D.P.S. Acquisition Corp. v. Director, Division of Taxation

16 N.J. Tax 292
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 N.J. Tax 292 (D.P.S. Acquisition Corp. v. Director, Division of Taxation) 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
D.P.S. Acquisition Corp. v. Director, Division of Taxation, 16 N.J. Tax 292 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1997).

Opinion

SMALL, J.T.C.

Plaintiff, D.P.S. Acquisition Corp., trading as Dependable Power Sweeping (“DPS”), challenges an assessment made by defendant, Director of Taxation (“Director”), under the New Jersey Sales and Use Tax Act. N.J.S.A. 54:32B-1 to -29. The amount of the assessment is not in dispute. The matter is submitted on stipulated facts pursuant to R. 8:8-1(b). The sole issue before this court is whether the services provided by DPS are exempt from sales tax as “garbage removal” pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:32B-3(b)(4).

The Division of Taxation, following an audit and notice of assessment, made a final determination that DPS was liable for sales and use tax totaling $22,503.15, plus penalties and interest, for the period of April 1, 1989 through December 31, 1991. The [294]*294basis of the determination was that the taxpayer’s services were in the nature of sweeping parking lots, and thus taxable under N.J.S.A. 54:32B-3(b)(4). DPS appealed the determination by timely filing a complaint with the Tax Court, asserting that it was in the service of garbage removal and thus exempt from sales and use tax under the statute.

The stipulation of facts consists of six numbered paragraphs and a footnote. Rather than paraphrase the carefully negotiated agreement of the parties, the entire “Joint Statement of Facts” is quoted in full as the court’s finding of facts.

During the taxable period 1989-1991, plaintiff was in the business of performing the following operations:

1. Plaintiff owned a self-propelled vehicle which has an integrated section that is capable of collecting dirt and/or other articles.***

2. Plaintiff contracted to travel across parking lots in this vehicle to collect dirt and/or other articles in the path of the vehicle.

3. There is a container which holds the dirt and/or other articles in the integrated section of the vehicle that is collected as the vehicle travels across the parking lots.

4. When the container in the integrated section of the vehicle was filled, it had to be emptied by Plaintiff. Plaintiff emptied this container into one or more dumpsters, which were not the property of Plaintiff, located on Plaintiffs customers’ premises.

5. For the convenience of Plaintiff, the container in Plaintiffs vehicle was generally emptied only when it was full. Since not every parking lot Plaintiff contracted to clean generated enough dirt and/or other articles to fill the container, Plaintiff decided when to empty the container, but Plaintiff had the right to empty its container at each and every site at which it operated.

6. Plaintiff did not own, control, operate or in any other way possess or pay any fees relative to the dumpster(s) into which Plaintiff emptied the container attached to its vehicle. The dump[295]*295sters, which had the names of unrelated entities printed on them, were emptied by the unrelated entities into their vehicles, which carried away from the site all of the contents of the dumpsters, including the dirt and/or other articles emptied by Plaintiff from its vehicle’s container.

*** For the purpose of the Joint Statement of Facts, the term "dirt and/or other articles” is defined to include, but is not limited to, dirt, gum wrappers, cigarette butts, food wrappers and containers, remnants of discarded food stuffs, cans, bottles and the like.

I.

N.J.S.A. 54:32B-3 provides for the imposition of a tax of 6% upon

(b) The receipts from every sale, except for resale, of the following services:

(4) Maintaining, servicing or repairing real property, other than a residential heating system unit serving not more than three families living independently of each other and doing their cooking on the premises, whether the services are performed in or outside of a building, as distinguished from adding to or improving such real property by a capital improvement, but excluding services rendered by an individual who is not in a regular trade or business offering his services to the public, and excluding garbage removal and sewer services performed on a regular contractual basis for a term not less than SO days.

[N.J.S.A. 54:32B-3(b)(4) (emphasis added).]

Thus, the pattern of the statute is to impose a tax on outside maintenance services except for, among other services, garbage removal.

The Director’s implementing regulation, N.J.A.C. 18:24-13.2, provides as follows:

(b) Removal includes only the operation of picking up and physically removing contained waste from the premises and does not include activities related to maintaining or servicing property or any processing of the waste product. Removal would, there[296]*296fore, not include sweeping parking lots, snow removal and construction site clean-up, or a process such as septic tank cleaning.

(c) Examples of trash removal service would include circumstances where:

1. A private company removes trash from baskets located in a building and collects the trash in larger receptacles for removal from the premises; or
2. A private company picks up garbage at a house; or
3. A private company picks up industrial sawdust at a plant.

Plaintiff characterizes its activities as vacuuming parking lots. It collects the detritus gathered from the parking lot in the self-propelled vacuum cleaners which are periodically emptied into dumpsters either at the location of the cleaned parking lot or at a dumpster at another customer’s lot. Plaintiff has nothing to do with the maintenance or servicing of the dumpsters. The Director and the plaintiff agree that the service of emptying the dumpsters is non-taxable garbage removal.

Plaintiff argues that (a) its services meet the definition of garbage removal found in the regulation (distinguishing vacuuming from sweeping and emphasizing its removal of waste contained in the self-propelled vehicle), or (b) in the alternative, those services are part of an integrated operation of trash removal from parking lot to dumpster to garbage truck. Director counters that his regulation excluding “sweeping parking lots” from the definition of garbage removal, which has its origins in a 1982 article in State Tax News, specifically precludes the garbage removal exception from applying to plaintiffs activities. Although Director conceded at oral argument that fully-integrated services where a single contractor vacuumed the parking lots and maintained and emptied the dumpsters might not be subject to sales tax, that is not the case before the court. Director argues that the separation of the parking lot sweeping/vacuuming activities from the dumpster-emptying activities precludes plaintiff from enjoying the garbage removal exemption from taxation.

II.

Plaintiff makes two separate arguments in support of its claim that its services fall within the sales and use tax exemption [297]*297provided by N.J.S.A. 54:32B-3(b)(4). First, DPS asserts that it is in the garbage removal business because it removes the dirt and other articles from the parking lots of its customers to dumpsters located on the customers’ premises.

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.J. Tax 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dps-acquisition-corp-v-director-division-of-taxation-njtaxct-1997.