Lowe's Home Centers, LLC v. Indiana Department of State Revenue

23 N.E.3d 52, 2014 Ind. Tax LEXIS 58, 2014 WL 7215767
CourtIndiana Tax Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2014
DocketNo. 49T10-1201-TA-6
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 N.E.3d 52 (Lowe's Home Centers, LLC v. Indiana Department of State Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe's Home Centers, LLC v. Indiana Department of State Revenue, 23 N.E.3d 52, 2014 Ind. Tax LEXIS 58, 2014 WL 7215767 (Ind. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER ON PARTIES’ CROSS-MOTIONS.FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

WENTWORTH, J.

Lowe’s Home Centers, LLC (Lowes) challenges the Indiana Department of State Revenue’s assessment of Indiana’s gross retail tax (sales tax) on construction material it incorporated into its customers’ real property during the tax years ending on December 31, 2007, 2008, and 2009 (the years at issue). The matter, currently before the Court on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, presents one issue for the Court to decide: did Lowes properly self-assess and remit use tax on that construction material or was it required to collect sales tax from its customers on it? The Court holds that Lowes properly self-assessed and remitted use tax on the construction material.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Lowes is a national home improvement retail chain that operates stores in Indiana. (See, e.g., Resp’t Mot. Summ. J. (“Resp’t Des’g Evid.”), Ex. 1 ¶¶ 1, 9.) Generally speaking, when Lowes purchased tangible personal property (ie., merchandise) during the years at issue to sell in its Indiana stores, it did not pay any sales tax pursuant to Indiana’s purchase for resale exemption set forth in Indiana Code § 6-2.5-5-8. When Lowes sold that tangible personal property, however, it collected sales tax from its customers and remitted it to the Department. The amount of sales tax Lowes collected was calculated using the retail price of the tangible personal property sold. See generally Ind.Code § 6-2.5-l-5(a)-(b) (2007) (amended 2009); Ind.Code § 6-2.5-2-1 (2007); Ind.Code § 6-2.5-2-2 (2007) (amended 2008).

During the years at issue, Lowes also performed real property improvement services as a general contractor.1 (Resp’t Des’g Evid., Ex. 1 ¶¶ 1, 4.) For example, Lowes might have been engaged to install [54]*54a new roof on, or new kitchen cabinets in, a customer’s home. Lowes performed these services pursuant to installation contracts with its customers. (Resp’t Des’g Evid., Exs. 1 ¶ 4, 9; 1:G) The installation contracts provided that Lowes would furnish both the construction material — typically pulled from its store inventory — and the labor to complete the specified projects.2 (See, e.g., Resp’t Des’g Evid., Exs. 1:G at 1, 1:K at 21-23, 1:L at 21.) Lowes subsequently self-assessed and remitted use tax to the Department on the construction material it furnished under the installation contracts. (Resp’t Des’g Evid., Ex. 1:D at 3-4.) Lowes calculated the amount of use tax it owed using its cost to acquire the construction material (i.e., its wholesale cost). (Resp’t Des’g Evid., Ex. 1:D at 3-4.)

In November of 2010, the Department completed an audit of Lowes. During the course of the audit, the Department determined that instead of self-assessing and remitting use tax on the construction material furnished under the installation contracts, Lowes should have collected sales tax from its customers using the retail cost of the construction material. (See Resp’t Des’g Evid., Ex. 1:D at 3-4.) As a result, the Department issued proposed sales tax assessments against Lowes, including penalties and interest.3 (Resp’t Des’g Evid., Ex. 1:B.)

Lowes subsequently filed a protest with the Department. On June 28, 2011, after conducting an administrative hearing, the Department issued a Letter of Findings denying Lowes’s protest. On November 29, 2011, after conducting a rehearing, the Department again denied Lowes’s protest in a Supplemental Letter of Findings.

Lowes initiated this original tax appeal on December 7, 2012. Both Lowes and the Department subsequently filed motions for summary judgment. The Court held a hearing on those motions on October 24, 2013. Additional facts will be supplied as necessary.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Summary judgment is appropriate when there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ind. Trial Rule 56(C); Horseshoe Hammond, LLC v. Indiana Dep’t of State Revenue, 865 N.E.2d 725, 727 (Ind. Tax Ct.2007), review denied. Cross-motions for summary judgment do not alter this standard. Ho 2d at 727.

LAW

Indiana imposes sales tax “on retail transactions made in Indiana.” I.C. § 6-2.5-2-l(a). A retail transaction occurs when a retail merchant, in the ordinary course of his regularly conducted trade or business, “(1) acquires tangible personal property for the purpose of resale; and (2) transfers that property to another person for consideration.” Ind.Code § 6-2.5-4-1(a), (b) (2007). The purchaser of the tangible personal property is liable for the sales tax. I.C. § 6-2.5-2-l(b).

Indiana imposes a use tax “on the storage, use, or consumption of tangible personal property in Indiana if the property was acquired in a retail transaction, regardless of the location of that transaction or of the retail merchant making that transaction.” Ind.Code § 6-2.5-3-2(a) (2007). The use tax is complementary to [55]*55the sales tax in that it applies only to transactions that would have been subject to the sales tax but for some reason have escaped it. Indiana Dep’t of State Revenue v. AOL, LLC, 963 N.E.2d 498, 501 (Ind.2012). The person who stores, uses, or consumes the tangible personal property is liable for the use tax. See Ind.Code § 6—2.5—3—6(b) (2007).

Indiana also imposes use tax “on the addition of tangible personal property to a structure or facility, if, after its addition, the property becomes part of the real estate on which the structure or facility is located.”4 I.C. § 6-2.5-3-2(c). Thus, contractors that do not pay sales tax on their purchase of construction material must remit use tax on their cost of purchasing the material when they incorporate it into real property. See I.C. § 6-2.5 — 3—2(c); swpra note 1. See also 45 Ind. Admin. Code 2.2-3-8(b) (2007) (see http:// www.in.gov/legislative/iac/); 45 Ind. Admin. Code 2.2-4-21 (b) (2007) (see http://www.in. gov/legislative/iac/) (both stating that “[a]ll construction material purchased by a contractor is taxable either at the time of purchase, or if purchased exempt (or otherwise acquired exempt) upon disposition unless the ultimate recipient could have purchased it exempt”). The imposition of this tax accounts for the fact that

[i]n general, all sales of tangible personal property are taxable, and all sales of real property are not taxable. The conversion of tangible personal property into realty does not relieve [a] taxpayer from a liability for any owing and unpaid [sales] tax or use tax with respect to such tangible personal property.

45 I.A.C. 2.2-3-8(a). See also 45 I.A.C. 2.2-4-21(a).

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23 N.E.3d 52, 2014 Ind. Tax LEXIS 58, 2014 WL 7215767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowes-home-centers-llc-v-indiana-department-of-state-revenue-indtc-2014.