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Appellate Court Date: 2021.04.09
10:09:06 -05'00'
Safety-Kleen Systems, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 2020 IL App (1st) 191078
Appellate Court SAFETY-KLEEN SYSTEMS, INC., Petitioner, v. THE
Caption DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE and THE ILLINOIS
INDEPENDENT TAX TRIBUNAL, Respondents.
District & No. First District, Second Division
No. 1-19-1078
Filed April 28, 2020
Decision Under Petition for review of order of the Illinois Independent Tax Tribunal,
Review No. 16-TT-167.
Judgment Affirmed.
Counsel on Brian L. Browdy, of Ryan Law Firm, PLLC, of Chicago, and Josh
Appeal Veith and Doug Sigel, of Ryan Law Firm, PLLC, of Austin, Texas, for
petitioner.
Kwame Raoul, Attorney General, of Chicago (Jane Elinor Notz,
Solicitor General, and Priyanka Gupta, Assistant Attorney General, of
counsel), for respondents.
Panel JUSTICE PUCINSKI delivered the judgment of the court, with
opinion.
Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Lavin concurred in the
judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 This appeal stems from proceedings before the Illinois Independent Tax Tribunal, in which
petitioner Safety-Kleen Systems, Inc. (Safety-Kleen), contested the Illinois Department of
Revenue’s (Department) assessment of use tax on Safety-Kleen’s unused, or “virgin,” cleaning
solvent under the Use Tax Act (Act) (35 ILCS 105/1 et seq. (West 2010)). The tax tribunal
entered summary judgment in favor of the Department and against Safety-Kleen, finding that
the Act’s temporary storage exemption did not apply to Safety-Kleen’s virgin solvent. See 35
ILCS 105/3-55(e) (West 2010). On appeal, Safety-Kleen asserts that the tax tribunal erred in
granting the Department summary judgment and denying Safety-Kleen summary judgment,
where the tax tribunal misapplied our holding in Shared Imaging, LLC v. Hamer, 2017 IL App
(1st) 152817, and where the virgin solvent returned to Illinois as a different product after its
sole use outside of Illinois. We affirm.
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 On August 22, 2016, Safety-Kleen filed a petition before the tax tribunal alleging in
relevant part that the Department erred in assessing use tax against its virgin solvent purchases.
In the petition, Safety-Kleen stated that it provides “solvent parts washers” and “recycled
solvent” to commercial customers throughout North America. As part of its services, Safety-
Kleen regularly drains used solvent from its customers’ parts washers and replenishes the
washers with recycled solvent. Included in this recycled solvent is the virgin solvent at issue,
which Safety-Kleen purchases from out-of-state retailers and blends with the recycled solvent
“to ensure an adequate supply of solvent.”
¶4 Safety-Kleen also alleged that during the audit period of January 1, 2010, through
December 31, 2012, Safety-Kleen remitted Illinois use tax on purchases of virgin solvent. The
Department completed a reconciliation of use tax and gave Safety-Kleen credit for use tax
accrued on virgin solvent purchases. Later, however, the Department audited Safety-Kleen and
concluded that Safety-Kleen owed Illinois use tax on multiple items, including virgin solvent.
Safety-Kleen requested an audit adjustment from the Department’s informal conference board.
The informal conference board denied Safety-Kleen’s request and concluded that “ ‘the
recycling of solvents is considered a taxable use in Illinois.’ ”
¶5 Safety-Kleen asserted in its petition that the Department erred in proposing to assess use
tax on the virgin solvent purchases, as the virgin solvent “was received and stored in Illinois
and subsequently distributed and use[d] outside of Illinois.” Safety-Kleen claimed it did not
subject the virgin solvent to its “intended use” until the solvent reached its customers’ locations
“both within and outside of Illinois.” Once the solvent was used and returned to Illinois by
Safety-Kleen, the solvent was allegedly a “substantially different product” because it was
“contaminated with debris and foreign chemicals that must be removed through the recycling
process” before further use.
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¶6 In its answer to Safety-Kleen’s petition, the Department denied that the virgin solvent was
“first subjected to its intended use” when used in the parts washers at Safety-Kleen’s
customers’ locations. The Department also denied that the used solvent was a “substantially
different product” than the virgin solvent.
¶7 The parties submitted cross-motions for summary judgment.
¶8 Safety-Kleen’s summary judgment motion argued that 88.46% of the out-of-state virgin
solvent purchases qualified for the temporary storage exemption to the Illinois use tax because
the virgin solvent was (1) acquired outside of Illinois, (2) stored in Illinois temporarily, and
(3) used solely outside of Illinois. Safety-Kleen reiterated its theory that storage of the used
solvent in Illinois did not constitute a “use” of the virgin solvent, since virgin and used solvent
were different products.
¶9 The Department’s motion for summary judgment asserted that based on Shared Imaging,
Safety-Kleen’s virgin solvent lost the temporary storage exemption once it was returned to
Illinois for further storage after its initial post-purchase storage. See id. The Department refuted
Safety-Kleen’s claim that virgin and used solvent were different properties entirely, arguing
that “at least some of the original virgin solvent returns multiple times to Illinois, albeit in
contaminated or used form.” The Department opined that “[c]lean or contaminated, solvent is
still solvent.”
¶ 10 The parties’ motions both contained a stipulation of facts, which stated in relevant part:
“17. Petitioner provides its customers with a regular, scheduled service to drain
‘used solvent’ from its customers’ parts washers and then replenish those washers with
‘recycled solvent.’
18. ‘Used solvent’ is solvent that has been subjected to its intended use in parts
washers to clean and degrease metal parts and tools.
19. ‘Used solvent’ contains all of the oils, chemicals, liquids, and debris that were
previously attached to the metal parts or tools before the solvent was used to clean
them.
20. ‘Used solvent’ does not have the same cleaning capability as ‘virgin’ or
‘recycled’ solvent.
21. ‘Recycled solvent’ is usable, clean solvent that has been refined through
distillation from ‘used solvent.’
22. ‘Virgin solvent’ is a solvent that has not diluted any solute yet (i.e., a substance
that has not absorbed or dissolved away any other substance).
23. ‘Recycled solvent’ has the same chemical and physical properties, as well as
the same commercial value, as ‘virgin solvent.’ ”
¶ 11 The stipulations continued to explain that after Safety-Kleen drains used solvent from
customers, it transports the used solvent to a recycling center in Dolton, Illinois. There, the
used solvent is stored in tanks before it is recycled. The used solvent from each respective
customer is not separated but rather is often mixed together. The recycling of used solvent is
primarily achieved through “fractional distillation,” which is “the separation of a mixture into
its component parts, or fractions, such as in separating chemical compounds by their boiling
points by heating them to a temperature at which one or more fractions of the compound will
vaporize.” Once used solvent is recycled, Safety-Kleen “blends virgin solvent with recycled
solvent in order to ensure [Safety-Kleen] maintains an adequate supply of solvent necessary
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for replenishing customers’ solvent parts’ washers.” “Solvent can be recycled many times
before it is permanently exhausted.”
¶ 12 The stipulations also stated that “at least some of the 88.46% of virgin solvent, as well as
some of the 88.46% of the recycled solvent, sent out of state is returned” to the Dolton
recycling center. However, Safety-Kleen could not identify the exact amount of virgin and
recycled solvent that is returned for recycling.
¶ 13 The alleged stipulations explained the differences between used and virgin solvent, and the
similarities between virgin solvent and recycled solvent, as follows:
“35. Used solvent must be recycled in order to be reused in Petitioner’s parts
washers because used solvent and recycled or virgin solvent are substantially different.
36. First and foremost, used solvent does not have the cleaning capability of virgin
or recycled solvent.
37. Second, virgin and recycled solvent are clear, colorless, or green liquid with a
mild hydrocarbon odor; used solvent is a dark, opaque liquid with an odor representing
the many residues contained within.
38. Third, virgin and recycled solvent consist of 100% hydrotreated light petroleum
distillates; used solvents contain all of the oils, chemicals, liquids, and debris that were
formerly attached to the metal parts or tools that the solvent cleaned from them.
39. Fourth, virgin and recycled solvent have very precise temperature reactions.
40. Specifically, virgin and recycled solvent boil at 310℉ and have flash points of
105℉ and auto-ignition temperatures of 410℉.
41. Used solvent has unpredictable temperature reactions due to the presence of
various oils, chemicals, liquids, and debris.
42. Fifth, virgin and recycled solvent have a pH level of 7; used solvent has an
unpredictable level of pH due to the presence of various oils, chemicals, liquids, and
debris.
43. Sixth, virgin and recycled solvent have consistent commercial values; used
solvent has no commercial value.
44. Seventh, virgin and recycled solvent are not subject to regulation under the
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (‘RCRA’), 42 U.S.C. § 6901 et seq; used
solvent is a hazardous waste that is regulated under the RCRA.
45. Eighth, Petitioner’s virgin and recycled solvent can be transported by tanker
trucks bearing placards that state the truck is transporting virgin or recycled solvent;
Petitioner’s tanker trucks transporting used solvent must bear placards stating that the
truck is transporting ‘hazardous waste.’ ”
The parties also stipulated that the total use tax assessment on Safety-Kleen’s virgin solvent
purchases was $1,162,335.43. However, because “88.46% of the virgin solvent was shipped
out-of-state for its intended use,” Safety-Kleen contended that the assessment should be
reduced by 88.46% down to $134,133.51.
¶ 14 On September 6, 2018, the tax tribunal granted the Department’s motion for summary
judgment and denied Safety-Kleen’s motion. The tax tribunal cited Shared Imaging in holding
that “the temporary storage exemption can apply only once” and so “if the property is returned
to Illinois for further storage the exemption is lost.” The tax tribunal also observed that Safety-
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Kleen cited no legal authority supporting its position that “the return of its property in a
different form allows it to reset the clock on the temporary storage exemption.” The tax tribunal
noted that it “does seem reasonable that at some point property may be so transformed out of
state that when returned to Illinois it could claim its own temporary storage exemption.”
Nonetheless, the tax tribunal was not convinced that such a transformation had occurred, as
the intended use of the virgin solvent does not “fundamentally change” once it is used and
recycled for further use.
¶ 15 On May 1, 2019, the tax tribunal entered a final order affirming the Department’s
assessment on Safety-Kleen’s solvent and entered judgment in favor of the Department and
against Safety-Kleen in the amount of $1,028,201.92, plus statutory interest. This appeal
followed.
¶ 16 ANALYSIS
¶ 17 On appeal, Safety-Kleen asserts that the tax tribunal erred in concluding that the temporary
storage exemption of the Act did not apply to its virgin solvent, as the solvent was used outside
of Illinois and returned in-state as an entirely different product. Thus, according to Safety-
Kleen, the virgin solvent was only temporarily stored once in Illinois, and our holding in
Shared Imaging does not apply. The Department responds that strictly construing the
temporary storage exemption against Safety-Kleen, we must conclude the exemption does not
apply because the virgin solvent was stored in Illinois multiple times, regardless of the changes
the virgin solvent underwent.
¶ 18 Tax exemptions are strictly construed, and we must resolve any doubts regarding an
exemption’s applicability in favor of taxation. Horsehead Corp. v. Department of Revenue,
2019 IL 124155, ¶ 42. “Under Illinois law, taxation is the rule. Tax exemption is the
exception.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Oswald v. Hamer, 2018 IL 122203, ¶ 12.
“Provisions granting tax exemptions *** must come not only within the terms of the statute
but also the authority given by the constitution.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) City of
Chicago v. Illinois Department of Revenue, 147 Ill. 2d 484, 491 (1992). “Courts have no power
to create exemption from taxation by judicial construction ***.” Id. The party seeking tax
exemption bears “[t]he burden of proving the right to exemption,” and in determining whether
the property is subject to the exemption, we must construe all facts and debatable questions in
favor of taxation. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Eden Retirement Center, Inc. v.
Department of Revenue, 213 Ill. 2d 273, 289 (2004).
¶ 19 Section 3 of the Act provides for the imposition of a tax on “the privilege of using in this
State tangible personal property purchased at retail from a retailer.” 35 ILCS 105/3 (West
2010). The Act defines “use” as “the exercise by any person of any right or power over tangible
personal property incident to the ownership of that property.” 35 ILCS 105/2 (West 2008). The
purpose of this tax is to prevent buyers from avoiding retailers’ occupation tax by making out-
of-state purchases and “to protect Illinois retailers against diversion of business to out-of-state
retailers.” Irwin Industrial Tool Co. v. Department of Revenue, 238 Ill. 2d 332, 340 (2010).
¶ 20 Section 3-55 of the Act provides for a “[m]ultistate exemption” to use tax in order to
“prevent actual or likely multistate taxation.” 35 ILCS 105/3-55 (West 2010). This section
includes a temporary storage exemption that applies to the following use of tangible personal
property:
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“The temporary storage, in this State, of tangible personal property that is acquired
outside this State and that, after being brought into this State and stored here
temporarily, is used solely outside this State or is physically attached to or incorporated
into other tangible personal property that is used solely outside this State, or is altered
by converting, fabricating, manufacturing, printing, processing, or shaping, and, as
altered, is used solely outside this State.” 35 ILCS 105/3-55(e) (West 2010).
This exemption applies when the property is “(1) acquired outside the State; (2) is stored
temporarily; and (3) is used, either in the form in which it came into Illinois or as altered, solely
outside this State.” Nutrition Headquarters, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 106 Ill. 2d 58, 61
(1985).
¶ 21 “When parties file cross-motions for summary judgment, they mutually agree that there are
no genuine issues of material fact and that only a question of law is involved.” Jones v.
Municipal Employees’ Annuity & Benefits Fund, 2016 IL 119618, ¶ 26. In this instance, our
review is de novo. Id.; see also Horsehead Corp. v. Department of Revenue, 2019 IL 124155,
¶ 27 (“A conclusion on a question of law by the tax tribunal is reviewed de novo.”).
¶ 22 Initially, we note that the parties agree the virgin solvent was acquired outside of Illinois
and therefore qualifies for the first of the temporary storage exemption’s three elements. They
also agree that, under our holding in Shared Imaging, property does not qualify for the
temporary storage exemption where it has been temporarily stored in Illinois, shipped out-of-
state, and then returned to Illinois for further storage. Shared Imaging, LLC, 2017 IL App (1st)
152817. The parties additionally do not dispute whether the virgin solvent’s first storage in
Illinois, before it is used out-of-state in customers’ parts washers, constitutes a use. The issue
before us is limited to whether the virgin solvent is used in Illinois for purposes of the Act
when it is altered by its out-of-state use and, in a different form, returned to Illinois and stored
again.
¶ 23 Safety-Kleen’s theory is essentially that the virgin solvent’s use in parts washers so
fundamentally changes the solvent on a “molecular level” that it cannot even be deemed the
same property afterwards. In support of this theory, the record contains a cursory outline of the
science underlying the virgin solvent’s apparent transformations. From the facts before us,
however, it does not appear that the actual matter that makes up the virgin solvent is completely
lost when it is used in parts washers. Rather, as the parties have stipulated, the solvent simply
picks up the “oils, chemicals, liquids, and debris” from the materials which it is used to clean.
¶ 24 With this in mind, we consider the parties’ dispute regarding the applicability of Shared
Imaging, LLC, 2017 IL App (1st) 152817. In Shared Imaging, the petitioner leased medical
equipment units to customers within and outside of Illinois. Id. ¶ 4. The Department assessed
use tax against certain units, and the petitioner filed suit against the Department and its director,
as well as the Treasurer of the State of Illinois, alleging that the units qualified for the
temporary storage exemption. Id. ¶¶ 5-6. The trial court granted the defendants summary
judgment on the issue. Id. ¶ 8. The petitioner asserted on appeal that the units qualified for the
temporary storage exemption because they were purchased outside of Illinois, temporarily
stored in Illinois, and leased exclusively outside of Illinois. Id. ¶ 31. After leasing these units,
the units would return to Illinois, where they would remain until they were leased outside
Illinois again. Id. ¶ 37.
¶ 25 This court in Shared Imaging affirmed the trial court’s ruling and found in part that certain
units did not qualify for the temporary storage exemption. Id. ¶ 46. We noted it was
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uncontested that these units were acquired outside of Illinois, and we found that the units’
initial storage in Illinois for 47 days was temporary. Id. ¶¶ 31, 33. Nonetheless, we concluded
that the units were not used solely out-of-state, as they were continuously stored and
maintained within Illinois, an act which we found constituted an “exercise of rights and power
over the property that belongs only to the owner of the property” and therefore fell within the
Act’s definition of “use.” Id. ¶ 38 (citing 35 ILCS 105/2 (West 2008)).
¶ 26 The petitioner in Shared Imaging asserted that even if the units returned to Illinois, they
were returned only to be temporarily stored once again, which is exempted under the temporary
storage exemption. Id. ¶ 43. We rejected this argument, and stated:
“Shared Imaging’s argument that there is no limit on the number of times a taxpayer
may temporarily store property in Illinois is incorrect: the temporary storage exemption
clearly places that limit on the taxpayer by providing that after the initial post-purchase
temporary storage of property, that property must be used ‘solely’ outside of Illinois.
Given that the term ‘use’ includes storage, the return of property to Illinois—even if
only for storage—constitutes use occurring inside Illinois. Therefore, although the
temporary storage exemption permits the initial post-purchase storage of property, it
prohibits the further storage (i.e., use) of property in Illinois absent the payment of the
use tax.” (Emphasis in original.) Id.
This court further explained that if the petitioner “returns the property to Illinois and engages
in the same activity again, the exemption no longer applies.” Id. ¶ 44. In summarizing our
conclusion, we stated:
“[B]ecause storage qualifies as a use of tangible personal property under the Act and
because the return of [the medical equipment units] to Illinois for additional storage
defeats the temporary storage exemption requirement that the property be used solely
outside of Illinois after its initial post-purchase storage in Illinois, we conclude that the
temporary storage exemption did not apply to [the units].” Id. ¶ 46.
We therefore affirmed the Department’s decision to assess use tax on the units. Id.
¶ 27 We find Shared Imaging applicable to this case. As the petitioner in Shared Imaging did,
Safety-Kleen purchased the virgin solvent out-of-state and initially stored the solvent within
Illinois before sending it to out-of-state customers. Also as the petitioner in Shared Imaging
did, Safety-Kleen then returned the solvent to Illinois after its out-of-state use, stored the
solvent again, and eventually “engage[d] in the same activity” with the once-virgin solvent by
sending it to customers’ parts washers. Id. ¶ 44. Because the solvent was stored in Illinois after
its “initial post-purchase storage in Illinois,” Safety-Kleen cannot claim that the temporary
storage exemption applies. Id. ¶ 46.
¶ 28 Safety-Kleen claims that Shared Imaging is distinguishable because in Shared Imaging,
the exact same medical equipment units that left Illinois were returned to Illinois for storage
after their out-of-state use. In contrast, Safety-Kleen claims that its virgin solvent becomes
“new tangible personal property” after its initial out-of-state use because (1) it obtains a new
color and odor; (2) it contains “ ‘oils, chemicals, liquids, and debris that were previously
attached to the metal parts or tools before the solvent was used to clean them’ ”; (3) it is legally
different, as trucks carrying used solvent must bear a placard stating the truck is transporting
hazardous waste; and (4) used solvent lacks the cleaning capabilities of virgin solvent.
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¶ 29 We find Safety-Kleen’s argument unconvincing. Even if we were to assume that virgin
solvent and used solvent are substantially different products, the used solvent is ultimately
recycled and used alongside virgin solvent for “the same activity again.” Shared Imaging, LLC,
2017 IL App (1st) 152817, ¶ 44. The undisputed facts in the record show that Safety-Kleen
essentially (1) purchases out-of-state virgin solvent, (2) blends the virgin solvent with recycled
solvent (Blend A), (3) ships Blend A to out-of-state customers, (4) picks up Blend A after its
use and returns it to Illinois, (5) converts Blend A to reusable recycled solvent, (6) blends this
newly recycled Blend A with more virgin solvent (Blend B), and (7) sends Blend B out-of-
state to be used in the exact same way as Blend A. The stipulated facts also showed that Safety-
Kleen’s solvent can undergo multiple rounds of storage and recycling before it becomes
“permanently exhausted.” Regardless of how much the virgin solvent is altered when it is used
to clean customers’ equipment, the solvent is nonetheless returned to Illinois in some form,
restored, and subjected to the exact same activity when it is sent to customers.
¶ 30 Significantly, as the parties’ stipulated facts even emphasize, virgin solvent and recycled
solvent carry several of the same characteristics. Namely, according to the stipulated facts on
record, both virgin and recycled solvent (1) have the same cleaning capabilities; (2) are clear,
colorless, or green-colored with a “mild hydrocarbon odor”; (3) “consist of 100% hydrotreated
light petroleum distillates”; (4) “have very precise temperature reactions”; (5) boil at 310℉;
(6) have a pH level of 7; (7) “have consistent commercial values”; and (8) do not have to be
transported by a tanker truck bearing a placard that states the truck is transporting hazardous
waste. We find no basis to hold that used solvent is an entirely different property than virgin
solvent when, through recycling, the used solvent regains the characteristics of virgin solvent.
¶ 31 In its reply brief, Safety-Kleen argues that American Distilling Co. v. Department of
Revenue, 53 Ill. App. 3d 42 (1977), supports its claim that new and used products can be
regarded as different property under the temporary storage exemption. In American Distilling
Co., the plaintiff distilling company appealed from a determination that its new white oak
barrels, which were used to produce bourbon whiskey, were subject to use tax. Id. at 43-44.
The undisputed facts showed that the barrels’ function was “to provide flavor bodies and
extracts from the wood which are ingredients of the final product,” and that the barrels could
only be used once, after which they became useless. Id. at 44. On appeal, the parties disputed
whether the barrels were “ ‘an ingredient of an intentionally produced product or by-product
of manufacturing’ ” and therefore not subject to use tax. Id. at 44-45 (quoting Ill. Rev. Stat.
1975, ch. 120, ¶ 439.2).
¶ 32 This court in American Distilling Co. noted that the barrels were a “required part” of the
bourbon-making process, and that the barrels are so changed by their initial use that it “is illegal
to attempt to use them again to make bourbon.” Id. at 45. We also observed that the barrels
were “not useless” but were “resold for other uses.” Id. This court found that the barrels were
intended to be ingredients of bourbon whiskey and that they were by-products of the
manufacturing process. Id. We therefore concluded that “where the bourbon barrels are resold
after being put to their intended use, the Department cannot collect a tax.” Id. at 46.
¶ 33 American Distilling Co. is inapplicable for multiple reasons. First, the court in American
Distilling Co. was not asked to consider the applicability of the temporary storage exemption,
nor was it asked to determine whether the property at issue became a different property
altogether after its initial use. More notably, however, the court in American Distilling Co.
emphasized that after the barrels were used for their intended use, they had to be sold to be
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used for other purposes. Id. Here, as we have stated, regardless of the changes that the virgin
solvent underwent when it became “used solvent,” that same solvent was nonetheless capable
of undergoing multiple rounds of recycling and reuse as cleaning solvent. Thus, unlike the
products in American Distilling Co., the virgin solvent is capable of the same function after its
initial intended use.
¶ 34 We acknowledge that a portion of the used solvent may ultimately be lost when it
undergoes the recycling process, as the recycled solvent must be blended with virgin solvent
to ensure that the supply of solvent remains adequate. However, Safety-Kleen has presented
us with no evidence as to how much of its used solvent is never used as recycled solvent, or
that this unrecycled used solvent is ever identified, separated out, or measured throughout the
recycling process. As the party seeking tax exemption, Safety-Kleen carried the burden of
proving the right to exemption. Eden Retirement Center, Inc., 213 Ill. 2d at 289. Because there
is no evidence that Safety-Kleen did, or was ever able to, identify and separate the used solvent
that does not become recycled solvent, we cannot conclude that Safety-Kleen is entitled to use
tax exemption as to this portion of its solvent.
¶ 35 Ultimately, as we have stated, this court has no authority to create exemption to taxation
through judicial construction. City of Chicago, 147 Ill. 2d at 491. With that in mind, Safety-
Kleen cites no legal authority supporting a finding that the temporary storage exemption can
apply where a property is significantly altered by its use but ultimately refined and reused for
the same activity after undergoing a recycling procedure. Any doubt that rises from this inquiry
must be resolved in favor of taxation. Horsehead Corp., 2019 IL 124155, ¶ 42.
¶ 36 As we previously found in Shared Imaging, property does not qualify for the temporary
storage exemption where, after the property’s “initial post-purchase storage in Illinois,” the
petitioner “returns the property to Illinois and engages in the same activity again.” Shared
Imaging, 2017 IL App (1st) 152817, ¶¶ 44, 46. In such a case, the petitioner’s storage of the
property in Illinois after the “initial post-purchase storage” constitutes a use in Illinois, and so
the temporary storage exemption does not apply. Id. ¶ 46. Regardless of the changes that
Safety-Kleen’s virgin solvent undergoes when it is used and eventually recycled, Safety-Kleen
effectively stores the same material—the solvent—multiple times in Illinois before using the
solvent to engage in the same activity. Thus, we find the virgin solvent is not exclusively used
outside of Illinois and therefore does not qualify for the temporary storage exemption. Id. The
tax tribunal did not err in granting the Department summary judgment as to its assessment of
use tax on the virgin solvent, and it did not err in denying Safety-Kleen summary judgment.
¶ 37 CONCLUSION
¶ 38 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the tax tribunal.
¶ 39 Affirmed.
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