MOON SCHOOLS UNION SCH. DIST. v. Tiglio
This text of 128 A.2d 150 (MOON SCHOOLS UNION SCH. DIST. v. Tiglio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Moon Schools Union School District
v.
Tiglio, Appellant.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania.
*68 Before HIRT, GUNTHER, WRIGHT, WOODSIDE, and CARR, JJ. (RHODES, P.J., and ERVIN, J., absent).
*69 Alan D. Riester, with him Harry V. Bair, and Brandt, Riester, Brandt & Malone, for appellant.
Robert Van der Voort, with him John F. Healy, and Van der Voort, Royston, Robb & Leonard, for appellee.
OPINION BY WOODSIDE, J., December 28, 1956:
A third class school district comprising the townships of Moon and Crescent in Allegheny County is here seeking through an action in assumpsit to collect a tax imposed by the school district "upon the admission fee or upon the privilege of attending or participating in amusements" conducted within the townships.
The defendant is an individual engaged in business at the Terminal Building, Greater Pittsburgh Airport, Moon Township, as the proprietor of an amusement arcade. As part of the arcade, the defendant operates a large number of coin operated amusement devices such as pinball machines, shuffleboard alleys and photographic machines, all of which are played by patrons of the arcade through the insertion of coins.
The Act of June 25, 1947, P.L. 1145, as amended, 53 PS § 2015.1 oftentimes referred to as the "Tax Anything Act," authorized certain political subdivisions, among them school districts of the third class, to levy and collect taxes on persons, transactions, occupations, *70 privileges, subjects and personal property within their limits, providing that the object taxed was not then, nor thereafter became subject to a state tax.
Pursuant to this enabling act the school district passed a resolution imposing a tax upon the admission fee, or upon the privilege of attending or participating in amusements, at the rate of 1¢ upon each 10¢ of admissions or fraction thereof, charged to the persons paying the admission.
The word "amusement" was defined by the resolution to cover all manner and form of entertainment including among others, "in arcades and in or upon coin operated machines or devices located therein, . . ."
The word "proprietor" was defined as "Any person owning, operating, managing or conducting an amusement."
The resolution further provided that a registration certificate be obtained by the proprietor, and that the proprietor "shall collect the tax imposed by this Resolution from the person paying the admission and shall be liable to Moon Schools Union School District as agents thereof for the payment of the same to the School District . . ." It likewise provided that the proprietor should deduct 2% of the amount of tax due as compensation from the school district for his services in computing, reporting or returning and paying the tax. There was also a provision that any proprietor neglecting or refusing to comply with the terms within thirty days of the date the report or return and tax were due, would be liable to the tax collector for an additional 10% of the amount of the tax. Taxes unpaid thirty days after the due date were to bear interest at the rate of ½% per month until paid.
The resolution became effective June 14, 1954. Although the appellant registered as required, he has refused *71 to file the returns or collect and pay over the tax imposed by the resolution.
On December 15, 1954 a deficiency assessment was made against the defendant pursuant to the terms of the resolution, and notice of the same was sent to him. When the defendant persisted in his refusal this action in assumpsit was commenced to collect the amount of the deficiency assessed.
The lower court, after dismissing the defendant's preliminary objections and after holding a hearing on the merits without a jury, entered judgment in the sum of $1278.27. This judgment was calculated by taking 10% of the defendant's gross receipts for the period from June 14 to November 30, 1954, and adding thereto the 10% penalty. From the entry of this judgment defendant has appealed.
The tax is upon the privilege of participating in amusements. "Amusements" are defined in the resolution to include coin operated machines or devices. The resolution clearly contemplates a tax upon the playing of coin operated machines. The tax was imposed not upon the place of amusement, but upon the privilege of engaging in the amusement as defined. Such an imposition has been held by the Supreme Court to have been authorized under the aforesaid enabling act. Fierro v. Williamsport, 384 Pa. 568, 120 A. 2d 889 (1956).
It is of no consequence that the secretary of the school board in a letter to the appellant, and the president in his testimony referred to the resolution as a gross receipts tax; it is the resolution itself which determines the nature of the tax. Neither is it of any relevance that the tax is difficult or uneconomical for a proprietor to collect; nor is it material that the school district officials devised no method of collecting the *72 tax from a patron inserting a coin in a coin-operated machine. We mention these matters, all of which we think are irrelevant, only because much of the testimony as well as much of the appellant's brief were given to a consideration of them.
Section 6(a) of the resolution provides: "If any proprietor subject to the provisions of this Resolution shall fail to file a report or return at the time required herein . . . the Tax Collector shall make an assessment of the tax . . . for the amount of the tax that should have been paid by such proprietor based upon all the information before the Tax Collector."
The proprietor failed to file the report or return required by the resolution, and the tax collector thereupon had authority to compute the amount which should have been collected. He did so by taking 10% of the gross receipts of the defendant's coin machine business.
The appellant contends that the taxing authorities have thus imposed upon him, the proprietor, a gross receipts tax, while the resolution imposes upon the person paying the admission an amusement tax. The resolution does not impose a gross receipts tax, and no such tax can be collected from the proprietor under it. This does not mean, however, that gross receipts cannot, under any circumstances be used as the basis for determining the amount of tax which the proprietor should have collected from the persons paying the admissions. The amount of tax which the proprietor should have collected from his patrons, and paid over to the tax collector of the school district, would under certain circumstances equal 10% of his gross receipts. For example, if all of the machines from which the proprietor obtained receipts required 10¢ or a multiple thereof for each play, the tax which the proprietor *73 should have collected from his patrons, and 10% of his gross receipts would be the same figure. If such were the case we would affirm the judgment entered in the court below. However, the evidence shows that the "admissions" collected through the machines were not all 10¢ but some were 5¢, and others 25¢, and for the reasons hereinafter set forth, we think the entry of the judgment in the amount of 10% of the gross receipts (plus penalties) in this case was error.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
128 A.2d 150, 183 Pa. Super. 67, 1956 Pa. Super. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moon-schools-union-sch-dist-v-tiglio-pasuperct-1956.