State Ex Rel. Otis Elevator Co. v. Smith

212 S.W.2d 580, 357 Mo. 1055, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 27, 1948
DocketNo. 40027.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 212 S.W.2d 580 (State Ex Rel. Otis Elevator Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Otis Elevator Co. v. Smith, 212 S.W.2d 580, 357 Mo. 1055, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 715 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

[580] This is a certiorari proceeding brought by the relator Otis Elevator Company, against the State Auditor in the circuit court of the City of St. Louis under Sec. 11445, 1 to review the Auditor’s finding and assessment of 2% State sales tax under Sec’s *1057 11407(b) (g) and 11408 [with penalty and interest], on intrastate retail sales of tangible personal property made by relator to various purchasers for use or consumption and not for resale, during the-period between October 1, 1940 and April 30, 1943. The amount in dispute is $8519.83. The circuit court quashed the Auditor’s finding and assessment and he has appealed. An opinion was written in Division 2 reversing that judgment in part and affirming it in part. On the court’s own motion the cause was transferred to the court en banc, where it was reargued and the opinion was again adopted, two judges dissenting and one dissenting in part. The respondent Elevator Company has filed a motion for rehearing en banc asking for a clarification of the opinion without reargument. To save duplication in the discussion of the facts and law our original opinion' is withdrawn and this opinion substituted.

The facts are practically undisputed. The respondent Elevator Company is engaged in the business of designing, constructing,- [581] installing and repairing elevators in buildings under -three classes of contracts: (1) those with .original contractors or bnilding owners, providing for the furnishing and erection complete of new elevators’ in buildings, including the engineering skill, labor and materials required ; (2) similar contracts for the reconstruction of, or major repairs upon, existing elevators in buildings; (3) oral contracts on open order, covering minor repairs on elevators and the .furnishing of small parts as necessary. ■ ■ .......

As to the class 1 and class 2 contracts, the controverted sales tax was levied only on the materials furnished. They are in writing and call for a lump sum consideration for the whole job — covering all profits, services and materials furnished. They also contain a clause retaining respondent’s title to the materials furnished until the contract price is paid in full. This clause provides in part: “It is agreed that all apparatus furnished hereunder can be removed without material injury to the freehold.” The elevators thus constructed under the class 1 and class 2 contracts are made to order, so to speak, and will not fit any elevator shaft.other than the one for which they were designed.

The State Auditor assessed the sales tax on 70% of the-lump sum. consideration received by respondent on each class 1 and class 2 contract during the period covered, this because the evidence showing that percentage represented the price of the materials furnished under those contracts, the remaining 30% covering the labor, services and profits. As to the class 3 contracts, for small repairs on elevators, the Auditor conceded that under Rule 18 of the Rules and Regulations of his Department if the Elevator Company in making such repairs had segregated the labor costs from the charges for material used, the sales tax would have been levied on the’ materials alone. But inasmuch as the respondent Elevator Company stated at the *1058 administrative hearing on the assessment that if it was liable for any tax it was liable for both labor and materials, the tax was ás-sessed on the whole contract price under the class 3 contracts.

The Elevator Company denies liability for the taxes altogether, relying on City of St. Lonis v. Smith, 342 Mo. 317, 320-2, 114 S. W. (2d) 1017, 1019-20. That was a suit for a declaratory judgment brought by the city against the State Auditor. Its purpose was to obtain an adjudication whether the city was liable for sales tax on the tangible personal- property purchased and used by contractors in the construction of a street paving, a sewer and a hospital for the city, where the price to be paid by the city in each instance was fixed by the construction contract at a lump sum for the completed project —as here.

The decision held the city was not required to pay the sales tax on the materials, on this reasoning. (1) The contractor had agreed to furnish all labor and materials necessary to construct, complete and deliver each project to the city for a fixed sum of money. (2) It was necessary for him to purchase and use the required materials in performing his contract. (3) It was “the inseparable commingling of labor and material that produced the finished project,” which became and was a new and separate entity. (4) Hence it could not be said the contractor sold the materials to the city as consumer, or that he purchased them for that purpose. (5) On the contrary, he used and consumed them in furnishing each completed project to the city. (6) Consequently the contractor, and not the city, was liable for the sales tax on the materials, under Sec. 11412. The case did not expressly decide whether the city could be liable for sales tax on the completed projects, as distinguished from the materials entering into their construction. But it did cite 23 B». C. L., p. 1233, see. 49 on the proposition that a contract to furnish labor and material for an improvement to be attached to real estate as a part of a building in course of construction, is not a sale of goods or chattels.

Following the pattern of the Smith decision, supra, the trial court found, and the respondent Elevator Company contends here, that it is not liable for the sales tax on the materials used in the construction and repairing of elevators under its class 1 and class 2 contracts because: it did not sell those materials to the owner of the building; but on the contrary “used and consumed” them [within the meaning' of Sec. 11407g, supra] in constructing the elevators, which automatically became a part of the building. In other words, the materials lost their character or status as “tangible personal property” [within the meaning of [582] Sec. 11407g, supra] and became a part of the real estate coincidently with, their delivery and. attachment to the building, in consequence of which they were not subject to sales tax.

*1059 The appellant Auditor’s first answering contention likens the Elevator Company’s business to that of a merchant or dealer who sells furnaces, heating systems, -air conditioning or. refrigerating systems,. and agrees to install them in buildings. He cites Commonwealth v. Pa. Heat & Pr. Co., 333 Pa. 46, 3 Atl. (2d) 412. We. think that case does not sustain him. There the tax involved was a “mercantile license tax.’’ And the defendant was a “dealer’’ who was engaged chiefly in the business of purchasing “specific articles’’, to wit, oil burners and their parts and accessories, and then reselling and installing them in furnaces or in buildings. The dealer was held liable for the tax, and-the opinion pointed out the difference between such a business and that of artisan or craftsman, who merely contracts to furnish the labor and materials for the construction, alteration or repair of a structure, but does not exhibit, sell and install it as a merchant might do. The Elevator Company here is more like these artisans. It does not pre-build standardized elevators or.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W.2d 580, 357 Mo. 1055, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-otis-elevator-co-v-smith-mo-1948.