COMMISSIONER OF REVENUE, Relator, v. DAHMES STAINLESS, INC., Respondent.
No. A15-1920.
Supreme Court of Minnesota.
Aug. 31, 2016.
884 N.W.2d 648
The tax court’s finding regarding the Antonellos’ tax liability is supported by the record. The Commissioner’s Determination is “an Official Order of the Commissioner of Revenue” that “supersede[d] the prior notice” the Antonellos received following the audit. This Determination was “final when made” and presumptively valid.
Affirmed.
Lori Swanson, Attorney General, Sara L. Bruggeman, Assistant Attorney General, Saint Paul, MN, for relator.
Mark A. Pridgeon, Edina, MN, for respondent.
OPINION
ANDERSON, Justice.
Relator Commissioner of Revenue challenges the tax court’s award of attorney fees to respondent Dahmes Stainless, Inc. (Dahmes) under the Minnesota Equal Access to Justice Act (MEAJA).
I.
Dahmes is a Minnesota corporation that manufactures, sells, and installs industrial equipment, the majority of which are “drying systems,” such as spray dryers and fluid-bed dryers, in addition to heat recovery and evaporation systems, and other equipment (collectively products). Dahmes’s products are generally used for dehydrating some type of liquid or liquid-bound commodity. The products are generally installed and enclosed within a customer’s building. Sometimes the products are left free-standing; other times they are installed to an anchored framework or fastened directly to a building floor. None of Dahmes’s products provides structural support, protection from the elements, insulation, temperature-control functions, or any other type of support for the building housing the products. Dahmes’s products may be relocated or removed without substantial damage to the building.
In this case, although Dahmes properly collected sales tax from its customers on the retail sales of its manufactured products, see
After the tax court issued its order, Dahmes filed a MEAJA application for attorney fees. See
II.
We first address whether Dahmes’s application for attorney fees was timely under
A.
A party seeking an award of attorney fees and expenses must apply “within 30 days of final judgment in the action.”
No Minnesota cases have directly addressed whether the 30-day time period in section 15.472(b) begins to run on the date that an order for judgment is filed, or on the date the judgment is entered. The plain language of the statute states that the 30-day time period begins with “final judgment in the action.”
B.
The Commissioner also argues that, even if the date of “final judgment” is May 28, 2015 (the date of entry of judgment), Dahmes’s MEAJA application is still untimely because Dahmes’s initial application did not contain a sufficiently itemized statement of attorney fees, as required by
Dahmes’s application included an affidavit by its attorney, showing how fees and other expenses were computed. The affidavit stated the actual time expended, the attorney’s hourly rate, and a list of costs. The affidavit also included a table of monthly attorney fees from the years 2010 through 2015. At the tax court, the Commissioner argued that this statement of fees was not sufficiently “itemized” under section 15.472(b). In response, Dahmes submitted a supplemental affidavit by its attorney on July 16, 2015, which contained additional itemization from invoices. At the tax court hearing, the Commissioner argued that this supplemental filing should not be allowed and that the failure to include sufficient itemization within the 30-day deadline was a “bar to relief.” On appeal, the Commissioner argues that this supplemental affidavit is another reason why Dahmes’s attorney-fees application was untimely filed.
The tax court allowed Dahmes to file the supplemental affidavit, concluding that the Commissioner’s objection to supplementation was “without merit.”8 No Minnesota cases have directly addressed the timeliness question of supplemental filings made after the 30-day deadline in
III.
We next address whether the tax court abused its discretion by determining that the Commissioner’s position in the tax litigation was not “substantially justified.”
Under the MEAJA, the prevailing party (other than the state) in a civil case involving the state may submit an application for an award of attorney fees and expenses. See
Although the Commissioner did not challenge the tax court’s April 7, 2015 order reversing the tax assessment, we must turn to the merits of the litigation before the tax court to determine whether the Commissioner’s position was “substantially justified” by a “reasonable basis in law and fact.”
A.
In this case, the Commissioner assessed use taxes totaling $364,856 on certain components (such as fans, pumps,
The definition of a taxable “retail sale,” which the Commissioner relied on to assess the additional use taxes, is a “sale of building materials, supplies, and equipment to owners, contractors, subcontractors, or builders for the erection of buildings or the alteration, repair, or improvement of real property.”
Thus, this case turns on whether Dahmes’s products are considered improvements to real property, as the Commissioner argues, or tangible personal property, as Dahmes argues, which determines whether the component purchases for those products are taxable retail sales under
Under chapter 297A, “tangible personal property” is defined in part as “personal property that can be seen, weighed, measured, felt, or touched, or that is in any other manner perceptible to the senses.”
1.
The Commissioner argues that Dahmes’s products would be considered real property at common law because they are “fixtures” actually attached to the realty and are intended to be a nontemporary addition. Dahmes argues, and the tax court agreed, that Dahmes’s products would not be considered “real property” at common law under the common-law doctrine of trade fixtures. Under this doctrine, a fixture is considered tangible personal property, rather than real property, when it is used for trade purposes and if removal does not result in material and permanent damage to the real estate. See, e.g., Cent. Chrysler Plymouth, Inc. v. Holt, 266 N.W.2d 177, 179-80 (Minn. 1978); Moffat v. White, 203 Minn. 47, 51-55, 279 N.W. 732, 734-36 (1938); Behrens v. Kruse, 121 Minn. 479, 483-87, 140 N.W. 114, 116-18 (1913). As the tax court correctly observed, we presume that the Legislature acts with full knowledge of existing law, including the common law. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Dynamic Air, Inc., 702 N.W.2d 237, 244 (Minn. 2005). Thus, based on the 1985 amendment to the definition of “tangible personal property,” Act of May 8, 1985, ch. 83, § 1, 1985 Minn. Laws 196, 196, which excludes what “at common law would be considered to be real property,” we presume that the Legislature knew that at common law, trade fixtures were not considered real property.
In response, relying on Abex Corp. v. Commissioner of Taxation, 295 Minn. 445,
First, Abex’s analysis regarding section 272.03 and the applicability of the trade-fixtures doctrine was superseded by a 1973 statutory amendment, enacted shortly after Abex was decided. See Act of May 24, 1973, ch. 650, art. XXIV, § 2, 1973 Minn. Laws 1606, 1687. Thus, Abex is not applicable in this context, as two of our decisions after the statutory amendment have recognized. Zimpro, Inc. v. Comm’r of Revenue, 339 N.W.2d 736, 739-40 (Minn. 1983) (referring to the “inapplicability of Abex” and stating that “Abex, however, does not control the instant case” because the property-tax statute,
Second, in Zimpro, we recognized that the trade-fixtures doctrine is relevant in tax cases. Our Zimpro decision interpreted the property-tax statute,
tachment”)).13
We think it unlikely that the legislature’s amendment of the definition of tangible personal property was meant to overrule Zimpro. The only information concerning the nature of the municipal sewage treatment equipment at issue in Zimpro . . . hardly describe[s] “large ponderous machinery and equipment used in a business or production activity.”
Rather, it is almost certain that the legislature’s amendment of the definition of tangible personal property to create an exception for “large ponderous machinery and equipment” was meant to overrule our decision in West Publishing Co. v. Commissioner of Revenue, Docket No. 2822, 1981 WL 1510 (Minn. T.C. Dec. 1, 1981), in which we held that a 30-ton binding machine—specifically described in our decision as “a huge and ponderous machine”—was personal property whose purchase was subject to sales and use tax. Dahmes Stainless, 2015 WL 5793705, at *5 n. 8.
Although this factual distinction is somewhat persuasive, there is another reason that Zimpro applies. An entire decision is not necessarily “superseded” simply because a statute relied upon in the decision has been amended. Rather, specific points of law may be superseded while other points remain good law. Here, the relevant point of law is that the trade-fixtures doctrine is applicable to tax cases, based on our interpretation of the definition of “real property,”
2.
In addition to chapter 297A, the parties also refer to
(a) For the purposes of taxation, “real property” includes the land itself, rails, ties, and other track materials annexed to the land, and all buildings, structures, and improvements or other fixtures on it. . . .
(b) A building or structure shall include the building or structure itself, together with all improvements or fixtures annexed to the building or structure, which are integrated with and of permanent benefit to the building or structure, regardless of the present use of the building, and which cannot be removed without substantial damage to itself or to the building or structure.
(c) (i) Real property does not include tools, implements, machinery, and equipment attached to or installed in real property for use in the business or production activity conducted thereon, regardless of size, weight or method of attachment. . . .
The Commissioner argued before the tax court that chapter 272’s definitions of “real property” are applicable only to real property taxation, not to sales-tax or use-tax cases under chapter 297A.14 This argument is contrary to our precedent. The tax court correctly rejected this argument because we have recognized that chapter 272’s definitions of “real property” are helpful and applicable in sales-tax and use-tax cases. See Zimpro, Inc. v. Comm’r of Revenue, 339 N.W.2d 736, 739-40 (Minn. 1983). In Zimpro, an appeal involving sales taxes, the appellant argued that the sales-tax statute (chapter 297A) and the property-tax statute (chapter 272) should not be “construed consistently” and that it would be unwise to “intermingl[e]” those statutes. 339 N.W.2d at 739. We disagreed, stating that “reference to Minnesota Statutes chapter 272, the general provisions of the property taxation scheme, is helpful” in construing the sales-tax and use-tax provisions under chapter 297A, and that “use of chapter 272 definitions for sales and use tax purposes promotes certainty and consistency.” Id. at 739-40.
Zimpro then referred to an exclusionary definition of “real property” under
Our conclusion in Zimpro is similar to and supportive of Dahmes’s core argument
In addition, the Commissioner relied on
B.
In summary, the tax court correctly determined that Dahmes’s products are “tangible personal property” and would not be considered “real property” at common law,
The Commissioner argues that the application of section 297A.61, subdivision 4(d), to building-material purchases is an inherently complex area of tax law, which requires a difficult differentiation between tangible personal property and improvements to real property. Based on this complexity, the various statutory amendments and superseded case law, the arguable incongruities between chapter 297A and chapter 272, and the lack of recent guidance from our court on section 297A.61, subdivision 4(d), the Commissioner argues that her interpretation of the law was not unreasonable. But on appeal, we are not reviewing this question de novo, i.e.,
Because the tax court did not abuse its discretion by determining that the Commissioner’s position was not “substantially justified,”
statute; and (c) a misreading or oversight of relevant points of law from Zimpro.16 A position that misreads or overlooks statutes and relevant precedent by our court is not “substantially justified” by a “reasonable basis in law and fact.”
Affirmed.
