Boeing Company v. Omdahl

169 N.W.2d 696, 1969 N.D. LEXIS 95
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1969
DocketCiv. 8516
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 169 N.W.2d 696 (Boeing Company v. Omdahl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boeing Company v. Omdahl, 169 N.W.2d 696, 1969 N.D. LEXIS 95 (N.D. 1969).

Opinion

PAULSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from an amended declaratory judgment entered in the District Court of Burleigh County, North Dakota, ■on October 10, 1966, Clifford Jansonius, J., presiding. The Boeing Company entered into contracts with the United States Government and, pursuant to said contracts, was engaged in installing, calibrating, and checking out various components of the missile launch sites, control centers, support buildings, and other facilities constituting the Minuteman missile bases at the Minot and Grand Forks Air Force bases. The contracts are designated as follows:

Letter Contract No. AF 04(647)-936
Definitive Contract No. AF 04(647)-936
Letter Contract No. AF 04(694)-362
Definitive Contract No. AF 04(694)-362
Facilities Contract No. AF 04(647)-683

Certain items of tangible personal property and services were utilized in North Dakota, pursuant to the above-listed contracts. In addition, there were other items of tangible personal property purchased outside North Dakota but utilized inside North Dakota, and, as a result of this purchasing procedure, the State claimed sales and use taxes on certain of the materials that were purchased both inside and outside North Dakota to complete these contracts.

The Boeing Company and the United States took issue with the State’s claim that sales and use taxes were owed on the above-mentioned transactions. Boeing and the United States sought a declaratory judgment in the district court determining that they were not liable for the sales and use taxes by virtue of the contractual relationship existing between The Boeing Company and the United States.

The State Tax Commissioner was named as a defendant, and also designated as defendants were Gaffaney’s Minot Stationery Company, Souris River Telephone Mutual Aid Cooperative, and Porter Bros. Steel and Iron, three of the retailers from whom goods and services were purchased. Prior to the commencement of the trial in the district court, certain stipulations of fact were executed by all parties concerned. *700 Some of the pertinent parts of the stipulations are as follows:

The State claims sales and use taxes are owing on the following:

1. Property and services procured by Boeing in North Dakota, pursuant to Letter or Definitized Contracts No. AF 04(647)-936 or No. AF 04(694)-362;
2. All property which was procured by Boeing outside North Dakota, pursuant to the contracts alluded to in paragraph 1; and
3. All property which was purchased at retail by Boeing under Facilities Contract No. AF 04 (647)-683, and as first used in North Dakota by Boeing.

It was further stipulated that Boeing was not liable for North Dakota sales and use taxes with respect to the following:

1. Property procured and produced by Boeing under Letter or Definitive Contracts No. AF 04(694)-107 or No. AF 04(694)-431, or under Negotiated Contract No. AF 04(694)-46;
2. Property acquired from the General Services Administration or under Federal Supply Schedules;
3. Property furnished to Boeing by the Government from its industrial reserves; and
4. Government-owned property used by the Government, Boeing, or others outside North Dakota prior to its utilization in North Dakota.

The district court awarded judgment to Boeing and the United States by determining that, under the laws of North Dakota, The Boeing Company was not liable for any sales or use taxes because it had in effect purchased the goods and services as an agent of the Federal Government, and thus these purchases were nontaxable.

The appeal was taken from the judgment of the lower court, and the State sets forth the following specifications of error:

“1. The District Court erred in ordering judgment against the Defendants declaring that:
‘No sales or use taxes are payable with respect to any purchase, procurement, use, storage, or consumption of tangible personal property or services by the Plaintiff, Boeing, heretofore or hereafter in the performance of said contracts for which it' is entitled to reimbursement from the Plaintiff, Government, or which is owned by and furnished to it by the Plaintiff, Government.’
“2. The District Court erred in ordering judgment against the Defendants declaring :
‘That Plaintiff, Boeing, is not and will not be liable to Defendants, Gaffaney’s Minot Stationery Company, a corporation, Souris River Telephone Mutual Aid Cooperative, a corporation, and Porter Bros. Steel and Iron, a partnership composed of Harold Porter and Zalmon Porter, partners, with respect to any procurement or purchase of tangible personal property or services in North Dakota by Boeing in the performance of said contracts for which it is entitled to reimbursement from the Government.’ ”

The basic contentions of the parties, to this lawsuit are:

The State contends that Boeing is liable for the North Dakota sales and use taxes on property and services procured inside or outside North Dakota in connection with the contracts involved, to which the United States allegedly is the principal party. More specifically, the contention of the State is that the sales tax (Ch. 57-39, North Dakota Century Code) applies to nearly all purchases made inside North Dakota, and that the use tax (Ch. 57-40, N.D.C.C.) applies to some purchases made inside North Dakota and to all purchases made outside North Dakota, of goods which were deliver *701 ed to and used at the base sites inside North Dakota. The State further contends that after the reeactment of the North Dakota Sales Tax Act failed on referendum and thereby expired as to all sales made after July 1, 1965, the use of property purchased in North Dakota was then subject to tax under the provisions of the North Dakota Use Tax Act.

Boeing contends, however, that neither the Sales Tax Act nor the Use Tax Act is applicable to the procurement or use of the property pursuant to the contracts involved. Boeing’s reasoning is that the procurement or use was on behalf of the United States; that Boeing was at all times acting as agent for the United States; and that title to all property purchased for completion of the contracts passed directly from the vendors to the United States. Thus it contends that the United States was in fact the purchaser. Boeing further contends that if the United States was the purchaser, the purchases then would be exempt from the sales tax under North Dakota law and would be immune from taxation under the Federal Constitution. Boeing further urges that the attempt by the State to extend the purview of the use tax to include in-State purchases made during the period from July 1, 1965, to April 1, 1967, is contrary to the purposes of the Use Tax Act and is without merit because the use tax was never intended to apply to in-State purchases.

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169 N.W.2d 696, 1969 N.D. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boeing-company-v-omdahl-nd-1969.