C. H. Heist Corp. v. State Tax Commission

407 N.E.2d 416, 50 N.Y.2d 438, 429 N.Y.S.2d 570, 1980 N.Y. LEXIS 2388
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 407 N.E.2d 416 (C. H. Heist Corp. v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. H. Heist Corp. v. State Tax Commission, 407 N.E.2d 416, 50 N.Y.2d 438, 429 N.Y.S.2d 570, 1980 N.Y. LEXIS 2388 (N.Y. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Jones, J.

Where heavy-duty, industrial cleaning machines, assembled by the taxpayer in New York State (from component parts purchased outside the State with respect to which use taxes are payable) for ultimate shipment out of the State are used during the in-State testing period in the performance of the taxpayer’s regular customer service contracts, the taxpayer is not entitled to refund or credit of such use taxes on the theory that the testing is an integral part of the fabrication of the machines. Nor is the taxpayer entitled in these circumstances to elect to have the use taxes computed on the basis of fair rental value rather than purchase price. Finally, *442 the industrial cleaning services rendered within the State by this taxpayer do not fall within the exclusion from taxation of janitorial cleaning services for purposes of the sales tax.

The taxpayer is engaged in the specialized business of cleaning industrial machinery, primarily in the plastics and petroleum industries, through the use of truck-mounted, high-pressure water units. It has operating offices throughout continental United States and in Puerto Rico and Canada, but all the design, assembly and fabrication of its cleaning units is done at a single location in Cheektowaga, New York. Parts for its machines are purchased throughout the United States and shipped to Cheektowaga for assembly. The finished machines are then used on jobs for industrial customers in New York State for field testing under actual operating conditions. The testing periods for the 16 cleaning units involved in this appeal ranged from 8.5 to 132 hours. Satisfactory functional performance having been assured, the machines are then shipped to various locations outside New York State for use by the taxpayer in providing customer service.

Following audit the Sales Tax Bureau issued a notice of determination and demand for the payment of sales and use taxes for the period September 1, 1969 to August 31, 1972 in the amount of $97,589.07, including interest and penalties. Additional tax liability was asserted in the amount of $65,533.78, of which $38,038.93 represented asserted sales tax deficiency and $27,514.83 was for use tax deficiency. The latter amount included $1,871.10 for taxable out-of-State purchases for repairs of cleaning units located in the Buffalo area (to which tax liability the taxpayer consented) and $25,643.73 for assertedly taxable out-of-State purchases of component parts for cleaning units assembled in New York, field tested and then shipped out of the State for use elsewhere. The taxpayer requested a hearing, claiming that it was not liable for the sales taxes and was entitled to an offsetting refund or credit with respect to the use taxes. Following the hearing the State Tax Commission issued a determination upholding the prior notice of determination. The taxpayer then instituted the present proceeding to review the commission’s determination. The Appellate Division confirmed the imposition of the sales taxes and the denial of refund or credit with respect to the use taxes, but modified to permit the taxpayer to elect to have the use taxes computed on fair rental value rather than purchase price under section 1111 (subd [b], par [2]) of the Tax *443 Law. The case is now before us on cross appeals by leave granted by our court. In our turn we undo the modification at the Appellate Division and confirm the determination of the commission without change.

On the taxpayer’s appeal two issues are tendered. The first relates to its liability for use taxes and particularly to the commission’s determination that the taxpayer is not entitled, under section 1119 (subd [a], par [4]) of the Tax Law, to refunds or credits with respect to use taxes paid on the purchase of component parts used in the assembly of its cleaning machines which are shipped out of the State after field testing. That clause provides that refunds or credits shall be allowed "(4) on the sale or use within this state of tangible personal property, not purchased for resale, if the use of such property in this state is restricted to fabricating such property (including incorporating it into or assembling it with other tangible personal property), processing, printing or imprinting such property and such property is then shipped to a point outside this state for use outside this state”. It appears that the taxpayer has recognized that use taxes were payable with respect to the out-of-State purchases of the component parts for these cleaning machines. It contends, however, that it is entitled to an economic offset by way of refund or credit under this clause. The critical question is whether the commission was warranted in concluding that the use to which the taxpayer put its finished cleaning machines during the period of testing before shipping them out of State was not part of "fabricating” the machines within the meaning of the statute. The testing was conducted, not at the taxpayer’s plant or in its laboratories but at the property of its customers, by use of the newly assembled units in the performance by the taxpayer of in-State customer service contracts, for which charges at regular rates were made to the customers. Assuming without deciding that in other situations testing without more could be considered an integral final state of fabrication, it cannot be said that there was not substantial evidence to sustain the determination of the commission that in this case the use to which the finished machines were put went beyond fabrication, thus taking; that use out of the operational scope of paragraph (4). The use here served dual purposes — providing the opportunity for field testing and at the same time satisfying performance obligations of the taxpayer under its customer service contracts. This latter use was of sufficient *444 independent substance to sustain the commission’s denial of refunds or credits.

The second issue on the taxpayer’s appeal relates to its liability for sales taxes and is based on its contention, which was rejected by the commission, that services performed by the taxpayer within the State of New York for Mobil and Du Pont corporations pursuant to long-term contracts were ex-cludable from the sales tax under the last clause of section 1105 (subd [c], par [5]) of the Tax Law. Under that paragraph a sales tax is imposed on the receipts from the sale of services in "Maintaining, servicing or repairing real property, property or land” but "excluding interior cleaning and maintenance services performed on a regular contractual basis for a term of not less than thirty days, other than window cleaning, rodent and pest control and trash removal from buildings.” The taxpayer asserts that its cleaning services come within this exclusionary clause. We have recently upheld the selective determination of the commission in the application of the exclusion of paragraph (5) to receipts for services for elevator repairs (Matter of National Elevator Ind. v New York State Tax Comm., 49 NY2d 538). In this instance the commission determined that this taxpayer’s services in cleaning industrial machinery, which were found to be of a "specialized, technical nature requiring custom fabricated equipment and skilled laborers”, did not come within the exclusion (interpreted by the commission essentially to refer to ordinary janitorial services). We cannot say that this determination was arbitrary or capricious. (See Memorandum 1 of Law Bureau, Information Letter No.

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Bluebook (online)
407 N.E.2d 416, 50 N.Y.2d 438, 429 N.Y.S.2d 570, 1980 N.Y. LEXIS 2388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-h-heist-corp-v-state-tax-commission-ny-1980.