Sharper Image Corporation v. Miller, No. Cv940536540 (Feb. 1, 1995)

1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 1402-A, 13 Conn. L. Rptr. 391
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1995
DocketNo. CV940536540
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 1402-A (Sharper Image Corporation v. Miller, No. Cv940536540 (Feb. 1, 1995)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharper Image Corporation v. Miller, No. Cv940536540 (Feb. 1, 1995), 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 1402-A, 13 Conn. L. Rptr. 391 (Colo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM FILED FEBRUARY 1, 1995 The issue in this tax appeal is whether catalogs mailed from out of state to Connecticut residents by an out-of-state retailer maintaining retail stores in Connecticut is subject to the Connecticut sales and use tax.

The resolution of this issue is the focal point of this appeal by Sharper Image Corporation (Sharper Image) from the imposition of a use tax by the commissioner of revenue services (commissioner) on its catalogs mailed to Connecticut residents. CT Page 1402-B

The parties have stipulated to the following facts:

Sharper Image is a Delaware corporation with headquarters in San Francisco, California. Sharper Image is engaged nationally and internationally in the retail sale of merchandise. It makes in-store sales and mail order sales.

In Connecticut, Sharper Image maintains one store in Stamford and one store in Hartford. In addition to its store sales, Sharper Image makes sales by means of telephone or mail orders transmitted to its San Francisco office.

Sharper Image collects and remits to the commissioner the Connecticut sales and use taxes levied on sales made at its stores in Connecticut and on its mail order sales. Sharper Image concedes that it has nexus with Connecticut for purposes of sales and use tax collection.

Sharper Image publishes catalogs on a monthly basis. The catalogs advertise the products that are available for sale both by mail or phone order and in general at the retail stores, although some products are exclusively mail order products so they cannot be purchased at the store.

Sharper Image contracts for the printing and distribution of catalogs from its San Francisco headquarters. Sharper Image has entered into a contract with Mid-American Web Press, Inc. dba Foote Davies ("Foote Davies") of Lincoln, Nebraska for the printing and mailing of the catalogs to persons residing in foreign countries and throughout the United States, including Connecticut. All instructions and payments to Foote Davies are made from Sharper Image's San Francisco headquarters. The total number of catalogs printed for Sharper Image are as follows: 1988 — 33.9 million; 1989 — 40.1 million; 1990 — 34.3 million. Approximately two percent of all catalogs printed for Sharper Image are sent to Connecticut residents.

Sharper Image has not contracted with any third CT Page 1402-C parties located in Connecticut for the printing or distribution of the catalogs, and none of Sharper Image's Connecticut employees are involved in any way with the printing or distribution of the catalogs that are the subject of the assessment in this action.

The catalogs are printed and labelled by Foote Davies. Foote Davies transfers the completed catalogs to the post office by way of U.S. Post Office trailers which are located at Foote Davies' facility in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Sharper Image's San Francisco headquarters provides Foote Davies with a mailing list, which contains the names of customers or prospective customers to whom catalogs are to be sent. The catalogs are addressed to the person named or the current resident at the address listed on the label, and are sent by third class mail.

Neither Sharper Image nor Foote Davies can withdraw or redirect the catalogs from the U.S. mail once they are placed in the U.S. Post Office trailers. If catalogs are not delivered to the addressee, Sharper Image does not receive a refund or credit from the post office for the postage or the value of the catalogs lost. If the U.S. Post Office is unable to deliver a catalog, it is destroyed by the post office.

Sharper Image has never withdrawn or redirected the catalogs from the U.S. mail. Sharper Image has never taken physical possession of the catalogs mailed to Connecticut residents.

On December 1, 1991, the department of revenue services (department) issued a notice of assessment of use taxes to Sharper Image, based on the sales price of catalogs sent by Foote Davies to Sharper Image's customers and prospective customers who are Connecticut residents. The commissioner imposed the use tax on Sharper Image pursuant to General Statutes § 12-411 and § 12-407(5). The commissioner's position is that Sharper Image made a taxable use of the catalogs mailed from out of state to Connecticut residents. On January 21, 1992, Sharper Image filed a protest of the assessment. CT Page 1402-D On March 14, 1994, a department hearing officer upheld the assessment insofar as liability for catalogs mailed into Connecticut. The revised assessment consists of $52,466.70 of use taxes, $2,218.33 of penalty and $45,471.35 of interest through March 31, 1994. The revised assessment is based on the sales price of catalogs sent by Foote Davies of Lincoln, Nebraska to Sharper Image's customers. Sharper Image does not contest the amount of the taxes assessed on the catalogs, but rather challenges any assessment on catalogs mailed to Connecticut residents.

In addition to the catalogs mailed to Connecticut residents, Foote Davies mails catalogs to Sharper Image's Connecticut stores where they are available for employees and customers of the stores. Sharper Image paid the use tax on these catalogs because they were received in Connecticut by its Connecticut employees at its Connecticut stores.

Sharper Image claims that the controlling issue in this case is the ownership of the catalogs. Sharper Image maintains that it did not own the catalogs as they passed into Connecticut because it did not exercise any right or power incident to the ownership of the catalogs upon which to base the imposition of a use tax. According to Sharper Image, both the exercise of a right or power over the catalogs and the ownership of the catalogs must occur in Connecticut. Sharper Image also contends that, as to the activity of distributing catalogs to Connecticut residents, the constitutionally required nexus between the distribution of the catalogs and Connecticut does not exist.1

More specifically, Sharper Image claims that its ownership rights in the catalogs terminated at the time that Foote Davies delivered the catalogs to the U.S. Post Office for shipment to Connecticut residents. On this basis, Sharper Image argues that it was not the owner of the catalogs when they were taken by the post office from Nebraska to Connecticut.

Our analysis must begin with an examination of the sales and use tax statute, and a determination of the party upon whom the liability for payment of the tax falls. CT Page 1402-E

Whereas a sales tax is a tax on the purchase of goods, the use tax is a tax on the enjoyment of that which was purchased. International Business Machines Corporationv. Brown, 167 Conn. 123, 129, 355 A.2d 236 (1974). "The use tax was created as a complementary measure to insure the equitable diffusion of the tax burden upon both in-state purchases of tangible personal property and out-of-state purchases of tangible personal property where such property is used, stored or consumed within the state." Id. When tangible personal property is purchased out of state and brought into Connecticut to be stored, consumed, or used, the party who makes that purchase is the purchaser and bears the obligation to pay the use tax. Robert Emmet Son Oil Supply Co. v.Sullivan, 158 Conn. 234, 238-39,

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Bluebook (online)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 1402-A, 13 Conn. L. Rptr. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharper-image-corporation-v-miller-no-cv940536540-feb-1-1995-connsuperct-1995.