Novelty Advertising Co. v. Bowers

84 Ohio Law. Abs. 347
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedAugust 10, 1960
DocketNo. 42502
StatusPublished

This text of 84 Ohio Law. Abs. 347 (Novelty Advertising Co. v. Bowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Novelty Advertising Co. v. Bowers, 84 Ohio Law. Abs. 347 (bta 1960).

Opinion

OPINION

This cause and matter came on to be considered by the Board of Tax Appeals upon a notice of appeal filed herein under date of January 26, 1960. by the appellant above named from a final order of the Tax Commissioner dated January 12, I960, in and by which final order that [348]*348official confirmed a sales and use tax assessment theretofore made against the appellant in the following basic amounts:

Sales Tax -------------------------------------$4,599.87

Use Tax -------------------------------------- 88.06

Each assessment carries with it a penalty in an amount to be contingent upon the date of payment of the basic assessment, all as set out by the terms of the final order.

The audit period involved herein is January 1,1955, through December 31, 1958.

The matter was submitted to the Board of Tax Appeals upon the notice of appeal, the statutory transcript supplied by the Tax Commissioner, the testimony and evidence presented at a hearing before the Board of Tax Appeals in Columbus, Ohio, on June 22, 1960, and the briefs filed by counsel.

When the case was called for hearing counsel for appellant stated that he would not present any testimony or evidence with respect to the sales tax assessed against appellant’s purchases in the basic amount of $68.99 or with respect to the use tax assessed against appellant’s purchases in the basic amount of $88.06. There being no error apparent in the Tax Commissioner’s transcript with respect thereto, the use tax assessment is, therefore, affirmed and the amount of the basic sales tax assessment still in issue is $4,530.88 and is the sales tax assessed against the appellant as a vendor on sales made by it.

The appellant, during the audit period, was engaged in the business of manufacturing for sale such items as printed calenders, imprinted leather goods, ball point pens, foodstuffs, etc. at its plant in Coshocton, Ohio. Apparently all of the manufactured items carried the imprinted name and address of the customer for whom manufactured or some advertising message.

In connection with such operation the appellant, during the audit period, made numerous sales in Ohio to customers without charging the appropriate amount of sales tax provided by §5739.02 R. C.

In some instances the appellant received the sales tax exemption certificate provided for by §5739.03 R. C., but in many instances no such exemption certificate was obtained by appellant until sometime subsequent to the audit period. In other instances the exemption certificates which appellant did have on file during the audit period were found to be invalid by the sales tax examiner because of either inadequacy of signature, date, or for other reasons.

The exemption certificates which were allowed as being valid were stamped with a special tax department stamp at the time of the audit and the sales covered by these valid exemption certificates are not in issue.

The sales made by the appellant during the audit, for which there were no exemption certificates on file or none were received by the appellant on or prior to the date the sales tax examiner started the audit of appellant’s busines, to wit, January 20, 1959, and upon which no sales tax had been charged by the appellant, were found by the sales tax examiner to be subject to the Ohio sales tax with the exception of those sales covered by customers’ letters as hereinafter noted. Likewise, [349]*349the sales made by the appellant during the audit period, concerning which there were exemption certificates on file which were found to be invalid exemption certificates by the sales tax examiner, were found to be subject to the Ohio sales tax.

The specific retail sales upon which the sales tax here in issue was assessed will be found listed on Sales Tax Form 152, Tax Commissioner’s transcript, pages 21 to 142.

As previously stated, the sales tax examiner commenced the audit of appellant’s business on January 20, 1959. The audit was completed on May 29, 1959. When the audit was commenced, the officials of the appellant company were told by the sales tax examiners that they would have a period of sixty days in which to contact their customers for the purpose of having the customers write a letter to the appellant in which it was to be stated either that the disputed items sold by the appellant to the customers were actually used by the customers directly in making retail sales or that the customers’ business was that of making retail sales.

In response to this request the appellant received from its customers the exemption certificates, the majority of which are identified as Appellant’s Exhibit C. In some instances, in response to its request, the appellant received an exemption certificate to which was attached a letter or other paper which indicated that the customer was engaged in the business of making retail sales or which stated that the items purchased were actually used directly by the customer in making retail sales. As to these exemption certificates to which there was attached such a letter stating the information above noted, the sales tax examiner held that irrespective of the exemption certificate, the information contained in said letter had established that the sale involved was not subject to the tax and that particular sale was not listed in Form 152 and is not listed on pages 21 to 142 of the Tax Commissioner’s transcript. We might comment at this point that the Tax Commissioner was acting very reasonably when he accepted such letters as establishing the nontaxability of said sales.

As to the exemption certificates to which there was not attached a letter of explanation, as above noted, the sales tax examiner held that it had not been established that the sale was not subject to the tax; and he subjected that sale to sales taxation and listed it for assessment on Form 152 on pages 21 to 142 of the Tax Commissioner’s transcript. These are the exemption certificates identified as Appellant’s Exhibit C.

The appellant, in its notice of appeal, claims that the final order of the Tax Commissioner is erroneous: “for the reason that the items with respect to which the assessment is made were sales to customers of products to be used or consumed directly in making retail sales, as defined in §5739.01 R. C., and that the Tax Commissioner erred in determining that such items were not so used, and in disregarding purchaser’s exemption certificates.”

The Tax Commissioner, on the other hand, says that he allowed all valid exemption certificates that appellant had on file as of January 20, 1959, and that, in addition thereto, he has allowed as nontaxable certain sales made by appellant during the audit period where it has been [350]*350established that the sale was not, in fact, subject to the tax even though there was no exemption certificate to cover the sale on file on January 20, 1959.

The pertinent provisions of §5739.01 R. C., read as follows:

“As used in §§5739.01 to 5739.31 inclusive, R. C.:

((($ # #

“(E) ‘Retail sale’ and ‘sales at retail’ include all sales except those in which the purpose of the consumer is:

* *

“(2) * * * to use or consume the thing transferred * * * directly in making retail sales, * * *.”

Sec. 5739.02 R. C., provides for the bracket sales tax on all retail sales in Ohio and, in addition thereto, contains this pertinent paragraph:

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Bluebook (online)
84 Ohio Law. Abs. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novelty-advertising-co-v-bowers-bta-1960.