Whitehill Sand & Gravel Co. v. State Tax Commission

150 P.2d 370, 106 Utah 469, 1944 Utah LEXIS 44
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1944
DocketNo. 6667.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 150 P.2d 370 (Whitehill Sand & Gravel Co. v. 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
Whitehill Sand & Gravel Co. v. State Tax Commission, 150 P.2d 370, 106 Utah 469, 1944 Utah LEXIS 44 (Utah 1944).

Opinion

McDonough, justice.

This is a proceeding to review the deficiency assessment of the State Tax Commission. The plaintiff is engaged in business of selling sand and gravel. Plaintiff paid sales tax on the price of gravel at the pit, but in some cases plaintiff either hauled the material to certain points or arranged for transportation, and the Commission held that the haulage charges collected by the seller constituted a part of the purchase price and entered a deficiency assessment thereon covering transactions over a period of three years. There appears to be little if any dispute between the parties as to the meaning of Sec. 80-15-4, U. C. A. 1948, the applicable statute; the dispute appears to be relative to the application thereof to the facts here. In essence, as we view the problem, *471 the question to be determined is; Was the Commission warranted in treating delivery charges in each instance as part of the purchase price?

Sec. 80-15-4, supra, reads as follows:

“From and after the effective date of this act 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, * *

Both parties agree that the following quotation from the case of Bloxom v. Henneford, 193 Wash. 540, 76 P. 2d 586, 587, correctly reflects the meaning of “purchase price” as used in our statute:

“The purchase price, as that phrase is employed in the definition of gross earnings in section 8, c. 180, p. 716, Laws of 1935, means the purchase price paid by the jobber to the person from whom he bought the goods. The cost of transportation to the purchaser’s place of business, whether freight, drayage, or other costs paid by the purchaser after he bought the goods, cannot, without doing violence to the language of the statute, be included within the phrase ‘purchase price.’
“* * * The costs or charges paid by the jobber to the railroad company or to the refrigerator car company do not come within any fair definition of the phrase ‘purchase price’. * * *”

The commission in its brief emphasizes1 the words “after he bought the goods” in such quotation.

In the case of Ford J. Twaits Co. et al. v. Utah State Tax Commission, 106 Utah 848, 148 P. 2d 343, 345, involving in part, the inclusion, in fixing the amount of a use tax, of the .cost of transporting the property purchased from a place of purchase without the state to the point of use in this state, we stated:

“The question is then whether the freight paid by contractors is a part of the sale price, being included as a service cost, or ‘other expenses.’ From the evidence in the record it could not be so. The commission’s audit of contractors’ books shows that all freight charges were paid by contractors directly to the various carriers by which *472 goods were shipped. In other words, plaintiff purchased the materials at a price fixed at seller’s place of business, took possession thereof and shipped those goods on its own account, and its own risk, paying the freight charges by its own check. How then can the freight charge be a part of the sale price? It is an entirely separate transaction, the sale being complete before shipment ever occurred.”

It is clear that if the deficiency here assessed is made up of a percentage of the transportation charges incurred and paid by the purchaser after he took title rather than of items included in the purchase price to him, the assessment must be set aside.

Does the record so show?

The testimony of Mr. Hyde, vice president and manager of appellant, is to the effect that Mrs. King, the office manager, attended to all routine sales but where bids on special contracts were to be considered and contracts entered into he attended to such matters. He testified that the general practice was to quote prices at the pit, since the company had just one truck which it used for deliveries only in case of an emergency; and that while the practice had been for contractors to haul away their own gravel from the pit; when they began to encounter transportation difficulties, they often requested plaintiff to arrange transportation for them. He further testified that the transportation was handled by the company at cost and stated that it was done only as a matter of accommodation and that the company merely acted as representative of the buyers in arranging deliveries at the cost per ton charged by the truckers; and that if the truckers deuanded an increase in delivery charges the company aided the contractors in negotiating a haulage charge which would be agreeable to the purchasers. He further stated that while the truckers collected the delivery charges from the company, the latter in turn collected from the purchasers'. While admitting that social security assessments were made against the company for the truckers, he testified that the assessments were paid under protest.

*473 The foregoing involves certain conclusions of the witness relative to the ultimate fact. Excerpts from his testimony more clearly reflect the nature of the arrangements made with the buyers with whom he dealt.

“Q. Let’s take the McKee Company. Just relate to the Commission what was done by way of negotiation and final closing of any agreement with that company. A. I discussed the terms with two members of the McKee Company at the Hotel Utah, gave them a quotation, and indicated to them that all of our contracting was based on the sale of material only; that the contractor, himself, handled the drayage either with his own trucks, or he would stipulate the amount that was to be paid to the truckers. We had only one delivery truck of our own. All of our work in the past had been by special contract with the truckers. But the McKee Company, I told them that the price that the men were delivering for at Hill Field was 80 cents per yard; that any increase due to difficulties that might arise, or to shortages of trucking, etc., would have to he borne by their company. There were two gentlement there, and this was agreed upon.
:§! jjs $
“A. We told them that the price given to us for that haul to Hill Field was 80 cents per yard, and we would give them the cost of material at the pit.
“Q. What was that price? A. When we first started out, it was 60 cents, as I remember it, that we would charge them — 60 cents per yard plus 80 cents, which would be the total for the delivered price, and that was agreeable to them. After we started work—
“Q. * * * What did you do about getting haulers then, under that arrangement with McKee? A. We had a good many men that were hauling for us. I met with the men and told them the price of hauling, and they agreed to go on with that price.
“Q. What do you mean, they would agree to go on with that price? A.

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Bluebook (online)
150 P.2d 370, 106 Utah 469, 1944 Utah LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehill-sand-gravel-co-v-state-tax-commission-utah-1944.