95-090

Response July 26 1995 and December 19, 1995

 

 

Request

July 26 1995

 

XXXXX

 

RE: Advisory Opinion - Applicability of Sales Tax to Drilling Services

 

Dear XXXXX

 

You requested an advisory opinion as to whether directional drilling services associated with oil and gas wells are subject to sales tax. Your letter indicated that the drilling contractor provides drilling services only and does not sell XXXXX drilling equipment or other tangible personal property.

 

Our research indicates that drilling contractors such as XXXXX have been instructed by our Auditing Division that certain types of drilling contracts amount to taxable equipment rentals The distinction is as follows

 

If the contract calls for XXXXX to provide drilling equipment, but XXXXX provides the equipment operator, the transaction is deemed as taxable equipment rental. Even if XXXXX provides an employee to observe or supervise the drilling operation, the entire contract price is taxable.

 

If the contract calls for XXXXX to provide drilling equipment and an operator, the contract is viewed as a tax exempt contract for services.

 

Your letter does not detail which type of arrangement XXXXX has with XXXXX, so we cannot determine whether your contracts are taxable. If you would like to provide us with more detailed information, we will be happy to issue you a more specific opinion.

 

For the Commission,

 

Alice Shearer

Commissioner

 

 

November 20, 1995

 

Ms. Alice Shearer

Tax Commissioner

Utah State Tax Commission

210 North 1950 West

Salt Lake City, UT 84134

 

Re: Advisory Opinion - Applicability of

Sales Tax to Drilling Services

XXXXX

 

Dear Commissioner Shearer:

 

I originally thought the advisory opinion you offered on XXXXX would be sufficient but, as always, new facts have occurred. Would you please elaborate on the same theme but with this factual situation:

 

XXXXX decides it wants a horizontal well drilled at a certain spot in Utah. (Remember a horizontal well starts out as a vertical bore, but the bore is turned horizontal after the vertical drilling is completed.) XXXXX retains a drilling contractor to drill the well (“Vertical”) and a separate contractor (“Horizontal”) to make the turn in the bore from vertical to horizontal. “Horizontal” is not a subcontractor for “Vertical.”

 

XXXXX's employees supervise the drilling operation but do not operate the drilling equipment. XXXXX does not rent or lease equipment used in the drilling operation.

 

“Vertical” and “Horizontal” each own their equipment brought to the job site.

 

When the time comes to make the turn to horizontal, “Horizontal” employees attach their equipment to the drill stem then monitor the program as “Vertical” operates the drill stem.

 

“Horizontal” has billed XXXXX for taxes on its drilling services. XXXXX has refused to pay the taxes maintaining drilling service is not taxable. “Horizontal” says it has been told its drilling service is taxable because “Vertical” operated “Horizontal's” equipment.

 

My reasoning on non-taxability is based upon the factual situation: “Vertical” is not renting equipment from “Horizontal.” The question of who is “operating” equipment does not determine taxability. Even if it is determined “Vertical” is operating “Horizontal's” machines, that fact does not render this transaction taxable unless “Vertical” is renting equipment from “Horizontal.”

 

As you can imagine, “Vertical” has a special responsibility. He is operating a long drill stem several thousand feet into the ground; “Horizontal” does not want to be responsible for operating that drill stem, only for making the turn at a designated spot. But “Horizontal” cannot make the turn without “Vertical” operating the drill stem in a precise manner as directed by “Horizontal.

 

Meanwhile, XXXXX watches, hopes to strike oil, and pays the bills for drilling services. Should it be paying Utah sales taxes on “Horizontal's” charges when it is not asked to pay sales taxes on “Vertical's” charges?

 

I would appreciate a prompt response.

 

Yours truly,

XXXXX

 

 

December 19, 1995

 

XXXXX

 

RE: Advisory Opinion - Applicability of Sales Tax to Drilling Services.

 

Dear XXXXX

 

We have received your request for additional information regarding the application of sales tax to drilling services. Before answering your most recent questions, we would like to take this opportunity to clarify our prior response. Our staff in the Auditing Division expressed concern that our July 26 advisory opinion failed to adequately explain the distinction between taxable and non-taxable rentals. To restate our position on your first inquiry

 

1. If the contract calls for XXXXX to provide drilling equipment, but XXXXX provides the equipment operator, the transaction is deemed as taxable equipment rental. Even if XXXXX provides an employee to observe the drilling operation and the drilling operation is under XXXXX's control, the entire contract price is taxable.

 

2. If the contract calls for XXXXX to provide drilling equipment and an operator or supervisor who exercises exclusive control over the equipment, the contract is viewed as a tax exempt contract for services.

 

The distinction between a contract for services and a rental of equipment turns on who controls the drilling operation. For instance, if XXXXX's enters an agreement with XXXXX that requires XXXXX to supply an equipment operator who will work under the exclusive direction of a XXXXX supervisor or employee, XXXXX is retaining control over the drilling operation. In that case, XXXXX is providing a non-taxable service as described in number 2 above. If, on the other hand, XXXXX controls decisions regarding the equipment, XXXXX is merely renting equipment. Such transaction is taxable, even if XXXXX supplies an employee to operate the equipment or to observe the work. If XXXXX requires that their supervising employee be on-site during the drilling operations, that is evidence that XXXXX has retained control of the operations.

 

Turning to your latest request for advisory opinion, we find as follows:

 

If XXXXX hires a contractor to drill a vertical well (Vertical), and Vertical supplies the equipment and operator, the transaction is a non-taxable contract for service so long as the Vertical, and not XXXXX, exercises control and supervision over the drilling operation. If XXXXX directs the drilling operation, the transaction is taxable as an equipment rental as described in #l above.

 

If XXXXX hires a second contractor to drill horizontally (Horizontal), and Horizontal supplies his own equipment and operator, the same rule applies. However, in the scenario that you describe, the transaction between XXXXX and Horizontal may be taxable. If Horizontal supplies the equipment, but Vertical controls the drilling operation, then Horizontal is merely renting its equipment rather than selling its services. By your description, if there is a rental transaction, it occurs between Horizontal and XXXXX -- not Horizontal and Vertical. Therefore, XXXXX is liable for sales tax on the rental transaction. If, on the other hand, Horizontal takes control of and directs the operation while its equipment is attached to Vertical's equipment, Horizontal is providing non-taxable services. In that case, the transaction is a non-taxable contract for services, even if Vertical's employee operates the drill under Horizontal's direction.

 

As you can see, we agree with you that taxability does not turn on who is operating the equipment. It turns on who is controlling and directing the drilling operation. We advise you to carefully review the agreements and the actual operations to determine XXXXX's tax liability.

 

For the Commission,

Alice Shearer

Commissioner