Vrontikis Bros. v. Utah State Tax Commission

337 P.2d 434, 9 Utah 2d 60, 1959 Utah LEXIS 193
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1959
DocketNo. 8962
StatusPublished

This text of 337 P.2d 434 (Vrontikis Bros. v. Utah State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vrontikis Bros. v. Utah State Tax Commission, 337 P.2d 434, 9 Utah 2d 60, 1959 Utah LEXIS 193 (Utah 1959).

Opinions

WORTHEN, Justice.

Review of an assessment by defendant against plaintiffs for sales tax allegedly due the state for merchandise taken as trade-ins by plaintiffs who are engaged in the retail selling of home appliances and other merchandise. The case involves an interpretation of the Sales Tax Statute.

Section 59-15-4, U.C.A.1953, provides in part as follows:

“ * * * there is levied and there shall be collected and paid:
“(a) A tax upon every retail sale of tangible personal property made within the state of Utah equivalent to two per cent of the purchase price paid or charged, or in the case of retail sales involving the exchange of property, equivalent to two per cent of the con[62]*62sideration paid or charged, including the fair market value of the property exchanged at the time and place of the exchange * * (Emphasis added.)

Plaintiffs concede that the State Tax Commission has the legal right to make rules and regulations so long as they are not in conflict with the Constitution and laws of the state of Utah. But plaintiffs contend that Sales Tax Regulations No. 30 and No. 72 promulgated by the State Tax Commission are not warranted under the statute hut that the Tax Commission has adopted a rule at variance with what the legislature authorized.

In 1953 and subsequent to the enactment of Section 59-15-4, U.C.A.1953, the State Tax Commission promulgated Sales Tax Regulation No. 30 as follows:

“Purchase price defined. The term ‘purchase price’ means the price to the consumer and includes not only the amount of money paid but also the value in money of any property of any kind or nature received in exchange.” (Emphasis added.)

Later, Sales Tax Regulation No. 72 relating specifically to “Trade-Ins” was promulgated, as follows:

“Trade-ins — ‘Retail sale’ or ‘purchase price’ includes not only cash or money received but also the value in money of any property of any kind or nature received in exchange.”

Section 59-15-4, U.C.A.1953 provides for payment of the tax on the fair market value of the property exchanged at the time and place of the exchange.

Plaintiffs contend that by assessing the tax against the value in money of the property received in exchange instead of against the fair market value of said property the Tax Commission has acted beyond its powers. Plaintiffs state their position as follows :

“The Tax Commission * * * has illegally assessed sales tax against the plaintiffs * * * by setting up as the basis of taxation on merchandise taken as trade-ins, the agreed value instead of the fair market value.”

There is no dispute as to the evidence. The parties have stipulated to the facts, the pertinent portion of which stipulation is as follows:

“3. That the petitioners were and are at all times mentioned herein engaged in the retail merchandise of home appliances, sporting goods, and other merchandise and operate a store in Salt Lake City, Utah, known as Vrontikis Brothers.
“4. That the petitioners’ mode of. doing business is to compete with merchants in the area selling like products by allowing discounts and trade-ins on' the retail price of the merchandise.
[63]*63That their method of competition was and is based on a lower sales price but with a greater volume of sales.
“5. That it is and has been for the last past several years the practice of the petitioners to advertise in the daily newspapers of the area their merchandise for sale and allow a trade-in allowance against the purchase price of the new merchandise, said trade-in allowance being fixed, and said price being given regardless of the condition of the trade-in or regardless of the actual worth of the article traded in.
“6. That the petitioners, when writing up a sale, place on the sales ticket the advertised normal sales price, and subtract therefrom the amount of the advertised trade-in allowance, which figure equals the advertised net sales price.
“7. That the petitioners in many instances did and do not require the purchaser to surrender the item being traded in nor did or do the petitioners, in all instances, pick up the item traded in.
“8. That the petitioners donate to various charitable institutions large quantities of traded-in merchandise which require extensive repairs or reconditioning, and by such donations do not realize, any monetary gain on such merchandise accepted by them as trade-ins.
“9. That traded-in merchandise which has resale value is resold by the petitioners and that such sales are duly recorded oh the books of the petitioners as being sales of used merchandise.
“10. That the available storage space allotted for traded-in merchandise being limited, and due to the volume of business of the petitioners, it was the practice of the petitioners to either sell or donate all trade-ins within 30 days of their receipt.
“11. That the Utah State Tax Commission audited the books of the petitioners and that the audit section of the commission, by an amended report dated September 20, 1956, assessed the petitioners, Nick and Pete Vrontikis, the sum of $1,434.16 for sales tax on consideration received by them in the form of traded-in merchandise which had not been theretofore paid by them; and assessed the petitioner, Vrontikis Brothers, Inc., the sum of $3,436.37 for sales tax on consideration received by it in the form of traded-in merchandise which had not been theretofore paid by it. That subsequently the petitioners paid the above amounts to the State Tax Commission under protest.
“12. That the audit section of the Tax Commission arrived at the amounts due for sales tax on consideration received in the form of merchan[64]*64dise accepted as trade-ins by taking the amount shown on the sales ticket as 'trade-in’ and ruling that this figure was the fair market value of the item traded.”

Plaintiffs contend that the Tax Commission should be obliged to accept as the basis of making the assessment the amount the trade-in brings when resold by plaintiffs. However, such approval does not comport with the statute which requires that the value shall be the value at the time and place of exchange. Further the parties to such later sale are not the parties to the sale we are concerned with. The later negotiations will not necessarily reflect the factors present at the original transaction.

It should also be observed that plaintiffs could not account for sales tax on all articles traded in. Plaintiffs admit, in the stipulation of facts, that in many instances they did not require the purchaser to surrender the item traded in nor did plaintiffs "in all instances pick up the item traded in." It is patent that plaintiffs’ records could not reflect any sales tax on such items. Likewise it is disclosed by the stipulation that plaintiffs donate to various charitable institutions “large quantities” of traded-in merchandise from which trade-ins no monetary gain is realized.

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Bluebook (online)
337 P.2d 434, 9 Utah 2d 60, 1959 Utah LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vrontikis-bros-v-utah-state-tax-commission-utah-1959.