Isakson v. State

296 N.W. 192, 70 N.D. 505, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 194
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1940
DocketFile No. 6674.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 296 N.W. 192 (Isakson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Isakson v. State, 296 N.W. 192, 70 N.D. 505, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 194 (N.D. 1940).

Opinions

Morris, J.

This is an appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint upon the ground that it fails to state a cause of action. The appeal presents for our consideration the application of the North Dakota retail sales tax to the retail sale of drinks prepared and served by the plaintiff to consumers, which drinks consist of a mixture of both alcoholic and nonalcoholic ingredients.

The plaintiff sets out in his complaint that he is a licensed dealer in alcoholic beverages, soft drinks, tobacco, and other commodities of like nature and is the holder of a sales tax permit.

He alleges: “That in the conduct of his business plaintiff sells at retail certain alcoholic beverages with which he mixes certain nonalcoholic beverages and ingredients, such as sugar, ice, flavoring syrup, soda water, pop, malt, and other commodities of a like nature, which nonalcoholic ingredients, when mixed with alcoholic beverages, are by the plaintiff and his employees delivered to customers as ‘mixed drinks.’ ”

ILe also alleges that he has paid, pursuant fo the demand of the tax commissioner and under protest, the sum of $25, representing sales tax claimed to be due from him on sales of nonalcoholic ingredients contained in mixed drinks; and seeks judgment against the state for the sum so paid under protest.

Chapter 249, N. D. Session Laws 1937, as amended by chapter 234, N. D. Session Laws 1939, levies a tax of 2 per cent upon gross receipts *508 from retail sales of tangible personal property with certain exceptions therein noted. Subsection (c) of § 1 contains the following definition : “ ‘Retail Sale’ or ‘Sale at Retail’ means the sale to a consumer or to any person for airy purpose, other than for processing or for resale, of tangible personal property and the sale of steam, gas, electricity, water, and communication service to retail consumers or users, and shall include the ordering, selecting or aiding a customer to select any goods, wares, or merchandise from any price list, or catalogue, which such customer might order, or be ordered for such customer to be shipped directly to such customer. By the term ‘processing’ as used in this act is meant tangible personal property that is used in manufacturing, producing or processing and which becomes an ingredient or component part of other tangible personal property and which latter tangible personal property becomes subject to the retail sales tax. The sale of an item of tangible personal property for» the purpose of incorporating it in or attaching it to other real or personal property otherwise exempt from the sales tax shall for the purposes of this act be considered as a sale of tangible personal property for a purpose other than for processing.”

Under § 4 certain property is exempted from the operation of the-act in the following language: “The provisions of this act shall not apply to sales of gasoline, cigarettes, snuff, insurance premiums, or any other product or article upon which the State of North Dakota now of may hereafter impose a special tax, either in the form of a license tax, stamp tax or otherwise.”

The controversy between the plaintiff and the tax commissioner develops over which of two transactions involving the sale of nonalcoholic ingredients of mixed drinks should be taxed. The plaintiff contends that the sale to him of nonalcoholic ingredients to be used in mixed drinks should be taxed, while the tax commissioner contends that the sale of these ingredients by the plaintiff to the consumer as portions of mixed drinks should be taxed.

Upon oral argument the attorney general contended that the sale of a mixed drink was taxable upon the full sale price, and that it neither partook of the exempt quality of the liquor that went into it nor could the ingredients be considered separately for the purposé of taxation.

*509 A mixed drinlc is undoubtedly tangible personal property. When it is sold to the customer, it is sold to a consumer. This sale constitutes one single transaction for one item of tangible personal property. We are aware that there are many cases holding that where repairs are made upon personal property such as automobiles or shoes, separate charges may be made for the property constituting the repairs and for the services necessary in making them, and that the property used in making the repairs may be taxed while the services are exempt. The cases thus holding are not authority upon the proposition now before us for consideration. The repair of personal property which involves both the. sale of repairs and the furnishing of services is quite different from the sale of a single new and complete item of personal property. A mixed drink is such an item. It does not become the property of the purchaser until it has been prepared in its final form. When thus prepared it cannot be again separated into its respective ingredients for purposes of taxation. The mixed drink as an item of tangible personal property is either taxable or nontaxable as an indivisible item.

The supreme court of California considered a similar problem under the sales tax of that state in the case of Bigsby v. Johnson, — Cal. (2d) —, 99 P. (2d) 268. One of the questions before the court was the application of a gross sales tax to printed matter where labor formed a material part of the finished product. The argument was made to the California court as it is made to us, that the finished product might, for purposes of taxation, be resolved into its original ingredients — the ingredients in that case being labor that was nontaxable and material that was taxable. In reaching the conclusion that the finished product and not its ingredients was the proper subject of the sales tax, the court said: “As the furnishing of the printed matter constitutes a sale of tangible personal property, it necessarily follows that the tax applies to the total amount of the sales price, i. e., the total amount charged for the printed matter. The definition of the term ‘gross receipts’ clearly forbids the elimination from the measure of the tax of any labor or service costs. It is difficult to conceive any principle more essential to the effective administration of a sales tax measured by gross receipts than one absolutely precluding the breaking down of the sales price of property into amounts attributable to labor and to materials, to the end that the tax might be avoided as to the charges for labor.” *510 99 P. (2d) 271. Tbe principle applied by tbe California court is clearly applicable to the facts in this case. The California sales tax is imposed upon the privilege of selling goods and is not a tax upon the consumer. Western Lithograph Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization, 11 Cal. (2d) 156, 78 P. (2d) 731, 117 A.L.R. 838. The North Dakota sales tax is a tax upon the purchaser. Jewel Tea Co. v. State Tax Comr. ante, 229, 293 N. W. 386. The nature of oür tax strengthens the applicability of the principle stated by the supreme court of California. Our tax being upon the purchaser, that which he purchases as one item cannot be considered as several items for sales tax purposes. A sale of an item of tangible personal property may not be broken down so as to separate the component parts of such property into separate ingredients, some of which are taxable and others nontaxable.

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Northern Improvement Company v. Engen
68 N.W.2d 463 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1954)
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46 N.W.2d 295 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
296 N.W. 192, 70 N.D. 505, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isakson-v-state-nd-1940.