Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP v. City of Detroit

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 2020
Docket157522
StatusPublished

This text of Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP v. City of Detroit (Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP v. City of Detroit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP v. City of Detroit, (Mich. 2020).

Opinion

Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan

Syllabus Chief Justice: Justices: Bridget M. McCormack Stephen J. Markman Brian K. Zahra Chief Justice Pro Tem: Richard H. Bernstein David F. Viviano Elizabeth T. Clement Megan K. Cavanagh

This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been Reporter of Decisions: prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. Kathryn L. Loomis

HONIGMAN MILLER SCHWARTZ AND COHN LLP v CITY OF DETROIT

Docket No. 157522. Argued October 2, 2019 (Calendar No. 2). Decided May 18, 2020.

Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP filed a petition in the Tax Tribunal, challenging the income tax assessments issued by the city of Detroit for the tax years 2010 through 2014. Petitioner argued that under MCL 141.623 of the Uniform City Income Tax Ordinance (UCITO), MCL 141.601 et seq., payment for services performed by attorneys working in the city on behalf of clients located outside the city constituted out-of-city revenue for the purpose of calculating income taxes, not in-city revenue as asserted by respondent. In other words, petitioner argued that MCL 141.623 encompassed only revenue derived from services delivered to clients located within the city, and respondent argued that the figure calculated under MCL 141.623 should have included revenue for all services performed within the city without regard to either the client’s location or the place of delivery. The tribunal granted partial summary disposition in favor of respondent, reasoning that the relevant consideration for calculating gross revenue under MCL 141.623 was where the work was performed, not where the client received the services. The Court of Appeals, MURPHY, P.J., and SAWYER and BECKERING, JJ., reversed the tribunal, concluding that under MCL 141.623, the relevant consideration for determining the percentage of gross revenue from services rendered in the city was where the service itself was delivered to the client, not where the attorney performed the service; in reaching that result, the Court attributed different meanings to the term “rendered” in MCL 141.623 and the term “performed” in MCL 141.622, reasoning that because the Legislature used different words within the same act, it intended the terms to have distinct meanings. 322 Mich App 667 (2018). The Supreme Court granted respondent’s application for leave to appeal. 503 Mich 909 (2018).

In an opinion by Justice MARKMAN, joined by Justices ZAHRA, BERNSTEIN, and CAVANAGH, the Supreme Court held:

The term “rendered” in MCL 141.623 means to do a service for another. In employing that term, the Legislature adopted an origin test, rather than a market-based approach for calculating revenue from services under MCL 141.623. When determining the percentage of gross revenue from services rendered in the city under MCL 141.623, that figure encompasses all legal services performed within the city regardless of where those services are delivered. Thus, when calculating the percentage of gross revenue from services rendered in the city, the focus is on where the service was performed, not on where it was delivered. 1. For purposes of interpreting the UCITO, it is useful to consider the analogous context of the sale of services in multistate-business taxation. Historically, business taxation laws in Michigan implemented an origin test by assigning services to the state in which they were performed. Because of the growth of the economy’s service sector, this treatment has evolved in Michigan toward market-based sourcing rules for services and other intangibles; in that regard, the Michigan Business Tax Act, 2007 PA 36, and the corporate income tax act, 2011 PA 38, required that the sale of services and other intangibles be calculated on the basis of where the recipient received the benefit, either in state or out of state.

2. MCL 141.618 of the UCITO requires a business to determine the percentage of its net profit that is derived from business activities within the city. To arrive at that number, MCL 141.624 requires a business to calculate taxable net profit from business activity within a city— the business allocation percentage—by calculating the property factor under MCL 141.621, the payroll factor under MCL 141.622, and the revenue factor under MCL 141.623, after which the figures are added together and divided by three. In calculating the payroll factor, MCL 141.622 requires that the taxpayer ascertain the percentage which the total compensation paid to employees for work done or for services performed within the city is of the total compensation paid to all the taxpayer’s employees within and without the city during the period covered by the return. In calculating the revenue factor, MCL 141.623 requires the taxpayer to ascertain the percentage which the gross revenue of the taxpayer derived from sales made and services rendered in the city is of the total gross revenue from sales and services wherever made or rendered during the period covered by the return. With regard to MCL 141.623(1), the phrase “sales made in the city” means all sales where the goods, merchandise, or property is received in the city by the purchaser, or a person or firm designated by the purchaser. Thus, with respect to the delivery of goods in the city, the place at which the delivery has been completed is considered as the place at which the goods are received by the purchaser, and the Legislature provides examples illustrating when revenue from the delivery of goods is considered in-city or out-of-city; the provision is therefore a market- based sourcing rule that focuses on where the goods were delivered. In contrast, the Legislature adopted an origin test for “services rendered” under the revenue factor. Given the dictionary definition of the term “render”—that is, to do a service for another—the revenue factor focuses on where the services are done or carried out, not on where the services are delivered. Had the Legislature intended to treat services similarly to the sale of goods, it would have plainly expressed that intention and could have seen fit to also provide guidance illustrating how services are “delivered” and when the delivery of services should be considered in-city or out-of-city. Moreover, because the phrase “services rendered in the city,” and slight variations of that phrase appear in many provisions of the UCITO, it is clear when apportioning a business’s net profits that the focus is on where the profit-earning activity takes place. Reading the revenue factor in context alongside the payroll and property factors, as well as with the UCITO’s broader provisions that employ the phrase “services rendered,” the apportionment of gross revenue under the revenue factor must be determined on the basis of the location at which the business activity, including legal services, takes place. Thus, “services rendered” under the revenue factor encompasses revenue for all services done or carried out within the city, even when those services are performed for out-of-city clients.

3. When the Legislature uses different words, they generally intend those words to have different meanings. This maxim of jurisprudence is a general rule and may not apply in every situation, particularly when its use would not give meaning to the entire statutory scheme or the overall context of provisions within the statutory scheme; therefore, competing rules of interpretation must be balanced and harmonized to fully discern what the Legislature intended. With regard to the UCITO, although the Legislature used the term “performed” in MCL 141.622 and the term “rendered” in MCL 141.623, the terms have similar meanings within those provisions.

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Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn LLP v. City of Detroit, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honigman-miller-schwartz-and-cohn-llp-v-city-of-detroit-mich-2020.