THE CARLE FOUNDATION, an Illinois Not-for-Profit Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. CUNNINGHAM TOWNSHIP; DAN STEBBINS, in His Official Capacity as Cunningham Township Assessor; and THE CITY OF URBANA, Defendants-Appellants, and THE CHAMPAIGN COUNTY BOARD OF REVIEW; ELIZABETH BURGENER-PATTON; MARK WHITSITT; JOSEPH MEENTS; DANIEL J. WELCH; and THE COUNTY OF CHAMPAIGN, Separate Appellants, and THE DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE; BRIAN HAMER, in His Official Capacity as Director of the Department of Revenue; and DIANNE HAYS, Defendants.—THE CARLE FOUNDATION, an Illinois Not-for-Profit Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. THE DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE and BRIAN HAMER, Its Director, Defendants-Appellants, and THE CHAMPAIGN COUNTY BOARD OF REVIEW; MARK WHITSITT, LAURA SANDEFUR, and ELIZABETH BURGENER-PATTON, as Members of The Champaign County Board of Review; JOSEPH MEENTS, Champaign County Supervisor of Assessments; CUNNINGHAM TOWNSHIP; DAN STEBBINS, Cunningham Township Assessor; DANIEL J. WELCH, Champaign County Treasurer; THE CITY OF URBANA; URBANA SCHOOL DISTRICT 116; and THE URBANA PARK DISTRICT, Defendants.
Docket Nos. 4-14-0795, 4-14-0845 cons.
Appellate Court of Illinois, Fourth District
January 5, 2016
2016 IL App (4th) 140795
Appellate Court
Carle Foundation v. Cunningham Township, 2016 IL App (4th) 140795
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Champaign County, No. 8-L-202; the Hon. Charles McRae Leonhard, Judge, presiding.
Counsel on Appeal:
Frederic M. Grosser (argued), of Champaign, for appellants Cunningham Township, Dan Stebbins, and City of Urbana.
Lisa Madigan, Attorney General, of Chicago (Carolyn E. Shapiro, Solicitor General, and Carl J. Elitz (argued), Assistant Attorney General, of counsel), for appellants Department of Revenue and Brian Hamer.
Julia Rosenbaum Rietz, State’s Attorney, of Champaign (Joel D. Fletcher (argued), Assistant State’s Attorney, of counsel), for other appellants.
Steven F. Pflaum (argued), of Neal Gerber & Eisenberg LLP and Amy G. Doehring and Lisa Haidostian, both of McDermott Will & Emery LLP, both of Chicago, and William J. Brinkmann, of Thomas Mamer & Haughey, LLP, of Champaign, for appellee.
John M. Izzo, Kimberly M. Jannotta, and Eugene C. Edwards, all of Hauser Izzo, LLC, of Flossmoor, for amicus curiae.
Panel: JUSTICE APPLETON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Turner and Steigmann concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶ 1 Plaintiff, The Carle Foundation, brought this action to establish that four of its properties were exempt from real estate taxation. The trial court granted a partial summary judgment that
¶ 2 We conclude that because
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Four Parcels
¶ 3 Plaintiff owns four parcels of land in Urbana: 611 West Park Street, 503 North Coler Avenue, 607 North Orchard Street, and 809 West Park Street. Plaintiff’s affiliate, Carle Foundation Hospital, operates a hospital on two of these parcels. On the third parcel is a day care center, which serves the families of plaintiff’s employees (among others). On the fourth parcel is a power plant, which services these parcels.
B. The Reclassification of the Parcels From Exempt to Nonexempt
¶ 4 Before 2004, the four parcels were not taxed. They were considered to be exempt under
¶ 5 For 2004, however, the Cunningham township assessor began assessing the four parcels at their full value as nonexempt. She continued doing so through 2011.
C. Plaintiff Applies for the Restoration of the Exemptions for the Years 2004 and 2005
¶ 6 Plaintiff filed applications with the county board of review, asking the board to exempt the four parcels from taxation for the years 2004 and 2005. The board forwarded these applications to the Department of Revenue (Department), along with a recommendation of denial.
¶ 7 On February 23, 2007, the Department denied plaintiff’s applications for 2004 and 2005, whereupon plaintiff requested an administrative hearing.
D. Our Intervening Decision in Carle Foundation v. Department of Revenue
¶ 8 On December 13, 2007, plaintiff filed an action in the circuit court against the Department and various local governmental entities, seeking a declaratory judgment that, under
¶ 9 On March 3, 2009, the circuit court certified some questions for interlocutory appeal (see
¶ 10 On October 29, 2009, we held that, in cases in which the Department or a court of review had acted favorably on a comparable exemption claim for any other year,
E. Plaintiff Withdraws Its Applications for 2004 and 2005 and Enters Into an Anti-Preclusion Agreement With the Department
¶ 11 On August 18, 2010, when the applications for 2004 and 2005 were about to go to an administrative hearing, plaintiff informed the administrative law judge that it was withdrawing its applications for 2004 and 2005. Accordingly, the administrative hearing was canceled.
¶ 12 Despite plaintiff’s expressed desire to withdraw the applications for 2004 and 2005, the Department went ahead and issued plaintiff formal letters denying these applications.
¶ 13 Plaintiff never requested a rehearing.
F. Plaintiff Files Applications for 2006 to 2008 and Later Withdraws Those Applications, Too
¶ 14 As we said, plaintiff likewise filed, with the county board, applications to exempt the four parcels for the years 2006, 2007, and 2008. The board likewise recommended the denial of those applications and forwarded them to the Department for decision.
¶ 15 In March 2012, plaintiff informed the Department it was withdrawing its applications for 2006 to 2008. As of that time, the Department had not yet made an initial decision on those applications.
¶ 16 On March 29, 2012, despite plaintiff’s notification of withdrawal, the Department issued formal denials of the applications for 2006 to 2008. Plaintiff never requested an administrative hearing.
G. Plaintiff Filed No Applications for 2009 to 2011
¶ 17 Plaintiff filed with the board no application to exempt the four parcels from taxation for 2009, 2010, and 2011.
H. The Fourth Amended Complaint
¶ 18 Plaintiff claims, in its fourth amended complaint, that the four parcels should be exempt from real estate taxes during the assessment years 2004 to 2011 on the ground of charitable use.
¶ 19 The fourth amended complaint has 35 counts. If we were to organize them by the legal theories they advance, these counts would fall into four categories.
¶ 20 The first category would consist of a single count, count I. In this count, plaintiff alleges that preexisting exemptions of the four parcels never were validly discontinued. Sometime before 2004, the Department or its predecessor agency determined the four parcels to be exempt, and, in plaintiff’s view, the local taxing officials lacked the statutory authority to override the Department’s determination and end the exemptions.
¶ 21 The second category would consist of counts III through XXXIV (we have not forgotten about count II; we will come to it in a moment). In those counts, plaintiff alleges that if, contrary to plaintiff’s position in count I, the local taxing authorities had authority to return the four parcels to the tax rolls and “thereby force [plaintiff] to establish anew its entitlement to an exemption on those properties, de novo consideration of the exemption issue [would lead] to the conclusion that [plaintiff] has satisfied the legal criteria for an exemption for each of the parcels and tax years in question,” 2004 to 2011. Those “legal criteria,” according to counts III
¶ 22 The third category would consist of count II, which seeks a declaratory judgment “that Section 15-86 applies to any determination of [plaintiff’s] entitlement to exemptions for the Four Parcels for tax assessment years 2004 through 2011.”
¶ 23 The fourth and final category would consist of count XXXV, in which plaintiff alleges the breach of a settlement agreement from 2002. Allegedly, under this settlement agreement, plaintiff paid $775,000 to various local taxing bodies, including Cunningham Township and the City of Urbana, and, in return, the local taxing bodies promised to “refrain from taking any action to challenge [plaintiff’s] entitlement to charitable exemptions with respect to certain properties owned by [plaintiff], including the Four Parcels involved in this litigation.” Plaintiff accuses Cunningham Township and City of Urbana of breaking that promise.
I. Summary Judgment in Plaintiff’s Favor on Count II of the Fourth Amended Complaint
¶ 24 Plaintiff moved for a summary judgment on count II of its fourth amended complaint, the count seeking a declaratory judgment that the newly enacted
¶ 25 The trial court granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on count II. Later, on August 28, 2014, in a modified opinion, the court held that
¶ 26 In addition to the Department, two groups of defendants appeal. We will call the first group “the township defendants.” They consist of Cunningham Township; Dan Stebbins, in his official capacity as Cunningham township assessor; and the City of Urbana. We will call the second group “the county defendants.” And on the motion of the assistant State’s Attorney, we substitute one of these county defendants for another: Joseph Meents, the current supervisor of assessments for Champaign County, is substituted for Stan Jenkins, who previously held that office. The remaining county defendants are Champaign County; the Champaign County Board of Review; Dianne Hays, Elizabeth Burgener-Patton, and Mark Whitsett, in their official capacities as members of the Champaign County Board of Review; and Daniel J. Welch, in his official capacity as the Champaign County treasurer.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Our Subject-Matter Jurisdiction
¶ 27 The trial court granted plaintiff’s motion for a summary judgment on count II of the fourth amended complaint, and the court made a
¶ 29 As for whether the summary judgment on count II qualifies as a final judgment on a separate claim, In re Marriage of Best, 228 Ill. 2d 107 (2008), and In re Marriage of Leopando, 96 Ill. 2d 114 (1983), appear to be the most relevant cases—but the parties are not in unanimity as to the conclusion to draw from those cases. On the one hand, plaintiff and the township defendants believe we have jurisdiction under Best. On the other hand, the county defendants and the Department regard Best as distinguishable, and they believe that, under Leopando, we lack jurisdiction (although, for safety’s sake, the county defendants and the Department filed their own notices of appeal).
¶ 30 Let us take a look, then, at Best and Leopando to see which of those cases the present case most resembles.
¶ 31 In Best, Steven Best filed a petition for dissolution of marriage, and afterward he filed an amended motion for a declaratory judgment, in which he sought a ruling on the validity and meaning of a premarital agreement. Best, 228 Ill. 2d at 110. The trial court granted his motion for a declaratory judgment, ruling that (1) the premarital agreement was valid and enforceable and (2) a waiver of attorney fees, in section 19 of the premarital agreement, was inapplicable to custody proceedings. Id. The declaratory judgment included a
¶ 32 The first thing the appellate court did, upon receiving Steven Best’s appeal, was consider whether it had jurisdiction under
¶ 33 Having decided it had jurisdiction, the appellate court reversed the declaratory judgment because, in the appellate court’s opinion, the declaratory judgment had failed to “terminate the controversy[,] or some part thereof, giving rise to the proceeding,” as
¶ 34 The case then went to the supreme court, which disagreed that
¶ 35 For our purposes, though, the most important discussion in Best comes earlier. Before reaching the question of whether the declaratory judgment had terminated part of the controversy, the supreme court scrutinized the appellate court’s jurisdiction: the supreme court considered whether the appellate court was correct in its conclusion that the declaratory judgment was a final judgment on a separate claim—a prerequisite to jurisdiction under
¶ 37 The supreme court answered no in Leopando because, instead of resolving a separate claim, the custody order had resolved an issue within the claim for dissolution of the parties’ marriage. Id. at 119. The supreme court explained:
“A petition for dissolution advances a single claim; that is, a request for an order dissolving the parties’ marriage. The numerous other issues involved, such as custody, property disposition, and support are merely questions which are ancillary to the cause of action. [Citation.] They do not represent separate, unrelated claims; rather, they are separate issues relating to the same claim.” (Emphases in original.) Id.
¶ 38 Given the dichotomy, in Leopando, between a claim and an issue within a claim, it might have been easy to assume, in Best, that the validity and meaning of the premarital agreement were issues within the claim for dissolution of marriage—but the appellate court did not see it that way, and neither did the supreme court. See Best, 228 Ill. 2d at 113. The supreme court agreed with the appellate court that Leopando was distinguishable and that, unlike the custody ruling in Leopando, the declaratory judgment was a final judgment on a separate claim. Id. at 115.
¶ 39 According to the supreme court, Leopando was distinguishable for two reasons.
¶ 40 First, the trial court in Leopando awarded permanent custody to the father, whereas in Best the trial court merely issued a declaratory judgment without making any actual award. Id. at 114. In Leopando, custody was part of the claim for dissolution of marriage, and, consequently, by granting custody, the trial court adjudicated part of the same claim instead of entering a final judgment on a separate claim. By contrast, the validity and meaning of the premarital agreement in Best were not part of the claim for dissolution of marriage, and by holding the premarital agreement to be valid and by interpreting section 19 of the premarital agreement, the trial court merely decided some threshold legal issues without actually awarding any relief on the claim for dissolution of marriage. In its declaratory judgment, the court did not—and could not—award custody, for instance, or divide property or dissolve the marriage: all those things still had to be done. In fact, the trial court in Best could have issued the requested declaratory judgment without thereafter granting any of the relief the dissolution petition requested. Therefore, the supreme court reasoned in Best, the motion for a declaratory judgment was a separate claim. Id. at 115.
¶ 41 Second, the petitioner in Leopando had requested no relief outside that available under the
¶ 42 For those reasons, the supreme court concluded in Best:
“Under the facts and circumstances of this case, the request for dissolution of the parties’ marriage and the request for declaratory judgment on the validity and interpretation of the premarital agreement are not so closely related that they must be deemed part of a single claim for relief, as they were in Leopando. Thus, Leopando is distinguishable.” Id.
¶ 43 Following the lead of the supreme court in Best, we conclude that Leopando likewise is distinguishable from the present case. It is distinguishable for essentially the same two reasons.
¶ 44 First, by issuing a declaratory judgment that
¶ 45 Second, in the proceedings below, plaintiff “sought nondeclaratory relief” under the Code (
¶ 46 For those reasons, which come straight from Best, we find Leopando to be distinguishable, and we conclude that we have subject-matter jurisdiction over defendants’ appeals. Count II, on the one hand, and counts III through XXXIV, on the other hand, “are not so closely related that they must be deemed part of a single claim for relief.” Best, 228 Ill. 2d at 115. By granting the declaratory relief requested by count II, the trial court entered a final judgment on a separate claim. See id. In sum, all the ingredients of subject-matter jurisdiction are here: a
B. An Overview of the Administrative Procedures for Establishing and Maintaining an Exemption from Property Taxes
¶ 47 This is an action pursuant to
1. Establishing an Exemption for the First Time
¶ 48 Although the General Assembly has categorically exempted certain real estate from taxation (
¶ 49 The board will make a decision on the application for an exemption, but its decision will not be final (except as to homestead exemptions).
¶ 50 If the Department decides the property is exempt, “any taxes extended upon the unauthorized assessment shall be abated or, if paid, shall be refunded.”
¶ 51 When the Department makes a decision on the application for exemption forwarded by the board, “any party to the proceeding who feels aggrieved by the decision may file an application for hearing.”
¶ 52 Upon receiving an application for hearing, the Department will reconsider its exemption decision and will grant any party to the proceeding a hearing.
¶ 53 Within 30 days after the Department mails its notice of decision, any party to the proceeding may file with the Department a request for rehearing.
¶ 54 The action of the Department on an application for hearing will become final the later of (1) 30 days after the issuance of a notice of decision, if no request for rehearing is made or, (2) if a timely request for rehearing is made, upon the issuance of the denial of the request for rehearing or upon the issuance of a notice of final decision.
¶ 55 No action for judicial review of an exemption decision by the Department (see
¶ 56 The judicial review will be in accordance with the
2. Maintaining an Exemption After It Is Granted
¶ 57 After an exemption has been granted, all property owners, except the United States and those with certain types of homestead exemptions, must file a certificate of status with the county assessor or the supervisor of assessments on or before January 31 of each year.
C. An Introduction to Section 15-86
¶ 58 In its declaratory judgment, which defendants have appealed, the trial court held that
¶ 59
¶ 60 The preamble to
“§ 15-65. Charitable purposes. All property of the following is exempt when actually and exclusively used for charitable or beneficent purposes, and not leased or otherwise used with a view to profit:
(a) Institutions of public charity.” (Emphasis added.)
¶ 61 Previously, under
¶ 62 In addition to establishing this “new category of ownership for [the] charitable property tax exemption,” the legislature intended, in
¶ 63 Nothing could be clearer than
¶ 64 Thus,
¶ 65 What “services and activities” count as charity, to be measured against the estimated property tax liability?
¶ 66 The “hospital applicant” will list all these services and activities, along with their respective dollar values, on an application form provided by the Department, and the “hospital applicant” will attach all the necessary, supporting records to its application.
D. Whether Section 15-86 Applies to an Action Pursuant to Section 23-25(e)
¶ 67 It is pretty clear that whenever a hospital owner seeks, “for the first time,” an exemption pursuant to
¶ 68 So, the legislature envisions that, in the first instance, the board and then the Department will apply
¶ 69 Because
¶ 70 How can this pervasively administrative statute,
“(e) The limitation in this Section shall not apply to court proceedings to establish an exemption for any specific assessment year, provided that the plaintiff or its predecessor in interest in the property has established an exemption for any subsequent or prior assessment year on grounds comparable to those alleged in the court proceedings. For purposes of this subsection, the exemption for a subsequent or prior year must have been determined under
Section 8-35 [(35 ILCS 200/8-35 (West 2014))] or a prior similar law by the Department or a predecessor agency, or underSection 8-40 [(35 ILCS 200/8-40 (West 2014))] . Court proceedings permitted by this subsection may be initiated while proceedings for the subsequent or prior year underSection 16-70 [(35 ILCS 200/16-70 (West 2014))] ,16-130 [(35 ILCS 200/16-130 (West 2014))] ,8-35 , or8-40 are still pending, but judgment shall not be entered until the proceedings under Section 8-35 or 8-40 have terminated.”Id.
¶ 71 The phrase at the beginning of the quoted passage—“The limitation in this Section”—means the requirement of obtaining a final decision by the Department as to the assessment year in question before filing an action in the circuit court. See
¶ 72 “[T]he exemption for a subsequent or prior year must have been determined under
¶ 73 Thus, as to the subject property,
¶ 74 Plaintiff seems to take the view that the favorable decision serves merely as an admission ticket into the circuit court and that once the taxpayer is admitted, the ticket is forgotten and the court applies
¶ 75 We can think of a different interpretation of
¶ 76 In our de novo review (Paris, 179 Ill. 2d at 177-78), we favor this interpretation of
¶ 77 Here, then, is the procedure the legislature must have contemplated. In an action pursuant to
¶ 78 Unless the two sets of facts are materially different or unless the Department convinces the circuit court that the exemption for the subsequent or prior assessment year actually was unlawful (see Brown’s Furniture, Inc. v. Wagner, 171 Ill. 2d 410, 432 (1996) (“[T]his court has refused to estop the State from reexamining a taxpayer’s liability even when returns for the relevant tax period have been filed and approved.”); Austin Liquor Mart, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 51 Ill. 2d 1, 4 (1972) (“It is firmly established that where the public revenues are involved, public policy ordinarily forbids the application of estoppel to the State.”)), logic would likewise require an exemption for the assessment year in question.
¶ 79 Now that we understand how
¶ 80 But what if the assessment year in question and a subsequent assessment year to which a comparison is being made are on different sides of the effective date of
¶ 81 It would seem, then, that, in this proceeding pursuant to
¶ 82 Assessment year 2012 was subject to
“24. Following the passage of
P.A. 97-688 in 2012, [plaintiff] filedSection 15-5 applications seeking exemptions for the Four Parcels and other *** properties
[belonging to plaintiff], pursuant to the hospital property tax exemption contained in
Section 15-86 , for the 2012 tax year. A true and correct copy of the Certificates of Non-homestead exemption for the Four Parcels issued to [plaintiff] by the [Department] for the tax year 2012 is attached as Group Exhibit H.”
¶ 83 So, after the passage of
¶ 84 It depends on whether the legislature intended
E. The Retroactivity of Section 15-86
¶ 85 At the outset, we should be clear what we mean by the retroactive application of
¶ 86 Did the legislature intend
¶ 87 Section 90 of
“Section 90. Applicability. The changes made by this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly to the Property Tax Code, the Illinois Income Tax Act, the Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, and the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act shall apply to: (1) all decisions by the Department on or after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly regarding entitlement or continued entitlement by hospitals, hospital owners, hospital affiliates, or hospital systems to charitable property tax exemptions; (2) all applications for property tax exemption filed by hospitals, hospital owners, hospital affiliates, or hospital systems on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly; (3) all applications for property tax exemption filed by hospitals, hospital owners, hospital affiliates, or hospital systems that have either not been decided by the Department before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, or for which any such Department decisions are not final and non-appealable as of that date ***.” Pub. Act 97-688, art. 99, § 90(1), (2), (3) (eff. June 14, 2012) (codified as
35 ILCS 128/1-90(1), (2), (3) (West 2014) ).
¶ 88 It is clear from section 90 of
¶ 89 Let us begin with subsection (1) (Pub. Act 97-688, art. 99, § 90(1) (eff. June 14, 2012) (codified as
¶ 90 Now let us look at subsection (2) (Pub. Act 97-688, art. 99, § 90(2) (eff. June 14, 2012) (codified as
¶ 91 Finally, let us look at subsection (3) (Pub. Act 97-688, art. 99, § 90(3) (eff. June 14, 2012) (codified as
¶ 92 We conclude, then, that the legislature “plainly” intended
¶ 93 The county defendants, perhaps anticipating that conclusion, argue it is untenable because the fourth amended complaint is not, in the words of sections 90(2) and (3) (Pub. Act 97-688, art. 99, § 90 (eff. June 14, 2012)), an “application[ ] for property tax exemption” (cf.
¶ 95 Understandably, the county defendants are concerned about open-ended retroactivity. They point out that “[i]f a taxpayer can raise an exemption claim long after the [equalized assessed valuation] for a given year has been certified to the Department, there is no way for taxing districts to recoup the lost taxes: there is no statutory authority for the assessor to go back to prior years and collect additional taxes,” to make up for the exemption that a court has retroactively granted. But we do not know how else to interpret the phrase “any subsequent *** assessment year” in
F. Is Section 15-86 Constitutional?
1. The Unavoidability of This Constitutional Question
¶ 96 The township defendants argue that
¶ 97 We do not see how we can avoid assessing the constitutionality of
2. An Introduction to Article IX, Section 6
¶ 98
“The General Assembly by law may exempt from taxation only the property of the State, units of local government and school districts and property used exclusively for agricultural and horticultural societies, and for school, religious, cemetery and
charitable purposes. The General Assembly by law may grant homestead exemptions or rent credits.”
Ill. Const. 1970, art. IX, § 6 .
¶ 99 In this appeal, we are concerned with the first sentence of
¶ 100 First, it is not self-executing. If there is to be any exemption from property taxes, the General Assembly must so provide by statutory law—consistently, though, with
¶ 101 Second, the only owners of real estate that can be exempt from property taxes on the basis of their identity, regardless of how they use the real estate, are “the State, units of local government[,] and school districts.” Id. All other exemptions—including exemptions for hospitals—must be based on the “exclusive[ ]” “use[ ]” of the real estate for any of the listed purposes, namely, “agricultural and horticultural societies, and for school, religious, cemetery[,] and charitable purposes.” (Emphasis added.) Id.
¶ 102 Third, for the past 106 years, the supreme court has interpreted “exclusive” use as “primary” use. Chicago Bar Ass’n v. Department of Revenue, 163 Ill. 2d 290, 300 (1994); Children’s Development Center, Inc. v. Olson, 52 Ill. 2d 332, 336 (1972); Illinois Institute of Technology v. Skinner, 49 Ill. 2d 59, 65-66 (1971); MacMurray College v. Wright, 38 Ill. 2d 272, 278 (1967); City of Mattoon v. Graham, 386 Ill. 180, 185 (1944); People ex rel. Fix v. Trustees of Northwestern College, 322 Ill. 120, 125 (1926); First Congregational Church of De Kalb v. Board of Review, 254 Ill. 220, 224 (1912); People ex rel. Thompson v. First Congregational Church of Oak Park, 232 Ill. 158, 164 (1908). (
¶ 103 It could strike an ordinary reader as counterintuitive that “exclusively,” in
¶ 104 Taking a hard line, though, on the meaning of “exclusively” would cause any nonexempt use of the property, however trivial and fleeting, to disqualify the property from an exemption—because “exclusively,” if one wanted to be strict and pedantic, means 100%, not 99.99%. To the supreme court, it seemed implausible that the ratifiers intended such a draconian, unforgiving standard. It seemed implausible that they intended a church, for example, to lose its exemption, as property used exclusively for religious purposes, merely because the elders held a business meeting there or because a sexton lived in the furnace room. First Congregational Church of Oak Park, 232 Ill. at 164. (Since First Congregational Church of Oak Park, the supreme court has taken a more expansive view of what constitutes use for an exempt purpose. McKenzie v. Johnson, 98 Ill. 2d 87, 98-99 (1983).) If “exclusively” meant “solely,” in the absolute sense of 100%, a church would have to forfeit its exemption if one night it hosted a chamber music concert. Likewise, a hospital that provided nothing but charity care would have to forfeit its exemption if it allowed a vending machine on the premises or if it allowed a nurse, during lunch break, to sell Little League popcorn to fellow employees. So, in a spirit of reasonableness, the supreme court somewhat softened the standard to “primary” use.
¶ 105 This standard of “primary” use might seem to suggest that if a building were used 51% of the time for religious purposes and the remaining 49% of the time as a nightclub, it would qualify for an exemption. But that apparently is not what the supreme court means. The nonexempt use has to be “merely incidental” (Skinner, 49 Ill. 2d at 66); that is, it cannot be a “major” use. The New Oxford American Dictionary 859 (2001) (definition of “incidental”); see Streeterville Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 186 Ill. 2d 534, 536-37 (1999) (“In the instant case, Streeterville concedes that the 26% nonexempt use of the parking facility cannot qualify as merely incidental.”). Any nonexempt use has to be trivial or de minimis; a reasonable reader would have to give at least that much rigor to the constitutional phrase “used exclusively for [exempt] purposes.” (Emphasis added.)
3. The Township Defendants’ Argument That Section 15-86 Is Facially Unconstitutional in That It Bestows a Charitable Exemption Without Requiring an Exclusively Charitable Use of the Property
¶ 106 The township defendants argue that
¶ 107 For two reasons, plaintiff disagrees with the township defendant’s argument.
¶ 108 First, plaintiff argues that
¶ 109 Second, plaintiff argues that, regardless of whether
a. Construing Section 15-86 So as To Make It Constitutional, Insomuch as Such a Construction Would Be Reasonably Defensible
¶ 111 In our de novo review of the constitutionality of
¶ 112 This rule of construction is not a license to rewrite
¶ 113 According to plaintiff, “[s]ection 15-86 should be interpreted, consistent with prevailing case law, to provide a description or illustration of properties owned by not-for-profit hospital-related entities that may be entitled to exemption, but issuance of an exemption remains subject to compliance with the charitable use requirement.” The “prevailing case law” that plaintiff has in mind is Chicago Bar Ass’n and McKenzie. Unlike
¶ 114 The statute at issue in Chicago Bar Ass’n was section 19.1 of the Revenue Act of 1939 (
¶ 115 Similarly, in McKenzie, the statute established an exemption for “ ‘property used exclusively for religious purposes,’ ” and then, in an “ ‘including’ ” clause, it listed examples of “ ‘such property.’ ” McKenzie, 98 Ill. 2d at 94 (quoting
¶ 116 Because
¶ 117
¶ 118 This statutory standard for a charitable exemption conflicts with
¶ 119 Not only does
b. The No-Set-of-Circumstances Test
¶ 120 A party challenging the constitutionality of a statute can contend either that the statute is unconstitutional on its face or that the statute is unconstitutional as applied to the particular context in which the party acted or proposed to act. Lamar Whiteco Outdoor Corp. v. City of West Chicago, 355 Ill. App. 3d 352, 365 (2005). The township defendants challenge the facial constitutionality of
¶ 121 Our supreme court has said this about facial unconstitutionality:
“It is especially difficult to successfully mount a facial challenge to a statute. The fact that a statute may operate invalidly under some circumstances is insufficient to establish facial invalidity; a statute is facially unconstitutional only if ‘no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid.’ (Emphasis added.) In re C.E., 161 Ill. 2d 200, 210-11 (1994), quoting United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745 (1987). Thus, so long as there exists a situation in which a statute could be validly applied, a facial challenge must fail.” Hill v. Cowan, 202 Ill. 2d 151, 157 (2002).
¶ 122 The no-set-of-circumstances test seems problematic to us for three reasons, which we will discuss under the following headings.
(1) The Supreme Court of the United States Apparently Has Never Used the Test, and in Fact Has Backpedaled From It
¶ 123 Hill poses the question of whether any “set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid” or whether “there exists a situation in which [the] statute could be validly applied.” (Emphases added and internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. at 157. And yet surely, when a party contends that a statute is unconstitutional on its face, Hill does not expect the court to perform an extrajudicial investigation to find out if some alternative set of circumstances empirically “exists.” Id. Rather, Hill must mean “hypothetically exists”: the court should try to hypothesize an alternative set of circumstances, or imagine a different “situation,” in which the statute would be constitutionally valid. Id.
¶ 124 One problem with this speculative approach is that the originator of the no-set-of-circumstances test, the Supreme Court of the United States (see United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745 (1987)), has more recently stated: “In determining whether a law is facially invalid, we must be careful not to go beyond the statute’s facial requirements and speculate about ‘hypothetical’ or ‘imaginary’ cases.” Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party, 552 U.S. 442, 449-50 (2008). This seems another way of saying that
(2) It Is Unclear What the Phrase “Validly Applied” Means
¶ 125 Hill says a statute is facially unconstitutional only if no circumstances could be hypothesized in which the statute “would be valid” or “could be validly applied.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Hill, 202 Ill. 2d at 157. We are unclear what the phrase “validly applied” means in this context.
¶ 126 To explain our uncertainty, we invite the reader to assume the existence of an Illinois statute that provides: “A charitable exemption shall be granted to every parcel of real estate that has an odd-numbered street address.” Pursuant to the no-set-of-circumstances test, we can easily hypothesize that, somewhere in Illinois, there exists a parcel of real estate used exclusively for charitable purposes—a food bank, for instance—that has an odd-numbered street address. Could the statute be “validly applied” to this hypothetical food bank? Id.
¶ 127 Well, yes and no. It depends on what you mean by “validly applied.” More precisely, it depends on what part of the statute you are applying. The part of the statute reading “[a] charitable exemption shall be granted” could be validly (constitutionally) applied to the food bank, because the food bank is used exclusively for charitable purposes, in satisfaction of
¶ 128 This illustration we have come up with might at first seem far-fetched, but actually, as far as
¶ 129 If the legislature wished, it could provide that even though property is used exclusively for charitable purposes, the property shall be exempt from taxation only if, additionally, the value of the charitable services equals or exceeds the estimated property tax liability—because, again,
¶ 130 Such, though, is the import of
(3) The No-Set-of-Circumstances Test Turns the Discussion Away From the Statutory Text, Whereas, Seemingly, When the Facial Constitutionality of a Statute Is Challenged, the Discussion Should Be All About the Statutory Text
¶ 131 One of the drawbacks of the no-set-of-circumstances test is that it “completely divorces review of the constitutionality of a statute from the terms of the statute itself, and instead improperly requires a court to engage in hypothetical musings about potentially valid applications of the statute.” (Emphasis in original.) Doe, 667 F.3d at 1123. The discussion gets diverted to the subject of the hypothetical food bank (to return to our illustration) when the discussion should be about the undeniably unconstitutional statutory provision that would award a charitable exemption merely on the basis of having an odd-numbered street address (or merely on the basis of equaling or exceeding the estimated property tax liability).
¶ 132 Even so, our supreme court, in conformance with Salerno, has prescribed the no-set-of-circumstances test for facial challenges to the constitutionality of statutes (One 1998 GMC, 2011 IL 110236, ¶ 20), and therefore our duty, as an inferior court, is to apply the no-set-of-circumstances test to determine whether a statute is facially unconstitutional—even though we have difficulty making sense of the test so as to even be able to apply it. But we will do our best.
¶ 133 The crucial provision in
¶ 134 If you understand “validly applied” in a result-oriented way, yes,
¶ 135 By this reasoning, though, the legislature could have passed a statute providing simply that “every hospital applicant shall be granted a charitable exemption,” and because it would be possible to hypothesize at least one hospital applicant that used its property exclusively for charitable purposes, a challenge to the facial constitutionality of the statute likewise would fail. But denying the facial unconstitutionality of such a statute would be absurd. The result-oriented approach cannot be right.
¶ 136 It would make more sense to say that an unconstitutional criterion cannot be “validly applied” to any hospital applicant and that by disregarding the unconstitutional criterion, we would effectively be deleting an essential part of the statute instead of taking the statute as it is. Hill, 202 Ill. 2d at 157. A statute granting a charitable exemption to all hospital applicants cannot be “validly applied” even to a hospital applicant that uses its property exclusively for charitable purposes, because the statute grants an exemption on the basis of an unconstitutional criterion: being a hospital applicant. A “law” purporting to grant a charitable exemption has to contain the criterion that
¶ 137 Measured against the terms of
III. CONCLUSION
¶ 138 For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court’s judgment, and we remand this case for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
JAMES A. APPLETON
JUSTICE
