Maine Aviation Corporation v. Johnson

196 A.2d 748, 160 Me. 1, 1964 Me. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 14, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 196 A.2d 748 (Maine Aviation Corporation v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maine Aviation Corporation v. Johnson, 196 A.2d 748, 160 Me. 1, 1964 Me. LEXIS 2 (Me. 1964).

Opinion

Williamson, C. J.

On report. This is an appeal from the assessment of a use tax on the transfer of a Cessna 310B aircraft from Bar Harbor Airways, Inc. to the appellant, Maine Aviation Corporation, both Maine corporations. There is no dispute about the amount of the tax based on the value of the aircraft, if it be determined that a tax is due.

Maine Aviation was registered with the Tax Assessor as a corporation doing business in aviation sales and service and also operated aviation services in Auburn and Portland, conducting “the business of flight instruction, charter services, air taxi service, aircraft rentals.” Bar Harbor Airways was likewise so registered and was similarly engaged in business in Trenton, Maine. Sales and Use Tax Law, R. S., c. 17, § 6.

In September 1958 Bar Harbor Airways purchased the Cessna aircraft in question for resale in the ordinary business of purchasing and selling aircraft. Subsequently, and before the transfer to Maine Aviation, it used the aircraft for “its own benefit and profit purposes” and paid a use tax thereon. In brief, the aircraft was taken from the stock in trade or inventory and used by Bar Harbor Airways for its general corporate purposes.

In February 1959 the aircraft was transferred to Maine Aviation for its use and not for resale. The transfer was evidenced by a bill of sale on a Federal Aviation Agency form used for registration purposes. The bill of sale exe *3 cuted by Bar Harbor Airways named as the seller reads in part:

“FEDERAL AVIATION AGENCY BILL OF SALE
For and in consideration of $1.00 A.O.C. the undersigned owner of the full legal and beneficial title of the aircraft described as follows:
Aircraft Make and Model CESSNA 310B
does . . . hereby sell, grant, transfer, and deliver all of his right, title and interest in and to such aircraft unto:
(Name and address of purchaser — same as on Parts A and B of this form)
MAINE AVIATION CORPORATION
Name of Seller BAR HARBOR AIRWAYS INC.
By (Sign in ink) Joseph A. Caruso
(If executed for co-ownership, all must sign)
Title PRESIDENT.....”_

The letters “A.O.C.” are an abbreviation of “and other consideration.”

The two stockholders of Bar Harbor Airways, each of whom owned of record or equitably one-half of its outstanding capital stock, organized Maine Aviation to bring about, in the words of appellant’s counsel, a “spin off” under Federal income tax law of a portion of their business assets to a new corporation. The purpose of the “reorganization” was to take advantage of income tax benefits of no interest to us in detail. The outstanding capital stock of the new corporation representing the book value of the aircraft was owned of record and equitably by the same two stockholders precisely as was the stock of Bar Harbor Airways.

*4 ■■ The pertinent parts of the Sales and Use Tax Law (R. S., c. 17) are:

“Sec. 4. Use Tax. A tax is imposed on the storage, use or other consumption in this State of tangible personal property, purchased at retail sale on and after July 1, 1957, at the rate of 3% of the sale price. Every person so storing, using or otherwise consuming is liable for the tax until he has paid the same or has taken a receipt from his seller, thereto duly authorized by the Tax Assessor, showing that the seller has collected the sales or use tax, in which case the seller shall be liable for it.”
(The above rate was in effect at the time of the transaction.)

In order that a use tax be imposed, there must be a retail sale or sale at retail.

“Sec. 2. Definitions. ‘Retail sale’ or ‘sale at retail’ means any sale of tangible personal property, in the ordinary course of business, for consumption or use, or for any purpose other than for resale, except resale as a casual sale, in the form of tangible personal property, . . . The term ‘retail sale’ or ‘sale at retail’ does not include . . . any ■ other isolated transaction in which any tangible personal property is sold, transferred, offered for sale or delivered by the owner thereof, such sale, transfer, offer for sale, or delivery not being made in the ordinary course of repeated and successive transactions of a like character by such owner, such transactions being elsewhere sometimes referred to as ‘casual sales’ ...”
‡ jj; í|í & ífc
“ ‘Sale’ means any transfer, exchange or barter, in any manner or by any means whatsoever, for a consideration in the regular course of business. .. ”
“ ‘Use’ includes the exercise in this State of any right or power over tangible personal property *5 incident to its ownership when purchased by the user at retail sale.”
“Sec. 9. Presumption concerning sales. The burden of proving that a transaction was not taxable shall be upon the person charged with tax liability.”

The decisive issue in our view is whether the transfer of the aircraft was a “casual sale,” and hence not subject to the use tax.

The appellant strongly urges that we look behind the corporate entities to find no more than a splitting off of certain property from one corporation to a newly created corporation with precisely the same ownership of stock. It argues that there was no sale within the meaning of the Sales and Use Tax Law.

We see no reason, however, for disregarding the corporate entities. In Bonnar-Vawter, Inc. v. Johnson, 157 Me. 380, 173 A. (2nd) 141, we held transactions between a parent and subsidiary corporation were subject to the sales tax. We said at pp. 387, 388:

. “Generally, courts have been reluctant to disregard the legal entity of a corporation, and have done so with caution and only when necessary in the interest of justice. The corporate entity will be disregarded when used to cover fraud or illegality, or to justify a wrong. It will not be disregarded when to do so would promote an injustice, give an unfair advantage, or contravene public policy.”
“In the field of retail sales tax legislation and similar tax legislation, courts have generally refused, for various reasons, to separate the corporate entities of the parent company and the wholly owned subsidary in order to grant relief from such taxes at the expense of the state.”

In the instant case there were substantial reasons for the transfer of the aircraft to a new corporation. The ap *6 pellant tells us the “reorganization” was intended to accomplish income tax benefits.

We have here in terms the sale of an aircraft by the owner Bar Harbor Airways to a purchaser Maine Aviation for its use and not for resale.

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Bluebook (online)
196 A.2d 748, 160 Me. 1, 1964 Me. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maine-aviation-corporation-v-johnson-me-1964.