94-2220
Sales
Signed 2/22/96
BEFORE
THE UTAH STATE TAX COMMISSION
____________________________________
XXXXX, )
XXXXX, XXXXX, :
XXXXX, )
XXXXX, : FINDINGS
OF FACT,
XXXXX,
) CONCLUSIONS OF LAW,
XXXXX, : AND
FINAL DECISION
XXXXX, )
XXXXX, :
XXXXX, ) Appeal
Nos.
XXXXX, : 94-2220 94-2221
XXXXX, ) 94-2222 94-2223
XXXXX, : 94-2224 94-2225
XXXXX,
) 94-2226 94-2227
XXXXX, XXXXX, : 94-2228 94-2229
XXXXX, XXXXX, ) 94-2230 95-0116
XXXXX, : 95-0117 95-0118
XXXXX, ) 95-0119 95-0120
XXXXX, : 95-0121 95-0122
XXXXX,
) 95-0123 95-0124
XXXXX, : 95-0493 95-0494
XXXXX, XXXXX ) 95-0495 95-0496
XXXXX, : 95-0592 95-0680
XXXXX, ) 95-0925 95-0926
XXXXX, :
)
Petitioners, :
)
vs. :
)
CUSTOMER SERVICE DIVISION OF :
THE UTAH STATE TAX COMMISSION,)
:
Respondent. ) Tax Type: Sales & Use
_____________________________________
STATEMENT
OF CASE
This matter came before the Utah State Tax
Commission for an Initial Hearing on
XXXXX. Based on the request by both
parties, the Initial Hearing was converted into the Formal Hearing. Present and representing Petitioner was
XXXXX, Attorney at Law. Present and
representing Respondent was XXXXX, Assistant Attorney General. Administrative Law Judge Gail Reich heard
the matter for and on behalf of the Commission.
Based upon the evidence and testimony
presented at the hearing, the Tax Commission hereby makes its:
FINDINGS
OF FACT
1.
The tax in question is sales tax.
2.
Petitioners request a refund for sales tax paid on the wholesale
purchase of food which is ultimately used to provide meals to patients.
3.
With the exception of XXXXX, the Petitioners are licensed by the Utah
Department of Health as nursing care facilities with specific designations as
either a ANursing Care Facility@ or ASmall Health Care Facility.@ XXXXX is a Nursing Care Facility designated as a ASpecialty Hospital Psychiatric.@
4.
The Nursing Care Facilities= admission agreements generally state that the facilities agree to
furnish room and board to inpatients.
The room and board charge is a fixed amount per day that is generally
billed monthly.
5.
Each of the Nursing Care Facilities provides at least three meals daily
for its inpatients.
6.
The Nursing Care Facilities do not separately itemize meal costs or
charge separately for meals provided to the resident patients. Rather, the facilities= invoices list a fixed daily rate for room
and board.
7.
Most patients generally rely on Medicare, Medicaid or private insurance
to satisfy all or portions of the bill.
8.
The Nursing Care Facilities purchase food in bulk quantities that the
dietary staff prepares and provides as meals.
9.
The food suppliers have generally imposed Utah sales tax on the Nursing
Care Facilities= food purchases.
10.
There is no discount from the fixed daily room and board rate charged if
an inpatient misses or skips a meal, or eats more or less than the normal
amount.
11.
Although some Nursing Care Facility inpatients require special diets,
they are not billed separately or differently than any other inpatients.
12.
The Nursing Care Facility inpatients generally are not given options
concerning meal plans (how many meals served, quality or quantity of food)
while in the facility and do not select these meals from a menu. They are given only minor choices concerning
beverages, side dishes etc. Some
Nursing Care Facilities do provide a selection of an alternate entree. The choices of side dishes, beverages,
entrees, etc. do not affect the daily rate charged.
13.
Separate charges per meal are not made to or collected from the
inpatients each time they eat a meal at the Nursing Care Facilities.
14.
The Nursing Care Facilities have not charged or collected sales tax on
the fixed daily room and board amount.
15.
At XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX,
XXXXX and XXXXX, no employees or individuals other than inpatients, are allowed
to eat at the Nursing Care Facilities= dining rooms.
16.
At XXXXX, XXXXX,XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX,
XXXXX, XXXXX, XXXXX, and XXXXX, family members, visitors and employees are
allowed to eat at the Nursing Care Facility.
With the exception of XXXXX, family members, visitors and employees pay
for these meals on a meal-by-meal basis by purchasing a meal ticket at the time
the meal is served. The Nursing Care
Facilities agree that sales tax has been collected or should be collected on
these sales of meals to family members, visitors or employees. At XXXXX, meals are provided to family
members, visitors and employees at no charge.
XXXXX does not contend that any tax paid on food used to prepare meals
provided free of charge to family members, visitors and employees is subject to
refund.
APPLICABLE
LAW
Utah Code Ann. '59-12-104(14) provides in pertinent part, as follows:
The following sales and uses are exempt from
taxes imposed by this chapter. . .
(14) sales of meals served by:
(a) public elementary and secondary schools;
(b) churches, charitable institutions, and
institutions of higher education, if the meals are not available to the general
public; and
(c) inpatient meals provided at medical or
nursing facilities.
Administrative Rule R865-19S-61 entitled AMeals Furnished Pursuant to Utah Cod Ann. '59-12-104" provides in pertinent part:
(A.)(1.) By specific exemption, the following
meal sales are exempt from taxation: . . .
(b.)
Inpatient meals provided at medical or nursing facilities. Tax must be paid on the purchase price of
food by nonexempt medical or nursing facilities.
(B.)
Where no separate charge or specific amount is paid for meals furnished but
is included in the membership dues or board and room charges; the club,
boarding house, fraternity, sorority, or other place is considered to be the
consumer of the items used in preparing such meals.
ANALYSIS
Petitioner reads Utah Code Ann. '59-12-104(14) as providing sales tax
exemption in regards to the meals provided to inpatients. Petitioner then asserts that by Rule 61, in
the second sentence of (A)(1)(b), the Commission circumvents the legislative
statutory exemption by pushing the imposition of sales tax up the wholesale -
retail chain to the wholesale purchases.
Respondent asserts that Utah Code Ann. '59-12-104(14) does not apply to the meals
provided to the inpatients because they do not constitute a 'sale.'
Petitioners= response is that the statute does not require a sale, and if it does,
the term should be broadly interpreted.
The answer to this dispute begins in the
first three words of subsection 14 of '59-12-104. It refers to 'sales
of meals.' Recognizing an awkward
sentence structure, it is nonetheless clear from this opening phrase that the
statute contemplated the exemption only for sales. The parties have stipulated that the providing of meals to
patients involves neither a separate charge nor a specific billing amount
stated for the meals. The Commission
has long relied on this criteria to determine whether a sale exists. Commission Rule 61 in Section (B) clearly states
that Awhere no separate charge or specific amount
is paid for meals furnished but is included in. . .the board and room charges;
the club, boarding house, fraternity, sorority or other place is considered to
be the consumer of items used in preparing such meals.@
The Commission agrees with Petitioner that,
if the providing of meals to the patients constituted a sale, then the second
sentence of Rule 61 (A)(1)(b) is inappropriate in its imposition of sales tax
at the wholesale level. However, that
situation does not arise here since the Commission agrees with Respondent=s position that the facts in this case do not
constitute a sale of a meal to the patients.
Thus, the issue of sales tax exemption does not arise in reference to
the transaction between the Petitioners and the patients. Based on Rule 61, Section(B), the
Petitioners were the consumers of the food items purchased from the wholesaler
and used in preparing the meals for the inpatients and, as such, properly paid
tax.
DECISION
AND ORDER
Based upon the foregoing, the Tax Commission
finds that Petitioners are not entitled to a refund of the sales tax paid for
the purchase of food items used in preparing meals for inpatients since the Petitioners were the ultimate
consumers under Section B of Commission Rule 61. It is so ordered.
DATED this 22nd day of February, 1996.
BY ORDER OF THE UTAH STATE TAX COMMISSION.
W. Val Oveson Roger
O. Tew
Chairman Commissioner
Joe B. Pacheco Alice Shearer
Commissioner Commissioner
NOTICE:
You have twenty (20) days after the date of a final order to file a
Request for Reconsideration with the Commission. If you do not file a Request for Reconsideration with the
Commission, you have thirty (30) days after the date of a final order to file
a.) a Petition for Judicial Review in the Supreme Court, or b.) a Petition for
Judicial Review by trial de novo in district court. (Utah Administrative Rule R861-1A-5(P) and Utah Code Ann. ''59-1-601(1), 63-46b-13 et. seq.)
^^