Walter Toebe & Co. v. Department of Revenue

148 N.W.2d 775, 378 Mich. 617, 1967 Mich. LEXIS 114
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1967
DocketCalendar 13, Docket 51,430, 51,431
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 N.W.2d 775 (Walter Toebe & Co. v. Department 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
Walter Toebe & Co. v. Department of Revenue, 148 N.W.2d 775, 378 Mich. 617, 1967 Mich. LEXIS 114 (Mich. 1967).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

These two cases, consolidated for appeal, are for declaratory judgments concerning the constitutionality of section 4, subdivision (m) of PA 1959, No 272, 1 under which there were assessed use taxes against plaintiffs, Walter Toebe & Company and Toebe-Hull Company.

The stipulation of facts pertaining to Walter Toebe & Company states that:

“While engaged as a road contractor in fulfillment of contracts with the Michigan State highway department during the calendar years 1961, 1962 and *620 1963, Walter Toebe paid certain use taxes through suppliers and also was assessed certain use taxes on purchases of personal property either used or consumed in said construction.”

The above quoted stipulation is also made regarding the other plaintiff, except that Toebe-Hull also fulfilled a contract with the county of Wayne during the stated period.

The Oakland circuit judge held that section 4, subdivision (m) imposing a tax on contractors dealing with the State and exempting those dealing with local units of government, constituted discrimination contra to the constitutional provision that: “The legislature may by law impose specific taxes, which shall be uniform upon the classes upon which they operate.” Article 10, § 4, Constitution of 1908 [Article 9, § 3, Constitution of 1963].

The use tax act was first enacted in 1937 2 and, as originally enacted, it set forth several categories of exemption, including the United States, the State and subdivisions, churches and schools (subdivisions [i] and [j] of section 4).

Section 4, subdivision (i) read:

“The tax hereby levied shall not apply to: * * *
“Property sold to the United States, the State of Michigan, its departments or institutions, or any of its subdivisions.”

PA 1949, No 273, § 4, subdivision (m), extended the exemption by providing that the tax should not apply to “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 in the fulfill - *621 men! of a contract” with the United States, the State of Michigan, its departments or institutions, or any of its subdivisions.

PA 1959, No 263, amended section 4, subdivision (m), eliminating the exemption on property purchased by contractors to fulfill construction contracts with the United States, and later that year the legislature by PA 1959, No 272 (the amendment now under consideration), eliminated the exemption on property purchased by a contractor whether the work was done for the United States or the State of Michigan.

In 1964, by Act No 164, 3 the legislature restored the exemption on property purchased by contractors in fulfilling their construction contracts with both the United States and the State of Michigan.

Contending that contractors are a separate class that was split by section 4, subdivision (m) into two parts, plaintiffs state:

“The use tax act did establish contractors as a separate class. However, section 4, subdivision (m) arbitrarily split that class into two parts thereby destroying the tax uniformity required so that the use tax was imposed on purchases of tangible personal property by contractors when they fulfilled their construction contracts with the State of Michigan but exempted contractors from the use tax on such purchases involving contracts with cities, villages, townships and counties of the State.”

Appellant, contending that section 4, subdivision (m) meets constitutional requirements and that the Michigan legislature had the right to tax tangible personal property used in the construction of State highways and exempting tangible personal property *622 used in constructing roads for counties, cities, and villages, states:

“The history of the exemptions from use tax as pertains to the construction industry unequivocally demonstrates that the exemption or lack of exemption with which we are here concerned, is one accorded to or denied a State or local governmental entity. The legislature has never sought, in either the-sales or use tax statutes, to exempt, or to economically benefit by any exemption, persons such as the appellees who are private construction contractors engaged in activity for profit. To speak of commercial construction contractors as a class and to seek to identify the legislative power of exemption with these private enterprises completely misses the intent of the legislature in granting the exemption or lack of exemption complained of here. Furthermore, a construction contractor with the State does hot hear the economic burden of the use tax. It is an element of the unit price in the hid. This raises a serious question of whether appellees have a justiciable issue to raise in these causes. The tax consequence .of the lack of exemption here complained of is one borne by the sovereign State at the election of the legislature. * * *
“The subdivisions of the State of Michigan are on an entirely different legal, political and economic footing than the State of Michigan and its institutions. There exist many basic differences, in fact, which justify the exemption by the legislature of the purchase of material used by plaintiffs in constructing roads and streets for counties, cities, and townships, while taxing the purchase of tangible personal property used by them in constructing highways for the State of Michigan.”

We have approved in Rockwell Spring & Axle Company v. Romulus Township (1962), 365 Mich 632, the right to exempt a tax on one division of government and not on another. The plaintiff in *623 Rockwell argued that by those leasing the facilities of Willow Run Airport, which were owned by a State supported educational institution, paying no tax, and by the plaintiff paying a tax on substantially identical facilities leased from the county of Wayne, the act was unconstitutional as lacking tax uniformity. This argument was unanimously rejected.

We agree with appellant that there exist many basic differences between the State and its subdivisions that would justify the legislature exempting the tax on materials used in constructing county, city, and village roads and not State roads, and we have stated in cases like the present that it is not the function of this Court to consider the propriety or justness of the tax, nor to criticize the public policy which led to adoption of the legislation. See W. S. Butterfield Theatres, Inc., v. Department of Revenue (1958), 353 Mich 345.

The question presented is whether one group of contractors is favored over another group and is not whether the counties, cities, and villages are favored over the State.

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Related

Davis v. Department of Treasury
446 N.W.2d 531 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 N.W.2d 775, 378 Mich. 617, 1967 Mich. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-toebe-co-v-department-of-revenue-mich-1967.