delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, National Realty and Investment Company (taxpayer), appeals from that part of the judgment of the trial court confirming the decision of the Department of Revenue (Department) that yearly installments from the 1960 sale of the Drake Hotel by taxpayer were taxable income in Illinois for the tax years 1972 through 1975, 1978 and 1979 under the provisions of the Illinois Income Tax Act (Act). Taxpayer raises two issues on appeal: (1) whether the Act taxes the taxpayer’s gain arising from the sale of property nine years before the Act’s effective date; and (2) whether denial of the valuation-limitation deduction to corporate taxpayers violates the Illinois and Federal constitutions. The Department has cross-appealed from the remaining portion of the judgment below which reversed the Department’s determination that taxpayer’s gain on the sale of property in Florida in 1973 was business income and taxable in Illinois, raising the issue of whether the sale resulted in taxable “business income.”
A stipulation of facts was agreed to by the parties during the administrative proceeding before the Department’s hearing officer. The pertinent facts are as follows. Taxpayer is a Delaware corporation qualified to do business in Illinois with its principal place of business in Oak Brook, Illinois. On December 31, 1960, taxpayer sold the Drake Hotel in Chicago for a total selling price of $10,372,907.77, realizing a gain on the sale of $7,350,813.06. The purchaser assumed a mortgage of $1,712,907.77 with the balance of $8,660,000 to be paid in annual installments of $250,000.
Taxpayer made an election under section 453 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. sec. 453 (1982)) to report its gain on the sale by the installment method of accounting, reporting as income that portion of each year’s payment that the gain on the sale ($7,350,813.06) bore to the total contract price ($8,660,000) or 84.88% of $250,000 which is $212,205.92.
Taxpayer also purchased property in Vero Beach, Florida, on June 30, 1967, for $405,226.59, and sold it on April 11, 1973, for $770,000, realizing a gain of $364,773.41.
In 1972 and 1973, taxpayer deducted $212,205.92 from its taxable income and in 1973 also deducted the gain attributable to the sale of the Florida property. In 1975, the Department mailed taxpayer a timely notice of deficiency assessing additional taxes of $9,230.61 for 1972 and $22,258.22 for 1973. In October 1975, taxpayer filed a protest to the Department’s notice of deficiency. Taxpayer again claimed a deduction for the gains realized on the Drake Hotel sale on its 1974, 1975 and 1978 Illinois tax returns. The Department disallowed these deductions treating them as “mathematical errors,” and required taxpayer to pay the deficiency immediately. Taxpayer filed a claim for refund due, and subsequently filed a timely protest to the Department’s denial of the refund.
In 1979, the purchaser of the Drake Hotel accelerated the payments due taxpayer, paying the remaining balance owed on the contract. On its 1979 amended Illinois income tax return taxpayer deducted $1,666,110.02 of gain realized from the sale of the Drake Hotel and claimed a refund as a result of the claimed deduction of $66,644.40 of the $71,862.37 of the Illinois income taxes paid, plus interest. Taxpayer filed a timely protest to the Department’s denial of the claimed refund.
A hearing was held before a Department hearing officer on September 25, 1980, and a decision was issued on December 1, 1980. The Department by its hearing officer found that as income is not “realized” for purposes of the Illinois income tax until reported on the taxpayer’s Federal return and included in its computation of Federal taxable income, this tax is not unconstitutionally retroactive. The hearing officer also found that, although the State granted taxpayer a valuation-limitation deduction for the gain reported in 1969 and 1970 pursuant to Thorpe v. Mahin (1969),
Finally, as to the Vero Beach property, the hearing officer found that taxpayer purchased the lots with the intention of building condominiums on the property. Because of various zoning restrictions, taxpayer could not use the property to build condominiums and neither made improvements on the property nor rented the real estate, it was sold for a gain of $364,773.41 in 1973. Taxpayer paid a tax in Florida in 1973 on only a portion, or $81,876, of the gain. The hearing officer stated that the record, although not “overburdened” with facts on taxpayer’s overall business character, shows that taxpayer dealt in real estate, both from the standpoint of management of improved properties and the development of condominiums. He concluded that the ultimate disposal of the property was business income and taxable in Illinois. The hearing officer then assessed deficiencies for the years of 1972 and 1973 and denied refunds for the remaining years in question.
Taxpayer sought judicial review of the Department’s decision. The trial court affirmed the decision of the Department as far as the constitutionality of the taxation of the income from the sale of the Drake Hotel. The court found, however, that based on the factual findings of the hearing officer, the income from the sale of the Vero Beach property was nonbusiness income. The court stated that the law requires that not only the acquisition but also the management and disposition of the property be considered in determining whether or not the transaction resulted in business or nonbusiness income. The court also relied on examples contained in the Department’s regulations. It should be noted that the examples relied on are not contained in the recently codified Department of Revenue income tax regulations. This appeal and cross-appeal followed.
Taxpayer first contends that the Act must be construed to apply prospectively only to gains realized after the effective date of the Act, August 1, 1969, a conclusion it argues is supported by the plain language of the Act and the supreme court decisions of Thorpe v. Mahin (1969),
This type of situation, where a sale occurred prior to the effective date of the State income tax but installment payments were received and reported for Federal tax purposes under section 453 after the State tax was in effect, has not previously been addressed by the Illinois courts. (Cf. Warren Realty Co. v. Department of Revenue (1978),
The cases further determined that the gain was actually realized when payment was received. The Nebraska Supreme Court in Altsuler v. Peters (1973),
“The taxpayer, in a sense, realizes a gain on an appreciated asset when he sells it, even though he has contracted to take the proceeds over a period of time. Under the provisions of section 453, I.R.C. 1954, if the requirements of that section are met, he may report the gain in installments. The statute and the regulation give him the opportunity of postponing the recognition of a portion of the gain. In effect, he has the option of treating the gain as completely realized at the time of sale, or he may postpone partially the tax consequences until he has actual realization by receiving the installment. It makes little difference whether we say the gain is realized but recognition is postponed, or say that there is no realization until receipt of the installment.” (Emphasis added.)190 Neb. 113 , 126,206 N.W.2d 570 , 578.
The receipt of payment is thus the taxable event upon which the tax is levied (Dery v. Lindley (1979),
Further, the cases cited above have uniformly rejected the contention that the inclusion of installment payments in taxable income from sales made prior to the effective date of the income tax statute results in an unconstitutional retroactive tax. While it is recognized that a tax’ retroactive application may be so harsh and oppressive as to constitute a violation of due process (Welch v. Henry (1938),
Taxpayer, however, contends that the tax results in an unfair disadvantage to an installment-basis taxpayer as the taxpayer validly elected a method of Federal tax reporting with no inkling that the election would serve as the basis of later State tax liability on the sale. This argument also has been rejected in other jurisdictions. One of the risks a taxpayer takes when he elects installment reporting is that the tax law may undergo change. Rosenblatt v. New York State Tax Com. (1981),
Taxpayer also argues that Thorpe v. Mahin (1969),
Thorpe and Mitchell, however, did not address the specific issue presented here, that of a sale by a corporation which occurred prior to the Act but with installments received and federally reported after the Act was effective. Moreover the supreme court’s decisions were based on legislative intent rather than on constitutionality. (Thorpe v. Mahin (1969),
Further, other decisions in Illinois have approved the legislature’s use of Federal-taxable income as the starting point for State net income. (Bodine Electric Co. v. Allphin (1980),
Taxpayer next argues that the valuation-limitation deduction should apply here as the 1971 legislative amendment which made the limitation available only to individuals, trusts and estates is unconstitutional.
Thorpe v. Mahin (1969),
In 1971, the legislature amended the Act, specifically giving the valuation-limitation deduction to individuals (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1983, ch. 120, par. 2—203(a)(2)(G)) and trusts and estates (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1983, ch. 120, par. 2—203(c)(2)(F)). Partnerships were later also given the valuation-limitation deduction. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1983, ch. 120, par. 2— 203(d)(2)(E).) Another subsection was added by the amendment and stated: “Except as expressly provided by this Section, there shall be no modifications or limitations on the amounts of income, gain, loss or deduction taken into account in determining gross income, adjusted gross income or taxable income ***.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1983, ch. 120, par. 2—203(h).) Therefore, corporations are effectively denied the valuation limitation.
In Mitchell v. Mahin (1972),
Taxpayer argues that granting the limitation to individual taxpayers and trusts and estates while denying it to corporations results in unconstitutional discrimination, with an arbitrary and unreasonable burden shouldered by some taxpayers but not others. It cites Crocker v. Finley (1984),
The power of the legislature to make classifications, particularly in the field of taxation, however, is very broad (Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. v. Lenckos (1984),
Taxpayer here has clearly not met this burden. This is not an unreasonable or arbitrary classification. Thorpe, which upheld the taxation of corporations at a higher rate than individuals, stated that there are sufficient differences between “the privilege of earning and receiving income as a corporate entity and the privilege of earning or receiving income as an individual *** to justify their being taxed at a different rate.” (Thorpe v. Mahin (1969),
In Warren Realty Co. v. Department of Revenue (1978),
Taxpayer argues that the reasoning in Warren Realty is faulty, interprets Thorpe incorrectly, and should not be followed here. We disagree. Taxpayer interprets Thorpe as reading a valuation limitation into the Act to avoid retroactive taxation. It contends that this limitation, therefore, cannot be constitutionally denied to corporate taxpayers. The decision in Thorpe, however, was based on legislative intent, and “Thorpe *** found no constitutional infirmity in the General Assembly’s adoption of Federal taxable income as a determinant of Illinois income tax liability.” (Bodine Electric Co. v. Allphin (1980),
Taxpayer finally contends that the legislative amendment violates the constitution’s “8 to 5” ratio provision. The constitutional provision states, “[i]n any such tax imposed upon corporations the rate shall not exceed the rate imposed on individuals by more than a ratio of 8 to 5.” (Ill. Const. 1970, art. IX, sec. 3(a).) Taxpayer contends that giving the valuation limitation to individuals but not corporations results in an effective ratio of 4 to 0. However, the provision refers to rate, not effective rate. The granting of,a deduction is a privilege created by statute as a matter of legislative grace, and a taxpayer is not entitled to a deduction unless clearly allowed by statute. (Bodine Electric Co. v. Allphin (1980),
In its cross-appeal, the Department argues that the sale of the Vero Beach, Florida, property by taxpayer resulted in “business income” and, therefore, a portion of the income was properly taxable in Illinois. This property was purchased for development of condominiums in 1967 and was sold in 1973, with taxpayer realizing a gain of $364,773.41. Because of zoning restrictions, the taxpayer did not build condominiums or make improvements to the property.
The Illinois Income Tax Act provides for “allocation” of nonbusiness income and “apportionment” of business income. Allocation is a process whereby certain types of income, called “nonbusiness” income, generally in the nature of passive or investment income, are assigned in their entirety to a particular jurisdiction for tax purposes. Under apportionment, the taxpayer’s normal or business income is mathematically divided among the various jurisdictions in which it does business to determine the measure of local tax. Apportionment is generally accomplished by means of a three-factor formula, utilizing property, payroll and sales in the taxing jurisdiction over properly, payroll and sales in all jurisdiction. (Roger Dean Enterprises v. State Department of Revenue (Fla. 1980),
The Department and taxpayer agree that it is taxpayer’s burden to show that the gain in question was nonbusiness income. The Department argues that taxpayer, based on the limited facts it presented, failed to meet its burden of demonstrating the nonbusiness nature of the income. The Department relies on cases from other jurisdictions which have stated that the statute establishes two tests to determine if the income in question is business income, which both parties agree apply here. Under the transactional test, set out by the first clause of the definition, income is classified as business income if it is attributable to a type of business transaction in which taxpayer regularly engages. (District of Columbia v. Pierce Associates, Inc. (D.C. 1983),
Taxpayer maintains that the income from the sale was nonbusiness income under the definition as (1) it is not in the business of selling improved real estate, so the sale was not in the regular course of its trade or business, and (2) the property was never used by taxpayer in its regular trade or business operations.
On this record, taxpayer had not met its burden to show that this gain was nonbusiness income. The only evidence presented by taxpayer, as to its normal business operations was the corporation’s articles of incorporation, its State and Federal income tax returns for the years in question, and corporate balance sheets. There is nothing in the parties’ stipulation of facts regarding the actual nature of taxpayer’s business. Taxpayer’s articles of incorporation are very general and state that the nature of the business is, among other things:
“(a) To acquire by purchase, subscription or otherwise and to own, hold, sell, negotiate, assign, dispose of, exchange, transfer, pledge, hypothecate or mortgage, guarantee, deal in and loan or borrow money upon, *** real and personal property of every kind, character and description whatsoever ***.”
Other provisions generally allow the corporation to deal in securities, loan money, and engage in any mercantile, manufacturing, or trading business. Its income tax returns reflect income from profits, from capital gains, from rents and from dividends and interest. The corporate balance sheets list assets including cash, certificates of deposits, accounts and notes receivable, inventories of saleable merchandise, stock investments, a hotel, and other property and equipment, including land and improvements.
The only facts before the hearing officer were, therefore, the articles of incorporation, the name of the corporation, tax returns and balance sheets, and information regarding the transactions at issue before him. This information is insufficient to support his finding that taxpayer’s “overall business character” was dealing “in real estate, both from the standpoint of management of improved properties and the development of condominiums.” The facts provided are not adequate for a determination of the actual nature of taxpayer’s business, which, from what is in the record, is apparently varied and diversified. Therefore, based on the broad nature of the taxpayer’s business shown by the evidence in the record, both the transactional and functional tests can be considered met. Taxpayer did not meet its burden to show that the gain from the sale of the Vero Beach property is nonbusiness income. The gain, therefore, was properly taxable in Illinois.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed as to the direct appeal and reversed as to the cross-appeal, and the Department’s decision is reinstated.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
STROUSE and LINDBERG, JJ., concur.
