Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. County Board

409 S.E.2d 130, 242 Va. 209, 8 Va. Law Rep. 970, 1991 Va. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 1991
DocketRecord No. 901553
StatusPublished

This text of 409 S.E.2d 130 (Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. County Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. County Board, 409 S.E.2d 130, 242 Va. 209, 8 Va. Law Rep. 970, 1991 Va. LEXIS 132 (Va. 1991).

Opinion

JUSTICE LACY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal we consider the validity of the Arlington County transient occupancy tax as applied to lodging secured by Delta Air Lines for use by its employees.

In 1989, Arlington County assessed the Stouffer Concourse Hotel $64,784.40 and $20,569 plus penalty and interest for additional transient occupancy taxes incurred from January 1, 1987 through February 28, 1989, and March through October, 1989, respectively. The County similarly assessed the Hyatt Arlington Hotel $18,311.40 and $11,469.60 plus penalty and interest for additional transient occupancy taxes incurred from May 1, 1988 through February 28, 1989, and March through October, 1989, respectively. The taxes were paid under protest. The assessment was based on hotel rooms paid for by Delta Air Lines and used by Delta employees.

Subsequently, Delta Air Lines, Inc. (Delta), as well as Hyatt Corporation and the Stouffer Hotel Management Corporation (collectively, the hotels) filed an amended motion for declaratory judgment against the County Board of Arlington County and Geraldine M. Whiting, Commissioner of Revenue for Arlington County (collectively, the County). Delta and the hotels sought a [211]*211declaration that the County’s transient occupancy tax ordinance was invalid, that the taxes were incorrectly assessed because the use of the hotel rooms fell within the “30 day rule” exception to the tax, and requested a refund of the taxes paid under protest with interest and attorneys’ fees. In its grounds of defense, the County denied that the ordinance was invalid or improperly applied and that any tax refunds were due.

The litigants filed cross motions for summary judgment. After consideration of the pleadings, memoranda, and argument of counsel, the trial court granted the County’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the proceeding.

Delta and the hotels assert that the trial court erred in holding that the County’s transient occupancy tax ordinance was valid and authorized by the enabling legislation, that the word “person” as used in the ordinance did not include corporations, and in granting summary judgment because material facts were in dispute regarding the applicability of the “30 day rule” exemption to the occupancy tax. We consider these issues in order.

I.

Delta and the hotels argue that the Arlington ordinance is invalid because it is not consistent with Code §§ 58.1-3819 and -3820, the enabling legislation.

Code § 58.1-3819 states in part:

Any county, by duly adopted ordinance, may levy a transient occupancy tax on hotels, motels, boarding houses and travel campgrounds. Such tax shall be in such amount and on such terms as the governing body may, by ordinance, prescribe; however, such tax shall not exceed two percent of the amount of charge for the occupancy of any room or space occupied. The tax imposed hereunder shall not apply to rooms or spaces rented for continuous occupancy by the same individual or group for thirty or more days in hotels, motels, boarding houses and travel campgrounds.
Any county, city or town which requires local hotel and motel businesses, or any class thereof, to collect, account for and remit to such locality a local tax imposed on the con[212]*212sumer, may allow such business a commission for such service in the form of a deduction from the tax remitted. Such commission shall be provided for by ordinance, which shall set the rate thereof, no less than three percent, not to exceed five percent of the amount of tax due and accounted for. No commission shall be allowed if the amount due was delinquent.

(Emphasis added.) Code § 58.1-3820 states:

Notwithstanding the provisions of Chapter 443, as amended, of the Acts of Assembly of 1970 carried by reference in the Code of Virginia as § 58.1-3819, beginning on and after July 1, 1977, Arlington County is authorized to levy the transient occupancy tax permitted in § 58.1-3819 in an amount not to exceed five percent of the amount of the charge for the occupancy of any room or space occupied; provided that the county’s local license tax as permitted in § 58.1-3703, as amended, on hotels, motels, boarding houses and travel campgrounds on and after January 1, 1978 shall not exceed one percent of the gross receipts of such hotels, motels, boarding houses and travel campgrounds. The remaining provisions of § 58.1-3819 shall apply mutatis mutandis to the provisions of this section.

Section 40-2 of the County’s transient occupancy tax ordinance states:

In addition to all other taxes of every kind now or hereafter imposed by law, there is hereby imposed and levied on each and every transient a tax equivalent to five (5) percent of the total amount paid for room rental by or for any such transient to any hotel.

(Emphasis added.)

Delta and the hotels argue that the ordinance improperly imposes and levies the tax on “each and every transient” rather than on the “hotels, motels, boarding houses and travel campgrounds” as mandated by the first paragraph of § 58.1-3819. We are not persuaded by such contention because it ignores the remainder of both the enabling legislation and the ordinance.

[213]*213Section 58.1-3819’s specific reference to the tax as levied “on hotels” in paragraph one and “imposed on the consumer” in paragraph three authorizes the County to enact a transient occupancy tax ordinance which holds either the consumer, the hotel, or both, liable for the payment of the taxes. See Op. Att’y Gen. 528-29 (1974-75). In this regard, it is consistent with methods established for the collection of similar taxes including the state sales tax on the gross receipts of charges for rooms, lodgings, or accommodations. See Code § 58.1-603, -605, -625.

The Arlington transient occupancy tax ordinance allows a hotel to collect the tax from the consumer, but requires the tax to be accounted for and paid by the hotel, regardless of whether the hotel collects the tax from the consumer of the services. Ordinance Sections 40-4, -5, and -6. In this case, all assessments were sent to the hotels; the hotels issued the initial payment checks to the County, although reimbursed by Delta; the second payment check, issued directly by Delta, was “applied to the assessed Transient Occupancy Tax delinquencies of the Stouffer Concourse Hotel and the Hyatt Arlington Hotel,” not to any tax account assigned to Delta or its employees. This procedure is consistent with the enabling legislation. Accordingly, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment that the Arlington ordinance is valid and authorized by §§ 58.1-3819 and -3820.

II.

Both the enabling legislation and the ordinance provide an exemption from the tax when a room is rented by the same party for thirty or more consecutive days. This is referred to as the “30 day rule,” and expressed in § 58.1-3819 as prohibiting the application of the tax

... to rooms or spaces rented for continuous occupancy by the same individual or group for thirty or more days.

The rule is found in the ordinance’s definition of “transient”:

. . . any person who, for any period of not more than thirty (30) consecutive days either at his own expense or at the expense of another, obtains lodging ... for which ...

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth Natural Resources, Inc. v. Commonwealth
248 S.E.2d 791 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1978)
Board of Supervisors v. Corbett
142 S.E.2d 504 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1965)
Commonwealth v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.
68 S.E.2d 122 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1951)
Supervisors of Montgomery County v. Tallant
32 S.E. 479 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1899)
Town of Wytheville v. Johnson's
62 S.E. 328 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1908)
Commonwealth v. Hutzler
97 S.E. 775 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1919)
County of Sussex v. Jarratt
106 S.E. 384 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1921)
Breckenbridge v. County School Board
135 S.E. 693 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1926)
City of Richmond v. Eubank
18 S.E.2d 397 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1942)
Bott v. Commonwealth
48 S.E.2d 235 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
409 S.E.2d 130, 242 Va. 209, 8 Va. Law Rep. 970, 1991 Va. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delta-air-lines-inc-v-county-board-va-1991.