Phillips v. Comptroller of the Treasury

167 A.2d 913, 224 Md. 350, 1961 Md. LEXIS 500
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 20, 1961
Docket[No. 139, September Term, 1960.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 167 A.2d 913 (Phillips v. Comptroller of the Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Comptroller of the Treasury, 167 A.2d 913, 224 Md. 350, 1961 Md. LEXIS 500 (Md. 1961).

Opinion

Prescott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Baltimore City Court affirmed a decision of the Comptroller denying the appellant’s claim for a refund of certain retail sales taxes, and the claimant has appealed.

The case is submitted on an agreed statement of facts, which is as follows:

“Appellant is engaged in the business of selling International Harvester equipment in the Maryland and Virginia area. The sales involved in this case were made on various dates from December 21, 1956, through May 29, 1958, and were all to the same purchaser, Weldon D. Shannon, trading as Shannon Construction, hereinafter called ‘Shannon’ or ‘purchaser’. Shannon, an excavator, was employed as a sub-contractor on numerous building projects, primarily in the Baltimore area, and requiring expensive heavy-duty earth-moving equipment, he purchased the same from Appellant. All sales were secured by conditional contracts of sale or chattel mortgages which were properly executed and recorded.
“Shannon failed to meet the installment payments as due, and after the accounts became critically delinquent, Appellant, with the assistance of Shannon’s employees, repossessed the equipment. At the time of the return of the machines, Shannon owed over One Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000.00) to Appellant, and after crediting Shannon with the values of the machines at the time they were returned and all moneys paid by Shannon on said accounts, there remained, and still remains, an uncollectible indebtedness of about Eighty Thousand Dollars ($80,000.00).
“The Chief of the Retail Sales Tax Division testified that Rules 1 through 72 were promulgated *353 simultaneously prior to July 1, 1947, the effective date of the Maryland Retail Sales Tax Act, and that Rule 10 was applied in this case in the same manner as it had been applied or administered by the Comptroller since the date of inception of said rule. Although Appellant was to receive periodic payments from Shannon, it remitted to Comptroller at the time of the sale of each machine the full amount of retail sales tax due in connection with the transaction. It is from the judgment of the lower Court holding that Appellant is not entitled to a refund of sales taxes in the amount of One Thousand Four Hundred Forty-three Dollars ($1,443.00), which it maintains is attributable to the remaining bad debt owing and due by Shannon that this appeal is taken. The parties hereto agree that the issues involved in this appeal were properly presented to the lower Court.”

There is no question raised concerning the full, fair and proper credit for the value of the machines, after their recapture, having been given to Shannon’s account, and it seems to be conceded that the appellant charged off, during its taxable year, the remaining uncollectible indebtedness.

Code (1957), Article 81, Sections 324-371, both inclusive, sets forth the Maryland Retail Sales Act (Act). Considerable space is consumed in the briefs in quoting definitions used in the Act in an attempt to show on the one side that the sales tax is imposed, where there is a credit or installment sale, only on that part of the sales price actually received by the seller, and on the other side to show that the tax is imposed upon the vendee, and is calculated upon the whole selling price, irrespective of how much thereof is collected by the seller. For the purposes of a disposition of this case, and in order to save time and space, we shall assume, without deciding, that the sales tax is a tax on all retail sales of tangible personal property, as defined in the act (and on certain services, not here pertinent); and is one that is imposed upon the vendee, to be calculated upon the whole amount of the sales price, whether paid in cash, in installments or by *354 credit, unless the sale is exempted entirely by the Act, or the Act (or some regulation of the Comptroller duly authorized by the Act) authorizes a revision of the tax, or a refund of some portion thereof, as originally calculated on the whole sales price.

The Sales Tax Act was initially enacted by the legislature in 1947, to become effective as of July 1st, of that year. Section 365 (a) (all sections referred to will be given their present numbers) authorized the Comptroller to make rules and regulations to “carry out the provisions of this subtitle and to define any terms used herein.” Section 329, set forth later in full, gave specific authority to make regulations relative to credit or installment sales, and Section 347, also set forth in full later, made specific provision for certain refunds. Anticipating the effective date of the Act, July 1st, 1947, the Comptroller prepared Rules 1 through 72 to be promulgated simultaneously with the effective date of the Act. We mention this now, as it helps to explain, as we shall soon see, the reasons for some of the rules that have a direct bearing upon the outcome of this case.

Section 327 provides that upon each taxable sale, the tax to be collected shall be stated and charged separately from the sale price and shown separately “on any record thereof at the time when the sale is wtade or at the time when evidence of the sale is issued or employed by the vendor(Emphasis added.) It further provides that the tax shall be paid by the purchaser to the vendor, as trustee for and on account of the State.

Section 329 reads as follows:

“The tax hereby imposed shall apply and be collected by the vendor from the purchaser at the time the sale is made regardless of the time when the purchase price is paid and delivered; unless the Comptroller shall provide by regulation in the case of credit or installment sales for the payment of the tax upon collection of the price or installments of the price or at some other time.”

In pursuance of the authority granted to him under the *355 provisions of Section 329, the Comptroller promulgated Rule 57, which authorized the vendor in installment or deferred payment sales to adopt either of two methods:

(a) To pay the tax on its ordinary due date in full; or
(b) To remit to the State each month the percentage of the taxes “collected as a result of an arrangement under which the purchaser would pay a vendor with each periodic payment that portion of the total tax which the payment bears to the total amount to be paid.”

A careful analysis and consideration of this Rule made it apparent that a vendor who elected to pay the tax on the installment basis, would receive an advantage over the taxpayer who paid the full tax at the time of the sale. The installment taxpayer would pay only as he collected cash, so, if he failed to collect, he would have no obligation to pay the tax to the Comptroller; whereas, the accrual taxpayer would have advanced the entire amount of tax at the time of the sale, and, upon failure to collect installment payments, would not only lose the value of his merchandise, but also a proportionate amount of the sales tax. In an effort to equalize more nearly the positions of the taxpayer who paid in full on the ordinary due date and the one who paid in installments, Rule 1 was adopted, which states:

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Bluebook (online)
167 A.2d 913, 224 Md. 350, 1961 Md. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-comptroller-of-the-treasury-md-1961.