delivered the opinion of the court:
The Department of Revenue of the State of Illinois and Ernest C. Marohn, as acting director thereof, appeal to this court from a judgment of the circuit court of Kane County which held that appellee, Modern Dairy Company, Inc., a corporation, was entitled to a credit memorandum for retailers’ occupation tax paid by appellee on milk sold to the Chicago State Hospital for consumption by its patients.
The facts are simple and not seriously disputed. The appellee operates a dairy and is engaged in selling dairy food products at wholesale and retail in the city of Chicago. The Chicago State Hospital, a State institution, through the Division of Purchases and Supplies of the Department of Finance, during the period from August, 1944, through 1947, purchased milk from appellee on quarterly competitive bids. No tax was included in these bids. The milk was delivered to the institution, 900 to 1200 gallons daily, in ten-gallon cans. A very small amount of milk was sold to employees, about eight per cent, about which there is no dispute. The balance of the milk was consumed by the patients and employees of the hospital. The patients were mentally ill persons committed by the courts of Illinois and volunteer patients. The hospital made a maintenance charge for food, housing, laundry, etc., to the employees. Some of the patients performed services in the kitchens and dining rooms, and as housekeepers and janitors, without compensation. The evidence disclosed that appellee also sold its products to others at retail and at wholesale for resale. The wholesale prices were less than the retail and the bid prices to the hospital were less than the wholesale prices. The appellee had included all sales to the hospital in its monthly tax returns and paid the tax for which credit is now claimed.
On this evidence the Department found the appellee liable for the retailers’ occupation tax on all milk sold to the hospital, except that actually sold to and paid for by the employees. The circuit court reversed the Department and entered judgment directing the Department to issue its credit memorandum for the full amount claimed. In its judgment the court found: “First: That a dairy company is not liable for Retailers’ Occupation Tax on sales of milk to a State Hospital where the milk is transferred to patients for consumption. Second: That Section 1 of Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act, and particularly the second paragraph thereof, which attempts to enlarge the definition of ‘Sales at Retail,’ is unconstitutional and void.”
The Department contends, on this appeal, that this case is controlled by the recent decision of this court in Fefferman v. Marohn,
The appellee contends that the act applies only to vendors who sell to purchasers who use and consume the property, and the purchaser here is not the user and consumer under the previous pronouncements of this court; and that if section 1 of the act as amended in 1941 is interpreted to include sales to purchasers who transfer the property to others for their use and consumption, then it is unconstitutional and void.
The appellants contend in reply that, as was stated in the Fefferman case, where the property purchased by a State institution was used in caring for its wards, that constituted a “use and consumption” contemplated by the act and, hence, no constitutional question would arise.
The question of what is “use and consumption” under this act has plagued the courts since the act went into effect. The first act, commonly known as the Sales Tax Act, was passed March 22, 1933. The title of that act was, “An act in relation to a tax upon persons engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property at retail, the disposition thereof and making certain appropriations in connection therewith.” The constitutionality of this act was challenged in Winter v. Barrett,
Subsequently, on June 28, 1933, the legislature adopted the present act, which is entitled, “An act in relation to a tax upon persons engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property to purchasers for use or consumption.” The constitutionality of this act was challenged in Reif v. Barrett,
The act of 1933 provided “ ‘Sale at retail’ means any transfer of the ownership of, or title to, tangible personal property to the purchaser, for use or consumption and not for resale in any form as tangible personal property, for a valuable consideration. Transactions whereby the possession of the property is transferred but the seller retains the title as security for payment of the selling price shall be deemed to be sales.” Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939, chap. 120, par. 440.
Clearly, it was the intention of the legislature to tax “sales,” but a sales tax not being authorized by our constitution the tax was imposed upon the privilege of selling at retail. The title of the first act said “at retail” but to avoid possible contention that this limited the act to sales in small quantities and would not apply to sales in gross to consumers (Franklin County Coal Co. v. Ames,
This apparent discrepancy in the language of the title and the body of the act brought on a series of cases in which this court had to construe the meaning of “use or consumption” as used in the title of the act. In the absence of any definitions of the terms in the act itself we applied the ordinary and popular meaning of the words; “use” meaning a long-continued possession and employment of a thing to the purposes for which it is adapted, as distinguished from possession and employment that is temporary or occasional; and “consumption” as “destruction by use.” (Revzan v. Nudelman,
In 1941, the legislature, in order to plug this gap and clarify the situation, amended section 1 of the act by inserting “ ‘Use or consumption,’ in addition to its usual and popular meaning, shall be construed to include the employment of tangible personal property by persons engaged in service occupations * * *, where as a necessary incident to the rendering of such services, transfer of all or of a part of the tangible personal property employed in connection with the rendering of said services is made from the person engaged in the service occupation * * *, to his customer or client.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 120, par. 440.) The constitutionality of this amendment was challenged principally on the ground that it violated section 13 of article IV of the constitution in that it imposed a tax on sales to purchasers who were not the users or consumers and was therefore not expressed in the title and inconsistent therewith. (Stolze Lumber Co. v. Stratton,
Three consolidated cases involving sales of textiles, bedding, towels, gauze, bandage muslin, surgical instruments, rubber gloves and other items of a similar nature to the State of Illinois and Cook County charitable, hospital, and penal institutions came before the court in Fefferman v. Marohn,
The 1941 amendment urged by appellant here was not considered in the Fefferman case. This amendment provides, “ ‘Sale at retail’ shall be construed to include any transfer of the ownership of or title to, tangible personal property to a purchaser, for use or consumption by any other person to whom such purchaser may transfer the tangible personal property without a valuable consideration.” The taxpayer here contends that the title of the act restricts its application to sales to purchasers who are themselves the users or consumers and if this amendment is interpreted to apply to sales to purchasers who transfer to others for use or consumption it brings in a subject matter not within the scope of the act and therefore in violation of section 13 of article IV of our constitution; that such interpretation would lack in uniformity in violation of section 1 of article IX; would grant special immunities in violation of section 22 of article IV of the Illinois constitution; and would violate the due-process and equal-protection clauses of section 1 of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States. The Department contends that under the authority of the Fefferman case the purchasers here are the users and consumers contemplated by the title to the act and therefore the constitutional question does not arise, but even if it did arise it was decided, although not discussed, in the Fefferman case.
We are therefore confronted in the instant case with the following questions: (1) Was the purchaser here the user or consumer of the milk furnished to its patients irrespective of the 1941 amendment? (2) If the amendment must be relied upon is it violative of any of the constitutional prohibitions as contended by the appellee?
We entertain no doubt that the instant situation involves a transfer by the purchaser to another without a valuable consideration. The fact that some of the patients performed services in the kitchens, dining rooms and as housekeepers and janitors cannot be regarded as a consideration for the milk they consumed. It is inconceivable that our State institutions would employ mental patients to perform menial services and pay them with a glass of milk. We regard such chores as being assigned solely for their therapeutic value to the patient and not as a business transaction between the institution and the patient.
It is obvious therefore that the answer to either or both of the questions here depends entirely upon what the legislature meant when it used the terms “user or consumer” in the title to the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act. If a broad and liberal definition of these terms was intended, the purchaser here could be considered the user or consumer as contemplated by the act, and the amendment could reasonably be within the title of the act.
Reviewing our previous decisions and the actions of the legislature retrospectively, we have come to the conclusion that it was not the intention of the legislature to use the terms “user or consumer” in the title of the act in the strict and narrow construction which this court placed upon those terms in the earlier cases culminating in the decision of the Stolze Lumber Co. case.
As pointed out above, the legislature substituted “to purchasers for use or consumption” in the title of the 1933 act for “at retail” in the title of the first act to avoid the possible contention that the act would apply only to sales in small quantities and would not apply to sales in gross to consumers. This seems to indicate at the outset that the legislature was using these terms to describe a retail sale rather than with a specific intention to restrict the act to apply only where the purchaser was the actual physical consumer.
Then, following the court’s construction of these terms in the Revzan case, and cases following it, the legislature passed the 1941 amendments which explicitly sought to define these terms in a broader and more liberal interpretation. After these amendments there certainly remains no question about the present legislative intention at least.
The object and purpose of the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act was to indirectly tax sales of tanglible personal property by imposing a tax on the privilege of selling. To tax every sale would result in multiple taxation, so the legislature restricted the tax to the sale at the retail level. The question then is what is the meaning of use or consumption when the motive is to tax the privilege of engaging in the occupation of retail selling. Considered in this sense, it seems obvious that the legislature intended and the act contemplates the use or consumption of the property which took it off the retail market so that it would no longer be an object of the tax. It seems equally obvious that who actually drinks the milk, eats the food, wears the clothes or uses the linens has no relation whatsOver to the object and purpose of this act and the legislature would have had no reason to use the terms “use or consumption” in that sense.
The legislature has the power to make any reasonable definition of the terms in a statute, and such definitions, for the purpose of the act, will be sustained. (Smith v. Murphy,
In view of the original reason why the legislature adopted the phrase “to purchasers for use or consumption,” in consideration of the purpose and motive of the legislature in passing the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act, the apparent irrelevance of physical consumption to that motive and purpose, the unquestionable efforts of the legislature to correct the court’s construction of the meaning of the terms, and the inconsistency of the court’s construction of the meaning of the terms evidenced by the belabored decisions finding the purchaser the user or consumer when the purchases were admittedly actually consumed by another, we do not believe that the strict and narrow interpretation heretofore placed on these terms is in accord with the intention of the legislature, and are of the opinion it should no longer be applied.
The title to this act describes sales “to purchasers for use or consumption.” It is noted that the terms are in the disjunctive rather than the conjunctive, indicating that the legislature intended “use” to mean one thing and “consumption” something else. Considering the purpose of the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act, it is reasonable to assume the legislature intended the term “use” to include any employment of a thing which took it off the retail market so that it was no longer the object of a tax on the privilege of selling it at retail.
The transfers described in the 1941 amendment clearly fall within this definition of the term “use” as contained in the title to the act, and this amendment is not beyond the scope of that title.
There remain the questions of constitutional uniformity, special immunities and due process. We find no merit in appellee’s contentions on these points. It is true that the entire scheme of the act will make vendors liable for the tax on some sales to the institutions and not liable on other identical sales, depending upon whether the institution transfers to a paying patient or a charity patient. This is due to the purpose and entire scheme of the act, the intention being to make the tax fall upon the last transfer for a consideration. This intention is not discriminatory. It is not discriminatory to exempt sales incidental to the performance of services. Since the intent of the act to make the tax fall on the last sale has a reasonable basis and the classification of vendees who perform services is reasonable and the act applies equally to all of the class, it satisfies the constitutional requirement of uniformity.
To support its contention that the imposition of the tax on the sales here in question would violate the equal-protection and due-process clauses, the taxpayer cites Stewart Dry Goods Co. v. Lewis,
In view of the foregoing determinations, the judgment of the circuit court óf Kane County is reversed, and the case remanded with directions to enter judgment in accordance with the findings and decision of the Department of Revenue.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.
