Winchester TV Cable Co. v. State Tax Commissioner

217 S.E.2d 885, 216 Va. 286, 1975 Va. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 5, 1975
DocketRecord 740933
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 217 S.E.2d 885 (Winchester TV Cable Co. v. State Tax Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winchester TV Cable Co. v. State Tax Commissioner, 217 S.E.2d 885, 216 Va. 286, 1975 Va. LEXIS 282 (Va. 1975).

Opinion

Compton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question in this case is whether the owner and operator of a community antenna television (CATV) system is entitled to an exemption from sales and use taxes on certain tangible personal property, under Code § 58-441.6(j) which exempts:

“Broadcasting equipment and parts and accessories thereto and towers used or to be used by commercial radio and television companies or concerns which are under the regulation and supervision of the Federal Communications Commission.”

*287 At issue is the applicability of the statutory exemption and not the extent to which it applies to specific items of property.

The taxpayer, Winchester TV Cable Company, appeals the trial court’s denial of its Application for Correction of Erroneous Assessments filed in October, 1971, after it had been assessed by the State Department of Taxation with sales and use taxes, penalties and interest of $733.72 for purchases from September, 1966, through May, 1969. Upon consideration of a stipulation of the parties, testimony ore terms, certain exhibits, and memoranda of law submitted by counsel, the trial court, in an ordervwhich incorporated a written opinion, determined that the taxpayer was “not engaged in broadcasting” and declared that the assessments were valid.

The taxpayer, a Virginia stock corporation for profit with its principal office in Winchester, owns and operates the CATV system in that city. The record shows that a CATV system consists of an antenna located at a strategic point for the reception of television signals broadcast from distant commercial television stations or transmitted by microwave relay, amplification equipment which boosts the strength of the signals received, conversion equipment which alters the frequency of the signals, and transmission equipment which sends the converted and amplified signals through cables to a subscriber’s television set. Thus, the system allows the reception and amplification of signals which are too weak to be detected by the ordinary home television antenna.

The equipment owned and used by the taxpayer in the reception of audio and video signals includes electronic tubes, rectifiers, transformers, filters, transistors, switches, relays, and shielded cable. Shielded cable must be used to prevent the escape of any radio frequency energy into space. The record shows that a length of cable without shielding will act as an antenna when radio frequency energy is fed into it.

The evidence shows that the taxpayer also transmits by cable, to its subscribers’ television sets, programming which originates in its own studios. The studio equipment used by the taxpayer includes microphones, video cameras, film, and tape recording equipment.

The record further shows that some of the equipment purchased and used by the taxpayer is interchangeable with and identical to similar equipment used by radio and television broadcasting companies.

The cable system is available throughout the City of Winchester and subscribers receive service through connections called “taps.” *288 Charges are made for each tap at rates established under a franchise granted by the City Council of Winchester in 1965. This tap charge entitled the subscriber to the channels carried by the taxpayer and all programs originated locally.

Any member of the public who is accessible to the cable facilities may become a subscriber, if he is willing to pay the established rate. Only subscribers to the service who are connected to the cable can receive the television signals transmitted by the taxpayer.

The taxpayer operates over rights of way granted by the franchise but pays rental to the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Virginia and Potomac Edison Company for space on poles from which the cable is strung.

The taxpayer provides 12 channels for reception of commercial and educational television. It also provides on one of these channels time, weather and temperature by automation and 30 hours a month of locally originated non-automated programs. This non-automated local programming includes area church services, Apple Blossom Festival events, and City Council meetings and, according to the trial court’s finding, comprises about .5% of the total programming.

In construing the statute in question, the court below found that the taxpayer is “a concern under the regulation and supervision of the Federal Communications Commission,” but concluded that it was not a “broadcaster” because it did not transmit its signals through the air and, therefore, denied the exemption.

The taxpayer argues that the trial court placed an “unwarranted and untenably narrow construction” on the statutory exemption which had the effect of defeating its plain language. It contends that the statute does not require the telecommunications signal to be wireless. It argues that the word “broadcasting” is used in the statute as an adjective which describes the functional capability of the property, and that it is not employed in the exemption in a “verbal or acting sense” to connote the manner in which the property is used.

The taxpayer also points out that some of the equipment it uses is “functionally identical to and interchangeable with other broadcasting parts and accessories” used by radio and television broadcasting companies generally, that, according to the parties’ stipulation, such property would be exempt under the statute from Virginia sales and use taxes if purchased by the latter, and that, accordingly, the exemption should have been granted.

*289 It further argues, alternatively, that it is a “broadcaster” and that no distinction can be made in “how” its equipment is used. The taxpayer bases this argument on the fact that it is required by its franchise to serve all members of the public in its franchise area and that it has a duty to “perform,” that is, it is required to originate programs locally. It contends that “origination equals performance equals broadcasting.”

Finally, the taxpayer argues that even if the foregoing contentions are incorrect, it should nevertheless be granted the exemption because the “broadcasting” and “FCC regulation” provisions of the statute “are joined by the correlative conjunction ‘or’ and stand independently of each other.” It maintains that the trial court properly found that it has been and is subject to regulation by the Federal Communications Commission, therefore, since the two parts of the statutory sentence are to be taken separately, the statute plainly exempts “concerns which are under the regulation and supervision of” the FCC.

The Attorney General argues that under the statute, and under the applicable departmental regulation, 1 four criteria must be met before the taxpayer qualifies for this exemption. It must be a commercial radio or television company or concern; it must be under the regulation and supervision of the Federal Communications Commission; it must be engaged in broadcasting; and the property must be broadcasting equipment, parts and accessories thereto, or towers used directly in broadcasting.

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217 S.E.2d 885, 216 Va. 286, 1975 Va. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winchester-tv-cable-co-v-state-tax-commissioner-va-1975.