GARDNER v DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY NGO v DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY MASELLI v DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY
Docket Nos. 150293, 150294, and 150295
Supreme Court of Michigan
Decided July 9, 2015
498 Mich 1
In a unanimous opinion per curiam, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to appeal and without hearing oral argument, held:
The State Real Estate Transfer Tax Act,
Reversed; cases remanded to the Tax Tribunal for further proceedings.
TAXATION - PROPERTY - TRANSFER TAXES - EXEMPTION.
The State Real Estate Transfer Tax Act,
Warner Norcross & Judd LLP (by Gaëtan Gerville-Réache and Jason L. Byrne) for petitioners.
Bill Schuette, Attorney General, Aaron D. Lindstrom, Solicitor General, Matthew Schneider, Chief Legal Counsel, and Matthew B. Hodges, Assistant Attorney General, for respondent.
Amicus Curiae:
McClelland & Anderson, LLP (by Gregory L. McClelland and Melissa A. Hagen), for the Michigan Realtors.
I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Petitioners in these consolidated cases are all homeowners who sold their principal residences at a time when the state equalized value (SEV) of their respective properties was less than the SEV at the time of their purchase.1 Upon the sale of their homes, the petitioners paid a transfer tax under
Respondent separately denied petitioners’ requests for a refund of the transfer tax, concluding that they were not entitled to the claimed exemption because each property sold for more than its “true cash value,” which respondent interpreted to mean two times the property‘s SEV or less in the year of sale. Each petitioner thereafter appealed in the Michigan Tax Tribunal, which awarded refunds to petitioners on the ground that the conveyances were exempt under
The Court of Appeals consolidated these cases and reversed the Tax Tribunal‘s refund award in a split published opinion.3 Contrary to the Tax Tribunal‘s determination, the majority concluded that
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo.5 When interpreting a statute, we follow the established rules of statutory construction, the fore-
III. ANALYSIS
[a] written instrument conveying an interest in property for which an exemption is claimed under section 7cc of the general property tax act, 1893 PA 206,
MCL 211.7cc , if the state equalized valuation of that property is equal to or lesser than the state equalized valuation on the date of purchase or on the date of acquisition by the seller or transferor for that same interest in property. If after an exemption is claimed under this subsection, the sale or transfer of property is found by the treasurer to be at avalue other than the true cash value, then a penalty equal to 20% of the tax shall be assessed in addition to the tax due under this act to the seller or transferor. [ MCL 207.526(u) .]
Reduced to its elements, a seller or transferor of property is entitled to this exemption if (1) the seller or transferor claimed a principal residence exemption for the property under
Petitioners contend that the proper understanding of “true cash value” for purposes of
As used in this act, “true cash value” means the usual selling price at the place where the property to which the term is applied is at the time of assessment, being the price that could be obtained for the property at private sale, and not at auction sale except as otherwise provided in this section, or at forced sale.... [13]
Nevertheless, caselaw treats the concept of true cash value as being synonymous with “fair market value.” For instance, in CAF Investment Co v State Tax Comm,14 this Court, after examining various provisions of the GPTA and corresponding caselaw, defined the term as “the usual selling price that could be obtained at the time of assessment, but not the price that could be obtained at a forced or auction sale.” Similarly, in Detroit Lions, Inc v Dearborn, the Court of Appeals noted that “true cash value” refers to ” the probable price that a willing buyer and a willing seller
The Court of Appeals erred when it held that, to be entitled to the exemption, petitioners must have sold their properties for exactly double the SEV at the time of the sale. To illustrate this logic, we turn to the specific dollar values involved in the Gardner case. As previously indicated, the Gardners paid $950,000 to acquire their principal residence in 2008 when the property‘s SEV was $464,300. Two years later, they sold the property for $875,000, when the SEV was $374,800.16 Under the majority‘s interpretation, the property‘s true cash value at the time of sale was $374,800 multiplied by two, or $749,600. Consequently, the Gardners were not entitled to the claimed exemption because they sold their property for $875,000, which was an amount “other than” $749,600.17 Yet contrary to the Court of Appeals majority‘s understanding, nothing in the statute states or even suggests that application of the exemption be limited to such exacting circumstances. Instead, all that need be shown in this regard is that the SEV be the same or lower at the time of sale than when the property was first acquired. Nor is there support for the majority‘s sweeping and unprecedented interpretation of the penalty clause, which, according to the
It is very unlikely—particularly in the absence of any textual indicia—that the Legislature impliedly intended the property‘s “true cash value” to mean precisely twice its SEV. Rather, the interpretation that best effectuates the legislative intent of
Additional support compels this construction of the statute. Because the first sentence in
IV. CONCLUSION
To be entitled to the transfer tax exemption under
YOUNG, C.J., and MARKMAN, KELLY, ZAHRA, MCCORMACK, VIVIANO, and BERNSTEIN, JJ., concurred.
