This appeal asks whether garbage constitutes "property," as that word is used in Indiana Code 6-2.5-5-27, the public transportation exemption from the gross retail (sales) and use taxes. The Petitioner, Indiana Waste Systems of Indiana, Inc. d/b/a Waste Management of Indianapolis (Waste Management), operates a garbage hauling business in and around Indianapolis. Waste Management paid sales and use tax on tangible personal property it uses in its business and filed a claim for refund for 1987, 1988, 1989, and 1990 with the Respondent, the Indiana Department of State Revenue (the Department). The Department did not respond to the claim for refund, and Waste Management now appeals.
ISSUES
Waste Management claims its purchases of trucks, truck parts, fuel, tires, utilities, and other miscellaneous items are exempt from sales and use tax under four different exemption statutes.
I. IND.CODE 6-2.5-5-8, the equipment exemption.
II. IND.CODE 6-2.5-5-80, the environmental quality exemption.
III. IND.CODE 6-2.5-5-16, the governmental agency/instrumentality exemption.
IV. IND.CODE 6-2.5-5-27, the public transportation exemption mentioned above.
FACTS
The undisputed material facts reveal that Waste Management is an Indiana for-profit corporation engaged in the business of hauling garbage. Since 1984, Waste Management, along with several other private contractors, has operated under contract with the Indianapolis Board of Public Works (the Board). The Board pays Waste Management to pick up, transport, and deposit solid waste from Marion County businesses, industries, and homes. Waste Management operates approximately fifty trucks, none of which is devoted exclusively to fulfilling Waste Management's contract with the Board.
Until December 1988, Waste Management delivered all the commercial, industrial, and residential garbage to Board designated landfills in and around Indianapolis. Since December 1988, Waste Management has delivered the garbage to the Indianapolis Ogden Martin Resource Recovery Facility (Ogden Martin). Ogden Martin burns almost 100 percent of the residential garbage it receives, which generates steam. Ogden Martin sells the steam to the Indianapolis Power and Light Company (IPALCO), which uses it to generate electricity for downtown Indianapolis buildings, including the State House. Ogden Martin disposes of approximately 60 percent of the commercial and industrial garbage in the same fashion as the residential garbage. The other 40 percent of the commercial and industrial garbage is unsuitable for burning, and Waste Management takes it to Board designated landfills in and around Indianapolis.
A corporation related to Waste Management owns and operates the Danville Recycling & Disposal Facility (Danville RDF) in Danville, Indiana, a few miles west of Indianapolis. Danville RDF is a sanitary landfill that acсepts only non-hazardous waste. The
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Standard of Review
Because this is an appeal from the Department, the court reviеws the matter de movo and is bound by neither the evidence nor the issues raised at the administrative level. Maurer v. Indiana Dep't of State Revenue (1993), Ind.Tax,
The parties have filed cross motions for summary judgment. The court may grant summary judgment only if there is no genuine issue of material fact and one of the parties is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Harlan Sprague Dawley, Inc., 605 .N.E.2d at 1224 (citing C & C Oil Co. v. Indiana Dep't of State Revenue (1991), Ind. Tax,
Since January 1991, parties cannot "rely without specificity on the entire assembled record-depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions-to fend off or support motions for summary judgment." Rosi v. Business Furniture Corp. (1993), Ind.,
I
Waste Management claims many of its purchases fall within IC 6-2.5-5-3, referred to as the equipment exemption. See General Motors Corp. v. Indiana Dep't of State Revenue (1991), Ind.Tax,
II
Next, Waste Management claims some of its purchases fall within IC 6-2.5-5-30, the environmental quality exemption, which provides:
Sales of tangible personal property are exempt from the state gross retail tax if;
(1) the property constitutes, is incorporated into, or is consumed in the operation of, a device, facility, or structure predominantly used and acquired for the purpose of complying with any state, local, or federal environmental quality statutes, regulations, or standards; and
(2) the person acquiring the property is engaged in the business of manufacturing, processing, refining, mining, or agriculture.
Waste Management fares no better under this exemption than under the equipment exemption. Waste Management is simply not "engaged in the business of manufacturing, processing, refining, mining, or agriculture," as required by subsection (2). Rather, Waste Management is engaged in the business of picking up, transporting, and disposing of garbage. Even if either or both Ogden Martin and the corporation that operates Danville RDF are engaged in a business within the ambit of subsection (2), Waste Manаgement cannot claim the benefit; like the equipment exemption, the environmental quality exemption requires the person acquiring the property to be engaged in a business within the ambit of subsection (2).
III
Waste Management also claims it is entitled to the benefits of IC 6-2.5-5-16, the sales tax exemption for governmental agencies and instrumentalities. The statute provides:
Transactions involving tangible personal property, public utility commodities, and public utility service are exempt from the state gross retail tax, if the person aequir-ing the property, commodities, or service:
(1) is the state of Indiana, an agency or instrumentality of the state, a political subdivision of the state, or an agency or instrumentality of a political subdivision of the state; and
(2) predominantly uses the property, commodities, or service to perform its governmental functions.
IC 6-2.5-5-16 (emphases added). 2 Specifically, Waste Management asserts it acts as an agency or instrumentality of the City of Indianapolis by virtue of its contract with the Board.
The Indiana Supreme Court addressed the question of nongovernmental entities acting
In extending agency or instrumentality status to the fire department, the court relied heavily on Indiana's comprehensive statutory treatment of volunteer firefighting. IND. CODE 836-8-12 establishes the specific methods for organization and creation of volunteer fire departments. Among other things, this chapter defines volunteer fire departments and volunteer firefighters. It also obligates municipalities that contract with volunteer fire departments to provide insurance, clothing, and automobile allowances to the volunteer firefighters who serve the municipality. See id. at 1235-36. 4 In the case at bar, however,; there is no statutory scheme creating garbage hauling companies. 5
Chapter 31 of Title 86, Article 9 of the Indiana Code governs garbage removal in Indianapolis. The Board has authority over all matters relevant to garbage collection and disposal within Indiаnapolis IND.CODE 36-9-31-8. It also has the authority to enter into contracts, including leases and sales, for many aspects of garbage collection, transport, and disposal. Id. Nowhere, however, does IC 36-9-31 purport to define or create garbage collecting companies. Unlike volunteer fire departments, Waste Management and other companies in the garbage industry are not Indiana statutory creations. Rather, like other independent contractors, "[they are private businesses available to anyone requiring their services, either public or private, and at a charge for their services." Ayres,
IC 6-2.5-5-16 grants an exemption from sales tax only to governmental agencies or instrumentalities. Waste Management is not a governmental agency or instrumentality. It is instead a private business, operating under contract with thе Board, engaged in garbage collection and hauling. It is therefore not entitled to the exemption granted by IC 6-2.5-5-16. 6
Finally, Waste Management claims it provides public transportation of property within the meaning of IC 6-2.5-5-27 when it transports garbage to the disposal sites. The court agrees.
A. "Property" within IC 6-2.5-5-27
IC 6-2.5-5-27 provides: "[tJransac-tions involving tangible personal property and services are exempt from the state gross retail tax, if the person acquiring the property or service directly uses or consumes it in providing public transportation for persons or property." (Emphasis added). See Calcar Quarries, Inc.,
The court gives all statutes, including exemptions, their plain, ordinary, and usual meaning. Harlan Sprague Dawley,
The word "property" is inherently ambiguous. On one hand, the law views "property" as a bundle of rights. "Generally, the word property in its legal sense means a valuable right or interest in a thing rather than the thing itself." Meek v. State (1933),
The court must construe the wоrd's ambiguity against Waste Management. See Harlan Sprague Dawley,
IC 6-2.5-5-27 creates an exemption for "public transportatiоn for persons or property." (Emphasis added). Simply put, rights and interests are incorporeal or intangible; they cannot be placed in a vehicle and moved from point A to point B. Only physical things are capable of being transported.
Moreover, the legislature chose to use the word "property" standing alone in the clause "public transportation for persons or property." Indiana imposes sales tax on retail transactions, IND.CODE 6-2.5-2-1, which almost exclusively involve the transfer of "tangible personal property" for consideration from a seller to a buyer. See IND. CODE 6-2.5-4-1; Maurer,
The legislature, though, did not reiterate the phrase "tangible personal property" in the final clause. Instead, it used the word "property," standing alone.
10
Every legislative word choice is presumed to have been used intentionally and to have meaning. Burks v. Bolerjack (1981), Ind.,
For example, stock certificates, debt instruments, аnd raffle tickets are all physical things, but their value usually stems from the intangible rights they represent. Seq, e.g., Maurer,
Within the context of the public transportation exemption, to define "property" as anything other than a physical thing would essentially write the word out of the phrase and nullify the portion of the exemption for transportation of property: there can be no transportation of incorporeal or intangible things, only of physical or tangible things. The court must construe statutes to give meaning to every word and phrase and cannot presume the legislature intended to enact a nullity or a meaningless statute. Monarch Steel Co. v. State Bd. of Tax Comm'rs (1993), Ind.Tax,
"Tangible personal property" is a term of art within the sales and use tax statutes, including IC 6-2.5-5-27. "Property," as used in IC 6-2.5-5-27, includes both "tangible personal property" and physical things like stock certificates that are not "tangible personal property." In other words, "prop
B. Ownership
Notwithstanding that garbage is property within the meaning of the statute, Waste Management must also show that the garbage is the property of another. 45 L.A.C. 2.2-5-61. See Calcar Quarries, Inc.,
At the point the garbage is abandoned, the generators of the garbage lose their ownership rights and the Board's authority to handle the garbage takes effect. See O'Neal v. Harrison (1915),
At this stage of the litigation, Waste Mаnagement has not met its burden, which arises both because it seeks the exemption and because it seeks summary judgment, to show that ownership lies with the Board. Waste Management has deluged the court with reams of evidentiary materials that, taken together, are literally more than a foot thick. Waste Management has made some vague attempts to point to the materials it relies on, but for the most part, these attempts have simply led the court to one very long document instead of several. Because the Department аlso seeks summary judgment, it too bears the burden to prove its case. TR. 56(C); Hermann v. Yater (1994), Ind.App.,
In Rosi,
CONCLUSION
Waste Management does not use its equipment within the meaning of IC 6-2.5-5-3, the equipment exemption, or IC 6-2.5-5-80, the environmental quality exemption. Moreover, Waste Management is neither an agency nor an instrumentality of the City of Indianapolis under IC 6-2.5-5-16. It is therefore not entitled to those exemptions and the court GRANTS summary judgment to the Department on those quеstions. There is no just reason for delay on these questions, and they are expressly entered as final judgments.
Notes
. This result holds true for garbage sent to both Ogden Martin and Danville RDF, even though Danville RDF is owned and operated by one of Waste Management's related corporations. Close corporate relationships, standing alone, do not break down the walls of separate corporate identity. See SFN Shareholders Grantor Trust v. Indiana Dep't of State Revenue (1992), Ind.Tax,
. Since 1991, the exemption has included within its ambit solid waste management districts and joint solid waste management districts established under IND.CODE 13-9.5-2. See PL. 1991-25, § 3.
. IND.CODE 34-4-16.5.
. This statutory scheme remains largely unchanged today. See IC 36-8-12 (West 1993).
. Although Ayres is a tort case, the court's analysis is nonetheless instructive in other contexts. IC 36-8-12 defines the status of volunteer fire departments and the relationship оf those fire departments to the municipalities they serve. And while those definitions undoubtedly have tort ramifications, they are not specific to tort situations alone.
. Because Waste Management is not a governmental agency or instrumentality, the court need not decide whether Waste Management performs a governmental function within the meaning of IC 6-2.5-5-16(2) when it collects, transports, and disposes of garbage. The court notes, however, that courts and learned authorities have historically viewed garbage as a potеntial nuisance having deleterious effects on people's health and safety. See, eg., City of Indianapolis v. Ryan (1937),
. The statute does not define "public transportation," either. The Department, however, has promulgated 45 LA.C. 2.2-5-61 to interpret IC 6-2.5-5-27.
Public transportation shall mean and include the movement, transportation, or carrying of persons and/or property for consideration by a common carrier, contract carrier, household goods carrier, carriers of exempt commodities, and other specialized carriers performing public transportation service for compensation by highway, rail, air, or water, which carriers operate under authority issued by, or are specifically exempt by statute or regulation from economic regulation of, the public service commission of Indiana ...
45 L. A.C. 2.2-5-61(b) (emphasis added). The Department replaced the Public Service Commission of Indiana as Indiana's motor carrier issuing authority several years ago. See IND.CODE 8-2.1-18-6. Be that as it may, Waste Management was specifically exempt from regulation because it operates in a limited geographical area. See IND.CODE 8-2-7-3(a), repealed, now IND.CODE 8-2.1-18-3. This exemption from regulation for "local" transport, found for many years in IC 8-2-7-3(a), was removed from IC 8-2-17-3's successor, IC 8-2.1-18-3, by PL. 1991-1, § 74 and PL. 1990-71, § 3. The effective date of the exemption's removal was March 20, 1990. P.L..1990-71, § 3. Therefore, Waste Management cannot claim to be еngaged in public transportation as an exempt carrier from March 20, 1990 forward. Any claim to the public transportation sales tax exemption since that date, then, must necessarily rest on another basis.
. The parties do not dispute that the matter Waste Management hauls is garbage within the statutory definition of solid waste found in IND. CODE 36-9-30-2 and 36-9-31-2.
. Indiana imposes sales tax on a few services, such as telephone service, as well. These services are also exempt from sales tax in several instances. See generally IND.CODE 6-2.5-4; 6-2.5-5.
. The word "proрerty" standing alone in the middle of the statute, introduced by a definite article, simply refers back to the "tangible personal property" in the opening clause.
. The court's discussion has no bearing on the issue of searches and seizures of garbage. The United States Supreme Court has addressed that issue and held that a warrantless search and seizure of garbage, left for collection outside the curtilage of a residence, does not violate the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. California v. Greenwood (1988),
. There are also genuine issues of material fact surrounding the question of Waste Management's status from March 20, 1990 forward, as discussed in footnote 7, supra.
