89-012

Response February 26, 1990

 

 

February 26, 1990

 

Re: XXXXX

 

Dear XXXXX:

 

This letter is in response to your December 28, 1989 request for a Tax Commission ruling on whether sales or use tax would be due on the transfer of leased assets in a business reorganization.

 

Although your inquiry was framed as a request for declaratory judgement, Tax Commission policy is to initially treat all such inquiries as requests for advisory opinions. As such, it was referred to the Tax Commission's Auditing Division for their analysis and recommendation. The division recommendation is as follows:

 

1. The taxpayer states that no sale takes place when assets are transferred between related parties, but that such a transfer would constitute a sale if the transfer is between unrelated corporations and value is exchanged. In Institutional Laundry, Inc. v. The Utah State Tax Commission the Utah State Supreme Court disagrees that a sale has to be between unrelated parties. The Auditing Division disagrees that no value is exchanged. The value of the equipment has exchanged, increasing the worth of the transferee and decreasing the worth of the transferor.

 

2. The Division takes the position that tax is due from the lessor when equipment purchased tax-free is withdrawn from a resale or leasing inventory for a use other than resale. In all cases where a sale qualified as isolated or occasional, tax was paid on the original purchase. The Division is of the opinion that the Texas statute quoted by the taxpayer on page 18 of his brief spells out the intent of the Utah Legislature.

 

3. It is not a lease termination (page 14 of brief) that triggers a taxable event, but what happens after the termination.

 

4. The Auditing Division, although agreeing that the court has said that statutes should be construed liberally in favor of the taxpayer, the same court has said that "exemptions should be construed narrowly."

 

In summary, The Auditing Division takes the position that tax is due when leased assets are withdrawn from the lease inventory for a purpose other than sale.

 

Based on the facts presented in your letter, we are in agreement with the Auditing Division's recommendations. Obviously, if there are deviations from these facts, this opinion may be negated.

 

If you do not agree with this determination, you may appeal to the Tax Commission for a formal hearing. The results of that hearing would constitute a declaratory judgement and be appealable to the Utah State Supreme Court. A notice of appeal rights is attached.

 

For the Commission

 

Joe B. Pacheco

Commissioner

 

M E M O R A N D U N

 

TO: XXXXX, Director

Auditing Division

 

FROM: XXXXX

 

DATE: January 4, 1990

 

SUBJECT: Request for Advisory Opinion

 

XXXXX has requested a declaratory judgment/advisory opinion on the taxable sale status when transferring assets from XXXXX to a XXXXX-related company.

 

Please respond according to the guidelines established by the Commission.

 

Thank you.

 

December 28, 1989

 

Utah State Tax Commission

Heber M. Wells Building

160 East 300 South

Salt Lake City, UT 84134

 

Re: In Re XXXXX Petition for Declaratory Order

 

Dear Commissioners:

 

I understand that a Request for Agency Action by Way of Declaratory Judgment should be filed directly with the Tax Commission, as opposed to the Appeals Division. Accordingly, I have submitted with this letter the original of XXXXX. Request for Agency action by Way of Declaratory Judgment, with copies of this cover letter and copies of the request with its supporting memorandum for each commissioner.

 

Please note that the Request for Agency Action also includes a request for a formal hearing before the Tax Commission. If the Commission cannot accommodate XXXXX by holding a formal hearing and issuing an order before 60 days have expired from the filing of the Request for Agency Action, XXXXX is willing to stipulate, pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 63-46(b)-21(7) (1989), that the hearing can be held and the declaratory judgment issued after 60 days from the receipt of the Request for Agency Action.

 

Please contact me directly if you have any comments or questions concerning XXXXX's Request.

 

Very truly yours,

 

XXXXX

 


BEFORE THE UTAH STATE TAX COMMISSION

 

In Re:

 

XXXXX, Utah Sales

Tax Exemption for Transfer

of Assets

 

REQUEST FOR AGENCY ACTION

BY WAY OF DECLARATORY

JUDGMENT AND REQUEST

FOR FORMAL HEARING

 

Appeal No.

 

* * * * * * * *

 

Pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 63-46b-21(1989), and Rules R861-1-4A and R861-1-5AQ of the Administrative Rules of the Utah State Tax Commission, XXXXX petitions the Utah State Tax Commission ("Tax Commission") for an order declaring that:

 

(1) a transfer of assets from XXXXX to a parent or wholly-owned subsidiary as part of a business reorganization does not constitute a taxable sale pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-103(1989);

 

(2) assuming such a transfer does constitute a sale, such sale is an "isolated or occasional" sale exempt from sales taxation pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-102(6)(1989); and

 

(3) there is no statutory or other authority for sales taxation of the so-called "residual value" of XXXXX's leases.

 

XXXXX also requests a formal hearing before the Tax Commission on this Request for Agency Action. This Request is supported by an accompanying memorandum that is incorporated by reference as part of the Request. The supporting memorandum includes a statement of facts and legal argument demonstrating that the contemplated asset transfer from XXXXX to a XXXXX-related company is not a taxable event, and that the so-called "residual value" of XXXXX's leases is not taxable.

 

RELIEF SOUGHT

 

XXXXX is entitled to an order, pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 63-46b-21, declaring that a transfer of assets from XXXXX to a XXXXX-related company as part of its business reorganization is not a taxable sale pursuant to Utah Code Ann. 59-12-103. If it is determined that such a transfer is a sale, XXXXX is entitled to an order declaring that such sale is exempt from sales tax as an "isolated or occasional" sale pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-104(14)(1989). XXXXX is also entitled to an order declaring that the "residual value" of the leases on the transferred assets is not subject to sales tax.

 

DATED this 27th day of December, 1989.

 

XXXXX


BEFORE THE UTAH STATE TAX COMMISSION

 

In Re:

 

XXXXX, Utah Sales Tax

Exemption for Transfer

of Assets

 

MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF

REQUEST FOR AGENCY ACTION

BY WAY OF DECLARATORY

JUDGMENT AND REQUEST FOR

FORMAL HEARING

 

Appeal No.

 

This Memorandum is filed in support and as part of XXXXX Request for Agency Action by way of Declaratory Judgment and Request for Oral Presentation which seeks an order declaring that:

 

(1) a transfer of assets from XXXXX to a parent or wholly-owned subsidiary as part of a business reorganization does not constitute a taxable sale pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-103 (1989);

 

(2) assuming such a transfer does constitute a sale, such sale is an "isolated or occasional" sale exempt from sales taxation pursuant to Utah Code Ann . § 59-12-104 ( 14 ) ( 1989 ); and

 

(3) there is no statutory or other authority for sales taxation of the residual value of XXXXX's leases. XXXXX also requests a hearing before the Tax Commission on its Request for Agency Action.

 

STATEMENT OF FACTS

 

1. Prior to September 1, 1982, XXXXX was a single-entity mining company and a wholly-owned subsidiary of the XXXXX of XXXXX. On or about August 31, 1982, XXXXX reorganized its Mineral Division into a number of subsidiaries. As a part of the reorganization plan, all depreciable mining assets were to be held by XXXXX leasing companies. XXXXX transferred its coal and land rights to XXXXX, which then transferred them to the newly formed XXXXX, and reserved for itself a 4% overriding royalty interest. XXXXX retained the depreciable assets which it had purchased prior to August 31, 1982 ( "old assets" ) and changed its name to XXXXX, sometimes known in Utah as XXXXX. A new corporation, XXXXX, was created to purchase all assets to be used at the XXXXX after September 1, 1982 ('new assets"). The leasing companies, XXXXX and XXXXX, leased both "old" (pre-1982) assets and "new" (post-1982) assets to XXXXX, the owner of the coal rights. A new corporation, XXXXX, was formed to act as operating company for the XXXXX, under contract with XXXXX.

 

2. On August 30, 1985, XXXXX, a subsidiary of XXXXX, and XXXXX's subsidiary, XXXXX, acquired the stock of all the XXXXX companies described above. Promptly upon acquisition, the leasing companies, XXXXX (which held title to the "old assets) and XXXXX (which held title to the "new" assets), were reorganized, both merging into XXXXX, the petitioner herein. XXXXX, the lessee of the assets and the owner of the land and mineral reserves, was merged into XXXXX. XXXXX thereby became lessee of the assets and the parent of the lessor, XXXXX. XXXXX continued to lease both the "old" and "new" assets to XXXXX. The operating company became XXXXX. A schematic drawing, showing the corporate structure as it has existed since September 1, 1985, is attached hereto as Exhibit A.

3. The lease agreement between XXXXX, and XXXXX, signed August 19, 1983, remained intact after August 30, 1985. This agreement prescribes the method for calculating the lease payments which the lessee XXXXX (replaced by XXXXX) pays to the lessor XXXXX (replaced by XXXXX). A copy of the lease agreement is attached hereto as Exhibit B. The lease agreement, in pertinent part, provides as follows:

 

For each item of such equipment and facilities, OWNER [lessee] shall pay Lessor a monthly amount equal to the sum of (a), (b), and (c) where:

 

(a) equals the cost of purchase or construction of the item of equipment or facility less estimated salvage value (if any), and less any accumulated depreciation on the day the equipment is placed in service by owner divided by the estimated useful life, in months, of the item of equipment OWNER and LESSOR recognize that depreciation expense on LESSOR S books of account will equal the amount specified in this paragraph (a );

 

(b) equals three percent (3%) of (a); and

 

(c) equals the cost of ownership of the item of equipment of facility paid by LESSOR.

 

4. XXXXX (XXXXX's parent), XXXXX, and XXXXX (XXXXX's subsidiary), have determined to simplify the corporate structure of the XXXXX operation by eliminating at least one and perhaps both of the intermediary corporations (XXXXX and XXXXX) by merger or dissolution of XXXXX and distribution of its mining assets to an affiliated corporation. No consideration will be paid for the merger or dissolution.

 

5. XXXXX's proposed transfer of assets, whether to a parent or subsidiary corporation, would be a business reorganization and not a "sale" made in XXXXX's regular business. Even if it could be considered a sale, the transfer of mining assets to a related company would have to be considered an "isolated or occasional sale" exempt from imposition of the Utah Sales or Use tax pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-104(14) (1989).

 

DISCUSSION

 

The Utah Sales and Use Tax Act ("the Act") imposes a sales tax on tangible personal property purchased within the state and a use tax on tangible personal property purchased outside Utah and stored, used or consumed in Utah. Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-103 (1989) provides in pertinent part:

 

1. There is levied a tax on the purchaser for the amount paid or charged for the following:

 

(a) retail sales of tangible personal property made within the state;. . .

 

By definition, the term "sale" includes leases. As defined in Utah Code Ann. § 59-12-102(10) (1989):

 

(10) "Sale" means any transfer of title, exchange or barter conditional or otherwise, in any manner, of tangible personal property or any other taxable item or service under Subsection 59-12-103(1), for consideration. It includes: . . .

 

(e) any transaction under which right to possession, operation, or use of an article of tangible property is granted under a lease or contract and such transfer of possession would be taxable if an outright sale were made.

 

The lessor is required to collect and remit both local and state sales tax.

 

I. THE TRANSFER OF ASSETS BETWEEN XXXXX ENTITIES IS NOT A SALE WITHIN THE MEANING OF UTAH CODE ANN. §59-12-103.

 

The liquidation and transfer of XXXXX's assets to a related, wholly-owned XXXXX entity is exempt from sales tax, since the transfer is not for value. In such a transfer there is no "purchaser" and no "amount paid or charged" as required by Section 59-12-103(1) in order for the state to impose a sales tax.

 

The transfer of assets from one corporation to another will constitute a sale if the transfer is between unrelated corporations and value is exchanged between a buyer and seller. In other words, a sale occurs when assets are transferred for a purchase price. In such transfers, the consideration passing from buyer to seller is generally easily identified. In this case, however, the transfer of assets from one related company to another in connection with a business reorganization through the liquidation or merger of or merger into the transferring company will not be a "sale" within the meaning of Section 59-12-103, since there is no exchange of value between buyer and seller, and thus no requisite "purchase."

 

There are several possible methods by which XXXXX could transfer its assets to a XXXXX affiliate. Whatever the method of transfer, XXXXX, the lessor, would agree with XXXXX, the lessee, to terminate the leases.

 

One method of transfer would be by property dividend, not to XXXXX, a XXXXX subsidiary, but upward to XXXXX, XXXXX's sole shareholder and parent or even to XXXXX, its parent and sole shareholder. The transfer would not be a "sale" because shareholders do not "buy" dividends. Dividends are a return on the shareholder s equity investment. For that reason, a dividend distribution by any XXXXX subsidiary to one of its parents would not be a ''sale'' within the meaning of Section 59-12-103.

 

This point, although obvious, has been pivotal to the outcome of certain cases. In Weaver v. King County, 437 P.2d 698 (Wash. 1968) (en banc reh'g denied), a corporation was liquidated and real estate which it owned was transferred as a liquidating dividend to stockholders. The Weaver Court held that the conveyance of corporate property as a liquidating dividend in dissolution of a solvent corporation is not a conveyance, grant, transfer for valuable consideration, or a "sale" in the ordinary sense and was thus not subject to real estate transfer tax. Id. at 699. This holding is a restatement of the obvious: the term "sale" means the transfer of property for consideration in the ordinary course of business. Id. From that premise, it is logical to conclude that the proposed liquidation and transfer of XXXXX's assets is not a "sale" and hence not taxable as such pursuant to Section 59-12-103 if the transfer were structured as a property dividend.

 

 

Another method of transferring assets could be by capital contribution from XXXXX to its subsidiary XXXXX. For similar reasons, such a transfer from XXXXX to XXXXX would not be taxable as a "sale" because there would be no transfer of assets for value in an arm's-length transaction. XXXXX would not receive stock, cash or collateral in exchange for the transfer.

 

A third method of transferring assets could be through merger. By this method, the surviving corporation in the merger would become the owner of all the assets previously owned by the merged corporation which would cease to exist as a separate entity. As with the other methods, XXXXX's merger with its parent or subsidiary, or even the merger of either into XXXXX, would not be a taxable "sale" because there would be no transfer of assets for value in an arm's length transaction.

 

II. EVEN ASSUMING, ARGUENDO, THAT XXXXX'S TRANSFER OF ASSETS TO A RELATED XXXXX COULD BE CONSIDERED A SALE, THAT SALE FALLS WITHIN THE SALES TAX EXEMPTION OF UTAH CODE ANN. §59-12-104(14) AS AN "ISOLATED OR OCCASIONAL SALE."

 

Subsection (14) of Utah Code Ann. §59-12-104 exempts "isolated or occasional sales by persons not regularly engaged in business, except the sale of vehicles or vessels required to be registered under the laws of this state;" The Tax Commission has interpreted the "isolated and occasional sales" provision by rule as exempting business reorganizations from sales tax liability, even for businesses that sell or lease tangible personal property. Rule R865-38S-1 ("Rule 38S") provides in relevant part:

 

Isolated or occasional sales made by persons not regularly engaged in business are not subject to the tax. The word "business" refers to an enterprise engaged in selling tangible personal property or taxable services notwithstanding the fact that the sales may be few or infrequent. Any sale of an entire business to a single buyer is an isolated or occasional sale and no tax applies to the sale of any assets made part of such a sale (with the exception of a vehicle subject to registration). (Emphasis added.)

 

Although XXXXX is in the business of leasing equipment to XXXXX, and even though such leasing is recognized as a taxable transaction, XXXXX proposes a business reorganization. Even if such reorganization could be construed as a sale, nonetheless it is not subject to taxation because it would be the sale of XXXXX's "entire business to a single buyer" which is a XXXXX affiliate. Utah case law interpreting the predecessor to present Section 59-12-104(14) and Rule 38S holds that the legislature did not intend to tax the transfer of personal property in business reorganizations, even though the business reorganized may ordinarily sell tangible personal property.

 

For example, in Geneva Steel Co. v. State Tax Commission. 209 P.2d 208 (Utah 1949), the Utah Supreme Court held that the sale of a steel plant, from the XXXXX through the XXXXX to XXXXX, was not a taxable transaction within the meaning of the Act. In its analysis of the transaction, the Court examined Rule 38S, which then provided, as it does now, that "isolated or occasional sales" made by persons "not regularly engaged in business are exempt from Utah sales tax. The Court concluded:

 

The above regulations, as well as those of other states which we have examined, definitely contemplate an isolated or occasional sale as one made by a person while not in the pursuit of the regular course of his business of selling tangible personal property. We think this is a proper and fair interpretation. Thus ordinarily when a person sells his entire business outright to a single purchaser, the sale is isolated or occasional since the regular course of his business is not selling businesses. Id. at 212 (emphasis added).

 

This quotation emphasizes two important points. First, sales made that are not in the regular course of a taxpayer's business are exempt sales. Second, the "sale of a business," or a business reorganization, is an example of a sale not in the regular course of a taxpayer's business.

 

Even though the XXXXX Court, in the context of the facts before it, interpreted Rule 38S as applying to a "single purchaser", the underlying rationale for the court's opinion is that "the sale is isolated or occasional since the regular course of his [the seller's] business is not selling businesses." Id.

 

In L.A. Young Sons Construction Co. v. State Tax Commission, 457 P.2d 973 (Utah 1969), the Utah Supreme Court held that where a construction company purchased equipment at an out of-state auction from another construction company not in the business of selling construction equipment nor in making retail sales, the sale was an isolated or occasional sale within the meaning of the Act. Although the sale at issue in XXXXX was not the transfer of assets from a parent to a subsidiary, the court interpreted Rule 38S by specifically reaffirming XXXXX.

 

XXXXX is also significant because the court effectively gave notice that the "isolated and occasional sales" exemption must be broadly construed. Given XXXXX's underlying rationale, the court would have reached the same decision even if more than one construction company purchased the equipment at the out-of-state auction, as long as none of the companies was in the business of selling construction equipment.

 

In Husky Oil Company of Delaware v. State Tax Commission of Utah, 556 P.2d 1268 (Utah 1976), the Utah Supreme Court held that XXXXX's purchase of used refinery equipment from XXXXX was an "isolated or occasional" sale within the meaning of the Act. In reaffirming XXXXX, the XXXXX court recognized that the holdings of those cases "emanated from and are restricted to the facts. . .[,]" but that:

 

[T]he analysis by this court in XXXXX concerning isolated sales are helpful to our determination here, and particularly so when the present analysis of our statute conduces to that determination. The words "isolated or occasional sales" would be excessive and useless unless they had reference to sales of tangible personal property by retailers or wholesalers who do not regularly sell such property in their business. If the legislature had intended to exclude from sales only those sales of tangible personal property by persons not regularly engaged in retail or wholesale business, then it could, - and we submit would - have eliminated "isolated and occasional" from the statute. Also, the Commission's S-38 regulation which interpreted the statute in question for 34 years to allow an exemption for a sale such as the one in this case adds strength to the retention of that exemption.

 

Id. at 1270 and 1271 (emphasis added). Significantly, the XXXXX Court further declared:

 

[T]he legislature did not intend to tax a sale of personal property transferred as a component part of the sale of an integrated business.

 

Id. at 1270.

 

XXXXX require a finding that XXXXX's transfer of all of its assets to a related XXXXX entity, if a sale at all, constitutes an "isolated or occasional sale" exempt from sales tax, since a XXXXX business reorganization is even further removed from a "sale" of assets than those assets exchanges reviewed by the Utah Supreme Court in XXXXX. The phrase " isolated or occasional " must be understood within the context of the transaction involved, as the XXXXX court recognized. Where XXXXX transfers all of its assets as part of a business reorganization, whether by property dividend, liquidation, merger, or otherwise, the exemption must apply.

 

III. THERE IS NO AUTHORITY FOR THE IMPOSITION OF SALES TAX UPON THE RESIDUAL VALUE OF XXXXX LEASES.

 

Article XIII, Section 11 of the Utah Constitution creates the Tax Commission and vests it with administrative and supervisory authority over the tax laws of the state. It is axiomatic that the Tax Commission cannot act outside statutory authority. See Olson Construction Co. v. State Tax Commission of Utah, 361 P.2d 1112 (Utah 1961). Even where the statute authorizes a tax, Utah's tax laws must be strictly construed against the taxing authority and in favor of the taxpayer. See e.g., Utah Farm Bureau Insurance Co. v. State Tax Commission of Utah, 347 P.2d 179 (Utah 1959), Builders Components Supply Co. v. Cockayne, 450 P.2d 97 (Utah 1969), Salt Lake County v. State Tax Commission of Utah, 116 Adv. Rep. 26 (No. 870368, September 8, 1989). In this case, the foregoing legal principles apply with particular force because there is no statutory authority, either explicit or implicit, authorizing the imposition of a sales tax upon the residual value of leased assets when a lease terminates. If the legislature had intended that lease terminations would trigger a taxable event, it would have so provided, as have other states in the United States.

 

XXXXX purchased the "new assets" tax free because the purchase of those assets was a "wholesale sale." See Utah Code Ann. §§ 59-12-103(1)(a) (1989), and 59-12-1104(28). In other words, these assets were purchased for "resale" or lease to XXXXX, the ultimate consumer, which paid applicable sales taxes on its lease payments to XXXXX.

 

When XXXXX's assets are transferred as part of a business reorganization, and its leases with XXXXX are terminated, the issue will arise whether additional sales taxes should be paid if the aggregate value of taxes paid on XXXXX's lease payments to XXXXX is or may be less than the taxes that would have been paid on the original fair market value of the tangible personal property XXXXX purchased tax free.

 

In discussions with XXXXX, one auditor at the Auditing Division initially took the position that the difference between the liquidation value of XXXXX's assets and the total lease payments already collected, or what the auditor called "residual value," is taxable. That position, if adopted by the Auditing Division itself, cannot withstand a challenge for several reasons.

 

First, the definition of the term "sale," found at Section 59-12-102(10)(1989) means "any transfer of title . . . of tangible personal property . . . for consideration." Likewise, "purchase price, as defined in Section 59-12-102(b) means "the amount paid . . ." Neither of these definitions provides authority for including so-called "residual value" as part of the sale purchase price upon which taxes are computed. Similarly, these definitions presume a willing buyer and willing seller, and do not imply that some third party, like the Auditing Division, can set what it thinks is a "proper" purchase price. There is no authority elsewhere for such a position. XXXXX's leases will be terminated upon liquidation of XXXXX because the surviving entity from the merger will hold the assets and the leases; that is, it will be both lessor and lessee and thus the leases will terminate. The leases will have ended and will no longer be taxable. Had the leases continued, the lessee would, of course, be required to continue to pay the applicable sales tax component of lease payments. However, there is no possible rationale or authority for assessing sales tax on the "residual" of a lease that has been terminated.

 

Second, a "sale" under Section 59-12-102(10)(e)(1989) includes "any transaction under which the right to possess, operate, or use an article of tangible property is granted under a lease or contract and such transfer of possession would be taxable if an outright sale were made." As originally enacted in 1933, the Act (then entitled the Emergency Revenue Act of 1933) did not tax lease transactions. Taxation of leases was later added. As the Utah Supreme Court explained in Snarr Advertising Inc. v. Utah State Tax Commission, 432 P.2d 882, 883 (Utah 1967):

 

Originally, a statute was enacted to tax a sale of tangible personal property. To avoid paying the tax, many transactions were made under the guise of a long-term lease of personal property, usually for the estimated life of the article in question. Possession and control were given to the lessee, the rentals to be paid were roughly the same as installment payments would have been had the property been purchased on conditional sales contracts. To plug this loophole, the legislature in 1937 (Chapter 110, Section 2(g), amended the law to read as above quoted [and as it now does].

 

XXXXX explains the reasons why leases are subject to sales tax. But XXXXX cannot be construed as giving the Auditing Division authority to close an apparent tax loophole by rewriting leases to the extent that aggregate lease payments do not equal the sales price of an asset. On the contrary, XXXXX holds, at least in dicta, that loopholes are to be closed by the legislature, not by arbitrary administrative decisions. There is no Utah case holding that a leasing company must make up sales tax for this difference should the leasing company cease to exist or should a lease terminate by virtue of a legitimate business reorganization.

 

Neither does Rule R865-19-32S, which governs sales taxes on leases and rentals, justify the Auditing Division in imposing a "make up" sales tax. The rule merely states that sales taxes are imposed on leases: "When a lessee has the right to possession, operation, or use of tangible personal property, the tax applies to the amount paid pursuant to the lease agreement, regardless of the duration of the agreement." (Emphasis added). The rule nowhere states or implies that the lessor or lessee must "make up" the difference between taxes on the lease and taxes on the initial purchase if the lease terminates.

 

If the Auditing Division or the Tax Commission perceives a loophole exists, that loophole must be closed through legislation, not by liberal construction of existing legislation in favor of the state and contrary to the express language in existing legislation and regulations. Other states have utilized legislation to deal with this issue. For instance, Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 151.055(a) (Vernon 1982) provides:

 

If a person purchases tangible personal property by means of a sale for resale for the purpose of renting or leasing the property for use but subsequently sells the property in an occasional sale before the person has collected and paid to the state an amount of sales tax on rental or lease charges equal to the amount of sales tax that would have been due if the person had not acquired the property at a sale for resale, the person at the time of the occasional sale shall include in his receipts from taxable sales the amount by which the purchase price of the item at the occasional sale exceeds the amount received from renting or leasing the property.

 

(Emphasis added). The Texas statute also requires the lessor to on the purchase price of the property (including rental payments to be credited to the purchase price) at the inception of the lease. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 151.055(b) (Vernon 1982). [I]f the purchaser-lessee returns the taxable item to the seller-lessor before the end of the lease or rental period without having acquired title to the property the seller-lessor may take a credit . . . or a refund . . . for an amount equal to the amount of the taxes paid on the unpaid portion of the sales price. Id. This statute provides that, on early termination of a lease, a refund of taxes on the difference between rental payments made and the purchase price will be allowed.

 

While statutes and taxing schemes of other jurisdictions are not binding on the Tax Commission, the Texas statute reflects important constitutional and administrative law principles, i.e., it is a state legislature's responsibility to enact taxing measures for the state. Any rules or regulations promulgated by an administrative agency of the state must be supported by the statute and the statute must be given its plain and obvious meaning. Salt Lake Union Stock Yards v. State Tax Commission, 71 P.2d 538, 540 (Utah 1937).

 

In XXXXX's case, the Auditing Division is attempting to impose a policy that is more restrictive than the statutory language. The intent of the statute and the regulations promulgated thereunder is to impose a sales tax on payments made pursuant to a lease agreement, regardless of the lease term, not on any residual value resulting from a lease termination. Consistent with this construction of statutory intent, the Utah Supreme Court recently held: "In fact, our practice is to construe taxation statutes liberally in favor of the taxpayer, leaving it to the legislature to clarify an intent to be more restrictive if such an intent exists." Salt Lake County v. State Tax Commission, 116 Utah Adv. Rep. 26, 27 (No. 870368, September 8, 1989) (emphasis added). Thus, the Auditing Division cannot impose a standard other than that specified in the statute.

 

Third, Section 59-12-104, which lists the sales tax exemptions, cannot be rationally interpreted to state or imply that the liquidation of a leasing company will obligate a lessee-purchaser, lessor-seller, or any entity with which the lessor or lessee may merge as part of a business reorganization to "make up" the difference between the exempt sales price and the aggregate lease charges. Any attempt to tax this so-called "residual value of leases would be contrary to the underlying policy of the "isolated and occasional" sale exemption. Case law interpreting the "isolated or occasional" sale provision implies that the exemption was intended to facilitate business reorganizations between affiliated companies. It simply does not follow that the Auditing Division has the authority, especially in light of cases construing Section 59-12-104 and in the absence of any legislative authority, to assess taxes it might have received in the future if the business reorganization were not exempt. There is no authority for the proposition that the lease of tangible property which is taxable under Section 59-12-103 is taxable in a subsequent transfer of the same property, if the subsequent transfer is otherwise exempt. Since the Utah Legislature has declared "isolated or occasional" sales exempt from sales taxes, there is no authority to impose taxes in disregard of this legislative mandate. See, e.g., Utah Restaurant Association v. Davis County Board of Health, 709 P.2d 1159 (Utah 1985), Olson Construction Co. v. State Tax Commission of Utah, 361 P.2d 1112 (Utah 1961), Utah Hotel Company v. Industrial Commission, 151 P.2d 467 (Utah 1944).

 

CONCLUSION

 

XXXXX's transfer of assets to a related XXXXX company, whether by dividend, capital contribution, merger, or otherwise, is not a "sale" under Section 59-12-103, since it is not for value. Hence there is no "purchase price" and no "purchaser" as required for taxation under Section 59-12-103. But even assuming that the transfer could be construed as a sale, it falls under the exemption of Section 59-12-104(14) as an "isolated or occasional sale," whether the business reorganization is by property dividend, capital contribution, merger, or otherwise. Finally, there is no authority for the Auditing Division's position that sales tax may be imposed on the "residual value" of XXXXX's leases, and such a position could not withstand a challenge. The Utah Supreme Court mandates that taxation statutes be liberally construed in favor of the taxpayer. For these reasons, the transfer of assets in XXXXX' business reorganization is exempt from sales tax.

 

___________

l The term "sale" under Section 59-12-103 is equivalent to the definition found in the Utah Uniform Commercial Code codified at Utah Code Ann. § 70A-2-106(1) (1989), which provides: "A sale consists of the passing of title from the seller to the

buyer for a price (Section 70A-2-401.)" (emphasis added.)

 

DATED this 27th day of December, 1989.

 

Attorneys for XXXXX


 

Exhibit "A"

 

Refer to the file 89-012DJ to see this exhibit

 

Exhibit "B"

 

Refer to the file 89-012DJ to see this exhib