People v. Siemens Building Technologies ( 2008 )


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  •                                                                         THIRD DIVISION
    December 24, 2008
    No. 1-08-1258
    THE PEOPLE ex rel. THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES                   )     Appeal from
    OF CHICAGO STATE UNIVERSITY,                               )     the Circuit Court
    )     of Cook County.
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                       )
    )
    v.                                                  )
    )
    SIEMENS BUILDING TECHNOLOGIES, INC.,                       )
    a Delaware Corporation,                                    )
    )
    Defendant-Appellee                         )
    )
    )
    (Siemens Financial Services, Inc.                          )
    f/k/a Siemens Credit Corporation,                          )     No. 03 CH 13221
    a Delaware Corporation, MBIA Capital Corporation           )
    1999-B T ax Exempt Grantor T rust,                         )
    a Delaware Corporation,                                    )
    )
    Defendants and Third-Party Plaintiffs-     )
    Appellees;                                 )
    )
    )
    Chapman and Cutler, LLP and                                )
    David G. Williams,                                         )
    )
    Third-Party Defendants and                 )
    Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellees;          )
    )
    )
    Nancy Kaye Hall-Walker,                                    )     Honorable
    )     Peter A. Flynn
    Third Party Defendant).                    )     Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE THEIS delivered the opinion of the court:
    This case appears before us on an interlocutory appeal pursuant to Supreme Court Rule
    1-08-1258
    308 (155 Ill. 2d R. 308) to consider three questions certified by the circuit court regarding the
    interpretation of the Public University Energy Conservation Act (the Act) (110 ILCS 62/1 et seq.
    (West 1998)). The People of the State of Illinois originally brought this action on behalf of the
    Board of Trustees of Chicago State University (the Board) against defendants, Siemens Building
    Technologies, Inc. (Siemens), Siemens Financial Services, Inc., f/k/a Siemens Credit Corporation
    (Siemens Financial), and MBIA Capital Corporation 1999-B Tax-Exempt Grantor Trust (MBIA)
    for declaratory relief, rescission, and breach of contract related to two agreements the Board
    entered into with defendants for the installation, purchase, and financing of certain energy
    conservation measures at the Chicago State University (the University) purportedly designed to
    provide guaranteed energy and operational cost savings.
    In its fourth-amended complaint, the State alleged, inter alia, that the “Performance
    Services Agreement” the Board entered into with Siemens violated the energy savings guarantee
    under the Act and that Siemens breached various provisions in the Agreement relating to that
    guarantee. The State sought restitution, rescission and damages arising from the alleged shortfall
    in energy savings to the University. The circuit court ultimately dismissed several counts of the
    fourth-amended complaint, finding that the guarantee could not be properly evaluated until the
    end of the 10-year contract term. The court also dismissed certain counts relating to the
    enforceability of the “Master Lease Agreement” the Board originally entered into with Siemens
    Financial, holding that the Act did not prohibit the financing of the environmental conservation
    measures by a third-party lender or prohibit an unconditional payment provision in the lease.
    Subsequently, the court certified three questions for interlocutory appeal pursuant to Supreme
    2
    1-08-1258
    Court Rule 308. 155 Ill. 2d R. 308.
    1.      “Can a university, under the ‘annual’ language of [the Act] §35, sue
    for reimbursement of a savings shortfall before the end of the [10]1-year guarantee
    period specified in [the Act] §20?”
    2.      “Does [the] 2007 amendment to [the Act]§25 merely clarify the
    language of §25, or does it effect a substantive change? If it effects a substantive
    change, is the change retroactive?”
    3.      “(a) Do[es] [the Act] §§5-15, 5-20, 15, 20, and 35 prevent the use
    of ‘hell or high water’ financing provisions under which the university must pay a
    lessor/financier for energy conservation measures even if the measures do not
    produce a savings to the university? [and] (b) Does the 2007 amendment to [the
    Act] §25 (see 
    Question 2 supra
    ) affect the answer to this question? If so, in what
    way?”
    For the following reasons, we answer the first certified question by holding that the Act
    does not require an annual reimbursement of a shortfall, but the parties are not prohibited from
    contracting for greater protections. We need not answer the second certified question because we
    find the original intent of the statute can be discerned from the original legislative enactment. We
    1
    The question is framed in terms of a 20-year guarantee period because the Act was
    amended in 2006 by Public Act 94-1062, which amended section 20 to extend the time period
    from 10 to 20 years. Pub. Act 94-1062, eff. July 31, 2006 (amending 110 ILCS 62/20 (West
    2006)). However, because the guaranteed energy savings contract in the present case was
    entered into prior to the amendment, we consider the preamended version of section 20 as it
    applies to this case.
    3
    1-08-1258
    answer the first part of the third certified question in the negative, ruling that the Act does not
    prohibit the use of “hell or high water” financing clauses.
    BACKGROUND
    In March 1999, the Board entered into a 10-year “Performance Services Agreement” (the
    Agreement) with Siemens under which Siemens was to install various energy conservation
    measures for the University to reduce energy consumption and increase energy efficiency at the
    University. The parties agreed that this Agreement constituted a “guaranteed energy savings
    contract” as contemplated by the Act (110 ILCS 62/5-15 (West 1998)) and that Siemens was a
    “qualified provider” of these energy services and measures as that term is defined by the Act (110
    ILCS 62/5-20 (West 1998)).
    Pursuant to section 2 of the Agreement, Siemens guaranteed that the energy and
    operational cost savings generated over the ten-year term would be equal to or greater than the
    total cost incurred by the University to complete the project. The total cost of the energy
    conservation measures was approximately $6 million. The Board additionally agreed to pay
    approximately $2 million for a maintenance program. Siemens guaranteed that the University
    would realize a total of at least $10 million from energy, operational and capital savings.
    Under subsection 2.2 of the Agreement, the parties set forth an accounting mechanism
    utilized to track the savings over the term of the Agreement. The amount of guaranteed annual
    savings was projected for each year of the contract term. At the end of each year, Siemens was
    responsible for documenting whether there was an excess in savings or a savings shortfall for each
    annual period based on its annual projections. If there were excess savings in any annual period,
    4
    1-08-1258
    Siemens would apply those savings toward the total guaranteed savings projected in the contract.
    However, if the actual annual energy savings fell short of the projected guaranteed savings for
    that year, the Board had two options: (1) carry over the shortfall into the next year and increase
    the savings guarantee amount for the next year; or (2) Siemens would pay the shortfall in the form
    of a credit toward the maintenance program.
    In order to finance the purchase of these measures, in June 1999, the Board entered into a
    “Master Lease Agreement” (the Lease) with Siemens Financial. Under the Lease, the University
    borrowed over $6.2 million to purchase the energy conservation measures from Siemens and
    agreed to repay the loan by making annual payments to Siemens Financial of about $816,000
    through 2009. The parties have given us little insight into the relationship between Siemens and
    Siemens Financial. However, under the Lease, the University holds title to the equipment
    purchased from Siemens and Siemens Financial holds a security interest in that equipment. The
    Lease also contains an unconditional rental payment clause the parties refer to as a “hell or high
    water clause” under which the Board’s obligation to make the lease payments is unconditional,
    notwithstanding any breach of the Agreement by Siemens. As part of the execution of this Lease,
    Chapman and Cutler provided an opinion letter on behalf of the University presumably expressing
    the University’s authorization to enter into the Lease. This letter does not appear in the record on
    appeal. Siemens Financial eventually assigned its rights in the Lease to another entity who, in
    turn, assigned its rights to MBIA.
    Subsequently, in 2003, a dispute arose relating to the performance guarantee under the
    Agreement. The Board claimed that certain equipment it had purchased was not functioning
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    1-08-1258
    properly and claimed an energy savings shortfall of $3 million less than projected through the first
    four years of the Agreement. Based upon these claims, the Board stopped making payments
    under the Agreement in 2003. The State ultimately filed suit on behalf of the Board against
    Siemens Financial and MBIA. In its fourth-amended complaint, the State alleged, inter alia, that
    the performance guarantee in the Agreement violated sections 20 and 35 of the Act because the
    Act mandated that the “qualified provider” reimburse the University for energy savings shortfalls
    on an annual basis. Additionally, the State alleged that, in the alternative, the University had not
    realized the guaranteed energy savings projected under the Agreement. It sought, in part,
    reimbursement of the shortfall between projected annual savings and actual annual savings.
    With respect to the financing, the State alleged, inter alia, that the Board was not
    authorized under the Act to enter into the Lease it executed because Siemens Financial and MBIA
    were not “qualified providers,” and the unconditional rental payment clause was now void and
    illegal. The State argued the clause contravened the purpose of the Act because it required
    unconditional payment to the lessor regardless of whether the energy conservation measures
    produced the requisite savings to the University. It sought to recover all of the payments the
    University had made under the Lease.2 The circuit court dismissed these claims, holding that the
    Act contemplated third-party financing from a lender other than a “qualified provider” and that
    2
    Subsequently, Siemens Financial and MBIA filed a third-party claim against Chapman
    and Cutler based on their reliance on the opinion letter. Chapman and Cutler, in turn, brought a
    contribution action against the University’s general counsel, Nancy Kaye Hall-Walker, for her role
    in structuring and approving the Agreement and Lease.
    6
    1-08-1258
    the unconditional payment clause in the lease was not prohibited by the Act. We granted
    defendants’ petition for leave to appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    Standard of Review
    Our scope of review is governed by Supreme Court Rule 308(a). 155 Ill. 2d R. 308(a).
    Rule 308 provides an avenue of permissive appeal for interlocutory orders where the trial court
    has deemed that they involve a question of law as to which there is substantial ground for
    difference of opinion and where an immediate appeal from the order may materially advance the
    ultimate termination of the litigation. 155 Ill. 2d R. 308(a). We are generally limited to the
    questions certified by the trial court, which, because they must be questions of law and not fact,
    are reviewed de novo. Townsend v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 
    227 Ill. 2d 147
    , 153, 
    879 N.E.2d 893
    , 897 (2007).
    With these principles in mind, we address defendants’ arguments that it is improper for the
    court to consider the first certified question under Rule 308 because (1) the State has not
    established an injury in fact, namely, that there indeed exists any energy shortfall; and (2) the
    Agreement provides for the remedy it seeks, namely, annual reimbursement of any shortfall.
    We recognize that if a question certified by the trial court calls for a hypothetical answer
    with no practical effect, this court should refrain from answering it. Lawndale Restoration Ltd.
    Partnership v. Acordia of Illinois, Inc., 
    367 Ill. App. 3d 24
    , 27, 
    853 N.E.2d 791
    , 794 (2006).
    However, the State’s underlying allegation, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Agreement is
    void and illegal, squarely implicates the interpretation of sections 35 and 20 of the Act relating to
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    1-08-1258
    reimbursement of energy savings shortfalls. For purposes of this appeal, we take the factual
    allegations as true (735 ILCS 5/2-619 (West 2006)), and note that the circuit court’s dismissal of
    these counts was based, at least in part, on its interpretation of these statutory provisions.
    Accordingly, we consider the merits of the certified questions.
    The Public University Energy Conservation Act
    In order to better understand the certified questions before us, we begin with a brief
    overview of the Act as a whole. Initially, we note that the Act has never previously been subject
    to judicial interpretation and, therefore, this case presents a case of first impression. 3 The Act was
    enacted in 1997 by Public Act 90-486 (Pub. Act 90-486, eff. Aug. 17, 1997) to encourage and
    facilitate energy conservation and efficiency at public universities at no net cost to the university.
    110 ILCS 62/1 et seq. (West 1998)4; see generally, D. Smith & J. Ferber, Performance
    Contracting with State and Local Governments, 25 Pub. Cont. L.J. 393, 394-95 (1996) (noting
    that energy savings contracts are considerably valuable to public entities because they allow the
    3
    We also note that numerous other states and the federal government have similar types
    of legislation regarding guaranteed energy savings contracts and to our knowledge there has been
    no published judicial authority with regard to similar legislation in any other jurisdiction. Thus,
    we write on a clean slate.
    4
    The Act mirrors three other similar statutes applying to local governments (50 ILCS
    515/1 et seq. (West 1994)); public school districts (105 ILCS 5/19b-1 et seq. (West 1994)); and
    community colleges (110 ILCS 805/5A-5 et seq. (West 1994)). None of these statutes have been
    subject to judicial interpretation.
    8
    1-08-1258
    entity to “use future energy savings to finance the cost” of conservation measures).
    Under the Act, the Board is empowered to enter into a multiyear “guaranteed energy
    savings contract” (110 ILCS 62/5-15 (West 1998)) with a “qualified provider” (110 ILCS 62/5-
    20 (West 1998)) for the implementation of various “energy conservation measure[s]” (110 ILCS
    62/5-10 (West 1998)) designed to reduce energy consumption and/or operating costs at the
    University. Pursuant to the guarantee provisions set forth in section 20 of the Act, the qualified
    provider must guarantee in writing that the actual energy and/or operational cost savings resulting
    from the implementation of these measures will meet or exceed the cost of implementing these
    measures within 10 years. 110 ILCS 62/20 (West 1998). The qualified provider must reimburse
    the university for any shortfall of guaranteed energy savings projected in the contract and must
    provide a sufficient bond to the university for the installation and performance of all of the energy
    conservation measures included in the contract. 110 ILCS 62/20 (West 1998).
    Question One
    “Can a university, under the “annual” language of [the Act] §35, sue for
    reimbursement of a savings shortfall before the end of the [10]-year guarantee
    period specified in [the Act] §20?”
    The principles guiding our review are familiar. The fundamental rule of statutory
    construction is to ascertain and give effect to the legislature's intent. DeLuna v. Burciaga, 
    223 Ill. 2d
    49, 59, 
    857 N.E.2d 229
    , 236 (2006). The language of the statute is the best indication of
    legislative intent, and we give that language its plain and ordinary meaning. Ready v.
    United/Goedeke Services, Inc., No. 103474, slip op. at 5 (November 25, 2008). In determining
    9
    1-08-1258
    the plain meaning of a statute's terms, we consider the statute in its entirety, keeping in mind the
    subject it addresses, and the apparent intent of the legislature in enacting the statute. Ready, slip
    op. at 5. We may not depart from the plain language of the statute by reading into it exceptions,
    limitations, or conditions that conflict with the express legislative intent. Town & Country
    Utilities, Inc. v. Illinois Pollution Control Board, 
    225 Ill. 2d 103
    , 117, 
    866 N.E.2d 227
    , 235
    (2007). “[A] court should not attempt to read a statute other than in the manner in which it was
    written.” Ultsch v. Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund, 
    226 Ill. 2d 169
    , 190, 
    874 N.E.2d 1
    , 13
    (2007).
    The State contends that under the plain language of sections 35 and 20, a qualified
    provider must reimburse a university for energy savings shortfalls annually. Conversely, Siemens
    maintains that under the plain language of the guarantee, any savings shortfalls cannot be realized
    until the end of the contract term. We begin by examining the language of each section. At the
    time of the parties’ Agreement, section 20 provided in pertinent part as follows:
    “The guaranteed energy savings contract shall include a written guarantee
    of the qualified provider that either the energy or operational cost savings, or both,
    will meet or exceed within 10 years the costs of the energy conservation measures.
    The qualified provider shall reimburse the public university for any shortfall of
    guaranteed energy savings projected in the contract. A qualified provider shall
    provide a sufficient bond to the public university for the installation and the faithful
    performance of all the measures included in the contract.” 110 ILCS 62/20 (West
    1998).
    10
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    Based on the plain reading of the first sentence of section 20, the legislature intended to provide a
    guarantee to protect contracting public universities from incurring net costs for pursuing energy
    conservation measures and to provide energy and operational cost savings over the 10-year term
    of the contract. Thus, under the guarantee, the ultimate risk is allocated to the provider to
    establish that, at the end of the contract term, the energy and/or operational savings generated
    over the term of the contract will equal or exceed the cost of the energy conservation measures.
    This construction of the first sentence is confirmed by section 15 of the Act (110 ILCS
    62/15 (West 1998)) relating to the power of the Board to award a guaranteed energy savings
    contract to a qualified provider. That section provides that the Board is empowered to enter into
    this type of contract if it finds that “the amount it would spend on the energy conservation
    measures * * * would not exceed the amount to be saved in either energy or operational costs or
    both within a 10 year period from the date of installation.” 110 ILCS 62/15 (West 1998).
    The next sentence of section 20 refers specifically to the obligation of the provider to
    “reimburse the public university for any shortfall of guaranteed energy savings projected in the
    contract.” 110 ILCS 62/20 (West 1998). It does not expressly indicate when the reimbursement
    is to occur. The State maintains that section 35 explains that the reimbursement is to be made on
    an annual basis.
    Section 35 provides as follows:
    “The public university shall document the operational and energy cost
    savings specified in the guaranteed energy savings contract and designate and
    reserve that amount for an annual payment of the contract. If the annual energy
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    savings are less than projected under the guaranteed energy savings contract the
    qualified provider shall pay the difference as provided in Section 20.” 110 ILCS
    62/35 (West 1998).
    By its express language, the legislature intended that we construe sections 20 and 35 together. In
    doing so, the circuit court ruled as follows:
    “Section 35 of the Act does call for keeping track of annual energy savings, but
    does not require payment (or netting out) except ‘as provided in Section 20.’ But
    [section] 20 contains a ten-year guarantee, not an annual guarantee. Thus, under
    [Section] 20 the provider guarantees that over ten years the energy savings will
    equal or exceed the conservation costs; and the provider must pay the shortfall if
    that guarantee is not met – which cannot be known until the ten years have
    elapsed. It follows that a university may incur interim excess costs during the ten-
    year period without triggering an immediate or annual reimbursement
    obligation.”(Emphasis in original).
    The State takes issue with this interpretation, asserting that the first sentence of section 20 is
    merely a “maximum payback period” and that section 35 must be understood in light of only the
    second sentence in section 20. However, Siemens maintains that the State’s construction would
    eviscerate the language of the first sentence in section 20 and read into the second sentence of
    section 20 an “annual” reimbursement obligation where that language is not expressly mandated.
    We are mindful that all provisions of a statutory enactment must be read as a whole.
    DeLuna, 
    223 Ill. 2d
    at 
    60, 857 N.E.2d at 236
    . We must not read each sentence in isolation but,
    12
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    rather, interpret each sentence in light of other relevant provisions in the statute. Alternate Fuels,
    Inc. v. Director of the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, 
    215 Ill. 2d 219
    , 238, 
    830 N.E.2d 444
    , 455 (2004). When section 35 and 20 are read together, the interpretation that comports with
    the “guarantee” is that “any shortfall” will be reimbursed at the end of the contract term rather
    than on an annual basis, because performance under the guarantee is not determined until the end
    of the contract term. Thus, Siemens’ conception that there may be savings in some years and
    excesses in others, that the savings are reconciled under section 35 annually, and that any
    shortfalls is reimbursed, if necessary, at the end of the contract, comports with the overall
    guarantee expressed in section 20.
    Nevertheless, the State maintains that requiring a university to wait until the end of a 10 or
    now 20-year contract term to seek reimbursement for any shortfall would violate several other
    provisions of the Act. It specifically directs our attention to section 5-15. 110 ILCS 62/5-15
    (West 1998). Section 5-15 provides in pertinent part that a guaranteed energy savings contract
    “shall provide that all payments *** are to be made over time and the savings are guaranteed to
    the extent necessary to pay the costs of the energy conservation measures.” 110 ILCS 62/5-15
    (West 1998).
    The State contends that this section means that the energy savings in any given year must
    be guaranteed to correspond to the amount needed to make “annual payments” under the
    contract, thereby allowing the University to not only leverage the savings, but, where there is a
    shortfall, apply a reimbursement to the next fiscal year’s payment of the contract. Nevertheless,
    this construction would require us to add the word “annual” into the definition of a guaranteed
    13
    1-08-1258
    energy savings contract in section 5-15 and the guarantee provisions in section 20 even though
    that language is not included. It is not within our power to do so. Madison Two Associates v.
    Pappas, 
    227 Ill. 2d 474
    , 495, 
    884 N.E.2d 142
    , 156 (2008). Had the legislature intended that
    annual energy savings must correspond to annual payments, it could have explicitly so provided as
    other states have indeed done. See, e.g, Fla. Stat. Ann. §489.145(5)(b) (West 2006) (“the annual
    savings are guaranteed to the extent necessary to make annual payments”); Colo. Rev. Stat. Ann.
    §29-12.5-101(3)(e) (West 2006) (“[i]f all payments ***made by such board during any year
    subject to the guarantee***exceed the sum of utility cost savings and operational and
    maintenance savings for that year, such party shall forfeit to such board that portion of such
    moneys equal to the amount by which such payments exceeded such savings”).
    Section 35 does indicate that the University shall document the energy savings and
    “reserve that amount for an annual payment of the contract.” However, the State’s contention
    that section 35 “is clearly the ‘true up’ where the documented savings are compared with the
    annual payment and the provider is required to ‘pay the difference’ ” is not what the statute
    provides. The “pay the difference” language refers to the difference between the actual and
    projected savings and not the difference between the savings and the annual payments.
    Accordingly, we reject this argument.
    We are mindful that legislative intent can be discerned from ascertaining the consequences
    that would result from construing the statute one way or another. In re Detention of Lieberman,
    
    201 Ill. 2d 300
    , 308, 
    776 N.E.2d 218
    , 223 (2002). If Siemens’ construction is applied, the
    University argues it unfairly has to carry any shortfall until the end of the contract term. If the
    14
    1-08-1258
    University’s construction is applied, the consequence to the provider is that it may unfairly end up
    paying for shortfalls in the early years of the agreement despite excess savings over the course of
    the contract.
    It appears that there are various ways to structure the guarantee in these statutes, as
    evidenced by other state legislation, suggesting that the structure posited by both the State and
    Siemens are both plausible and it was ultimately a policy decision as to where the General
    Assembly chose to allocate the risks over the term of the contract. See, e.g., D. Smith & J.
    Ferber, Performance Contracting with State and Local Governments, 25 Pub. Cont. L.J., at 395-
    96 (1996) (“If the performance contractor fails to meet the annual savings guarantee, the
    performance contractor may be permitted to roll over the shortfall until the following annual
    reconciliation, with the intention that it may be offset by excess savings achieved in following
    years. In other cases, the performance contractor can elect or be required to make a shortfall
    payment to cover the difference between the guaranteed and actual savings. The determination of
    whether savings shortfalls are rolled over or paid to the governmental entity on an annual basis is
    often dictated by statute”).
    At some point, however, our role is to interpret the Act as written, and not to decide the
    wisdom of its provisions. People v. Ramirez, 
    361 Ill. App. 3d 450
    , 455, 
    837 N.E.2d 111
    , 117
    (2005); see also Ready, slip op. at 11 (deciding between competing policies is a “task better left to
    the legislature”). Accordingly, since the Act does not expressly require an “annual” guarantee, we
    answer the first question in the negative, holding that under the Act the provider is not required to
    annually reimburse a university for energy savings shortfalls. However, nothing in the statute
    15
    1-08-1258
    prohibits a public university from contracting for greater protections to avoid any potential interim
    risks to the university. As such, although the statute provides a broader guarantee, it does not
    prevent the parties from agreeing to an annual guarantee and annual reimbursement of any
    shortfall. We make no ruling on whether this Agreement provides for such reimbursement.
    Question Two
    “Does the 2007 amendment to [the Act] merely clarify the language of
    section 25, or does it effect a substantive change? If it effects a substantive
    change, is the change retroactive?”
    Some background facts are necessary to an understanding of this question. At the time the
    Board entered into the Lease with Siemens Financial, section 25 of the Act provided in pertinent
    part as follows:
    “A public university *** may enter into an installment payment contract or
    lease purchase agreement with a qualified provider for the purchase and installation
    of energy conservation measures. Each public university may issue certificates
    evidencing the indebtedness incurred pursuant to the contracts or agreements.”
    110 ILCS 62/25 (West 1998).
    During the pendency of this litigation, on November 15, 2006, the trial court construed section 25
    in its order denying Siemens Financial’s and MBIA’s motions to dismiss the third-amended
    complaint. Therein, it ruled that section 25 authorized public universities to finance energy
    savings measures exclusively through “qualified providers” who were guaranteeing the projected
    energy savings and who were required to post a bond under section 20 for their faithful
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    performance of the contract. Accordingly, the court held that since Siemens Financial and MBIA,
    as third-party financiers, did not meet that criteria, the Lease violated the Act.
    Within three months of the trial court’s ruling, on February 8, 2007, State Senators Cronin
    and Harmon introduced Senate Bill 1183 to amend section 25 of the Act. 95th Ill. Gen. Assem.,
    Senate Bill 1183, 2007 Session. The bill was passed by the Senate on March 30, 2007, and
    became effective on September 11, 2007, as Public Act 95-612. The preamble to this legislation
    provides in pertinent part as follows:
    “WHEREAS, It is desirable for *** public universities *** to have
    flexibility in choosing the most appropriate means by which to pay for the costs of
    purchasing and installing energy conservation measures, including without
    limitation entering into installment payment contracts or lease purchase agreements
    with qualified providers or other third-party lenders, as authorized by law.” Pub.
    Act 95-612, eff. September 11, 1997.
    The actual amendment added the following italicized language:
    “A public university *** may enter into an installment payment contract or
    a lease purchase agreement with a qualified provider or with a third-party lender,
    as authorized by law, for the purchase and installation of energy conservation
    measures by a qualified provider. Each public university may issue certificates
    evidencing the indebtedness incurred pursuant to the contracts or agreements.”
    Pub. Act 95-612, eff. September 11, 2007 (amending 110 ILCS 62/25 (West
    2006)).
    17
    1-08-1258
    Thereafter, on January 14, 2008, the trial court vacated its earlier interlocutory ruling, recognizing
    the 2007 amendment to section 25 as a clarification of the legislature’s original intent that the Act
    did not require that lenders to public universities be “qualified providers.” Consequently, the
    court held that the third-party financing of the environmental conservation measures through the
    Lease was not prohibited under the Act.5
    Initially, we must again consider the procedural posture of this case under Rule 308. By
    asking this court to consider the first part of question two, whether the 2007 amendment clarifies
    the intent of the original 1997 legislation, it assumes the premise that the drafters’ intent cannot be
    ascertained from the statutory language alone. For it is only then that we can resort to tools of
    statutory interpretation to ascertain the meaning of a statute. Ready, slip op. at 5.
    Although we recognize that under Rule 308, we are generally restricted to the certified
    question, we find that any answer to the certified question necessarily requires us to first consider
    the plain meaning of section 25 as originally enacted in 1997. Our supreme court has indicated
    that the legislative intent that controls the construction of a public act is the intent of the
    legislature which passed the subject act, and not the intent of the legislature which amends the act.
    O’Casek v. Children’s Home & Aid Society, 
    229 Ill. 2d 421
    , 441, 
    892 N.E.2d 994
    , 1007 (2008).
    Courts must proceed cautiously when examining future legislative enactments for evidence of past
    legislative intent. 
    O’Casek, 229 Ill. 2d at 441
    , 892 N.E.2d at 1007. Thus, we must first consider
    5
    The trial court did not consider whether the Lease in this case constituted a “lease
    purchase agreement” as contemplated by the statute. We are not asked to make a determination
    in that regard.
    18
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    the plain language of the preamended version of section 25. See, e.g., Boyd v. Travelers
    Insurance Co., 
    166 Ill. 2d 188
    , 193, 
    652 N.E.2d 267
    , 270 (1995), quoting 134 Ill. 2d R. 366(a)(5)
    (explaining that in the interest of judicial economy and reaching an equitable result, a reviewing
    court may go beyond the certified question to consider the order giving rise to an appeal).
    Section 25, as it existed when the parties entered into the Lease, provided that a university
    “may” enter into an installment contract or lease purchase agreement with a qualified provider for
    the purchase and installation of the energy conservation measures. 110 ILCS 62/25 (West 1998).
    In other sections of the Act, the relationship between the university and the qualified provider is
    strictly mandated. For example, the qualified provider “shall reimburse” (110 ILCS 62/20 (West
    1998)) or “shall provide a sufficient bond” (110 ILCS 62/20 (West 1998)). However, in section
    25, by using the flexible term “may,” the General Assembly neither expressly required a lease be
    entered into with only a qualified provider nor expressly prohibited a lease with a third-party
    lender. People v. Reed, 
    177 Ill. 2d 389
    , 393, 
    686 N.E.2d 584
    , 586 (1997) (usually the
    legislature's use of the word “may” is regarded as indicating a permissive or directory reading,
    whereas the use of the word “shall” is considered to express a mandatory reading). Thus, an
    inference can be made that the General Assembly intended to provide the public universities with
    some flexibility and discretion in the way they finance these contracts.
    We are also mindful that we must construe the Act in light of other relevant statutes
    related to the Board’s statutory authority. Under its enabling statute, the Chicago State
    University Law (110 ILCS 660/5-1 et seq. (West 1998)), the Board is “a body politic and
    corporate” (110 ILCS 660/5-10 (West 1998)), and has the statutory power generally to enter into
    19
    1-08-1258
    contracts and expend funds appropriated to the University provided that it “shall not create any
    liability or indebtedness of funds from the State Treasury in excess of the funds appropriated to
    [the University]” (110 ILCS 660/5-40 (West 1998)). Nothing in the Act warrants the conclusion
    that the legislature intended to affect the university’s existing contracting authority.
    Moreover, we must construe statutes in a practical and common sense manner. Jones v.
    Industrial Comm’n, 
    188 Ill. 2d 314
    , 328, 
    721 N.E.2d 563
    , 570 (1999). The Act is a mechanism
    for public universities to make costly energy saving improvements without large up-front outlays
    of funds from State revenue sources. Third-party financing is a viable means to accomplish that
    objective. See D. Smith & J. Ferber, Performance Contracting with State and Local
    Governments, 25 Pub. Cont. L.J., at 397-98 (1996) (third-party financing is typical in energy
    performance contracts because public entities rarely have the cash readily available and bonds can
    be time-consuming and involve higher transaction costs). In contrast, qualified providers, as
    defined by the statute, have expertise in the design, implementation or installation of energy
    conservation measures. 110 ILCS 62/5-20 (West 1998). They are not in the financial lending
    business. See D. Smith & J. Ferber, Performance Contracting with State and Local Governments,
    25 Pub. Cont. L.J., at 398 (1996) (The provider will often assign its right to receive payments
    from the public entity to a third-party lender in order to obtain the present cash value of those
    funds). Thus, any interpretation that would limit the financing of these contracts to only qualified
    providers would severely constrain the ability of public universities to enter into these contracts to
    achieve the stated purpose of the Act. Accordingly, for all of these reasons, we find that the plain
    meaning of section 25 as originally enacted in 1997 does not prohibit the use of third-party
    20
    1-08-1258
    financing.
    In light of our holding, we need not consider whether the 2007 amendment, expressly
    allowing financing through third-party lenders “as authorized by law,” was a clarification nor do
    we need to address whether the 2007 amendment was a substantive change that applies
    retroactively. Nevertheless, even if we were to consider whether the 2007 amendment was a
    clarification, although not necessary to our disposition, we would find that the statements made
    by the cosponsor of the amendment inform and support our conclusion.
    Senate Bill 1183 was introduced three months after the circuit court’s ruling. The
    comments of Senator Cronin, the Senate co-sponsor of Senate Bill 1183, strongly support that the
    amendment was intended to clarify existing law with respect to the financing of these contracts.
    During the limited floor debate, Senator Cronin stated in pertinent part as follows:
    “This seeks to clarify a little technical misunderstanding with regard
    to qualified providers. Qualified providers means people that are
    qualified, yes, to do the energy conservation work, but we also
    want qualified lenders. We clarify this in the bill. We want to make
    sure that a lender need not be [an] environmental energy
    conservation expert. So I think this is all clarified.” 95th Gen.
    Assem., Senate Proceedings, March 30, 2007, at 117 (statements of
    Senator Cronin).
    In sum, nothing in the preamended section 25 would prohibit the Board from entering into
    a lease purchase agreement with a third party lender, and the statements of the cosponsor of the
    21
    1-08-1258
    2007 amendment support that conclusion.
    Question Three
    (a) “[Do sections 5-15, 5-20, 15, 20 and 35 of the Act] prevent the use of
    ‘hell or high water’ financing provisions under which the university must pay a
    lessor/financier for energy conservation measures even if the measures do not
    produce a savings to the university?”
    (b) “Does the 2007 amendment to [section 25 of the Act] affect the answer
    to this question? If so, in what way?”
    The unconditional payment clause referred to as a “hell or high water” financing provision
    in the Lease requires the University to continue to pay Siemens Financial or its assignee the debt
    notwithstanding any alleged failure of the qualified provider to perform its obligations under the
    guaranteed energy savings contract.
    These types of unconditional payment provisions are common in commercial equipment
    leases. See 810 ILCS 5/2A-407 (West 2006) (specifically sanctioning “hell or high water” clauses
    in finance leases); see also O.P.M. Leasing Services, Inc. v. Hassett, 
    21 B.R. 993
    , 999 (Bankr.
    S.D.N.Y.1982) (State of West Virginia as lessee of computer equipment could not terminate the
    lessor’s assignee’s unconditional right to payment under a “hell or high water” clause). Given that
    section 25 expressly contemplates the “lease purchase agreement” structure of financing, and
    given that the “hell or high water” clause is apparently an ordinary financing term in these
    contracts that is not expressly excluded here, this provision does not appear to be prohibited
    under the Act.
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    1-08-1258
    Defendants maintain that the protections provided to public universities under the Act are
    not lost by the inclusion of this clause. We agree. Nothing in a “hell or high water clause” would
    prevent the public universities from enforcing their rights under the performance guarantee against
    the qualified provider and nothing in that clause impacts the bond requirements of the qualified
    provider under section 20 of the Act. 110 ILCS 62/20 (West 1998). However, the State argues
    that this interpretation would require the universities to make payments to the lender, including
    financing costs, for up to 20 years for faulty energy conservation measures.6
    The State’s argument is essentially a continuation of the State’s construction of section 35
    and 20 in relation to the obligations the provider owes to a university and does not equate with an
    argument that an unconditional payment obligation to the lender is violative of the Act. If we
    presume for purposes of this question that third-party financing was contemplated by the
    legislature, then the commercial reality of this type of lease makes it clear that the risk as between
    the lessee and lessor for defective equipment is to be placed on the lessee who has recourse
    against the supplier. 810 ILCS 5/2A-407 (West 2006). Under the construction of the Act, the
    recourse against the supplier is guaranteed, albeit delayed. Accordingly, for all of the foregoing
    reasons, we answer the third certified question in the negative, holding that the Act does not
    prohibit the use of “hell or high water” financing. In light of our ruling, we need not consider the
    affect of the 2007 amendment.
    6
    We note that prior to entering into a guaranteed energy savings contract, the public
    university must evaluate the cost of “debt service” which would include financing costs. 110
    ILCS 62/10 (West 1998).
    23
    1-08-1258
    Certified questions answered; cause remanded.
    QUINN and COLEMAN, JJ., concur.
    24