Romeo Homes, Inc. v. Commissioner of Revenue

105 N.W.2d 186, 361 Mich. 128
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1960
DocketDocket 44, Calendar 48,296
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 105 N.W.2d 186 (Romeo Homes, Inc. v. Commissioner of Revenue) 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
Romeo Homes, Inc. v. Commissioner of Revenue, 105 N.W.2d 186, 361 Mich. 128 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

*131 Carr, J.

The facts in. this case are not materially in dispute. Plaintiff Romeo Homes was engaged, during the period here involved, in the erection of buildings for its customers, principally, or perhaps entirely, prefabricated houses. The prepared parts for such houses were manufactured by Seholz Homes, Inc., which was located at Toledo, Ohio, and which customarily from time to time prepared basic plans for submission to prospective customers of contractors. Alterations in said plans were permitted and written contracts for the construction work in accordance with specifications therein set forth were executed by the property owners. In accordance therewith the method of operation contemplated in each instance the construction of a concrete floor with service outlets as specified in the selected blueprint.

Seholz Homes constructed the parts of each building for which plans were submitted to it, including the preparation of the interior trim. Such prefabricated parts were then shipped from Toledo to the contractor for erection, the latter paying the transportation charges to the site of the contemplated construction. It is conceded that the sections of each building so prepared and shipped could not be used except in the construction of a building having the identical plans selected by the property owner. Plaintiff Romeo Homes was assessed by the defendant for taxes under the use tax act of Michigan, * in the sum of $3,134.73, which sum was paid. Claiming that it was not subject to the tax in view of the nature of its operations Romeo Homes filed suit in the circuit court of Macomb county for a declaratory judgment. Thereafter the other plaintiff, Fenton & Fen-ton, was granted leave to submit its claims in conjunction with Romeo Homes. It appears that Fen- *132 ton & Fenton was engaged in the same business as was tbe original plaintiff, and that it had paid by way of taxes assessed against it under the use tax act the sum of $4,371.69. Each plaintiff sought reimbursement of the amount paid by it.

Directly in issue here are the exemption provisions of the use tax act as set forth in section 4 thereof, as amended by PA 1955, No 235 (CDS 1956, § 205.94 [Stat Ann 1957 Cum Supp §7.555(4)]). We are not concerned with the subsequent amendment of the section by PA 1959, No 263. Plaintiffs rely specifically on subdivision (m) of said section as amended by the 1955 act, which reads as follows:

■ “(m) Property purchased by persons engaged in the business of constructing, altering, repairing, or improving real estate for others when property so purchased by such persons shall be affixed and made a structural part of real estate or used and completely consumed in the fulfillment of a single contract within the exempt classifications set forth in subsections (b), (i), (]) and (k) of this section; or which shall not be affixed and made a structural part of real estate but shall be transferred to a person in fulfillment of a contract with such person for his use for an exempt purpose as set forth in subsection (f) or (g) of this section.”

Other exempting provisions of the section which require consideration in determining the disputed interpretation of subdivision (m) are as follows:

“(b) Property, the storage, use, or other consumption of which, this State is prohibited from taxing under the Constitution, or laws of the United States, or under the Constitution of this State. * * *
“(f) Property sold to persons engaged in or having an interest in, as a business enterprise and using and consuming such property in the tilling, planting, earing for and/or harvesting of the things of the soil, in the breeding, raising or caring for livestock and/ *133 or poultry or horticultural products, including transfers of livestock and/or poultry or horticultural products for further growth: Provided, That in all such cases, at the time of the transfer of the tangible personal property, the transferee shall sign a statement, in the form approved by the department of revenue, stating that such property is to be used or consumed in connection with the production of horticultural or agricultural products as a business enterprise. Such statement shall be accepted by all courts as prima facie evidence of the exemption: Provided further, That this exemption shall not be construed to include transfers of food, fuel, clothing or any similar tangible personal property for personal living or human consumption: Provided further, That this exemption shall not be deemed to include tangible personal property permanently affixed and becoming a structural part of real estate.
"(g) Property sold to persons for use or consumption in industrial processing: Provided, That the term industrial processing’ shall not be deemed to include tangible personal property permanently affixed and becoming a structural part of real estate. * * *.
“(i) Property sold to the United States, its unincorporated agencies and instrumentalities,' any incorporated agency or instrumentality of the United States wholly owned by the United States or by a corporation wholly owned by the United States, the American Bed Cross and its chapters and branches,’ the State of Michigan, its departments or institutions, or any of its political subdivisions.
“(j) Property sold to schools, hospitals, homes for the care and maintenance of children or aged ' persons, and other health, welfare, educational, ■ charitable or benevolent institutions and agencies, .■operated by an entity of government, a regularly • organized church, religious or fraternal organization, ■ a veterans’ organization, or a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of Michigan, when not operated for profit, and when the income ¡ from the operation does not inure, in whole or in *134 part, to the benefit of any individuals or private shareholders, directly or indirectly.
“(k) Property sold to regularly organized churches or houses of religious worship excepting when such property is used in activities as are mainly commercial enterprises.”

■ It is the claim of the plaintiffs in substance that subdivision (m), above quoted, exempts them from the payment of the- use tax on the theory that the parts purchased by them in their carrying on of their business operations are .“affixed and made a structural part of real estate”, that the exemption is absolute, and that the reference to the exempt ■classifications set forth in subdivisions (b), (i), (j), and (k), do not modify the words quoted but, rather, is limited to instances where the materials purchased are used and completely consumed in the fulfillment ■of a single contract. Emphasis is placed on the use ■of the word “or” in the subdivision in question, plaintiffs contending that such word is employed in a «disjunctive sense.

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Bluebook (online)
105 N.W.2d 186, 361 Mich. 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/romeo-homes-inc-v-commissioner-of-revenue-mich-1960.