Court Opinion

ID: 4226177
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-12-06 14:08:11.9886+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:47:53.487487
License: Public Domain

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as
Accel, Inc. v. Testa, Slip Opinion No. 2017-Ohio-8798.]

                                        NOTICE
     This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
     advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
     promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
     South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
     formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
     the opinion is published.

                         SLIP OPINION NO. 2017-OHIO-8798
   ACCEL, INC., APPELLEE AND CROSS-APPELLANT, v. TESTA, TAX COMMR.,
                         APPELLANT AND CROSS-APPELLEE.
  [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
    may be cited as Accel, Inc. v. Testa, Slip Opinion No. 2017-Ohio-8798.]
Sales and use tax—R.C. 5739.02(B)(42)(a) and 5739.01(R)—Tax exemption for
        purchases of items used in “assembling” or “assembly”—R.C.
        5739.01(JJ)(3)—Tax exemption for employment-services transactions
        involving employees assigned “on a permanent basis”—Decision of Board
        of Tax Appeals affirmed.
(No. 2015-1332—Submitted September 26, 2017—Decided December 6, 2017.)
              APPEAL from the Board of Tax Appeals, No. 2012-2840.
                               ____________________
        Per Curiam.
        {¶ 1} The Ohio Tax Commissioner, appellant and cross-appellee,
conducted a consumer-use-tax audit of certain purchases made by appellee and
cross-appellant, Accel, Inc., during the period January 1, 2003, through December
                            SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

31, 2009, and the tax commissioner issued a tax assessment based on that audit. On
appeal, the Board of Tax Appeals (“BTA”) affirmed the assessment in part and
reversed the assessment in part.
       {¶ 2} The BTA reversed the imposition of use tax on materials Accel
acquired to be used and incorporated into gift sets, holding that the purchases were
entitled to exemption under R.C. 5739.02(B)(42)(a) and 5739.01(R) because the
preparation of the gift sets involved “assembling” or “assembly.” The BTA also
reversed the imposition of use tax on certain transactions by which Accel obtained
“employment services” through one of its suppliers, holding that the transactions
were exempt under R.C. 5739.01(JJ)(3), which exempts transactions involving the
assignment of employees “on a permanent basis.” The tax commissioner appeals
these findings and asserts in conjunction with his appeal that the BTA should have
deferred to his own factual findings.
       {¶ 3} In its cross-appeal, Accel contests the BTA’s ruling that no portion of
the assessment is time-barred by R.C. 5703.58(B). Accel also contends that the
production of gift sets qualifies for exemption directly under the definition of
“manufacturing operation” in R.C. 5739.01(S) and that the employment-services
transactions with a different supplier should also have been exempted.
       {¶ 4} Finally, each party contests the BTA’s decision to admit into evidence
the report and testimony of the opposing party’s expert witness.
       {¶ 5} Based on our review of the issues presented, the record before us, the
briefs, and the relevant case law, we conclude that the BTA acted reasonably and
lawfully with respect to all of the contested findings. We therefore affirm the
decision of the BTA.
                         COURSE OF PROCEEDINGS
       {¶ 6} The tax commissioner issued a use-tax assessment against Accel on
January 18, 2011. Accel petitioned for reassessment, and the tax commissioner
issued his final determination on June 26, 2012, stating the amount of unpaid use

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tax as $2,447,159.84, plus preassessment interest of $651,862.91 and a penalty of
$122,357.99, for a total assessment of $3,221,380.74. Accel appealed to the BTA.
       {¶ 7} The BTA held a hearing at which Accel presented the testimony of its
president, its cost-accounting manager, an expert on manufacturing, the tax
department’s audit agent, Accel’s chief financial officer, and the chief financial
officer of Resource Staffing, Inc., a company through which Accel obtained some
of its workers. The tax commissioner presented the testimony of an expert on
packaging. Numerous exhibits were introduced into evidence, some subject to
objections to be resolved by the BTA in its decision.
       {¶ 8} The BTA found that those items purchased by Accel that, through
“assembly,” became part of the gift sets qualified for exemption. BTA No. 2012-
2840, 2015 WL 4410600, *3-4 (July 15, 2015). It arrived at this conclusion in two
steps. First, the BTA stated that Accel was not engaged in “merely packaging
products,” and it went on to find that “Accel’s activities do not involve packaging.”
Id. at *3. Second, the BTA determined that Accel’s preparation of the gift sets did
constitute “assembly.” Id. at *4.
       {¶ 9} Next, the BTA found that the evidence showed that the employees
supplied to Accel by Resource Staffing were assigned “on a permanent basis,” with
the result that Accel did not owe sales or use tax on the purchase of employment
services from Resource Staffing. Id. at *5. In contrast, the BTA found that there
was insufficient evidence for it to find that employees supplied to Accel by
Manpower, Inc., were assigned on a permanent basis, so those transactions were
found to be taxable. Id. at *6.
       {¶ 10} Finally, the BTA found that R.C. 5703.58(B) imposed no time bar
on any aspect of the assessment, because that provision did not take effect until
after the tax commissioner issued the assessment. Id.

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                                    ANALYSIS
                                Standard of Review
          {¶ 11} In reviewing a decision of the BTA, we determine whether the
decision is “reasonable and lawful.” Satullo v. Wilkins, 111 Ohio St.3d 399, 2006-
Ohio-5856, 856 N.E.2d 954, ¶ 14.           Although the BTA is responsible for
determining factual issues, this court “ ‘will not hesitate to reverse a BTA decision
that is based on an incorrect legal conclusion.’ ” Id., quoting Gahanna-Jefferson
Local School Dist. Bd. of Edn. v. Zaino, 93 Ohio St.3d 231, 232, 754 N.E.2d 789
(2001).
          The BTA Reviews Tax-Commissioner Determinations De Novo
          {¶ 12} Under his second proposition of law, the tax commissioner argues
that the BTA erred because it “merely substituted its own fact finding for that of
the Tax Commissioner.” The tax commissioner relies on Hatchadorian v. Lindley,
21 Ohio St.3d 66, 488 N.E.2d 145 (1986), paragraph one of the syllabus, which
articulates a “clearly unreasonable or unlawful” standard for rebutting the tax
commissioner’s findings. We have mentioned that standard in subsequent cases.
E.g., Am. Fiber Sys., Inc. v. Levin, 125 Ohio St.3d 374, 2010-Ohio-1468, 928
N.E.2d 695, ¶ 42; Newman v. Levin, 120 Ohio St.3d 127, 2008-Ohio-5202, 896
N.E.2d 995, ¶ 31; Nusseibeh v. Zaino, 98 Ohio St.3d 292, 2003-Ohio-855, 784
N.E.2d 93, ¶ 10. Although the “clearly unreasonable and unlawful” standard does
imply that the BTA should accord deference to the tax commissioner’s findings of
fact, two strands of case law establish that deference is not required.
          {¶ 13} First, longstanding case law unequivocally holds that the BTA’s
standard for reviewing the tax commissioner’s findings is de novo, as to both facts
and law. Key Servs. Corp. v. Zaino, 95 Ohio St.3d 11, 16, 764 N.E.2d 1015 (2002),
citing Higbee Co. v. Evatt, 140 Ohio St. 325, 332, 43 N.E.2d 273 (1942); accord
MacDonald v. Shaker Hts. Bd. of Income Tax Rev., 144 Ohio St.3d 105, 2015-Ohio-

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3290, 41 N.E.3d 376, ¶ 21. De novo review is, of course, the opposite of deferential
review.
          {¶ 14} Second, our case law establishes—without any reference to a
“clearly unreasonable” standard—that the tax commissioner’s findings are
presumed valid subject to rebuttal: “The rule is well settled that a taxpayer
challenging the assessment has the burden to ‘ “ ‘show in what manner and to what
extent * * * the commissioner’s investigation and audit, and the findings and
assessments based thereon, were faulty and incorrect.’ ” ’ ” Krehnbrink v. Testa,
148 Ohio St.3d 129, 2016-Ohio-3391, 69 N.E.3d 656, ¶ 30, quoting Maxxim Med.,
Inc. v. Tracy, 87 Ohio St.3d 337, 339, 720 N.E.2d 911 (1999), quoting Federated
Dept. Stores, Inc. v. Lindley, 5 Ohio St.3d 213, 215, 450 N.E.2d 687 (1983), quoting
Midwest Transfer Co. v. Porterfield, 13 Ohio St.2d 138, 141, 235 N.E.2d 511
(1968).      Notably, under this standard, the burden for rebutting the tax
commissioner’s findings is simply to prove that the findings were incorrect.
          {¶ 15} We recently invoked the Hatchadorian standard in the context of
vacating a finding of the BTA that had contradicted the tax commissioner’s own
finding that a trust was a “nonresident trust” for purposes of R.C. 5747.01(I)(3).
T. Ryan Legg Irrevocable Trust v. Testa, 149 Ohio St.3d 376, 2016-Ohio-8418, 75
N.E.3d 184, ¶ 62-63. But close examination shows that our decision in that case
did not require the BTA to defer to the tax commissioner as a finder of fact. To the
contrary, we set forth two specific reasons for setting aside the BTA’s finding of
the trust’s residency. First, the BTA’s finding was defective because the BTA
failed to consider one essential statutory element of trust residency. Id. at ¶ 58.
Second, the tax commissioner’s finding that the trust was a nonresident trust had
not been contested at the BTA and no probative evidence had been presented to
show that the tax commissioner’s original determination was factually incorrect.
Id. at ¶ 62. These considerations did not cause us to reverse the BTA’s residency
finding; instead, we vacated the BTA’s finding on the grounds that the presumptive

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validity of the tax commissioner’s finding had not been rebutted because it had not
been contested, with an offer of proof, at the BTA. Id. at ¶ 63. Thus, as relevant
here, T. Ryan Legg Irrevocable Trust stands for nothing more than the proposition
that the BTA must affirm a finding of the tax commissioner when the finding has
not been shown to be incorrect.
       {¶ 16} For the foregoing reasons, we reject the tax commissioner’s second
proposition of law.     We hold that the BTA owed no deference to the tax
commissioner’s findings beyond placing the evidentiary burden on the taxpayer,
Accel, to show them to be, by a preponderance of the evidence, incorrect. And in
reviewing the BTA’s own factual findings, “[w]e must affirm * * * if they are
supported by reliable and probative evidence, and we afford deference to the BTA’s
determination of the credibility of witnesses and its weighing of the evidence
subject only to an abuse-of-discretion review on appeal.” HealthSouth Corp. v.
Testa, 132 Ohio St.3d 55, 2012-Ohio-1871, 969 N.E.2d 232, ¶ 10.
   Accel’s Preparation of Gift Sets Could Reasonably Be Found to Involve
                          “Assembling” or “Assembly”
       {¶ 17} R.C. 5739.02(B)(42)(a) provides an exemption from taxation for
“[s]ales where the purpose of the purchaser is to * * * incorporate the thing
transferred as a material or a part into tangible personal property to be produced for
sale by manufacturing, assembling, processing, or refining * * *.” (Emphasis
added.) “Manufacturing” is not by itself defined, but “manufacturing operation” is
defined in R.C. 5739.01(S):

               “Manufacturing operation” means a process in which
       materials are changed, converted, or transformed into a different
       state or form from which they previously existed and includes
       refining materials, assembling parts, and preparing raw materials
       and parts by mixing, measuring, blending, or otherwise committing

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                                January Term, 2017

       such    materials   or   parts   to   the   manufacturing    process.
       “Manufacturing operation” does not include packaging.

(Emphasis added.) R.C. 5739.01(R) defines “assembly” and “assembling” as
“attaching or fitting together parts to form a product, but [assembly and assembling]
do not include packaging a product.”
       {¶ 18} The BTA applied these interlocking definitions to find that Accel’s
gift-set production involved “assembly” or “assembling” but not “manufacturing”
per se. According to the BTA, Accel was attaching or fitting together components
to create a new whole but it was not engaging in an operation producing the type
of change of form that characterizes manufacturing per se. 2015 WL 44106005 at
*4, citing Sauder Woodworking Co. v. Limbach, 38 Ohio St.3d 175, 177, 527
N.E.2d 296 (1988). The BTA also specifically found that Accel’s activities did not
constitute “packaging.” Id. at *3.
       {¶ 19} Under his third proposition of law, the tax commissioner contests the
BTA’s finding that Accel was not engaged in “packaging”; under his fourth
proposition of law, the tax commissioner challenges the finding that “assembling”
was involved. In its cross-appeal, Accel challenges the BTA’s finding that it was
not engaged in “manufacturing.” Although we agree with the tax commissioner
that the activity at issue did meet the definition of “packaging,” we reject his
contention that the activity did not constitute “assembling.” And because we hold
that the BTA reasonably and lawfully found that assembling was involved, we need
not consider whether Accel was engaged in manufacturing per se.
       {¶ 20} At the outset, there was sufficient evidence to support the BTA’s
finding that “Accel does more than merely package products,” 2015 WL 4410600
at *3, and that Accel engaged in “assembling.” Accel’s cost-accounting manager
testified that Accel produced its gift sets through a three-stage process—a design
phase, a planning phase, and an assembly phase. In the design phase, Accel worked

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with its clients “to brainstorm ideas on how to build that gift set, how that gift set
is going to be presented in an aesthetic form so that it is sellable in a retail
environment.” The design phase also involved drawing up a written “specification”
document setting forth instructions for building the gift set and stating the materials
to be used. Those instructions were then incorporated into an internal document
for Accel’s use that set forth the production-line procedures it would employ. The
initial two phases involved determining the costs of the items to be included in the
gift set and the cost of the labor to do the assembly. The design and planning
process usually took between two and six months to complete before the assembly
phase began. According to its cost-accounting manager, Accel was engaging in
approximately 217 such projects per year at the time of the BTA hearing.
       {¶ 21} The tax commissioner levels a four-pronged legal challenge to the
BTA’s finding. First, the tax commissioner argues that a canon of statutory
construction, noscitur a sociis, calls for construing “assembling” to involve a
change in state or form in the same way “manufacturing,” “processing,” and
“refining” would. The Latin phrase means “it is known by its associates,” Black’s
Law Dictionary 1224 (10th Ed.2014); the tax commissioner maintains that the
scope accorded to “assembling” must be limited by the other terms included in R.C.
5739.02(B)(42)(a).
       {¶ 22} We disagree.       The fact that the legislature chose to define
“assembling” in R.C. 5739.01(R) in accordance with its ordinary meaning indicates
the intent that “assembling” adds an element to the listing in R.C.
5739.02(B)(42)(a) that is otherwise absent. Under this reading, “assembling”
extends the exemption to situations in which there is no transformation of
substances but there is a putting together of components into a new functional (or
in this case aesthetic) whole. See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
131 (2002) (defining “assemble” in part as “to fit together various parts of so as to

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make into an operative whole”). This is clear enough that we need not resort to the
statutory canon noscitur a sociis.
       {¶ 23} Second, the tax commissioner argues that because the definition of
“assembling” in R.C. 5739.01(R) excludes “packaging,” any activity that qualifies
as “packaging” cannot constitute “assembling.”         Thus, according to the tax
commissioner, even if an activity independently qualifies as manufacturing,
assembling, processing, or refining, it does not trigger the exemption if it also
constitutes “packaging.”
       {¶ 24} To consider this argument, it is necessary to consult the statutory
definition of “packaging”; R.C. 5739.02(B)(15) defines “packages” and
“packaging” in connection with the packaging exemption as follows:

       “Packages” includes bags, baskets, cartons, crates, boxes, cans,
       bottles, bindings, wrappings, and other similar devices and
       containers, but does not include motor vehicles or bulk tanks,
       trailers, or similar devices attached to motor vehicles. “Packaging”
       means placing in a package.

(Emphasis added.)
       {¶ 25} The preparation of gift sets clearly involves “placing in a package”
because the various items Accel included in the gift sets—manufactured soaps,
lotions, and other accessory and toiletry items—were boxed, wrapped, and bound
together in being made part of a gift set. Moreover, the activity satisfies the case-
law consideration that “packaging” involves “restrain[ing] movement” of the items
in the gift set “in more than one plane of direction.” Custom Beverage Packers,
Inc. v. Kosydar, 33 Ohio St.2d 68, 73, 294 N.E.2d 672 (1973). We accordingly
disagree with the BTA’s conclusion that Accel’s activities did not constitute
“packaging.”

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       {¶ 26} Although Accel’s operations did involve packaging, that fact alone
does not disqualify its production of gift sets from constituting “assembling.” The
issue here is how to treat an activity that is covered by both the assembling
definition and the packaging definition, and the case law cuts against the tax
commissioner’s position in this regard. In Cole Natl. Corp. v. Collins, 46 Ohio
St.2d 336, 339, 348 N.E.2d 708 (1976), this court effectively held that “packaging”
can be an incidental function, meaning that even when the packaging definition
applies, that is not determinative of the taxable status of the transactions.
       {¶ 27} In Cole Natl., a manufacturer sought to obtain the packaging
exemption for display cases and racks that contained manufactured merchandise;
the manufacturer shipped the initial order of merchandise to a retailer in the display
cases or on display racks. Thus, the display cases and racks served as packages,
but they were also designed to be used by retailers to store and display the
merchandise for sale to customers. Id. at 336-337. This court affirmed the denial
of the packaging exemption for the display cases and racks, holding that the
function of the display cases and racks as packaging was “incidental to their use as
a marketing aid.” Id. at 339. By the same logic, the fact that the gift sets here
functioned as “packaging” for the included items is incidental to the fact that in
assembled form, they constituted a new and differently marketable product.
       {¶ 28} Third, the tax commissioner contends that Accel’s own use of the
words “package” and “packaging” in describing its business to the public cuts
against its exemption claim. And the record contains promotional materials and
news articles in which Accel’s executives and others refer to the company’s
participation in the “contract packaging industry,” call the company a “contract
packager,” and refer to its production as involving “packaging.” This is, of course,
significant because the definitions of “assembling,” R.C. 5739.01(R), and
“manufacturing operation,” R.C. 5739.01(S), both specifically exclude the mere
“packaging” of a product. But the BTA’s rejection of this argument was not

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unreasonable—Accel’s promoting itself as a “packager” for business purposes did
not necessarily preclude the conclusion that its operations involved “assembling”
as that word is specially defined for purposes of tax exemption.
         {¶ 29} Fourth, the tax commissioner contends that case law of this court
precludes the BTA’s finding that “assembling” occurred in this case.             This
argument is unpersuasive because the cases the tax commissioner relies on did not
involve a situation in which manufactured goods were (at least arguably) being
“assembled” into a new, separately marketable whole. For example, Fichtel &
Sachs Industries, Inc. v. Wilkins, 108 Ohio St.3d 106, 2006-Ohio-246, 841 N.E.2d
294, was a personal-property-tax-exemption case involving the issue whether
putting clutch components into packages for shipment constituted “processing,”
thereby defeating a claimed exemption for inventory held “for storage only” under
R.C. 5701.08 and 5711.22. We did state that “[p]ackaging is not processing,” id.
at ¶ 40, but the issue in Fichtel & Sachs is not apposite to the one presented in this
appeal, which involves “assembling” manufactured items into a new aesthetic
whole.
         {¶ 30} In Sauder Woodworking, 38 Ohio St.3d at 176, 527 N.E.2d 296, a
manufacturer of “knock down” furniture—furniture that was sold in an
unassembled state to consumers—sought a sales-and-use-tax exemption for boxes
in which furniture components were shipped. Sauder Woodworking argued that
the packaging material was exempt because it was used directly in manufacturing
or processing its products; we agreed with the tax commissioner and the BTA in
rejecting this contention, based on the principle that “the container is [not] an
inherent part of the product, as the furniture was equally functional and usable prior
to its packaging.” Id. at 177. By contrast, the gift sets in this case do constitute a
new product of which the packaging materials are a component.
         {¶ 31} In Scholz Homes, Inc. v. Porterfield, 25 Ohio St.2d 67, 266 N.E.2d
834 (1971), forklifts were used to move component parts that were later to be

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assembled into homes from a plant’s “fabricating” area to an “expediting” area,
where the items were packed for shipment. Id. at 68-69. Rejecting a claim that the
forklifts were used as part of a process that involved “assembling,” we held that
“assembling” means “more than the mere gathering together of fabricated
materials”; “assembling” means fitting together various parts to make a new
operative whole. Id. at 72. Quite simply, the BTA was justified in finding that the
activity at issue in this case constituted “assembling,” as the word is described in
Scholz Homes.
       {¶ 32} For the foregoing reasons, we reject the tax commissioner’s first
through fourth propositions of law relating to the BTA’s finding that Accel was
engaged in “assembling.” At oral argument, counsel for the tax commissioner
advanced an alternative contention that “some of this stuff is not even [the
production of] a gift set; it’s ‘I’m putting it in a box to send it off.’ ” But neither
the notice of appeal nor the tax commissioner’s main brief argues that the case
should be remanded with an instruction that transactions that involved
“assembling” of gift sets should be segregated from those transactions that did not.
Under these circumstances, the tax commissioner has abandoned the argument. See
Navistar, Inc. v. Testa, 143 Ohio St.3d 460, 2015-Ohio-3283, 39 N.E.3d 509, ¶ 39,
citing E. Liverpool v. Columbiana Cty. Budget Comm., 116 Ohio St.3d 1201, 2007-
Ohio-5505, 876 N.E.2d 575, ¶ 3.
  Accel’s Transactions with Resource Staffing Could Reasonably Be Found
                        Exempt under R.C. 5739.01(JJ)(3)
       {¶ 33} “Employment service” is subjected to sales and use tax pursuant to
R.C. 5739.02 and 5739.01(B)(3)(k). Pursuant to R.C. 5739.01(JJ):

                “Employment service” means providing or supplying
       personnel, on a temporary or long-term basis, to perform work or
       labor under the supervision or control of another, when the

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        personnel so provided or supplied receive their wages, salary, or
        other compensation from the provider or supplier of the employment
        service or from a third party that provided or supplied the personnel
        to the provider or supplier. “Employment service” does not include:
                  ***
                  (3)   Supplying personnel to a purchaser pursuant to a
        contract of at least one year between the service provider and the
        purchaser that specifies that each employee covered under the
        contract is assigned to the purchaser on a permanent basis.

        {¶ 34} The BTA found that Accel’s dealings with Resource Staffing
qualified under the permanent-assignment exemption of R.C. 5739.01(JJ)(3), while
Accel’s dealings with Manpower did not. Under his fifth proposition of law, the
tax commissioner contests the first finding; on cross-appeal, Accel contests the
latter finding.
   The BTA made no formal finding concerning the “supervision or control” of
                        personnel supplied by Resource Staffing
        {¶ 35} After determining that Accel’s arrangements with Resource Staffing
triggered the permanent-assignment exemption, the BTA stated:

                  Moreover, Accel argues that the employees provided by
        Resource Staffing were not “under the supervision or control of
        another,” as is required to meet the definition of “employment
        service” in R.C. 5739.01(JJ). The testimony of [Moises Lluberes]
        indicated that Resource Staffing supplied supervisors, on its own
        payroll, not Accel’s, to supervise and direct the employees provided
        for Accel’s production activities.

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2015 WL 4410600 at *6. The BTA’s decision then starts a new paragraph
addressing a totally different subject: whether Accel’s arrangement with Manpower
triggered the permanent-assignment exemption.
       {¶ 36} In his notice of appeal and his brief, the tax commissioner treats the
statement quoted above as if it were a finding and then argues that the BTA erred
in making that finding. The tax commissioner points out that the contract between
Resource Staffing and Accel itself recited that the employees would be under
Accel’s supervision and control. In its brief, Accel also treats the BTA’s statement
as if it were a finding that the personnel did not act under Accel’s own supervision
and control.
       {¶ 37} We conclude that the quoted passage from the BTA’s decision does
not constitute a formal finding.    The passage recites an additional argument
advanced by Accel and alludes to its evidentiary significance, but it does not
explicitly draw any conclusion as to the argument’s validity. And making such a
finding was unnecessary, because the BTA had already found that the permanent-
assignment exemption applied to Accel’s dealings with Resource Staffing.
Because there was no formal finding regarding the supervision of the employees,
we decline to address this contention.
The tax commissioner raises legal arguments that have been rejected by the case
                                         law
       {¶ 38} On its face, the permanent-assignment exemption of R.C.
5739.01(JJ)(3) appears to turn on the content of the employment-services contract
underlying the transaction.     And consistent with that plain reading, the tax
commissioner’s fifth proposition of law asserts that the BTA erred by finding that
the permanent-assignment exemption applied regarding employees supplied to
Accel by Resource Staffing: “When an employment services contract fails to
provide an express term for ‘permanent’ employees, the [BTA] cannot supply the
missing terms by inquiring into facts and circumstances of the employment

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relationship.” The tax commissioner then focuses his argument on the content of
the written employment-services agreement between Accel and Resource Staffing.
       {¶ 39} But the tax commissioner is reviving an argument that this court has
rejected in previous cases. This court has twice declined to adopt an analysis that
narrowly focuses on whether an employment-services contract “specifies”
permanent assignment and has instead applied a broader facts-and-circumstances
test. First, in H.R. Options, Inc. v. Zaino, 100 Ohio St.3d 373, 2004-Ohio-1, 800
N.E.2d 740, the tax commissioner had argued to the BTA that H.R. Options’s
contracts with its clients contained “no contractual provision that ‘specifies
permanent’ assignment” and that its “practice of continuous employment cannot be
offered as evidence when no written contract provision exists.” See BTA No. 2001-
M-808, 2002 WL 1813907, *3 (Aug. 2, 2002). Neither the BTA nor this court
accepted the tax commissioner’s contract-centered approach. Indeed, this court’s
analysis placed greater emphasis on the individual employment contracts between
the employees and the employment-services provider that were in the record than
on the overarching employment-services contracts between the provider and its
clients. H.R. Options at ¶ 23-25.
       {¶ 40} In H.R. Options, we articulated a test that does not emphasize the
wording of the employment-services contract, as advocated by the tax
commissioner here. Instead, the test for permanent assignment has two elements:
(1) the employee must be assigned for an indefinite period, i.e., the contract stating
the employee’s assignment does not specify an ending date, and (2) the employee
must not be provided as a substitute for a current employee who is on leave or to
meet seasonal or short-term-workload needs. Id. at ¶ 21. In applying the test, “both
the contract and the facts and circumstances of the employee’s assignment are
factors that must be reviewed to determine whether the employee is being assigned
on a permanent basis.” Id. Most significantly, we then approved the exemption
from taxation for some of the employees based on the facts and circumstances when

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the employment-services contract between the provider and the client plainly did
not specify that they were assigned on a permanent basis. Id. at ¶ 23-24. And we
remanded transactions involving certain other employees to the BTA for further
review to determine whether they were purely seasonal, i.e., nonexempt,
assignments. Id. at ¶ 26.
       {¶ 41} In Bay Mechanical & Elec. Corp. v. Testa, 133 Ohio St.3d 423,
2012-Ohio-4312, 978 N.E.2d 882, ¶ 19, we explained that in H.R. Options, we had
“construed the exemption as turning on the facts of each employee’s assignment
rather than on the presence of ‘magic words’ in the employment-service agreements
themselves.” We then took the additional step of holding that the presence of the
“magic words” in the employment-services contracts could not, in light of H.R.
Options, be dispositive in favor of exemption. Bay Mechanical at ¶ 22.
       {¶ 42} The tax commissioner tries to bolster his emphasis on R.C.
5739.01(JJ)(3)’s “specifies” language with a contract-law argument. The tax
commissioner contends that an approach that determines the exemption’s
applicability based on facts-and-circumstances evidence violates principles of
contract law by allowing course of performance to supply a contract term that is
not present in the actual contract. The tax commissioner maintains that because
under contract law, a contract term that is not set forth in the contract itself is
“deemed to have no existence,” Aultman Hosp. Assn. v. Community Mut. Ins. Co.,
46 Ohio St.3d 51, 53, 544 N.E.2d 920 (1989), and therefore cannot be shown by
extrinsic evidence, R.C. 5739.01(JJ)(3) cannot properly be construed to support
application of a facts-and-circumstances test to establish that the employees here
were “assigned * * * on a permanent basis” when the employment-services contract
failed to specify permanent assignment.
       {¶ 43} This argument also is at odds with the case law. It cannot be
reconciled with the facts-and-circumstances test set forth in H.R. Options and
explained by Bay Mechanical. Indeed, the tax commissioner’s argument had been

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                                 January Term, 2017

rejected by the BTA at the time H.R. Options was decided, and those earlier
decisions formed the basis for the approach taken in H.R. Options. See Bay
Mechanical at ¶ 23 (“H.R. Options adopts a consistent theme sounded by the BTA
itself when reviewing exemption claims: when ‘determining whether an exception
or exemption to taxation applies, it is not just the form of a contract that is
important,’ but instead, the ‘crucial inquiry becomes a determination of what the
seller is providing and of what the purchaser is paying for in their agreement’ ”),
quoting Excel Temporaries, Inc. v. Tracy, BTA No. 97-T-257, 1998 WL 775284,
*2 (Oct. 30, 1998).
         {¶ 44} For the foregoing reasons, the tax commissioner’s objections based
on his proposed interpretation of R.C. 5739.01(JJ)(3) to the BTA’s finding
regarding permanent assignment of the Resource Staffing employees are without
merit.
The BTA’s finding of permanent assignment is neither unreasonable nor unlawful
         {¶ 45} In his brief, the tax commissioner then turns away from his contract-
centered argument based on R.C. 5739.01(JJ)(3)’s wording and delves into the facts
and circumstances of this case. Most importantly, he points to substantial evidence
in the record that the employee assignments at issue here may have been seasonal
or designed to meet “short-term workload conditions,” H.R. Options, 100 Ohio
St.3d 373, 2004-Ohio-1, 800 N.E.2d 740, at ¶ 21. Under H.R. Options, neither of
those types of assignment transactions qualifies for the permanent-assignment
exemption.      The tax commissioner in his final determination had found
“compelling” evidence that Accel’s “labor force fluctuates with the seasons,”
noting the nature of its business and the fact that invoices from Manpower and
Resource Staffing demonstrated fluctuating payroll dollar amounts with heaviest
spending on employee labor from August through December, and therefore had
determined that the employees were “seasonal in nature.”

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                                  SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

         {¶ 46} In arriving at a contrary conclusion regarding employees supplied by
Resource Staffing, the BTA relied primarily on the testimony of Accel’s chief
financial officer, Daniel Harms, and Moises Lluberes, the chief financial officer of
Resource Staffing. The gist of their testimony was that Accel sought to have
employees return for job after job once they had been trained and that during
periods when less work was available, Resource Staffing would reduce the hours
the employees worked rather than discharging them. Lluberes specifically testified
that Resource Staffing supplied 647 persons to Accel as employees from 2006
through 2011 (when its contract with Accel ended) and that about 358 of those
employees worked more than one year at Accel.1 Lluberes also testified that
Resource Staffing would not reassign personnel placed with Accel to other clients
when the workload at Accel decreased. The BTA relied on this testimony to
conclude that the personnel supplied by Resource Staffing were “assigned on a
permanent basis.” 2015 WL 4410600 at *5.
         {¶ 47} Although there is no question that the number of Resource Staffing
workers at Accel fluctuated significantly throughout the year and was greatest
during the fall as the holidays approached, the BTA concluded that the retention of
the same personnel through high-activity and low-activity periods negated their
status as seasonal employees. This is best viewed as an aspect of the BTA’s factual
determination that merits our deference.
         {¶ 48} Ultimately, the distinction between seasonal or short-term-workload
employment and more regular employment is one of degree, not of kind. In every
enterprise, the workload may experience periods of ebb and flow. It seems entirely

1
  Lluberes testified in part based on an exhibit that the BTA in its decision ultimately struck from
the record. The exhibit was a document stating the names and tenures of employees supplied by
Resource Staffing to Accel and was prepared at Lluberes’s direction by Resource Staffing’s
accounting department. But even if he had not stated precise numbers, Lluberes’s testimony
explained the nature of the permanent-assignment relationship, as to which he was not cross-
examined. And the tax commissioner did not move to strike Lluberes’s general testimony regarding
the employees’ tenures, which appeared to rely on a foundation beyond that of the excluded exhibit.

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                                January Term, 2017

reasonable, therefore, that what matters in an ebb-and-flow business for purposes
of R.C. 5739.01(JJ)(3) and our precedents is the continuity of the workforce, i.e.,
are the same workers having their hours adjusted or are new workers being brought
in to handle the extra work during the busy season only? Based on Lluberes’s
testimony, the BTA found the former to be true. Under H.R. Options, bringing back
the same workers each time with differing hours is consistent with permanent
assignment; using new workers just for a brief workload spike is not.
       {¶ 49} The tax commissioner argues that Lluberes’s testimony was so
biased that the BTA could not have reasonably relied on it. But as discussed, we
review the BTA’s weighing of evidence and determinations of witness credibility
under an abuse-of-discretion standard, meaning that we will reverse a decision of
the BTA only if we detect an arbitrary or unconscionable attitude. HealthSouth
Corp., 132 Ohio St.3d 55, 2012-Ohio-1871, 969 N.E.2d 232, at ¶ 10; NWD 300
Spring, L.L.C. v. Franklin Cty. Bd. of Revision, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2017-Ohio-
7579, ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 14. Although Lluberes undeniably had a business interest
in relation to his testimony, the BTA did not abuse its discretion by crediting that
testimony in spite of any possible bias.
 The BTA Reasonably Concluded that Accel Did Not Show that Manpower
                     Personnel Were Permanently Assigned
       {¶ 50} On cross-appeal, Accel argues that the BTA erred by regarding the
evidence as insufficient to establish that the personnel supplied by Manpower were
also permanent-assignment employees. See 2015 WL 4410600 at *6. Accel
challenges that finding by pointing to the affidavit of its president, David Abraham.
       {¶ 51} Abraham’s affidavit summarily recited that no written agreement
existed with Manpower but that the parties contemplated “a long term relationship
of at least one year” and that Accel requested that the employees be assigned
indefinitely because they would have been trained and exposed to confidential
manufacturing processes. The affidavit also detailed some types of work performed

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                            SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

by the employees. Notably, the affidavit did not even address the question of
seasonal labor.
       {¶ 52} We reject Accel’s contention that the BTA erred by failing to grant
exemption based on the affidavit. Accel bore the burden of proof to show that it
was entitled to a tax exemption, but it adduced a much smaller quantum of proof
with respect to the Manpower transactions than it did regarding the transactions
involving Resource Staffing, failing to even address central concerns regarding the
applicability of the exemption for the transactions involving Manpower. Under
these circumstances, Accel has failed to demonstrate an abuse of discretion.
R.C. 5703.58(B) Is Inapplicable Because It Became Law after the Issuance of
                             the Assessment at Issue
       {¶ 53} R.C. 5703.58(B) prohibits the tax commissioner from “mak[ing] or
issu[ing] an assessment against a consumer for any tax due under Chapter 5741 of
the Revised Code, or for any penalty, interest, or additional charge on such tax, if
the tax was due before January 1, 2008.” Accel argues on cross-appeal that this
provision applies to this case. If the provision is applicable, it would bar a
considerable portion of the tax commissioner’s assessment.
       {¶ 54} But the provision was enacted as part of 2011 Am.Sub.H.B. No. 153,
and it became effective on September 29, 2011. The tax commissioner issued his
assessment on January 18, 2011. Because the provision was not in effect when the
tax commissioner issued his assessment, it did not bar the issuance of that
assessment. We therefore affirm the BTA’s ruling on this point.
The BTA Did Not Abuse Its Discretion Regarding the Expert Testimony and
                                Experts’ Reports
       {¶ 55} On various grounds, each party contests the other party’s expert
testimony and expert’s written report offered into evidence at the BTA hearing.
Our starting point for evaluating the arguments is that we accord the BTA wide
discretion in evaluating proffered expert testimony. Steak ‘n Shake, Inc. v. Warren

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                               January Term, 2017

Cty. Bd. of Revision, 145 Ohio St.3d 244, 2015-Ohio-4836, 48 N.E.3d 535, ¶ 20
(“the proper use of expert opinions [lies] within the sound discretion of the BTA,”
and this court “defer[s] to the BTA’s determination of the competency as well as to
the board’s determination of the credibility of the evidence presented to it”
[emphasis sic]); accord Johnston Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Inc. v. Hamilton Cty. Bd.
of Revision, 149 Ohio St.3d 155, 2017-Ohio-870, 73 N.E.3d 503, ¶ 32, 36. It
follows that the deferential abuse-of-discretion standard is applicable to the
arguments advanced regarding the experts.
       {¶ 56} The need for considering those arguments, however, is obviated by
the fact that the BTA’s decision sets forth extensive analysis in support of its
conclusions without relying on evidence offered by either expert. When “nothing
in the BTA’s decision” indicates that exhibits “were given any weight,” we have
held that “any error in admitting [the] exhibits” constitutes “harmless error.”
Higbee Co. v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Revision, 107 Ohio St.3d 325, 2006-Ohio-2,
839 N.E.2d 385, ¶ 30. The same is true regarding the experts’ opinions and
testimony here, and we accordingly find no merit to the arguments.
                                CONCLUSION
       {¶ 57} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the BTA.
                                                                Decision affirmed.
       O’CONNOR, C.J., and O’DONNELL, KENNEDY, FRENCH, O’NEILL, FISCHER,
and DEWINE, JJ., concur.
                              _________________
       Corsaro & Associates Co., L.P.A., Joseph G. Corsaro, Christian M. Bates,
Steven B. Beranek, and Scott R. Poe, for appellee and cross-appellant.
       Michael DeWine, Attorney General, and Daniel W. Fausey, Assistant
Attorney General, for appellant and cross-appellee.
                              _________________

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