Compusa Stores, LP v. Department of Taxation, State of Hawaii.

284 P.3d 209, 128 Haw. 116, 2011 WL 768318, 2011 Haw. LEXIS 32
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 2011
DocketSCWC-29597
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 284 P.3d 209 (Compusa Stores, LP v. Department of Taxation, State of Hawaii.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compusa Stores, LP v. Department of Taxation, State of Hawaii., 284 P.3d 209, 128 Haw. 116, 2011 WL 768318, 2011 Haw. LEXIS 32 (haw 2011).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

RECKTENWALD, C.J.

This case arises out of the assessment of the Hawaii use tax by the State of Hawaii, Department of Taxation (Department) against CompUSA Stores L.P. (CompUSA) on goods that were transported from the mainland to CompUSA’s retail stores in Hawaii during the period between July 1, 1999 and December 31, 2002. During that period, CompUSA caused consumer electronics goods from various mainland vendors to be shipped to Hawaii in order to restock Com-pUSA’s retail stores in this state.

Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 238-2 (1993), quoted infra, governs the applicability of the Hawaii use tax. CompUSA appealed the assessment of the tax in the Land and Tax Appeal Court (tax appeal court), 1 arguing that it was not subject to the use tax under In re Tax Appeal of Baker & Taylor, *? Inc. v. Kawafuchi 103 Hawai'i 359, 361-62, 372, 82 P.3d 804, 806-07, 817 (2004) (holding that the use tax did not apply to a mainland seller who sold and shipped books to the Hawaii State Library). CompUSA moved for summary judgment. The Department cross-moved, contending that Baker & Taylor was not applicable to the instant case and that the plain language of HRS § 238-2 compelled the assessment of the use tax against CompUSA. The tax appeal court granted the Department’s motion and denied Com-pUSA’s motion, holding that Baker & Taylor was distinguishable and that the use tax applied to CompUSA. The court entered a judgment against CompUSA in the amount of $1,705,337.71. CompUSA appealed.

The Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA) vacated the tax appeal court’s judgment and remanded for further proceedings, holding that Baker & Taylor was controlling and that, pursuant to that case, CompUSA was not liable for the tax. The Department seeks review of the ICA’s judgment.

As discussed further infra, we conclude that the ICA erred in its analysis of HRS § 238-2 and Baker & Taylor. Specifically, we hold that Baker & Taylor is distinguishable because the taxpayer in that case, a mainland seller, did not “use in this State” the imported goods, as required by HRS § 238-2. See HRS § 238-2; Baker & Taylor, 103 Hawaii at 361-62, 82 P.3d at 806-07. CompUSA, on the other hand, used the goods in Hawaii by “keeping of the property” in this state “for sale[.]” HRS § 238-1 (1993), quoted infra. CompUSA’s transportation of the goods to Hawaii for resale to Hawaii customers also satisfied the other requirements of HRS § 238-2. We, therefore, vacate the ICA’s judgment and affirm the tax appeal court’s judgment.

I. Background

A. Background Facts and Tax Appeal Court Proceedings

The following facts are taken from the record on appeal, including CompUSA’s undisputed admissions of fact and answers to the Department’s interrogatories. CompU-SA’s corporate headquarters are located in Dallas, Texas. CompUSA held a Hawaii general excise tax license during the relevant period. 2 It also maintained two retail stores in Hawaii, where it engaged in “retail sale[s] of computers, computer components, consumer electronics, and related other products and serviees[.]” 3

CompUSA did not manufacture the goods it sold to its Hawaii customers. According to CompUSA, mainland vendors shipped products either to its mainland consolidation centers (“cross-dock” shipment) and then to its Hawaii retail stores, or directly, to its Hawaii retail stores (“drop shipment”). In both types of shipment, vendors shipped the goods pursuant to “F.O.B. Origin” contracts, which, according to CompUSA, meant that the title and risk of loss passed to CompUSA on the mainland (the origin of the shipment). 4 CompUSA maintained that “[a]ll purchasing decisions and all ordering of inventory sold at the retail stores [were] conducted and managed from” its headquarters in Texas. Com-pUSA did not pay the use tax at the time of the shipments at issue.

On June 9, 2004, the Department issued tax assessments requiring CompUSA to pay, inter alia, a use tax pursuant to HRS § 238-2(2)(A) 5 on CompUSA’s “imports for resale.” *118 (Formatting altered). CompUSA filed a notice of appeal of the assessment with the tax appeal court.

In the tax appeal court, CompUSA moved for summary judgment, arguing, inter alia, that under this court’s decision in Baker & Taylor, 6 CompUSA was not subject to the use tax on the goods which it owned prior to shipment from the mainland to Hawai'i. The Department cross-moved for summary judgment, contending that the plain language of HRS § 238-2 and Hawai'i Administrative Rules (HAR) § 18-238-2 7 compelled the application of the use tax to CompUSA, and that the facts in Baker & Taylor were distinguishable. At the hearing on the cross-motions, the tax appeal court ruled from the bench, holding that Baker & Taylor did not apply to the facts of the instant ease and that CompUSA’s transactions were subject to the use tax pursuant to HRS § 238-2. The court stated:

[Wjhat we are dealing with is a situation where the legislature is attempting to level the playing field between local vendors or sellers and mainland sellers, and there appears to be a concern that mainland sellers, because they may not be subject to the excise tax, wholesale tax, may have a huge advantage over the local vendors. And so, that could be one of the reasons underlying the use tax in the case at bar.
The Court does agree that the use tax is viewed generally as a tax that compliments [sic] the general excise tax on gross revenues, and I think that this Court is most persuaded by two facts that distinguish the case at bar from the Baker & Taylor case.

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Related

CompUSA Stores, L.P. v. State.
418 P.3d 645 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P.3d 209, 128 Haw. 116, 2011 WL 768318, 2011 Haw. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compusa-stores-lp-v-department-of-taxation-state-of-hawaii-haw-2011.