Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Limitations Upon
Claims
1) If it shall appear that an amount
of tax or penalty or interest has been paid in error under the Service Use Tax
Act to the Department by a purchaser, as distinguished from the serviceman,
whether the amount be paid through a mistake of fact or an error of law, the
purchaser may file a claim for credit with the Department.
2) If it shall appear that an amount of tax
or penalty or interest has been paid in error to the Department under the
Service Use Tax Act by a serviceman who is required or authorized to collect
and remit the Service Use Tax, whether the amount be paid through a mistake of
fact or an error of law, the serviceman may file a claim for credit with the
Department, provided that no credit shall be allowed for any amount paid by any
such serviceman unless it shall appear that he bore the burden of the amount
and did not shift the burden to anyone else (as in the case of a duplicated tax
payment which the serviceman made to the Department and did not collect from
anyone else), or unless it shall appear that he or his legal representative has
unconditionally repaid the amount to his vendee:
A) Who bore the burden and has not shifted
the burden directly or indirectly in any manner whatsoever;
B) who, if he has shifted the burden, has
repaid unconditionally the amount to his own vendee, and
C) who is not entitled to receive any
reimbursement therefor from any other source than from his vendor, nor to be
relieved of the burden in any other manner whatsoever.
Claimant will be considered to have satisfied the unconditional
repayment requirement where it provides its purchaser with an instrument upon
which the customer can make a demand upon claimant for payment of the tax
recovered if the claim is allowed. The claimant's provision of unconditional
promissory notes or irrevocable credit memoranda to its purchasers who paid tax
in error would satisfy this requirement. The purpose of requiring the claimant
to make an unconditional repayment to its purchasers is to prevent unjust
enrichment on the part of the claimant. Therefore, in order to establish that
it was not unjustly enriched, the claimant filing a claim for credit must be
able to demonstrate that it gave unconditional promissory notes or irrevocable
credit memoranda to its purchasers who paid tax in error to the
claimant.
3) If
it shall appear that an amount of tax has been paid in error under the Service
Use Tax Act by the purchaser to a serviceman, who retained the tax as
reimbursement for his tax liability on the same sale under the Service
Occupation Tax Act, and who remitted the amount involved to the Department
under the Service Occupation Tax Act, whether the amount be paid through a
mistake of fact or an error of law, the procedure for recovering the tax shall
be that prescribed in Sections 17, 18 and 20 of the Service Occupation Tax
Act.
4) As to any claim for credit
filed with the Department on and after January 1 but on or before June 30 of
any given year, no amount of tax or penalty or interest erroneously paid
(either in total or partial liquidation of a tax or penalty or amount of
interest under the Service Use Tax Act) more than 3 years prior to such January
1 shall be credited, and as to any claim filed on and after July 1 but on or
before December 31 of any given year, no amount of tax or penalty or interest
erroneously paid (either in total or partial liquidation of a tax or penalty or
amount of interest under the Service Use Tax Act) more than 3 years prior to
the July 1 shall be credited.
5) No
claim shall be allowed for any amount paid to the Department, whether paid
voluntarily or involuntarily, if paid in total or partial liquidation of an
assessment which had become final before the claim for credit to recover the
amount so paid is filed with the Department, or if paid in total or partial
liquidation of a judgment, order or decree of court.
b) Filing Of Claims
1) Claims for credit shall be prepared and
filed upon forms provided by the Department. Where the claimant is a
corporation, the claim filed on behalf of such corporation shall be signed by
the president, vice-president, secretary or treasurer or by the properly
accredited agent of the corporation.
2) A claim for credit shall be considered to
have been filed with the Department on the date upon which it is received by
the Department. Upon receipt of any claim for credit filed under the Act, any
officer or employee of the Department, authorized in writing by the Director of
Revenue to acknowledge receipt of such claims on behalf of the Department,
shall execute on behalf of the Department, and shall deliver or mail to the
claimant or his duly authorized agent, a written receipt, acknowledging that
the claim has been filed with the Department, describing the claim in
sufficient detail to identify it and stating the date upon which the claim was
received by the Department. The written receipt shall be prima facie evidence
that the Department received the claim described in the receipt and shall be
prima facie evidence of the date when the claim was received by the
Department.
3) In the absence of a
written receipt, the records of the Department as to when the claim was
received by the Department, or as to whether or not the claim was received at
all by the Department, shall be deemed to be prima facie correct upon these
questions in the event of any dispute between the claimant (or his legal
representative) and the Department concerning these questions. (See Section 17
of the Service Use Tax Act.)
c) Procedure After Filing Of Claims
1) The Department will examine each claim for
credit as soon as practicable after the claim is filed and will notify the
claimant (or his legal representative, if the claim is filed by the legal
representative, or if the claimant has died or become incompetent and the legal
representative has notified the Department of his appointment and qualification
as such legal representative, or if the Department, on its own motion, has
substituted the legal representative in the proceeding for the deceased or
incompetent claimant) of its Tentative Determination of the amount of credit,
if any, to which the claimant or his legal representative is
entitled.
2) If the claimant, or
the legal representative of a deceased or incompetent taxpayer, shall, within
60 days after the Department's Notice of Tentative Determination of Claim, file
a protest and request a hearing, the Department shall give notice to the
claimant, or to the legal representative of a deceased or incompetent taxpayer,
of the time and place fixed for the hearing, and shall hold a hearing in
conformity with the provisions of the Act, and pursuant to that hearing shall
issue its Final Determination of the amount of credit, if any, found to be due
as a result of the hearing, to the claimant, or to the legal representative of
a deceased or incompetent taxpayer.
3) If a protest to the Department's Notice of
Tentative Determination of Claim is not filed within 60 days and a request for
a hearing is not made, the said Notice shall become and operate as a Final
Determination. (See Section 18 of the Act.)
d) Use Of Credit Memoranda To Satisfy Prior
Rights of Department
1) If, following the
above procedure, a credit is found to be due, as evidence thereof a credit
memorandum for the amount shall be issued in the name of the claimant. If there
is an established unpaid assessment or an admitted unpaid liability under the
Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, the Retailers' Occupation
Tax Act, the Use Tax Act, any local occupation or use tax administered by the
Department, Section 4 of the Water Commission Act of 1985 [70 ILCS
3720/4] , subsections (b), (c) and (d) of Section 5.01
of the Local Mass Transit District Act [70
ILCS 3610/5.01] , or subsections (e), (f) and (g) of
Section 4.03 of the Regional Transportation Authority Act [70 ILCS
3615/4.03] , or unpaid penalty, or interest, against
the claimant, the amount of the credit shall be credited against the tax or
penalty or interest due. If the credit is in an amount less than that of the
unpaid liability, it shall be applied pro tanto.
2) If the amount of the credit exceeds that
of the unpaid liability, after crediting an amount sufficient to liquidate or
cancel out the unpaid liability, a new credit memorandum shall be issued for an
amount representing the difference between that of the original credit found to
be due and that of the liability liquidated or paid, and the new credit
memorandum shall be delivered to the person entitled to receive delivery,
provided that no proceeding is pending against the claimant to establish an
unpaid liability under the Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act,
the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the Use Tax Act, any local occupation or use
tax administered by the Department, Section 4 of the Water Commission Act of
1985, subsections (b), (c) and (d) of Section 5.01 of the Local Mass Transit
District Act, or subsections (e), (f) and (g) of Section 4.03 of the Regional
Transportation Authority Act.
3) If
a proceeding to establish an unpaid liability is pending, the credit memorandum
shall be held by the Department until the proceeding is concluded. If the
proceeding results in the issuance of an assessment which becomes final under
any of these Acts, the credit shall be applied by the Department, to the extent
which may be necessary, in liquidation of the assessment, and any interest that
may accrue, and the balance of the credit, if any (after cancellation of the
credit memorandum applied in liquidation of the liability), shall be issued in
the form of a new credit memorandum and delivered to the person entitled to
receive delivery.