Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co. v. Joseph

125 N.E.2d 857, 308 N.Y. 333, 1955 N.Y. LEXIS 1002
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 125 N.E.2d 857 (Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co. v. Joseph) 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
Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co. v. Joseph, 125 N.E.2d 857, 308 N.Y. 333, 1955 N.Y. LEXIS 1002 (N.Y. 1955).

Opinion

Conway, Ch. J.

Petitioner, the Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Company, is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, and has its principal place of business in Jersey City, New Jersey. Its business consists of the manufacture, packing and sale of soaps and toilet articles such as toothpaste, shaving cream and the like. These articles are sold in bulk principally to wholesalers, jobbers, retail grocers and retail druggists. The sales involved on this appeal are those made by the petitioner to retail grocers and druggists in the city of New York.

The issue is whether petitioner may be held liable as a retail vendor or as a retail purchaser for the New York City Sales Tax upon the corrugated cardboard cartons in which it ships its products to those grocers and druggists. No question of ■the use tax is involved.

[337]*337It is undisputed that when the petitioner sells its products in the cartons there is a sale not only of the contents of the carton, but of the carton itself. Testimony was given by a number of petitioner’s customers that, after they had ripped open the cartons and had removed the products, they considered the cartons as waste or rubbish. One of petitioner’s employees testified that if the cartons were opened by its customers in one particular manner, and with a special tool or implement, then the cartons so opened would be reusable as cartons, but there was no testimony that any of petitioner’s customers opened cartons in that manner. Some of petitioner’s customers testified that they occasionally used the cartons, after removing the contents, for the delivery of their own wares; but none of petitioner’s customers who testified indicated that he purchased the cartons for the purpose of resale. All but two of them further indicated that they knew of no other similar retailers who ever resold such used cartons. The conclusion is inescapable that there was no general custom and practice among petitioner’s customers of reselling the empty cartons. That some of the cartons may have been resold in isolated instances does not undermine that conclusion, nor establish a contrary custom. That being so, the further logical conclusion is that the carton first used by the petitioner for the purpose of shipping its goods is then received by the retailer and, after a brief use as a temporary storage container, is emptied of its contents and disposed of as waste or rubbish.

The applicable statutes levied a tax ‘ ‘ upon the amount of the receipts from every sale of tangible personal property sold at retail * * * ” (Administrative Code of City of New York, § N41-2.0, subd. a, par. 1). In the definitions section of this statute, a sale at retail is defined as “ a sale to any person for any purpose other than for resale in the form of tangible personal property * * * ” (Administrative Code, § N41-1.0, subd. 7).

The comptroller determined that the petitioner should have paid sales taxes to the City of New York upon the sales of cartons made by it to its customers. That involved a determination that the sales made by petitioner were retail sales, or sales “ for any purpose other than for resale ”, as defined by the statutes.

The Appellate Division annulled the comptroller’s determina[338]*338tian, holding that the petitioner itself is the consumer of the cartons. That conclusion, however, is not in accord with the decided cases of this court.

Upon review in such cases as this, the function of the court is limited to ascertaining whether or not there is a rational and legal basis for the decision of the administrative body (Matter of Mounting & Finishing Co. v. McGoldrick, 294 N. Y. 104, 108).

In Matter of American Molasses Co. v. McGoldrick (281 N. Y. 269) and Sterling Bag Co. v. City of New York (281 N. Y. 269), the issues were whether or not a retail sale took place when a manufacturer of metal and wooden barrels and casks, as well as when a manufacturer of large burlap and cotton sacks and bags, sold those containers to another company which packed its wares into them and resold the whole to its customers. We held that the packers of the wares were not retail purchasers from the manufacturers of the containers. The reasoning in that case was that “ the container and contents are not inseparably connected. * * ■ * The container remains ‘ tangible personal property ’ after it has been filled by the refiner or packer and resold as an incident of the sale of the contents; it may be resold as tangible personal property by the purchaser of the contents who has no use for an empty container after the contents have been removed ” (281 N. Y. 273-274; emphasis supplied. gee, also, Matter of Wood Packing Box Co. v. McGoldrick, 286 N. Y. 665),

The same may be said of the cartons in the present case. They are not an integral part of and inseparable from their contents; but the cartons are used “ only to facilitate the sale of the product packed in the container and not for the purpose of a resale of the container as an article of commerce ” (281 N. Y. 269, 273; emphasis supplied). The testimony of petitioner’s customers amply establishes that they did not customarily engage in the resale of petitioner’s containers “as an article of commerce There was no basis, therefore, for any conclusion that petitioner sold the cartons for the sole purpose of resale — which is the statutory test for a sale not at retail.

The Appellate Division decided that the present case was not controlled by our decisions in the American Molasses Company, the Sterling Bag Company, and the Wood Packing Box Company [339]*339cases (supra). The grounds advanced by the majority in the Appellate Division for distinguishing the present case from those cases, viz., the durable nature of the containers in those cases, the price differential depending upon which container was used, and the customer’s ability to choose a container of a specific type — all these are differences, but they are not substantial grounds of distinction. The metal or wooden barrels or boxes and the burlap or cotton bags or sacks may differ in their relative degree of durability; but all of these as well as the cartons used by the petitioner herein are not inseparable from their contents, and hence all may be said with equal accuracy to be sold as containers by the packer, and to be capable of resale by the retailer as articles of commerce apart from their contents. Since there is no basis for deciding that the present case differs substantially from those other cases, they are controlling; and in the present case they dictate a decision that petitioner is not a retail vendee although it may be liable as a vendor at retail unless its customers buy the cartons for the sole purpose of reselling them. Petitioner has been unable to show that.

At the time of its sales to its retail customers, and in order to avoid liability for sales taxes, petitioner obtained from each of them a signed resale certificate which stated that all the tangible personal property purchased by the customer was purchased for resale in the form of tangible personal property. These certificates, however, do not specify whether they cover only the contents of the cartons, or whether they cover both the contents of the carton and the carton itself. Indeed, in its brief on this appeal, the petitioner stated that “ *

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.E.2d 857, 308 N.Y. 333, 1955 N.Y. LEXIS 1002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colgate-palmolive-peet-co-v-joseph-ny-1955.