TECHNICAL SERVICES OF ARK., INC. v. Pledger
This text of 896 S.W.2d 433 (TECHNICAL SERVICES OF ARK., INC. v. Pledger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
TECHNICAL SERVICES OF ARKANSAS, INC., D/B/A JPAC Outdoor Advertising Company, Appellant,
v.
Jim C. PLEDGER, Director of Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration, and Timothy J. Leathers, Commissioner of Revenues, Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration, Appellees.
Supreme Court of Arkansas.
*434 Jon. R. Coleman, Robert J. Gibson, Jonesboro, for appellant.
Kenneth R. Williams, Little Rock, for appellees.
ROAF, Justice.
This case involves the interpretation and construction of our sales and use tax, the Arkansas Gross Receipts Act of 1941, as amended, and the Arkansas Compensating Tax Act of 1949, as amended. Appellant's gross proceeds derived from sales of billboard advertising services are not taxed due to a specific exemption for advertising revenues earned by newspapers, publications, and billboard companies granted by the Arkansas Gross Receipts Act. Appellant failed to pay use tax on certain tangible items used in its advertising business, purchased from out-of-state vendors. No sales tax was collected from appellant by these vendors. Appellant claims that its gross proceeds exemption provides a basis for also exempting these items of personal property from the use tax because the items are purchased for use in providing advertising services to its customers. The chancellor ruled the items used in connection with the taxpayer's billboard advertising service are not exempt from the use tax, Ark.Code Ann. § 26-53-106 (Supp.1993). We affirm.
Appellant Technical Services of Arkansas, Inc., d/b/a JPAC Outdoor Advertising Company (Technical Services) is a corporation engaged in the business of billboard advertising. The appellant erects billboards and enters *435 into contracts with its customers to rent or lease billboard advertising space. The Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration (DFA) conducted a use tax audit of Technical Services' records for the audit period of January 1, 1988, through January 31, 1991. Technical Services was assessed a use tax deficiency, plus interest, in the amount of $16,367.13. The DFA assessed the use tax on "painted bulletins, posters, facings, hardware, and paint, purchased out of state for storage, usage, distribution, and consumption in Arkansas." (Emphasis supplied.) After exhausting its administrative remedies, the appellant paid the tax under protest and pursued its challenge in chancery court.
The chancellor found the items in question constituted tangible personal property against which the use tax was properly assessed. The court found that Ark.Code Ann. § 26-52-401(13) (Supp.1993) exempts billboard advertising services from Arkansas sales and use taxes, but expressed "some doubt about these items constituting a service." Further, the trial court found the appellant did not possess an Arkansas retail sales and use tax permit; therefore, the purchases were not exempt as a sale for resale pursuant to Ark.Code Ann. § 26-52-401(12) (Supp.1993).
On appeal, Technical Services submits (1) it was entitled to an exemption under Ark. Code Ann. § 26-52-401(13); (2) the items were exempt under the sale for resale exemption provided by § 26-52-401(12); and (3) the taxation of the use of property in billboard advertising is in violation of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
The standard of review in these cases is well established. A strong presumption operates in favor of the taxing power, and the taxpayer must establish an entitlement to an exemption from taxation beyond a reasonable doubt. Pledger v. C.B. Form Co., 316 Ark. 22, 871 S.W.2d 333 (1994); Pledger v. Baldor Int'l, Inc., 309 Ark. 30, 827 S.W.2d 646 (1992). Tax exemptions are strictly construed against the exemption, and we have written that "to doubt is to deny the exemption." C.B. Form Co., supra. Finally, tax exemption cases are reviewed de novo and the appellate court does not set aside the findings of the chancellor unless they are clearly erroneous. Baldor, supra.
I. Ark.Code Ann. § 26-52-401(13)
Jeff Simmons, a senior tax auditor with the DFA, testified he assessed use tax on the poles, facings, posters, lighting equipment and any and all hardware used to attach the billboard to the pole. Simmons testified he assessed the tax on the items because they were bought out of state and shipped through interstate commerce, and no sales tax was charged. According to the testimony of Bill Levins, general manager of the appellant, "national" clients often provided the prepared posters which the appellant placed directly on the leased billboard. However, for those clients who did not provide their own posters, the appellant acted as an "agent" in securing the poster paper. The clients could buy the paper directly from the poster company if they had credit approval; however, in order to expedite the process, the appellant allowed the poster company to bill the appellant. Mr. Levins testified that the other items taxed were "necessary in performing the services that we supply to our clients." Further, it is significant that Mr. Levins testified the appellant paid sales taxes when it purchased items used in its business from local suppliers.
The appellant contends that pursuant to Ark.Code Ann. § 26-52-401(13) "billboard advertising services" are exempt from the gross receipts tax; therefore, pursuant to Ark.Code Ann. § 26-53-112 (1987), "billboard advertising services," specifically the items of tangible personal property used to provide such services, are also exempt from the use tax. Further, the appellant submits that "services," as contemplated by the legislature in enacting the exemption, means "business." Consequently, the appellant contends no use taxes may be levied against the billboard advertising "business," which includes the items in question. We disagree.
*436 Arkansas Code Ann. § 26-53-106(a) (Supp. 1993) provides:
There is levied and there shall be collected from every person in this state a tax or excise for the privilege of storing, using, distributing, or consuming within this state any article of tangible personal property purchased for storage, use, distribution, or consumption in this state at the rate of three percent (3%) of the sales price of the property.
Arkansas Code Ann. § 26-53-112 (1987) provides in part:
There is specifically exempted from the taxes levied in this subchapter: ...
(2) Sales of tangible personal property on which the tax under the Arkansas Gross Receipts Act, § 26-52-101 et seq., is levied, and any tangible personal property specifically exempted from taxation by the Arkansas Gross Receipts Act, § 26-52-101 et seq., and legislation enacted thereto. (Emphasis added.)
As authority for its claimed exemption from the use tax, the appellant relies upon the reference in § 26-53-112 to tangible personal property exempted by the Gross Receipts Act. Arkansas Code Ann. § 26-52-301 (Supp.1993), gross receipts tax, provides in part:
There is levied an excise tax of three percent (3%) upon the gross proceeds or gross receipts derived from all sales to any person of the following:
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896 S.W.2d 433, 320 Ark. 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/technical-services-of-ark-inc-v-pledger-ark-1995.