AQUILA FOREIGN QUALIFICATIONS CORPORATION, Respondent, v. DIRECTOR OF REVENUE, Appellant.
No. SC 91784.
Supreme Court of Missouri, En Banc.
March 6, 2012.
Bruce Farmer, Oliver Walker Wilson LLC, Columbia, for Aquila.
MARY R. RUSSELL, Judge.
The issue before this Court is whether a convenience store is exempt from sales and use tax for the electricity it purchases for its food preparation operations. Although
I. Background
Casey‘s Marketing Company d/b/a Casey‘s General Stores is a convenience store engaged in the retail sale of gas, grocery items, various nonfood items, and prepared foods. Aquila Foreign Qualifications Corporation is a utility company selling electricity to residential and commercial customers, including Casey‘s. Casey‘s filed a refund claim with the director of revenue for one month‘s tax paid for a portion of electricity Aquila sold to two Casey‘s locations in Grain Valley and Greenwood. The director denied the claim. At Casey‘s request, Aquila filed a complaint challenging the director‘s final decision denying Casey‘s refund claim for state sales and use tax paid. The commission, in reversing the director‘s final decision, decided that a portion of Casey‘s purchased electricity is exempt from state sales and use tax under
Casey‘s food preparation operations are minimal. Many of its food products are pre-cooked and only require reheating before consumption.3 A few items are frozen raw and are required to be heated to temperature before the items are ready for consumption.4 A few more items require the addition of water along with the application of heat or the freezing of water before the items are ready for consumption.5
Casey‘s serves two food products that require additional preparation steps beyond the addition of water or the application of heat. Pizzas are prepared by mixing
Cake donuts also require a few additional steps beyond the addition of water or the application of heat. First, the cake donut flour is measured and mixed in a mixer with water to form cake donut dough. The dough is placed into a hopper, and then a cutter cuts, forms, and drops the dough into a fryer. The donuts are flipped once during the frying process and are then dropped onto a donut tray. Once the donuts are cooled, they are iced, topped, and placed in a display case for sale.
In this appeal, the director contends Casey‘s is not exempt from state sales and use tax on the portion of electricity it purchases for its food preparation operations under
II. Standard of Review
To determine whether Casey‘s is entitled to a tax exemption, this Court must interpret a revenue statute. As statutory interpretation is a question of law, this Court reviews the commission‘s interpretation of
III. Analysis
At issue in this case is whether the electricity Casey‘s purchases for the preparation of certain food items qualifies for a tax exemption.
To determine whether Casey‘s is entitled to a sales and use tax exemption on electricity purchased for its food preparation operations, this Court must determine whether Casey‘s engages in “processing” under
“A statute is ambiguous when its plain language does not answer the current dispute as to its meaning.” Derousse v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 298 S.W.3d 891, 895 (Mo. banc 2009).
There is little precedent analyzing
Essential to Brinker‘s holding was the lack of the terms “restaurant,” “preparation,” “furnishing,” or “serving” in
Casey‘s notes
Although this Court recognizes that neither the term “processing,” nor its statutory definition, appear in
Further, this Court‘s interpretation of “processing” is guided by the statutory maxim of noscitur a sociis—a word is known by the company it keeps. Pollard v. Bd. of Police Comm‘rs, 665 S.W.2d 333, 341 n. 13 (Mo. banc 1984). It is “often wisely applied where a word is capable of many meanings in order to avoid the giving of unintended breadth in statutory construction.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
IV. Conclusion
Giving effect to the legislative intent and strictly construing the exemption against
BRECKENRIDGE, FISCHER, STITH and DRAPER, JJ., concur.
PRICE, J., dissents in separate opinion filed.
TEITELMAN, C.J., concurs in opinion of PRICE, J.
WILLIAM RAY PRICE, JR., Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. The outcome of this case turns on whether Casey‘s Marketing Company d/b/a Casey‘s General Stores engages in “processing.” “Processing” is the most generic of terms that the General Assembly could have chosen when writing the energy tax exemption provision in
1. As used in this section, the following terms mean: (1) “Processing“, any mode of treatment, act, or series of acts performed upon materials to transform or reduce them to a different state or thing, including treatment necessary to maintain or preserve such processing by the producer at the production facility. . . .
The term “processing” is broad, but it is not ambiguous. Its application to the activities in which Casey‘s engages could not be clearer. “[C]ourts have a duty to read statutes in their plain, ordinary and usual sense. . . . Where there is no ambiguity, this Court does not apply any other rule of construction.” MC Dev. Co. v. Cent. R-3 Sch. Dist. of St. Francois Cnty., 299 S.W.3d 600, 604 (Mo. banc 2009) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). The Court‘s resort to the maxim of noscitur a sociis is, thus, inappropriate here.
Reliance on Brinker Missouri, Inc. v. Dir. of Revenue, 319 S.W.3d 433 (Mo. banc 2010), is also inappropriate. Whether or not Brinker was rightly decided,1 that case is not controlling here because it interpreted a different term appearing in a different statute. In Brinker, the issue was whether a restaurant‘s kitchen equipment, tables, chairs and dishes were exempt from the state use and sales taxes. The answer turned on whether those items were “[m]achinery and equipment . . . purchased and used to establish new or to expand existing manufacturing, mining or fabricating plants . . . if such machinery and equipment is used directly in manufacturing, mining or fabricating a product which is intended to be sold ultimately for final use or consumption. . . .”
I would affirm the decision of the Administrative Hearing Commission.
