In re Marriage of Miller ( 2007 )


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  •                 Docket Nos. 104022, 104035 cons.
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT
    OF
    THE STATE OF ILLINOIS
    In re MARRIAGE OF LENORA ANN MILLER, Appellant, and
    HAROLD E. MILLER (H.E. Miller, Sr., Appellee; Lisa Madigan,
    Attorney General, Appellant).
    Opinion filed November 29, 2007.
    JUSTICE FITZGERALD delivered the judgment of the court,
    with opinion.
    Chief Justice Thomas and Justices Freeman, Kilbride, Garman,
    Karmeier, and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    At issue in this appeal is whether the penalty provision contained
    in section 35(a) of the Income Withholding for Support Act
    (Withholding Act) (750 ILCS 28/35 (West 2004)), as applied to an
    employer who knowingly failed to turn over child support payments
    withheld from his employee’s wages in a timely manner, violates the
    employer’s substantive due process rights. The circuit court of Cook
    County rejected the employer’s constitutional challenge and applied
    the statutory $100-per-day penalty, entering judgment against the
    employer in the amount of $1,172,100. The appellate court reversed
    the judgment of the circuit court, holding that the statutory penalty,
    as applied in this case, was unconstitutionally severe. 
    369 Ill. App. 3d 46
    , 51.
    We reverse the judgment of the appellate court and affirm the
    judgment of the circuit court.
    BACKGROUND
    On May 1, 2001, the circuit court of Cook County entered a
    judgment dissolving the marriage of Lenora Ann Miller and Harold E.
    Miller. The judgment incorporated the parties’ marital settlement
    agreement under which Lenora was granted custody of the couple’s
    only child and Harold was required to pay child support. The support
    order, entered the same day, set child support in the amount of $82
    per week. In accordance with the support order, a “Notice to
    Withhold Income” issued immediately to Harold’s employer–his
    father, H.E. Miller, Sr., an architect. The notice, which was delivered
    by certified mail to Miller on May 8, 2001, advised Miller that he was
    required by law to deduct $82 from Harold’s weekly income and
    forward the same, within seven business days of the pay date, to the
    State Disbursement Unit (SDU) in Wheaton, Illinois. The reverse side
    of the notice contained additional information in several numbered
    paragraphs. Relevant here is paragraph 6:
    “LIABILITY: If you fail to withhold income as the
    NOTICE directs, you are liable for both the accumulated
    amount you should have wit hheld fr om the
    employee’s/obligor’s income and any other penalties set by
    State law. You may be found liable for the total amount which
    you fail to withhold or pay over and fines up to $100.00 per
    day for each day after the 7 day grace period.”
    Although Miller withheld the required support from Harold’s
    wages, Miller did not timely forward the same to the SDU. Thus, on
    October 12, 2001, Lenora’s attorney sent a letter to Miller regarding
    19 missing support payments totaling $1,558. The letter reminded
    Miller of the statutory penalty for late payments, quoting the relevant
    statutory provision, and further stated, “While it is not the intent of my
    client to pursue penalties at this time, she does require this money to
    live. Therefore, timely payments are mandatory. I must require that
    you bring the payments current by way of immediate payment of
    -2-
    $1,558.00 to Lenore [sic] Miller.” Miller eventually turned over the
    missing payments, but failed to stay current.
    On February 28, 2002, Lenora filed a motion in the circuit court
    seeking to add Miller as a third-party defendant in the dissolution of
    marriage proceeding. The circuit court granted the motion on March
    28, 2002, and on the same date, Lenora filed a complaint against
    Miller for unpaid child support and statutory penalties. According to
    the complaint, Miller had failed to pay over to the SDU 25 weeks of
    child support totaling $2,050. Miller was personally served the
    complaint on April 12, 2002, but failed to file an answer or otherwise
    plead. Sixteen months later, on Lenora’s motion, the circuit court
    found Miller in default and set the matter for prove-up on August 28,
    2003. On that date, Miller’s counsel filed his appearance. The circuit
    court allowed Miller 30 days to answer the complaint. No answer was
    filed.
    The parties next appeared in court on November 5, 2003. The
    circuit court granted Miller leave to file his answer on before January
    7, 2004. The circuit court also ordered Miller “to remain current in his
    payment of child support withholding.” Miller did not file an answer
    and did not bring the child support payments up to date.
    On January 16, 2004, Lenora filed a petition for rule to show
    cause. Lenora alleged that Miller, in violation of the court’s order of
    November 5, 2003, failed and refused to submit child support
    withholding payments to the SDU for the 12-week period beginning
    October 27, 2003. Lenora sought payment of the arrearage ($984), as
    well as statutory penalties ($39,500).
    On January 29, 2004, the circuit court granted Miller a 60-day
    extension to March 30, 2004, to answer Lenora’s complaint and again
    ordered Miller to remain current with child support withholding
    payments.
    Miller filed his answer on April 1, 2004, two years after Lenora
    had filed her complaint. In his answer, Miller admitted that he
    withheld $82 per week from Harold’s paycheck, and that he “fell
    behind on sending in the child support payments from the very
    beginning in May, 2001.” Although Miller claimed, in his answer, that
    he was then current with child support payments, an agreed stipulation
    -3-
    later entered by the parties demonstrates that this was not the case and
    that Miller was actually 10 weeks in arrears.
    In his answer, Miller raised two affirmative defenses. He argued
    first that Lenora was guilty of laches in enforcing the statutory
    penalties, i.e., that she was dilatory in filing her complaint. Miller also
    claimed that the October 12, 2001, letter from Lenora’s counsel,
    stating that it was not his client’s intention to pursue penalties at that
    time, “lulled” him into a “sense of security.” Miller stated that, in
    reliance on that letter, he continued to make lump-sum payments
    rather than weekly payments, believing that Lenora would never
    attempt to enforce any statutory penalties against him.1
    As his second affirmative defense, Miller argued that the
    Withholding Act was unconstitutional as applied to him, depriving him
    of his due process rights under both the federal and state constitutions
    (U.S. Const., amend. XIV; Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, §2). Miller claimed
    the statute was confiscatory because the penalty is not commensurate
    with the offense and not related in any way to the dollar amounts
    withheld for child support. Miller noted that, as of March 31, 2004,
    the total support withheld was $12,382, but that Lenora was
    attempting to collect a penalty from him of over $1 million.
    Lenora moved to strike Miller’s affirmative defenses. As to the
    laches defense, Lenora argued that no reasonable person would have
    believed the October 12, 2001, letter indicated an intent never to seek
    statutory penalties, but that any misapprehension would have
    dissolved when Miller was served with the summons and complaint.
    Lenora noted that over $700,000 of the penalties she sought accrued
    after service of summons, and that additional penalties accrued even
    after the circuit court ordered Miller to remain current. Lenora also
    argued that she diligently pursued her claim against Miller, filing her
    complaint less than 11 months after the original child support order
    was entered. Finally, Lenora argued that the court should consider the
    family relationship–Miller is Lenora’s former father-in-law, and the
    1
    To the extent Miller’s answer suggests that he made regular lump-sum
    payments, the record indicates otherwise. Miller’s lump-sum payments were
    sporadic, covering periods as short as 4 weeks and as long as 40 weeks.
    -4-
    child support withholding is for the support of Miller’s own
    granddaughter–and the consequent hesitation to litigate.
    As to Miller’s constitutional challenge to the statute, Lenora
    argued that the $100-per-day penalty bears a reasonable relationship
    to a proper legislative purpose and is not harsh because it applies only
    to knowing violations of the statute. Lenora also argued that the
    burden to Miller under the statute was slight, and the magnitude of the
    penalty was the result solely of Miller’s own outrageous and
    indefensible conduct.
    Prior to resolution of Lenora’s motion to strike, Lenora filed a
    second petition for rule to show cause. Lenora claimed that, in
    disregard of the court’s orders of November 5, 2003, and January 29,
    2004, Miller failed to remit any child support withholding for the
    period beginning May 3, 2004, to the date of her petition, July 15,
    2004.
    On August 12, 2004, the circuit court granted Lenora’s motion to
    strike Miller’s affirmative defense challenging the constitutionality of
    the statute. The circuit court also struck Miller’s laches defense, but
    only for the period following the filing of Lenora’s complaint.
    Thereafter, the matter was continued from time to time for prove-up
    of the statutory penalties claimed by Lenora.
    On October 4, 2004, Lenora and Miller filed an agreed stipulation
    of facts. The parties stipulated that for the period from April 15, 2002
    (after Miller was served with the complaint), to October 4, 2004, the
    amount of penalties which accrued to Miller due to his delinquency in
    forwarding withheld child support payments to the SDU was
    $1,172,100. The parties also stipulated to the accuracy of an attached
    spreadsheet which details the date each withholding payment was due;
    whether the payment was mailed to the SDU and, if so, the date of
    mailing; and the number of days, if any, each payment was overdue.
    The spreadsheet indicates that for the 128 weeks at issue, Miller
    mailed the withheld child support in a timely fashion on only three
    occasions, and that, as of October 4, 2004, Miller was 15 weeks in
    arrears. The spreadsheet also indicates that payments were mailed
    anywhere from a day late to as many as 299 days late.
    On October 26, 2004, the circuit court entered judgment in favor
    of Lenora and against Miller in the stipulated penalty amount of
    -5-
    $1,172,100 based on Miller’s “knowing failure to forward withheld
    child support payments.” The circuit court denied Miller’s motion for
    rehearing and to vacate the judgment. Miller appealed.
    The appellate court, with dissent, reversed the judgment of the
    circuit court. 
    369 Ill. App. 3d 46
    . The majority acknowledged that the
    $100-per-day penalty, on its face, rationally advances the state’s
    legitimate interest in encouraging the prompt payment of child
    support, but nonetheless concluded that the penalty imposed against
    Miller violated his substantive due process rights. The appellate court
    explained that the gross disparity between the judgment here and the
    $25,000 maximum fine for a parent’s willful failure to pay child
    support (see 750 ILCS 16/15(d) (West 2004)) demonstrates that the
    $1,172,100 penalty is wholly disproportionate to Miller’s offense and
    obviously 
    unreasonable. 369 Ill. App. 3d at 51
    . Although the appellate
    court reversed the circuit court judgment, the appellate court
    recognized that Miller’s conduct was “hardly exemplary” and justified
    a 
    penalty. 369 Ill. App. 3d at 51
    . Thus, the appellate court remanded
    the matter to the circuit court with directions to hold a hearing to
    determine an appropriate 
    penalty. 369 Ill. App. 3d at 51
    . The appellate
    court gave no further direction to the circuit court as to how the
    penalty should be computed.
    The dissenting justice agreed that the penalty was harsh, but noted
    that “Miller invited it by his indifference to his legal obligations. He
    virtually created his own due process 
    issue.” 369 Ill. App. 3d at 54
    (Wolfson, P.J., dissenting). The dissenting justice also disagreed that
    the circuit court could, under the statute, fashion a different 
    penalty. 369 Ill. App. 3d at 53
    (Wolfson, P.J., dissenting).
    We allowed the Attorney General of Illinois leave to intervene,
    and allowed the petitions for leave to appeal filed by Lenora and the
    Attorney General (collectively, petitioners). 210 Ill. 2d R. 317. Their
    petitions have been consolidated for review.
    ANALYSIS
    Section 35(a) of the Withholding Act (750 ILCS 28/35(a) (West
    2004)) sets forth the obligations of employers, like Miller, who have
    been served with an income-withholding notice, and states in relevant
    part:
    -6-
    “It shall be the duty of any payor who has been served
    with an income withholding notice to deduct and pay over
    income as provided in this Section. The payor shall deduct the
    amount designated in the income withholding notice, ***
    beginning no later than the next payment of income which is
    payable or creditable to the obligor that occurs 14 days
    following the date the income withholding notice was mailed
    ***. The payor shall pay the amount withheld to the State
    Disbursement Unit within 7 business days after the date the
    amount would (but for the duty to withhold income) have
    been paid or credited to the obligor. If the payor knowingly
    fails to withhold the amount designated in the income
    withholding notice or to pay any amount withheld to the State
    Disbursement Unit within 7 business days after the date the
    amount would have been paid or credited to the obligor, then
    the payor shall pay a penalty of $100 for each day that the
    amount designated in the income withholding notice (whether
    or not withheld by the payor) is not paid to the State
    Disbursement Unit after the period of 7 business days has
    expired. The failure of a payor, on more than one occasion, to
    pay amounts withheld to the State Disbursement Unit within
    7 business days after the date the amount would have been
    paid or credited to the obligor creates a presumption that the
    payor knowingly failed to pay over the amounts. This penalty
    may be collected in a civil action which may be brought
    against the payor in favor of the obligee or public office. ***
    For purposes of this Act, a withheld amount shall be
    considered paid by a payor on the date it is mailed by the
    payor ***.” (Emphasis added.) 750 ILCS 28/35(a) (West
    2004).
    The $100-per-day penalty is assessed for each violation of the
    Withholding Act. “A separate violation occurs each time an employer
    knowingly fails to remit an amount that it has withheld from an
    employee’s paycheck.” Grams v. Autozone, Inc., 
    319 Ill. App. 3d 567
    ,
    571 (2001). To illustrate: If an employee is paid weekly, and the
    employer fails to remit child support withheld from the employee’s
    paycheck in week one, the employer is subject to a penalty at the rate
    of $100 per day. If the employer also fails to remit the next support
    -7-
    payment withheld in week two, and the first payment is still
    outstanding, the employer is subject to two $100 penalties each day
    that both payments remain outstanding. See 
    Grams, 319 Ill. App. 3d at 571
    . Here, because Miller was frequently several weeks in arrears,
    he was subject to numerous $100 penalties on any given day–one for
    each support payment he had failed to remit. This explains how, over
    the course of 2½ years, Miller was able to accumulate 11,721
    penalties, ultimately resulting in a judgment against him in the amount
    of $1,172,100.
    Petitioners argue that, notwithstanding the size of the judgment,
    application of the statutory penalty to Miller does not violate his due
    process rights. Petitioners note that Miller alone was responsible for
    the extent of any penalties, and maintain that the judgment was
    reasonable and proportional to Miller’s conduct. Petitioners further
    argue that the appellate court erred by focusing on the judgment
    amount, rather than the daily penalty amount of $100, and that the
    appellate court judgment undermines the purpose of the statutory
    penalty–to ensure timely payment of child support obligations.
    Our analysis is guided by the following well-settled principles. All
    statutes carry a strong presumption of constitutionality. In re Rodney
    H., 
    223 Ill. 2d 510
    , 516 (2006); Wickham v. Byrne, 
    199 Ill. 2d 309
    ,
    316 (2002). Accordingly, this court will uphold a statute if reasonably
    possible to do so (Allen v. Woodfield Chevrolet, Inc., 
    208 Ill. 2d 12
    ,
    21 (2003); 
    Wickham, 199 Ill. 2d at 316
    ), and will “resolve all doubts
    in favor of constitutional validity” (People ex rel. Sheppard v. Money,
    
    124 Ill. 2d 265
    , 272 (1988)). The party challenging the statute–here,
    Miller–bears the burden of rebutting the presumption by clearly
    demonstrating the statute’s constitutional infirmity. Rodney 
    H., 223 Ill. 2d at 516
    ; 
    Allen, 208 Ill. 2d at 21
    . Whether a statute is
    unconstitutional is a question of law, and thus our review proceeds de
    novo. Rodney 
    H., 223 Ill. 2d at 516
    ; 
    Allen, 208 Ill. 2d at 21
    .
    Preliminarily, we note that although Miller claimed a violation of
    his due process rights under both the federal and state constitutions,
    he advanced no argument and cited no authority for the proposition
    that our state due process clause provides him greater protection than
    its federal counterpart. The appellate court did not distinguish the
    federal due process clause and the state due process clause in its
    
    opinion. 369 Ill. App. 3d at 50-51
    . Because we discern no reason to
    -8-
    construe our due process clause differently than the federal due
    process clause on the specific issue before us, we will treat the two
    clauses as coextensive and will be guided by federal precedent. See
    People v. Molnar, 
    222 Ill. 2d 495
    , 510 (2006); Lewis E. v. Spagnolo,
    
    186 Ill. 2d 198
    , 226-27 (1999).
    No question exists that our General Assembly possesses the
    authority to establish a civil penalty for an employer’s violation of the
    Withholding Act. See Missouri Pacific Ry. Co. v. Humes, 
    115 U.S. 512
    , 523, 
    29 L. Ed. 463
    , 466, 
    6 S. Ct. 110
    , 114 (1885) (“The power
    of the State to impose fines and penalties for a violation of its
    statutory requirements is coeval with government”); Knox County ex
    rel. Masterson v. The Highlands, L.L.C., 
    188 Ill. 2d 546
    , 559 (1999)
    (pursuant to its police power, “ ‘the legislature has broad discretion
    to determine not only what the public interest and welfare require, but
    to determine the measures needed to secure such interest’ ”), quoting
    Chicago National League Ball Club, Inc. v. Thompson, 
    108 Ill. 2d 357
    , 364 (1985); People v. P.H., 
    145 Ill. 2d 209
    , 233 (1991) (“Under
    the State’s police power, the legislature has discretion to prescribe
    penalties for defined offenses”); 
    19 Ill. L
    . & Prac. Fines, Forfeitures,
    & Penalties §3, at 410 (1991) (“The legislature has the authority to
    set the nature and extent of penalties”).
    The legislature’s authority to set a statutory penalty is, however,
    limited by the requirements of due process. St. Louis, Iron Mountain,
    & Southern Ry. Co. v. Williams, 
    251 U.S. 63
    , 66, 
    64 L. Ed. 139
    , 141,
    
    40 S. Ct. 71
    , 73 (1919); see also Opyt’s Amoco, Inc. v. Village of
    South Holland, 
    149 Ill. 2d 265
    , 270 (1992) (“Due process
    requirements prevent the arbitrary and unreasonable exercise of the
    police power”); Heimgaertner v. Benjamin Electric Manufacturing
    Co., 
    6 Ill. 2d 152
    , 158-59 (1955) (“The police power, however, while
    paramount to the rights of the individual, is still restrained by the
    fundamental principles of justice connoted by the phrase, due process
    of law”). Whereas procedural due process governs the procedures
    employed to deny a person’s life, liberty or property interest,
    substantive due process limits the state’s ability to act, irrespective of
    the procedural protections provided. Collins v. City of Harker
    Heights, 
    503 U.S. 115
    , 125, 
    117 L. Ed. 2d 261
    , 273, 
    112 S. Ct. 1061
    ,
    1068 (1992). The case at bar presents a substantive due process claim.
    -9-
    Where the statute at issue does not implicate a fundamental
    constitutional right, courts employ the rational basis test to determine
    whether the statute satisfies substantive due process. Under this test,
    the statute need only bear a reasonable relationship to a legitimate
    state interest. Washington v. Glucksberg, 
    521 U.S. 702
    , 722, 138 L.
    Ed. 2d 772, 788-89, 
    117 S. Ct. 2258
    , 2268 (1997); In re J.W., 
    204 Ill. 2d
    50, 67 (2003). Miller does not claim an infringement of a
    fundamental constitutional right and does not challenge the appellate
    court’s conclusion that, “[o]n its face, the $100-per-day penalty
    provision rationally advances the State’s legitimate interest in
    encouraging the prompt payment of child 
    support.” 369 Ill. App. 3d at 51
    . Indeed, as this court has acknowledged, “it is difficult to
    imagine a more compelling State interest than the support of
    children.” 
    Sheppard, 124 Ill. 2d at 277
    . The “needs of the custodial
    parents and their children for swift establishment and rapid
    enforcement of support obligations” is “obvious.” Sheppard, 
    124 Ill. 2d
    at 276. The legislature’s adoption of the penalty provision in
    section 35(a) of the Withholding Act was clearly intended as an
    enforcement measure to ensure employer compliance with the statute
    and “to help combat the crisis of child support delinquency.” Dunahee
    v. Chenoa Welding & Fabrication, Inc., 
    273 Ill. App. 3d 201
    , 206
    (1995). Employers who are subject to withholding notices have
    innumerable opportunities to violate the statute. In the absence of a
    penalty provision, an employer might be inclined to retain the withheld
    support payments for its own use. That is, the “longer a withheld child
    support check is not mailed to the obligee, the longer those funds are
    available for the employer to use to its own advantage.” 
    Dunahee, 273 Ill. App. 3d at 208-09
    .
    We note, too, that the harm suffered by custodial parents and their
    children where payments are not received on a regular and timely basis
    is not necessarily susceptible of precise measurement, and that the
    eventual receipt of a child support payment may not adequately
    compensate the family for the delay. See 
    Dunahee, 273 Ill. App. 3d at 208
    (recognizing that an employer’s noncompliance with its support
    obligation may force the custodial parent to postpone purchasing
    essentials such as food or medicine). Thus, the need for uniform
    adherence to the Withholding Act is paramount.
    -10-
    Although inferentially conceding that the statute is constitutional
    on its face, Miller maintains that the statutory penalty, as applied to
    him, is grossly exaggerated and out of proportion to the severity of his
    conduct and the amount of child support involved. Miller likens the
    penalty here to the imposition of a life sentence for a series of
    speeding tickets. In short, “the punishment does not fit the crime.”
    We agree with Miller that a statutory penalty which is “so severe
    and oppressive as to be wholly disproportioned to the offense and
    obviously unreasonable” will run afoul of the due process clause.
    
    Williams, 251 U.S. at 67
    , 64 L. Ed. at 
    141, 40 S. Ct. at 73
    . Such a
    penalty, the appellate court correctly recognized, “does not further a
    legitimate government purpose” (369 Ill. App. 3d at 50), and thus fails
    the rational basis test. We disagree, however, that the penalty at issue
    here should be so characterized. In reaching this conclusion, we are
    guided by the United States Supreme Court’s opinion in Williams.
    In Williams, the Supreme Court considered a due process
    challenge to an Arkansas statute which regulated passenger rail rates
    within the state. Under the statute, any railroad company that
    demanded or collected a rate higher than that prescribed by the statute
    was subjected, for each offense, to a penalty of not less than $50 nor
    more than $300, plus the costs of suit and a reasonable attorney fee.
    A railroad company demanded and collected $0.66 more than the
    prescribed fare from two passengers, who subsequently brought suit
    under the statute. Each passenger obtained a judgment for the
    overcharge, a penalty of $75, an attorney fee of $25, and the costs of
    suit. The Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed the judgment, and the
    case proceeded to the United States Supreme Court.
    The Supreme Court initially noted that enforcement of the
    statutory penalty in a suit by a private party, as opposed to state
    action, is a matter of legislative discretion. The Supreme Court also
    observed that the penalty need not be confined or proportioned to the
    passenger’s loss or damages. 
    Williams, 251 U.S. at 66
    , 64 L. Ed. at
    
    140-41, 40 S. Ct. at 73
    . Because the penalty is imposed “as a
    punishment for the violation of a public law, the legislature may adjust
    its amount to the public wrong rather than the private injury, just as
    if it were going to the State.” 
    Williams, 251 U.S. at 66
    , 64 L. Ed. at
    
    141, 40 S. Ct. at 73
    .
    -11-
    In determining the ultimate question of whether the statutory
    penalty conflicted with the due process clause, the Supreme Court
    acknowledged the “wide latitude of discretion” states possess in
    prescribing penalties for violations of their laws, and opined that a
    statutory penalty will transcend the limits of that discretion “only
    where the penalty prescribed is so severe and oppressive as to be
    wholly disproportioned to the offense and obviously unreasonable.”
    
    Williams, 251 U.S. at 66
    -
    67, 64 L. Ed. at 141
    , 40 S. Ct. at 73. Based
    on these principles, the Supreme Court upheld the penalty against the
    railroad company’s due process challenge:
    “When the penalty is contrasted with the overcharge
    possible in any instance it of course seems large, but, as we
    have said, its validity is not to be tested in that way. When it
    is considered with due regard for the interests of the public,
    the numberless opportunities for committing the offense, and
    the need for securing uniform adherence to established
    passenger rates, we think it properly cannot be said to be so
    severe and oppressive as to be wholly disproportioned to the
    offense or obviously unreasonable.” 
    Williams, 251 U.S. at 67
    ,
    64 L. Ed. at 
    141, 40 S. Ct. at 73
    .
    The principles underlying the Williams decision still have vitality
    today. In Texas v. American Blastfax, Inc., 
    121 F. Supp. 2d 1085
    (W.D. Tex. 2000), a federal district court applied the Williams
    holding in rejecting a substantive due process challenge to the federal
    Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (TCPA) (47 U.S.C.
    §227 (2000)). The TCPA, which prohibits the sending of any
    unsolicited advertisement to a telephone facsimile machine (47 U.S.C.
    §227(b)(1)(C) (2000)), provides minimum statutory damages of $500
    for each violation (47 U.S.C. §227(f)(1) (2000)). In a suit brought by
    the Texas Attorney General, the defendant argued that the TCPA
    violates due process because the minimum statutory damages are
    grossly disproportionate to any actual harm suffered by the recipients
    of the unsolicited faxes. The federal district court rejected this
    argument:
    “Congress identified two legitimate public harms addressed by
    the TCPA’s ban on junk faxes: (1) unsolicited fax
    advertisements can substantially interfere with a business or
    residence because fax machines generally can handle only one
    -12-
    message at a time, at the exclusion of other messages; and (2)
    junk faxes shift nearly all of the advertiser’s printing costs to
    the recipient of the advertisement. [Citations.] *** [T]he
    TCPA’s $500 minimum damages provision, when measured
    against the overall harms of unsolicited fax advertising and the
    public interest in deterring such conduct, is not ‘so severe and
    oppressive as to be wholly disproportioned to the offense or
    obviously unreasonable.’ ” 
    Blastfax, 121 F. Supp. 2d at 1091
    ,
    quoting 
    Williams, 251 U.S. at 67
    , 64 L. Ed. at 
    141, 40 S. Ct. at 73
    .
    See also Native American Arts, Inc. v. Bundy-Howard, Inc., 168 F.
    Supp. 2d 905, 914-15 (N.D. Ill. 2001) (where the district court relied
    on Williams to reject a due process challenge to the Indian Arts and
    Crafts Act, under which a plaintiff may recover the greater of treble
    damages or $1,000 per day for each day that a product which falsely
    suggests it is Indian-made is offered for sale or sold).
    Application of the Williams principles to the facts of this case
    persuades us that section 35(a) of the Withholding Act, as applied to
    Miller, does not conflict with the due process clause.
    During the 2½-year period relevant to this litigation, Miller, by his
    own admission, violated the Withholding Act on 11,721 separate
    occasions. This figure does not include the thousands of violations
    Miller allegedly committed prior to Lenora filing suit. Although Miller
    continuously withheld the required support from Harold’s weekly
    wages, Miller waited five weeks after suit was filed before mailing
    another child support payment to the SDU, and failed to mail any
    further payments for another 20 weeks. A 10-month delay preceded
    the next payment. In all, during the 128 weeks at issue, Miller mailed
    the weekly support on only 11 occasions. His sporadic payment
    practice resulted in the payment of child support which was, on
    average, 90 days late, and as much as 10 months late.
    Significantly, Miller was aware of his statutory obligations, and
    equally aware of the $100-per-day penalty, as set forth in the
    withholding notice delivered to him in May 2001. Miller was reminded
    of his obligations and the statutory penalty by Lenora’s counsel in his
    October 2001 letter. Nonetheless, Miller repeatedly and knowingly
    violated the statute and his noncompliance continued, as indicated
    above, even after suit was filed. Miller’s disregard of the Withholding
    -13-
    Act persisted even after the circuit court twice ordered him to stay
    current, and even after Lenora filed two petitions for rule to show
    cause.
    We recognize that the individual daily penalties amassed by Miller
    produce a weighty sum when aggregated. Miller, however, could have
    avoided the imposition of any penalties simply by complying with his
    statutory obligation upon service of the withholding notice or at least
    after suit was filed. Miller chose to do otherwise. Because Miller
    controlled the extent of the penalty, he cannot now complain that the
    penalty is harsh when compared to the amount of child support at
    issue. See In re Marriage of Chen, 
    354 Ill. App. 3d 1004
    , 1022
    (2004) (rejecting employer’s claim that $36,100 penalty under the
    Withholding Act, which was adjusted to $90,600 on appeal, was
    excessive compared to the amount actually owed because “it is the
    employer that controls the extent of the fine”); Express Valet, Inc. v.
    City of Chicago, 
    373 Ill. App. 3d 838
    , 857 (2007) (rejecting
    defendant’s argument that $135,825 fine imposed under the Municipal
    Code was excessive because defendant’s argument “ignores that
    almost all of that amount is based on a [$100] per-offense penalty and
    that it was [defendant] who controlled the extent of those fines”).
    Miller alludes to the dire financial consequences to him if the
    circuit court’s judgment is upheld, but he offered no evidence on this
    issue in the trial court. This aside, we decline to judge the
    constitutionality of the penalty here with reference to Miller’s assets.
    Our lawmakers are under no obligation to make unlawful conduct
    affordable, particularly where multiple statutory violations are at issue.
    See United States of America ex rel. Tyson v. Amerigroup Illinois,
    Inc., 
    488 F. Supp. 2d 719
    , 747 (N.D. Ill. 2007) (declining to conduct
    economic analysis of defendants’ excessiveness challenge to statutory
    penalty because excessiveness determination “should turn on the
    nature of the Defendants’ conduct, not the state of his coffers”).
    Accord 
    Dunahee, 273 Ill. App. 3d at 208
    (rejecting employer’s
    argument that $12,000 penalty under the Withholding Act is unjust as
    applied to a small business and would cause hardship).
    Based on the important societal interests at stake and the
    concomitant need for adherence to the Withholding Act, coupled with
    the egregiousness of Miller’s conduct, we cannot say that the statute
    is unconstitutional as applied to Miller. Were we to hold otherwise,
    -14-
    then “[a]ll an employer would have to do to evade any penalty is
    nothing, as Miller did here. It could pile up the nonpayments and,
    when called to account under the penalty provisions, contend it cannot
    be required to pay because the mandatory penalty is unconstitutionally
    
    excessive.” 369 Ill. App. 3d at 54
    (Wolfson, P.J., dissenting).
    The appellate court, in concluding that the statute violated Miller’s
    due process rights, focused on what the court called the “gross
    disparity” between the million dollar judgment here and the $25,000
    maximum fine imposed by the Non-Support Punishment Act on a
    parent who willfully fails to pay child support (750 ILCS 16/15(d)
    (West 2004)). The appellate court reasoned that the judgment against
    Miller is approximately 47 times greater than the maximum fine the
    legislature found necessary to ensure a parent’s compliance with a
    child support obligation and is thus unconstitutionally severe. 369 Ill.
    App. 3d at 51. We agree with petitioners that the appellate court’s
    comparison of the two statutes is not an apt one and provides an
    insufficient basis for holding section 35(a) of the Withholding Act
    unconstitutional as applied to Miller.
    In contrast to the Withholding Act, which imposes a $100-per-day
    civil penalty (750 ILCS 28/35(a) (West 2004)), the Non-Support
    Punishment Act imposes criminal liability. Depending upon the
    circumstances, a parent convicted under the Non-Support Punishment
    Act is subject to a fine not to exceed $25,000 and, in addition thereto,
    may be sentenced to a term of imprisonment. A repeat offender, for
    example, is guilty of a Class 4 felony and may be imprisoned for up to
    three years. See 750 ILCS 16/15(b), (d) (West 2004) (setting forth the
    applicable sentences and fines); 730 ILCS 5/5–8–1(a)(7) (West 2004)
    (“for a Class 4 felony, the sentence shall be not less then 1 year and
    not more than 3 years”).
    The appellate court did not consider the possibility of
    imprisonment, which the legislature must have concluded was
    necessary, in addition to a criminal fine, to ensure a parent’s
    compliance with his or her support obligations. Thus, even if we were
    inclined to focus on Miller’s accumulated penalty, as the appellate
    court did, rather than the $100 daily penalty, the differences between
    the Withholding Act and the Non-Support Punishment Act prevent
    any meaningful comparison.
    -15-
    We note that the appellate court, during the course of its analysis,
    cited favorably to State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v.
    Campbell, 
    538 U.S. 408
    , 
    155 L. Ed. 2d 585
    , 
    123 S. Ct. 1513
    (2003).
    369 Ill. App. 3d at 50
    . In State Farm, the Supreme Court reiterated
    the three guideposts, first identified in BMW of North America, Inc.
    v. Gore, 
    517 U.S. 559
    , 
    134 L. Ed. 2d 809
    , 
    116 S. Ct. 1589
    (1996),
    that courts should use in determining whether a punitive damage
    award is unconstitutionally excessive. State 
    Farm, 538 U.S. at 418
    ,
    155 L. Ed. 2d at 
    601, 123 S. Ct. at 1520
    , citing 
    Gore, 517 U.S. at 575
    , 134 L. Ed. 2d at 
    826, 116 S. Ct. at 1598-99
    . The appellate court
    here did not mention, much less apply, the Gore guideposts in this
    case. The appellate court cited State Farm only for the limited
    proposition that, “If a penalty is grossly excessive, it does not further
    a legitimate government purpose and constitutes an arbitrary
    deprivation of property. See State Farm Mutual Automobile
    Insurance Co. v. Campbell, 
    538 U.S. 408
    , 417, 
    155 L. Ed. 2d 585
    ,
    600, 
    123 S. Ct. 1513
    , 1520 
    (2003).” 369 Ill. App. 3d at 50
    .
    Nonetheless, prompted by the appellate court’s citation to State Farm,
    the Attorney General argues that the excessiveness test applicable to
    jury awards of punitive damages at issue in State Farm has no
    relevance to the calculation of the statutory penalty at issue here. The
    Attorney General notes that our appellate court has so held. See
    
    Chen, 354 Ill. App. 3d at 1022
    .
    In Chen, an employer who was subject to a $90,600 penalty under
    the Withholding Act argued that the penalty was grossly excessive and
    violated its due process rights. The employer urged the appellate court
    to resolve its due process claim by looking to the punitive damage
    cases decided by the United States Supreme Court and applying the
    criteria identified in Gore and State Farm. The appellate court
    declined to do so:
    “Because this case involves a statutory penalty rather than
    an award of punitive damages, we decline to resolve [the
    employer’s] due process claim based on the above [Gore]
    criteria. Simply stated, the concerns over the imprecise manner
    in which punitive damages systems are administered are not
    present here. Unlike the inherent uncertainty associated with
    punitive damages, section 35 of the [Withholding] Act
    provides employers with exact notice of the $100-per-day
    -16-
    penalty they will face for failing to comply with a support
    order. Indeed, employers receive personal notice of their
    duties to withhold and pay over income, as well as the penalty
    for failing to do so, through service of the income withholding
    order.” 
    Chen, 354 Ill. App. 3d at 1022
    .
    See also Express 
    Valet, 373 Ill. App. 3d at 858
    (following Chen and
    declining to apply the Gore criteria to determine whether $135,825
    fine imposed under the Municipal Code was excessive); Native
    American 
    Arts, 168 F. Supp. 2d at 914
    (declining to apply the Gore
    criteria to determine whether the $1,000-per-day statutory damages
    applicable under the Indian Arts and Crafts Act violated the
    defendant’s substantive due process rights).
    In response to the Attorney General’s argument, Miller states that
    the Gore guideposts directly apply to this case. We note that Miller
    did not advance this argument in the trial court or the appellate court,
    and that he cites no supporting authority in his brief before this court.
    Moreover, Miller makes no attempt to distinguish or discredit the
    Chen case. In light of the foregoing circumstances, we find it
    unnecessary to address the matter further.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons discussed, we reverse the judgment of the
    appellate court and affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
    Appellate court judgment reversed;
    circuit court judgment affirmed.
    -17-