Tomra of North America Inc v. Department of Treasury

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 2020
Docket158335
StatusPublished

This text of Tomra of North America Inc v. Department of Treasury (Tomra of North America Inc v. Department of Treasury) 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
Tomra of North America Inc v. Department of Treasury, (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

TOMRA OF NORTH AMERICA, INC v DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY

Docket Nos. 158333 and 158335. Argued November 7, 2019 (Calendar No. 3). Decided June 16, 2020.

TOMRA of North America, Inc., brought two separate actions in the Court of Claims against the Department of Treasury, seeking a refund for use tax and sales tax that plaintiff had paid on the basis that plaintiff’s sales of container-recycling machines and repair parts were exempt from taxation under the General Sales Tax Act (GSTA), MCL 205.51 et seq., and the Use Tax Act (UTA), MCL 205.91 et seq. Plaintiff moved for summary disposition, seeking a ruling on the question whether plaintiff’s container-recycling machines and repair parts perform, or are used in, an industrial-processing activity under the GSTA and UTA. The Court of Claims, MICHAEL J. TALBOT, J., denied plaintiff’s motion and instead granted summary disposition in favor of defendant, holding that plaintiff’s container-recycling machines and repair parts were not used in an industrial-processing activity and that plaintiff therefore was not entitled to exemption from sales and use tax for the sale and lease of the machines and their repair parts. The Court of Claims found that the tasks that plaintiff’s machines performed occurred before the industrial process began, reasoning that the activities listed in MCL 205.54t(3) and MCL 205.94o(3) are only industrial-processing activities when they occur between the start and end of the industrial process as defined by MCL 205.54t(7)(a) and MCL 205.94o(7)(a), respectively. Plaintiff appealed, and the Court of Appeals consolidated the appeals. The Court of Appeals, GADOLA, P.J., and RIORDAN, J. (K. F. KELLY, J., dissenting), reversed, declining to interpret MCL 205.54t(7)(a) and MCL 205.94o(7)(a) as placing a temporal limitation on the activities listed in MCL 205.54t(3) and MCL 205.94o(3), respectively. 325 Mich App 289 (2018). Defendant sought leave to appeal in the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court granted the application. 503 Mich 987 (2019).

In a unanimous opinion by Justice VIVIANO, the Supreme Court held:

Plaintiff’s sales of container-recycling machines and repair parts were exempt from taxation under the industrial-processing exemption because the temporal limitation specified in the general statutory definition of industrial processing under MCL 205.54t(7)(a) of the GSTA and MCL 205.94o(7)(a) of the UTA did not apply to the enumerated list of industrial-processing activities in MCL 205.54t(3) and MCL 205.94o(3), respectively; the rule of strict construction of tax exemptions was inapplicable in this case because the statutes were unambiguous. 1. There is a canon of construction that tax exemptions must be strictly construed in favor of the government, i.e., against the finding of an exemption. The preference against tax exemptions is a judicially created substantive canon, meaning that it is premised on certain policies or political objectives instead of its usefulness in uncovering a statute’s ordinary meaning. Because the canon requiring strict construction of tax exemptions does not help reveal the semantic content of a statute, it is a canon of last resort. That is, courts should employ it only when an act’s language, after analysis and subjection to the ordinary rules of interpretation, presents ambiguity. In this case, the canon was inapplicable because the statutes were unambiguous: their ordinary meaning was discernible by reading the text in its immediate context and with the aid of appropriate canons of construction.

2. The GSTA imposes taxes on the sale of goods, and the UTA imposes taxes on goods purchased outside the state for use in the state. To avoid the double taxation of a product that would result from exacting both use and sales taxes, the Legislature exempted certain property used or consumed in industrial processing from the taxes in each act. Pursuant to MCL 205.54t(1)(b) and (c) of the GSTA and MCL 205.94o(1)(b) and (c) of the UTA, the exemption covers, among other things, tangible personal property that is intended for ultimate use in and is used in industrial processing by an industrial processor or is used by a person, whether or not an industrial processor, to perform an industrial-processing activity for or on behalf of an industrial processor. The industrial-processing exemption provides both a general definition of industrial processing, MCL 205.54t(7)(a); MCL 205.94o(7)(a), and also a list of specific activities that constitute industrial-processing activities, MCL 205.54t(3); MCL 205.94o(3). Subsection (7)(a) generally defines industrial processing as the activity of converting or conditioning tangible personal property by changing the form, composition, quality, combination, or character of the property for ultimate sale at retail or for use in the manufacturing of a product to be ultimately sold at retail. Subsection (7)(a) further provides that industrial processing begins when tangible personal property begins movement from raw-materials storage to begin industrial processing and ends when finished goods first come to rest in finished-goods-inventory storage. The second sentence of Subsection (7)(a) thus establishes a temporal period during which industrial processing must occur, spanning from when property begins movement from raw-materials storage into processing until the finished goods enter inventory storage. Subsection (3) states that industrial processing includes 11 enumerated activities. In this case, plaintiff’s machines facilitated the collection of raw materials outside the time frame described in Subsection (7)(a). However, Detroit Edison Co v Dep’t of Treasury, 498 Mich 28 (2015), explained that Subsection (7)(a) and Subsection (3) are discrete inquiries—Subsection (7)(a) does not establish a threshold requirement for an exemption as long as Subsection (3) applies. Some of the activities listed in Subsection (3) fall outside the period specified in the general definition but are still considered industrial- processing activities. Extending the temporal limitation in Subsection (7)(a) to all requests for exemptions would leave portions of Subsection (3) without meaning or function within the statute. Instead, interpreting Subsection (3) as the more specific provision resolves the conflict and accords the statutes their most natural and ordinary meanings. Therefore, the Court of Appeals correctly held that the temporal limitation in Subsection (7)(a) does not apply to the industrial-processing activities listed in Subsection (3).

Affirmed and remanded to the Court of Claims for further proceedings.

©2020 State of Michigan Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan

OPINION 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

FILED June 16, 2020

STATE OF MICHIGAN

SUPREME COURT

TOMRA OF NORTH AMERICA, INC.,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v Nos. 158333 and 158335

DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY,

Defendant-Appellant.

BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH

VIVIANO, J. At issue is whether plaintiff TOMRA of North America, Inc.’s container-recycling

machines and repair parts are excluded as a matter of law from qualifying for the industrial-

processing-activity exemptions under MCL 205.54t of the General Sales Tax Act (GSTA),

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Tomra of North America Inc v. Department of Treasury, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomra-of-north-america-inc-v-department-of-treasury-mich-2020.