Petitioner Inter Cooperative Council appeals as on leave granted following a remand from our Supreme Court in lieu of granting leave to appeal.
Inter-Cooperative Council v Dep’t of Treasury,
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Petitioner owns seventeen houses in the city of Ann Arbor. According to a sample membership contract that petitioner offered into evidence, petitioner provides low-cost housing to university students who purchase a defined number of cooperative member shares and pay a one-time nonrefundable membership fee. The membership contract states that petitioner is *221 a “non-profit cooperative membership corporation,” subject to “the Consumer Cooperative Act.”
In February 1994, petitioner filed affidavits with respondent for each of the seventeen houses, claiming entitlement to a homestead exemption as a nonprofit cooperative housing corporation pursuant to MCL 211.7dd(a) of the General Property Tax Act (gpta), MCL 211.1 et seq. A hearing referee for respondent looked to the definition of “cooperative housing corporation” in the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), 26 USC 216(b)(1), and recommended that the claim be denied on the ground that petitioner failed to meet the federal definition of “cooperative housing corporation” for purposes of the gpta. Petitioner appealed to the Small Claims Division of the tribunal, which denied the claim on the same ground. 1
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“This Court’s authority to review a decision of the Tax Tribunal is very limited.”
Michigan Milk Producers Ass’n v Dep’t of Treasury,
Statutory interpretation is a question of law that is reviewed de novo.
Robertson v DaimlerChrysler Corp,
m. ANALYSIS
The issue before the tribunal was whether petitioner was a “cooperative housing corporation” for purposes of the homestead-exemption statute, MCL 211.7cc and 7dd(a) of
While tax-exemption statutes are strictly construed in favor of the government, they are to be interpreted according to ordinary rules of statutory construction.
Cowen v Dep’t of Treasury,
The homestead-exemption statute, MCL 211.7cc(l), exempts a homestead from local school district taxes. According to MCL 211.7dd(a), a “homestead” includes “[1] property owned by a cooperative housing corporation and [2] occupied as a principal residence by tenant stockholders.” (Emphasis added.)
Thus, petitioner must first be a “cooperative housing corporation” to qualify for the homestead exemption. Every word or phrase contained in a statute should be accorded its plain and ordinary meaning.
Slater v Ann Arbor Pub Schools Bd of Ed,
250 Mich
*224
App 419, 428-429;
Petitioner asserts that the plain meaning of the homestead-exemption statute conveys the legislative intent to exempt “cooperative housing corporations” without qualification. However, petitioner fails to point to anything in the statute that supports such argument and we do not find anything in the language of the homestead-exemption statute that clearly and unambiguously indicates legislative intent to that effect.
Petitioner also asserts that the term is not defined in the homestead-exemption statute or in the gpta because the term has “long been familiar” to the Legislature. In effect, petitioner requests that we apply the definition of “cooperative corporation,”
3
of the General Corporation Act, MCL 450.98
et seq.,
and the
*225
definition of “consumer cooperative”
4
under the Consumer Cooperative Act, MCL 450.3100
et seq.,
to discern the meaning of “cooperative housing corporation” for purposes of the homestead-exemption statute. We disagree. Statutes relating to the same subject matter or sharing a common purpose are in pari materia and must be read together, even though the statutes were enacted at different times and contain no reference to each other.
State Treasurer v Schuster,
Moreover, we presume that every word in a statute has some meaning, and this Court should avoid any construction that would render any part of a statute surplusage or nugatory.
Karpinski v St John Hosp-Macomb Ctr Corp,
We are persuaded by respondent’s argument that the gpta should be read in pari materia with the Michigan Income Tax Act of 1967 (ita), MCL 206.1 et seq. The two acts include the same terms. The homestead-exemption statute in the gpta defines “homestead” as “that portion of a dwelling or unit in a multiple-unit dwelling that is subject to ad valorem taxes and is owmed and occupied as a principal residence by an owner of the dwelling or unit.” MCL 211.7dd(a). A homestead also includes “property owned by a cooperative housing corporation and occupied as a principal residence by tenant stockholders.” Id. The act defines “owner” to include a “cooperative housing corporation.” MCL 211.7dd(b)(vii). On the other hand, the ita defines “homestead” as “a dwelling or unit in a multiple-unit dwelling that is subject to ad valorem taxes . . . owned and occupied as a home by the owner of the dwelling or unit . . . .” MCL 206.508(2). The act defines “owner” as “a tenant-stockholder of a cooperative housing corporation.” MCL 206.510(2). Although the two acts relate to different subject matters, one being property taxes and the other income taxes, they serve the same purpose in that they provide homestead owners with tax exemptions or tax credits. Specifically, they provide tax exemptions and tax credits to the “tenant stockholders” of housing *227 owned by a “cooperative housing corporation.” Therefore, the two statutes are in pari materia and should be construed together.
The ita does not define the term “cooperative housing corporation.” However, the act provides that
[a]ny term used in this act shall have the same meaning as when used in comparable context in the laws of the United States relating to federal income taxes unless a different meaning is clearly required. . . . [MCL 206.2(2).]
In this case, the tribunal looked to § 216 of the IRC, 26 USC 216, which uses the same terms “cooperative housing corporation” and “tenant-stockholder.” Section 216(a) allows a “tenant-stockholder” to deduct amounts paid or accrued to a “cooperative housing corporation” within a taxable year. Because the context of § 216 is comparable to the provisions in the two Michigan acts at issue, we conclude that the tribunal properly looked to this section in the IRC.
We reject petitioner’s argument that the Legislature could not have intended the import of the federal definition of the two terms into the homestead-exemption statute because the terms in that statute were introduced over two decades after MCL 206.2(2) of the rrA was enacted. This Court presumes that when the Legislature enacts new laws it is aware of existing statutes.
Consumers Power Co v Dep’t of Treasury,
Petitioner next argues that the tribunal misapplied the IRC definition of “cooperative housing corporation.” 5 In this case, the tribunal ruled that petitioner was ineligible for a homestead tax exemption because petitioner was not a “cooperative housing corporation.” The tribunal found that petitioner’s houses did not meet the requirements of the federal definition of the term because the space accommodations for the majority of the members were not separate and independent units with their own sleeping, cooking, and sanitation facilities.
In pertinent part, 26 USC 216(b)(1) provides that the term “cooperative housing corporation” means a corporation
(B) each of the stockholders of which is entitled, solely by reason of his ownership of stock in the corporation, to occupy for dwelling purposes a house, or an apartment in a building, owned or leased by such corporation .... [Emphasis added.]
Petitioner takes issue with one of the two Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rulings on which the tribunal relied in interpreting the term “apartment in a building.” In Ruling 74-241, the IRS defined the term “apart *229 ment in a building” for purposes of subsection 216(b)(1)(B) as meaning “an independent housekeeping unit consisting of one or more rooms which contains facilities for cooking, sleeping, and sanitation normally found in a principal residence.” The IRS concluded that a room in a single-family house owned by a cooperative housing corporation was not an “apartment in a building” for purposes of subsection 216(b)(1)(B).
Petitioner does not distinguish the facts in this case with the facts in Ruling 74-241. Rather, petitioner argues that the term “apartment in a building” is inapplicable because it is not found or implied in the homestead-exemption statute. We disagree. As previously discussed, the tribunal properly looked to the IRC for the definition of “cooperative housing corporation.” The IRS ruling made a determination with respect to the language of the federal definition. In light of the above, we conclude that the tribunal properly determined that petitioner was not a “cooperative housing corporation” for purposes of the homestead-exemption statute. Accordingly, we do not address petitioner’s remaining issues on appeal.
Affirmed.
Notes
Because the case was heard in the Small Claims Division of the tribunal, there is no record of the hearing. Accordingly, we decide the issues in this case by relying on the opinion and judgment of the tribunal.
We note that the Legislature has enacted certain amendments to the provisions in MCL 211.7cc and 7dd. The amendments do not affect the decision in this case.
MCL 450.98(1) provides:
Corporations organized to conduct a lawful business which limits the dividends payable upon stock investment in the case of corporations with capital stock and membership investment in the case of membership corporations without capital stock to not in excess of 8% per annum or which limits the voting rights of stockholders or members to 1 vote regardless of the number of shares of stock or membership held, and in any case do not conduct more than 50% of their business or services with nonstockholders or nonmembers, shall be governed by this act, except as specifically otherwise provided and except for cooperatives organized under chapter 11 of Act No. 162 of the Public Acts of 1982, being sections 450.3100 to 450.3192 of the Michigan Compiled Laws, as to the mode of corporate management, manner of distribution of earnings and profits, their powers, and optional principles of doing business.
MCL 450.3103(2) provides that a “consumer cooperative” means
a cooperative the majority of the votes of which are held by consumers, or, in the case of a cooperative which provides residential dwelling units, the majority of the votes of which are held by consumers and the majority of members of which do not have the right of possession or occupancy of dwelling units they do not occupy.
Petitioner also argues that the tribunal improperly applied the federal definition to the term “tenant stockholders.” In light of our resolution in this case, we do not address this argument.
