Verizon Pennsylvania, Inc. v. Commonwealth

127 A.3d 745, 633 Pa. 578
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 18, 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 127 A.3d 745 (Verizon Pennsylvania, Inc. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Verizon Pennsylvania, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 127 A.3d 745, 633 Pa. 578 (Pa. 2015).

Opinions

OPINION

Justice TODD.

In these cross-appeals by Verizon Telephone Company of Pennsylvania (“Verizon”) and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (“Commonwealth”), we consider the taxability, under Pennsylvania’s Gross Receipts Tax, 72 P.S. § 8101(a)(2), of Verizon’s gross receipts from: (1) the installation of private phone lines; (2) the provision of directory assistance services;, and (3) certain non-recurring charges levied on its customers for the installation of telephone lines; moves of, and changes to telephone lines and services; and from repairs of telephone lines. After careful consideration, we conclude that revenue derived from all such activities constitutes, gross receipts taxable under 72 P.S. § 8101(a)(2),- and, thus, we affirm the portion of the order of the Commonwealth Court which determined revenue from the first two above-enumerated activities was taxable, and reverse the portion of the Commonwealth Court’s order finding revenue from the third activity was not.

I. Background

We begin by briefly recounting the history of the Gross Receipts Tax in Pennsylvania, inasmuch as the evolution and meaning of its language through the years is the central focus of the parties’ current dispute. The Pennsylvania General Assembly first enacted this tax in 1866 in order to pay our state’s share of the debt incurred by the United States as the result of the Civil War. Stradley and Krekstein, Corporate Taxation and Procedure in Pennsylvania § 356 (1942). This tax was initially applied only to the gross annual receipts of railroad, canal, and transportation companies which were incorporated in Pennsylvania and which did not pay income taxes. However, gradually, as the industrialization of our Commonwealth progressed, the scope of the tax was expanded by the legislature, such that, by tíie late 1870’s, it included companies which received extensive revenue from the utilization of emerging technologies, including, inter alia, steamboat, streetcar, telegraph, and pipeline corporations. See Act of June 7, 1879, P.L. 112, Section 7.

In 1889, our legislature again widened the scope of the Gross Receipts Tax, through the passage of the Act of June 1, 1889, P.L. 420 (codified at 72 P.S. § 2181 (1889) (repealed)), which was the genesis of the taxing statute at issue in this appeal. Relevant to the matter at hand, Section 23 of that law included among the enumerated business entities required' to pay this tax all telephone companies doing business in Pennsylvania, whether incorporated in [747]*747Pennsylvania or elsewhere.1 This law provided that telephone companies were required to pay a specified tax rate on each dollar . of their gross- receipts “from ... telephone ... business done wholly with-, in” Pennsylvania. 72 P.S. § 2181 (1889) (repealed) (emphasis added).

Subsequently, in 1925, through the enactment of the Act of May 14, 1925, P.L. 706, the legislature amended former Section 2181 so that telephone companies paid the gross receipts tax on each dollar of their receipts “from ... telephone[ ] traffic '.'.. done wholly within” Pennsylvania. 72 P.S. § 2181 (1925) (repealed) (emphasis added). In 1929, the General Assembly passed the Act of April 25, P.L. 662, which again changed the means of taxation for gross receipts of telephone companies by providing that this tax would be assessed on each dollar of gross receipts of the companies “from' ... telephone messages transmitted wholly within” Pennsylvania. 72 P.S. § 2181 (1929) (repealed) (emphasis added).

This method of calculation of the gross receipts tax for telephone companies, i.e., based on “telephone messages transmitted,” has remained unchanged since the 1929 amendments. In 1971, the General Assembly repealed 72 P.S. § 2181, but simultaneously reenacted all of its provisions, with minor stylistic language modifications and -adjustment of the tax rate, in the Tax Reform Act of 1971 — the Act of March 4, 1971, P.L. 6 (codified at 72 P.S. § 8101 (1971-2000)). Just as 72 P.S. § 2181 had specified for the preceding 42 years, 72 P.S. § 8101 required that the gross receipts tax be paid by all telephone companies on each dollar of their gross receipts “from ... telephone messages transmitted wholly within” Pennsylvania. 72 P.S. § 8101 (1971-2000) (emphasis, added).

In 2000, the General Assembly again aménded 72 P.S. § 8101, and, while continuing to impose the tax on “telephone messages transmitted,” excepted from that category:

(i) the sales of access to the Internet ... to the ■ ultimate consumer; and
(ii) the sales for resale to persons, partnerships, associations, corporations or political subdivisions subject to the tax imposed by this article upon gross receipts derived from such re[748]*748sale of telecommunications services, including:
(A) telecommunications exchange access to interconnect with a local exchange carrier’s network;
(B) network elements on an unbundled basis.

72 P.S. § 8101(a)(2)(i), (ii)(A), (B) (2000-2003). In 2003, the legislature expanded the ambit of 72 P.S. § 8101 to impose the gross receipts tax on gross receipts telephone companies receive from “telephone messages transmitted in interstate commerce, where such messages originate'or terminate in this State and the charges for such messages are billed to a service address in this State.” 72 P.S. § 8101(a)(2) (2003-present). At that same time, it added “sales of telecommunications services to interconnect with providers of mobile telecommunications services” to the exclusions from the category of “telephone messages transmitted.” Id. § 8101(a)(2)(ii)(C). It did not, through this amendment, or at any time since, alter the manner of calculating the tax, which is still assessed on each dollar of gross receipts telephone companies receive from “telephone messages transmitted,” whether intrastate or interstate. Id. § 8101(a)(2).2

On December 31, 2004, Verizon filed its annual gross receipts tax report for the tax year 2004, claiming total taxable intrastate gross receipts in Pennsylvania of $1,474,524,745, on which it paid gross receipts tax in the amount of $73,726,237. Thereafter, the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue, with the approval of the Pennsylvania Auditor General (“Taxing Departments”), prepared a proposed “tax settlement” with Verizon which increased its total taxable gross receipts to $2,427,676,531, and assessed Verizon an additional $47,657,590 in gross receipts tax. Verizon filed a petition for resettlement with the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue Board of Appeals, which, after consideration of the petition, reduced Verizon’s total taxable gross receipts by $754,451,363 to $1,673,225,168, and, correspondingly, lowered the additional amount Verizon.was alleged to owe in.the proposed tax- , -settlement from $47,657,590 ■ to $9,935,021. Thereafter, the Taxing Departments presented Verizon with a new tax resettlement reflecting the determinations by the Board of Appeals of the additional gross receipts tax Verizon owed.

Verizon subsequently filed a petition for review of this resettlement with the Com-monwéalth Board of Finance and Revenue in which it sought to exclude from taxable gross receipts, inter alia,

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Bluebook (online)
127 A.3d 745, 633 Pa. 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verizon-pennsylvania-inc-v-commonwealth-pa-2015.