Marathon Petroleum Co. v. Cook County Department of Revenue , 2022 IL App (1st) 210635 ( 2022 )


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    2022 IL App (1st) 210635
    No. 1-21-0635
    Opinion filed: December 30, 2022
    Sixth Division
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    MARATHON PETROLEUM COMPANY LP,                                     )          Appeal from the
    f/k/a Marathon Petroleum Company LLP,                              )          Circuit Court of
    )          Cook County, Illinois.
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                          )
    )
    v.                                                           )
    )          No. 2019 L 050614
    THE COOK COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF                                      )
    REVENUE; ZAHRA ALI, as Director of the Cook                        )
    County Department of Revenue; and THE COOK                         )
    COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE                                )          The Honorable
    HEARINGS,                                                          )          John J. Curry Jr.,
    )          Judge Presiding.
    Defendants-Appellants.                                       )
    JUSTICE C.A. WALKER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Mikva and Justice Tailor 1 concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    1
    Oral argument was held in this case before a panel that included Justice Pierce. Justice Pierce has retired, and
    Justice Tailor has been assigned in his place. Justice Tailor has read the briefs and record, and he has listened to the
    oral argument.
    No. 1-21-0635
    ¶1     The instant appeal arises from the circuit court’s reversal of an administrative law judge’s
    decision that upheld taxes and penalties imposed by the Cook County Department of Revenue
    (Department) pursuant to the Cook County Retail Sale of Gasoline and Diesel Tax Ordinance (Fuel
    Tax Ordinance) (Cook County Code of Ordinances § 74-470 et seq. (approved Feb. 6, 2011)). The
    Department imposed fuel taxes and penalties on Marathon Petroleum Company LP (Marathon) for
    book-out transactions, in which no fuel changes location and the parties’ fuel inventories do not
    change. Marathon filed a petition seeking administrative review of the Department’s tax
    assessments, and the administrative law judge found that Marathon’s book-out transactions were
    taxable under the Fuel Tax Ordinance. Hence, Marathon sought administrative review, the circuit
    court reversed, and this appeal followed. On appeal, the Department contends the record supports
    the administrative law judge’s finding that the book-out transactions, though they do not involve
    the physical delivery of fuel, still involve the transfer of an ownership interest as to that fuel and
    are thus taxable sales under the Fuel Tax Ordinance. For the following reasons, we reverse the
    circuit court’s decision, affirm in part and reverse in part the administrative law judge’s decision,
    and remand for recalculation of the amount due without penalties.
    ¶2                                      I. BACKGROUND
    ¶3                             A. Cook County Fuel Tax Ordinance
    ¶4     Fuel is a widely traded commodity, and the County of Cook taxes the sale of gasoline,
    diesel fuel, biodiesel fuel, and GDiesel at a retail level pursuant to the Fuel Tax Ordinance. The
    Department is responsible for administering and enforcing the Ordinance. The Fuel Tax Ordinance
    provides a unique tax collection plan. When a distributor sells fuel to a retailer located in Cook
    County, the distributor collects the fuel tax from the retailer and remits the tax payment to the
    Department. The retailer recovers the fuel tax by adding the tax price to the consumer’s fuel
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    No. 1-21-0635
    purchase. Similarly, when a distributor sells fuel directly to a consumer, the distributor adds the
    tax price to the consumer’s fuel purchase.
    ¶5      The fuel tax collection plan also occurs in distributor-to-distributor transactions. If a buying
    distributor holds a registration certificate issued by the Department, the selling distributor does not
    collect the fuel tax from the buying distributor. The tax is only collected when the last distributor
    in the distribution chain sells the fuel to a retailer doing business in Cook County or to a consumer
    who purchases fuel directly from a fuel distributor for delivery in Cook County. In contrast, if a
    buying distributor does not hold a registration certificate, the selling distributor must collect the
    fuel tax from the unregistered buying distributor and remit the tax payment to the Department. If
    the selling distributor fails to collect the fuel tax from the unregistered buying distributor, the
    Department may seek the uncollected fuel tax from the selling distributor.
    ¶6                              B. Marathon’s Tax Fuel Assessments
    ¶7      Marathon is a refiner of crude oil and distributes petroleum products from facilities in
    Mount Prospect, Argo, and Des Plaines, Illinois, all of which are municipalities located in Cook
    County. Marathon also holds a registration certificate issued by the Department.
    ¶8      In May 2014, the Department started an audit of Marathon’s gasoline and diesel
    transactions occurring between January 2006 and July 2014. At the end of the audit, the
    Department issued two “Notices of Tax Determination and Assessment.” The first notice involved
    Marathon’s gasoline transactions and assessed $16,450,932.78 in tax, interest, and penalties. The
    second notice involved Marathon’s diesel transactions and assessed $13,149,477.88 in tax,
    interest, and penalties.
    ¶9      Marathon filed a “Protest and Petition for Hearing” for each assessment and subsequently
    gave the Department additional documents for review. Based on the Department’s review, it
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    amended Marathon’s assessments, reducing the gasoline assessment to $4,398,180.76 and the
    diesel assessment to $10,537,077.16. Marathon filed a supplemental “Protest and Petition for
    Hearing,” arguing that the assessments contained “book transfers” or “book out” 2 transactions that
    were not taxable sales of fuel as set forth in the Fuel Tax Ordinance.
    ¶ 10                               C. Administrative Proceeding
    ¶ 11   The case proceeded to an administrative hearing on Marathon’s protest and petition for
    hearing. At the hearing, Dr. Gregory Arburn, Marathon’s expert witness, testified that a forward
    contract is an agreement to deliver a product on a specific date and that a book-out transaction is
    one way to financially settle a forward contract “instead of delivery or making delivery” of the
    product. In a book-out transaction, “the parties may sell and acquire an intangible interest in a
    commodity.” The purpose of a book-out transaction is for risk management and cost control.
    ¶ 12   Dr. Andria van der Merwe, the Department’s expert witness, testified that a forward
    contract is a privately negotiated agreement between two parties that “creates an economic
    obligation to buy or sell a commodity” at a specific date. Specifically, on the contracting date, but
    before the delivery date, the parties will negotiate the terms of the contract, including the quantity
    of the commodity, delivery location, delivery date, and the commodity price. The parties must
    fulfill their obligations under the contract by either “physically delivering the commodity or by
    doing a cash settlement.” Dr. van der Merwe stated that, based on Dr. Arburn’s testimony, she
    understood that a book-out transaction is “the cash settlement of the forward contract” and that
    there is no “physical transfer of commodity, but there is a transfer of cash that is the economic
    equivalent of the value of the forward contract.” When asked whether title of ownership transfers
    2
    The terms “book transfer” and “book out” are used interchangeably throughout the record.
    Hereinafter, we refer to these transactions as book-out transactions for consistency purposes.
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    No. 1-21-0635
    in a book-out transaction, Dr. van der Merwe responded, “From an economic perspective, I don’t
    want to opine on transfer of title.”
    ¶ 13   Mr. Jose Vega, the Department’s audit supervisor, testified that he was assigned to review
    Marathon’s revised assessments. During the audit, the Department requested Marathon’s internal
    summary report. The report included invoices that listed the name of a seller, the name of a
    purchaser, the net gallons of fuel sold, and the origin and destination of the fuel. Based on these
    invoices, the Department determined that there were additional sales to unregistered gas
    distributors not listed in Marathon’s tax return. According to Vega, the invoices showing that
    Marathon sold fuel to a buyer exemplified a transfer of ownership in the fuel.
    ¶ 14   Gary Michals, the Department’s deputy director of compliance, testified that he oversaw
    the audit on the initial and revised assessments. Michals reviewed Marathon’s internal summary
    report and found that Marathon was involved in multiple transactions with nonregistered
    purchasers and that these transactions occurred in Cook County. Michals testified that a transfer
    in ownership occurs “on a given delivery date determined by the FOB where a destination is. Then
    at the—at that point money is transferred into Marathon’s account to conclude the sales transaction
    usually within a 48-hour period.” He elaborated that a “[t]ransfer of ownership means a right to
    that given product. Doesn’t necessarily have to be a physical possession.”
    ¶ 15   Joseph Steiner, Marathon’s motor fuel tax specialist, defined a book-out transaction as “a
    mechanism which is used to settle contracts and to remove associated obligations without
    physically moving or transferring any product.” The difference between a book-out transaction
    and a transaction where fuel is sold and transferred is “the book-out transaction is simply a
    financial transaction” whereas a “physical transaction *** would actually mean that the product
    either transferred or moved and there’s some kind of documentation to that effect, a meter ticket,
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    No. 1-21-0635
    a bill of lading, a transfer order with a facility operator, something to evidence the fact that there’s
    been a change in ownership or movement somewhere.”
    ¶ 16    Matthew Freeman, Marathon’s commercial analysis manager, testified to the different
    types of book-out transactions that Marathon employs when settling forward contracts. Freeman
    stated that Marathon generally uses three types of book-out transactions: direct, indirect, and
    distress. In a direct book-out transaction, two companies contract to sell some quantity of fuel to
    one another. The companies merge their contractual agreements together, financially settle the
    contract, and retain their own inventory rather than physically move barrels of fuel. In an indirect
    transaction, three or more companies enter a chain of forward contracts. There is a separate
    contract for each company in the chain. Ultimately, the chain of contracts come full circle and the
    initial company in the chain becomes the buyer and seller. Instead of fulfilling each contractual
    agreement between the various companies, they agree to financially settle the contracts and the
    initial company retains its fuel inventory.
    ¶ 17    In a distress book-out transaction, the selling company cannot fulfill its contractual
    agreement to sell a certain quantity of fuel to the buying company. The buying company agrees to
    enter into a subsequent contractual agreement wherein the buying company will “contract back to
    [the selling company] the same quantity of barrels, just a final obligation saying you’re going to
    sell from [the buying company] back to [the selling company].” The selling company “use[s] that
    paperwork to say [the buying company gave] back the barrels on the original transaction. In this
    there’s no inventory moving, no meter tickets are cut, no transfer orders are sent to the terminal.”
    Freeman explained that the transaction is “just a financial settling.” The companies do not change
    title and do not physically move the fuel. The buying company is not obligated to enter a book-out
    transaction and, instead, may seek enforcement of the contract.
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    No. 1-21-0635
    ¶ 18   Freeman testified to respondent’s exhibit 4, a buy-sell contract between Marathon and
    Sunoco, and exhibit 11, an invoice for the sale of fuel that Marathon sent to Sunoco. Freeman
    explained that, under the buy-sell contract, Marathon agreed to sell 20,000 gallons of fuel to
    Sunoco. Marathon sent the payment invoice to Sunoco for payment to “settle” or “book out” the
    transaction. No physical transfer of the fuel occurred during the transaction.
    ¶ 19   The administrative law judge determined that Marathon provided insufficient evidence that
    its book-out transactions were not subject to the Fuel Tax Ordinance during the audit period.
    Specifically, Marathon failed to corroborate Freeman’s testimony concerning the different types
    of book-out transactions with any documentary evidence of the cash settlement contracts
    associated with the revised tax assessment or with a representative sample of the different types of
    cash settlement contracts and their corresponding forward contracts. While the administrative law
    judge acknowledged Marathon’s buy-sell contract with Sunoco, she found that Marathon failed to
    provide any documentary evidence “memorializing the parties’ agreement to settle two forward
    contracts for cash and setting the terms of the settlements, particularly the price terms.” Because
    Marathon failed to provide sufficient evidence to support its claim, the judge rejected Marathon’s
    argument that the book-out transactions are not taxable sales of fuel subject to the Fuel Tax
    Ordinance.
    ¶ 20                               D. Circuit Court Proceeding
    ¶ 21   Marathon filed a complaint for review of the administrative decision in the circuit court. In
    his written decision, the circuit court judge found that the Department’s auditing method met
    minimum standards of reasonableness. He also found that, even assuming the assessment was
    reasonable, Marathon met its burden of showing that its book-out transactions were “mere cash
    settlements” and not taxable sales of fuel. The circuit court judge held that the administrative law
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    No. 1-21-0635
    judge’s decision constituted reversible error and entered judgment in Marathon’s favor. The
    Department appeals.
    ¶ 22                                        II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 23                                  A. Administrative Decision
    ¶ 24      The Department challenges the circuit court’s reversal of the administrative law judge’s
    decision. We review the administrative agency’s decision, not the judgment of the circuit court.
    Exelon Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 
    234 Ill. 2d 266
    , 272 (2009). On administrative review of
    an agency decision, a court may encounter three types of questions, each with different degrees of
    deference. Cinkus v. Village of Stickney Municipal Officers Electoral Board, 
    228 Ill. 2d 200
    , 210
    (2008).
    ¶ 25      An agency’s findings and conclusions on questions of fact are deemed prima facie true and
    correct, and a reviewing court will not overturn those findings unless they are against the manifest
    weight of the evidence. 
    Id.
     An agency’s findings on questions of law, in contrast, are not binding,
    and a court’s review is de novo. 
    Id.
     “Mixed questions of fact and law are questions in which the
    historical facts are admitted or established, the rule of law is undisputed, and the issue is whether
    the facts satisfy the statutory standard, or to put it another way, whether the rule of law as applied
    to the established facts is or is not violated.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. at 211
    . For
    mixed questions, the reviewing court reviews whether the agency’s decision is clearly erroneous.
    
    Id.
     An agency’s decision is clearly erroneous when the reviewing court is left with the definite and
    firm conviction that a mistake has been made. 
    Id.
    ¶ 26                             1. The Department’s Prima Facie Case
    ¶ 27      Marathon argues that the Department failed to establish a prima facie case that its auditing
    method met a minimum standard of reasonableness because (1) the Department failed to
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    No. 1-21-0635
    distinguish between buy-sell transactions and book-out transactions when it audited Marathon’s
    internal summary report and (2) the Department failed to understand the nature of book-out
    transactions by ignoring Marathon’s documents during the audit and adopting its own
    interpretation of the transactional record. The Department argues that it did not fail to make a
    distinction between the two types of transactions but that forward contracts, even if they are later
    “booked out,” still constitute taxable sales of fuel under the Fuel Tax Ordinance.
    ¶ 28    Section 34-64 of the Cook County Code of Ordinances states that “[a]ny tax determination
    and assessment, or amended tax determination and assessment, shall be deemed prima facie correct
    and the burden shall be on the person assessed to prove the contrary.” Cook County Code of
    Ordinances § 34-64(b)(2) (approved Feb. 16, 2011). If the taxpayer challenges the method
    employed by the Department to calculate the amount of tax due, then the record must show that
    the techniques and assumptions that the Department used met some minimum standard of
    reasonableness. Chak Fai Hau v. Department of Revenue, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 172588
    , ¶ 46.
    ¶ 29    We begin our review of the Department’s method by first examining the relevant
    provisions of the Fuel Tax Ordinance. Section 74-472 of the Fuel Tax Ordinance imposes a tax on
    the retail sale of gasoline, diesel fuel, biodiesel fuel, and GDiesel fuel on a distributor or supplier.
    Cook County Code of Ordinances § 74-472(a) (approved Feb. 16, 2011). Section 74-472(c)(3)
    provides that the tax levied “shall be collected by each distributor or supplier who sells gasoline,
    diesel fuel, biodiesel fuel, or gdiesal [sic] fuel to *** [a]nother Gas Distributor doing business in
    the County that is not holding a valid registration certificate.” Id. § 74-472(c)(3). Section 74-471
    of the Fuel Tax Ordinance defines “Sale, resale, and selling” as “any transfer of ownership or
    possession or both, exchange or barter, conditional or otherwise, in any manner or by any means
    whatsoever.” Id. § 74-471.
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    No. 1-21-0635
    ¶ 30   Considering these provisions, the record shows that the Department’s auditing method met
    a minimum standard of reasonableness. Vega audited Marathon’s books and records pertaining to
    the revised assessment. During the audit, Vega reviewed the internal summary report, along with
    additional contracts, invoices, and documents provided by Marathon. Based on this information,
    Vega identified multiple sales transactions between Marathon and distributors unregistered with
    the Department. Vega determined that the transactions constituted sales because the report listed
    Marathon as the seller, a purchaser company that was not listed as a registered Cook County
    distributor, the gallons of fuel sold, and the origin and destination of that fuel was in Cook County.
    ¶ 31   Michals reviewed audits on the initial and revised assessments. He reviewed Marathon’s
    internal summary report and entered the names of all the companies involved in transactions with
    Marathon into the Department’s fuel registration database to determine whether the company was
    a registered distributor. Michals found that there were multiple sales transactions that occurred
    between Marathon and a company that was not listed in the registration database. He calculated
    the amount of fuel sold to the unregistered companies and generated the revised tax assessments.
    In light of Vega’s and Michals’s testimonies, we find that the Department’s method was reasonable
    despite Marathon’s assertion that the Department failed to adopt its interpretation of a book-out
    transaction. Accordingly, we hold that the Department established a prima facie case.
    ¶ 32            2. Marathon’s Rebuttal to the Department’s Prima Facie Case
    ¶ 33   Next, we consider Marathon’s alternative argument that it overcame the Department’s
    prima facie case by presenting rebuttal evidence that its book-out transactions were not subject to
    the Fuel Tax Ordinance. The Department contends that Marathon did not meet its burden because
    it failed to present evidence “consistent, probable, and identified with” its books and records
    showing that the Department’s revised assessment was incorrect.
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    No. 1-21-0635
    ¶ 34   The burden is on Marathon to present “competent evidence to show that the Department’s
    assessment of additional tax liability was incorrect.” Chak Fai Hau, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 172588
    ,
    ¶ 54. “[A taxpayer] may not prevail by merely saying [his] own return was correct,***. Simply
    questioning the Department of Revenue’s return does not shift the burden to the Department of
    Revenue.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     The taxpayer must present “ ‘competent
    evidence, identified with *** books and records showing that the Department’s returns are
    incorrect.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting Masini v. Department of Revenue, 
    60 Ill. App. 3d 11
    , 15 (1978)); see also
    PPG Industries, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 
    328 Ill. App. 3d 16
    , 34 (2002) (“a taxpayer ***
    must present sufficient documentary support for its assertions” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    “ ‘The law is well-settled that a taxpayer cannot overcome the Department’s prima facie case
    merely by denying the accuracy of the Department’s assessments or by suggesting hypothetical
    weaknesses.’ ” Chak Fai Hau, 
    2019 IL App (1st) 172588
    , ¶ 54 (quoting Smith v. Department of
    Revenue, 143 Ill App. 3d 607, 613 (1986)).
    ¶ 35   Here, the administrative law judge acknowledged that Marathon presented testimony on
    the nature and types of book-out transactions Marathon used to settle its forward contracts. The
    administrative law judge, however, found that Marathon failed to corroborate that testimony with
    documents demonstrating that book-out transactions actually occurred. We find this focus to be
    somewhat misplaced. The question here is not whether book-out transactions occurred, but how
    forward contracts with corresponding book-out transactions should be treated for tax purposes.
    Marathon’s position is that no taxable event occurs because the act of “booking out” forward
    contracts before delivery is a purely financial transaction involving no actual transfer of an
    ownership interest in fuel. This understanding is contradicted not only by how the relevant terms
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    No. 1-21-0635
    are used in the field of commodities trading but also by the testimony of Marathon’s own
    witnesses.
    ¶ 36   The Department invites us to take judicial notice of the definitions used in the
    PriceWaterhouseCoopers “Glossary of terms used in the trading of oil and gas, utilities and mining
    commodities.”    See    PriceWaterhouseCoopers,         Energy,   Utilities   &   Mining   Glossary,
    https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/energy-utilities-
    mining/pdf/eumcommoditiestradingriskmanagementglossary.pdf (last visited Dec. 16, 2022)
    [https://perma.cc/A7AS-ZK5T]. There, “[f]orward buying” is defined as “[t]he acquisition of
    energy or related services in advance of need.” Id. at 52. Unlike a “[f]utures contract,” in which
    “the seller doesn’t sell the commodity until the date on the contract” (id. at 55), a “[f]orward’’
    contract is the present sale of a commodity “that will be delivered to the buyer at a specified time
    in the future.” Id. at 52. A “[b]ook” is “[t]he total of all forward positions held by a trader or
    company,” and a “[b]ook transfer” or “book out” is “[t]he transfer of title of a cash commodity to
    the buyer without a corresponding physical movement.” Id. at 13. As both the glossary and
    Marathon’s expert, Dr. Arburn, note, futures contracts are regulated by the Commodity Futures
    Trading Commission (CFTC); forward contracts, like the ones at issue here, are not.
    ¶ 37   These definitions align with Marathon’s own internal documentation and the testimony of
    its witnesses in these proceedings. Exhibit 4, referenced above, implicitly recognizes that delivery
    on a forward contract may take place “by book transfer.” Dr. Arbun agreed that a book-out
    transaction can involve the acquisition of “an intangible interest in a commodity.” Mr. Freeman
    likewise explained that in a book-out “I have the barrels, you gave them to me essentially,” and
    “I’m going to give them back to you,” although “[w]e’re not going to move them anywhere.” We
    find that under section 74-471 of the Fuel Tax Ordinance—which broadly defines the sale of fuel
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    No. 1-21-0635
    as “any transfer of ownership or possession or both *** by any means whatsoever” (Cook County
    Code of Ordinances § 74-471 (approved Feb. 6, 2011))—the transfer of that intangible ownership
    interest is enough to make these transactions taxable.
    ¶ 38     Although not commented on by the parties, we note, as further persuasive support for this
    understanding, the apparently longstanding treatment of book transfers as taxable sales by the
    Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR). When asked, for example, whether the Illinois prepaid
    sales tax would be owed “on book transfers of motor fuel with a non-licensed distributor or
    supplier,” which involved “the passing of title to product among several parties without moving
    the product,” the IDOR responded in a June 1, 1987, opinion letter that, based on this limited
    information, the tax would indeed be owed. Ill. Dep’t of Revenue Letter Ruling No. 87-0396 (June
    1, 1987), 
    1987 WL 53530
    . When asked more recently about book transfers in the uranium market,
    the IDOR noted in a 2011 private letter ruling that a company purchasing uranium in book entry
    form for eventual resale could sell, swap, or trade the uranium during that time (though the uranium
    itself remained in the possession of a second company at that company’s secure facility) and thus
    qualified as a “dealer” under the Illinois Income Tax Act. Ill. Dep’t of Revenue Private Letter
    Ruling           No.          IT         11-0003-PLR             (Nov.          18,          2011),
    https://tax.illinois.gov/content/dam/soi/en/web/tax/research/legalinformation/letterrulings/it/docu
    ments/2011/it-11-0003-p.pdf [https://perma.cc/8H23-4BVP].
    ¶ 39     Based on the foregoing, we agree with the administrative law judge’s determination that
    Marathon failed to rebut the Department’s prima facie case that the transactions at issue here were
    taxable sales under the Fuel Tax Ordinance.
    ¶ 40                          B. Marathon’s Alternative Arguments
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    No. 1-21-0635
    ¶ 41    Marathon additionally argues that the Fuel Tax Ordinance, as applied to book-out
    transactions, impermissibly imposes an occupation tax on fuel distributors in violation of the
    Illinois Constitution. The Illinois Constitution authorizes a home rule unit, such as Cook County,
    to exercise any power and perform any function pertaining to its government and affairs. Ill. Const.
    1970, art. VII, § 6(e). A home rule unit only has “the power that the General Assembly may provide
    by law *** to license for revenue or impose taxes upon or measured by income or earnings or upon
    occupations.” Id. The General Assembly has enumerated certain instances where a home rule unit
    is permitted to impose an occupation tax; however, a tax on fuel distributors is not one of these
    exceptions. See 55 ILCS 5/5-1009 (West 2020). Thus, as Marathon argues, it generally would be
    impermissible for the Department to impose an occupation tax under the circumstances in this
    case.
    ¶ 42    Here, however, the fuel tax ordinance does not impose an impermissible occupation tax on
    fuel distributors that engage in book-out transactions. In her decision, the administrative law judge
    rejected Marathon’s argument that no retail sale, e.g., the taxable sale of fuel to consumers or end
    users, occurred in book-out transactions. The administrative law judge found that Marathon failed
    to establish that the fuel associated with its book-out transactions could never be sold at retail and
    that the tax will never be imposed on the consumer or end user.
    ¶ 43    Moreover, to the extent that Marathon challenges the Fuel Tax Ordinance’s collect-and-
    remit plan between two distributors, our supreme court held that similar collect-and-remit plans
    do not impose an occupation tax. See Mulligan v. Dunne, 
    61 Ill. 2d 544
    , 551-52 (1975); S. Bloom,
    Inc. v. Korshak, 
    52 Ill. 2d 56
     (1972). Thus, we hold that the administrative law judge did not err
    in finding that the Fuel Tax Ordinance did not impose an occupation tax in violation of the Illinois
    Constitution.
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    No. 1-21-0635
    ¶ 44   Next, Marathon contends that the Department erroneously held that the Fuel Tax Ordinance
    applied to book-out transactions that did not occur within Cook County. Marathon asserts that this
    application constitutes an extraterritorial tax in violation of the Illinois Constitution. Marathon also
    argues that its book-out transactions have no nexus with Cook County and, therefore, violate the
    due process clauses of the United States and Illinois Constitutions (U.S. Const. amend. V; Ill.
    Const. 1970, art. I, §2). Marathon specifically refers to the Department taxing its transactions
    labeled “F.O.B. Chicago, IL” despite Marathon having no fuel storage facilities in Chicago and
    the fact that no sale, as defined by the Fuel Tax ordinance, occurred in Cook County. To support
    its argument, Marathon relies on Hertz Corp. v. City of Chicago, 
    2017 IL 119945
    .
    ¶ 45   In Hertz, the City of Chicago sought to enforce a tax ordinance that required suburban
    vehicle rental companies within three miles of the City’s borders to collect taxes on Chicago
    residents who rented vehicles. Hertz Corp., 
    2017 IL 119945
    , ¶ 5. Our supreme court found that
    the tax was based on the mere presumption that residents will drive the vehicle in Chicago when,
    in fact, there was no evidence of such occurrence. Id. ¶ 30. Consequently, the court held that the
    tax had an extraterritorial effect and, therefore, was beyond the City’s home rule powers. Id. ¶ 31.
    ¶ 46   We find Hertz inapplicable here given the procedural posture of this case. The Fuel Tax
    Ordinance requires a selling distributor to collect taxes from “[a]nother Gas Distributor doing
    business in the County that is not holding a valid registration certificate.” (Emphasis added.) Cook
    County Code of Ordinances § 74-472(a)(3) (approved Feb. 16, 2011). The administrative law
    judge held that Marathon failed to produce evidence that the companies it contracted with did not
    do business as distributors of fuel in Cook County. In fact, as the administrative law judge found,
    one of the companies that was a party to Marathon’s book-out transactions, Phillips 66, registered
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    No. 1-21-0635
    with the Department as a Cook County distributor within the audit period indicating that, at some
    point, Marathon sold fuel to an unregistered distributor doing business in Cook County.
    “In examining an administrative agency’s factual findings, a reviewing court does
    not weigh the evidence or substitute its judgment for that of the agency. Instead, a
    reviewing court is limited to ascertaining whether such findings of fact are against
    the manifest weight of the evidence. An administrative agency’s factual
    determinations are against the manifest weight of the evidence if the opposite
    conclusion is clearly evident.” Cinkus, 
    228 Ill. 2d at 210
    .
    ¶ 47   Here, we find the agency’s factual determinations are not against the manifest weight of
    the evidence, and we find the facts satisfy the statutory standard such that the rule of law as applied
    to the established facts has not been violated. We are not left with the definite and firm conviction
    that a mistake has been made. Thus, we decline to extend Hertz to this case because Marathon
    failed to show that it did not conduct book-out transactions with unregistered distributors that were
    doing business in Cook County and thereby demonstrate that its book-out transactions had no
    connection to Cook County. Accordingly, we do not find the decision of the agency to be clearly
    erroneous. 
    Id.
    ¶ 48   Finally, Marathon argues the Department should not have imposed penalties in addition to
    the taxes and interest imposed in the revised tax assessment. Cook County’s Uniform Penalties,
    Interest, and Procedures Ordinance provides:
    “If the Director determines that the taxpayer or tax collector had reasonable cause
    for any of the following:
    (1) Paying late;
    (2) Remitting late;
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    No. 1-21-0635
    (3) Underpaying the applicable tax;
    (4) Filing a late or incomplete tax return; or
    (5) Filing a late or incomplete remittance return, the applicable
    penalty shall be waived.” Cook County Code of Ordinances § 34-68(c)
    (amended Dec. 17, 2014).
    The ordinance echoes section 3-8 of the Uniform Penalty and Interest Act, which similarly permits
    abatement of penalties when the taxpayer shows reasonable cause for failing to pay the taxes. 35
    ILCS 735/3-8 (West 2020). Additionally, the Administrative Code provides:
    “The determination of whether a taxpayer acted with reasonable cause shall be
    made on a case by case basis taking into account all pertinent facts and
    circumstances. The most important factor to be considered in making a
    determination to abate a penalty will be the extent to which the taxpayer made a
    good faith effort to determine his proper tax liability and to file and pay his proper
    liability in a timely fashion.” 86 Ill. Adm. Code 700.400(b) (2019).
    See Horsehead Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 
    2019 IL 124155
    , ¶ 46.
    ¶ 49   Our supreme court’s decision in Horsehead Corp. provides guidance on this issue. There,
    the Illinois Department of Revenue imposed late payment and late filing penalties against
    Horsehead Corporation (Horsehead) for failing to pay a use tax. Horsehead Corp., 
    2019 IL 124155
    , ¶¶ 4, 45. The court found that Horsehead had reasonable cause for failing to pay the use
    tax because, inter alia, the use tax exemption, which Horsehead argued was applicable to its case,
    had no statutory definition and no caselaw that Horsehead could rely on for guidance as to how
    the exemption is interpreted and applied. Id. ¶ 51. The court held that, therefore, the imposition of
    penalties was against the manifest weight of the evidence. Id. ¶ 52.
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    No. 1-21-0635
    ¶ 50   Here, as in Horsehead, the taxpayer’s decision not to pay the taxes resulted from a
    reasonable interpretation of the law. No prior Illinois case established the taxability of book-out
    transactions as sales. Because no product changes hands and no inventories change, the transaction
    in some respects appears not to include any sale. We find that under the circumstances of this case,
    the decision to affirm the imposition of penalties is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence.
    See Horsehead, 
    2019 IL 124155
    , ¶ 46. We remand the case to the Cook County Department of
    Administrative Hearings for redetermination of the debt without the imposition of penalties. In all
    other respects, we affirm the administrative law judge’s decision.
    ¶ 51                                    III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 52   The administrative law judge did not err in upholding the revised tax assessment on the
    imposition of taxes and interest. However, Marathon showed reasonable cause for its failure to
    pay the taxes at the time of the sales, so the Department improperly imposed penalties on
    Marathon. We affirm the administrative law judge’s decision insofar as the decision requires the
    payment of taxes, but we reverse the decision to impose penalties, and we remand for recalculation
    of the amount due.
    ¶ 53   Circuit court judgment reversed; Department decision affirmed in part and reversed in part;
    cause remanded.
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    No. 1-21-0635
    Marathon Petroleum Co. v. Cook County Department of Revenue,
    
    2022 IL App (1st) 210635
    Decision Under Review:      Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 19-L-050614;
    the Hon. John J. Curry Jr., Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                   Kimberly M. Foxx, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Cathy McNeil
    for                         Stein, Marie D. Spicuzza, Paul L. Fangman, and Jonathon D.
    Appellant:                  Byrer, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for appellants.
    Attorneys                   David W. Machemer and Marilyn A. Wethekam, of Horwood
    for                         Marcus & Berk Chtrd., of Chicago, for appellee.
    Appellee:
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