David and Jill Kehlenbrink v. Director of Revenue , 577 S.W.3d 798 ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
    en banc
    DAVID KEHLENBRINK and                        )     Opinion issued June 25, 2019
    JILL KEHLENBRINK,                            )
    )
    Respondents,          )
    )
    v.                                           )     No. SC97287
    )
    DIRECTOR OF REVENUE,                         )
    )
    Appellant.            )
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION
    OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING COMMISSION
    The Honorable Sreenivasa Rao Dandamudi, Commissioner
    The director of the department of revenue appeals a decision of the administrative
    hearing commission (“AHC”) reversing the director’s denial of an application for a sales
    tax refund. The director asserts the AHC erroneously ruled David and Jill Kehlenbrink
    were entitled to a refund of all the sales tax they paid after their purchase of a new vehicle.
    Specifically, the director claims that, in calculating the sales tax owed on the Kehlenbrinks’
    newly purchased vehicle, the plain language of section 144.025.1 1 unambiguously allows
    1
    All statutory citations are to RSMo 2016, unless otherwise noted.
    the Kehlenbrinks to credit the sale proceeds of only one vehicle against the purchase price
    of the new vehicle.
    Section 144.025.1 unambiguously permits the sale proceeds of only one vehicle as
    a credit against the purchase price of a new vehicle for purposes of calculating sales tax.
    The AHC erroneously decided the Kehlenbrinks were entitled to a refund of all the sales
    tax they paid because it mistakenly allowed credit for four vehicles the Kehlenbrinks sold
    within 180 days of their purchase of a new vehicle. The AHC’s decision is reversed, and
    the case is remanded.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    On February 26, 2017, the Kehlenbrinks sold a 2006 Ford truck for $10,500. Two
    weeks later, the Kehlenbrinks sold a 2000 Kawasaki motorcycle for $3,900. On March 14,
    the Kehlenbrinks purchased a 2016 Dodge truck for $27,495. The Kehlenbrinks titled the
    Dodge truck on March 31 at an independently owned St. Louis County license fee office. 2
    When titling the Dodge truck, the Kehlenbrinks were permitted to credit $14,400 from the
    sales of the Ford and Kawasaki to reduce the sales tax due on the Dodge truck. Sales tax
    was assessed on the resulting net purchase price of $13,095, and the Kehlenbrinks paid
    $1,095 in state and local sales taxes.
    The Kehlenbrinks subsequently sold a 2008 Jeep for $5,200 on May 9 and a 2013
    Hyundai for $8,400 on June 5. The dates of sale of all four vehicles – the Ford, the
    Kawasaki, the Jeep, and the Hyundai – were within 180 days of the March 14, 2017,
    2
    Although the license fee office is independently owned, the office and its employees are
    authorized to collect taxes and title vehicles on behalf of the director.
    2
    purchase date of the Dodge truck. Devon Knupp, an employee of the license fee office
    who assisted the Kehlenbrinks on all relevant occasions, informed the Kehlenbrinks they
    were permitted to credit the proceeds from the sales of the Jeep and Hyundai against the
    prior purchase price of the Dodge.
    On June 6, the Kehlenbrinks applied for a refund of sales tax paid on the titling of
    the Dodge. This application for refund was based on the additional credit of $13,600
    derived from the sale of the Jeep and Hyundai. With this additional credit, the total credit
    from all four vehicles exceeded the purchase price of the Dodge. On July 17, the director
    denied the Kehlenbrinks’ application for a sales tax refund. The Kehlenbrinks appealed to
    the AHC challenging the final decision of the director. 3
    After a hearing, the AHC found section 144.025.1 to be ambiguous and construed
    it to give credit for the sales of multiple vehicles against the purchase price of a new vehicle
    in computing sales tax owed.          It reversed the director’s denial and awarded the
    Kehlenbrinks a refund of all sales tax paid, plus interest at the statutory rate.
    The director appeals the decision of the AHC. This Court has jurisdiction because
    the case involves construction of a state revenue law. Mo. Const. art. V, sec. 3; McDonnell
    Douglas Corp. v. Dir. of Revenue, 
    945 S.W.2d 437
    , 439 (Mo. banc 1997).
    Standard of Review
    Pursuant to article V, section 18 of the Missouri Constitution, this Court reviews the
    AHC’s decision to determine if it is “authorized by law, and in cases in which a hearing is
    3
    The AHC has jurisdiction over appeals from the director’s final decisions under section
    621.050.1.
    3
    required by law, whether the same [is] supported by competent and substantial evidence
    upon the whole record.” “The AHC’s interpretation of revenue laws is reviewed de novo.”
    Loren Cook Co. v. Dir. of Revenue, 
    414 S.W.3d 451
    , 453 (Mo. banc 2013).
    Section 144.025.1 Unambiguously Limits Credit to One Vehicle
    The director claims the AHC erred in concluding the Kehlenbrinks were entitled to
    credit the proceeds from the sales of four vehicles against the purchase price of a single
    newly purchased vehicle because section 144.025.1 unambiguously allows credit for the
    sale of only one vehicle. 4 “The primary rule of statutory interpretation is to give effect to
    legislative intent as reflected in the plain language of the statute.” State ex rel. Young v.
    Wood, 
    254 S.W.3d 871
    , 872-73 (Mo. banc 2008). Words in a statute are not read in
    isolation but, rather, are read in the context of the statute to determine their plain and
    ordinary meaning. Union Elec. Co. v. Dir. of Revenue, 
    425 S.W.3d 118
    , 122 (Mo. banc
    2014). A statute’s language is “clear and unambiguous” if “the statute’s terms are plain
    and clear to one of ordinary intelligence.” Wolff Shoe Co. v. Dir. of Revenue, 
    762 S.W.2d 29
    , 31 (Mo. banc 1988). The rules of statutory construction do not apply if the statute is
    unambiguous. Kerperien v. Lumberman’s Mut. Cas. Co., 
    100 S.W.3d 778
    , 781 (Mo. banc
    2003).
    Section 144.025.1 provides:
    [(1)] Notwithstanding any other provisions of law to the contrary, in any
    retail sale other than retail sales governed by subsections 4 and 5 of this
    section, where any article on which sales or use tax has been paid, credited,
    4
    The director makes multiple claims of error in the AHC decision. His claim that section
    144.025.1 unambiguously allows a taxpayer to credit only one sale against the purchase
    price of a new vehicle is addressed first because it is meritorious.
    4
    or otherwise satisfied or which was exempted or excluded from sales or use
    tax is taken in trade as a credit or part payment on the purchase price of the
    article being sold, the tax imposed by sections 144.020 and 144.440 shall be
    computed only on that portion of the purchase price which exceeds the actual
    allowance made for the article traded in or exchanged, if there is a bill of sale
    or other record showing the actual allowance made for the article traded in
    or exchanged. [(2)] Where the purchaser of a motor vehicle, trailer, boat or
    outboard motor receives a rebate from the seller or manufacturer, the tax
    imposed by sections 144.020 and 144.440 shall be computed only on that
    portion of the purchase price which exceeds the amount of the rebate, if there
    is a bill of sale or other record showing the actual rebate given by the seller
    or manufacturer. [(3)] Where the trade-in or exchange allowance plus any
    applicable rebate exceeds the purchase price of the purchased article there
    shall be no sales or use tax owed. [(4)] This section shall also apply to motor
    vehicles, trailers, boats, and outboard motors sold by the owner or holder of
    the properly assigned certificate of ownership if the seller purchases or
    contracts to purchase a subsequent motor vehicle, trailer, boat, or outboard
    motor within one hundred eighty days before or after the date of the sale of
    the original article and a bill of sale showing the paid sale price is presented
    to the department of revenue at the time of licensing. [(5)] A copy of the bill
    of sale shall be left with the licensing office. [(6)] Where the subsequent
    motor vehicle, trailer, boat, or outboard motor is titled more than one hundred
    eighty days after the sale of the original motor vehicle, trailer, boat, or
    outboard motor, the allowance pursuant to this section shall be made if the
    person titling such article establishes that the purchase or contract to purchase
    was finalized prior to the expiration of the one hundred eighty-day period.
    (Emphasis added).
    Although the director acknowledges the fourth sentence of section 144.025.1 refers
    to “motor vehicles, trailers, boats, and outboard motors sold,” he asserts the singular
    reference to “the original article” and “a bill of sale” in the remainder of the fourth sentence
    and the singular reference to “the bill of sale” and “the sale of the original motor vehicle,
    trailer, boat, or outboard motor” in the fifth and sixth sentences, respectively, show the
    legislature’s clear intention to permit credit for only one vehicle sold against the purchase
    price of “a subsequent motor vehicle, trailer, boat, or outboard motor.” The Kehlenbrinks
    5
    argue, in contrast, that the legislature would have used in the fourth sentence the singular
    for “motor vehicle, trailer, boat, or outboard motor” to refer to a vehicle sold if it wanted
    to limit the number of vehicles credited against the purchased vehicle to one. They further
    note the legislature used the singular terms elsewhere in the statute to refer to a vehicle
    purchased.
    The fourth, fifth, and sixth sentences of section 144.025.1 govern the giving of a
    credit for a qualifying sale that occurs within 180 days of a subsequent purchase of a new
    vehicle, and they reference the sale of such item five times, as indicated in italics. Four of
    five references are to the singular. The plural is used only once in the fourth sentence.
    There, the plural of “motor vehicles, trailers, boats, and outboard motors” is used to identify
    the types of items for which the proceeds of a sale are eligible for a credit. The other four
    times, the singular is used to reference a singular sale of a motor vehicle, trailer, boat, or
    outboard motor or a singular bill of sale. 5 While the use of the plural phrase “motor
    vehicles, trailers, boats, and outboard motors” in the fourth sentence, viewed in isolation,
    raises a question of the legislature’s intent, the entirety of the fourth, fifth and sixth
    sentences in section 144.025.1 answers that question. By referencing only a single item or
    5
    The legislature’s use of the definite article “the” and the indefinite article “a” indicates
    the legislature intended only a singular object. See, e.g., Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 
    542 U.S. 426
    ,
    434 (2004) (“The consistent use of the definite article in reference to the custodian indicates
    that there is generally only one proper respondent . . . .”); State v. Campbell, 
    109 S.W. 706
    ,
    712 (Mo. 1908), overruled on other grounds by State v. Adkins, 
    225 S.W. 981
    (Mo. 1920)
    (“[‘The’] is used before nouns with a specifying or particularizing effect.”); State v.
    Nichols, 
    865 S.W.2d 435
    , 437 (Mo. App. 1993) (“The plain and ordinary meaning of the
    word ‘a’ is the singular ‘one.’”).
    6
    a single sale when describing the act for which a credit is given, the legislature plainly and
    clearly intended credit be given for only one sale.
    The Kehlenbrinks further argue the AHC found different language in section
    144.025.1 to be ambiguous.        Particularly, the AHC found section 144.025.1 to be
    ambiguous because the fourth sentence uses the word “subsequent” when referencing the
    newly purchased vehicle and then states the sale of a previously owned vehicle must be
    made “within one hundred eighty days before or after” the purchase of a new vehicle. This
    sentence may not be a model of drafting but it is sufficiently clear the legislature intended
    to give credit for a vehicle sold before or after the purchase of the new vehicle so long as
    the sale occurs within 180 days of the purchase of the new vehicle. Additionally, any
    question as to when the sale of a previously owned vehicle must occur is not an ambiguity
    as to the number of vehicles sold for which credit is given. 6
    Accordingly, section 144.025.1 unambiguously allows a taxpayer to credit only one
    vehicle sold against the purchase price of a new vehicle.            Because the statute is
    unambiguous, the AHC erred in considering matters beyond the language of the statute to
    find the statute was ambiguous and construe its meaning. 
    Kerperien, 100 S.W.3d at 781
    .
    6
    In its finding that section 144.025.1 was ambiguous, the AHC mistakenly considered
    three other factors: (1) an agent of the director, Mr. Knupp, and the director differed in
    their interpretations of the statute; (2) the director allowed the Kehlenbrinks to credit the
    proceeds from the sales of two vehicles when they initially paid sales tax; (3) and a
    regulation, 12 C.S.R. 10-103.350(3)(G), provides the sale proceeds of more than one
    vehicle may be credited against the purchase price of another vehicle.
    7
    Conclusion
    Section 144.025.1 unambiguously permits the sale proceeds of only one vehicle to
    reduce the purchase price of a newly purchased vehicle for purposes of calculating sales
    tax. The AHC erred in deciding the Kehlenbrinks were entitled to a refund of sales tax
    paid because it mistakenly allowed credit for four vehicles the Kehlenbrinks sold within
    180 days of their purchase of a new vehicle. The AHC’s decision is reversed, and the case
    remanded.
    ___________________________________
    PATRICIA BRECKENRIDGE, JUDGE
    All concur.
    8