BRINKER MISSOURI, INC., Appellant, v. DIRECTOR OF REVENUE, Respondent.
No. SC 90463.
Supreme Court of Missouri, En Banc.
Aug. 31, 2010.
319 S.W.3d 433
LAURA DENVIR STITH, Judge.
Jeremiah J. Morgan, Deputy Solicitor General, Attorney General‘s Office, Jefferson City, for Respondent.
LAURA DENVIR STITH, Judge.
Brinker Missouri, Inc. seeks review of an Administrative Hearing Commission decision correctly determining that Brinker‘s purchases of kitchen equipment and other items were not exempt from use tax pursuant to sections
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The material facts are not in dispute. Brinker Missouri, Inc., headquartered in Dallas, Texas, owns and operates 23 restaurants in Missouri, including Chili‘s Grill & Bar, Romano‘s Macaroni Grill, On the Border and Maggiano‘s Little Italy. Each restaurant prepares and sells food and drink to the public2 and is subject to Missouri sales and use tax where applicable.
During the relevant period—October 1, 2003, to December 31, 2004—Brinker purchased what it refers to as “kitchen machinery, equipment and parts” that it used to prepare food and drinks for its customers and to refrigerate or heat them pending serving. Although the record does not specify the specific nature of this “machinery” or “equipment,” it appears to refer to stoves, knives, refrigerators, cutting tables and similar items commonly found in kitchens, for the record states that Brinker‘s restaurants use these items for cutting, cooking, mixing or blending ingredients such as for salsa; baking, frying or otherwise cooking raw foods; keeping its salsa and other food and drink ingredients chilled or warm during their preparation to prevent spoilage or to hold them until there was a need to assemble or mix them into the final food item; and generally presenting food and drinks to customers in an attractive way in individual servings.
Also during the period at issue, the restaurants run by Brinker were furnished with chairs, bar stools, tables, menus, dishes, tableware, glassware, booster seats, high chairs and similar items. Customers were served meals on the plates, from which they ate while sitting at the tables and using the silverware and glasses, as in other restaurants. The cost of these items was included in each restaurant‘s overhead. Brinker charges the same prices for meals and drinks for dine-in consumption as for sales “to go.”
Brinker initially paid use tax for the period October 1, 2003, through December 31, 2004, but in October 2006, Brinker sought a refund of $54,034.86 of the use tax it had paid. The director denied $48,966.83 of the claim, and Brinker sought review of the denial of $44,183.93 of that amount to the commission. It argued that an exemption applied under sections
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The commission‘s decision shall be affirmed if: (1) it is authorized by law; (2) it is supported by competent and substantial evidence on the whole record; (3) mandatory procedural safeguards are not violated; and (4) it is not clearly contrary to the reasonable expectations of the General Assembly.
III. RESTAURANTS PREPARE RATHER THAN MANUFACTURE MEALS
Section
Section
Brinker argues that it qualifies for the exemptions provided in section
Brinker reads the exemptions too broadly. Section
(5) Machinery and equipment ... purchased and used to establish new or to expand existing manufacturing, mining or fabricating plants in the state 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 ...
(emphasis added). While Brinker is correct that this provision does not use the word “retail,” it does use the word “plants.” It expressly states that the machinery and equipment must be used for new or expanded plants that manufacture, mine or fabricate products intended to be sold ultimately for final use or consumption by others. Neither Chili‘s, Macaroni Grill, On the Border nor Maggiano‘s Little Italy are plants,3 and they do not fabricate, manufacture or mine products to be sold ultimately for final use or consumption. By its terms, this exemption simply does not apply to purchases of new or expanded kitchen equipment in Brinker‘s restaurants. The commission did not err in rejecting Brinker‘s request for a refund of $21,588.19 in use tax it paid on new or expanded plant machinery and $1,309.56 in use tax it paid on new or expanded plant equipment.
(4) Replacement machinery, equipment, and parts and materials and supplies solely required for the installation or construction of such replacement machinery, equipment, and parts, used directly in manufacturing, mining, fabricating or producing a product which is intended to be sold ultimately for final use or consumption ...
While section
Brinker argues that this interpretation of the exemption is too narrow and that the words “manufacture” and “produce” should be read broadly to include preparing and cooking food. Brinker argues as though all that is required to avail itself of the exemption is simply to refer to preparing food as producing it and cooking food as manufacturing or transforming it.
Brinker‘s argument ignores the fact that it is seeking to take advantage of an exemption. “An exemption is allowed only upon clear and unequivocal proof, and doubts are resolved against the party claiming it.” Id. at 825.4 This Court will give the language used in the statute a narrow construction, not the exceedingly broad and peculiar meaning argued for by Brinker. Dir. of Revenue v. Armco, Inc., 787 S.W.2d 722, 724 (Mo. 1990) (“Canons of construction direct that exemption statutes be strictly construed against the taxpayer“).
The narrow construction of this exemption also comports with the common sense understanding of the words used in the statute. “Absent a statutory definition, the primary rule of statutory interpretation is to give effect to legislative
These definitions have in common that they treat restaurants as furnishing food and beverages to the public at retail, not as plants or production facilities that manufacture, mine, fabricate or produce food or drink. Had the legislature intended to include restaurants or restaurant equipment within the exemptions set forth in section
The legislature did not include the words “restaurant” or “preparation” or “furnishing” or “serving” in
IV. A RESTAURANT DOES NOT SELL A CUSTOMER THE FURNITURE ON WHICH SHE SITS OR THE TABLEWARE SHE USES TO EAT
Brinker also seeks a refund of the use taxes it paid on the furniture at which customers sit and eat as well as on the items in and on which their food is served, arguing that it sells use of these items to its customers, albeit temporarily, and that this either exempts or excludes it from paying use tax on these items.
Section
Section
Brinker‘s theory is that as it includes the cost of the tables, chairs, silverware and dishes with and on which it serves its customers in its overhead, then each time it serves food to its customers, those customers not only are purchasing the food Brinker has prepared but also are buying the right to use the furniture on which they sit and the table on which the server places their food and the silverware with which they eat. Brinker argues, therefore, that it should be considered to have obtained these service items and furniture solely for the purpose of “reselling” them to its customers with their food.
This argument proves too much. As every cost normally is included in overhead one way or another (at least if the business is to break even), it would mean that everything a customer touches in the restaurant in that sense is resold and not subject to use tax. That cannot be what the legislature intended when it enacted these statutes. A “transfer, barter, or exchange” of “the title or ownership of tangible personal property, or the right to use, store, or consume the same” does not occur when Brinker provides the benches, chairs, bar stools, tables, menus, dishes, tableware, glassware, booster seats and high chairs to supply meals to its customers conveniently. While Brinker customers do acquire temporary use in the sense that the reusable items are used as a mechanism to facilitate delivery of their food and drink, this degree of control is de minimus and does not rise to the level of an actual transfer of a right to use. The plates, tables and chairs are not in any real sense transferred to customers any more than a piece of the restaurant floor is transferred to a customer when he or she walks on it or a bottle of ketchup is transferred when a customer picks it up to use or inspect it or a menu is transferred to a customer who reads it.
In those few cases finding a sale took place absent a permanent transfer of possession and title, the taxpayer did not merely incorporate the cost of the items in overhead, as Brinker has done here, but charged an additional consideration for the right to use the item for an extended period. For example, in Ronnoco Coffee Co., Inc. v. Dir. of Revenue, 185 S.W.3d 676, 677 (Mo. banc 2006), the taxpayer sought a section
Similarly, in Weather Guard, Inc. v. Dir. of Revenue, 746 S.W.2d 657, 657-58 (Mo. App. 1988), the court of appeals held that insulation machines temporarily provided to customers pursuant to a “Rental Machine Agreement” constituted a transfer of a right to use the machines for consideration because an additional amount was charged for insulation purchased by those customers as compared with the price charged to customers who either bought the machines outright or used their own machines.
Here, the chairs, tables, dishes, tableware and similar items are used to serve or supply the food conveniently to Brinker‘s customers and allow them to have a place at which to sit to eat it. No additional charge is made to customers for the privilege of sitting in a chair, eating at a table, or using glasses or silverware. Customers are not charged different sums depending on how many of these serving items they use or at what kind of chair or table they sit, and “to go” customers are charged the same price for food as are eat-in customers. To charge a separate fee certainly would be detrimental to the Brinker‘s business because customers come to Brinker‘s restaurants to eat the food, not to rent use of bowls, cups and tables; the items as to which a use tax exclusion or exemption is sought are used simply as a delivery mechanism for what customers are buying—the food and beverages. Brinker fails to show, within the meaning of the statutes, a transfer of a right to use the furniture, menus, dishes, glassware, booster seats, high chairs and other items it provided at its restaurants for consideration. It cannot avail itself of
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the commission is affirmed.
TEITELMAN, RUSSELL, WOLFF, BRECKENRIDGE, and FISCHER, JJ., concur.
PRICE, C.J., dissents in separate opinion filed.
WILLIAM RAY PRICE, JR., Chief Justice, dissenting.
The majority holds that Brinker is not entitled to tax exemptions under sections
I. Restaurants Are Plants.
Section
Machinery and equipment ... purchased and used to establish new or to expand existing manufacturing, mining or fabricating plants in the state 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.
Because “plants” are not defined in the statute, the majority properly turns to the dictionary, which defines a plant as “the land, buildings, machinery, apparatus, and fixtures employed in carrying on a trade or a mechanical or other industrial business.” WEBSTER‘S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1731 (emphasis added). The majority fails, however, to finish the process by examining the definition of “trade.” The dictionary defines a trade as “an occupation requiring manual or mechanical skill and training.” Id. at 2421. Cooking and preparing food is a trade that requires manual skill and training. Brinker‘s restaurants are “land, buildings, machinery, apparatus, and fixtures employed in carrying on a trade” and fit within the language of sections
Prior decisions of this Court repeatedly have allowed a broad interpretation of manufacturing plants and processes for purposes of this exemption. Southwestern Bell Tele. Co. v. Dir. of Revenue, 78 S.W.3d 763 (Mo. banc 2002) (telephone company performing telecommunications services); DST Sys., Inc. v. Dir. of Revenue, 43 S.W.3d 799 (Mo. banc 2001) (newspaper publishing); Bridge Data Co. v. Dir. of Revenue, 794 S.W.2d 204 (Mo. banc 1990) (financial company that supplied information about securities traded on public markets), abrogated on other grounds by International Bus. Mach. Corp. v. Dir. of Revenue, 958 S.W.2d 554 (Mo. banc 1997).
II. Cooking Is Manufacturing Under the Statute.
The process of preparing food for consumption by Brinker‘s patrons is manufacturing. Manufacturing is “the alteration or physical change of an object or material in such a way that produces an article with a use, identity, and value different from the use, identity, and value of the original.” Branson Prop. USA, L.P. v. Dir. of Revenue, 110 S.W.3d 824, 826 (Mo. banc 2003). Acts that fall outside subdivisions (4) and (5) generally involve repairing or transmit-
Again, this Court repeatedly has allowed a broad interpretation of what output is sufficient to be considered manufacturing. See Concord Publ‘g House, Inc. v. Dir. of Revenue, 916 S.W.2d 186, 191 (Mo. banc 1996) (manipulating and affixing words onto a page to create a newspaper); Jackson Excavating v. Administrative Hearing Comm‘n, 646 S.W.2d 48, 51 (Mo. 1983) (treating and purifying water); Wilson & Co., Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 531 S.W.2d 752, 755 (Mo. 1976).
In Wilson, this Court held that converting live hogs into marketable portions of food fit for human consumption was manufacturing. Id. Like in Wilson, Brinker‘s restaurants also take raw ingredients and transform them into articles ready for human consumption. The resulting food is distinct from the original ingredients, and the finished product is generally twice as valuable as the original ingredients. For the purposes of section
The legislature enacted sections
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
WILLIAM RAY PRICE, JR.
CHIEF JUSTICE
