Commonwealth v. A. J. Wood Research Co.

60 Pa. Commw. 225
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 29, 1981
DocketAppeals, Nos. 593 C.D. 1974 and 594 C.D. 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 Pa. Commw. 225 (Commonwealth v. A. J. Wood Research Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. A. J. Wood Research Co., 60 Pa. Commw. 225 (Pa. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinions

Opinion by

Judge Craig,

In these two consolidated appeals by the Commonwealth from a sales tax reassessment and use tax refund granted by the Board of Finance and Revenue (Board) in favor of taxpayer A. J. Wood Research Company of Pennsylvania, trading as Computer Letters, Inc., the central common issue is

Does the taxpayer’s use of computerized word processing equipment to produce a large number of letters and other materials, for distribution as direct mail advertising, fall within the printing exclusion of the Tax Reform Code of 1971 (Tax Code)?1

Tax Code §201(o) (4) (B) (i), as to use tax, excludes from tax the use of property in the “manufacture” of personal property, and Tax Code §201 (c) (2) defines manufacturing to include

(2) The publishing of books, newspapers, magazines and other periodicals and printing.

The Board held that the exclusion was applicable to the taxpayer’s business activity.

From the stipulations submitted by the parties, and from the testimony and exhibits submitted in the course of evidentiary hearings, we make the following:

Findings of Fact

1. With respect to the taxpayer’s business activity and product, and the method and equipment by which that product is produced, we hereby adopt in full the detailed initial stipulation submitted by the parties, consisting of thirteen paragraphs. (The key [228]*228factual elements are summarized in the discussion below.)

2. The activity of printing consists in fact of the reproduction of multiple copies of graphic elements as a business. Beyond such basics, the opinions of experts, as well as dictionary and encyclopedic sources, differ irreconcilably as to the technical, trade and popular definitions of printing.

3. To achieve the reproduction of multiple copies, as noted above, printing uses an image carrier of some nature, in which the graphic elements to be reproduced are preassembled. There is no agreement among authoritative sources as to the nature, or limits upon the nature, of such an image carrier; types of image carriers include, but are not limited to, those which function by physical or mechanical or electronic means.

4. Printing involves reproduction with substantially identical results, but some printing products, such as the personalized children’s books patented as products of “printing”, also involve the insertion of individualized references within a particular copy, with the remainder of the resulting material being identical with all other copies.

5. The reproduction resulting from the image, carrier may be produced a page at a time, as upon a flat press, or may involve impact transfer or other means of transfer which produces, at one instant, a lesser component, such as one color at a time, one line at a time or less than one line at a time.

Discussion

The Commonwealth urges that we resolve the issue primarily by contrasting the technology of the taxpayer’s process with the technology of those other processes traditionally accepted as printing, i.e., letterpress, offset printing and the like.

[229]*229From stipulations and expert testimony, the record informs ns that the taxpayer, as a business, produces and distributes large numbers of direct mail advertising materials by using what we can generically call word-processing equipment, the I.B.M. No. 1403 “Printer” in the taxpayer’s case. According to stipulation, a computer, in which the contents of the letters and also the mailing list of addresses are stored, transmits one line at a time to the “Printer”, which transfers the characters or marks to paper being fed in a continuous roll. The equipment accomplishes the transfer by using a “Train” of 240 characters or symbols revolving at a high rate of speed in a continuous chain, with a ribbon between the train and the paper, so that when the computer electronically actuates certain of 132 “Hammers” behind the paper, the predesignated characters appear on the paper. The taxpayer’s equipment produces two letters, character by character and line by line, at a time.

The crux of the Commonwealth’s technically-based position is that this process is not printing because it does not involve an image carrier, such as a plate or web as used in letterpress or offset printing, on which the information components {e.g., characters) have been physically pre-assembled in relation to each other before the equipment places the graphic result on paper, so that a mass of information components are applied to the paper medium simultaneously, e.g., a page at a time.

The Commonwealth further contends that, in contrast, processes like those of the taxpayer conceptually resemble high-speed typewriting, and that typewriting was held not to constitute printing in Sunday v. Hagenbuch, 18 C. 540, 5 D. 542 (1896), which dismissed a bill in equity because, being typewritten, it was not deemed to be printed as required by rule of court.

[230]*230However, the Board and we are saved from floundering in today’s rising seas of technology by the Commonwealth’s own definition of printing for use tax purposes, set forth in 61 Pa. Code §32.1, which reads

Printing—
The performance of those operations, engaged in as a business, which are necessarily and directly related to the production of printed matter by means of mechnical reproduction and transfer of letters, characters, figures, illustrations, or designs onto paper, cloth, metal, plastic or other material. (Emphasis supplied.)2

In the same regulatory section, “printed matter” is defined as including envelopes and advertising, among other items. A regulation has the same legal force and effect as a statute. Charles Riebe Construction Company v. Commonwealth, 17 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 508, 512, 333 A.2d 226, 228 (1975).

Inescapably, we must conclude that the taxpayer’s activities at issue fall within the regulation’s definition because taxpayer, as a business, is engaged in the production of reproduced matter by mechanical transfer of characters onto paper.

Although we lack authoritative history as to the legislative policy behind the printing exclusion, we note that the statutory exclusion begins with the key word “publishing”. Whether we read.the word “printing” at the end of that exclusion as standing by itself or subsumed, along with books and periodicals, as a further reference to matter which is published, we believe that the Department of Revenue made a reason[231]*231able administrative interpretation when it promulgated this regulation, defining “printing” to mean information reproduction conducted as a business. Thus we conclude that the reasonable and workable understanding of the exclusion is that it is intended to embrace businesses involving the publication or distribution of reproduced information in quantity.

Such an understanding appears to violate no conceivable purpose of the exclusion, whether the legislative intention might have been to stimulate commercial fields of enterprise or to support the distribution of information to a literate society, or both.

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