Brent Leasing Co., Inc. v. [Maine] State Tax Assessor

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJune 5, 2000
DocketKENap-97-061
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brent Leasing Co., Inc. v. [Maine] State Tax Assessor (Brent Leasing Co., Inc. v. [Maine] State Tax Assessor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brent Leasing Co., Inc. v. [Maine] State Tax Assessor, (Me. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT KENNEBEC, ss. Civil Action

Docket No. AP-97-061 DHM-cew- &/s Jagco

BRENT LEASING COMPANY, INC.,,

Petitioner Vv. a ORDER AND DECISION STATE TAX ASSESSOR,

Respondent

This matter is before the Court on Petitioner’s Motion for Summary Judgment. Petitioner has filed a Petition for Review pursuant to 36 M.R.S.A. § 151, 5 M.R.S.A. § 11001 and Rule 80C MLR. Civ. P. It seeks court review of an assessment of sales and use tax, interest and penalty as of May, 1994 in respect of a 92 foot watercraft (Vessel) first brought into Maine in June of 1994. The Petitioner has timely requested reconsideration of the assessment, the Assessor issued its decision affirming assessment in its entirety on the reconsideration question. Petitioner seeks exemptions from the tax, relief from interest, abatement of penalty and declaration of error on the party of the Respondent.

For purposes of this Court’s consideration the facts are undisputed. The Petitioner is a Delaware corporation. It is a successor to Bar Harbor Whalewatch Company, a Maine corporation. That merger of corporations took place in 1996. As stated in Petitioner’s motion, in May of 1994 the Petitioner purchased the Friendship IV, a 92 foot vessel from Gladding-Hern Shipbuilding of Somerset, Massachusetts,

for the purchase price of $1,300,000. The Friendship IV is a “watercraft” within the

meaning of 36 M.R.S.A. § 1752-24. The Petitioner has paid no sales nor use tax to any state with respect to its purchase of the Friendship IV. Upon its purchase of the Friendship IV, the Petitioner registered the craft with the United States Coast Guard, identifying Bar Harbor, Maine as the vessel’s home port. The Friendship IV then sailed to Bar Harbor in June, 1994, within 30 days of its purchase. Immediately upon the arrival of the Friendship IV in Bar Harborgin June, 1994, Respondent began using the vessel for whalewatching and other nature cruises. The Friendship IV was used to carry passengers on the whalewatching and other nature cruises offered by Petitioner. Passengers paid a fee. From June, 1994 to October, 1995, when the vessel permanently left Maine, the Friendship IV was used for such cruises every day it was in Maine except those precluded by inclement weather. On each of the cruises the Friendship I1V would depart from and return to Bar Harbor without any intermediate stops along the way. For the vast majority of such cruises, if not all of them, the Friendship IV entered international waters, meaning those waters more than three miles from the United States’ coastline.

On February 28, 1996, the State Tax Assessor (the “Assessor”’) issued an assessment against Petitioner for the period of May 1, 1994 through May 31, 1994 for use taxes in the amount of $89,000, interest in the amount of $18,164 and penalties in the amount of $18,690. Petitioner filed a timely Petition for Reconsideration of the assessment pursuant to 36 M.R.S.A. § 151 on March 22, 1996. An informal

conference was held telephonically resulting in a decision by the Respondent on

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July 25, 1997, upholding the assessment in its entirety and adding additional interest to bring the total amount due at that time to $143,103.56.

A Motion for Summary Judgment may be granted if there is no genuine issue of material fact and a party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Chadwick-

BaRoss, Inc. v. T. Buck Construction Co., Inc., 627 A.2d 532 (Me. 1993). The facts are

not in issue. Is a party entitled to a judgment as a matter of law on these facts?

The issue is the application of 36 M.R.S.A. § 1760(41). That statute provides

that:

“No tax on sales, storage or use shall be collected upon or in connection with:

41. Certain instrumentalities of interstate or foreign commerce. The sale of a vehicle, railroad rolling stock, aircraft or watercraft, which is placed in use by the purchaser as an instrumentality of interstate or foreign commerce within 30 days after that sale and which is used by the purchaser not less than 80% of the time for the next 2 years as an instrumentality of interstate or foreign commerce. ... For purposes of this subsection, property is “placed in use as an instrumentality of interstate or foreign commerce” by its carrying of, or providing the motive power for the carrying of, a bona fide payload in interstate or foreign commerce, or by being dispatched to a specific location at which it will be loaded upon arrival with, or will be used as motive power for the carrying of, a payload in interstate or foreign commerce.”

The parties agree the tax exemption provisions are strictly construed against taxpayers. However, an exemption provision is entitled to a “reasonable

interpretation in accordance with its purpose.” Harold MacQuinn, Inc. v. Halperin,

415 A.2d 818 (Me. 1980). The term “interstate and foreign commerce,” being

undefined in the statute, must be given its plain, ordinary meaning. Reagan v.

Racal Mottgade, Inc., 715 A.2d 925 (Me. 1998). Plaintiff relies upon a series of Federal and state cases where, under similar circumstances, a bus, tugboat or riverboat ferry leaving from and returning to a specific point in a state, but traveling during the trip through the land or waters of another state, constitute interstate or foreign

commerce. Central Greyhound Lines, Inc. v. Mealey, 334 U.S. 653 (1998); Cornell

Steamboat Company v. United States, 321 U,S. 634 (1949); City of St. Louis v.

Streckfus, 505 S.W. 2d (70 Mo., 1974). The Respondent has interpreted its statute as found in its regulation published by the Maine Revenue Services, formerly the

Bureau of Taxation, and exhibited in Sales/Excise Division Instructional Bulletin

No. 34. The Department defines the term “use as an instrumentality of interstate or foreign commerce” that vehicles are considered to be used intrastate or local operations when they are carrying cargo that both originates and terminates within

the State of Maine. In addition, the State cites La Crosse Queen, Inc. v. Wisconsin

Dept. of Revenue, 208 Wis. 2nd 439, 561 N.W. 2nd 686 (1997).

This Court is unpersuaded that a proper standard of consideration of “interstate or foreign commerce” should be governed by interpretation of Federal U.S. Constitution law under the commerce clause or that transportation which simply enters another state or international waters constitute interstate commerce.

The 1980 edition of Oxford American Dictionary defines “commerce” as “all forms

of trade and the services that assist trading,....” The term “trade” is defined as “an exchange of goods for money or other goods”. The term “foreign” is “(1) of or in or

from another country, not of one’s own country”, (2) “dealing with or involving

~~

at

other countries . The term “interstate” is described as “existing or carried on

between states.” Black’s Law Dictionary, 7th ed., dated 1999 defines “commerce” as

“the exchange of goods and services, esp. on a large scale involving transportation between cities, states, and nations.” “Interstate commerce” is defined as “trade and other business activities between those located in different states; esp., traffic in goods and travel of people between states.” Going further, “intrastate commerce” is

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defined as “commerce that begins and ends entirely within the borders of a single state.”

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