Youngstown Steel Products Co. v. State Board of Equalization

306 P.2d 983, 148 Cal. App. 2d 205, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2348
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 1957
DocketCiv. No. 21847
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 306 P.2d 983 (Youngstown Steel Products Co. v. State Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Youngstown Steel Products Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 306 P.2d 983, 148 Cal. App. 2d 205, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2348 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

SHINN, P. J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment awarding plaintiff a refund of $2,698.16 in an action to recover sales taxes paid under protest, Trial was to the court. The sole question presented on this appeal is whether, under the provisions of sections 6011, paragraph 3(b) and 6012, paragraph 3(b) of the Revenue and Taxation Code, as they read prior to their amendment in 1953, plaintiff was obligated to pay a sales tax upon certain sales of steel pipe where the pipe was returned to plaintiff within 90 days after the respective sales but the sales were noted as cancelled and refunds were made at later dates.

Plaintiff, a California corporation, is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company, which produces steel pipe at its mills in Ohio and Illinois. Plaintiff maintains a yard for the storage of pipe at Wilmington, California. Upon receipt of pipe from the mills, it is unloaded and stored according to size in a series of numbered racks on the yard and a record of where the pipe is stored is kept at the yard office. When pipe is invoiced to a customer, plaintiff’s records are adjusted to show ownership of the pipe in the customer’s name. This is accomplished by transferring the inventory information from a stock card and putting it on the customer’s'card.

The facts of the ease are not in dispute. The transactions in question were 29 separate sales of pipe between April 1, 1948 and March 31, 1951. The gross receipts from these sales totaled $86,173.74. Approximately one-half of this amount was represented by nine separate sales in which pipe was invoiced by the parent company at Youngstown, Ohio, and shipped to California either directly to the purchaser or to plaintiff’s storage yard to await the purchaser’s instructions. The remainder of the $86,173 in gross receipts was represented by 20 separate transactions in which pipe stored at the Wilmington yard was sold for future delivery to the purchasers. The full purchase price, including the sales tax, was paid by [207]*207each purchaser within 10 days of the invoice date and the sales tax was reported and paid by plaintiff with its next quarterly return.

All the pipe in question was returned to plaintiff within 90 days after the respective sales dates. The court so found and the finding is not questioned by appellant. However, the respective sales were not formally cancelled and credits to the accounts of the purchasers were not entered until some months later. Plaintiff stored all pipe not delivered and all pipe physically returned at the yard without segregating it from other pipe stored there. Plaintiff subsequently sold the pipe to other purchasers and reported and paid a sales tax on each of the resales. However, plaintiff took credit for the undelivered pipe on previous sales in its returns for the quarterly periods in which credits were entered for the cancelled orders. In 1951 defendant ordered a field audit of plaintiff’s records and filed a notice of determination in which it claimed that a sales tax was due on the 29 rescinded transactions. Plaintiff’s petition for redetermination was denied as to those sales and plaintiff paid the sales tax under protest. Plaintiff’s claim for refund was likewise denied by the Board.

Prior to the amendment of section 6011, subdivision (b), of the Revenue and Taxation Code in 1953, there was excluded from the sales price: “The amount charged for property returned by customers upon rescission of the contract of sale when the entire amount charged therefor is refunded either in cash or credit, and when the property is returned within 90 days from the date of purchase.” Prior to the amendment of section 6012, subdivision (b), in 1953,1 there was excluded [208]*208from the “gross receipts”: “Sale price of property returned by customers upon rescission of the contract of sale when the full sale price is refunded either in cash or credit, and when the property is returned within 90 days from the date of sale.” The words “and when the property is returned within 90 days from the date of purchase [sale] ” had been added to those sections in 1945.

The court concluded that under the language of sections 6011, subdivision (b), and 6012, subdivision (b), as they read prior to 1953, as applied to the facts that the pipe had been returned to plaintiff within the several 90-day periods and the purchase prices had been refunded, plaintiff was entitled to a refund of the tax it had paid on the rescinded transactions.

The board contends that the court’s construction of sections 6011, subdivision (b), and 6012, subdivision (b), is erroneous. In this connection, defendant argues that the return of the property must be pursuant to a rescission, the rescission must be contemporaneous with the return of the property, and both must occur within 90 days of the original sale. Defendant’s reasoning is predicated upon the clause “property returned by customers upon rescission of the contract of sale.” The word “upon” is defined as “with little or no interval after.” Hence, defendant argues, the sections must be taken to exclude only the sales price or the amount charged for “property returned by customers with little or no interval after rescission of the contract of sale, ’ ’ etc.

Under the literal construction of sections 6011 and 6012 insisted upon by appellant, it would seem that in order to become entitled to a credit the buyer would not only have to return the property within 90 days but would have to be given a refund within that time. But an agreement to credit the purchase price is a refund, and, as we shall point out, accomplishes a rescission even though credit is entered later. Appellant’s tax counsel twice ruled that under the 1945 amendment a deduction was allowable if the property was returned within 90 days, even though credit was given at some later date. (See CCH State Tax Reporter, California, volume 2, paragraphs 60-356,052 and 60-356.054.)

Under the law in effect at the times of the transactions in question three things were necessary to avoid liability for a tax on sales where the buyer returned the property, (1) rescission of the sale, (2) refund of the purchase price in cash or by credit, and (3) return of the property within [209]*20990 days. In ascertaining the significance of the addition in 1945 of the phrase “and when the property is returned within 90 days from the date of sale,” we turn to appropriate sources of information as to the purpose the legislation was intended to accomplish. In September 1943 sales tax ruling Number 50 read in part: “If there has been a substantial use of the property and the credit is pursuant to an agreement that the full selling price would be allowed on the purchase of property of substantially greater value, ... it will be presumed that the contract of sale was not rescinded and the property was traded in; . . .” Appellant proposed to substitute for the above the following: “The tax does not apply when: (1) The customer returns the property and the sale is rescinded under the terms of the agreement as in the case of a sale ‘on trial/ ‘on satisfaction/ ‘on sale or return’ or similar terms or pursuant to the election of the customer as in the case of a breach of warranty, and (2) The full sale price, including that portion designated to be on account of ‘sales tax/ is refunded or credited to the customer.” The attorney general approved the change, stating in part “the contract of sale is rescinded when the customer exercises his option to return the property (citations). The full sale price is refunded in credit.

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306 P.2d 983, 148 Cal. App. 2d 205, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/youngstown-steel-products-co-v-state-board-of-equalization-calctapp-1957.