delivered the opinion of the court:
In 1939 certain vendors of building material brought suit in the circuit court of Cook County to restrain State officials from enforcing the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act against them. The suit was consolidated with a similar one brought by building contractors to whom such materials were sold. A decree was entered adjudging that neither occupation was within the act, and collection of the tax was enjoined. On appeal by the defendant State officials the decree was affirmed in these respects in Material Service Corp. v. McKibbin,
After our decision in Lyon & Sons Lumber and Mfg. Co. v. Department of Revenue,
The tax in question is imposed upon “persons engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property at retail.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1961, chap. 120, par. 441.) The statute provides its own definition of “sale at retail.” It says, insofar as is relevant here, that such a sale is any transfer to a purchaser “for use or consumption and not for resale in any form as tangible personal property.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1961, chap. 120, par. 440.) To sustain the tax it must be shown (1) that the property was bought for use or consumption and (2) that it was not bought for resale in any form as tangible personal property.
In the first Material Service case (Material Service Corp. v. McKibbin,
In the present cases there is precisely the same employment of building material by the purchaser. The acts of. the contractor with respect to the materials he buys differ in no respect whatever from those of the speculative builder. In either case the material is bought and used for the purpose of constructing buildings or otherwise improving real estate, and in either case the material, in the process of such use, loses its identity as personal property. Insofar at least as the requirement of use or consumption is concerned the Lyon case is controlling here.
It is argued, however, that the material is sold to the contractors for resale as tangible personal property, and that the second condition for taxability is therefore not satisfied. A distinction is sought to be made in this respect between sales to speculative builders (whose subsequent transfer is of real estate) and sales to contractors, who do not own the real estate on which they are working. The argument is that somewhere between his purchase of materials and their incorporation into the structure or other improvement the contractor must necessarily transfer title to the landowner, and that this is a “resale” of tangible personal property within the meaning of the act. Reliance is placed on language to this effect in Material Service Corp. v. Hollingsworth,
The fact that the contractors in this case build for others whereas in the Lyon case they built for themselves may have significance insofar as sales of real estate are concerned. But it has nothing whatever to do with sales of tangible personal property. Their customers are not interested in and do not bargain for so many feet of lumber, kegs of nails, thousands of brick, cubic yards of concrete and so on. It is unrealistic .to say that the contractor purchases these things for resale as tangible personal property to his customers. We conclude that a construction which recognizes this fact is justified by the language of the statute and is consistent with the design of the act as a whole. The sales to the contractor are not for resale as tangible personal property but for his own use or .consumption, and the amount thereof is includable in measúring the tax on the materialman’s occupation.
We recognize that this conclusion is not in harmony with our decision on the merits of this same injunction in Material Service Corp. v. Hollingsworth,
The circuit court properly vacated the injunction. The order is accordingly affirmed.
Order affirmed.
