Industrial Communications, Inc. v. Utah State Tax Commission

2000 UT 78, 12 P.3d 87, 405 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2000 Utah LEXIS 122, 2000 WL 1435074
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 2000
Docket990701
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2000 UT 78 (Industrial Communications, Inc. v. Utah State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Communications, Inc. v. Utah State Tax Commission, 2000 UT 78, 12 P.3d 87, 405 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2000 Utah LEXIS 122, 2000 WL 1435074 (Utah 2000).

Opinion

DURRANT, Justice:

11 Industrial Communications, Inc., petitions for review of a Utah State Tax Commission decision upholding an assessment of sales tax on one-way pager service that Industrial Communications provides to its clients. Before the Commission, Industrial Communications argued that the Sales and Use Tax Act's definition of telephone corporations providing telephone service applies only to two-way communications. The Commission rejected Industrial Communications' argument and upheld the assessment pursuant to a regulation it had promulgated in 1997, which specifically defines pager service as a telephone service subject to taxation. On appeal, Industrial Communications contends that the Commission's regulation exceeds the Commission's statutory authorization to tax telephone service provided by telephone corporations.

BACKGROUND

T2 The Commission issued a notice of assessment and sales tax deficiency to Industrial Communications on the charges it had collected from clients who purchased pager service. The notice covered a three year period running from January 1, 1995, to December 31, 1997. Industrial Communications petitioned for redetermination, arguing that one-way pager service is not a telephone service.

[ 3 The question presented to the Commission was whether the one-way pager service provided by Industrial Communications was subject to taxation under Chapter 12 of Title 59 of the Utah Code, the Sales and Use Tax Act (hereinafter the "Sales Tax Act"). In its present form, the Sales Tax Act provides for the levy of a sales tax on the "amount paid ... to telephone corporations ... for ... (i) intrastate telephone service." Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-1083(1)(b). The Commission was thus required to interpret the statutory provision to determine whether Industrial Communications is a "telephone corporation" providing "telephone service."

T4 The Commission recognized, however, that this question could not be answered by isolated reference to the present form of the statute. It examined both the statutory history of the Sales Tax Act, including recent amendments to that act, and the prior course of dealings between the Commission and Industrial Communications. Prior to 1983, Industrial Communications collected and paid sales tax on charges it collected for one-way pager service. At that time, the Sales Tax Act explicitly based its definition of "telephone corporation" upon that found in Title 54, the Public Utilities Title Specifically, the taxing provision stated that a sales tax was levied on amounts paid for "telephone service" to "telephone ... corporations as defined by Section 54-2-1 {of the Public Utilities Title]." 1977 Utah Laws, ch. 220, § 1. Industrial Communications took the position that it was a regulated telephone corporation for purposes of its provision of one-way pager service under the Public Utilities Title. Accordingly, because of the definitional link between the Sales Tax Act and the Public Utilities Act, Industrial Communications assumed that it was also liable under the Sales Tax Act for collecting tax on its client transactions for one-way pager service.

15 In 1983, however, the Public Service Commission ruled that a business providing one-way pager service was not subject to its regulatory authority. Industrial Communications challenged this ruling, arguing that it was a "telephone corporation" for purposes of the Public Utilities Act. This court resolved that dispute in Williams dba Industrial Communications v. Public Service Commission, 754 P.2d 41, 51 (Utah 1988), in which we affirmed the Public Service Commission's ruling. In Williams, we construed the definition of "telephone corporation," for purposes of the Public Utilities Title, by reference to the service provided by that corporation. See id. at 50-51. We quoted with approval the Public Service Commission's finding that "[tlelephone service over land lines or radio waves is fundamentally the same service irrespective of the means of *89 transmission. But telephone service is a two-way service; paging service is one-way call notification." Id. at 51. Thus, following Williams, Industrial Communications' one-way pager service was not a telephone service, for purposes of the Public Utilities Act, and Industrial Communications was not a telephone corporation with respect to the one-way pager service it provided.

T 6 Industrial Communications stopped remitting sales tax for one-way pager service in April of 1984. In light of the explicit connection between the definition of telephone corporation in the Public Utilities Act and the Sales Tax Act, Industrial Communications took the position that its duty to pay sales tax was coextensive with its status as an entity regulated by the Public Service Commission. Although the Commission rendered no official decision on Industrial Communications' interpretation of the impact of Williams on the collection of sales tax, Commission officials responsible for enforcing the sales tax provisions acceded to Industrial Communications' interpretation. During the pendency of the petition in Williams, the Commission asserted a sales tax deficiency, but agreed to stay the deficiency pending the outcome. After Williams issued, the Commission did not seek to enforce the prior alleged deficiency, nor did it assert any subsequent deficiency until the date on which it issued the notice giving rise to this case.

T7 In 1990, the Legislature amended the sales tax provision relating to telephone service in Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-108(1)(b). The 1990 amendment added the qualifier "intrastate" to the term "telephone service" and deleted the phrase "as defined by Section 54-2-1," with reference to the definition of "telephone corporation." See 1990 Utah Laws, ch. 22, § 1. Thus, the definition of "telephone corporation" in the Sales Tax Act is no longer explicitly dependent upon the corresponding definition of that term in the Public Utilities Act, as construed by Williams.

T8 The Commission did not immediately respond to this statutory amendment and Industrial Communications continued to assume it was not required to remit sales tax on its one-way pager service. In September of 1996, however, the Commission signaled a potential reversal of its policy by issuing two advisory opinions indicating that pager service should be subject to sales tax. Neither opinion was directed to Industrial Communications, nor was it published as a bulletin. However, in 1997, the Commission formally adopted a regulation, Rule 865-198-90, 1 which explicitly included pager service within its definition of "telephone service." The Commission thus formally reversed its tacit policy of exempting businesses providing one-way pager service from the duty to remit sales tax and, accordingly, issued the notice of assessment and deficiency provoking the instant dispute.

{9 Upon hearing Industrial Communications' petition, the Commission issued its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Final Decision on July 20, 1999.

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

Related

State v. J. Lafield
2017 MT 312 (Montana Supreme Court, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 UT 78, 12 P.3d 87, 405 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2000 Utah LEXIS 122, 2000 WL 1435074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-communications-inc-v-utah-state-tax-commission-utah-2000.