95-015

Response June 27, 1994

 

 

Request

June 1, 1994

 

XXXXX

Auditing Division

Utah State Tax Commission

160 East 300 South

Salt Lake City, Utah 84134

 

Dear XXXXX,

 

I am following up too our phone conversation of XXXXX with this written Advisory Opinion request. As I had mentioned in our phone conversation our client is tentatively anticipating a consummation of the sale of its Utah properties, hopefully, by the first week of XXXXX. I have copied XXXXX and the Tax Commissioners with this request in hopes that we may receive an Advisory Opinion regarding this transaction before it is consummated.

 

Let me review the facts and the three specific issues we would like the Tax Commission to address. Our client has physical XXXXX in Utah and XXXXX. It is planning to sell its Utah asset which are real, personal and intangible to an XXXXX business. The Utah business is a manufacturing concern. The three specific issues are:

 

1. The Utah business will sell inventories which will consist of raw materials, work-in-process and possibly some finished goods. The Utah business is planning not to assess the sales tax on this bulk sale of inventory since it will constitute a sale for resale. The XXXXX business will provide a properly executed Utah resale exemption certificate (the XXXXX business will need to register with the Utah State Tax Commission in order to execute this certificate). Given the above facts in item 1. we would like the Tax Commission to confirm our position that the sales tax should not be assessed on the sale of the inventory if an exemption certificate is properly executed.

 

2. The second issues has to deal with the sale of the Utah business accounts receivable to the Arizona business. It is our understanding that the sale of accounts receivable is not subject to the sales tax.

 

3. The final issue we ask that the Tax Commission rule on is the sale of the fixed assets used by the Utah business in its trade or business and whether this sale would be subject to a sales tax. The fixed assets would be both real and personal property. It is our understanding that the as long as the personal property which is being sold was not manufactured by the Utah business for sale to its customers in the normal course of business that the sale would not be subject to the sales tax. We understand that the sale of licensed motor vehicles would be an exception to this exemption. The Utah business is selling these personal properties as part of its termination of its Utah operations.

 

If you should need any additional information please feel free to call me directly at XXXXX.

 

Sincerely, XXXXX

 

 

June 27, 1994

 

Re: Advisory Opinion -- Application of Sales Tax Exemption Under Various Circumstances

 

Dear XXXXX:

 

Your request (copy attached) for an advisory opinion as to whether certain sales transactions are taxable or exempt under the Utah Sales and Use Tax Act was referred to the Auditing Division for their analysis.

 

The division’s staff recommendations are as follows:

 

1. Utah Code Annotated Section 59-12-104(27) provides exemption for “property purchased for resale ...either in its original form or as an ingredient or component part of a manufactured or compounded product.” Consequently, the sale of raw materials, work-in-process, and finished goods which will be resold as tangible personal property by the purchaser as described in our opinion request is exempt from the tax if the purchaser provides a properly completed exemption certificate to the seller as required in UCA Section 59-12-106(2).

 

2. The sale of the business accounts receivable is exempt from the tax since receivables do not constitute “tangible personal property” as defined in UCA 59-12-102(13)..

 

3. UCA Section 59-12-04(14) exempts “isolated or occasional sale... except the sale of vehicles or vessels required to be titled or registered under the laws of this state.” Administrative Rule R865-19-38S (copy attached) provides interpretation and clarification of the referenced statute. The rule in paragraph D indicates. “Any sale of an entire business to a single buyer is an isolated or occasional sale and no tax applies to the sale of and assets made part of such a sale (with the exception of vehicles subject to registration).” Aircraft are included in the definition of “vehicles.” In order to qualify as the sale of an entire business, a sale must include all remaining fixed assets inventories, accounts receivable, etc. of an operating economic entity or physical business location. The entire legal entity need not be sold. If all assets are included in the proposed sale the described sale qualifies for exemption. Without regard for the above exemption the transaction may still qualify for exemption if the sale is not “one of a series of sales sufficient in number, amount and character to indicate the seller deals in the sale of such items” as indicated in paragraph E of the referenced rule. Three or more sales in a year are considered as sufficient in number to disqualify exemption. Regardless of whether the above exemptions apply, sales of any motor vehicles, aircraft or vessels subject to registration are taxable. The sale of real property is exempt from the tax.

 

Based upon 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 judgment and be appealable to the Utah State Supreme Court. A Notice of Appeal Rights and a copy of the Utah Tax Payer Bill of Rights are attached.

 

Respectfully,

 

Alice Shearer

Commissioner