New Mexico Taxation & Revenue Department v. Dean Baldwin Painting, Inc.

2007 NMCA 153, 174 P.3d 525, 143 N.M. 189
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 2007
Docket26,752
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2007 NMCA 153 (New Mexico Taxation & Revenue Department v. Dean Baldwin Painting, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Mexico Taxation & Revenue Department v. Dean Baldwin Painting, Inc., 2007 NMCA 153, 174 P.3d 525, 143 N.M. 189 (N.M. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

WECHSLER, Judge.

{1} In this appeal regarding a taxpayer’s protest of the assessment of gross receipts taxes to the sale of services, the painting of airplanes, to out-of-state customers, we address the requirement for a deduction under NMSA 1978, § 7-9-57(A) (2000), that the buyer not make initial use or take delivery of the product of the service in New Mexico. We conclude that the flying of an airplane to the customer’s out-of-state location for inspection and acceptance of the service does not constitute initial use. We nonetheless conclude that Taxpayer, Dean Baldwin Painting, Inc., did not meet its burden of proof to show out-of-state delivery that would permit Taxpayer to take the deduction. We affirm the denial of the protest.

BACKGROUND

{2} Taxpayer filed a timely protest of an assessment of gross receipts taxes by the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD). The following facts were determined by the TRD hearing officer after hearing.

{3} During the audit period in question, April 1998 through June 2001, Taxpayer engaged in the business of painting airplanes used by airlines, corporations, cargo companies, and the United States military. It operated a facility in New Mexico, and it performed all work that is the subject of the protest at the facility. Flight crews of customers flew the customers’ airplanes to and from Taxpayer’s New Mexico facility. They did so under Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) “ferry permits” that permit transport to and from a specified maintenance location without the presence of paying customers or cargo. Typically, the crews were maintenance crews that fly the airplanes for maintenance only, rather than the customers’ regular flight crews. Customers’ technical representatives often remained with the airplanes to act as liaisons with Taxpayer.

{4} The customers retained title to the airplanes. Taxpayer’s mechanics had FAA certifications to inspect the airplanes for safety to fly after painting, but they could not recertify the airplanes to carry paying passengers or cargo. That necessary recertification took place after the customers’ flight crews transported the airplanes to another location for inspection, including inspection of Taxpayer’s work. If a customer had a complaint, Taxpayer would perform additional work either at its New Mexico facility or at the customer’s location.

{5} The hearing officer concluded that Taxpayer’s customers both made initial use of and took delivery of the product of Taxpayer’s service in New Mexico. The hearing officer therefore denied Taxpayer’s protest except for an amount that is not at issue in this appeal. Taxpayer appeals, contending that it is entitled to deductions from its gross receipts for its receipts from all customers except the two with which it had a services agreement because it provided the services to an out-of-state customer under Section 7-9-57(A).

APPLICATION OF SECTION 7-9-57(A)

{6} Section 7-9-57(A) provides:

Receipts from performing a service may be deducted from gross receipts if the sale of the service is made to an out-of-state buyer who delivers to the seller either an appropriate nontaxable transaction certificate or other evidence acceptable to the secretary unless the buyer of the service or any of the buyer’s employees or agents makes initial use of the product of the service in New Mexico or takes delivery of the product of the service in New Mexico.

The language of Section 7-9-57(A) is clear. To be entitled to a deduction, neither of the conditions that would negate the deduction can exist; the buyer of the service can neither make initial use in New Mexico nor take delivery in New Mexico. We address each condition to determine if it applies in this case.

I. Initial Use in New Mexico

{7} The product of the service must be used initially outside New Mexico if the receipts from the provision of the service are to be deducted from the receipts of a taxpayer providing services within New Mexico. Section 7-9-57(A). The hearing officer concluded that Taxpayer’s customers made initial use of their painted airplanes in New Mexico. We review the hearing officer’s conclusion concerning the application of Section 7-9-57(A) de novo because it presents a question of law. See TPL, Inc. v. N.M. Taxation & Revenue Dep’t, 2003-NMSC-007, ¶ 10, 133 N.M. 447, 64 P.3d 474.

{8} The hearing officer relied upon Reed v. Jones, 81 N.M. 481, 468 P.2d 882 (Ct.App.1970). In that case, the taxpayer performed repairs on his customer’s bread delivery truck in New Mexico. Id. at 481-82, 468 P.2d at 882-83. Upon completion of the work, the truck was driven to Texas, where the customer was located. Id. at 482, 468 P.2d at 883. We held that initial use was made of the truck in New Mexico, rather than in Texas, where it would be placed in service for bread deliveries. Id. We stated that if the statute had been clear, we would not have needed to construe the language “initial use.” Id. at 482-83, 468 P.2d at 883-84. Since the issuance of the Reed opinion, the legislature has defined “initial use.” NMSA 1978, § 7-9-3(0) (1991, as amended through 2002) (current version at NMSA 1978, § 7-9-3(D) (2006)). We are therefore guided by the statutory definition rather than the interpretation in Reed.

{9} Section 7-9-3(D) defines “initial use” as “the first employment for the intended purpose.” The product of Taxpayer’s service was a repainted airplane. See TPL, 2003-NMSC-007, ¶ 12, 133 N.M. 447, 64 P.3d 474 (stating that “the ‘product’ is the ‘direct result’ or ‘consequence’ flowing from the service” and that the benefit received represents the “product of service”). The intended purpose of the airplanes, depending on the customer, was to transport passengers or cargo, or to conduct activity of the military.

{10} The transport by the customers’ maintenance crews was not a use for the airplanes’ intended purpose. The customers’ maintenance crews transported the airplanes to and from New Mexico for the limited purpose of maintenance under an FAA permit restricting the use of the airplane. The transport by a maintenance crew from Taxpayer’s facility to the location selected by the customer was merely an extension of the maintenance of the airplane. It may have enabled the customer to return the airplane to its intended use or purpose, but the airplane still needed to be inspected and recertified before it could again be used for its intended purpose. This inspection and re-certification did not take place in New Mexico. The first employment of the airplane for its intended purposes, therefore, could not have occurred until the airplane was transported from New Mexico. The hearing officer was incorrect in concluding that there was initial use in New Mexico.

II. Delivery in New Mexico

{11} A valid deduction from gross receipts under Section 7-9-57(A) also requires that delivery not occur in New Mexico.

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2007 NMCA 153, 174 P.3d 525, 143 N.M. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-mexico-taxation-revenue-department-v-dean-baldwin-painting-inc-nmctapp-2007.