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Appellate Court Date: 2018.07.18
17:10:10 -05'00'
People ex rel. Lindblom v. Sears Brands, LLC, 2018 IL App (1st) 171468
Appellate Court THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS ex rel. RICHARD
Caption LINDBLOM and RALPH LINDBLOM, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v.
SEARS BRANDS, LLC, an Illinois Corporation, HOME DEPOT,
U.S.A., INC., a Georgia Corporation, LOWE’S HOME CENTERS,
LLC, a North Carolina Corporation, BEST BUY STORES, L.P., a
Minnesota Corporation, and GREGG APPLIANCES, INC., an
Indiana Corporation, Defendants (Best Buy Stores, L.P., a Minnesota
Corporation, Defendant-Appellee).
District & No. First District, Second Division
Docket No. 1-17-1468
Filed April 17, 2018
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 15-L-50776; the
Review Hon. James E. Snyder, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Reversed and remanded.
Counsel on Paul Berks, of Massey & Gail, LLP, of Chicago, for appellants.
Appeal
Baker & McKenzie LLP, of Chicago (Scott L. Brandman, David A.
Pope, Matthew S. Mock, and David A. Hemmings, of counsel), for
appellee.
Panel JUSTICE MASON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Pucinski and Hyman concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Relators-appellants, Richard Lindblom and Ralph Lindblom, brought this qui tam action
on behalf of themselves and the State of Illinois under the Illinois False Claims Act (Act) (740
ILCS 175/1 et seq. (West 2014)) against defendants Sears Brands, LLC (Sears); Home Depot
U.S.A., Inc. (Home Depot); Lowe’s Home Centers, LLC (Lowe’s); Best Buy Stores, L.P.
(Best Buy); and Gregg Appliances, Inc. (Gregg Appliances). This appeal involves only
defendant-appellee Best Buy. For purposes of this appeal, relators alleged that Best Buy
knowingly engaged in a scheme to avoid payment of retailers’ occupation tax (sales tax) and
use tax by treating the sale and installation of dishwashers and over-the-range microwave
ovens as a construction contract, which is not subject to the collection of sales tax from
purchasers. At the time relators added Best Buy as a defendant, the Illinois Department of
Revenue (Department) was in the process of auditing Best Buy’s sales tax calculation practices
and had issued a proposed tax liability. Best Buy requested review of the proposed tax liability
by the Department’s Informal Conference Board (Board). Best Buy moved to dismiss relators’
qui tam complaint under section 2-619(a)(9) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS
5/2-619(a)(9) (West 2014)), asserting that the “government action bar” set forth in section
4(e)(3) of the Act (740 ILCS 175/4(e)(3) (West 2014)) barred relators’ qui tam action because
it was the subject of an administrative civil money penalty proceeding (the audit combined
with the Board’s review) and the State was already a party in that proceeding. The trial court
agreed with Best Buy’s position and dismissed Best Buy from relators’ qui tam action.
¶2 Relators appeal the dismissal, asserting that the audit and the Board’s review were not
adversarial and, thus, could not be an administrative civil money penalty proceeding. Relators
also contend that the subject of the audit and the Board’s review were different from the
qui tam suit that focused on fraud and Best Buy’s knowing misclassification of sales of
over-the-range microwaves and dishwashers as a construction contract in order to avoid
remittance of sales tax to the Department. Finding merit in relators’ position, we reverse and
remand for further proceedings.
¶3 BACKGROUND
¶4 A. Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act
¶5 In Illinois, the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act (35 ILCS 120/1 et seq. (West 2014)) imposes
sales tax on retailers selling tangible personal property to purchasers for use or consumption.
Kean v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 235 Ill. 2d 351, 362 (2009) (citing 35 ILCS 120/2 (West 2006));
86 Ill. Adm. Code 130.101 (2005). The use tax complements the sales tax and is imposed on
taxpayers for the use of tangible personal property purchased from a retailer. Irwin Industrial
Tool Co. v. Department of Revenue, 238 Ill. 2d 332, 340 (2010) (citing 35 ILCS 105/3 (West
2008)); 86 Ill. Adm. Code 150.101(a) (1991). The sales tax is computed as a percentage of
“gross receipts” (35 ILCS 120/2-10 (West 2014)), defined as the “total selling price” (id. § 1).
Citibank, N.A. v. Illinois Department of Revenue, 2017 IL 121634, ¶ 2. A retailer remits the
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sales tax collected from the purchaser to the Department. Id. On the other hand, a construction
contract involves the incorporation of tangible personal property into real estate, and such
contracts are not subject to sales tax on the labor furnished and tangible personal property
(materials and fixtures) incorporated into a structure. 86 Ill. Adm. Code 130.1940(c) (2000);
86 Ill. Adm. Code 130.2075(a)(2) (2001). Instead, the construction contractor pays a use tax
based on the price it paid for the affixed property. 86 Ill. Adm. Code 130.1940(c) (2000); 86 Ill.
Adm. Code 130.2075(a)(2) (2001). Stated simply, a purchaser does not pay sales tax on a
construction contract.
¶6 B. The False Claims Act
¶7 Several sections of the Act are relevant here. Section 3(a)(1)(G) provides that any person
who “knowingly conceals or knowingly and improperly avoids or decreases an obligation to
pay or transmit money or property to the State” is liable to the State for a civil penalty. 740
ILCS 175/3(a)(1)(G) (West 2014). Section 4(b)(1) authorizes private persons, referred to as
plaintiffs-relators, to bring civil actions on behalf of themselves and on behalf of the State of
Illinois against any person violating section 3(a)(1)(G). Id. § 4(b)(1); State ex rel. Beeler,
Schad & Diamond, P.C. v. Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corp., 369 Ill. App. 3d 507,
510 (2006) (citing 740 ILCS 175/4(b)(1) (West 2002)). The action brought by a relator is
known as a “qui tam” action. Id. (citing 740 ILCS 175/4(c) (West 2002)). But under section
4(e)(3), a relator may not “bring an action under subsection (b) [permitting qui tam actions]
which is based upon allegations or transactions which are the subject of a civil suit or an
administrative civil money penalty proceeding in which the State is already a party.” 740 ILCS
175/4(e)(3) (West 2014). Section 4(e)(3)’s restriction is known as the “government action
bar.” See United States ex rel. Batty v. Amerigroup Illinois, Inc., 528 F. Supp. 2d 861, 876 &
n.12 (N.D. Ill. 2007) (referring to 31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(3) (2006), a federal parallel provision to
740 ILCS 175/4(e)(3), as the government action bar). The government action bar prohibits
qui tam actions that are parasitic in that they duplicate the State’s civil suits or administrative
proceedings without giving the government any useful return, other than the potential for
additional monetary recovery. People ex rel. Schad, Diamond & Shedden, P.C. v. QVC, Inc.,
2015 IL App (1st) 132999, ¶ 23; 740 ILCS 175/4 (West 2014).
¶8 After a relator files a qui tam action, the State may elect to intervene, take over and proceed
with the action, or decline to intervene giving the relator the right to conduct the action.
Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse Corp., 369 Ill. App. 3d at 510 (citing 740 ILCS
175/4(b)(4) (West 2002)). A relator is a party to the qui tam action and is awarded a percentage
of the proceeds or settlement if the action is successful. Id. (citing 740 ILCS 175/4(c)(1), (d)
(West 2002)).
¶9 C. The Lindbloms’ Case
¶ 10 Richard and Ralph Lindblom are brothers, and they own and operate Advanced Appliance,
Inc., d/b/a Advanced Maytag Home Appliance Center (Advanced Maytag), located in
Schaumburg, Illinois. Advanced Maytag’s business consists of selling and servicing home
appliances. Likewise, a portion of Best Buy’s business includes selling home appliances, such
as dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves.
¶ 11 Beginning in the late 1970s, the relators’ father, who owned Advanced Maytag at the time,
learned that Advanced Maytag’s competitor, defendant Sears, did not charge sales tax on the
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retail sales of dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves when the purchaser also arranged
for delivery and installation services from Sears because Sears treated those sales as a
construction contract, which was not subject to the collection of sales tax from purchasers.
Relators later learned that the other named defendants, including Best Buy, followed Sears’s
practice of failing to remit sales tax on the gross receipts from the sale of dishwashers and
over-the-range microwaves by treating sales of those appliances as construction contracts.
Relators believed this practice was a knowing and purposeful scheme to avoid remitting the
taxes owed on the sale of dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves. Relators estimated that
Advanced Maytag lost approximately 36 sales a year to defendants based on defendants’ lower
prices due to their failure to collect and remit the requisite sales tax.
¶ 12 In February 2015, relators contacted the Department and provided specific examples of
defendants’ failure to charge purchasers sales tax on dishwashers and over-the-range
microwaves when also arranging for delivery and installation of those appliances. The
Department acknowledged that defendants may have stretched the interpretation of “affixed to
real estate,” as well as what constitutes a construction contract versus a retail purchase with
separate installation.
¶ 13 Following and allegedly in response to the information provided by relators, in June 2015,
the Department issued a compliance alert to retailers addressing the proper tax treatment of
appliances and other tangible personal property sold with installation services and whether
those sales qualified as construction contracts. The compliance alert clarified that if a customer
who is the end user of tangible personal property makes a retail purchase and enters into a
separate agreement for installation, then the sale is an over-the-counter transaction subject to
sales tax. The compliance alert explained that the sale of tangible personal property along with
a separate agreement to install the property does not convert a retail sale into a construction
contract. The applicable tax relating to the sale of tangible personal property is based either on
the cost of the property affixed to real estate as part of a construction contract, or on the selling
price of items sold over-the-counter.
¶ 14 On August 31, 2015, Best Buy received a notice of audit initiation from the Department
notifying Best Buy that it was conducting a limited scope review of Best Buy’s appliance sales
to Illinois customers for the audit period from July 1, 2012, through December 31, 2013. The
Department’s audit of Best Buy was confidential and not publically disclosed. 35 ILCS 120/11
(West 2014).
¶ 15 During an audit, the Department examines the procedures a taxpayer has used in tax returns
to calculate the tax base, any exemptions and deductions claimed, and the overall accuracy of
the tax return filed. 35 ILCS 5/904(a) (West 2014); Ill. Dep’t of Revenue, Illinois Audit
Information, http://tax.illinois.gov/Publications/PIOs/PIO-60.pdf (last visited Apr. 12, 2018).
After the auditor has examined the taxpayer’s books and records, the Department issues a
written notice of proposed liability, notice of proposed deficiency, or notice of proposed
(refund) claim denial reflecting the auditor’s proposed audit adjustment. 86 Ill. Adm. Code
215.115 (2007).
¶ 16 A taxpayer may request review by the Department’s Board of the proposed audit
adjustments, and the Board’s review is informal in nature. Id. The Board’s informal review
process affords taxpayers an opportunity to resolve disagreements with the Department’s
proposed audit adjustments before commencement of the formal protest and administrative
hearing process. 86 Ill. Adm. Code 215.100 (2007). The Board’s goal is to ensure that the
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Department’s proposed audit adjustments disputed by the taxpayer are correct and to resolve
disputes with taxpayers concerning their tax liability at the earliest opportunity possible. Id. A
taxpayer may request an in-person conference with the Board, but the Board conducts no
hearing of any type and formal rules of evidence do not apply at the informal conference. 86
Ill. Adm. Code 215.130 (2007). Documentation or information submitted to the Board by a
taxpayer does not become part of any formal record and cannot be forwarded to any other
agency or judicial body for purposes of making a determination on the merits of any case. 86
Ill. Adm. Code 215.120(c) (2007). Instead, both the taxpayer and the Department must provide
all evidence that they wish to be considered directly to those entities in the event of a later
dispute. Id. The Board’s informal conference process is not subject to the requirements of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act (5 ILCS 100/1-1 et seq. (West 2014)), and the Board’s
final action is not subject to administrative review. 86 Ill. Adm. Code 215.120 (2007).
¶ 17 After the Board concludes its review, the Board issues an action decision and the audit is
finalized. Id.; Ill. Dep’t of Revenue, Informal Conference Board Review,
http://tax.illinois.gov/Publications/PIOs/PIO-58.pdf (last visited Apr. 12, 2018). If the Board
upholds the proposed tax liability, the Department issues a notice of tax liability. Following
receipt of a notice of tax liability, a taxpayer may dispute the imposition of the tax by
withholding payment and participating in an administrative hearing. 35 ILCS 120/4, 12 (West
2014); Ill. Dep’t of Revenue, Illinois Audit Information, http://tax.illinois.gov/
Publications/PIOs/PIO-60.pdf (last visited Apr. 12, 2018). An administrative hearing is a
formal legal proceeding, and it is presided over by an administrative law judge. Slater v.
Department of Children & Family Services, 2011 IL App (1st) 102914, ¶ 28; Ill. Dep’t of
Revenue, Illinois Audit Information, http://tax.illinois.gov/Publications/PIOs/PIO-60.pdf (last
visited Apr. 12, 2018). Alternatively, the taxpayer may pay the tax under protest and seek
judicial determination of the tax dispute under the State Officers and Employees Money
Disposition Act (Protest Monies Act) (30 ILCS 230/1 et seq. (West 2014)) in lieu of
exhausting its administrative remedies under the tax code. National City Corp. & Subsidiaries
v. Department of Revenue, 366 Ill. App. 3d 37, 44 (2006).
¶ 18 On November 12, 2015, relators filed this whistleblower qui tam action under the Act,
alleging that big-box appliance retailers, Sears, Home Depot, Lowe’s, and Gregg Appliances,
violated section 3(a)(1)(G) by knowingly and improperly avoiding or decreasing their
obligation to collect and remit sales tax on dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves sold in
conjunction with installation of the appliance. Best Buy was not originally named as a
defendant. After receiving relators’ complaint and pertinent information, the Attorney
General, on behalf of the State, elected not to intervene in the action, and relators brought this
action on their own behalf and on behalf of the State. At the time the complaint was filed, the
Department had not completed its audit of Best Buy, nor had the fact of the ongoing audit been
publically disclosed.
¶ 19 About two months later on January 25, 2016, the Department sent Best Buy a notice of
proposed liability asserting that Best Buy owed sales tax on certain sales of appliances that
were sold with installation and delivery and assessed $173,610 in tax, $26,040 in penalties, and
$11,026 in interest. Best Buy requested full abatement of the assessed penalty, which the
Department granted. On March 23, 2016, Best Buy requested review of the proposed liability
by the Board. Best Buy asserted that it acted properly as a construction contractor not subject
to sales tax on receipts from labor furnished and tangible personal property installed into a
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structure as an integral part of real property. Best Buy claimed that instead of sales tax, it
incurred and remitted use tax on the cost of the tangible personal property that was
permanently affixed to real property as the end user of the property. The Board granted Best
Buy’s request for an in-person conference, which was held on October 11, 2016.
¶ 20 While the Board’s review was pending, relators amended their qui tam complaint to
include Best Buy as a defendant. Approximately a month later on September 28, 2016, relators
filed a second amended complaint, which is the subject of this appeal. In that complaint,
relators alleged that defendants, including Best Buy, engaged in a scheme to conceal and avoid
their obligations to pay sales tax to the State. The alleged scheme involved defendants
characterizing nonpermanently affixed installed appliances (dishwashers and over-the-range
microwaves) as permanent improvements to real property to avoid collecting sales tax from
their customers. Relators asserted that defendants knowingly and incorrectly designated the
sales of these appliances when they arranged for delivery and installation as construction
contracts (instead of retail sales) and knowingly failed to collect and remit sales tax on the
gross receipts from the sales of those appliances.
¶ 21 Defendants filed a joint motion to dismiss the second amended complaint, asserting that
relators failed to plead fraud with the requisite specificity demonstrating that defendants
knowingly submitted false claims and failed to remit the required tax due.
¶ 22 Best Buy also moved separately to dismiss the second amended complaint on the
independent ground that the government action bar of section 4(e)(3) barred relators’ claims
because the claims were the subject of an administrative civil money penalty proceeding in
which the State was already a party. Best Buy took the position that the government action bar
applied because by the time relators named Best Buy as a defendant, the Department had
completed its field audit and issued a notice of proposed liability and Best Buy had initiated the
Board’s review, which collectively constituted an administrative civil money penalty
proceeding that addressed the exact tax issues raised by relators in the qui tam action. Best Buy
characterized the qui tam action as nothing more than a parasitic lawsuit that provided no
benefit to the State.
¶ 23 On January 23, 2017, after Best Buy filed its motions to dismiss and before the trial court
ruled on those motions, the Board denied Best Buy’s request to withdraw the tax and interest
liabilities assessed in the notice of proposed liability. Best Buy received the Department’s
“Notice of Tax Liability” dated April 4, 2017, which assessed $173,610 in tax and $18,537.58
in interest for the audit period. Best Buy objected to the assessed liability by filing an action
under the Protest Monies Act (30 ILCS 230/2a (West 2014)).
¶ 24 After a hearing on defendants’ motions to dismiss held on the same day Best Buy received
the Department’s notice of tax liability, the trial court granted defendants’ joint section 2-615
motion to dismiss without prejudice, finding that the complaint failed to plead fraud with
specificity. The trial court reserved ruling on Best Buy’s separate motion to dismiss and
directed the parties to submit additional briefs on the issue of whether the Department’s audit
procedures constituted an administrative civil money penalty proceeding that barred relators’
qui tam claim. After reviewing the supplemental briefs, the trial court found that the
government action bar applied because the Department’s audit and notice of proposed liability,
combined with Best Buy’s invocation of the Board’s informal assessment review, constituted
an administrative civil money penalty proceeding. The trial court also found that the qui tam
action and the prior administrative proceedings both involved the same core factual
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allegations: that Best Buy was not a construction contractor and was subject to sales tax on the
sale of dishwashers and over-the-range microwaves. The trial court granted Best Buy’s motion
to dismiss with prejudice, dismissed Best Buy from the matter, and entered an Illinois Supreme
Court Rule 304(a) (eff. Mar. 8, 2016) finding.1 Relators’ timely appeal follows.
¶ 25 ANALYSIS
¶ 26 The dispositive issue on appeal is whether the Department’s audit in conjunction with the
Board’s informal review was an administrative civil money penalty proceeding barring
relators’ qui tam action pursuant to the government action bar.
¶ 27 Because we must determine what qualifies as an administrative civil money penalty
proceeding as that term is used in the Act, the issue before us is a matter of statutory
construction. It is well settled that the cardinal rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and
give effect to the intent of the legislature. In re Marriage of Turk, 2014 IL 116730, ¶ 15. The
statute’s language is the best indication of the legislature’s intent and must be given its plain,
ordinary, and popularly understood meaning. Id.; In re Detention of Lieberman, 201 Ill. 2d
300, 308 (2002). It is appropriate to consult a dictionary to determine a statutory term’s plain
and ordinary meaning. People v. Perry, 224 Ill. 2d 312, 330 (2007). When the statute’s
language is clear and unambiguous, we must apply it as written without resort to extrinsic aids
or tools of interpretation. Turk, 2014 IL 116730, ¶ 15. A court should not consider the statute’s
words and phrases in isolation but instead should interpret each word and phrase in light of the
statute as a whole. Standard Mutual Insurance Co. v. Lay, 2013 IL 114617, ¶ 26. Statutory
interpretation is a question of law that we review de novo. Citibank, N.A., 2017 IL 121634,
¶ 39.
¶ 28 The parties correctly note that the Act does not define the term “administrative civil money
penalty proceeding.” Both parties turned to Black’s Law Dictionary’s definition of the term
“administrative proceeding”: “[a] hearing, inquiry, investigation, or trial before an
administrative agency, [usually] adjudicatory in nature but sometimes quasi-legislative.”
Black’s Law Dictionary 54 (10th ed. 2014). Best Buy relies on the first half of the definition,
arguing that the Department’s audit was investigatory and the Board’s review was an
adversarial proceeding. Relators rely on the second half of the definition, arguing that an
administrative proceeding, regardless of the form it takes, must be either adjudicatory in nature
or quasi-legislative. Relators contend that the Department’s audit along with the Board’s
informal review was neither. We agree with relators.
¶ 29 When relators added Best Buy as a defendant to the qui tam action, the Board was in
process of reviewing the proposed liability, but the Department’s audit had not yet been
completed because no notice of tax liability had been issued to Best Buy. Until the Department
completed its audit by issuing the statutory notice of final liability to Best Buy, there was no
final assessment of tax due and, consequently, no determination subject to adjudication.
¶ 30 Although the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act establishes an administrative process that
begins with the initiation of an audit and provides for an informal review of the proposed audit
assessments, that process is not an administrative proceeding and does not implicate formal
1
Relators filed a third amended complaint against the other named defendants, which is not the
subject of this appeal, and had not yet been ruled upon when the trial court dismissed Best Buy from the
qui tam action.
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protest procedures. Importantly, the Board’s informal review addressed the Department’s
notice of proposed, but not final, liability against Best Buy. The nature of the Board’s review
was only to reconsider the proposed assessment against Best Buy, and the Department did not
present evidence supporting its proposed assessed liability. Moreover, the rules of evidence
did not apply to Best Buy’s in-person conference with the Board (86 Ill. Adm. Code 215.130(f)
(2007)), lending support to the position that the Board’s review was not adversarial. A
taxpayer’s formal appeal rights are not triggered until the Department issues a statutory notice,
which had not yet issued here at the time relators joined Best Buy as a defendant. Once the
Department issues a statutory notice, then a taxpayer may invoke administrative proceedings
before an administrative law judge or, alternatively, pay under protest and file an action in the
circuit court. Shell Oil Co. v. Department of Revenue, 95 Ill. 2d 541, 545-46 (1983).
¶ 31 We must be mindful that the relevant statutory language refers to both a “civil suit” and
“administrative civil money penalty proceeding” as matters sufficient to impose the
government action bar. Reading “civil suit” and “administrative civil money penalty
proceeding” together, along with the requirement that the State was already a party to either of
those actions, we can easily ascertain that the legislature intended to bar qui tam actions that
were already subject to an adversarial proceeding in which the State was a party. Although the
Department initiated the audit of Best Buy and grants the Board power to review and consider
a taxpayer’s grievances concerning proposed audit assessments, neither aspect of the
investigation of Best Buy’s potential tax liability amounted to an adversarial proceeding.
Rather, these phases are precursors to a future adversarial proceeding should the taxpayer not
be satisfied with the outcome of the Board’s review. It is the taxpayer’s conduct in pursuing
relief from the notice of tax liability (no longer a proposed liability) by requesting an
administrative hearing or initiating a civil suit under the Protest Monies Act that triggers the
Department’s status as a party in an adversarial proceeding. A “party” is commonly
understood to mean “[o]ne by or against whom a lawsuit is brought” (Black’s Law Dictionary
1297 (10th ed. 2014)), and the Department and Best Buy only became parties and opponents in
an adversarial proceeding when Best Buy filed its action under the Protest Monies Act, 10
months after it had been joined as a defendant in this case. In other words, at the time relators
named Best Buy as a defendant, the Department had not yet issued a final tax liability subject
to formal adversarial proceedings, and Best Buy had not yet taken any action to trigger the
Department’s status as a party in an adversarial proceeding.
¶ 32 Best Buy contends that, even if the Board’s review was not an administrative civil money
penalty proceeding, its protest monies action was one step in a continuous process (beginning
with the Department’s audit) that collectively qualifies as an administrative civil money
penalty proceeding. Section 4(e)(3)’s language provides no support for Best Buy’s position.
Importantly, section 4(e)(3)’s language uses the present tense when it refers to “allegations or
transactions which are the subject of a civil suit or an administrative civil money penalty
proceeding in which the State is already a party.” (Emphases added.) 740 ILCS 175/4(e)(3)
(West 2014). Nothing in the statute’s express language demonstrates that the legislature
intended to bar a qui tam action based on the possibility that the State may be a party in a civil
suit or administrative civil money penalty proceeding in the future. Likewise, the statute limits
the government action bar to civil suits and administrative civil money penalty proceedings
and does not include investigations or other steps leading to the eventual filing of either
proceeding. Best Buy is attempting to expand the government action bar’s applicability
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beyond what is provided for in the statute, which, under the well-established canons of
statutory interpretation, is not permissible. See Schultz v. Illinois Farmers Insurance Co., 237
Ill. 2d 391, 408 (2010) (it is improper to add provisions not found in a statute or to depart from
a statute’s plain language by reading into the law exceptions, limitations, or conditions that the
legislature did not express in the statute). Although the Department’s audit of Best Buy and the
Board’s review were steps in an administrative process and were investigatory in nature, they
do not constitute steps in an administrative proceeding for purposes of the government action
bar. Rather, steps in an administrative proceeding would include the filing of a complaint in the
circuit court under the Protest Monies Act or requesting an administrative hearing, and neither
occurred here before Best Buy was named as a defendant in relators’ complaint.
¶ 33 Because the Department’s audit and the Board’s informal internal review of the proposed
audit adjustments were not an administrative civil money penalty proceeding that the State was
already a party to, the government action bar is not applicable to relators’ qui tam action. For
this reason, the trial court erred in granting Best Buy’s section 2-619(a)(9) motion to dismiss.
¶ 34 Best Buy also contends that relators’ qui tam action addressed the same subject as the
Board’s informal review and was “parasitic” because it relied on and used information derived
from the Department’s audit and the Board’s review. But because the Department’s audit and
the Board’s review of the proposed audit adjustment were not an administrative civil money
penalty proceeding, Best Buy’s contention is beside the point. Likewise, because this appeal
involves a motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds addressing whether the government
action bar precludes the qui tam action, we need not address Best Buy’s contentions as to the
merits of the allegations in the qui tam action that it erroneously treated retail appliance sales
as construction contracts.
¶ 35 CONCLUSION
¶ 36 For these reasons, we reverse the trial court’s dismissal of relators’ qui tam complaint and
remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶ 37 Reversed and remanded.
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