Northeastern Pennsylvania Imaging Center v. Commonwealth

35 A.3d 752, 613 Pa. 560
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 21, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 35 A.3d 752 (Northeastern Pennsylvania Imaging Center v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northeastern Pennsylvania Imaging Center v. Commonwealth, 35 A.3d 752, 613 Pa. 560 (Pa. 2011).

Opinions

OPINION

Justice EAKIN.

In these consolidated appeals, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Revenue seeks review of the Commonwealth Court’s decisions holding appellees’ MRI1 and PET/CT2 Scan systems were not tangible personal property subject to sales tax under § 7202(a) of the Tax Reform Code of 1971, 72 P.S. § 7101 et seq., because they were part of real estate structures. We reverse.

The facts relevant to both appeals, as established by joint stipulation, are set forth individually below, along with the procedural history of each case.

Northeastern Pennsylvania Imaging Center v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

In December, 2003, Northeastern Pennsylvania Imaging Center purchased an [754]*754MRI and PET/CT Sean system from Philips Medical Systems North America Company. Northeastern paid Philips $2,172,375 for the MRI system, and paid $129,774.02 in sales tax. For the PET/CT Scan system, it paid Philips $1,815,000, and paid $98,010 in sales tax. To prepare for installation of both systems in its facility, Northeastern made extensive structural changes to the building, which it owns. The changes included: revising the electrical, heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and plumbing systems; installing floor and ceiling supports; enlarging rooms; installing troughs in the walls and conduit above the ceilings to accommodate power cables and wire; installing radio frequency shielding in the walls, floor, and ceiling to prevent MRI radio signals from interfering with other devices; installing a vent for safe removal of cryogenic helium vapor the MRI magnet generated; installing lead panels for radiation shielding; enlarging doors in order to move the PET/CT Scan system into the building; and removing an outside wall in order to move the MRI system into the building.

The MRI system weighed 15,201 pounds and could only be moved by a crane. It took approximately five days to install. The system’s magnet and patient table were bolted to the building, using anchors installed in concrete beneath the floor. Removal of the system would require several days of interior construction work and would necessitate removing an exterior wall to give a crane access to the system. The PET/CT Scan system weighed 12,375 pounds and took approximately two weeks to install. The system’s gantry3 and patient table were bolted to the building by anchors installed in concrete beneath the floor, and the system was hardwired to Northeastern’s electrical system. Removal of the PET/CT Scan system would require several days. The MRI system remains in place in Northeastern’s facility; however, the PET/CT Scan system became obsolete, and was removed and replaced with a new system in 2006. The new system was not at issue in this matter.

On July 20, 2004, the Department issued a letter ruling which stated, “[P]rospec-tively the sale and installation of an MRI to [a] taxable entity is considered a construction contract. The MRI is considered to be a permanent part of the real estate upon installation.” Pennsylvania Sales and Use Tax Letter Ruling No. SUT-04-021, 7/20/04, at 1. Thus, the sale and installation of MRI and PET/CT Scan systems like the ones Northeastern purchased was no longer subject to sales tax, which only applies to the sale of tangible personal property and services. See 72 P.S. § 7202(a) (imposing six percent sales tax on sale at retail of tangible personal property or services). Instead, as part of a construction contract,4 the sale and installation of MRI and PET/CT Scan systems would be subject to a use5 tax under 72 P.S. § 7202(b), which imposes a six per[755]*755cent tax on the use of tangible personal property, paid by the seller or contractor. Ten months later, the Department rescinded its first letter ruling; it issued a second letter ruling which stated an installed MRI system would be subject to sales tax as tangible personal property. See Pennsylvania Sales and Use Tax Letter Ruling No. SUT-05-008, 5/20/05.

Northeastern had paid sales tax on its imaging systems in installments during a large portion of the period when the first letter ruling was in effect. It filed a claim with the Department December 7, 2006, seeking a refund of $362,811.88 for the sales tax paid on the systems and their service agreements. The Department denied Northeastern’s refund claim, and Northeastern filed a petition for review with the Board of Finance and Review, which affirmed.

Northeastern petitioned the Commonwealth Court for review, seeking reversal of the Board’s decision on the grounds that the Department’s first letter ruling was correct, and the acquisition of the imaging systems did not trigger a sales tax event; rather, the systems were installed as part of a construction contract and thus were subject to use tax payable by the seller or contractor.6 The Department countered that Northeastern, not Philips (who sold the imaging systems), was responsible for the construction necessary to prepare the building for installation of the systems. It also argued the systems were items of tangible personal property, which were not so annexed to Northeastern’s building that they became part of the realty.

In a published opinion, the Commonwealth Court reversed the Board’s decision; it concluded the imaging systems, once installed, constituted realty, and thus were not subject to sales tax. Acknowledging that the Tax Reform Code’s definition of “real estate structure” does not apply to for-profit corporations like Northeastern, the court relied on In re Appeal of Sheetz, 657 A.2d 1011 (Pa.Cmwlth.1995), which the parties contended set forth the appropriate test for determining whether the imaging systems were tangible personal property or part of the realty. The court noted, in a footnote, that the parties agreed Commonwealth v. Beck Electric Construction, Inc., 485 Pa. 604, 403 A.2d 553 (1979), did not apply; although the ease concerned the applicability of sales tax, it was partially superseded by statute insofar as it pertained to sales and use tax for tax-exempt entities. See Northeastern Pennsylvania Imaging Center v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 978 A.2d 1055, 1061-62 n. 13 (Pa.Cmwlth.2009). The court further noted Beck’s analysis, which focused on an item’s ease of portability in determining whether it was realty, was based on a regulation that had since been superseded; thus, the court did not apply Beck. Id.

Instead, the court relied on Sheetz, which was a real estate assessment case. At issue in Sheetz was whether canopies covering gasoline pumps at a service station became part of the real.estate for purposes of assessing the real property’s value. Sheetz identified three classes of chattel: (1) furniture and similar items, which are always personalty; (2) items annexed to the building or land to the extent they could not be removed without causing injury to the realty or themselves, [756]

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Bluebook (online)
35 A.3d 752, 613 Pa. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northeastern-pennsylvania-imaging-center-v-commonwealth-pa-2011.