Tyler Equipment Corp. v. Town of Wallingford

561 A.2d 936, 212 Conn. 167, 1989 Conn. LEXIS 216
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 18, 1989
Docket13568
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 561 A.2d 936 (Tyler Equipment Corp. v. Town of Wallingford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler Equipment Corp. v. Town of Wallingford, 561 A.2d 936, 212 Conn. 167, 1989 Conn. LEXIS 216 (Colo. 1989).

Opinion

Shea, J.

In this case the board of tax review of the town of Wallingford denied the claim of the plaintiff, Tyler Equipment Corporation (Tyler), that certain property included in its assessment list was exempt from the property tax. The plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court, which rendered judgment for the defendant town. The plaintiff has appealed from that judgment and maintains that the undisputed facts establish that the property involved qualifies for the exemption provided by General Statutes § 12-81 (54)1 for inventories of wholesale and retail businesses. We find error in part.

[169]*169There is no significant dispute about the facts. Tyler has its principal place of business in East Longmeadow, Massachusetts, but also conducts business on premises in the town of Wallingford in this state. It is engaged in selling heavy construction equipment, such as front-end loaders, off-highway trucks, cranes, excavation equipment, rollers, backhoes, and trailers for carrying such equipment. The equipment is used in constructing roads, excavating building sites and operating quarries.

Some of the equipment at the Wallingford location is held only for long-term leasing and Tyler concedes the taxability of such property. Tyler claims that the remaining equipment qualifies as “goods” of a “wholesale and retail business,” which are exempt from the property tax under § 12-81 (54), because such equipment is available for sale like any other business inventory. It admits, however, that a substantial portion of this remaining equipment is used in its leasing program, under which a customer may rent the equipment for a period of time with an option to purchase it, the rental payments being credited toward the purchase price. Tyler contends that the equipment involved in this leasing program is held for the purpose of sale because its basic business is the sale of the equipment and the leasing program is merely a marketing device that facilitates an ultimate sale.

The Wallingford assessors took a different view of the status of the items classified as rental equipment in Tyler’s financial statements and added $1,691,160 to its grand list for October 1, 1987. The town maintains that, once Tyler leases a construction machine, [170]*170that machine loses its status as “goods” or business inventory because it is no longer available for sale to customers other than the lessee, whose right to possession cannot be terminated until the expiration of the lease.

The $1,691,160 value of “rental equipment” inventory located in Connecticut, as shown on Tyler’s financial statements, consisted of two items, $1,510,212 for rental equipment “on location,” i.e., in the possession of the lessee, and $180,948 for rental equipment “in stock,” i.e., equipment that had been rented but had been returned to Tyler’s possession and, therefore, was available for sale or another lease.

I

Tyler first contends that, because the trial court found that its principal activity was the sale of heavy construction equipment and that the rental of such equipment was only “a last-resort tool to make a sale,” it was entitled to the exemption provided by § 12-81 (54) for all its tangible personal property, whether or not it was being leased or previously had been leased with an option to purchase. The statute, however, provides an exemption for “[t]he monthly average quantity of goods of any wholesale and retail business” (emphasis added) and not for all the tangible personal property of such a business. Even though, as the court found, Tyler qualifies as a “wholesale and retail” business because its principal activity is selling tangible personal property, not all of its tangible personal property can be classified as “goods.” Indeed, Tyler has conceded the taxability of the rental equipment that it holds for the purpose of long-term leasing and presumably does not contest the taxability of other personal property used in its business, such as office equipment and vehicles.

[171]*171II

Tyler also maintains that the term “goods” as used in § 12-81 (54) is broad enough to include its lease program equipment because the purpose of the lease is the ultimate sale of the equipment to the lessee. Since the term is not defined by any statute relating to the personal property tax, Tyler relies upon the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) definition set forth in General Statutes § 42a-2-105 (1): “ 'Goods’ means all things, including specially manufactured goods, which are movable at the time of identification to the contract for sale other than the money in which the price is to be paid, investment securities covered by article 8 and things inaction. . . .” We agree that this definition is broad enough to include Tyler’s lease program equipment as well as the remainder of its tangible personal property, for which no exemption is claimed. The purposes for which the UCC definition was designed, however, are not necessarily congruent with the purposes of the legislature in creating the exemption for “goods” of wholesale and retail businesses in § 12-81 (54).

There is abundant evidence in the legislative history of the adoption in 1969 of Public Act No. 657 that the purpose of the enactment was to eliminate over a period of several years the personal property tax on the inventories of wholesale and retail merchants in Connecticut so that they would not be disadvantaged by conducting business in this state rather than in bordering states that did not tax such inventories. Representative Darius J. Spain spoke of “eliminating from local taxation the inventory of retail merchants.” 13 H.R. Proc., Pt. 11, 1969 Sess., p. 4960. Representative Joseph T. Gormley stated that “[b]ig corporations will not establish warehouses in our state because of this inventory tax.” Id., p. 4961. Senator William J. Ver-riker described the bill as decreasing the “property tax [172]*172assessment on inventory [of] mercantile establishments.” 13 S. Proc., Pt. 7, 1969 Sess., p. 3429. The title of the bill was “An Act Concerning Elimination of Taxes on Inventories of Mercantile Establishments.” Id., p. 3428. Section 12-81 (54), which, in the current revised statutes, embodies the exemption created in 1969, is entitled “Wholesale and retail business inventory.” From this history we are convinced that the operative words, “goods of any wholesale and retail business,” refer, not to all the tangible personal property of such an enterprise, but only to those goods properly classified as inventory.

The legislative history also sheds some light on what the legislators meant by use of the term “inventory.” At the hearing before the finance committee, some of the considerations mentioned by those favoring elimination of the tax on inventories of wholesale and retail businesses were that Connecticut merchants were being discouraged from quantity buying at lower prices “for fear of retaining large taxable inventories, resulting in loss of profits and loss of service to the consumer because of higher cost, fewer products, more back orders, less variety, and delays in obtaining desired items,” that variations in the rate of turnover among different businesses made the tax unfair because slow moving items are sometimes taxed more than once, and that the elimination of the tax on manufacturer inventories in 1965 left inventories stored in warehouses of manufacturers untaxable while those in warehouses of wholesalers were subject to the tax. Conn. Joint Standing Committee Hearings, Finance, 1969 Sess., pp. 330-36.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

William W. Backus Hospital v. Stonington
349 Conn. 713 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2024)
Chadwick-BaRoss, Inc. v. City of Westbrook
2016 ME 62 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2016)
Kansas Enters., Inc. v. Frantz
6 P.3d 857 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2000)
Michaud v. Zarillo, No. Cv96 0388490 (Oct. 28, 1996)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 8392 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1996)
Eagle Rental, Inc. v. City of Waterville
632 A.2d 130 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
561 A.2d 936, 212 Conn. 167, 1989 Conn. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-equipment-corp-v-town-of-wallingford-conn-1989.