
    THE ANDERSONS ALBION ETHANOL LLC v DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY
    Docket No. 327855.
    Submitted September 8, 2016, at Lansing.
    Decided September 13, 2016, at 9:05 a.m.
    Leave to appeal denied 500 Mich 1009.
    The Andersons Albion Ethanol LLC (Andersons) appealed its final assessment and bill for taxes due in the Tax Tribunal, asserting that the Department of Treasury’s interpretation of the formula for the renaissance zone tax credit under the Michigan Business Tax Act, MCL 208.1101 et seq., was erroneous. Under MCL 208.1433, the amount of the credit depended on Andersons’ renaissance zone business activity factor. MCL 208.1433(9X0 defines the renaissance zone business activity factor as a fraction, the numerator of which is the ratio of the average value of the taxpayer’s property located in a designated renaissance zone to the average value of the taxpayer’s property in this state plus the ratio of the taxpayer’s payroll for services performed in a designated renaissance zone to all of the taxpayer’s payroll in this state, and the denominator of which is two. This definition could be illustrated, as follows, by an equation in which X represents the renaissance zone business activity factor:
    
      
    
    Andersons filed for a $514,579 renaissance zone tax credit for 2010. Andersons did not have any payroll attributable to services performed in a renaissance zone or in Michigan, so its payroll ratio was 0/0, which is an undefined number. Relying on guidance from the department’s treatment of a similar credit under the former Single Business Tax Act, repealed by 2006 PA 325, Andersons did not divide the combined averages in the numerator by two, despite that MCL 208.1433(9X0 states the denominator is two. The department concluded that Andersons had failed to properly divide by two and only granted Andersons a $257,290 credit for 2010. The department moved for summary disposition, asserting that, in such circumstances, the undefined number should impliedly be removed from the formula. Andersons contended that if the department removed the number from the formula, it should not have to divide the numerator by two because one of the two factors did not exist. The tribunal granted summary disposition to Andersons, holding that the department had previously applied the interpretation advanced by Andersons under the Single Business Tax Act and that the department should do the same in this case. The department appealed.
    The Court of Appeals held,'.
    
    The tribunal erred by granting summary disposition to Ander-sons. The department’s interpretation of the statute did not conflict with the statute’s language, and the tribunal lacked cogent reasons to overturn the department’s interpretation. The parties agreed that it was mathematically impossible to work the formula as written when one of the ratios was 0/0 but disagreed on the solution. The tribunal rejected the department’s solution because it was inconsistent with the department’s previous interpretation of a now-repealed, but analogous, statute. However, the inconsistency of the department’s interpretation was not, in and of itself, a cogent reason to reject the department’s new interpretation. A provision in a similar statute in which the Legislature expressly stated that the denominator would change in response to missing factors in the formula’s numerator suggested that the Legislature was aware of that method for altering the formula and elected not to add similar language to MCL 208.1433. The language of MCL 208.1433 indicates that the Legislature wished to provide a tax benefit to businesses that both owned property in a renaissance zone and invested payroll in the renaissance zone. Businesses that only did half of those things should have received only half of the credit. Finally, mathematical examples showed that the department’s interpretation was more consistent with rewarding investment in renaissance zones than Andersons’ interpretation. Otherwise, businesses that invested more in the state would receive a less beneficial result.
    Reversed and remanded.
    Taxation — Michigan Business Tax Act — Credits — Renaissance Zone Business Activity Factor.
    When calculating the renaissance zone business activity factor under MCL 208.1433(9X0 of the Michigan Business Tax Act, MCL 208.1101 et seq., if either of the ratios in the numerator is 0/0, i.e., an undefined number, the denominator is still two.
    
      Bill Schuette, Attorney General, Aaron D. Lind-strom, Solicitor General, Matthew Schneider, Chief Legal Counsel, and Eric M. Jamison, Assistant Attorney General, for the Department of Treasury.
    
      Miller, Canfield, Paddock & Stone, PLC (by Gregory A. Nowak and Maria Baldysz), for The Andersons Albion Ethanol LLC.
    Before: TALBOT, C.J., and O’CONNELL and OWENS, JJ.
   O’Connell, J.

Defendant, Department of Treasury (the Department), appeals as of right the ruling of the Tax Tribunal (the Tribunal) in favor of plaintiff, The Andersons Albion Ethanol LLC (Andersons), in this case involving a tax credit under the Michigan Business Tax Act, MCL 208.1101 et seq. The Tax Tribunal concluded that applying the renaissance zone business activity factor, MCL 208.1433(9)(f), when the taxpayer does not have payroll services in the renaissance zone or in Michigan under the renaissance zone tax credit leads to an absurd result. The Department agrees that literal application of the formula is impossible under such circumstances, but it contends that the Tribunal erred when it disregarded the Department’s interpretation of the statute. We conclude that the Tribunal lacked cogent reasons to disregard the Department’s interpretation, which was not contrary to the statute, and we reverse and remand.

I. BACKGROUND

The amount of a taxpayer’s credit depends on the taxpayer’s renaissance zone business activity factor.

See MCL 208.1433(1)(a)(i) and (9)(g). “Renaissance zone business activity factor” is defined as

a fraction, the numerator of which is the ratio of the average value of the taxpayer’s property located in a designated renaissance zone to the average value of the taxpayer’s property in this state plus the ratio of the taxpayer’s payroll for services performed in a designated renaissance zone to all of the taxpayer’s payroll in this state and the denominator of which is 2. [MCL 208.1433(9)(f).]

The following formula illustrates the factor as an equation, where X represents the renaissance zone business activity factor:

Andersons filed for a $514,579 renaissance zone tax credit for 2010 under the Michigan Business Tax Act. Andersons did not have any payroll attributable to services performed in a renaissance zone or in Michigan. Accordingly, its payroll ratio was 0/0, which is an undefined number. Relying on guidance from the former Single Business Tax Act, Andersons did not divide the combined averages in the numerator by two, despite that MCL 208.1433(9)(f) states the denominator is two. The Department concluded that Andersons had failed to properly divide by two and, accordingly, only granted Andersons a $257,290 credit for 2010.

Andersons appealed its final assessment and bill for taxes due in the Tax Tribunal. The Department moved for summary disposition, asserting that in such circumstances, it should simply remove the undefined number from the formula. Andersons contended that if the Department did so, it should not have to divide the numerator by two because one of the two factors in the numerator (the ratio regarding the taxpayer’s payroll) did not exist.

The Tribunal granted summary disposition to Ander-sons. It held that applying the formula as written would lead to an “absurd result” because “adding one factor to an undefined number and then dividing that sum by two leads to a result not quantifiable under the laws of mathematics; neutral laws that determine values.” The Tribunal concluded that no reasonable lawmaker could have conceivably intended a tax credit that is an indeterminate number. It held that in such circumstances under the Single Business Tax Act, the Department had previously applied the interpretation advanced by Andersons—that the taxpayer need not apply the denominator—and concluded that it should do the same in these circumstances. The Department now appeals.

II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

When a party does not dispute the facts or allege fraud, we review whether the Tribunal made an error of law or adopted a wrong principle. Mich Props, LLC v Meridian Twp, 491 Mich 518, 527-528; 817 NW2d 548 (2012). This Court reviews de novo the interpretation and application of tax statutes. Id. at 528. We review de novo the Tribunal’s decision to grant or deny a motion for summary disposition. Briggs Tax Serv, LLC v Detroit Pub Sch, 485 Mich 69, 75; 780 NW2d 753 (2010).

III. APPLICATION

We conclude that the Tribunal erred by granting summary disposition to Andersons. The Department’s interpretation does not conflict with the statute’s language, and the Tribunal lacked cogent reasons to overturn the Department’s interpretation.

When interpreting a statute, our goal is to give effect to the intent of the Legislature. Paris Meadows, LLC v Kentwood, 287 Mich App 136, 141; 783 NW2d 133 (2010). If the plain and ordinary meaning of a statute’s language is clear, we will not engage in judicial construction. Id. If the language of the statute is unambiguous, we must enforce the statute as written. Id. But “a statute need not be applied literally if no reasonable lawmaker could have conceived of the ensuing result.” Detroit Int’l Bridge Co v Commodities Export Co, 279 Mich App 662, 675; 760 NW2d 565 (2008).

In this case, it is mathematically impossible to apply the Legislature’s formula in the statute as written when one of the ratios in the numerator is 0/0. This fraction is an indeterminate number that renders the entire formula indeterminate. The parties do not dispute that the formula is unworkable in this circumstance—they dispute the solution to the problem.

An agency’s interpretation of a statute is not binding and may not conflict with the plain meaning of the statute, but it is entitled to respectful consideration. In re Complaint of Rovas Against SBC Mich, 482 Mich 90, 117-118; 754 NW2d 259 (2008). Courts should not overturn an agency’s interpretation without cogent reasons. Id. at 108. An agency’s interpretation “can be particularly helpful for ‘doubtful or obscure’ provisions.” Id.

In this case, the Tribunal rejected the Department’s interpretation because the Department’s present interpretation was inconsistent with its interpretations of an analogous provision in the now-repealed Single Business Tax Act. The Department’s interpretation was of a prior—if admittedly analogous—statute. While a longstanding, consistent interpretation of a statute is entitled to more deference than a recent interpretation, it does not necessarily follow that courts may entirely disregard a new interpretation, see In re Mich Cable Telecom Ass’n, 239 Mich App 686, 690; 609 NW2d 854 (2000), particularly when the “longstanding” interpretation applies to a previous version of a statute. For instance, if the Department determines that past allowances were improper under a statute, it is not bound by the same mistake on subsequent determinations. See Lear Corp v Dep’t of Treasury, 299 Mich App 533, 539; 831 NW22 255 (2013). That the Department changed its interpretation of the renaissance zone business activity factor does not necessarily mean that its new interpretation is unreasonable. We conclude that the inconsistency of the Department’s interpretations was not, in and of itself, a cogent reason to reject the Department’s new interpretation.

This Court lacks other cogent reasons to reject the Department’s interpretation. First, in a similar statute, the Legislature has indicated when the denominator should change in response to a missing factor in the numerator:

[T]he taxpayer shall add the percentages ... and divide the total by 3 and the result so obtained is the business allocation percentage. In determining this percentage, a factor shall be excluded from the computation only when the factor does not exist anywhere insofar as the taxpayer’s business operation is concerned and, in such case, the total of the percentages shall be divided by the number of factors actually used. [MCL 141.624 (emphasis added).]

It is clear from this provision that the Legislature is aware of a method to alter a tax formula’s denominator in response to missing factors in the formula’s numerator. Had the Legislature wished to do so, it was free to add similar language to MCL 208.1433. It did not.

Second, the language of the statute indicates that the Legislature wished to provide a tax benefit to businesses that both (1) own property in a renaissance zone, and (2) invest payroll in the renaissance zone. It is sensible that if the taxpayer only does half these things, it would receive only half a credit.

Third, the Department’s interpretation seems more consistent with rewarding investment in renaissance zones than Andersons’ interpretation. We will use a few mathematical examples to illustrate how Ander-sons’ proposed interpretation results in windfalls to companies who keep their entire payrolls out of this state versus companies who invest payroll in a renaissance zone. We reiterate that the following formula represents the statute, where X is the renaissance zone business activity factor:

Suppose that company A’s average value of renaissance zone property is $50,000 and its average value of Michigan property is $100,000. If it has no Michigan payroll, then under Andersons’ suggested interpretation, it would have a business activity factor of 0.5:

Using the Department’s interpretation, it would have a business activity factor of 0.25:

Suppose company B has the same average value of renaissance zone property of $50,000 and average value of Michigan property of $100,000, but company B spends $10,000 in payroll performed in a renaissance zone and $100,000 in Michigan. It would have a business activity factor of 0.3 under both parties’ interpretations:

Under the Department’s interpretation, company B would have a slightly more favorable business activity factor than company A. This result is reasonable because company B invested payroll in the renaissance zone and company A did not. Applying Andersons’ proposed interpretation is less reasonable because company A would have a business activity factor higher than company B when company B provided a greater financial contribution to the renaissance zone. It does not make sense to effectively punish company B for spending $10,000 on payroll in this state and $100,000 in the renaissance zone, nor does it make sense to effectively reward company A for not spending any money on payroll in Michigan or in the renaissance zone.

The problem with Andersons’ interpretation is more apparent in the next example. Suppose that company C has the same average value of renaissance zone property of $50,000 and average value of Michigan property of $100,000, but it spends $0 on payroll performed in a renaissance zone and $100,000 in Michigan. Under the Department’s proposed interpretation, it would have a business activity factor of 0.25:

Using Andersons’ proposed formula, company A would have a business activity factor of 0.5, but company C would have a business activity factor of 0.25, when the only difference between the two is that company C spent an additional $100,000 on Michigan payroll. Again, it is not reasonable that company C would receive a less beneficial result for spending more money in this state than company A.

For these reasons, we conclude that the Tribunal erred by granting summary disposition to Andersons. Rather, it should have granted summary disposition to the Department because the Department’s interpretation of MCL 208.1433(9)(f) was not contrary to the statute and the Tribunal lacked cogent reasons to overturn it.

We reverse and remand. We do not retain jurisdiction.

TALBOT, C.J., and Owens, J., concurred with O’Connell, J. 
      
       The act has been repealed with regard to most businesses, but some businesses have been permitted to continue filing returns using the act to claim refundable tax credits. 2011 PA 39. The act will not be fully repealed until the last of those credits are claimed. 2011 PA 39, enacting § 1.
     
      
       Part of the renaissance zone tax credit.
     
      
       See Sal Khan, The Problem with Dividing Zero by Zero <https:// www.khanacademy.org/math/algebra/introduction-to-alegbra/division-by zero/v/why-zero-divided-by-zero-is-undefined-indeterminate> (accessed August 16, 2016).
     
      
       Now repealed. 2006 PA 325.
     