95-008

Response March 2, 1995

 

 

Request

February 27, 1995

 

Commissioner Joe Pacheco

Utah State Tax Commission

210 North 1950 West

Salt Lake City, Utah 84134

 

Dear Joe:

 

I am writing to request an advisory opinion from the Tax Commission regarding property tax exemption of vehicles that are titled and registered in other states, or are titled and registered in Utah being used for rental purposes in other states.

 

Accordingly to SB 116, passed by the 1994 legislature, vehicles coming into the state are exempt from proportional assessment if they are titled and registered in another state. This is assuming an ownership change takes place when the vehicle enters the dealership sales inventory.

 

Currently, we have a dealership in Weber County claiming they are exempt from proportional assessment in Utah, even though the vehicles are already licensed and titled to the dealership. It is my belief as County Assessor, that unless the dealership can show these vehicles have current out of state title and registrations showing the fees have been paid for the current year, a proportional assessment would be due. For Utah titled and registered vehicles a full year assessment would be due.

 

Another section of SB 116 introduced the concept of a floating lien date for motor vehicles being brought into the state for inclusion to a dealer’s sales inventory.

 

Again, this dealership is claiming this section would exempt their vehicles from even the proportional motor vehicle tax. For background information, the vehicles they are bringing into the state are registered and titled to the Ogden address. While SB 116 doesn't address the issue directly, one must assume the law anticipates a change of ownership as the out of state vehicles are brought into the state. This is another area we need clarification from the State Tax Commission.

 

Thank you for assistance on this issue. If you have any questions, or need further information, please give me a call at XXXXX.

 

Sincerely,

 

XXXXX

XXXXX

 

 

March 2, 1995

 

Dear XXXXX, *hand-written

 

Joe Pacheco has given me your letter requesting an advisory opinion on proportional assessment.

 

This issue was considered (again) in the legislature this year. As soon as the results are final, we can give you an answer. If there are charges in the law, I’m sure you will be consulted as we cogitate what it all means.

 

If you have further questions, send them along.

 

Sincerely,

 

Alice Shearer

Commissioner

 

XXXXX

 

 

Rental Car Study

 

Prepared by:

Research and Standards Section

Property Tax Division

 

May 1995

 

INTRODUCTION

 

In XXXXX, the Commission received a letter from XXXXX, Weber County Assessor, requesting an opinion as to whether rental vehicles operated in Weber County are taxable. In his letter, XXXXX cited a particular rental agency which paid no Utah property tax on its rental cars. The rental agency declared some of its cars to be tax exempt as dealer inventory, and it registered of the vehicles out of state.

 

After XXXXX brought this issue to light, both the Weber County Attorney’s Office and the Utah Attorney General’s Office issued opinions on the taxable status of rental cars operated in Utah. The opinions were not in complete agreement with one another, and to date, the matter has not been resolved to the satisfaction of the assessors.

 

In XXXXX, representatives of the Property Tax Division met with XXXXX from the Weber County Assessor’s Office and other county assessors to discuss this issue. At that meeting, the assessors expressed an interest in exploring whether the counties could impose a tax on rental cars. The Property Tax Division offered to take a fresh look at the taxability of rental fleets, and to advise the assessors whether a tax on rental transactions is feasible. This report summarizes the difficulties facing the assessors who are charged with the responsibility of assessing taxable rental cars, and it evaluates the possibility of taxing rental transactions.

 

SCOPE OF THE STUDY

 

This study concerns only vehicles which are part of fleets used for short-term rentals, not vehicles which are subject to long-term leases. This study also assumes that a rental car agency may operated in more than one state, and that vehicles in the rental fleet may operate in more than one jurisdiction. Finally, this study assumes that rental cars are generally purchases as new cars, used as rental cars for a fairly short period of time, than either traded to another car dealer or placed on the rental agency’s lot for resale.

 


 

BACKGROUND

 

Unlike most Utah vehicles, rental cars pose the potential for escaped property tax. It is the underlying nature of the rental car business which creates two special problems.

 

1. A rental car is generally purchased new from the manufacturer or dealer and placed into service as a rental car after January 1 lien date. Because the vehicles was part of the dealer’s or manufacturer’s inventory on January 1, it is exempt from property tax (or uniform fee) for the first calendar year. If the vehicle is still in the rental fleet on the following January 1, it is taxable property for the next calendar year. The county assessor expects to collect the property tax on any vehicle when its registration is renewed. However, it is likely that the rental car will be retired from the rental fleet and moved to dealer inventory or sold out of state before the registration expires. In that case, the assessor may never have the opportunity to assess and collect the tax.

 

2. Some rental car agencies operate in more than one state. Utah law allows these interstate agencies to register their vehicles outside of Utah, even though their vehicles are operated in Utah. This situation creates two problems for the assessor. First, the assessor may be unsure whether vehicles with out-of-state plates are taxable in Utah. Second, even if they are taxable, the vehicles never come to the assessor’s attention through the registration process. Unless the assessor conducts continuous rental agency audits, the taxable rental cars are likely to escape taxation.

 

TAXABLE STATUS OF RENTAL CARS

 

The taxable status of a rental vehicle is a two-part question. First, is the vehicle eligible for an exemption from property tax as dealer inventory? If the answer is “no,” the second part of the question is whether the car has taxable situs in Utah.

 

Inventory Exemption

 

Under Utah law, all property in this state is taxable unless otherwise exempted. The only permissible exemptions are those set forth in the state constitution. Of the exemptions stated there, the only exemption which could apply to rental vehicles is the dealer inventory exemption. UTAH STATE CONSTITUTION, Article XIII, Sec. 2.

 

To be eligible for an inventory exemption, a vehicle must be held for sale in the ordinary course of business on January 1 or on the assessment date as defined in section 59-2-1114(3)(a) of the Utah Code. Vehicles held as part of Utah rental fleet on January 1 are in come-producing assets; they are not held as inventory for sale in the ordinary course of business. Therefore, they do not qualify for the inventory exemption.

 

A rental car which is purchased new and placed in service as a rental car is exempt from property tax during the first calendar year either because it was part of dealer or manufacturer inventory on January 1 or because it was brought into Utah after January 1. (Passenger vehicles are exempt from the proportional tax on transitory personal property. §59-2-402(2)(b), Utah Code Ann.) If that vehicle is still part of the rental car fleet on the following January 1, the exemption no longer applies.

 

By identifying the vehicles in the rental pool as of January 1, the assessor has cleared the first hurdle to determining taxable status. But identifying the rental vehicles is a tough job. The business owner has a great deal of latitude to move vehicles form the rental fleet to inventory at any time without notice to the assessor. The owner may even shuffle rental cars from state to state at will. Practically speaking, it is nearly impossible for the assessor to identify which vehicles were in rental pool on January 1 unless the owner volunteers the information.

 

Tax Situs

 

Assuming that the assessor successfully identifies which cars were in a rental pool on January 1, the next step is to identify taxable situs of each vehicle. The assessor or business owner may be tempted to rely on a vehicle’s registration to determine whether it may be taxed in Utah, but a vehicle’s registration does not determine taxability. Under Utah law, personal property owned by a corporation doing business in Utah is taxable if it is used within the boundaries of the authority levying the tax. UTAH STATE CONSTITUTION, Article XIII, Sec. 10 (emphasis added). If a rental car is owned by a company doing business here, and it is operated in Utah, it is taxable in Utah unless the owner can prove to the assessor’s satisfaction that it is used predominately in another jurisdiction. §59-2-104 Utah Code Ann.

 

Registration, then, is a separate issue from taxation. The registration may provide evidence of where a vehicle is operated, but in some cases the registration is a poor indicator of tax situs. Such is the case when a rental car agency operates in more than one state. Under Utah’s Motor Vehicle Act, that business owner has two registration options. The first option is to register under an approved reciprocal agreement such as the International Registration Plan (IRP). If the rental company registers under the IRP, a portion of its total fleet will be allocated to Utah for registration purposes. The Utah allocation is calculated by dividing the gross revenue received from Utah rental transactions by the gross revenue received from rental transactions in all jurisdictions. The resulting percentage is applied to the total number of rental vehicles owned by the company to determine the number of vehicles that must be fully registered in Utah. INTERNATIONAL REGISTRATION PLAN, Article XI, Section 1116.

 

The IRP allocates only the number of vehicles to be registered in Utah. It does not dictate which vehicles must be registered here. Nothing prevents the owner form registering the least expensive cars in Utah and the most expensive cars in a state with a more favorable tax climate. Nor does the IRP preclude the owner from operating from operating a vehicle with out-of-state plates exclusively in Utah. Such a vehicle is taxable here without regard to its registration.

 


 

If the rental company does not register the rental cars under the IRP, it must register its Utah- based rental cars here. §41-1a-202(3), Utah Code Ann. However, the Motor Vehicle Code imposes no obligation on the owner to base plate any rental cars in Utah. The language of section 41-1a-202(3) allows the owner to register the vehicles anywhere that the company does business. Consequently, a rental vehicle with out-of-state plates may be operated predominately in Utah, and, therefore, taxable in Utah.

 

Clearly a vehicle’s registration does not determine its tax status. Nor is it a reliable indication of tax situs. Whether a rental car is taxable in Utah depends upon how and where it was used. To the extent that the assessor can track the status of individual rental cars, they should fall into one of the following categories:

 

1. If a vehicle is part of a rental fleet on January 1 and it has been operated exclusively in Utah, the vehicle is taxable in Utah. The dealer cannot avoid the current year’s tax by placing the car in declare inventory for resale after the lien date.

 

2. If a vehicle is part of rental fleet on January 1 and it has operated in Utah and at least one other state, the vehicle is taxable in Utah unless the owner can prove to the county assessor that the car is kept predominately in another jurisdiction.

 

3. If a vehicle is part of a rental fleet on January 1 and it has been operated exclusively outside of Utah, then brought into the owner’s Utah inventory for resale after January 1, the vehicle is not taxable in Utah. It had no taxable situs in Utah while it served as a rental vehicle, and it qualifies for an inventory exemption from the tax on transitory personal property when it is brought into Utah.

 

4. If a vehicle is part of the dealer’s inventory for resale on January 1 (or the assessment date for vehicles brought in from out of state), the vehicle is exempt from taxation during the current calendar year.

 

5. If a new vehicle is acquired by the rental agency from manufacturer or dealer inventory after January 1, it is exempt from taxation for the current calendar year.

 

Occupation Tax as an Alternative

 

In the January meeting, some assessors expressed an interest in exploring whether a transaction fee could be assessed on car rental contracts in lieu of property tax. The assessors may be envisioning something similar to the surcharge used in Wyoming. Under Wyoming law, the registration of rental cars is not an important issue. If rental cars are registered under an IRP agreement, a percentage of the fleet must be plated in Wyoming, and registration fees are collected on those vehicles. Regardless of registration, the rental agencies attach a surcharge to each rental contract. The surcharge equals 4% of the net contract price after all state taxes and fuel tax is deducted.


 

Wyoming’s surcharge resembles and occupation tax, and it suggests a viable solution for county assessors. An occupation tax is imposed on business owners specifically for the purpose of raising revenue. In Utah, the legislature may expressly authorize counties to impose an occupation tax on specified businesses or commercial operations. Such a tax is not a property tax, nor is it a sales tax, which is a tax imposed on the consumer or transaction. See E.C. Olsen Co. V. State Tax Commission, 168 P.2d 324 (Utah 1946).

 

In imposing an occupation tax, the legislature has broad discretion to define the class of taxpayer which is subject to the tax. That is, the legislature can impose the tax on rental vehicle agencies without imposing a similar tax on other businesses. Such classification does not violate the uniform and equal provision of the constitution so long as the tax operates uniformly on all parties within the class. See eg. Menlove v Salt Lake County. 418P.2d 227 (Utah 1966) and State v. Taylor, 541 P.2d 0012 (Utah 1975).

 

Over the years, the legislature has calculated occupation taxes on the value of stock (see Salt Lake City v. Christensen Co., 95 P. 523 (Utah 1908)), gross income (see Davis v. Ogden City, 215 P.2d 616 (1950)), number of employees (see State v. Taylor, 511 P.2d 1124 (Utah 1975)), and amount of room rent (see Menlove v. Salt Lake County, 418 P.2d 227 (1966)). It is reasonable, then, for the legislature to authorize the counties to tax each rental vehicle agency on the basis of its receipts from all local rental contracts. However, to avoid the issue of double taxation, the tax should be imposed on the total rental receipts minus sales tax or any other tax included in the rental contract. For example, if a contract includes a charge for fuel, that amount should be deducted from the total contract amount before calculating the occupation tax because the cost of gasoline includes tax which is paid at the pump.

 

Although the legislature can grant the counties authority to impose an occupation tax on rental car transaction, it cannot create a property tax exemption for rental cars. Therefore, some rental vehicles will be subject to both the occupation tax and property tax while others are subject only to the occupation tax. Such a discrepancy gives an unfair advantage to rental agencies which find a way to avoid Utah property tax. To put all rental agencies on equal footing, any Utah property taxes paid on rental cars should be credited against an equal footing, any Utah property taxes paid on rental cars should be credited against the occupation tax due. Here is how that could work: The occupation tax could be calculated as a percentage of an agency’s total annual receipts from Utah rentals, minus any sales tax, fuel, and property tax. The counties could use a self-reporting form similar to the one found in Appendix A to collect tax information. For purposes of the illustration in Appendix A, the tax is call a “Rental Vehicle Transaction Tax.” However, some other appropriate label may be selected.

 

From the assessor’s perspective, the occupation tax has clear advantages. All rental agencies would be treated equally for tax purposes. Every rental car company operating in Utah will contribute to the county’s general fund either through property tax or through the occupation tax. Escaped property taxes will no longer be an issue. The occupation tax would also counteract the effects of current tax laws which give an unfair financial advantage to interstate rental agencies over agencies operating strictly within Utah. Finally, the assessor could audit financial records instead of attempting to track individual cars.

 

CONCLUSION

 

The county assessors have the responsibility of assessing taxable rental vehicles in their counties, but no practical way of identifying them. Under current Utah law, the assessors must either launch aggressive audit programs to identify taxable rental cars or accept the fact that property taxes are escaping. Alternatively, the county assessors can ask the legislature to grant them the option to impose an occupation tax on rental car agencies. The occupation tax would be relatively easy to administer and it would result in equitable treatment of all rental car agencies.

 

This report does not suggest a tax rate for the occupation tax. If the assessors pursue this option, they must also propose a tax rate to the legislature. Presumably, that proposed rate will approximate the amount of revenue that would be generated by a property tax assessed against all taxable rental vehicles.