Tax crackdown: Allphin's revenuers find new tool in asset seizure power
THE LADY in Jersey County had just
fainted. The sheriff had come to her
business and announced he had an
order from the Illinois Department of
Revenue to seize assets to cover business
taxes she hadn't paid. Just as the sheriff
was bending over the prostrate form on
the floor, a revenue agent walked in and
announced, "Well, we got the car." In a
flash, the woman was upright and
screaming, "You can't take my car."
Before the sheriff and agent left, they
had a check for the unpaid taxes. Robert Allphin, director of the
Department of Revenue, tells the story
to illustrate how tax cheaters react when
they find out that the state really means
business about collecting unpaid taxes. Allphin has other stories. For
example, last year in Peoria the state
moved to seize the assets of a sizeable
business operation. "One of the sons
worked in the business," Allphin said,
"and they all had their sports cars and
everything conceivable titled to the
business. Suddenly he realized that we
had his car. He said, 'you can't take my
car.' But we had it. We checked it, and it
was titled to the business, and we seized
the business and got junior off his
wheels." This particular seizure took place
because the firm had not turned over to
the state income taxes withheld from
employee wages. The state acted in
March of last year — the last month of
the quarter — and the next quarter
payments on income tax bills sent by
the accounts receivable section of the
department went up 500 per cent. "I
can't give you the name," Allphin said
as he recalled the Peoria incident(which
was picked up by the national news
wires) "but all of a sudden here was a
guy from New York who had chartered
a plane and was standing in my office
with a check for $42,000. It was for
past due taxes on an entirely different
type of tax, but I think he was afraid we
might be seizing his business next."
A watershed case
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The self-employed professionals who have not been paying the state what is due under the income tax act are the latest target for Allphin's raiders. Lawyers form a particularly large portion of this group, and Allphin admits the militancy of the department is sure to cause a ruckus. He predicts, however, that the psychological impact will lead to increased compliance in short order. In one unpublicized case in Champaign County, an attorney behind in his taxes erupted in rage at the seizure order. After loud protestations and the announcement that he was hiring another lawyer to fight the department, the barrister meekly complied within 48 hours, paying up in full.
State laws on seizure
The power to seize assets was written
into the Income Tax Act of 1969 (Ill.
Rev. Stat. 1975, ch. 120, sec. 11-1109). It
was simply copied out of federal
statutes. The state then found it did not
have seizure powers with respect to the
Retailers Occupational Tax and Use
Tax — the taxes generally called the sales tax.
14 / May 1976 / Illinois Issues
For years, paying state taxes in Illinois was almost voluntary. Now a delinquent stands a good chance that agents will snatch his car
And the revenue loss in this
area was considerable. The department
has identified more than 1,000
aggravated accounts (individuals who
have not responded to notices, calls) and
over $6 million in withheld sales taxes.
About $600,000 of this amount has been
recovered so far. A few firms, after
collecting the sales tax from customers,
were keeping the money instead of
turning it over to the Revenue
Department. Seizure power for sales tax delinquency was quietly negotiated through
legislative channels and signed into law,
becoming effective in July 1975 (Ill.
Rev. Stat. 1975, ch. 120, sec. 444f).
"This gave us another important tool,"
Allphin explained. "Some people equated this as muscle, some people equated
it as being hard-nosed, but I call it just
a tool. If we're charged with the responsibility of collecting taxes . . . which we
are, we have to have the tools with
which to do the job. We are gradually getting them."
Auto seizures over cigarettes
The law said it was an offense to be in
possession of more than 10 cartons of
cigarettes without tax stamps from
Illinois. The penalty was $10 per pack for the excess, and if a car was used in
the commission of a crime, it could be
seized. Auto seizures were made in 1973
and tax collections soared, climbing
$10 million. Then in early 1974 a
Chicagoan got an injunction from
Circuit Court Judge Donald O'Brien
that said it was all right for an individual
to bring in as many cigarettes as he
might personally use. After a conference
with the attorney general's office, the
department worked out a strategy of
prosecuting anyone possessing more
than 50 cartons. Word got out quickly,
and soon no one stopped had more than 45 cartons. Another conference was held, and a
decision was reached to act if more than
three brands were involved. One
hospital orderly had 21 different brands
among 42 cartons, and was arrested.
Next, the limit was 30 cartons, and when
the game got below 30 the original
plaintiff went back to court to get
Allphin held in contempt of court for
violating the original injunction. Judge
O'Brien found Director Allphin in contempt of court, fined him and sentenced
him to a prison term. This decision is currently being appealed.
There has been a running battle in the
courts in Chicago over the seizure of
automobiles used to bring cigarettes
into the state without payment of the
excise tax of 12 cents per pack. Back in
1973, cigarette tax collections dropped
from $168 million to $165 million, and
then started sliding further after the City
of Chicago imposed a nickel-per-pack
tax. It was a well-known fact in Chicago
that motorists were going just across the
border to Indiana to buy cigarettes at a
saving of 11 cents per pack, or $ 1.10 per
carton. The Indiana tax was only 6 cents
— compared to the combined 17-cent levy in Chicago.
Using IRS computer tapes
Allphin took over at a time when the
Revenue Department was regearing to
handle the collection of income taxes.
Previously, sales and excise tax
collections were the department's major
responsibility. Different audit procedures and field agent personnel were
needed, Allphin noted. By late 1973, the
state was able to begin a "tape-match"
with federal Internal Revenue Service
computer tapes. This showed there were
130,000 disparities between state and
federal records — everything from
different sums on the adjusted gross
income figure for individuals to non-filings in the state. The department's first reaction was
that 400 agents could never cope with
that mass of audit work. By having the
computers prepare notices for taxpayers, however, the workload was
quickly diminished. "There were a lot of
loud screams back in the winter of 1973 as we found that in some aspects our
filing system was not as current as it
should be," Allphin noted. The screams
of protest had a beneficial effect in
another way. It determined that those
screaming indeed had been contacted. It
pointed out where the errors were and
indicated where second letters needed to
be delivered: to those who had not
responded by screams or other communications. The second, computer-originated
letters were more "forceful," according
to Allphin. Any letters that came back
as undeliverable were put aside to be
checked against the next year's federal
returns. Finally, the ones that did not
come back, that did not draw responses
after two letters, were assigned to the
field force. "We figure by the time you
check four years, you really have ended
up with the hard-core evader," Allphin
said, "and these you can give special
attention." Revenue department
computers are now working from the
1974 tapes which should be processed
through the department by fall when
IRS will deliver the first computer tapes
of 1975 federal returns to the state. At
that point the Illinois department will be
as current as it could expect to be, Allphin said. One of the benefits of the recent
business recession was the increased
availability of talented accountants.
"When corporations and CPA firms
stopped hiring, the caliber of our
recruits went up noticeably," Allphin
said. Each was put through almost a
year's training, so the concern now is to
keep the talent that has been trained.
Allphin, who was considered a boy
wonder in Kentucky in the 1950's when
he reorganized the state's revenue
machinery, was brought to Illinois by
Gov. Dan Walker from a position as
corporation tax manager for Pittsburgh
Plate Glass Industries in Pittsburgh.
Correcting personnel problem
One of the failures conceded by
Allphin was some poor personnel
assignments in the enforcement operation. Now that he has brought in Roger
C. Beck, the former IRS director for the
Chicago area, Allphin feels confident
the angry letters involving department
error will drop. In fact, he says, they
already have — and his collection of
delinquent taxes in the past six months
has risen to $28.4 million from $17.7
million for the same period a year ago.
May 1976 / Illinois Issues / 15