Automagic Vendors, Inc. v. Morris

386 S.W.2d 897, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 877
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 23, 1965
Docket50121-50123
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 386 S.W.2d 897 (Automagic Vendors, Inc. v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Automagic Vendors, Inc. v. Morris, 386 S.W.2d 897, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 877 (Mo. 1965).

Opinion

HYDE, Presiding Judge.

These cases, consolidated for hearing in the Circuit Court, are petitions for judicial review of the administrative decisions of the Director of Revenue of the State of Missouri (see Chap. 536 and Rule 100) denying refunds of certain payments of sales taxes, paid under protest in accordance with the Sales and Use Regulations (see Sec. 144.270, subd. 1) involving construction of the revenue laws of this state. See Sec. 3, Art. V, Const., V.A.M.S. (Unless otherwise stated statutory citations are to RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S.) The court found petitioners entitled to the refunds claimed and entered judgment therefor, adjudging costs against the Director, who has appealed from this judgment.

The question for decision is the effect of the 1961 amendment to the sales tax law, establishing a bracket system for collection of sales taxes, on the liability of sellers to remit taxes to the Director.

*898 Sec. 144.020 provided: “[T]here shall be and is hereby levied and imposed and shall he collected and paid: (1) Upon every retail sale in this state of tangible personal property a tax equivalent to two per cent of the purchase price paid or charged.”

Sec. 144.060 provided: “It shall be the duty of every person making any purchase or receiving any service upon which a tax is imposed by sections 144.010 to 144.510 to pay the amount of such tax to the person making such sale.”

Sec. 144.080 provided: “Every person receiving any payment or consideration upon the sale of property * * * shall, on or before the fifteenth day of the month following each calendar quarterly period of three months, make a return to the director of revenue of all taxes collected for the preceding quarter, or required to be collected for the preceding quarter, and shall remit the taxes so collected or required to be collected to the director of revenue.”

Sec. 144.100 provided: “2. The returns shall show the amount of gross receipts from sales, services and taxable transactions by the person and the amount due thereon during and for the period covered by the return and with the return the person shall remit to the director of revenue the amount of the tax due, including any and all moneys collected from a purchaser as sales tax.”

These sections were not changed in 1961 but the following new section 144.285 was adopted:

“Brackets for collection of tax.- — Notwithstanding the rate of taxes imposed by this chapter, and in order to avoid fractions of pennies, the following brackets shall be applicable to all two per cent taxable transactions :

“(1) On sales of less than twenty-five cents no tax shall be added;
“(2) On sales in amounts from twenty-five cents up to and including seventy-four cents, one cent shall be added for taxes;
“(3) On sales in amounts from seventy-five cents to one dollar, two cents shall be added for taxes; and
“(4) On sales in amounts of more than one dollar, two per cent shall be charged upon each dollar of price, plus the above bracket charges upon any fractional part of a dollar in excess of even dollars.
“No vendor or seller shall knowingly charge or receive from a purchaser as a sales tax any sum in excess of the sums prescribed in subdivisions one to four inclusive of Section 144.285.” Laws 1961, p. 634.

Before the enactment of this bracket system tokens were provided “to enable purchasers and recipients of taxable sales, services and transactions to pay the tax when the same amounts to a fractional part of one cent.” Sec. 144.270, subd. 2; see also Sec. 144.280. Authorization for tokens was repealed by the 1961 act and liquidation of tokens was required. Laws 1961, p. 634.

Petitioners sell merchandise through coin-operated vending machines making a large number of separate sales at less than twenty-five cents; two of them (Coffee Time and Spot Sales) sell no merchandise for more than seventy-four cents, so make sales only in the first two brackets specified in 1961 Sec. 144.285. The trial court agreed with petitioners’ contentions, making the following decisive findings and conclusions:

“3. That the Sales Tax Law, as amended, is in the nature of a transaction tax; i. e., computation of the tax is dependent upon the amount of sale or sales comprising one transaction; the Sales Tax Law, as amended, does not impose a tax on the total or gross sales or receipts of the seller.
“4. That the Sales Tax Law, as amended, imposes the duty to pay the tax on the purchaser; the seller’s liability is only to pay the tax collected or required to be collected.
“5. That in accordance with Section 144.285, R.S.Mo.Cum.Supp.1961, re- *899 lators are not required to collect any sales tax, nor is any sales tax due, on transactions of less than twenty-five cents (25^), and therefore, relators are not required to remit to the Director of Revenue or the Department of Revenue any sales tax on said transactions.”

The State says: “There is general agreement between the parties upon the proposition that our sales tax is imposed upon the ‘purchaser’ while the ‘seller’ has the duty of collecting it. The real dispute in this lawsuit arises over petitioners’ insistence that a seller is only responsible for that amount of sales tax he is able to collect; ” but the State says “they have chosen a mode of doing business which virtually precludes them from in fact collecting any tax on their retail sales.” Nevertheless, as noted, Sec. 144.080 requires sellers to remit taxes “collected or required to be collected.” Whether or not the seller actually collects the tax from the buyer has no effect on the seller’s liability to remit to the Director. The decisive question is: What taxes are required to be collected by the seller? Whatever taxes the seller is required to collect, the seller is required to remit to the Director. Prior to the adoption of Sec. 144.285, the amount the seller was required to collect was “two per cent of the purchase price.” Sec. 144.020. As the State says, even under the mill token system, this could not be collected exactly, for example in sales under five cents, but the law of averages made it substantially accurate for the seller to remit two per cent of his gross sales.

The State argues that this principle should still be applied to sales at all amounts, saying that Sec. 144.020 is still the Section that imposes the tax and that remains “two per cent of the purchase price.” However, 1961 Sec. 144.285 says “[n\ot•mithstanding the rate of taxes imposed by this chapter * * * the following brackets shall be applicable to all two per cent taxable transactions.” It then says: “On sales of less than twenty-five cents no tax shall be added.” Is not this a change in tax imposed ? and does it not exempt sales of less than twenty-five cents from being taxable transactions ? It is our view that Sec. 144.-020 must be held to have been amended by the provisions of Sec. 144.285 to the extent that no tax is imposed on sales for less than twenty-five cents. We note that both Sec. 144.020 and Sec. 144.285 were materially amended in 1963 (Laws 1963, p. 196-197; 1963 Supp., Secs.

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Bluebook (online)
386 S.W.2d 897, 1965 Mo. LEXIS 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/automagic-vendors-inc-v-morris-mo-1965.