Levine v. State Board of Equalization

299 P.2d 738, 142 Cal. App. 2d 760, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2046
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 3, 1956
DocketCiv. 21314, 21315
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 299 P.2d 738 (Levine v. State Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levine v. State Board of Equalization, 299 P.2d 738, 142 Cal. App. 2d 760, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2046 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

Appellants brought two actions for the recovery of taxes levied and collected under the California Sales and Use Tax Law. The cases were consolidated for trial and judgment in each case went for the defendant.

One action, Case Number 21314, is for the recovery of taxes in the amount of $9,717.17, with interest levied during the period from February 1, 1949, to September 30, 1951. The second action, Case Number 21315, is for the recovery of taxes in the sum of $1,940.18, with interest levied during the period from July 1, 1948, to January 31, 1949. Except for the taxable periods, the legal and factual issues in each action are substantially the same.

The appellants were engaged in designing, engineering, fabricating, selling and installing water cooling towers, aerial towers and industrial wooden products especially designed for industrial processing. The business headquarters were located in Los Angeles, and their principal fabricating plant, storage *762 and lumberyard were located at Santa Rosa, California. Customers’ purchase orders were first sent to the Los Angeles office where design and engineering work was performed. The orders were then forwarded to Santa Rosa, accompanied by requisitions to inventory. Fabrication and loading for shipment were performed at Santa Rosa. The items fabricated were either (1) sold and merely delivered to the job sites specified by customers, or (2) erected on the customers’ job sites by appellants. Out-of-state shipments were made by railroad ear with appellants as consignee at the out-of-state job site. Appellants’ erection superintendent took possession of the shipment upon arrival and with the assistance of local labor supervised the erection work. No deficiency tax assessments were made upon out-of-state sales not involving erection. The business was a specialty in that the items fabricated consisted almost entirely of items specifically engineered for a particular customer.

The instant appeals involve tax and interest measured by the price paid by appellants for materials which were purchased in California, ex tax under resale certificates. The raw materials were first placed in inventory in California and, as orders were received for the erection of one of the completed structures to be manufactured and installed by appellants, after the design and engineering work was done, the necessary raw materials were withdrawn from inventory as required, and fabricated in California for subsequent erection and installation by the appellants outside California on customers’ job sites. The purchase, storage and fabrication of the materials all took place in this state.

We are concerned with the provisions of the law as it existed during the taxable periods. 1

In 1953, section 6009.1 was amended by striking therefrom *763 the words “shipped or brought into this State.” In the same year, section 6094 was amended as follows:

“6094. If a purchaser who gives a certificate makes any use of the property other than retention, demonstration, or display while holding it for sale in the regular course of business, the use shall be deemed a -retail- sale fey taxable to the purchaser under Chapter 3 of this part as of the time the property is first used by him, and the east sales price of the property to him shall be deemed the gross receipts from saefe retail- sale measure of the tax. Only when there is an unsatisfied use tax liability on this basis shall the seller be liable for sales tax with respect to the sale of the property to the *764 purchaser. If the sale use of the property other than retention, demonstration, or display in the regular course of business is the rental of the property while holding it for sale, the purchaser may elect to include in his gross receipts the amount of the rental charged rather than the east sales price of the property to him.” (Italicizing indicating additions made to the section.)

Where the purchaser gave a valid resale certificate pursuant to sections 6091-6093, and the gross receipts involved were accordingly not included in the measure of the sales tax imposed upon the vendor, any use by the purchaser other than mere retention, demonstration or display while holding the property for sale in the regular course of business was under section 6094, as it read during the period involved herein, and prior to the section’s amendment in 1953, deemed a retail sale by the purchaser and subject to the sales tax measured by the purchaser’s cost. The amendment of 1953 provided that the use of tangible personal property, other than retention, demonstration or display, for sale in the regular course of business by the one who purchased the property under a valid retail certificate is subject to the use tax imposed by section 6201, rather than the sales tax imposed by section 6051.

During the times with which we are concerned, section 1921 of the California Administrative Code, relating to the Board of Equalization—Sales and Use Tax (being formerly known as Board of Equalization Sales and Use Tax Ruling No. 11), provided in substance as is set forth in the footnote hereto. 2

*765 Appellants’ contention, in substance, is that prior to the 1953 amendment, the Sales and Use Tax Law was ambiguous with respect to the taxation of materials purchased by a California seller under certificates of resale and subsequently fabricated, shipped and erected on out-of-state job sites pursuant to contract with out-of-state purchasers, and that the 1953 amendments to sections 6009.1 and 6094 should be construed as declaration of existing law.

Before the 1953 amendment, section 6009.1 exempted from the definition of taxable storage and use, under certain circumstances, only the use of tangible personal property “shipped or brought into this State for the purpose of subsequently transporting it outside the State for use thereafter solely outside the State, ...”

In the case of People v. Grazer, 138 Cal.App.2d 274, 279 [291 P.2d 957], the court said:

“Respondent argues that it has never been the intent or effect of the code provisions to tax the transactions here involved and refers us to the declaration to that effect by the Legislature when it passed the exclusionary section 6019. If the existing law taxed these transactions, and we hold that it did, then the Legislature could not change the law by declaring that it had never intended to tax them.
“ ‘The usual purpose of a special interpretative statute is to correct a judicial interpretation of a prior law which the Legislature determines to be inaccurate. Where such statutes are given any effect, the effect is prospective only. This seems correct, for any other result would make the Legislature a court of last resort.’ (2 Sutherland Statutory Construction, 3d ed., § 3004.)

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Bluebook (online)
299 P.2d 738, 142 Cal. App. 2d 760, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levine-v-state-board-of-equalization-calctapp-1956.