City of Peoria v. BRINK'S HOME SECURITY, INC.

247 P.3d 1002, 226 Ariz. 332, 604 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 15, 2011 Ariz. LEXIS 14
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 2011
DocketCV-10-0218-PR
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 247 P.3d 1002 (City of Peoria v. BRINK'S HOME SECURITY, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Peoria v. BRINK'S HOME SECURITY, INC., 247 P.3d 1002, 226 Ariz. 332, 604 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 15, 2011 Ariz. LEXIS 14 (Ark. 2011).

Opinion

*333 OPINION

BALES, Justice.

¶ 1 This ease concerns municipal taxation of home-security services when the provider’s monitoring facility is out of state and the services include telecommunications. Municipalities are prohibited from taxing interstate telecommunications services. Ariz.Rev.Stat. (“A.R.S.”) § 42-6004(A)(2) (2006). The court of appeals held that the telecommunications involved are intrastate because they are part of a transmission loop that begins and ends in Arizona. We reject this theory and conclude that separate interstate telecommunications cannot be aggregated and characterized as intrastate. We remand this ease for the court of appeals to consider whether the assessed taxes are permissible because they are imposed on the monitoring services and not on telecommunications services.

I.

¶ 2 Brink’s Home Security (“BHS”) provides home-security systems and monitoring services to customers throughout Arizona. If an alarm is triggered at an Arizona home and not disarmed, information from the alarm system is transmitted electronically to BHS’s monitoring station in Texas. Personnel there receive the automated signal and attempt to contact the customer — typically by telephone. When appropriate, the monitoring personnel in Texas call emergency responders in Arizona.

¶ 3 The Cities of Peoria and Phoenix assessed transaction privilege taxes against BHS pursuant to Peoria City Code § 12-470(a)(2)(D) and Phoenix City Code § 14-470(a)(2)(D). Each code provides for taxation of gross income from providing “telecommunication services,” which include “[e]harges for monitoring services relating to a security or burglar alarm system located within the City where such system transmits or receives signals or data over a communications channel.” Peoria City Code § 12-470(a)(2)(D); Phoenix City Code § 14-470(a)(2)(D). BHS protested the assessments, arguing that it provides interstate telecommunications services immune from municipal taxation under A.R.S. § 42-6004(A)(2). The Tax Court granted summary judgment for the Cities, concluding that the monitoring services are primarily intrastate and therefore taxable.

¶ 4 In a split decision, the court of appeals affirmed. City of Peoria v. Brink’s Home Sec., Inc., 224 Ariz. 278, 280 ¶ 1, 229 P.3d 1020, 1022 (App. 2010). Characterizing BHS’s monitoring process as a “transmission loop” that begins and ends in Arizona, the majority opinion concluded that the services are intrastate and therefore taxable. Id. at 283 ¶¶ 19-21, 229 P.3d at 1025. The dissenting opinion viewed the monitoring process as involving separate interstate communications that are not subject to municipal taxation. Id. at 286 ¶ 35, 229 P.3d at 1028 (Johnsen, J., dissenting).

¶ 5 We granted review to consider unresolved issues of statewide importance concerning municipal taxation of home-security monitoring services. The Court has jurisdiction under Article 6, Section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution and A.R.S. § 12-120.24 (2003).

II.

¶ 6 “[I]t is especially important in tax cases to begin with the words of the operative statute.” Arizona State Tax Comm’n v. Staggs Realty Corp., 85 Ariz. 294, 297, 337 P.2d 281, 283 (1959). We read tax provisions “to gain their fair meaning, but not to gather new objects of taxation by strained construction or implication.” Id.

¶ 7 No city, town or special taxing district may tax “[ijnterstate telecommunications services, which include that portion of telecommunications services, such as subscriber line service, allocable by federal law to interstate telecommunications service.” AR.S. § 42-6004(A)(2). Neither § 42-6004(A)(2) nor any other Arizona statute defines “interstate telecommunication services.”

¶ 8 Another Arizona tax provision defines “intrastate telecommunications services” as “transmitting signs, signals, writings, images, sounds, messages, data or other information of any nature by wire, radio waves, light waves or other electromagnetic means if the information transmitted originates and ter *334 minates in this state.” A.R.S. § 42-5064(E)(4) (emphasis added). Although this definition appears in the statutes for state transaction privilege taxes, rather than municipal, we agree with the court of appeals that telecommunications services that are “intrastate” under § 42-5064(E)(4) are not “interstate” for purposes of § 42-6004(A)(2). See People’s Choice TV Corp. v. City of Tucson, 202 Ariz. 401, 403-04 ¶ 8, 46 P.3d 412, 414-15 (2002) (noting the converse relationship between “intrastate” and “interstate”).

¶ 9 Arizona eases provide little guidance for distinguishing between interstate and intrastate telecommunications services. This Court’s only decision interpreting § 42-6004(A)(2) is People’s Choice, which considered whether the City of Tucson could impose transaction privilege taxes on a television service provider. Upholding the tax, the court of appeals construed § 42-6004(A)(2) to prohibit “only the taxation of interstate ‘transmissions’ of information, not the taxation of the ‘services ancillary to the interstate transmission of signals.’ ” Id. at 403 ¶ 6, 46 P.3d at 414. We disagreed, holding that “the phrase ‘interstate telecommunications services’ requires a more expansive meaning” and § 42-6004(A)(2) prohibits the taxation of both interstate transmissions and services ancillary to such transmissions. Id. at 403-04 ¶ 8, 46 P.3d at 414-15.

¶ 10 Whether a certain telecommunication is intrastate or interstate was not before us in People’s Choice. The television service provider there carried both local and out-of-state programs, and A.R.S. § 42-5064(A) “specifically exempts cable and microwave television systems from intrastate taxation because such systems ... primarily provide interstate programming.” Id. at 404 ¶ 10, 46 P.3d at 415. In this case, in contrast, no statutory scheme explicitly exempts home-security monitoring transmissions from intrastate taxation. We accordingly reject the conclusion below that People’s Choice suggests the phrase “intrastate telecommunications services” be given an “expansive meaning.” Brink’s Home Sec., 224 Ariz. at 283 ¶ 19, 229 P.3d at 1025.

¶ 11 The triggering of the home-alarm systems at issue in this case may result in three separate transmissions. First, the home-security system in Arizona sends a transmission to the Texas monitoring facility.

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Bluebook (online)
247 P.3d 1002, 226 Ariz. 332, 604 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 15, 2011 Ariz. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-peoria-v-brinks-home-security-inc-ariz-2011.