Coppa v. Taxation Division Director

8 N.J. Tax 236
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedApril 23, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 8 N.J. Tax 236 (Coppa v. Taxation Division Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coppa v. Taxation Division Director, 8 N.J. Tax 236 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1986).

Opinion

ANDREW, J.T.C.

The focus of this dispute between plaintiffs, John and Mario Coppa, and defendant, Director, Division of Taxation (Director), is on the question of whether the purchase and use of a powerboat, “Brothers Two,” in the name of a Delaware corporation, Brothers Two, Inc., is subject to a use tax under New Jersey’s Sales and Use Tax Act, N.J.S.A. 54:32B-6. In order to resolve this main question, however, the underlying issue which initially confronts this court and must be decided is whether, as plaintiffs assert, the court should give legal recognition to Brothers Two, Inc., the vessel’s purchaser of record, as a valid, separate corporate entity. If, as the Director contends, however, the close corporation is merely a sham, then plaintiffs, as sole shareholders of Brothers Two, Inc., would be personally liable for a use tax on the vessel and could not claim the statutory exemption for a nonresident corporation under N.J. S.A. 54:32B-11(2).

The testimony of plaintiff, John Coppa, and the evidence presented at trial revealed the following facts. On January 30, 1979, New Jersey residents, John and Mario Coppa, negotiated with Staten Island Boat Sales, Inc. of New York for the purchase of a 31-foot powerboat at a sale price of $39,950. The buyer was listed as “Brothers Two, Inc. — Mario Coppa, Pres.” No sales tax was paid to New York since the purchaser was designated as an out-of-state corporation with a nonresident business address in Wilmington, Delaware. Approximately six weeks later, on March 21, 1979, a certificate of incorporation was issued and filed in Delaware in the name of Brothers Two, Inc. Later, Chemical Bank of New York provided financing pursuant to a retail installment contract, dated April 4, 1979 and signed by Mario Coppa. While the contract was in the name of “Mario Coppa Pres. — Brothers Two,” underneath that designation plaintiff’s individual New Jersey home address was listed. In completing the contract agreement, the boat dealer wrote that the use of the boat was “pleasure,” the home port was “Wilmington, Delaware,” and the boat would be kept at “Sportsman’s Island Marina, Bricktown, New Jersey.” A New [240]*240Jersey insurance agent also provided liability coverage. Final delivery of the vessel was in June 1979, when plaintiffs sailed the vessel “Brothers Two” from Staten Island to its dock at the Bricktown, New Jersey marina where it has remained until the present time.

Commencing in 1979, Brothers Two, Inc. filed annual franchise tax returns with Delaware. It was designated as a nonstock corporation with no gross assets and paid an annual corporate tax of $10. A New York company procured a registered agent of the corporation in Delaware which processed the incorporation papers and provided a corporate mailing address. The agent also supplied standardized preprinted forms which were to serve as minutes of the incorporators' first meeting and as by-laws for the new corporation. Other than page 16M of the by-laws that denoted the officers of the corporation as John Coppa, President and Secretary, and Mario Coppa as Vice-President and Treasurer, no other information was ever inserted in the by-laws or the minutes section of the forms.

John Coppa testified that he and his brother created Brothers Two, Inc. to conduct a charter boat business on the intercoastal waterway between Delaware and Florida. He also noted that he had extensive experience in the navigation and operation of all types of vessels and, since March 1985, he had held a captain's license from the Coast Guard. In addition, he stated that he and his brother were foreclosed from following through with their charter business plans because of other financial and business commitments which they were forced to undertake in June 1979.1 Consequently, any plans they may have had to develop a charter-boat service fell by the wayside in light of [241]*241these new business developments. The end result was that the corporation never actively engaged in its alleged original business purpose.

Plaintiff admitted that although he and his brother had not observed any corporate formalities in the creation or operation of Brothers Two, Inc., they had held informal annual meetings to discuss the status and future of their charter business. He added that the corporation kept no written minutes of any meetings, had never adopted by-laws, issued no shares, paid no federal or New Jersey taxes, kept no account books or records, and had no separate checking account or telephone number. From the day the brothers took delivery of the boat in June 1979, John Coppa acknowledged that the vessel had been used solely for the personal use of the owners of the corporation. Moreover, all expenses of maintaining and operating the boat, including fuel, insurance, mortgage payments, and mooring fees, were disbursed from the personal bank accounts of one of the brothers. Furthermore, plaintiff stated that the corporation never derived any income from a charter,2 acquired no other assets except the boat and received no rental fees from plaintiffs, John and Mario Coppa, to reimburse it for use of the vessel. Plaintiff also confirmed that the powerboat had never been docked or moored in Delaware waters.

John Coppa stated that in 1983, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection required that all boats operated in the State for more than six months of the year had to be registered in New Jersey. The Department of Motor Vehicles refused to allow plaintiffs to register the vessel in the corporate name and allegedly advised plaintiffs that registering the vessel in their names individually would not subject them to sales tax liability. In crosschecking its files, however, the Division of Taxation discovered that no sales tax had been paid by plaintiffs upon purchase of the powerboat in 1979 and thus issued a [242]*242determination on October 13, 1983 assessing plaintiffs for a deficiency tax payment. After a conference with plaintiffs on December 7, 1983, the Director rendered a final determination on December 21, 1983 affirming his prior assessment. Plaintiffs paid a total tax of $1,550 plus interest at $356.50. Plaintiffs now claim a tax refund of $1,906.50 plus interest on the refund from date of payment.

Plaintiffs argue that Brothers Two, Inc. should be recognized as a separate corporate entity and as the purchaser of the vessel “Brothers Two.” As a result, if the purchase were made by this Delaware corporation, then, plaintiffs reason, no use tax liability can be attributed to the individual owners of the corporation in New Jersey. Secondly, plaintiffs claim that they are entitled to interest on their tax refund at the same rate of interest as that charged by the State when it imposed the tax deficiency assessment. On the other hand, defendant urges the court to disregard the corporate form of Brothers Two, Inc. because the actions of the taxpayers evidence that the corporation is merely a sham. Moreover, as sole owners of the corporation, defendant argues, plaintiffs had unrestricted use of the vessel, and therefore, despite alleged corporate ownership, they should be liable under the use tax statute. Defendant also counters that should the court decide that plaintiffs are entitled to a tax reimbursement, they cannot collect interest on their prior tax payment because there is no explicit statutory directive or equitable consideration requiring that interest be included with any mandated tax refund.

The New Jersey Sales and Use Tax Act, N.J.S.A. 54:32B-1 et seq.,

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.J. Tax 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coppa-v-taxation-division-director-njtaxct-1986.