Benner Tea Company v. Iowa State Tax Commission

109 N.W.2d 39, 252 Iowa 843, 1961 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 560
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 2, 1961
Docket50260
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 109 N.W.2d 39 (Benner Tea Company v. Iowa State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benner Tea Company v. Iowa State Tax Commission, 109 N.W.2d 39, 252 Iowa 843, 1961 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 560 (iowa 1961).

Opinion

Garfield, C. J.

The question presented is whether, in computing the sales tax due the state, a retailer is entitled to deduct from its gross receipts, as discounts, the cost to it of S&H stamps given customers. We must disagree with the trial court’s affirmative answer to this question.

The case is here upon appeal by the state tax commission, granted by us under rule 332, Rules of Civil Procedure, from the trial court’s adjudication of a law point under rule 105, R. C. P. For convenience we disregard the fact members of the commission are joined as defendants. Plaintiff, Benner Tea Company, is a retailer with its principal place of business in Burlington.

Plaintiff made a written contract with Sperry & Hutchinson Company, a New Jersey corporation, to use what the contract calls its “Co-operative Cash Discount System” under which plaintiff purchases “Co-operative Discount Stamps” from “S&H” and offers them to its customers at the rate of one stamp for each ten cents paid for merchandise at the time of sale or on or before the 15th of the next month. S&H furnishes plaintiff stamp books in which its customers may paste the stamps and agrees to redeem them when so collected, at S&H redemption centers, by giving them cash or merchandise, apparently at its option, subject to conditions of the contract and as printed in its merchandise catalogues and stamp books. See Sperry & Hutchinson Co. v. Siegel, Cooper & Co., 309 Ill. 193, 140 N.E. 864, 867, and citations.

Although the contract' provides for redemption of the stamps in cash or merchandise,' plaintiff’s petition alleges merely that *845 the stamps are redeemable for valuable personal property. It seems we would be justified in accepting this allegation as true. In any event it is not claimed S&H ever redeems its stamps at the rate plaintiff pays for them and for what the contract designates “the services to be performed by” S&H. One such agreed service is to furnish plaintiff advertising signs in quantities sufficient for use inside and outside its store to make known to the public that plaintiff has adopted the S&H “Co-operative Cash Discount System.”

Section 422.43, Code, 1958, imposes “a tax of two percent upon the gross receipts from all sales of tangible personal property * * *."

Section 422.42, paragraph 6, thus defines gross receipts: “ ‘Gross receipts’ means the total amount of the sales of- retailers, valued in money, whether received in money or otherwise, provided, however, that discounts for any purpose allowed and taken on sales shall not be included, nor shall the sale price of property returned by customers when the full sale price thereof is refunded * * *. Provided further, that on all sales * * * under conditional sales contract * * * only such portion of the sale amount thereof shall be accounted, * * * as has actually been received in cash by the retailer * *

As before indicated, our problem is whether plaintiff may exclude from its gross receipts, as “discounts for any purpose allowed and taken on sales”, the amounts it pays S&H under the contract between them.

Our statutes do not define “discounts.” It is therefore necessary to look elsewhere for its meaning. Code section 4.1, paragraph 2, provides: “Words and phrases shall be construed according to the context and the approved usage of the language ; but technical words and phrases, and such others as may have acquired a peculiar and appropriate meaning in law, shall be construed according to such meaning.”

The definition of “discount” in Webster’s New International Dictionary, Second Edition, includes “an allowance upon an account * * * usually made in consideration of prompt or cash payment; something taken off or deducted.”

The most pertinent definition of the word in Webster’s New *846 Twentieth Century Dictionary is “a deduction from an original price or debt, allowed for paying promptly or in cash.”

The definitions of “discount” in 26A C. J. S., page 973, taken from 'court decisions, are much like those found in the dictionaries. Perhaps the most common definition is “something taken off or deducted, a reduction.”

Black’s Law Dictionary, Fourth Ed., defines the word as “an allowance or deduction made from a gross sum on any account whatever.”

“Discount is an abatement from the face of the account, and the remainder is the actual purchase price of the goods charged in the account. A purchaser entitled to discounts never owes the face of the bills. * * * His debt is the net of the bills after the agreed discount has been deducted * * Napier v. John V. Farwell Co., 60 Colo. 319, 324, 153 P. 694, 695.

Several definitions substantially the same as those above quoted are found in Carroll v. Drury, 170 Ill. 571, 49 N.E. 311, 312.

“* * * the word discount is * * * widely used in the sense of a rebate or allowance for punctual payment, * * *." Tatelbaum v. Chertkof, 212 Md. 475, 480, 129 A.2d 680, 683.

“ ‘The word discount * * * means simply to buy at a reduction * * *.’ ” Industrial Savings & Loan Co. of Charleston v. Schultz, 117 W. Va. 196, 197, 185 S.E. 3, 4.

Of course “discount” is frequently used in the sense of discounting commercial paper. The legislature could not have intended it to have this meaning in the sales tax law and it is not so contended. Whether the word is construed according to its context and approved usage or as having acquired a peculiar and appropriate meaning in law, the only sense in which the legislature could reasonably have used it here is, in accordance with the above definitions, as an allowance or reduction in price or the equivalent. No other meaning is suggested.

It is clear to us that the cost to plaintiff of S&H’s so-called discount system is not a discount on sales to plaintiff’s customers within the meaning of section 422.42, paragraph 6. It is a fair deduction from our general knowledge of trading *847 stamps and from the contract between them that at least a substantial part of what plaintiff pays S&H is for advertising and promotion of plaintiff’s business and profit to the contracting parties. Plaintiff’s customers receive no direet benefit from this part of plaintiff’s cost and no allowance or deduction for any of it is made in the price of what they buy. In fact what S&H really sells plaintiff is an advertising and promotion service, not trading stamps. The contract refers to the payments to S&H as having been made for “its services” and “use of its system.” Plaintiff is merely the licensee or agent of S&H in issuing the stamps to customers of the store and they must be returned to S&H before anything of value may be obtained for them.

(As long ago as 1905 it was said the general character of trading stamps is a matter of common knowledge. Ex parte Drexel, 147 Cal. 763, 82 P. 429, 431, 2 L. R. A., N. S., 588, 3 Ann. Cas. 878. Since then knowledge of them has become much more common.)

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109 N.W.2d 39, 252 Iowa 843, 1961 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benner-tea-company-v-iowa-state-tax-commission-iowa-1961.