Per Curiam.
These consolidated cases arise out of an audit by the Department of Treasury of plaintiffs records and subsequent assessment of taxes under the General Sales Tax Act (GSTA), MCL 205.51 et seq., and the former motor fuel tax act (MFTA), MCL 207.101 et seq. Plaintiff distributes and sells at retail gasoline and diesel fuel in St. Clair County and other eastern Michigan counties. Rex Pierce supervised and David Wagg conducted the audit, which began in May 1996. The audit culminated in the department issuing orders of determination on April 15, 1999. One order finalized a deficiency assessment for diesel motor fuel tax and interest of $46,249.22 for the period of January 1994 to the end of September 1996. Another order finalized an adjusted deficiency assessment for sales tax of $4,714 for the period of February 1994 through September 1996. Plaintiff paid these assessments under protest and commenced these proceedings. The trial court granted summary disposition for defendants, dismissing all of plaintiffs claims for tax refunds in the Court of Claims and for damages as well as declaratory and injunctive relief in the circuit court. Plaintiff appeals by right. We affirm.
I. SUMMARY OF FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Plaintiff filed a complaint in the St. Clair Circuit Court on July 1, 1999, seeking declaratory and equitable relief. Plaintiff also sought money damages and injunctive relief, alleging that Pierce and Wagg violated 42 USC 1983 (count I) by denying plaintiff its right to due process under the Fifth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment. Plaintiff further alleged (count II) that it was deprived of property without due process of *23 law as guaranteed by Const 1963, art 1, § 17. In addition, plaintiff asserted in count II that defendants’ conduct during the audit, the department’s enforcement of its Revenue Administrative Bulletin 1991-12 (RAB 91-12), and the use of a “block sampling” auditing procedure, deprived it of “fair and just treatment,” for which plaintiff sought injunctive and “other relief.” Plaintiff also sought declaratory and injunctive relief in counts III, iy and V. It asserted that § 22 of the MFTA, MCL 207.122 1 was unconstitutionally vague and unlawfully delegated to the department the authority to specify necessary requirements for invoices that § 22 mandated for diesel fuel sales. Plaintiff also claimed that because RAB 91-12 was not adopted pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act (APA), MCL 24.201 et seq., it was unenforceable. In addition, plaintiff contended that the department’s use of “block sampling” to determine an error rate to apply to plaintiffs tax returns over the entire audit period was not “fair and just treatment” and was in violation of Const 1963, art 1, § 17.
On July 13,1999, plaintiff filed a suit in the Court of Claims in which it sought a refund of taxes, interest, and penalties it had paid under protest. Plaintiff asserted the same arguments it raised in the circuit court case. Specifically, plaintiff again alleged that § 22 of the MFTA did not provide reasonably precise standards and therefore unlawfully delegated legislative authority to the department; that the application of RAB 91-12 was unfair, unjust and unlawful; and that the department’s use of the “block sampling” technique was also unfair, unjust, and unlawful. Plaintiff added a claim that the department interpreted § 6a of the GSTA, MCL 205.56a *24 (regarding prepayment credits) in an arbitrary, capricious, and, therefore, unlawful manner.
After a series of motions in each court, and after appeals to this Court, 2 plaintiffs circuit court action was transferred by an order chаnging venue to the Ingham Circuit Court, where it was heard with the Court of Claims action. Defendants subsequently moved for summary disposition in each case under MCR 2.116(C)(4), (7), (8) and (10); the trial court granted the motions and dismissed all of plaintiffs claims in each case.
The trial court ruled with respect to the circuit court action that plaintiff had failed to plead a valid claim for damages and injunctive relief pursuant to 42 USC 1983 against the individual defendants for alleged violations of federal due process; that plaintiff had failed to plead a valid claim against defendants for injunctive relief for alleged violations of state due process rights under Const 1963, art 1, § 17; that § 22 of the MFTA does not unlawfully delegate authority to the department contrary to state due process of law requirements and the separation of state governmental power doctrine; that § 22 of the MFTA directly authorized the department’s adoption and enforcement of RAB 91-12 so that compliance with rule promulgation requirements of the APA was unnecessary; that the auditing method used by the department was fully authorized by the GSTA and not in violation of state due process rights; and that plaintiff failed to plead a valid claim for declaratory relief by alleging that § 22(2) of the MFTA, the RAB 91-12, and the “block sampling” auditing method were unlawful and unenforceable.
*25 In the Court of Claims action for a refund, the trial court ruled that plaintiff failed to state a valid claim because § 22 of the MFTA was a constitutional delegation of legislative authority to the department; that RAB 91-12 was not an unlawful enforcement of § 22; that the “block sampling” audit method did not unconstitutionally deprive plaintiff of state due process rights; and that the department’s interpretation of the “prepayment credit” provisions in § 6a of the GSTA was neither arbitrary nor capricious but, in fact, was consistent with and thus authorized by the statute.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The interpretation, application, and constitutionality of statutes are questions of law that this Court reviews de novo.
Eggleston v Bio-Medical Applications of Detroit, Inc,
The trial court dismissed plaintiffs claims under MCR 2.116(C)(7), (8), and (10). 3 A motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(7) asserts that a claim is barred by immunity granted by law; a C(8) motion asserts that the pleading fails to state a claim on which relief can be granted, and summary disposition under C(10) is proper where there is no genuine issue of material fact and a party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
*26
A motion under MCR 2.116(C)(7) may be supported or opposed by affidavits, depositions, admissions, or other documentary evidence; the substance or'content of the supporting proofs must be admissible in evidence.
Maiden v Rozwood,
A motion brought under MCR 2.116(C)(8) tests the factual sufficiency of the complaint on the basis of the pleadings alone. MCR 2.116(G)(5);
Corley v Detroit Bd of Ed,
A C(10) motion tests the factual sufficiency of a complaint and must be supported by affidavits, depositions, admissions, or other documentary evidence. MCR 2.116(G)(3)(b);
Corley, supra
at 278. The moving party must specifically identify the undisputed factual issues and support its position with documentary evidence. MCR 2.116(G)(4);
Smith v Globe Life Ins Co,
III. DOCKET NO. 251201
We begin by reviewing the trial court’s rulings with respect to plaintiffs circuit court case for two reasons. First, that is the order in which the trial court proceeded. Second, plaintiffs circuit court case raises almost all the same issues that plaintiff asserts in its Court of Claims complaint as a basis for a refund and it names all defendants.
A. 42 USC 1983
Plaintiff сlaims that the individual defendants violated state law and regulations governing the department’s conduct when auditing taxpayers and, therefore, they violated its federal right to due process of law. On this basis, plaintiff asserts that the individual defendants are liable pursuant to 42 USC 1983 for violating its federal rights under color of state law. Specifically, plaintiff alleges that the individual defendants violated its right to due process of law by failing to provide plaintiff a Taxpayers Rights Handbook, 4 being “visibly unhappy” and expressing dissatisfaction while abiding plaintiff’s request that the audit be conducted through and at the office of plaintiffs accountant, failing to keep plaintiff or its accountant apprised of the audit’s progress, pressuring plaintiff to execute a waiver of the period of limitations to permit review of the audit results before the department issued its formal notice of intent to assess, 5 and initially determining an amount *28 of claimed tax deficiencies that contained errors. 6 Plaintiff does not allege that it lacked notice or an opportunity for a meaningful hearing, and plaintiff does not contest that both predeprivation and postdeprivation remedies were available to it.
The trial court rejected plaintiffs contention that allegations of noncompliance with state laws and regulations, standing alone, can support a federal claim of deprivation of property without due process of law. Noting that plaintiff failed to support its position with authority, the trial court quoted
Harrill v Blount Co, Tennessee,
Both the Michigan Constitution and the United States Constitution preclude the government from de
*29
priving a person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. US Const, Am XIV; Const 1963, art 1, §
17; Hinky Dinky Supermarket, Inc v Dep’t of Community Health,
Because the collection of a tax constitutes a deprivation of property, a state must provide sufficient procedural safeguards tо satisfy due process requirements.
McKesson Corp v Div of Alcoholic Beverages,
*30
The Michigan statutory scheme at issue provides taxpayers with notice and an opportunity for meaningful hearings both predeprivation and postdeprivation. MCL 205.21; MCL 205.22;
Kostyu v Dep’t of Treasury,
Because plaintiff failed to state an actionable claim for a violation of a federal right under 42 USC 1983, it follows that plaintiff failed to state a claim for attorney fees pursuant to 42 USC 1988. Moreover, because adequate remedies are available under state law to aggrieved taxpayers, declaratory or injunctive relief is *31 not available through federal district courts under § 1983. 28 USC 1341; Nat’l Private Truck Council, supra at 588 (“[I]t is clear that [federal courts] may not award damages or declaratory or injunctive relief in state tax cases when an adequate state remedy exists.”). This same rule applies to state courts hearing § 1983 claims because “Congress did not authorize injunctive or declaratory relief under § 1983 in state tax cases when there is an adequate remedy at law.” Id. Thus, irrespective of “[w]hether a suit is brought in federal or state court, Congress simply did not authorize the disruption of state tax administration in this way.” Id. at 590. In addition, MCL 205.28(1)(b) applies to the GSTA and the MFTA and provides: “An injunction shall not issue to stay proceedings for the assessment and collection of a tax.” Consequently, the trial court did not err in dismissing all of plaintiffs 42 USC 1983 claims for failing to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
For the reasons already discussed, the trial court also properly dismissed all of plaintiffs § 1983 claims against the individual defendants on the ground of qualified or “good faith” immunity. MCR 2.116(C)(7). See
Harlow v Fitzgerald,
B. CONST 1963, ART 1, § 17
The trial court concluded that plaintiffs circuit court complaint failed to allege a violation of either proce *32 dural or substantive due process and also failed to state an actionable claim under the “fair and just treatment” clause of Const 1963, art 1, § 17. We agree.
1. PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS
Const 1963, art 1, § 17 provides, in pertinent part:
No person shall... be deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law. The right of all individuals, firms, corporations and voluntary associations to fair and just treatment in the course of legislative and executive investigations and hearings shall not be infringed.
On appeal, plaintiff cites
Bohannon v Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel, Inc,
2. SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS
Plaintiff next asserts that the trial court erred by dismissing its substantive due process claims under Const 1963, art 1, § 17 for injunctive (count II) and declaratory relief (counts III and V). Plaintiff contends that § 22 of the MFTA, MCL 207.122, unconstitutionally delegated legislative authority because it permitted the department to specify required details of invoices for diesel fuel sales without reasonably precise standards; therefore, the department could not enforce RAB 91-12. “One of the requirements of substantive due process is the existence of reasonably precise standards to be utilized by administrative agencies in the performance of delegated legislative tasks.”
State Hwy Comm v Vanderkloot,
Section 22(1) provides a discount of six cents a gallon of the tax imposed on diesel motor fuel pursuant to the MFTA “if the diesel motor fuel is delivered into the fuel supply tanks of a commercial motor vehicle licensed under the motor carrier fuel tax act [MCL 207.211 et seq.].” Plaintiff rests its constitutional argument on the language of § 22(2) that reads in pertinent part:
The tax on diesel motor fuel sold and delivered in this state by the retailer into the fuel supply tanks of motor vehicles shall be collected by the supplier and paid over monthly to the department except that the retail dealer shall pay over monthly to the department 6 cents of the tax imposed. .. for each gallon sold for delivery into or supplied into the fuel supply tanks of a motor vehicle that is not a commercial motor vehicle... and eligible for discount allowed under subsection (1). Each diesel motor fuel retailer shall invoice sales of diesel motor fuel as prescribed by the department. .. . [MCL 207.122(2) (emphasis added).]
The department exercised the delegated authority in the emphasized language by approving RAB 91-12 on October 10, 1991. The RAB stated the department’s belief that the advent of computerized card pump and key pump systems allowed abuses of the commercial motor carrier discount because the discount was “often being given to anyone with access to a card or a key.” To *35 address these concerns, RAB 91-12 requires minimum invoice record keeping for retail sales of diesel motor fuel as follows:
1. Seller’s name, address, and account number.
2. Date of sale.
3. Name of purchaser.
4. Serial number of the current-year license fuel decal or serial number of the 5-Day Fuel Tax Permit in the driver’s possession.
5. Product sold.
6. Number of gallons.
7. Total price per gallon, including the current full Michigan motor fuel tax.
8. Indication of the 6 cent discount, shown as a separate item.
RAB 91-12 requires additional details for card pump systems. It also provides that the “[f]ailure to meet any of these requirements will result in the disallowance of any discount given at the time of the sale.” Plaintiff contends that these invoicing requirements are arbitrary and capricious, especially the requirement of the forfeiture of the discount upon noncompliance. Therefore, plaintiff argues, RAB 91-12 violates substantive due process under Const 1963, art 1, § 17.
In
Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Michigan v Governor,
*36 First, the act in question must be read as a whole; the provision in question should not be isolated but must be construed with reference to the entire act.
Second, the standard should be as reasonably precise as the subject matter requires or permits.
The preciseness of the stаndard will vary with the complexity and/or the degree to which subject regulated will require constantly changing regulation. .. .
Third, if possible the statute must be construed in such a way as to “render it valid, not invalid, as conferring administrative, not legislative” power and as vesting discretionary, not arbitrary, authority. [Seaman, supra at 309 (citations and punctuation deleted).]
The trial court began its analysis with the third criterion and the “well-established rule that a statute is presumed to be constitutional unless its unconstitutionality is clearly apparent.”
McDougall v Schanz,
With regard to the second
Seaman
criterion, that “the standard should be as reasonably precise as the subject matter requires,” the trial court reasoned that although “many aspects of sales taxation in general can be highly complex, the same is surely untrue of the specific power delegated by section 22(2) to Treasury, to prescribe departmental requirements for the invoicing of sales by diesel fuel retailers.” Thus, the trial court found that the single, well-known word “invoice,” having a generally understood meaning, provided adequate standards for the department to specify the details for the standardized form and content of invoices to be used by all diesel fuel retailers. The trial court likened “invoice” to the one- or two-word standards upheld as sufficient to satisfy due process, citing
Vanderkloot, supra
(“necessity” in the context of condemnation),
G F Redmond & Co v Michigan Securities Comm,
We concur in the trial court’s reasoning, but also find additional reasons for concluding that the Legislature provided constitutionally sufficient standards to guide the department in the exercise of its discretion. Specifically, applying the first and third Seaman principles to § 22, we conclude that the legislative purpose of requiring that diesel fuel sales be invoiced is to ensure that the discount of § 22(1) is granted to only those sales *38 that qualify, i.e., when “diesel motor fuel is delivered into the fuel supply tanks of a commercial motor vehicle licensed under the motor carrier fuel tax act. . . MCL 207.122(1). Thus, the purpose for which the invoice is required also provides standards tо guide the department in exercising the authority delegated to it to “prescribe” the details required in the invoice by § 22(2).
Furthermore, plaintiff concedes in its brief that the standards would be constitutionally sufficient if the Legislature had provided that the invoice the department prescribes required information reasonably necessary to determine the amount of tax due. Plaintiffs concession is fatal to its argument. Although the language plaintiff suggests is not found in § 22 of the MFTA, similar language is found in § 11(2) 9 of the MFTA, MCL 207.111(2). At the relevant time, that section provided:
Each supplier, exporter, wholesale distributor, carrier, terminal operator, liquid fuel carrier, and retail dealer shall maintain and keep, for a period of 4 years, suitable books, records, and accounts of all gasoline and diesel motor fuel received, manufactured, stored, used, sold, or delivered within this state, sold for export from this state, or exported from this state, together with all invoices, delivery tickets, bills of lading, and other pertinent records and papers as may be required by the commissioner for the reasonable administration of this act. [MCL 207.111(2) (emphasis supplied).]
In sum, the Lеgislature provided constitutionally sufficient standards for the department to implement the invoice requirement of § 22(2). Accordingly, the trial court did not err by ruling that plaintiff failed to state a *39 claim for either injunctive or declaratory relief on the basis of its assertion that the Legislature’s delegation of authority to the department to prescribe the details of the invoice required by § 22(2) violated state substantive due process. 10 MCR 2.116(C)(8).
3. FAIR AND JUST TREATMENT
Plaintiff next contends that the trial court erred by dismissing its claims for injunctive relief (count II) and declaratory relief (count V), alleging that RAB 91-12 and the department’s use of a “block sampling” technique during the audit violated the “fair and just treatment” clause of Const 1963, art 1, § 17. The trial court, citing
Johnson v Wayne Co,
“The primary objective in interpreting a constitutional provision is to determine thе text’s original meaning to the ratifiers, the people, at the time of ratification.”
Wayne Co v Hathcock,
The text at issue in Const 1963, art 1, § 17 provides, “The right of all individuals, firms, corporations and voluntary associations to fair and just treatment in the course of legislative and executive investigations and hearings shall not be infringed.” The plain text conveys that the protection of “fair and just treatment” applies only “in the course of,” or “during,” either a “legislative” or “executive” “investigation” or “hearing.” Johnson, supra at 155. Further, the historical context in which this clause was adopted suggests that it was intended to protect against the excesses and abuses of Cold War legislative or executive investigations or hearings. See Jo-Dan, Ltd v Detroit Bd of Ed, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued July 14, 2000 (Docket No. 201406), slip op at 10-14. We doubt that the “common understanding” or “popular mind” at the time of ratification regarded this provision as a protection against the adverse consequences of a run-of-the-mill tax audit. Nevertheless, we examine the conduct that plaintiff alleges comes within its ambit to determine whether it might fit within the plain meaning of the constitutional text. Carmacks, supra at 211.
*41
First, plaintiff offers no argument or authority about how the department’s adoption of RAB 91-12 could possibly constitute unfair and unjust “treatment.” The word “treatment” clearly connotes some active conduct during the “course of” a hearing or investigation. An administrative agency’s interpretation or implementation of a statutory provision can hardly amount to a violation of the “fаir and just treatment” clause simply because plaintiff disagrees with the agency’s interpretation or implementation. In any case, because plaintiff has not adequately briefed or argued this issue, it has abandoned it.
Yee v Shiawassee Co Bd of Comm’rs,
The department referee who presided over the “informal conference” process pursuant to § 21 of the revenue act, MCL 205.21, explained the nature of the “block sampling” dispute and the parties’ positions in her report of January 29, 1999:
The motor fuel tax audit involves a disallowance of less than 2% [1.76%] of the motor fuel discount claimed on returns filed. The disallowance is based on review of invoices for discounted sales made during the month of July 1994. A total of 825,625 gallons of discounted sales were [sic] reported for that month. The audit disallowed a discount on sales of 14,535 gallons. The department states that the discount was reduced because some invoices did not include the purchaser’s name, other invoices reflected an incomplete decal number while still other invоices reflected an invalid decal number. An error rate was projected over the total audit time period.
The taxpayer objects to the auditor’s test sample with the contention that it was not conducted in accordance with widely recognized sampling methods. The auditor made mistakes during the audit as well. An error rate of less than 2% should be acceptable. The taxpayer implemented a computer system specifically for compliance purposes. Inaccurate discount slips were reported by one *42 employee who left after the test month. Inclusion of exceptions which were caused by this one employee distort the test period. The State of Michigan has not implemented a system which allows sellers to verify decal numbers given by customers. The taxpayer has no way of knowing if a number accepted is correct.
***
The department issued RAB 91-12 in response to [MCL 207.122(2)]. The RAB lists six requirements which must be met with each sales invoice in order to become eligible for the discount. Two of the criteria require that the invoices include the name of the purchaser and the serial number of the current-year license fuel decal or the serial number of the 5-day Fuel Tax Permit in the driver’s possession.
Schedule 6 of the audit workpapers lists approximately 60 sales per page. The schedule is made up of 116 pages. Approximately 6,960 sales were reviewed as part of the department’s test period. Approximately 120 were disallowed. The taxpayer’s argument does not connect general sampling principles with the specific amount of sales reviewed or with the specific amount of sales disallowed. The law does not provide an exemption for an “acceptable” error rate.
The trial court ruled that plaintiff has no right to choose the audit method employed by the department. We agree that the Legislature has granted the department wide discretion in the selection of auditing methods. MCL 205.21;
Vomvolakis v Dep’t of Treasury,
Further, we agree that the trial court correctly rejected plaintiff’s argument that the audit method the department selected violated the “fair and just treаtment” clause of Const 1963, art 1, § 17. Because plaintiff contends the violation occurred during the department’s audit rather than during a “hearing,” the audit must be considered an “investigation” to come within the protection of the “fair and just treatment” clause.
Carmacks, supra
at 212. But defendants did not engage in a searching inquiry to ascertain facts.
Id.
at 210-211, citing
Messenger v Dep’t of Consumer & Industry Services,
C. THE ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES ACT
Plaintiff also argues that the trial court erred by not finding that RAB 91-12 was a “rule” as defined in § 7 of the APA, MCL 24.207, and therefore invalid and unenforceable because it was not promulgated according to the procedure dictated by the APA.
11
MCL 24.243(1);
Clonlara, Inc v State Bd of Ed,
“Rule” means an agency regulation, statement, standard, policy, ruling, or instruction of general applicability that implements or applies law enforced or administered by the agency, or that prescribes the organization, procedure, or practice of the agency, including the amendment, suspension, or rescission of the law enforced or administered by the agency.
Plaintiff contends that RAB 91-12 is more than an agency’s interpretative statement because it was strictly applied in plaintiffs case, resulting in the disallowance of certain discounts plaintiff had claimed. Accordingly, plaintiff argues, the RAB had the effect of law and must be a “rule” under the APA that is unenforceable because required procedures were not followed.
The department asserts that it was granted specific Legislative authority, independent from the APA, to adopt RAB 91-12. It points to § 3(f) of the revenue act, *45 MCL 205.3(f), which provides that “[t]he department may periodically issue bulletins that index and explain current dеpartment interpretations of current state tax laws.” Further, the department asserts that the Legislature granted direct authority for the RAB in § 22(2) of the MFTA, MCL 207.122(2), which provided in part: “Each diesel motor fuel retailer shall invoice sales of diesel motor fuel as prescribed by the department.” Even if RAB 91-12 would otherwise be considered a “rule” under the APA, the department argues § 7 of the APA provides a number of exceptions, two of which apply. After defining “rule,” § 7 of the APA continues:
Rule does not include any of the following:
***
(h) A form with instructions, an interpretive statement, a guideline, an informational pamphlet, or other material that in itself does not have the force and effect of law but is merely explanatory.
***
(j) A decision by an agency to exercise or not to exercise a permissive statutory power, although private rights or interests are affected. [MCL 24.207.]
Relying on
Kent Co Aeronautics Bd v Dep’t of State Police,
Agencies have the authority to interpret the statutes they are bound to administer and enforce.
Legislative rules have the force of law. Interpretive “rules” state an agency’s interpretation of a statute. Legislative rules are enforceable in and of themselves. But an agency must rely on the underlying statute to support its reading of a statute set forth in an interpretive “rule.”
We find that RAB 91-12 comes within the narrow exception of § 7(h) of the APA because it is an “interpretive statement,” or a “guideline” thаt merely explains the requirements of MCL 207.122 that a taxpayer claiming the diesel fuel discount must satisfy.
Detroit Base Coalition for the Human Rights of the Handicapped v Dep’t of Social Services,
*47
Moreover, we must also reject plaintiffs argument that because the department strictly applied RAB 91-12, it has the “force and effect” of law and must be a “rule” under the APA. The trial court also found that RAB 91-12 was exempted from the rule-making procedures of the APA by § 7(j) because the authority granted by § 22(2) of the MFTA to “prescribe” the invoice required by thаt section was a “permissive statutory power.” Again, we agree. Subsection 7(j) excepts administrative action from the APA’s definition of “rule” when the Legislature has either explicitly or implicitly authorized the action in question.
Detroit Coalition, supra
at 187-188. See also
Michigan Trucking Ass’n v Pub Service Comm (On Remand),
IV DOCKET NO. 251200
Plaintiffs complaint in the Court of Claims mirrored the claims it raised in the circuit court case discussed in *48 part III. Plaintiffs Court of Claims case on these issues fails for the same reasons as the identical circuit court claims. The trial court correctly granted summary disposition for the department pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8).
1. SECTION 6a OF THE GSTA
Plaintiffs last claim is that the department arbitrarily, capriciously, and unlawfully interpreted § 6a of the GSTA, MCL 205.56a. That section requires gasoline retailers to prepay sales tax to their supplier at the time of “purchase or shipment,” MCL 205.56a(1), but then permits the retailer to “claim an estimated prepayment credit... for prepayments made during the month for which the return is required” for the tax on sales by the retailer. MCL 205.56a(3). Plaintiff contends that the time of its purchase of gasoline supplies is when it pays its supplier’s invoice and that it is simply using cash basis accounting. The department argues that § 6a requires plaintiff to claim the prepayment credit in the month it actually receives gasoline from its wholesaler, i.e., that the statute implicitly requires accrual basis accounting of the prepayment credit.
MCL 205.56a provides in pertinent part:
(1) At the time of purchase or shipment from a refiner, pipeline terminal operator, or marine terminal operator, a purchaser or receiver of gasoline shall prepay a portion of the tax imposed by this act at the rate provided in this section to the refiner, pipeline terminal operator, or marine terminal operator for the purchase or receipt of gasoline. ...
***
(3) A person subject to tax under this act who makes prepayment to another person as required by this section *49 may claim an estimated prepayment credit on its regular monthly return filed pursuant to section 6. The credit shall be for prepayments made during the month for which the return is required and shall be based upon the difference between prepayments made in the immediately preceding month and collections of prepaid tax received from sales or transfers. [Emphasis added.]
The trial court upheld the department’s interpretation of the statute by reasoning as follows:
The GSTA states plainly that the tax accruеs at the end of the month in which the sales transaction takes place, not the month in which the purchaser or receiver makes payment to the supplier. That is also when a return to Treasury is required and, therefore, when the prepayment of tax must be made for the claimed credit. The accrual method of accounting, as required by Treasury in its forms and instructions for claiming prepayment credits, is implicit in the GSTA and therefore lawful. Plaintiffs contentions to the contrary are without merit and must therefore be dismissed under MCR 2.116(C)(8).
Our primary goal in interpreting a statute is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the Legislature.
Neal v Wilkes,
Applying these principles to the statute at issue, we conclude that the trial court reached, the correct result, although we do not agree completely with the court’s reasons.
The GSTA imposes a tax on “all persons engaged in the business of making sales at retail... .” MCL 205.52(1). At the time pertinent to this casе, “sale at retail” meant “a transaction by which the ownership of tangible personal property is transferred for consideration, if the transfer is made in the ordinary course of the transferor’s business and is made to the transferee for consumption or use, or for any purpose other than for resale ... .” MCL 205.51(1)(b);
Univ of Michigan Bd of Regents v Dep’t of Treasury,
MCL 205.56a(1) fixes the mandatory time when a retailer must prepay sales tax to its supplier that the retailer will subsequently collect upon ultimate sale of gasoline to consumers. “The word ‘shall’ is unambiguous and is used to denote mandatory, rather than discretionary, action.”
STC, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury,
This broad definition of “purchase” is also consistent with its legal meaning. “Black’s [Law Dictionary (6th ed)] defines ‘purchase’ as ‘To own by paying or [by] promising to pay an agreed [. . . ] price which is enforceable at law. . . . The term ‘purchase’ includes any contract to purchase or
otherwise
acquire.’ ”
Graves v American Acceptance Mortgage Corp (On Rehearing),
*52
Moreover, this broad definition of the word “purchase” is consistent with its placement in the broader statutory scheme of the sales tax. Under the GSTA, “to sell,” the mirror image оf “to buy” or “to purchase,” means a transaction by which the ownership of tangible personal property is transferred for consideration, which “includes a conditional sale, installment lease sale, and other transfer of property if title is retained as security for the purchase price but is intended to be transferred later.” MCL 205.51(1)(c), before
We also find it appropriate to examine the Legislature’s use of the word “purchase” in the Use Tax Act (UTA), MCL 205.91
et seq.
When statutes relate to the same subject or share a common purpose they are
in pari materia
and must be read together as one law, even if they contain no reference to one another and were enacted on different dates.
State Treasurer v Schuster,
In summary, the plain and ordinary meaning of the word “purchase” in § 6a(1) of the GSTA is to acquire possession of or legal or equitable title to gasoline, regardless of when payment is actually made to the gasoline suрplier. This interpretation is also consistent with the other time-marker in § 6a(1), “shipment,” which likewise does not require actual payment to the supplier or shipper before giving rise to the mandatory requirement that “a purchaser or receiver of gasoline shall prepay a portion of the tax imposed by this act....” Because § 6a(1) establishes the mandatory time to prepay the tax as “at the time of purchase or shipment,” which may precede the time of actual prepayment, the statute implicitly requires accrual accounting when retailers calculate the “estimated prepayment credit” permitted by § 6a(3). Thus, the plain meaning of § 6a supports the department’s longstanding interpretation rather than plaintiffs view.
Moreover, even if the statute is considered ambiguous, allowing judicial construction, we would still reach the same conclusion under the principles already discussed. The department’s longstanding, consistent in *54 terpretation of the statute within its responsibility to enforce is entitled to great weight and should not be overruled unless clearly erroneous. Schmaltz, supra. Because the department’s interpretation of the statute is not overcome by the statute’s plain meaning, the interpretation has not been shown to be clearly erroneous. Catalina, supra at 23-24. Further, the department’s interpretation of the statute implicitly requires retailers to calculate estimated prepayment credits by using the accrual method of accounting for their acquisition of gasoline supplies and is both reasonable and consistent with the purpose of the sales-use tax scheme. Accordingly, the trial court correctly ruled that plaintiff failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. MCR 2.116(C)(8).
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed, the trial court correctly granted defendants’ motion for summary disposition and dismissed all of plaintiffs claims in each case. We affirm.
Notes
See unpublished opinion per curiam issued May 22, 2001 (Docket No. 230731), and unpublished order, entered June 6, 2001 (Docket No. 232733).
This Court will affirm the lower court decision when that lower court reaches the correct result even if it does so for the wrong reason.
Wickings v Arctic Enterprises, Inc,
See MCL 205.4 and 205.5.
See MCL 205.21(2)(b) and 205.27a(3).
The department initially found an MFTA deficiency of $225,000 and a GSTA deficiency of $30,384. During plaintiffs review of the audit results before the department issued its notice of intent to assess, these initial findings were reduced to $36,116 and $24,268, respectively. Plaintiff contends the errors resulted from Wagg’s fading to review certain documents that he had been provided and basic math errors; defendants contend the errors resulted from plaintiffs not providing the documents during the audit.
See
York v Detroit (After Remand),
This Court later held that providing oral argument before the Worker’s Compensation Appeal Board, at issue in
Bohannon,
was not required as a matter of either federal or state constitutional due process of law.
Leonardi v Sta-Rite Reinforcing, Inc,
Like the rest of the MFTA, this section was repealed, effective April 1, 2001. See n 1.
In light of our conclusion that plaintiffs procedural and substantive due process claims lack merit, we agree with the trial court that “no matter how unpleasant or inconveniencing [the conduct of the department’s employees] may have been in other respects,” such conduct did not deny plaintiff “due process guarantees during the course of their tax audit.” Although plaintiff viewed the department’s agents’ conduct as arbitrary or rude, plaintiff “failed to identify and allege with specificity any unlawful conduct of constitutional magnitude that could support the claim that its state rights to due process had been violated.”
Neither party addresses, nor do we opine, whether MCL 24.243(2) affects plaintiffs right to challenge the department’s 1991 revenue bulletin on the basis of noncompliance with the APA. That subsection provides, “A proceeding to contest a rule on the ground of noncompliance with the requirements of sections 41 and 42 shall he commenced within 2 years after the effective date of the rule.”
This latter subsection was designated § 6(4) between the effective dates of
