New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Clark

624 A.2d 298, 1993 R.I. LEXIS 123, 1993 WL 138268
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 26, 1993
Docket92-97-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 624 A.2d 298 (New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Clark, 624 A.2d 298, 1993 R.I. LEXIS 123, 1993 WL 138268 (R.I. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

FAY, Chief Justice.

This matter is before the court pursuant to a petition for writ of certiorari. The tax administrator filed this petition, seeking review of a District Court judgment that held that certain engineering services provided to New England Telephone and Telegraph Company (NET) by American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT & T) were not taxable under G.L.1956 (1988 Reenactment) § 44-18-12.

The engineering services involved in this dispute are associated with updating certain central-office locations of NET. A central office is like a police officer whose job is directing traffic, controlling the direction and flow of travel associated with a certain geographic location. The central office is responsible for switching telephone lines to interconnect with any other telephone line in the same exchange area or any other location in the state, country, or world. Rhode Island generally has one central office per community, although the large metropolitan areas may have more because of their greater customer density. Each central office has specific, generic equipment that is common to all central offices. As a certain geographic location grows and more phone lines are added, the central office must be updated to accommodate the increased activity. This activity involves introducing telecommunication equipment into the present infrastructure of the central-office location. Engineering services must be performed to ensure the proper interfacing of the new equipment with the existing equipment in the central-office location. A chief engineer of NET testified that a central office can be seen as a large loop, and in order for equipment to be added to the office, the loop must be opened. This procedure must be done in a very exacting and precise manner to ensure that service to telephone customers is not interrupted.

*300 As a result of an audit for the period from January 1984 through December 1986, the tax administrator imposed a tax of $157,698.39 on engineering services provided to NET by AT & T in updating central-office locations. In audits conducted before the divestiture of AT & T, the same type of engineering services were furnished to NET by Western Electric Company, a predecessor in interest to AT & T, yet no taxes were imposed on those services. The tax administrator avers that the assessed engineering services are so inextricably interwoven with the sale of the equipment that the services are part and parcel of a single transaction. New England Telephone submits that the purchase of the engineering services and the purchase of the equipment are two separate transactions. Consequently NET asserts that the engineering services are nontaxable professional services.

The tax administrator also asks us specifically to review an evidentiary issue regarding the admissibility of hypothetical questions in a tax hearing.

I

“A writ of certiorari brings up the record of the lower court for inspection and review on questions of law only. * * * Review is limited to the allegations of error which appear in the petition for the writ.” Statewide Multiple Listing Service, Inc. v. Norberg, 120 R.I. 937, 940, 392 A.2d 371, 372 (1978). See also G.L.1956 (1985 Reenactment) § 8-8-32. Furthermore, this court affords great weight to findings of fact by a trial justice sitting without a jury. “We shall not disturb the findings of the trial justice unless it is established that he or she misconceived or overlooked relevant and material evidence or was otherwise clearly wrong.” Cerilli v. Newport Offshore, Ltd., 612 A.2d 35, 39 (R.I.1992). In his petition the tax administrator alleges that the trial judge misconceived critical evidence, improperly relied on hypothetical questions, and misapplied the real-object test in holding that the particular engineering services were not taxable as “part of the sale.”

The primary issue before this court is whether the engineering services rendered in conjunction with NET’S acquisition of central-office equipment are subject to the Rhode Island use tax as “services that are part of the sale” of tangible personalty according to § 44-18-12. The trial judge found that the engineering services were not “part of the sale” under the statute and consequently held that the services were not subject to taxation.

Our difficulty lies in the premise that most transactions, to a certain degree, involve some amount of personal service and some amount of tangible property.

“In the jungle of verbiage that characterizes sales and use tax statutes it must not be forgotten that the privilege taxed is that of selling at retail tangible personal property in this state or the use or consumption, in this state, of any item or article of tangible personal property as defined in [the statute].” Cities Service Co. v. Tidwell, 534 S.W.2d 298, 302 (Tenn.1976).

We now begin our own safari into the tax jungle by analyzing the appropriate statute. Section 44-18-12 provides in part that “(1) ‘Sale price’ means the total amount for which tangible personal property is sold or leased or rented * * * valued in money * * * including all of the following: (A) Any services that are a part of the sale, valued in money, whether paid in money or otherwise. ” (Emphasis added.) Subsection (2)(C) of § 44-18-12 specifically excludes labor or services rendered in installation of the property when the charge is separately stated.

On a number of different occasions this court has analyzed the taxability of mixed transactions. We begin by reviewing the well-reasoned Statewide opinion. In Statewide this court outlined three categories for analyzing mixed transactions. The three situations that the court profiled were these:

1. The service is the main item purchased, and the property received is incidental to that service.
*301 2. The service aspect and the property aspect of the transaction are readily separable.
3. The property is the main item purchased, and the service is incidental to the receipt of that property. Statewide, 120 R.I. at 942, 392 A.2d at 374.

The court concluded that transactions would not be taxable when service is the real object of the transaction (situation 1), but instances wherein property is the real object of the transaction would be taxable (situation 3). (See Hasbro Industries, Inc. v. Norberg, 487 A.2d 124 (R.I.1985), for another application of the real-object test.) The Statewide court did not directly confront the situation in which the service and the property aspects of the transaction are readily separable (situation 2). We believe that the logical implication of the Statewide

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Bluebook (online)
624 A.2d 298, 1993 R.I. LEXIS 123, 1993 WL 138268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-telephone-telegraph-co-v-clark-ri-1993.