Defendant appeals as of right from an order granting partial summary disposition to plaintiff. Plaintiff sought a refund of taxes paid to defendant under the Single Business Tax Act (SBTA), MCL 208.1 et seq., for the years 1997, 1998, and 1999. Plaintiff alleged that the site-specific and apportioned capital acquisition deduction (CAD) codified at MCL 208.23(e) is not fairly apportioned under the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution, US Const, art I, § 8, cl 3. The Court of Claims agreed with plaintiff that the CAD is unconstitutional and ordered defendant to refund plaintiff $4,864,436, plus statutory interest. We reverse.
The SBTA is a “consumption-type value-added tax” that is subject to certain exemptions, exclusions, and adjustments.
Caterpillar, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury,
Except as provided in subdivisions (g), (h), and (i), for a tax year beginning sifter December 31, 1996 and before January 1, 2000, deduct cost, including fabrication and installation, paid or accrued in the taxable year of tangible assets of a type that are, or under the internal revenue code will become, eligible for depreciation, amortization, or accelerated capital cost recovery for federal income tax purposes, provided that the assets are physically located in this state for use in a business activity in this state and are not mobile tangible assets. This deduction shall be multiplied by the apportionment factor for the tax year as prescribed in chapter 3.
The SBTA provides that if subsection 23(e) is declared unconstitutional on appeal and that decision is not under appeal, the subsection becomes ineffective and MCL 208.23(i) takes effect. MCL 208.23(i); MCL 208.23a. MCL 208.23(i) allows a CAD for the apportioned cost of tangible assets but removes the requirement that the assets be located in Michigan.
Plaintiff is a Virginia corporation that supplies “components, modules, and complete systems to vehicle manufacturers and related aftermarkets.” Plaintiff conducts business in Michigan; this includes the operation of eleven manufacturing facilities and several sales offices. During the years at issue, however, approximately 90 percent of the products plaintiff sold to Michigan customers were produced outside Michigan.
Plaintiff filed amended SBTA returns for the years 1997, 1998, and 1999, claiming that refunds were owed it for each year because the CAD is not fairly apportioned and discriminates against interstate commerce. Defendant denied the refund claimed in the 1999 amended return, and plaintiff filed suit based on that denial in June 2001. That claim was held in abeyance pending resolution of Jefferson Smurfit and remained in abeyance at the time of the filing of the present complaint.
Defendant argues that the decision of the Court of Claims must be reversed because it is contrary to the holding in Jefferson Smurfit, supra at 281, a case in which the Court deemed the CAD constitutional. Plaintiff, in contrast, argues that Jefferson Smurfit did not address the central question at issue in the present case, i.e., whether the CAD is fairly apportioned. 1
We review de novo a trial court’s grant of summary disposition.
Spiek v Dep’t of Transportation,
The plaintiff in Jefferson Smurfit challenged the CAD statute, MCL 208.23(e), that was in effect during the years 1997 and 1998 and requested a refund of taxes paid, alleging that the site-specific and apportioned CAD violates the Commerce Clause “because it burdens out-of-state businesses and thus discriminates against interstate commerce.” Jefferson Smurfit, supra at 276-277. The Court ruled that the CAD did not discriminate against interstate commerce, and it therefore rejected the plaintiffs claim of unconstitutionality. Id. at 278-281.
At least in broad terms, the facts and issues were the same in
Jefferson Smurfit
as they are in this case — an interstate company requested a refund for taxes paid in 1997 and 1998 (and 1999 in this case) on the basis of a claim that MCL 208.23(e) violates the Commerce Clause. However, plaintiff asserts that there is a crucial difference between this case and
Jefferson Smurfit.
Specifically, plaintiff claims that this case concerns fair
apportionment,
In
Complete Auto Transit, Inc v Brady,
The pertinent question, then, is whether the specific Jefferson Smurfit analysis — which, nominally at least, focused on “discrimination” — and an analysis focusing on “fair apportionment” can be considered substantively identical.
A “discrimination” analysis involves deciding whether a statute “(1) is facially discriminatory against interstate commerce, (2) has a discriminatory effect, or (3) was enacted for a discriminatory purpose.” Jefferson Smurfit, supra at 278. In Jefferson Smurfit, the Court briefly concluded that the CAD statute was not facially discriminatory and was not enacted for a discrimina tory purpose. Id. at 279-280. With regard to “discriminatory effect,” the Court’s entire analysis was as follows:
States may compete with one another for a share of interstate commerce, they just may not discriminatorily tax the products manufactured or the business operations performed in other states. Boston Stock Exchange [v State Tax Comm,429 US 318 , 336-337;97 S Ct 599 ;50 L Ed 2d 514 (1977)]. Here, the CAD is available to all Michigan taxpayers who locate new property in Michigan, whether intrastate or multistate businesses, and it is available at the same apportioned rate as is applied to the taxpayer’s overall tax base. The three-factor apportionment formula of the SBTA has survived constitutional challenge, see Trinova [Corp v Dep’t of Treasury,498 US 358 , 387;111 S Ct 818 ;112 L Ed 2d 884 (1991)], and the availability of an apportioned CAD in a given tax year is not dependent on the initial location of the taxpayer’s assets, but rather turns on the taxpayer’s election to increase its Michigan investment.
We conclude, therefore, that the CAD provision is not designed to punish multistate taxpayers who choose not to increase their Michigan presence. Moreover, we are not convinced that the CAD provision is responsible for any deleterious effects suffered by multistate taxpayers who opt to increase activity outside Michigan. Accordingly, we note agreement with an analysis adopted by our Supreme Court in Caterpillar, supra at 425:
“Generally speaking, the overall tax consequences to a multistate taxpayer will be dependent upon the nature of its business activities and whether it is eligible and elects to avail itself of the tax reduction incentives afforded by the [single business tax].” [Pollock,Multistate taxpayers under the Single Business Tax Act, 22 Wayne L R 1101, 1113 (1976).]
We hold that the site-specific CAD available pursuant to subsection 23(e) has no discriminatory effect on interstate commerce. [Jefferson Smurfit, supra at 280-281.]
The Court in Jefferson Smurfit, supra at 280, emphasized that the CAD “is available at the same apportioned rate as is applied to the taxpayer’s overall tax base.” The Court, citing Trinova, supra at 387, noted that “[t]he three-factor apportionment formula of the SBTA has survived constitutional challenge . ...” Jefferson Smurfit, supra at 280. In Trinova, the United States Supreme Court considered whether the rate applied to the taxpayer’s overall tax base under the SBTA was fairly apportioned. Id. at 380-387. The Trinova Court mentioned “the requirement of fair apportionment, as expressed in the tests of internal and external consistency.” Id. at 385. 2 The Court indicated that Michigan must only tax “its fair share of an interstate transaction,” id. at 386 (citation and quotation marks omitted), and the Court concluded that, “as applied to Trinova during the tax year at issue, the Michigan SBT[A] does not violate the... Commerce Clause[] of the Constitution.” Id. at 387. Clearly, the Trinova Court addressed the elements of “fair apportionment.” See Caterpillar, supra at 417-419 (indicating that a fair apportionment analysis focuses on whether an entity is taxed only for activity attributable to the taxing state and uses the concepts of “internal consistency” and “external consistency”).
The
Jefferson Smurfit
Court’s discussion of
Trinova
and its statement regarding apportionment convinces us that the Court in
Jefferson Smurfit
did in fact conclude that the CAD is fairly apportioned. As noted in
W A Foote Mem Hosp v City of Jackson,
262 Mich App
333, 341;
Plaintiff emphasizes that the
Jefferson Smurfit
Court explicitly stated that the “issue here is the third prong of the
Complete Auto
test,” i.e., whether the CAD discriminates against interstate commerce. See
Jefferson Smurfit, supra
at 278. Plaintiff contends that
Moreover, the concepts of discrimination and fair apportionment are related; a fair apportionment analysis essentially constitutes a
part
of a discrimination
analysis. As noted in
Armco, Inc v Hardesty,
Reversed.
Notes
Plaintiff contends that defendant “has waived any argument that the site-specific, apportioned CAD meets the fair apportionment internal consistency test” because defendant did not make a proper argument below and did not submit an affidavit below to rebut plaintiffs affidavit. See MCR 2.116(G). This argument is without merit. Defendant explicitly argued below that the CAD statute was constitutional. Moreover, plaintiffs affidavit merely reiterated information from its complaint, and defendant then argued that the law was in its favor, even though plaintiff moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), which, in general, focuses on facts rather than law. Defendant focused on the law and argued that it was entitled to summary disposition under MCR 2.116(I)(2) and MCR 2.116(C)(8). Defendant was not required to submit an affidavit to make its law-based argument, and, in failing to assert a factual dispute, defendant did not lose its right to assert a legal dispute. We note that MCR 2.116(0(10) states that summary disposition may be granted when “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment or partial judgment as a matter of law.’’ (Emphasis added.)
The concept of “internal consistency” addresses whether, if every state were to use the same taxing scheme, no more than 100 percent of a taxpayer’s business activity would be taxed. Caterpillar, supra at 419. “External consistency” addresses whether the tax in question covers only that portion of value attributable to business activity within the taxing state. Id.
