Opinion
TAYLOR, P. J
These combined appeals
from two actions for refunds of state and local
sales taxes paid to the State Board of Equalization in 1968, consolidated for trial on stipulated facts, raise the question of whether, pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052, the legal incidence of the California taxes falls on the púrchasing national bank (Crocker), or on the retailer-vendor (Diamond). The parties agree that if the legal incidence of the tax is on Crocker, it is barred by former 12 United States Code section 548.
For the reasons set forth below, we have concluded that under California law, the legal incidence of the tax is on the vendor-retailer, and the judgment in favor of Diamond in No. 35143 must be reversed, and the judgment of dismissal as to Crocker in No. 35698 affirmed..
As the facts were stipulated, we set forth briefly only the basic facts pertinent to the central legal issue before us. Diamond supplied printed forms and other items of tangible personal property to Crocker for use in its business as a chartered national bank. The parties understood and agreed that the item prices stated by Diamond were exclusive of “sales tax reimbursement,” which would be added to the stated price in
computing the total amount Crocker would pay for the merchandise. During the period in issue (Mar. 25, 1968-June 16, 1968), Crocker paid the sum of $292,086.49, of which $278,174.55 represented the stated price and $13,911.84 represented “sales tax reimbursement.”
Diamond included the $278,174.55 in tax returns filed with the board, paid the appropriate tax, and subsequently filed for refund of $13,908.73,
Crocker also filed for a refund of the same amount. The board disallowed both refunds. Diamond agreed that any refund returned to it would be refunded to Crocker pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code section 6054.5 and
Decorative Carpets, Inc.
v.
State Board of Equalization,
58 Cal.2d 252 [23 Cal.Rptr. 589, 373 P.2d 637].
Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052 provides: “The tax hereby imposed shall be collected by the retailer from the consumer in so far as it can be done.”
Preliminarily we note that our Supreme Court long ago held that this statute imposes a vendor tax
(Western L. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization,
11 Cal.2d 156, 162 [78 P.2d 731, 117 A.L.R. 838]). In
Western Lithograph,
the court construed statutes of 1933, chapter 1020, page 2602, section
8Vi,
the predecessor of Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052.
Diamond, relying on
Agricultural Bank
v.
Tax Comm’n,
392 U.S. 339 [20 L.Ed.2d 1138, 88 S.Ct. 2173], as recently reaffirmed in
United States
v.
Mississippi Tax Comm’n.
(1975) 421 U.S. 599 [44 L.Ed.2d 404, 95 S.Ct. 1872], urges that since we are construing a federal exemption, we are bound to conclude that the legal incidence of the tax fell on the purchaser. However, the question presented by a claim of exemption under a federal statute granting immunity to national banks from state sales taxes goes beyond the mere claim of an automatic exemption for a federal agency. The national bank must also show that
the “incidence” of the tax is on it
(Huntington Nat. Bank of Columbus
v.
Porterfield,
23 Ohio St.2d 131 [263 N.E.2d 227], cert, den., 401 U.S. 1005 [28 L.Ed.2d 542, 91 S.Ct. 1260]).
In
Agricultural Bank,
the United States Supreme Court squarely rejected the proposition that the legal incidence of a tax always fell on the person legally liable for it, and held, that pursuant to the Massachusetts statute there in issue,
the Massachusetts Legislature intended that the tax be “passed on" to the purchaser and accordingly was a tax on the purchaser and not the vendor. The court emphasized (at p. 347) that the legislative intent was controlling. In
United States
v.
Mississippi Tax Comm’n., supra,
421 U.S. atpage 608 [44 L.Ed.2d at p. 413], which involved the question of whether the Mississippi wholesale markup fell on the out-of-state distiller or on the purchasing federal military installations,
the court emphasized that “. . . the controlling significance of
First Agricultural Bank
for our purposes is the test formulated by that decision for the determination of where the
legal incidence
of the tax falls, namely, that where a state
requires
that its sales tax be passed on to the purchaser and be collected by the vendor from him,
this establishes as a matter of law that the legal incidence of the tax falls upon the
purchaser” (italics supplied).
Agricultural Bank
thus simply held that: 1) if the tax must be passed on, the incidence is on the purchaser; 2) legislative intent is controlling as
to whether the pass-on is mandatory; and 3) lack of sanction against the vendor for failing to pass-on does not negate a clearly worded pass-on provision. In the
Mississippi Tax Commission
case,
supra,
the United States Supreme Court followed the mandatory pass-on test of
Agricultural Bank, supra.
Unlike the Massachusetts sales tax law or Mississippi tax Regulation 25, this state has no mandatory requirement that its sales taxes be “passed on”
to the purchaser. As indicated above, Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052 provides that “[t]he tax hereby imposed shall be collected by the retailer from the consumer
in so far as it can be done.”
It is well settled that “[t]his section
merely allows
a retailer to reimburse himself for payment of the tax. He is
limited
in so doing where the consumer’s contractual or constitutional rights are infringed” (Code Commissioners’ Note, citing
De Aryan
v.
Akers,
12 Cal.2d 781 [87 P.2d 695]; (italics supplied)). The retailer is
permitted
to pass the tax on to the consumer, but he is
not charged with a mandatory duty
to collect the tax
(Coast Elevator Co.
v.
State Bd. of Equalization,
44 Cal.App.3d 576, 588 [118 Cal.Rptr. 818];
Pac. Coast Eng. Co.
v.
State of California,
111 Cal.App.2d 31, 34 [
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Opinion
TAYLOR, P. J
These combined appeals
from two actions for refunds of state and local
sales taxes paid to the State Board of Equalization in 1968, consolidated for trial on stipulated facts, raise the question of whether, pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052, the legal incidence of the California taxes falls on the púrchasing national bank (Crocker), or on the retailer-vendor (Diamond). The parties agree that if the legal incidence of the tax is on Crocker, it is barred by former 12 United States Code section 548.
For the reasons set forth below, we have concluded that under California law, the legal incidence of the tax is on the vendor-retailer, and the judgment in favor of Diamond in No. 35143 must be reversed, and the judgment of dismissal as to Crocker in No. 35698 affirmed..
As the facts were stipulated, we set forth briefly only the basic facts pertinent to the central legal issue before us. Diamond supplied printed forms and other items of tangible personal property to Crocker for use in its business as a chartered national bank. The parties understood and agreed that the item prices stated by Diamond were exclusive of “sales tax reimbursement,” which would be added to the stated price in
computing the total amount Crocker would pay for the merchandise. During the period in issue (Mar. 25, 1968-June 16, 1968), Crocker paid the sum of $292,086.49, of which $278,174.55 represented the stated price and $13,911.84 represented “sales tax reimbursement.”
Diamond included the $278,174.55 in tax returns filed with the board, paid the appropriate tax, and subsequently filed for refund of $13,908.73,
Crocker also filed for a refund of the same amount. The board disallowed both refunds. Diamond agreed that any refund returned to it would be refunded to Crocker pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code section 6054.5 and
Decorative Carpets, Inc.
v.
State Board of Equalization,
58 Cal.2d 252 [23 Cal.Rptr. 589, 373 P.2d 637].
Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052 provides: “The tax hereby imposed shall be collected by the retailer from the consumer in so far as it can be done.”
Preliminarily we note that our Supreme Court long ago held that this statute imposes a vendor tax
(Western L. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization,
11 Cal.2d 156, 162 [78 P.2d 731, 117 A.L.R. 838]). In
Western Lithograph,
the court construed statutes of 1933, chapter 1020, page 2602, section
8Vi,
the predecessor of Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052.
Diamond, relying on
Agricultural Bank
v.
Tax Comm’n,
392 U.S. 339 [20 L.Ed.2d 1138, 88 S.Ct. 2173], as recently reaffirmed in
United States
v.
Mississippi Tax Comm’n.
(1975) 421 U.S. 599 [44 L.Ed.2d 404, 95 S.Ct. 1872], urges that since we are construing a federal exemption, we are bound to conclude that the legal incidence of the tax fell on the purchaser. However, the question presented by a claim of exemption under a federal statute granting immunity to national banks from state sales taxes goes beyond the mere claim of an automatic exemption for a federal agency. The national bank must also show that
the “incidence” of the tax is on it
(Huntington Nat. Bank of Columbus
v.
Porterfield,
23 Ohio St.2d 131 [263 N.E.2d 227], cert, den., 401 U.S. 1005 [28 L.Ed.2d 542, 91 S.Ct. 1260]).
In
Agricultural Bank,
the United States Supreme Court squarely rejected the proposition that the legal incidence of a tax always fell on the person legally liable for it, and held, that pursuant to the Massachusetts statute there in issue,
the Massachusetts Legislature intended that the tax be “passed on" to the purchaser and accordingly was a tax on the purchaser and not the vendor. The court emphasized (at p. 347) that the legislative intent was controlling. In
United States
v.
Mississippi Tax Comm’n., supra,
421 U.S. atpage 608 [44 L.Ed.2d at p. 413], which involved the question of whether the Mississippi wholesale markup fell on the out-of-state distiller or on the purchasing federal military installations,
the court emphasized that “. . . the controlling significance of
First Agricultural Bank
for our purposes is the test formulated by that decision for the determination of where the
legal incidence
of the tax falls, namely, that where a state
requires
that its sales tax be passed on to the purchaser and be collected by the vendor from him,
this establishes as a matter of law that the legal incidence of the tax falls upon the
purchaser” (italics supplied).
Agricultural Bank
thus simply held that: 1) if the tax must be passed on, the incidence is on the purchaser; 2) legislative intent is controlling as
to whether the pass-on is mandatory; and 3) lack of sanction against the vendor for failing to pass-on does not negate a clearly worded pass-on provision. In the
Mississippi Tax Commission
case,
supra,
the United States Supreme Court followed the mandatory pass-on test of
Agricultural Bank, supra.
Unlike the Massachusetts sales tax law or Mississippi tax Regulation 25, this state has no mandatory requirement that its sales taxes be “passed on”
to the purchaser. As indicated above, Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052 provides that “[t]he tax hereby imposed shall be collected by the retailer from the consumer
in so far as it can be done.”
It is well settled that “[t]his section
merely allows
a retailer to reimburse himself for payment of the tax. He is
limited
in so doing where the consumer’s contractual or constitutional rights are infringed” (Code Commissioners’ Note, citing
De Aryan
v.
Akers,
12 Cal.2d 781 [87 P.2d 695]; (italics supplied)). The retailer is
permitted
to pass the tax on to the consumer, but he is
not charged with a mandatory duty
to collect the tax
(Coast Elevator Co.
v.
State Bd. of Equalization,
44 Cal.App.3d 576, 588 [118 Cal.Rptr. 818];
Pac. Coast Eng. Co.
v.
State of California,
111 Cal.App.2d 31, 34 [244 P.2d 21]). Moreover, “[w]hile the act authorizes the retailer to collect the tax ‘from the consumer in so far as the same can be done,’ . . . that does not make it a consumer’s tax.”
(Ainsworth
v.
Bryant,
34 Cal.2d 465, 474 [211 P.2d 564]).
In
De Aryan
v.
Akers,
12 Cal.2d 781 [87 P.2d 695], the state Supreme Court declared that the statute “. . .
must be deemed to indicate a reservation
only in those cases where so to pursue the authority of reimbursement to the retailer would infringe the consumer’s existing contractual or other constitutional rights.” (Id., at p. 786; italics supplied.) Indeed, unlike the mandatory provisions of the Massachusetts statute and the Mississippi tax Regulation 25, Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052
expressly bars
the right to reimbursement when a constitutional right would be infringed.
In a bootstrap argument, Diamond attempts to equate the caveat of the California statute, “in so far as it can be done,” with the language “as
nearly as possible or practicable” from the Massachusetts statute, and further asserts that the
Agricultural Bank
holding regarding the “same provisions” dictates abandonment of the established California construction, because determination of the incidence of the California tax is a federal question and not a state question. However, we find this argument less than convincing for two reasons.
First, in comparing caveats, Diamond takes the Massachusetts “as nearly as possible or practicable” out of context. When read within subsection 3 of the Massachusetts sales tax, as set forth in footnote 7 above, the term clearly refers to collection of the average equivalent of the full amount of the tax. As discussed above, this is
not
the meaning of the California caveat.
Second, as recently stated in
Gurley
v.
Rhoden
(1975) 421 U.S. 200, at page 208 [44L.Ed.2d 110, 117, 95 S.Ct. 1605]: “[A] State’s highest court is the final judicial arbiter of the meaning of state statutes [citation], and therefore our review of the holding of a state court respecting the legal incidence of a state excise tax is guided by the following: ‘When a state court has made its own definitive determination as to the operating incidence . . . [w]e give this finding great weight in determining the natural effect of a statute, and if it is
consistent with the statute’s reasonable interpretation it will be deemed conclusive.’
” (Italics added.)
Thus, given the clear mandatory wording of both the Massachusetts statute and Mississippi tax Regulation 25, and in view of the obvious difference of Revenue and Taxation Code section 6052 as construed by the courts of this state since its inception, we think neither
Agricultural Bank
nor the
Mississippi Tax Commission
cases have overruled
Western Lithograph
and the other California cases. Further, as an intermediate appellate court, we are bound to follow the construction of a state statute by the decisions of our state Supreme Court
(Market St. Ry. Co.
v.
Cal. St. Bd. Equal.,
137 Cal.App.2d 87, 98 [290 P.2d 20]).
Accordingly, we need not discuss in great detail two recent federal decisions, cited by Diamond for the proposition that the legal incidence of the California sales taxes is upon the purchaser. The first
of these is a federal district court case currently on appeal to the Ninth Circuit, and accordingly of little or no precedential value. The second,
United States
v.
Nevada Tax Commission
(9th Cir. 1971) 439 F.2d 435, summarily
affirmed a trial court decision
that found the legal incidence of the Nevada sales tax to lie with the vendee. Although the Nevada law is similar to the California law, we find the case to be of negligible assistance in determining
California
legislative intent. We think it is well settled by
Western L. Co., DeAryan
and other authorities cited above, that since the vendor is permitted and encouraged but not required to pass on the sales taxes to the consumer, the legal incidence of the California sales taxes falls on the vendor. It follows that the trial court erred
in concluding that
Agricultural Bank, supra,
changed the preexisting California law.
Diamond also attempts to expand the scope of
Javor
v.
State Board of Equalization,
12 Cal.3d 790 [117 Cal.Rptr. 305, 527 P.2d 1153], However,
Javor
is a limited decision under “unique circumstances” whereby a customer can join the board in an action against the retailer. The
action remains against the retailer,
and the board is joined strictly to protect the integrity of the sales tax by ensuring that the customers receive their refunds. Thus, the retailer is not relieved of the legal incidence of the sales tax.
Diamond also attempts to argue that
Decorative Carpets, Inc.
v.
State Board of Equalization,
58 Cal.2d 252 [23 Cal.Rptr. 589, 373 P.2d 637], and the enactment of Revenue and Taxation Code section 6054.5 support its position that the legal incidence of the California sales taxes is on the purchaser rather than the vendor.
Javor, Decorative Carpets
and section 6054.5 deal with the refund remedy of customers and do not determine the incidence of the tax. In fact, in Revenue and Taxation Code section 6054.5, the Legislature clearly indicates that “nothing in this legislation shall be construed to affect the basic principle that the
incidence of the California sales tax is on the retailer.” (Stats. 1961, ch. 872, p. 2289).
We need not discuss the authorities from foreign jurisdictions cited by Diamond, as all are factually distinguishable and of no guidance in examining the basic question of the intent of the California Legislature as to which party bears the legal incidence of the sales tax.
Diamond’s remaining contentions relating to administrative construction and the 1951 and 1964 Reports of Legislative interim committees are also neither pertinent
nor persuasive,
and need not be discussed here.
Accordingly, we conclude that since the California statute does not mandate that the state and local sales taxes must be passed on to the purchaser and the courts of this state have consistently held that the legal incidence of these taxes is on the vendor, the court below erred in entering judgment in favor of Diamond.
On its appeal, Crocker attempts to argue that the above disposition of Diamond does not necessarily dispose of all of the issues presented. However, in view of our conclusion in the Diamond appeal that the legal incidence of the California sales taxes falls on Diamond, Crocker has no standing to seek a refund from the board. Crocker’s contentions pertaining to Revenue and Taxation Code section 6937 are irrelevant in view of the recent holding of
Javor, supra,
that a purchaser has no direct recourse against the board for a refund of excessive sales tax reimbursement paid to the vendor. Of course, our holding has no bearing on the possibility of a contract action by Crocker against Diamond.
The judgment in Diamond (No. 35143) is reversed and the judgment in Crocker (No. 35698) affirmed.
Kane, J., and Rouse, J., concurred.
Petitions for a rehearing were denied July 24, 1975, and the petition of respondent in No. 35143 and appellant in No. 35698 for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 28, 1975.