Bud Crossman Plumbing & Heating v. Commissioner of Taxes

455 A.2d 799, 142 Vt. 179, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 637
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 2, 1982
DocketNo. 474-81
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 455 A.2d 799 (Bud Crossman Plumbing & Heating v. Commissioner of Taxes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bud Crossman Plumbing & Heating v. Commissioner of Taxes, 455 A.2d 799, 142 Vt. 179, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 637 (Vt. 1982).

Opinion

Peck, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, a Rutland plumbing and heating contractor, from an order of the Washington Superior Court upholding a sales tax deficiency assessed against him by the Vermont Department of Taxes. Plaintiff [184]*184applied to the Commissioner of Taxes for a hearing in accordance with 32 V.S.A. § 9777. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Commissioner determined the assessment was proper under 32 V.S.A., Chapter 233, whereupon the plaintiff appealed to the superior court, 32 V.S.A. § 9817, and subsequently to this Court. We affirm.

In the regular course of business, plaintiff bought materials and supplies from various sources to be incorporated into his jobs. The invoices received from the suppliers sometimes stated an amount for the sales tax, but often they did not.

The Department assessed the deficiency based upon the invoices for taxable purchases which did not state the three percent sales tax. Of particular concern here are sales made to the plaintiff by a New York supplier who formerly had a place of business in Vermont, but has since ceased its operation in this state. Interest was added to the assessment, but no penalty was imposed. The Department seeks to collect the deficiency assessment from the plaintiff rather than from the vendor-supplier.

Plaintiff raises five issues for review. They are: (1) whether the sales tax is imposed on the vendor or the purchaser; (2) whether the state may collect the sales tax from the purchaser; (3) whether the presumption of taxability under 32 V.S.A. § 9813 applies to the facts of this case; (4) whether plaintiff was wrongfully denied access to certain confidential records of the Department; (5) whether there is here the possibility of an unconstitutional double taxation. We consider these issues in the order listed.

I.

It is the position of the Department that the sales tax payable under Chapter 233 of Title 32 is imposed on the purchaser, not the vendor, and that the latter, under our statutory scheme, is merely the tax collector on behalf of the state. Rowe-Genereux, Inc. v. Department of Taxes, 138 Vt. 130, 133, 411 A.2d 1345, 1347 (1980).

Plaintiff’s argument to the contrary, that the vendor is the taxpayer, is based in part on decisions by courts of other jurisdictions whose statutes are different from those in Vermont. In addition, plaintiff construes the obligation of a vendor to [185]*185pay to the state the tax collected from a purchaser, coupled with a vendor’s personal liability in the event of his failure to do so, 32 V.S.A. § 9703, as an indication of legislative intent to impose the tax on the vendor.

Perhaps 32 V.S.A. § 9771, standing alone and considered out of context with the rest of Chapter 233, contains some ambiguity. It reads in part: “there shall be paid a tax of four percent upon the receipts from [various sources].” In its generic sense, “receipts” might well refer to money received by a vendor for the goods sold, thus giving some plausibility to the argument that since the purchase price is a receipt in this context, and since it is “received” by the vendor, the tax must be the responsibility of the recipient, that is, the vendor.

Individual statutes, however, are to be construed with others in pari materia as parts of one system. In re Preseault, 130 Vt. 343, 346, 292 A.2d 832, 834 (1972). When this is done in the instant case, the plaintiff’s argument collapses.

The word “receipt” as used in 32 V.S.A. Chapter 233 has a special meaning, differing in some respects from the broader or generic meanings to be found in the dictionaries. It is expressly defined by 32 V.S.A. § 9701(4) to mean “the sales price of any property and the charge for any amusement taxable under this chapter [233] valued in money . . . .” Therefore, the word “receipt” as it appears in § 9771, by definition, does not refer to the person who receives the purchase price, it refers to the purchase price itself. Accordingly, § 9771 provides no support for the plaintiff’s position, while several of the other statutory sections of Chapter 233, interpreted reasonably and consistently, are fatal to it.

It is too clear for any acceptable argument that there are two persons involved in the processing of the amount of the sales tax prior to its ultimate remission to the state: the person responsible to pay the amount of the tax, and the person obligated to collect the tax in the first instance from the payor. If this were not so (if, for example, the payor and the collector are one and the same entity) many of the relevant statutes would be virtually meaningless.

By definition, vendors are collectors of the sales tax. [186]*18632 V.S.A. § 9701(14). It is so patently unlikely the legislature meant by this definition that a vendor should “collect” a tax from himself that the suggestion does not merit serious consideration. As a simple logical progression, it must be contemplated that, as in the case of all the historically unpopular tax collectors, they will collect from someone: the taxpayer.

If the statutes are intended to make the vendor the taxpayer, and to do no more than permit the vendor to charge the amount of the tax over against the purchaser, it is not believable that 32 V.S.A. § 9705 would have been worded as it is. This section reads in part:

(a) Where any purchaser has failed to pay a tax . . . to the person required to collect the same . . . the tax shall be payable by the purchaser directly to the commissioner ....
(b) The commissioner may . . . provide by rule that purchasers shall file returns and pay directly to the commissioner any tax herein imposed, at such times as returns are required to be filed and paid by persons required to collect the tax. (Emphasis added.)

Any interpretation of this language consistent with the position of the plaintiff would be a strained reading at best. Section 9705 is, however, entirely consistent with the purchaser-payor, vendor-collector interpretation of Chapter 233 urged by the State, and seemingly adopted by this Court in Rowe-Genereux, Inc. v. Department of Taxes, supra.

The personal liability of the vendor for the amount of the tax under § 9703 does not change our conclusion. This section serves only to put teeth into the vendor’s responsibility to collect and pay over to the state the tax collected. Moreover, the further provisions of this section, giving the vendor a right of action against his purchaser as an aid in collecting the tax, lends still further support for our interpretation of the statutory roles of purchasers and vendors as taxpayers and collectors respectively.

In the light of the above analysis, we affirm our brief statement on the question in Rowe-Genereux, Inc. v. Department of Taxes, supra, and hold that in this state the sales tax [187]*187is imposed on the purchaser of goods and services, not on the vendor; the latter is merely the collector of the tax on behalf of the state.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
455 A.2d 799, 142 Vt. 179, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bud-crossman-plumbing-heating-v-commissioner-of-taxes-vt-1982.