Court Opinion

ID: 2789319
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-03-26 07:04:39.236537+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:28:50.088293
License: Public Domain

STATE OF MICHIGAN

                            COURT OF APPEALS

MORLEY COMPANIES, INC.,                                               UNPUBLISHED
                                                                      March 24, 2015
               Plaintiff-Appellant,

v                                                                     No. 318624
                                                                      Court of Claims
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY,                                               LC No. 12-000100-MT

               Defendant-Appellee.

Before: JANSEN, P.J., and METER and BECKERING, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

       Plaintiff appeals as of right from an order of the Court of Claims denying its motion for
summary disposition and granting defendant’s motion for summary disposition under MCR
2.116(C)(10) (no genuine issue of material fact). We affirm.

        Plaintiff is a Michigan business operating as an event management service company that,
among other things, designs, organizes, executes, and manages special events and meetings for a
Fortune 500 clientele. After working closely with a client to help the client choose the various
components of an event and drawing up an agreement that reflects those choices and identifies
plaintiff’s obligations, plaintiff contracts for hotel accommodations, transportation, food and
beverages, activities, and entertainment. If the client so directs, plaintiff also procures tangible
personal property for use as gifts and giveaways to event attendees. In conjunction with
purchasing such items, plaintiff claimed a sales tax exemption because, it reasoned, the purchase
was for resale to its clients. Record evidence shows that vendors often shipped the items to
plaintiff at its Saginaw headquarters. Plaintiff stated that it retained the merchandise to inspect it
for quality and quantity, consolidated it with other items, and then shipped everything to the
event venue. Third-party vendors billed plaintiff for the items, and plaintiff invoiced its clients
the cost of the items, generally without markup.

        Defendant audited plaintiff for the tax periods from March 1, 2006, through February 28,
2010. The audit revealed that plaintiff had not paid sales tax or use tax on the goods it purchased
from third-party vendors and had not collected use tax for the goods from its clients. Because
the value of the total services plaintiff provided was never less than 80 percent of the total
charges, defendant deemed plaintiff a service provider rather than a seller of goods, and assessed
a use tax against plaintiff in the amount of $213,958, plus statutory interest, with respect to these
goods. Plaintiff paid the assessment under protest and eventually filed an action in the Court of

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Claims requesting a refund, alleging an exemption from use tax because it did not store, use, or
consume the tangible personal property, but purchased it as an agent of its clients or for resale to
its clients.

        Plaintiff and defendant filed cross-motions for summary disposition under MCR
2.116(C)(10). The Court of Claims denied plaintiff’s motion and granted defendant’s motion,
finding that plaintiff had not presented evidence sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material
fact with respect to its claim to operate as its clients’ agent or as a reseller of merchandise to its
clients. The court also found that plaintiff’s transactions with its clients involved the sale of
services and the sale of goods. Applying the incidental-to-services test of Catalina Mktg Sales
Corp v Dep’t of Treasury, 470 Mich 13; 678 NW2d 619 (2004), the court concluded that plaintiff
used the tangible personal property in partial fulfillment of its service obligation and, therefore,
was subject to use tax. We review de novo plaintiff’s challenge to the court’s ruling. Auto Club
Group Ins Co v Burchell, 249 Mich App 468, 479; 642 NW2d 406 (2002).

         A motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) tests the factual sufficiency
of a claim. Smith v Globe Life Ins Co, 460 Mich 446, 454; 597 NW2d 28 (1999). “In reviewing
a motion for summary disposition brought under MCR 2.116(C)(10), a trial court considers
affidavits, pleadings, depositions, admissions, and documentary evidence filed in the action or
submitted by the parties, MCR 2.116(G)(5), in the light most favorable to the party opposing the
motion.” Quinto v Cross & Peters Co, 451 Mich 358, 362; 547 NW2d 314 (1996). If the
documentary evidence shows that there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party
is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, the trial court may grant the motion. Id. “[T]he
moving party has the initial burden of supporting its position by affidavits, depositions,
admissions, or other documentary evidence,” and then the burden shifts “to the opposing party to
establish that a genuine issue of disputed fact exists.” Id. (citation omitted). “If the opposing
party fails to present documentary evidence establishing the existence of a material factual
dispute, the motion is properly granted.” Id. at 363.

          Under the Use Tax Act (UTA), MCL 205.91 et seq., every person1 in Michigan is subject
to a use tax “for the privilege of using, storing, or consuming tangible personal property in this
state . . . .” MCL 205.93(1). The UTA defines “[s]torage” as “a keeping or retention of property
in this state for any purpose after the property loses its interstate character.” MCL 205.92(c).2 It
defines “[u]se” as “the exercise of a right or power over tangible personal property incident to
the ownership of that property including transfer of the property in a transaction where
possession is given.” MCL 205.92(b).

       A person who purchases property for resale is exempt from paying use tax as long as the
purchaser does in fact resell the property. MCL 205.94(1)(c)(i) and (2). Plaintiff argues that

1
    “Person” includes a firm. MCL 205.92(a).
2
 Merchandise ordinarily loses its interstate character when it reaches the point where the parties
originally intended the movement of the merchandise to end. 15A Am Jur 2d, Commerce, § 65,
p 518.

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although the Court of Claims recognized that sales of tangible personal property were itemized
separately from the sale of services, it erred when it failed to treat these sales as separate taxable
transactions. Plaintiff argues that the court should have found that each separately stated sale of
program gifts and giveaways was a separate transaction constituting a taxable sale at retail to
plaintiff’s customers, and thus exempt. “[T]he burden is on a claimant to establish clearly his
right to exemption, and an alleged grant of exemption will be strictly construed and cannot be
made out by inference or implication but must be beyond reasonable doubt.” Evanston YMCA
Camp v State Tax Comm’n, 369 Mich 1, 8; 118 NW2d 818 (1962) (citations and quotation marks
omitted).

        In support of its position, plaintiff cites RCA Serv Co Div, RCA Corp v Dep’t of Treasury,
135 Mich App 807; 355 NW2d 679 (1984), Natural Aggregates Corp v Dep’t of Treasury, 133
Mich App 441; 350 NW2d 272 (1984), and Kal-Aero v Dep’t of Treasury, 123 Mich App 46;
333 NW2d 171 (1983). Plaintiff’s reliance on these three cases is misplaced. What
distinguishes the facts of the case at bar from RCA, Natural Aggregates, and Kal-Aero is that the
plaintiff in each of those cases sold, rented, or leased goods at retail, while also selling services
that were entirely distinct from the goods. RCA Serv, 135 Mich App at 808-809, 811-812;
Natural Aggregates, 133 Mich App at 442, 446; Kal-Aero, 123 Mich App at 48-49, 51-52.
Because each plaintiff’s charges for the services sold were separately identifiable from charges
for the goods sold, the income earned from the services was distinct and not subject to taxation.
RCA, 135 Mich App at 812; Natural Aggregates, 133 Mich App at 442, 446; Kal-Aero, 123
Mich App at 51-52. In the case at bar, plaintiff does not sell, and clients cannot purchase from it,
the tangible personal property at issue apart from plaintiff’s event management services.
Plaintiff’s clients can opt out of giving room gifts to its attendees, but they cannot purchase, rent,
or lease gifts and giveaways from plaintiff apart from engaging plaintiff’s services.

         Next, plaintiff argues that it serves as a purchasing agent for its clients and thus is not
liable for use tax. Defendant argues that plaintiff did not hold itself out to third-party vendors as
a purchasing agent for its clients and that there is no factual basis for plaintiff’s contention that
its clients were disclosed principals. An agency relationship is “a fiduciary relationship created
by express or implied contract or by law, in which one party (the agent) may act on behalf of
another party (the principal) and bind that other party by words or actions.” Breighner v Mich
High Sch Athletic Ass’n, 255 Mich App 567, 582-583; 662 NW2d 413 (2003) (citation and
quotation marks omitted). Whether an agency relationship has been created is ordinarily a
question of fact that a party may resolve by direct or by circumstantial evidence. Van Pelt v
Paull, 6 Mich App 618, 623; 150 NW2d 185 (1967). “[W]hether an agency has in fact been
created is to be determined by the relations of the parties as they exist under their agreements or
acts, with the question being ultimately one of intention.” Id. at 623-624 (citation and quotation
marks omitted). “The manner in which the parties designate the relationship is not controlling,
and if an act done by one person in behalf of another is in its essential nature one of agency, the
one is the agent of such other notwithstanding he is not so called.” Id. at 624 (citation and
quotation marks omitted).

        Plaintiff has not presented evidence sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact
that an agency relationship existed between it and any of its clients. Plaintiff’s blanket purchase
order clearly states that “nothing in the contract makes either party the agent or legal
representative of the other for any purpose whatsoever.” Plaintiff argued that, the language of

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the purchase order notwithstanding, its Scope of Work agreement and its course of dealing
created an agency relationship between plaintiff and its clients. The evidence is clear, however,
that with regard to the purchase of tangible personal property to fulfill its contractual obligations,
plaintiff did not hold itself out to third-party vendors as an agent of its clients. On the contrary,
defendant presented indisputable evidence in the form of the testimony of plaintiff’s controller
that plaintiff held itself out to third-party vendors as a buyer purchasing tangible personal
property for resale. Plaintiff procured the tangible personal property requested by the client for
itself for use in partial fulfillment of its obligation to design, arrange, execute, and manage a
particular event for the client. Although plaintiff’s clients selected the elements of the special
events and meetings, including choosing the tangible personal property to be used as gifts and
giveaways, the record contains no evidence that clients controlled plaintiff’s conduct in the
latter’s fulfillment of the clients’ wishes. “Fundamental to the existence of an agency
relationship is the right of the principal to control the conduct of the agent.” Briggs Tax Serv,
LLC v Detroit Pub Schs, 485 Mich 69, 80; 780 NW2d 753 (2010).3

       Plaintiff also argues that the trial court erred when it applied the incidental-to-services
test. Plaintiff asserts that the trial court confused services that are separate and apart from the
property transferred with services that are embodied in the property. Defendant counters that the
incidental-to-services test is applicable because plaintiff provides a single transaction, namely a
group event or program, to its clients.

        In Catalina Mktg Sales Corp, 470 Mich at 19, the Michigan Supreme Court explained
that, “[a]s a general rule, sales tax applies only to sales of tangible personal property, not sales of
services. When a single transaction . . . involves both the provision of services and the transfer
of tangible personal property, it must be categorized as either a service or a tangible property
transaction.” The Court provided the following guidelines to use in determining whether the
transfer of tangible personal property was incidental to the rendering of professional services:

       [A] court should examine what the buyer sought as the object of the transaction,
       what the seller or service provider is in the business of doing, whether the goods
       were provided as a retail enterprise with a profit-making motive, whether the
       tangible goods were available for sale without the service, the extent to which
       intangible services have contributed to the value of the physical item that is
       transferred, and any other factors relevant to the particular transaction. [Id. at 26.]

       Plaintiff argues that Catalina is distinguishable. Plaintiff maintains that because Catalina
involved “one monthly price for the marketing services and coupon delivery transaction,” the
coupon could not be separated from the marketing service, so the one mixed transaction had to

3
  We disagree with plaintiff’s bare assertion that General Motors’ possession of a “direct pay
permit,” see MCL 205.98, somehow overcomes the fact that no agency relationship existed and
the other circumstances of this case. We note that plaintiff’s argument with regard to this issue is
self-contradictory in that it refers to the existence of a “direct pay permit” but then relies on
provisions—MCL 205.71(2) and MCL 205.103(2)—that are applicable to instances not
involving a “direct pay permit.”

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be categorized as either a sale of tangible personal property or a sale of services. By contrast,
plaintiff argues, its customers can purchase all of the other event elements (accommodations,
transportation, food) but elect not to purchase the gifts and giveaways.

        While it is true that plaintiff’s clients could elect not to provide gifts or giveaways to their
event attendees, a client’s choice of gifts and giveaways occurred in the context of plaintiff’s
design, arrangement, execution, and management of the event. Again, the client could not
purchase, and plaintiff did not sell, the merchandise apart from plaintiff’s event management
services. Contrary to plaintiff’s claim that it provides “hundreds of separately itemized
transactions” to its clients, a client’s Scope of Work agreement actually represents a single
transaction—the design, arrangement, execution, and management of a special event. Thus,
where plaintiff’s event management services are comprised of the sale of both services and
goods, they are mixed transactions subject to the incidental-to-services test. We find no basis
upon which to reverse the trial court’s ruling.

       Affirmed.

                                                               /s/ Kathleen Jansen
                                                               /s/ Patrick M. Meter
                                                               /s/ Jane M. Beckering

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