Court Opinion

ID: 4206456
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-09-27 09:09:22.476174+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:40:46.826504
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MICHIGAN

                            COURT OF APPEALS

DAVOR VULIC,                                                         FOR PUBLICATION
                                                                     September 26, 2017
               Petitioner-Appellant,

v                                                                    No. 333255
                                                                     Tax Tribunal
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY,                                              LC No. 15-004644-TT

               Respondent-Appellee.

Before: MARKEY, P.J., and RONAYNE KRAUSE and BOONSTRA, JJ.

RONAYNE KRAUSE, J. (dissenting).

        I respectfully dissent. I agree with the majority that the only issue before us is whether
petitioner is personally liable for taxes under the Tobacco Products Tax Act (TPTA), MCL
205.421 et seq., not whether his actions were otherwise lawful. However, I believe the majority
misreads the plain language of the applicable statutes. I would reverse.

        As an initial matter, I suspect that the unusual facts of this case may be a situation not
anticipated by our Legislature and therefore it did not think to cover this particular set of facts.
However, be that as it may, we may not depart from the plain language of a statute even to avoid
an absurd result. Piccalo v Nix, 466 Mich. 861; 643 NW2d 233 (2002). In the event of any
ambiguity in a taxing revenue statute, such statutes “must be construed against the taxing
authority.” Ecorse Screw Mach Products Co v Michigan Corp and Securities Comm, 378 Mich.
415, 418; 145 NW2d 46 (1966).

        The TPTA defines a “sale” as “a transaction by which the ownership of tangible personal
property is transferred for consideration and applies also to use, gifts, exchanges, barter, and
theft.” MCL 205.422(r). The Tax Tribunal concluded that because petitioner merely passed the
cigarettes on at cost, no consideration occurred and, by implication, none of the other
possibilities occurred. Respondent’s construction to the contrary would render almost the
entirety of the language nugatory, effectively deleting everything after “transferred.” Courts
must avoid construing statutes in such a way that any portion thereof is rendered nugatory. Ally
Financial Inc v State Treasurer, 317 Mich. App. 316, 327-332; 894 NW2d 673 (2016). A sale
must entail more than merely transferring an item, and there is no reason not to defer to the Tax
Tribunal’s conclusion that some form of consideration is the touchstone. Consequently,
petitioner is not personally liable for taxes under the TPTA for selling or offering to sell tobacco
products.

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         Likewise, the majority’s conclusion that the transfer must have been a gift if no
consideration was exchanged would do the same: if literally any possible transfer would lead to
liability, then the Legislature’s specifications would be nugatory. Put another way, the
Legislature must be presumed to have limited situations under which transfer of ownership of
tangible personal property would constitute a sale, or it would not have included “for
consideration and applies also to use, gifts, exchanges, barter, and theft.” Because we must
avoid rendering any portion of a statute nugatory and must construe revenue statutes in favor of
the taxpayer, and because petitioner’s acts of passing the cigarette cartons on to his friend at cost
does not seem to neatly fit any of the specified categories, I conclude that petitioner’s actions
must not constitute “sales” under the TPTA. If the Legislature had intended any transfer of
cigarettes to be a sale, it would have defined a “sale” more simply as “a transaction by which the
ownership of tangible personal property is transferred.” Incongruous as the result might be, we
may not depart from the plain language of the statute as enacted by the Legislature.

        Furthermore, I find nothing even slightly ambiguous about the term “individual
package,” both words being well understood and entirely clear in context. The majority
concludes that because petitioner was in possession of unopened cartons of cigarettes, he must
have been in control of the individual packages therein, completely eviscerating the Legislature’s
specification of “individual packages.” We must presume that the Legislature specified this for
some reason. Petitioner was never in possession of individual packages of cigarettes as
individual packages. Again, we may not depart from the plain language of the statute as enacted
by the Legislature, even if the result strikes us as strange. I do, however, concur with the
majority’s extension of an invitation to the Legislature to clarify the TPTA should this not have
been its intended result.

        Although not addressed by the majority, my conclusions require me to address a further
provision of the TPTA, under which personal tax liability may be imposed for being “in control
or in possession of a tobacco product contrary to this act.” Respondent argues that petitioner is
an “unclassified acquirer” under MCL 205.422(z), because he was “a person . . . who imports or
acquires a tobacco product from a source other than a wholesaler or secondary wholesaler
licensed under this act for use, sale, or distribution.” The TPTA expressly forbids, inter alia, the
purchase or possession of tobacco by an unclassified acquirer without a license. MCL
205.423(1). Therefore, respondent somewhat confusingly appears to argue, if petitioner is an
“unclassified acquirer,” then by definition his lack of a license means his purchase or possession
of the cigarettes was “contrary to this act” and he is personally liable for the taxes. There is no
dispute that petitioner acquired the cigarettes from an unlicensed source; the question is therefore
whether he did so “for use, sale, or distribution.”

        As discussed, the Tax Tribunal properly found that no “sale” occurred. Neither “use” nor
“distribution” is defined by the TPTA. However, “distribution” is generally understood to entail
transferring something to multiple sources, which clearly also did not occur. See Merriam-
Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed). “[I]n doubtful cases, revenue statutes must be
construed against the taxing authority.” Ecorse Screw Mach Products Co v Michigan Corp and
Securities Comm, 378 Mich. 415, 418; 145 NW2d 46 (1966). We conclude that it would be
inappropriate to conclude that petitioner acquired the cigarettes for “distribution” because he
unambiguously only acquired them for the purpose of passing them on to a single recipient.
Consequently, the critical question is whether petitioner acquired the cigarettes for “use.” The

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Tax Tribunal found that he did by referring to definitions of “consumer” and “use” provided in
the Use Tax Act, MCL 205.91 et seq. (UTA).

        By default, our Legislature has instructed that “All words and phrases shall be construed
and understood according to the common and approved usage of the language” unless they have
some special technical meaning. MCL 8.3a. If an undefined word is common and lacks a
unique legal meaning, courts consult a lay dictionary. People v Thompson, 477 Mich. 146, 152;
730 NW2d 708 (2007). “It is a cardinal rule of statutory construction that the legislative intent
must be gathered from the language used, if possible, and that such language shall be given its
ordinary meaning unless a different interpretation is indicated.” Goethal v Bd of Supervisors of
Kent Co, 361 Mich. 104, 111; 104 NW2d 794 (1960). Helpfully, the Legislature has expressly
stated that “It is the intent of this act to impose the tax levied under this act upon the consumer of
the tobacco products by requiring the consumer to pay the tax at the specified rate.” MCL
205.427a. However, like the word “use,” the word “consumer” is also undefined in the TPTA.

         Both “use” and “consumer” are common words. The proper first resort should therefore
have been to a dictionary, not to a different statutory scheme with a different intent and
definitions crafted to serve that different intent. Respondent argues that this Court has held that
it is appropriate to refer to a definition found in another statutory scheme, but that is a misreading
or misunderstanding of what this Court held. Rather, this Court held that ambiguous language in
the TPTA should be construed in light of our Supreme Court’s construction of similarly
ambiguous language in the Use Tax Act, MCL 205.91 et seq. (UTA). S Abraham & Sons Inc v
Dep’t of Treasury, 260 Mich. App. 1, 14-15; 677 NW2d 31 (2003). There is no ambiguity at issue
here. It is inappropriate to refer to a dictionary for a word if an act provides its own definition.
Betten Auto Center Inc v Dep’t of Treasury, 478 Mich. 864, 864; 731 NW2d 424 (2007).
However, here the Tax Tribunal simply lifted a definition from one act entirely and applied it to
another without considering the different purposes behind the different acts.

        In contrast to the TPTA, the UTA is an “excise or privilege tax” on “the use, storage or
consumption of tangible personal property brought into the State in interstate commerce, after it
has come to rest in this State.” MCL 205.93(1); Western Electric Co v State, 312 Mich. 582, 595-
596; 20 NW2d 734 (1945). “Statutes in pari materia are those which relate to the same person
or thing, or the same class of persons or things, or which have a common purpose,” and they
must be read together as a whole when interpreting any discrete provision therein. City of
Detroit v Michigan Bell Tel Co, 374 Mich. 543, 558, 132 NW2d 660 (1965), overruled on other
grounds by City of Taylor v Detroit Edison Co, 475 Mich. 109, 120, 715 NW2d 28 (2006). The
definition of “use” at MCL 205.92(b) and “consumer” at MCL 205.92(g) in the UTA would not
have been intended to be read in complete isolation from the entirety of the UTA. In other
words, the definitions must be understood in the context of any exemptions from applicability
also included in the UTA. In particular, petitioner points out that “property purchased for resale”
is explicitly exempt from the Use Tax. MCL 205.94(1)(c)(i). The cigarettes did not and were
not intended to come to rest in Michigan. The Tax Tribunal’s rote application of a definition
from the UTA to the TPTA was, under the circumstances, improper and out of context.

        According to Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed), a “consumer” is, in
relevant part, “one that utilizes economic goods.” To “consume” means, in relevant part, “to
utilize as a customer.” To “use” has several possible meanings, of which all relevant

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possibilities pertain to engaging in the consumption of something, putting something into action
or service, or expending something. It is abundantly and readily obvious that, barring a specific
definition in the act to the contrary, the plain and unambiguous import of these words is that use
or consumption for purposes of the TPTA means the final end goal of a cigarette: smoking it. It
is therefore equally plain and unambiguous that petitioner is neither a consumer nor a user of the
cigarettes.

        It is undisputed that petitioner never intended to smoke the cigarettes, nor were any of the
cigarettes ever smoked in Michigan. He therefore did not purchase them for “use” according to
the common, everyday meaning of that word, which this Court must presume was the usage
intended by the Legislature for purposes of the TPTA when it did not include a definition in the
TPTA. Likewise, petitioner was not a “consumer” according to the common, everyday meaning
of that word. The Tax Tribunal therefore erred in finding petitioner personally liable for the
taxes assessed by respondent.

                                                             /s/ Amy Ronayne Krause

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