme court.) The plaintiffs challenged this portion of the license fee as
an unconstitutional tax violative of due process and uniformity of taxation. The supreme
court held that the charge violated the Illinois due process clause.
Id.
at 369. The supreme
court first noted that the charge was a tax, as it bore no relationship to the county clerk’s
service of issuing and recording licenses.
Id.
at 365. Its sole purpose was to rаise revenue for
the domestic violence fund. The supreme court then further noted that “[i]n considering the
reasonableness of a classification from a due process point of view, under either the police
power or the taxing power of the State, ‘it must appear that the particular classification is
based upon some real and substantial difference in kind, situation or circumstance in the
рersons or objects on which the classification rests, and which bears a rational relation to the
evil to be remedied and the purpose to be attained by the statute.’ ” (Emphasis omitted.)
Id.
at 366-67 (quoting
Grasse v. Dealer’s Transport Co.
,
marriage license applicants to provide services to all adult citizens who were victims of domestic violence and their dependents regardless of their marital status. Id. at 364. Thus, the tax on marriage license applicants was arbitrary because there was only a remote relationship between those who were being taxed and those who were benefitting from that tax. Id. at 366-67. Further, the tax funded numerous services that had no relationship to marriage or the dissolution of marriage. at 364. Here, in contrast, the tax at issue, while *6 imposed only on people who are marrying, benefits only married and formerly married people who need services because of marital domestic violence. As such, the tax herein is for a limited purpose and has a narrower class of beneficiaries than the tax at issue in Boynton . Thus, the concerns that the supreme court voiced in Boynton regarding the remoteness between those being taxed and those benefitting from the tax are not present here.
¶ 19 We next consider the plaintiff’s argument that the fee is overinclusive because it provides
benefits to those who were married out of state and those who married prior to the enactment of the fee, and thus never paid the fee. In other words, the plaintiff is complaining that the tax violates the uniformity clause because some people will benefit from the tax even though they did not pay the tax. Although the plaintiff’s argument might be true, it does not raise a valid uniformity clause challenge. In considering a uniformity clause challenge, our supreme court has explained:
“[T]he court is not required to have proof of perfect rationality as to each and every taxpayer. The uniformity clause was not designed as a straitjacket for the General Assembly. Rather, the uniformity clause was designed to enforce minimum standards of reasonableness and fairness as between groups of taxpayers.” Geja’s Café v. Metropolitan Pier & Exposition Authority ,153 Ill. 2d 239 , 252 (1992).
We believe that requiring marriage license applicants to pay a $5 fee to help a victim of domestic violence leave a violent marriage is neither unfair nor unreasonable, even if that victim never paid the $5 fee. We thus find the plaintiff’s argument that the fee is overinclusive to be without merit. The plaintiff also asserts that she stated a tax uniformity claim because “[a] more
appropriate program would tax and provide relief to all victims of domestic violence,” not merely those who are or were married. First, we believe that the plaintiff’s argument misses the legislature’s purpose in enacting Public Act 95-711. The purpose of that law was to help victims of violent marriages to exit such marriages. This is not a problem that unmarried people have. We further note that, in certain circumstances, the Illinois legislature already treats married аnd unmarried people differently. See, e.g. , In re Parentage of John M. , 212 Ill. 2d 253, 263 (2004) (explaining that the law presumes that a married man is the father of his wife’s child born during marriage while no similar presumption exists to establish paternity to a child born to an unmarried woman). We reject the plaintiff’s implicit argument that the legislature’s choice to make distinctions between married and unmarried people is improper. Second, to the extent that the plaintiff chаllenges the wisdom of the Fund, we observe
that “[w]hether a statute is wise or whether it is the best means to achieve the desired result
are matters left to the legislature, not the courts.”
Arangold
,
violates the constitutional guarantee of due process, a court must first determine the nature
of the right alleged to be infringed by the government’s action.
In re R.C.
,
(1978). Nonetheless, the Supreme Court has specifically held that “reasonable regulations
that do not significantly interfere with decisions to enter into the marital relationship may
legitimately be imposed.” Thus, a court will not use a strict scrutiny test unless the effect
of the law impacting the right to marriage is significant. See
id.
(applying strict scrutiny
where issue was ban on marriage unless applicant was current on child support payments);
cf. Bowen v. Owens
,
scrutiny test because that is the test that
Boynton
used. However, the tax at issue on the
marriage license in that case ($25) was much more significant than the tax at issue herein
($5). We agree with the defendants that the $5 fee at issue here is a nominаl fee.
The plaintiff points out that in
Boynton
the court specifically noted that there was nothing
in the statute at issue that prohibited the legislature from raising the fee. Indeed, while
Boynton
was pending, the legislature did raise the fee from $10 to $25. Although we
*8
acknowledge that the legislature may raise this fee in the future, we decline to speculate
regarding how high the legislature could raise the fee before it would constitute a significant
impеdiment to the right to marry. See
Napleton
,
marriage license applicants is reasonably related to the Fund’s narrow purpose of helping married victims of domestic violence leave violent marriages. As we find that the tax bears a rational relationship to a legitimate legislative purpose, the plaintiff’s due process claim fails. VI. Conclusion For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is
affirmed. Affirmed.
