Great Adventure, Inc. v. Director

9 N.J. Tax 480
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 N.J. Tax 480 (Great Adventure, Inc. v. 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
Great Adventure, Inc. v. Director, 9 N.J. Tax 480 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

ANDREW, J.T.C.

This is a state tax case involving claims for refund of sales tax erroneously collected and paid pursuant to the Sales and Use Tax Act, N.J.S.A. 54:32B-1 et seq. Plaintiff, Great Adventure, Inc. filed refund applications with the Division of Taxation on December 29, 1984 claiming that it was entitled to a refund in the amount of $103,428.08 for 1981, $102,974.54 for 1982, $177,277.80 for 1983, and $155,866.96 for 1984 or a total of $538,547.38 for sales tax it had remitted to the Division on the face value of discount coupons. On June 27, 1985, the Director of the Division of Taxation denied plaintiffs refund claims and in a final determination letter dated March 11, 1986 the Director confirmed his denial of plaintiffs refund applications. Thereafter, plaintiff filed a complaint with this court seeking review of the Director’s final determination.

The parties have submitted this matter for the court’s consideration on stipulated facts which follow.

1. Great Adventure, Inc. (“Great Adventure”) has its principal office in Jackson Township, New Jersey, where it operates a theme park and a drive-thru safari.
[482]*4822. Great Adventure sells daily tickets charging a separate admission price for the park, for the safari, and for a combination of both. It also sells season passes.
3. Great Adventure offers a reduction from the price of its tickets by issuing discount coupons, which are distributed through various sources. There is no requirement that patrons must supply addresses and/or telephone numbers to Great Adventure in order to redeem discount coupons, nor is there any space provided on the coupons for the addresses and/or telephone numbers of patrons using these discount coupons.
4. Great Adventure’s discount coupons are “nonreimbursable” in that Great Adventure receives no remuneration for the value of the coupons from a third party.
5. In response to an inquiry from Great Adventure, the Director of the New Jersey Division of Taxation (the “Director”) ruled that the value of the discount coupons was subject to New Jersey sales tax in letters from the Director dated April 6 and April 18, 1979 ...
6. Great Adventure complied with the Director’s position in regard to the taxability of the discount coupons for the years 1981-1984____
7. Great Adventure calculated sales tax by first deciding the total ticket price it would charge for admission to the park and safari. For example, in 1984 Great Adventure determined from a business prospective that it could charge a total of $15.85, including sales tax, for admission to the park and safari and attract the number of patrons it required for the venture to be profitable. Great Adventure therefore collected a total of $15.85, which included $14.95 admission charge plus .90 cents sales tax. If a patron brought a $2.00 [discount] coupon to the park, the patron would pay a total of $13.85, which included $14.95 admission charge plus .90 cents sales tax minus a $2.00 discount for the coupon ...
8. Sales tax was remitted by Great Adventure to the Division of Taxation for the years at issue____
9. Great Adventure sought relief from this position of the Director regarding the taxability of the value of the discount coupons through a declaratory judgment action brought in the New Jersey Tax Court. The Complaint in this declaratory judgment action was filed on May 16, 1983. An Answer was filed on behalf of the Director on July 15, 1983 ...
10. In Great Adventure, Inc. v. Director, Division of Taxation, 7 N.J.Tax 58 (Tax Court 1984), the New Jersey Tax Court held that the face value of the nonreimbursable discount coupons was not subject to tax under the New Jersey Sales and Use Tax Act, N.J.S.A. 54:32B—1 et seq.
11. As a result of the Tax Court’s decision in the declaratory judgment action, for the 1985-1986 season and thereafter, Great Adventure treated the amount previously paid to the Division of Taxation as a sales tax on the value of the discount coupons as part of its net income....

Plaintiff's initial argument is that it is entitled to the claimed refund because the sales tax it collected and remitted to the Division on the face value of its discount coupons was based on the Director’s erroneous interpretation of the sales tax law. [483]*483Had it not been for the Director’s erroneous ruling that plaintiff’s discount coupons were subject to sales tax plaintiff would still have collected the same total amount for its admission charge and thus the erroneous tax would have gone into plaintiff’s pocket as income.

In plaintiff’s words its argument is as follows:

Great Adventure provided for sales tax, by first deciding the total ticket price it would charge for admission to the park and safari. This total admission charge figure represented the amount Great Adventure concluded it could charge and attract the number of patrons it needed to make the business venture profitable. Great Adventure then worked backwards from this to arrive at the total ticket price and calculated in the New Jersey sales tax. Therefore, the sales tax on the value of the discount coupons was included in this total ticket price calculation. If Great Adventure had not been required by the Director to pay a sales tax on the value of the discount coupons, it would have treated the amount it attributed to sales tax on the value of the discount coupons as net income to it and as part of its business profit.
For example, in 1984 Great Adventure collected a total of $15.85 for each admission to the park and safari. If the sales tax charge had been appropriate, the amount Great Adventure collected with the use of a $2.00 coupon would have resulted in a net to it of $12.95 after subtraction of the $.90 sales tax and the $2.00 coupon amount. On the other hand, if the value of the $2.00 coupon was not subject to sales tax, the net to Great Adventure would have been $13.07, or additional net income and business profit to Great Adventure of $.12 per full price ticket. This figure would have been calculated by measuring the sales tax on $12.95, the charge for admission after subtracting the $2.00 discount coupon amount. This is illustrated in the example below:
With tax on coupon Without tax on coupon Saving
Admission Charge $14.95 $14.95
Tax @ 6% _.90 _1)0
Full price patron pays $15.85 $15.85
Funseeker discount (2.00) (2.00)
Funseeker patron pays $13.85 $13.85
Less tax _1)0 _.78
Net to Great Adventure $12.95 $13.07 $.12

The gist of plaintiff’s initial argument appears to be that the moneys it collected were not sales tax but rather its own income and that it is entitled to the claimed refund because it in “good faith” remitted the moneys as sales tax to the Division in order to comply “with the Director’s erroneous and illegal interpretation of the law.” The State, therefore, should not be permitted to benefit unjustly from an erroneous interpretation of law.

[484]

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.J. Tax 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-adventure-inc-v-director-njtaxct-1988.