Court Opinion

ID: 4112645
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-01-02 08:10:08.08227+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:46:46.894124
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MICHIGAN

                           COURT OF APPEALS

MJR GROUP, LLC,                                                    UNPUBLISHED
                                                                   December 29, 2016
              Petitioner-Appellee,

v                                                                  No. 329119
                                                                   Tax Tribunal
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY,                                            LC No. 00-441767

              Respondent-Appellant.

Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and O’CONNELL and GLEICHER, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

       Respondent, Department of Treasury (the Department), appeals as of right the
determination of the Michigan Tax Tribunal (the Tribunal) that petitioner, MJR Group, LLC,
(MJR) was entitled to a refund of the sales tax MJR remitted on nontaxable bottled water and
prepackaged candy for tax years 2007 to 2010. We affirm.

                    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

        MJR owns and operates a chain of movie theaters in southeast Michigan, and its
concession stands sell bottled water and prepackaged candy. MJR’s menu boards list the final
transfer price paid by the customer and stated that “All Prices Include Sales Tax.” From at least
1991 going forward, MJR calculated its owed sales tax by multiplying its gross sales by the sales
tax quotient, regardless of the items sold.

        During an investigation about reimbursing sales tax to a group of Girl Scouts, MJR
discovered that bottled water and prepackaged candy are nontaxable items. It subsequently
sought a refund of $409,760.05 in excess sales taxes paid between 2007 and 2010. The
Department denied the refund, concluding that even had MJR erroneously collected sales tax,
MCL 205.73 prohibited MJR from keeping the sales tax it had wrongfully collected from
customers. MJR appealed the denial of that refund, asserting that MJR “did not pass the burden
of the tax to the customer. Instead [MJR] bore the direct legal incidence of the tax . . . .”

        The hearing referee recommended denying MJR’s refund request because, although
bottled water and prepackaged candy were not subject to sales tax, a refund would unjustly
enrich MJR under MCL 205.73(4). The referee concluded that MJR’s contention that the
customers did not pay sales tax was “misguided” because MJR included sales tax in the cost of
the items sold. The Department adopted the referee’s decision, and MJR appealed to the

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Tribunal, asserting that the menu price was the final transfer price and it did not add sales tax to
the menu prices. Both parties sought summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), and the
Tribunal ruled in favor of the Department.

       MJR appealed to this Court, which reversed and remanded. MJR Group LLC v Dep’t of
Treasury, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued February 25, 2014
(Docket No. 312745). This Court concluded that summary disposition was improper because
MJR presented evidence that it did not add sales tax to the menu items’ stated prices and,
accepting that as true, MJR had not wrongfully collected any tax from its customers. Id. at 5.
The panel further concluded that summary disposition in favor of MJR was improper because
there was a factual question regarding whether MJR had, in fact, collected sales tax from its
customers. Id.

         On remand, the Tribunal held a full hearing regarding whether MJR or its customers paid
the sales tax on the concession items. Dennis Redmer, MJR’s vice president of operations,
testified that he changed the concessions item prices about a year after he began working for
MJR. Redmer explained that he implemented a pricing system to get people through the
concessions stand faster, and he stated that he did not consider sales tax when setting the prices;
rather, Redmer considered sales tax a cost of doing business. Redmer stated that this was true
whether the item was taxable, like popcorn, or nontaxable, like bottled water.

        Donna Kondek, MJR’s controller, testified that sales tax was not charged to the customer
above the price stated on the menu board. This conflicted with one of Kondek’s previous
affidavits, in which she stated that sales tax was included in the prices that MJR charged its
customers. Kimberly Knoll, a Department auditor, testified that based on how MJR’s software
worked, she could not tell whether the prices for bottled water and packaged candy included
sales tax or not because the software did not have transactional details.

        Following the hearing, the Tribunal found that MJR had not considered sales tax when
establishing its prices and that the sales tax ultimately came out of MJR’s profits. The Tribunal
reasoned that Redmer’s testimony clarified the discrepancies in the documentation showing how
tax was collected and the confusion in Kondek’s statements. It reasoned that Kondek’s belief
that the concessions prices included sales tax was irrelevant because Redmer, not Kondek, set the
concessions prices. Finally, it found that the Department had not rebutted Redmer’s testimony
about the way MJR collected sales tax. Because Redmer testified that he did not include sales
taxes when setting the prices for the menu board, the Tribunal concluded that MJR had not
charged its customers sales tax and thus was not inappropriately keeping sales tax it had actually
collected from customers.

                                 II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

        This Court’s review of a decision by the Tax Tribunal is limited. Mich Props, LLC v
Meridian Twp, 491 Mich. 518, 527; 817 NW2d 548 (2012). We must accept the Tax Tribunal’s
factual findings if “competent, material, and substantial evidence on the record” supports them.
Const 1963, art 6, § 28. See also Mich Props, 491 Mich. at 527. Substantial evidence supports
the Tax Tribunal’s findings if a reasonable person would accept the evidence as sufficient to

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support the conclusion. Wayne Co v Mich State Tax Comm, 261 Mich. App. 174, 186-187; 682
NW2d 100 (2004). Substantial evidence “may be substantially less than a preponderance.” Id.

                                         III. ANALYSIS

        The Department contends the Tribunal improperly found that MJR did not in fact collect
sales tax from its customers. We disagree.

         The only question presented after this Court’s previous remand was the factual question
of whether MJR had actually collected sales tax from its customers. MJR Group LLC, unpub op
at 5. At the hearing in this case, the parties presented the Tribunal with conflicting evidence on
this point. Redmer—who was responsible for setting the prices on the concessions stand items—
testified that he did not consider sales tax when setting the prices of items but instead considered
sales tax a cost of doing business. Kondek made conflicting assertions at different times: in her
first affidavit, she stated that MJR did not collect additional sales tax above the amounts listed on
the board, but in her second affidavit and testimony, she stated that MJR itself ultimately paid
taxes on all the items, including bottled water and packaged candy. Finally, Knoll testified that
she could not tell whether MJR’s prices on bottled water included sales tax or not because MJR’s
software did not include transactional details.

        A reasonable mind could accept as true Redmer’s statements that he, as the person who
set the menu prices, did not include sales tax in those prices but rather considered tax an eventual
cost of doing business. And a reasonable person could credit Kondek’s later testimony that MJR
was the party ultimately responsible for paying taxes on all items sold, particularly when it made
more sense in light of MJR’s accounting software. Because a reasonable person could conclude
that MJR did not, in fact, collect sales tax from its customers, we conclude that competent,
material, and substantial evidence supported the Tribunal’s decision.

        Moreover, contrary to the assertions of the dissent, MJR’s financial records do not
indisputably establish that MJR customers paid sales tax on concession items. Rather, taken as a
whole, record evidence supports a conclusion that MJR charged round prices for concession
items to speed up transactions and then separated out the sales tax it was required to remit to the
Department from its net profit. The Tax Tribunal could find that during the years in question,
MJR miscalculated its net profit by remitting sales tax for nontaxable items. Given our limited
review, we cannot accept the dissent’s theory of this case.

       We affirm.

                                                              /s/ Peter D. O’Connell
                                                              /s/ Elizabeth L. Gleicher

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