Wе granted certiorari to review a court of appeals decision reversing the Utah State Tax Commission’s (“the Commission”) assessment of sales tax on Newspaper Agency Corporation’s (“NAC”) purchase and reconfiguration of printing presses.
See Newspaper Agency Corp. v. Utah State Tax Comm’n,
NAC provides advertising, printing, and circulation services for The Salt Lake Tribune and the Deseret News. Between 1988 and 1991, NAC spent $37,000,000 to renovate its Regent Street plant in downtown Salt Lake City. NAC’s renovation project was extensive: “The existing building was expanded by approximately 25% on property already owned by NAC[,][f]orty percent of the building’s walls were rebuilt[,][and][a] new foundation was built to support new printing presses.” Id. at 19. Prior to the renovation, NAC operated two letter presses and one offset press. The renovation included reconfiguring the offset press and replacing the two letter presses with new offset presses. The new and reconfigured presses increased NAC’s printing capacity and allowed NAC to produce new advertising formats.
In late 1991, the Auditing Division of the Commission assessed a sales tax on NAC’s purchase and reconfiguration of the presses. NAC filed a petition for redetermination, disputing the tax assessment and claiming that it was exempt from the tax. The Commission then held a full evidentiary hearing in which NAC presented expert and fact witnesses. After the hearing, the Commission rejected NAC’s argument that the presses were exempt from sales tax under section 59-12-104(16) as a purchase for a “new or expanding operation” in a “manufacturing facility.” The Commission found that the presses did not meet any of the three alternative tests for “new or expanding operations” found in the Commission’s rule defining that term. See Utah Admin.Code R865-19-85S(A)(3) (1991). NAC filed a petition for reconsideration, which was denied.
NAC filed a petition for review, which we granted. We transferred the case to the court of appeals. The court of appeals reversed the Commission, holding that the presses were exempt.
Newspaper Agency Corp.,
We begin by stating the appropriate standard of review. We review the court of appeals’ decision for correctness and give its conclusions of law no deference.
State v. Christensen,
Disposition of this appeal turns on the lаnguage of section 59-12-104(16), 1 which defines the sales tax exemption, and the Commission’s rules purporting to define some critical terms of the statute. Section 59-12-104(16) provides in relevant part:
The following sales and uses are exempt from the taxes imposed by this chapter:
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(16) sales or leases of machinery and equipment purchased or leаsed by a manufacturer for use in new or expanding operations (excluding normal operating replacements, which includes replacement machinery and equipment even though they may increase plant production or capacity, as determined by the commission) in any manufacturing facility in Utah. Normal operating replacements shall inсlude replacement machinery and equipment which increases plant production or capacity.... For purposes of this subsection, the commission shall by rule define “new or expanding operations ”....
Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-104(16) (emphasis added). Pursuant to the authority granted it by the two emphasized portions of section 59-12-104(16), the Commission promulgated two separate rules pertinent to this case. The first, rule 865-19-85S(A)(6), defines “normal operating replacements,” and the second, R865-19-85S(A)(3), defines “new or expanding operations.”
Because the statute at issue contains two explicit grants of discretion to the Commission, we apply a reasonableness standard to the Commission’s conclusiоns regarding “normal operating replacements” and “new or expanding operations.”
Eaton Kenway,
We first address the question of whether the Commission’s rule defining “normal operating replacements” is a reasonable interpretation of that term as used in section 59-12-104(16). That section providеs that “normal operating replacements” include “replacement machinery and equipment even though they may increase plant production or capacity.” To provide further direction in the application of the statute, the Commission promulgated rule 865-19-85S(A)(6), which defined “normal operating replacements” as
machinery or equipment which replaces existing machinery or equipment of a similar nature, even if the use results in increased plant production or capacity.
(a) If new machinery or equipment is purchased or leased which has the same or similar purpose as machinery or equipment retired from service within 12 months before оr after the purchase date, such machinery or equipment is considered as replacement and is not exempt.
(b) If existing machinery or equipment is kept for back-up or infrequent use; new, similar machinery or equipment *269 purchased would be considered as replacement and is not exempt.
Utah Admin.Code R865-19-85S(A)(6) (1991). 2
The court of appeals, addrеssing the matter without any guidance from this court, held that this rule is “invalid because it is contrary to section 59-12-104(16) and imper-missibly restricts the availability of sales tax exemptions.”
Newspaper Agency Corp.,
We next move to a determination of whether the Commission acted reasonably in concluding that the circumstances here fall within the definition of “normal operating replacements” in rule 865-19-85S(A)(6). Under the rule, an inquiry must be made into the nature and purpose of the new and reconfigured presses that replaсed NAC’s old presses. Pursuant to this direction, the Commission examined the functional similarities between the old and new presses. Both the old and the new presses were used to print newspapers and advertisements. To meet publication demands, NAC kept three presses operating at all times during the renovation and press conversions. Each of the two new presses and the reconfigured press literally replaced an old press. Thus, NAC used the new presses to perform the same tasks performed by the old presses— printing newspapers and advertisements— though the new and reconfigured presses increased NAC’s printing capacity and allowed NAC to produce new advеrtising formats. Finding that the old presses and the new and reconfigured presses performed the same essential functions, the Commission concluded that the new and reconfigured presses were normal operating replacements.
On the basis of the foregoing facts, which are not challenged by NAC, we cannot hold as a matter of law that thе Commission was unreasonable in finding that the presses were' “normal operating replacements.” These facts evidence the replacement of old machinery with similar machinery that is more technologically advanced, efficient, and productive. Section 59-12-104(16), however, expressly provides that “normal operating replacements” include “replacement machinery and equipment even though they may increase plant production or capacity.” In addition, this is precisely the type of replacement that we said in
Eaton Kenway
constitutes a normal operating replacement.
Having concluded that the Commission was reasonable in finding that the presses were normal operating replacements, we must address NAC’s аrgument that the Commission erred by concluding that the normal operating replacements limitation applies to both new and expanding operations. 3 This inquiry necessitates a close reading of section 59-12-104(16).
That section provides in relevant part:
*270 The following sales and uses are exempt from the taxes imposed by this chapter:
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(16) sales or leases of machinery and equiрment purchased or leased by a manufacturer for use in new or expanding operations (excluding normal operating replacements, which includes replacement machinery and equipment even though they may increase plant production or capacity, as determined by the commission) in any manufacturing facility in Utah. Normal operating replacements shall include replacement machinery and equipment which increases plant production or capacity.... For purposes of this subsection, the commission shall by rule define “new or expanding operations ”-
Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-104(16) (emphasis added). The resolution of NAC’s challenge turns on whether the parenthetical exclusion of “normal operating replacements” applies to the entire phrase “new or expanding operations” that immediately precedes it or only to the second part of that phrase, “expanding operations.” NAC argues for the latter position; the Commission, for the former.
We start from the premise that because this is an еxemption from taxation, we construe it strictly against the taxpayer.
Eaton Kenway,
In view of this plain reading of the statute, we reject NAC’s position. The parenthetical sentence in section 59-12-104(16) excluding normal operating replacemеnts applies to the entire phrase “new or expanding operations.”
This is precisely how the Commission read the statute when it exercised its discretion in defining the phrase. At the time this controversy arose, administrative rule 865-19-85S(A)(3) provided:
“New or expanding operations” means manufacturing, processing, or assembling activities which:
(a) are substantially different in nature, character, or purpose from prior activities;
(b) are begun in a new physical plant location in Utah; or
(c) increase production or capacity. This definition is subject to limitations dealing with normal operating replacements.
Utah Admin.Code R865-19-85S(A)(3) (1991) (emphasis added). 4
NAC makes a rather convoluted argument under rule 865-19-85S(A)(3) that because of the placement of the last sentence of the quoted portion, the Commission has acknowledged that the “nоrmal operating replacement” exclusion applies only to expanding operations, not to new ones. NAC further contends that this rule also too narrowly defines “new operations” and that NAC’s remodeling qualifies as a “new” operation. We need not dwell on this contention. It amounts to a claim that the tail should wag the dog.
Section 59-12-104(16) gives the Commission the power to define by rule the phrase “new or expanding operations,” but that delegation of authority does not include the power to define the phrase in a way that flatly contradicts the statute.
Sanders Brine Shrimp v. Audit Div.,
A fair reading of the rule applies elementary rules of punctuation and grammar. The Commission defined “new or expanding operations” by setting forth three alternative tests. These tests are listed in a single sentence, albeit one separated intо three sub-parts by a colon and semicolons. Utah Ad-mimCode R865-19-85S(A)(3) (1991). This sentence is followed by a sentence that states, “This definition is subject to limitations dealing with normal operating replacements.” Id. (emphasis added). Because the preceding sentence containing the three tests defines “new or expanding operations,” the plain meaning of the words “[t]his definition” in the last sentence is to refer to the entire sentence defining “new or expanding operations,” not merely to the last alternative test, as NAG argues.
Thus, the language of both section 59-12-104(16) and rule 865-19-85S(A)(3) confirm that the normal operating replacements limi-. tation applies to both new and expanding operations. Because the Commission reasonably found that the presses were normal operating replacements and because the normal operating replacements limitation applies to both new and expanding operations, NAC is not entitled to the section 59-12-104(16) exemption. Consequently, the court of appeals erred in ovеrruling the Commission. We therefore reverse the court of appeals.
Notes
. Section 59-12-104(16) was amended in 1991 and renumbered 59-12-104(15). Act of Jan. 21, 1991, ch. 5, § 57, 1991 Utah Laws 45. Section 59-12-104(15) was significantly amended in 1995 to phase in a full exemption even fоr “normal operating replacements.” Act of Mar. 1, 1995, ch. 327, § 1, 1995 Utah Laws 1240-41. All subsequent citations are to section 59-12-104(16) as it stood prior to the 1991 amendment.
. The Commission has since renumbered and made minor grammatical changes to this rule. See Utah Code Admin. R865-19S-85(A)(6).
. The court of appeals did not reach this issue, as it had determined that the normal operating replacеments limitation applied only to businesses replacing worn out machinery.
. The Commission amended and renumbered this rule in 1994. It now provides:
(a) "New or expanding operations” means manufacturing, processing, or assembling activities that:
(1)are substantially different in nature, character, or purpose from prior activities;
(2) are begun in a new physical plant location in Utah; or
(3) increase production or capacity.
(b) The definition of new or expanding operations is subject to limitations dealing with normal operating replacements.
Utah Admin.Code R865-19S-85(A)(3).
