State Of Wa, Dept. Of Revenue, App./cross-res. v. Sprint Spectrum, Lp, Res./cross-app.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 30, 2013
Docket42304-9
StatusPublished

This text of State Of Wa, Dept. Of Revenue, App./cross-res. v. Sprint Spectrum, Lp, Res./cross-app. (State Of Wa, Dept. Of Revenue, App./cross-res. v. Sprint Spectrum, Lp, Res./cross-app.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Of Wa, Dept. Of Revenue, App./cross-res. v. Sprint Spectrum, Lp, Res./cross-app., (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIVISJOIj I!

2013 APR 30 AM 8: 3 S' , 1_ I

M.

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

SPRINT SPECTRUM, LP, No. 42304 9 II - -

Respondent Cross Appellant, /

AIM

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT PUBLISHED OPINION OF REVENUE,

BRINTNALL J. — QUINN- The Department of Revenue (DOR) assessed use tax on

wireless phones Sprint Spectrum, LP (Sprint)had fully discounted and "sold"to customers for — 0.0 who signed extended term wireless service agreements. Sprint successfully appealed the 0 = use tax assessment to the Board of Tax Appeals (the Board), arguing that it recovers the cost of

the free phones through sales of wireless phone service (on which it collects retail sales tax every month).Sprint also successfully argued that it was not a consumer of the free phones it provided to customers but, instead, was a retailer who resold the phones in conjunction with wireless

service plans.

DOR appeals the Board's decision, asserting that Sprint is liable for use tax because it

does not "resell"fully- discounted phones but, instead, acts as a consumer distributing the fully- for the purpose of promoting the sale of its wireless discounted wireless phones primarily No.42304 9 II - -

telephone services.' Because the Board's decision contains factual findings contrary to the

evidence in the record, the Board erroneously interpreted and applied the law and we settled this

issue on almost identical facts in Activate, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 150 Wn. App. 807,

209 P. d 524 (2009), reverse the Board's decision. RCW 34. 5. 3 we d) 570( 3 e). 0 )( -( FACTS

In 2007, DOR assessed Sprint with various state taxes for the audit period July 1, 1999,

through December .2002, including $ 946 of unreported use tax on fully- 85, discounted wireless phones Sprint "sold"to customers for $ 00. DOR assessed the tax, pursuant to former RCW 0. 020( 82. 2. 1 2002), 1 ) ( the grounds that Sprint "provided free cell phones to customers for the on

primary purpose of promoting the sale of its wireless services." Administrative Record (AR)at 155. Sprint paid DOR's use tax assessment but appealed the assessment decision to DOR's Appeals Division, arguing that as a retailer of wireless phones, it was not subject to consumer use tax on phones it sold to customers —including phones "sold" for $ 00. The Appeals 0.

Division disagreed; after losing that appeal, Sprint appealed to the Board.

The parties stipulated to a number of facts for the Board appeal,including - - - - - -

d] 1) "[ uring the audit period, Sprint sold wireless telephone services, wireless telephones, and accessories." AR at 836. " All cell phones transferred from Sprint to a customer were configured to be used with Sprint's wireless services."AR at 841. 2) " Sprint arranged for cell phone manufacturers to send the cell phones it purchased to a warehouse in Kentucky, from which the cell phones were

Sprint initially cross appealed a separate issue addressed by the Board: whether Sprint's service to certain customers qualified as a "residential class of telephone service" exempt from sales tax. The parties have resolved that dispute and that issue is no longer before us. 2 To avoid confusion, we cite the 2002 version of Title 82 RCW unless otherwise indicated. The substantive provisions of the statutes have changed little since 2002. However, the numbering of various sections and subsections is different in some instances.

2 No. 42304 9 II - -

shipped to Sprint retail outlets for sale in various states, including Washington. Sprint purchased these cell phones from manufacturers without paying retail sales tax on the purchases."AR at,840 41. - 3) " During the audit period, Sprint sold some cell phones to customers at what was termed their `regular price'. Sprint collected retail sales tax from customers on the regular price. These were typically sales in which the customer was not purchasing any wireless service or was purchasing wireless service on a month to month basis." - - AR at 841. 4) " During the audit period, Sprint sold most cell phones to customers at partial discounts. off the regular price, including discounts that were conditioned upon the customers signing a service agreement legally binding them to purchase wireless service from Sprint for a term, typically 1 or 2 years, either as a new customer or as a returning customer."AR at 841. Typically, Sprint offered its customers discounts on the purchase price of wireless phones in accordance with the length of the service contract a customer was willing to sign. For example, at the time of the audit, customers signing a one year contract for wireless telephone - services would receive a $75 discount off the purchase price of a phone while customers signing a two year contract would get a $ - 150 discount. DOR did not assess use tax on phones sold at discounted rates so long as the discount did not result in a customer receiving a free phone. These partial cost sales"were not at issue in the Board appeal. 5) Because of discounts —especially the discount customers received by long term - wireless service Sprint agreements— ended up signing transferr[ing]some cell phones to customers at discounts equal to the regular price" during the audit period. AR at 842. Sprint collected no retail sales tax on these "fully- discounted"phones and, at the point of sale, customers received a receipt reflecting a purchase price of the phone as 0. - DOB's use tax assessment solely involved these " ree"wire ess 00. f - phones. 6) Sprint's monthly wireless service rates did not vary depending upon whether a customer bought an undiscounted, partially- discounted, or fully - discounted phone.

The parties argued the case before the Board on August 19, 2010. Sprint called Sprint

Senior State Tax Counsel Anthony Whalen to testify. Whalen explained that Sprint loses almost

100 on every phone it sells and that Sprint's business model is designed to recoup the almost

3 Customers signing extended service agreements also agreed to early termination fees for cancellation of their wireless services prior to the end of the agreedupon term of service. This fee was typically $ 50 at the time of the audit. The termination fee did not vary depending on 1 how much a customer paid for their wireless phone. 3 No. 42304 9 II - -

two billion dollars a year" that Sprint loses in phone sales through sales of wireless service

plans. Administrative Report of Proceedings (ARP)at 15. Whalen further stated that Sprint sold most wireless phones at prices below their fair market value because "consumers in the U. . S

aren't willing to pay a big upfront fee for [wireless phones],but they're more than willing to pay

it over the life of a contract. So it' just more of a forced financing arrangement." ARP at 54. s

Whalen testified that despite losing money on nearly every. phone Sprint sells, he does not

consider a cell phone to be a.promotional item. The cell phone is integral to the business." ARP at 5 5.

DOR argued that .contrary to Sprint's position, Sprint "distributed these cell phones

without charge for a price of zero dollars and zero cents in order to promote the sale of its

wireless service" and, in result, Sprint owed use taxes on the fully- discounted phones. ARP at

95. DOR also explained that because of the way Washington's tax statutes are written, it has a

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State Of Wa, Dept. Of Revenue, App./cross-res. v. Sprint Spectrum, Lp, Res./cross-app., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-wa-dept-of-revenue-appcross-res-v-sprint--washctapp-2013.