TAS Lakewood, Inc. v. Director, Division of Taxation

19 N.J. Tax 131
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedApril 18, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 19 N.J. Tax 131 (TAS Lakewood, Inc. v. Director, 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
TAS Lakewood, Inc. v. Director, Division of Taxation, 19 N.J. Tax 131 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

ANDREW, P.J.T.C.

In this state tax case plaintiff, TAS Lakewood, Inc., a New Jersey corporation, contests a deficiency assessment under the Sales and Use Tax Act, N.J.S.A. 54:32B-1 to -29 for the period April 1, 1993 to December 31, 1994. The contested deficiency assessment was imposed by defendant, Director of the Division of Taxation, because an audit of plaintiffs records revealed discrep-[133]*133aneies between the gross receipts reported by plaintiff in its United States corporation income tax return and its New Jersey sales tax returns. As a consequence, the Division imposed a sales tax assessment of $76,061.76 with interest of $26,022.92 calculated to December 20, 1997 for a total tax due of $112,084.68. The Division issued its notice of assessment to plaintiff on April 10, 1997.

Plaintiff filed a protest and a request for a hearing with the Division on July 8, 1997. After an administrative conference was held with representatives of plaintiff and the Division on November 18, 1997, the Director issued a final determination dated December 8, 1997 in which the Director confirmed that the original deficiency assessment was correct. The Director’s final determination noted that plaintiff had failed “to provide any documentation refuting the audit findings at the conference of November 18, 1997.” Plaintiff then filed a complaint with this court challenging the Director’s final determination.

During the period 1989 to 1994 plaintiff engaged in the business of a telephone answering service and pager sales and related paging services. See Radiofone Corp. of N.J. v. Director, Div. of Taxation, 4 N.J.Tax 420, 423-24 (Tax 1982), for an explanation of pagers and related paging services. Plaintiff terminated its business operations toward the end of 1994 for a number of reasons unrelated to the present litigation. Plaintiff concedes that its answering sendee was subject to the New Jersey sales and use tax, but contends that its pager sales and related paging services were not subject to sales tax in New Jersey. The Director’s deficiency assessment is predicated on these sales of pagers and paging services. During the course of the audit of plaintiffs books and records, the Division observed that plaintiff’s reported gross receipts for New Jersey sales and use tax purposes did not match the gross receipts reported by plaintiff on its United States corporation income tax return. Specifically, the gross receipts reported by plaintiff on its United States corporation income tax return for the calendar year 1993 were $1,040,157 while plaintiff reported gross receipts of $47,115 on its New Jersey sales tax returns for 1993. For tax year 1994, plaintiff reported gross [134]*134receipts of $882,748 on its United States corporation income tax reten while it reported gross receipts of $62,533 on its New Jersey sales tax returns.

Plaintiff claimed that the difference was due to sales of pagers and paging service to customers in New York which sales were not taxable for New Jersey sales and use tax purposes. The Division then reviewed plaintiffs 1993 New York general business corporation franchise tax retan in which plaintiff reported sales of $207,491 attributable to New York while its gross sales were $1,040,157, the same figure plaintiff reported on its United States corporation income tax return for 1993. Stated somewhat differently, plaintiff reported that 19.94804% ($207,491 -h $1,040,157 = 19.94804%) of its 1993 gross receipts were attributable to New York sales. The Division took plaintiffs New York sales as reported on its 1993 New York franchise tax reten and then calculated plaintiffs sales tax deficiency on the basis that all of its receipts except for the reported New York sales were attributable to New Jersey.

Plaintiff contended before the Division that its out-of-state sales were greater than the figure reported on its 1993 New Yoi*k franchise tax retan but was unable to provide any documentation to support that claim. ' This default apparently was due to the fact that at the end of 1994, when plaintiff ceased its operations but before it closed its doors, it disposed of all its operating books and records in a trash dumpster located at the rear of its Dover, New Jersey office.

In the record there appear to be two explanations as to how this occurred. The first is that since the business had failed, the records would no longer be required and therefore disposal in a trash dumpster was appropriate. The second was offered by plaintiffs only witness, Stanley I. Pure, the vice president of plaintiff, TAS Lakewood, at the trial of this matter on April 11, 2000. After it was determined that TAS Lakewood would close its doors in late 1994 and cease operations, Pure asked the husband of a TAS Lakewood employee to clean out the office in Dover, N.J. over a weekend. When Pure went to the office the following [135]*135Monday, he discovered that, in addition to the trash and useless equipment, all of TAS Lakewood’s records and books had been thrown out. According to Pure, the books and records were thrown out by mistake. As a consequence, there are no books or records to support any claims made with respect to the business operations of TAS Lakewood not only during the audit period but at anytime during the business life of TAS Lakewood.

In this proceeding plaintiff makes four claims in its challenge to the Director’s deficiency assessment. First, plaintiff contends that the pager sales and the related pager service were not taxable under the sales and use tax act. Second, plaintiff asserts that the Director’s basis for imposing the deficiency assessment is an educated guess based on plaintiff’s revenues but plaintiff argues that the actual revenues attributable to New Jersey transactions are lower than the figures used by the Director in arriving at his deficiency assessment.

Third, plaintiff contends that it is entitled to credit for the sales tax it paid to its suppliers for the goods and services that it resold to its own customers.

Fourth and last, plaintiff claims tax amnesty benefits with respect to the waiver of interest and penalties even though plaintiff did not apply for tax amnesty during the designated tax amnesty period of Friday, March 15, 1996 to midnight, Saturday, June 1, 1996. See N.J.S.A 54:53-17 and N.J.A.C. 18:39-1.1(b). Plaintiff abandoned this claim with respect to tax amnesty at the outset of the trial.

It should be noted that during the course of the trial, Stanley I. Pure advanced an additional claim when he testified that TAS Lakewood also made a number of sales to tax exempt entities and that the Division did not provide credit for these tax exempt sales in the calculation of the deficiency assessment at issue in this case. This claim was not raised during the audit conducted by the Division, nor was it raised during the conference before the Division. It was not asserted in plaintiffs complaint, nor was it preserved in the pretrial order in this case which specifically provided that any issue not preserved in the pretrial [136]*136order was deemed to be abandoned. Therefore, I will not consider the claim now. There is, however, an additional reason why the claim is not persuasive and I will say more of this later.

The only proof offered by plaintiff to controvert what the Division did in this ease was the uncorroborated testimony of Stanley I. Pure. Pure went to work for TAS Lakewood, Inc. in approximately 1986 as a manager and three or so years later, became a 50% shareholder in plaintiff corporation.

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19 N.J. Tax 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tas-lakewood-inc-v-director-division-of-taxation-njtaxct-2000.