Northern Improvement Company v. Engen

68 N.W.2d 463, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 119
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1954
Docket7475
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 N.W.2d 463 (Northern Improvement Company v. Engen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Improvement Company v. Engen, 68 N.W.2d 463, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 119 (N.D. 1954).

Opinion

*465 MORRIS, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint. The complaint discloses that the plaintiff is a North Dakota corporation engaged in the contracting business and among other things constructs projects for the United States Government, the State of North Dakota, political subdivisions of the state, municipal corporations and educational institutions created and operated by the state. During the year 1953 the plaintiff purchased tangible personal property consisting of cement, steel, iron, equipment, glass, paint, lumber and other construction supplies and sundries which it incorporated in various projects and structures which became a part of the real estate of tax exempt entities upon which such projects and structures were located, all of which were within the State of North Dakota. On or about January 19, 1954, the plaintiff paid under protest a sales tax and use tax of $8,448.56 on this tangible personal property. After filing a claim for a refund of the sum so paid, which was rejected, the plaintiff brought this action to recover the amount paid.

The plaintiff contends that when it incorporates steel, cement, or other construction materials into airports, roads, streets, and structures for the government of the United States or the state or the tax exempt agencies of either, it makes a retail sale of those materials and that such sale is exempt under the sales tax law because the tax exempt contractee is the consumer. The state tax commissioner contends that in such transactions the plaintiff is the consumer and must pay a sales tax on the tangible personal property it consumes in creating the structure which is the object of the construction contract.

Our sales tax law is contained in •Chapter 57-39, NDRC 1943 and in Chapter 57-39, NDRC 1953 Supp. A tax of two per cent is imposed upon gross receipts from all sales of personal property consisting of goods, wares, or merchandise sold at retail in the state of North Dakota to consumers or users, except as otherwise provided in the act. Section 57-3902, ND RC 1953 Supp. The phrase, “goods, wares, or merchandise,” embraces some, and sometimes all, species of personal property. It never includes real estate. Culp v. Holbrook, 76 Ind.App. 272, 129 N.E. 278; Crowe v. Union Automobile Ins. Co., Tex.Civ.App., 79 S.W.2d 168.

Chapter 57-40, NDRC 1943, provides for a use tax which is declared to be supplementary to the sales tax. Section 57-4003. Section 57-4002, NDRC 1943, imposes an excise tax of two per cent on the storage, use, or consumption in this state of tangible personal property purchased at retail for storage, use, or consumption in this state. Section 57-4005 provides that this tax shall be paid in the following manner:

“1. The tax upon tangible personal property which is sold by a retailer maintaining a place of business in this state, or by such other retailer as the tax commissioner shall authorize pursuant to subsection 2 of section 57-4006, shall be collected by the retailer and remitted to the commissioner as provided by section 57-4006;
“2. The tax, when not paid in conformity with subsection 1 of this section, shall be paid to the tax commissioner directly by any person storing, using, or consuming such property within this state, pursuant to the provisions of section 57-4006.”

In Section 57-4006, NDRC 1943, we find that:

“6. Any person who uses any property upon which the said tax has not been paid, either to the retailer or directly to the tax commissioner, shall be liable therefor, and, on or before the twentieth day of the month next succeeding each quarterly period, shall pay the tax upon all such property used by him during the preceding quarterly period, in such manner and accompanied by such returns as the commissioner shall prescribe; * *

Section 57-3902, NDRC 1953 Supp., imposes a sales tax upon goods “sold at *466 retail.” Section 57-3901, NDRC 1953 Supp., defines words and phrases used in the sales tax law and says:

“3. ‘Retail sale’ or ‘sale at retail’ means the sale to a consumer or to any person for any purpose, other than for processing or for resale, of tangible personal property * * *. The sale of an item of tangible personal property for the purpose of incorporating it in or attaching it to other real or personal property otherwise exempt from the sales tax shall be considered as a sale of tangible personal property for a purpose other than for processing ; * *

Under this definitive statutory provision, it is clear that when any person for any purpose buys an item of tangible personal property for the purpose of incorporating it in or attaching it to real property, the sale cannot be considered either for processing or for resale but is a taxable sale at retail.

The plaintiff points out that under Section 57-3903, NDRC 1943, gross receipts from the sale of tangible personal property sold to the United States, the State of North Dakota, or any of its subdivisions, departments, or institutions, including municipal corporations, are exempt from the sales tax and argues that the construction of a project for the United States or the state or any of its exempt institutions, subdivisions, or corporations, is a sale thereto of the tangible personal property incorporated in the project by the plaintiff and is exempt from the sales tax. In support of its contention the plaintiff turns to the definition of the word “retailer” contained in paragraph 5 of Section 57-3901, NDRC 1953 Supp., which provides that

“ ‘Retailer’ * * * shall include any person as herein defined who by contract or otherwise agrees to furnish for a consideration a totally or partially finished product consisting in whole or in part of tangible personal property subject to the sales tax herein provided, and all items of (of) tangible personal property entering into the performance of such contract as a component part of the product agreed to be furnished under said contract shall be subject to the sales tax herein provided; and the sales tax thereon shall be collected by the contractor from the person for whom the contract has been performed in addition to the contract price agreed upon, and shall be remitted to the state in the manner provided in this Act (chapter); * * * ft

We must determine whether one who buys tangible personal property and attaches it to real property in the course of constructing a project is a retailer who has agreed to furnish a totally or partially finished product consisting in whole or in part of tangible personal property subject to our sales tax or whether he is a person who buys personal property for the purpose of incorporating it in or attaching it to real estate. In the former instance he is a retailer under paragraph 5, in the latter he is a consumer, the purchase being a sale at retail under paragraph 3. If the transaction by which the contractor purchased his materials is a sale at retail and taxable, the plaintiff, as consumer, must pay the tax regardless of whether his construction conT tract is with a tax exempt public political subdivision or with a nonexempt con-tractee. Our sales tax is primarily a tax on the consumer. Jewel Tea Co. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 N.W.2d 463, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-improvement-company-v-engen-nd-1954.