Seventeen Thirty Corp. v. Director, New Jersey Division of Taxation

18 N.J. Tax 168
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedApril 16, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 18 N.J. Tax 168 (Seventeen Thirty Corp. v. Director, New Jersey Division of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seventeen Thirty Corp. v. Director, New Jersey Division of Taxation, 18 N.J. Tax 168 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

KUSKIN, J.T.C.

Plaintiff is a New Jersey corporation which operates a retail store in Avenel, New Jersey. The store sells adult-oriented books, periodicals, novelties, and videotapes and includes a segregated area which contains twenty-seven booths used to view adult videotapes. Defendant determined that certain payments by plaintiff to its store manager, who is also the president and sole shareholder of plaintiff, for the fiscal years ending October 31, [171]*1711988 through October 31, 1992 were dividends and not compensation as reported by plaintiff in its Corporation Business Tax returns. Based upon this determination, defendant disallowed plaintiffs deduction of such payments for purposes of calculating its “entire net income” for Corporation Business Tax purposes under N.J.S.A. 54:10A-5(c), and defendant imposed a Corporation Business Tax deficiency assessment. Defendant also determined that, for the period January 1988 through March 1995, customer purchases of tokens required in order to enter the viewing booth area, or to use the viewing booths, constituted payments of admission charges “to or for the use of [a] place of amusement” subject to Sales Tax under N.J.S.A. 54:S2B — 3(e)(1), and imposed a Sales Tax deficiency assessment. Plaintiff appeals both assessments.

The parties submitted a Stipulation of Facts with relevant documents attached, and, thereafter, defendant moved for summary judgment. With the consent of counsel for defendant, plaintiff presented the testimony of two witnesses at the hearing on the motion. See R. 1:6-6. At the conclusion of the testimqny, and after oral argument, counsel for both parties further stipulated that, if summary judgment was denied based on the existence of a genuine issue as to a material fact under R. 4:46-2(e), neither would submit any evidence in addition to the stipulated facts and attached documents, the facts contained in the certification submitted by defendant in connection with the motion, the facts contained in the testimony presented by the plaintiff, and the exhibits placed in evidence in connection with such testimony. Both counsel agreed, therefore, that, if the court denied summary judgment, the court could proceed to decide the matter on the merits as if a lull trial had occurred.

The facts set forth above, and the following facts, are either included in the Stipulation of Facts or are undisputed. Plaintiffs store is open for business seven days a week, twenty-four hours a day. During the period November 1, 1987 through October 31, 1992, John Mastrolacasa was the President of plaintiff, served as store manager, and worked in excess of seventy hours per week. [172]*172As compensation for his services during such period, Mr. Mastrolacasa received a regular salary from plaintiff from which New Jersey Gross Income Tax and federal income tax were withheld. Plaintiff issued annual W-2 Forms to Mr. Mastrolacasa reflecting such salary and withholding. Mr. Mastrolacasa also wrote corporate checks to himself for varying amounts at varying times during each fiscal year. No New Jersey Gross Income Tax or federal income tax was withheld with respect to those payments, and plaintiff issued no W-2 Forms or other reporting forms reflecting the payments. Mr. Mastrolacasa determined the timing and amount of each payment based upon the availability of cash in plaintiffs business. Plaintiff did not adopt corporate resolutions or prepare corporate minutes authorizing or memorializing any of these payments to Mr. Mastrolacasa. The total of the salary and additional amounts paid to Mr. Mastrolacasa for each fiscal year in issue constituted reasonable compensation to him for services rendered to plaintiff.

The Corporation Business Tax returns filed by plaintiff for each of the fiscal years ending October 1, 1988 through October 31, 1991, reported as “Officers Compensation” the total of the basic salary and the additional amounts paid to Mr. Mastrolacasa. For each of those years, no amount was reported on the returns as “Salaries and Wages” paid to Mr. Mastrolacasa. For the fiscal year ending October 31, 1992, the amount shown on the Corporation Business Tax return as “Officers Compensation” reflected only the corporate checks mitten by Mr. Mastrolacasa to himself. His regular salary was included on the “Salaries and Wages” line of the return. For each fiscal year Mr. Mastrolacasa was the only officer receiving the Officers Compensation reported on the tax return, and for each fiscal year plaintiff deducted the amount reported as Officers Compensation in calculating plaintiffs liability for Corporation Business Tax.

Defendant determined that payments by plaintiff to Mr. Mastrolacasa in excess of the salary from which taxes were withheld constituted dividends and not compensation. Consequently, defendant disallowed a portion of the deduction for “Officers Com[173]*173pensation” for each of the fiscal years ending October 31, 1988 through October 31, 1991, and disallowed the entire deduction for the fiscal year ending October 31, 1992. The following table sets forth, for each fiscal year, the amount claimed by plaintiff as compensation to Mr. Mastrolacasa, the amount defendant allowed as a deduction, and the additional tax claimed by defendant.

Total Mastrolacasa Fiscal Year Ending October 31 Compensation As Shown on Tax Return_ Deduction Allowed by Director Additional Tax Claimed

1988 $163,725 $44,680 $ 7,686

19S9 $103,825 $45,800 $ 6,230

1990 $100,370 $55,080 $ 6,006

1991 $153,852 $49,500 $ 9,898

1992 $158,990 $55,650 $14,607

The total assessment against plaintiff for Corporation Business Tax, including interest through April 15, 1997, was $82,188.27.

As described above, plaintiffs store premises contained a segregated area in which twenty-seven viewing booths were located. The booth area extended along the side and rear walls of the premises. Each booth contained a viewing device which was operated by the deposit of a token. Each device could display either ten or sixteen different videotapes. A person entering the booth deposited a token, and then could view approximately one minute of any one of the available videotapes. Each videotape had a total playing time of approximately two hours. The person could not deposit more than one token at a time, and, at the end of the one minute period, the videotape stopped, and would continue for another one minute only upon deposit of another token. Access to the booth area was controlled by an employee of plaintiff. In genei-al, a person seeking access to the area was required to purchase a minimum of $3 of tokens, each token having a value of $0.25. The tokens had no expiration date. No purchase of tokens was required in order to enter the balance of the store premises. The minimum token purchase requirement was instituted by Mr. Mastrolacasa at the suggestion of municipal [174]*174officials who advised him that, by imposing the requirement, he would eliminate, or at least limit, loitering in the booth area.

Not all patrons were required to purchase $3 of tokens in order to gain access to the booth area. Persons known to Mr. Mastrolacasa, or the attendant controlling access to the area, to be neither trouble-makers nor loiterers were permitted to enter without the purchase of any tokens. In general, a person who had purchased tokens on one occasion and did not use all of them, could return on another day and gain access to the booth area simply by displaying the remaining tokens in his or her possession.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.J. Tax 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seventeen-thirty-corp-v-director-new-jersey-division-of-taxation-njtaxct-1999.