96-146
Response October 10, 1996
Request
September 5, 1996
W. Val Oveson
Chairman, State Tax Commission
210 North 1950 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84134
Dear Mr. Oveson,
Re: Sales/Use Tax Treatment of Sale-Leasebacks
We are an
equipment leasing company. We write to request guidance and information
concerning the sale/use tax treatment in your state of so-called
"sale-leaseback" transactions. We are not seeking a binding ruling on
any particular transaction. The background to this request is as follows.
We are sometimes asked by leasing customers to provide
finance based on the security of, or in exchange for, the customer's existing
interest in equipment or other personal property. The customer in these cases
already owns and has paid for the equipment in full, including sales tax, and
does not want to become liable to pay double tax, ie. by becoming liable
for paying sales tax a second time on the same equipment.
Many states have "safe harbor" regulations
in their tax codes which allow sale-leasebacks to occur without double taxation
occurring. Please provide us with details and copies, if available, of any such
laws applicable in your state, and with any other information which may control
this issue.
To assist you in responding to this enquiry, we
provide the following brief descriptions of the types of financing structures a
leasing company like ours may use to provide finance in these cases:
A. True Sale-Leaseback
The customer sells and transfers ownership in the
equipment to us. We immediately lease it back to the customer under a
"true" lease ie. we own the equipment throughout the lease. The
lessee/customer sometimes has an option to buy the equipment at lease-end at
fair market value or some pre-determined but realistic (not nominal) price.
B. "Conditional Sale" Type Lease Following
Nominal Sale
The customer nominally "sells" the
equipment to us. We immediately lease it back to the customer under a
"finance" lease, ie. the "lease" is not a "true"
lease because the lessee/customer is automatically given a nominal "$1.00
purchase option" at lease end. In most states the transaction is treated
as a conditional sale agreement and the lessee/customer is considered in law to
be the owner of the equipment throughout. The "lease" is regarded as
a "lease intended as security" only. Properly characterized, the
transaction is really a loan, not a sale-leaseback at all, although it is often
described as such.
C. Secured Loan
The amount to be financed is loaned to the customer
subject to a chattel mortgage or similar loan and security agreement. The equipment
is collateral for the loan. The customer never relinquishes title in the
equipment.
In cases under A and B above, the lessor in most
states is permitted to issue the customer with re-sale certificates at the time
of the sale (true or nominal) from the customer to the lessee. This eliminates
sales tax on the initial "sale" portion of the transaction, the
reason being that the lessor "buys" the equipment from the customer
for the sole purpose of immediately selling or leasing it back to the customer.
Most states would not seek double taxation of the transaction in C, above.~
Individual states, however, differ significantly in
their tax treatment of the lease rentals payable by the customer under the
"leaseback" under A or B, above. Some states treat all
sale-leasebacks as free of tax. Others may only exempt the sale-leaseback
rentals from tax if the transaction occurs within a specified time period (eg.
90 days) from when the customer originally bought the equipment and first paid
tax on it. Others have rules based on whether or not title to the equipment was
transferred by the customer to the lessor when the "sale" portion of
the "sale-leaseback" occurred.
We look forward to receiving information about this
question under the laws of your state. If in the meantime you have any
questions about this letter, please do not hesitate to call me at XXXXX. Our
fax number is XXXXX.
Sincerely,
XXXXX
XXXXX
Advisory opinion - sales tax consequences on sale/leaseback
transactions and other financing arrangements.
Dear XXXXX
We
have received your request for tax guidance pertaining to various financing
agreements entered by your company. We
offer the following:
1. Sale/leaseback
agreement
Utah
law imposes sales and use tax on retail sales and leases of personal tangible
property unless a statutory exemption applies.
However, section 59-12-102 (13)
(c) of the Utah Code provides that lease payments made under a sale-leaseback
agreement are exempt from sales tax if:
(1) the
lessee pays applicable sales tax on its initial purchase and then enters into a
sale- leaseback transaction which transfers title to the property to the
lessor,
(2) the
transaction is intended as a form of financing for the property to the
purchaser-lessee, and
(3) the
purchaser-lessee capitalizes the subject property for financial reporting
purposes, and accounts for the lease payments as payment made under a financing
arrangement.
You
do not describe the type of equipment involved, but certain mining,
manufacturing or agricultural equipment may have been purchased tax free. If you have specific questions about these
exemptions, please let us know.
2. Conditional
sale “leases” and secured loans.
Calculation
of sales tax on conditional sale “leases” and the timing of its payment is
explained in the enclosed copy of Utah Administrative Rule R865-19S-32. Also enclosed is an excerpt from the Utah
Uniform Commercial Code which explains the legal distinction between secured
loans and other types of interests.
In
cases where the transaction creates a sale and a secured loan, the seller must
collect sales tax on the full purchase price of the transaction at the time of
sale. Subsequent loan payments, of
course, are not subject to taxation. If
your company is the seller as well as the secured party, your company is liable
for collecting and reporting Utah sales and use tax on these transactions if your
company has nexus in Utah. Otherwise,
your client is required to report the tax directly to the commission. (The
enclosed publication explains our nexus requirements.)
If
your company purchases equipment, then leases the equipment to a client in
Utah, your company may purchase the equipment tax free under the resale
exemption, but you must collect sales tax on each lease payment.
If
your client purchases equipment, immediately sells it to your company, then
leases the equipment back, we regard these sales as separate transactions
unless they fit within the sale- leaseback provisions cited above. However, your client may be eligible for the
resale exemption on his initial purchase of the item. Assuming that the initial purchase is a Utah transaction, your
client must have a tax license number and must complete an exemption
certificate for the vendor’s tax records.
Your company, then, must also present a resale exemption certificate to
your client in order to purchase the equipment tax free. Finally, your company must collect and
report sales tax on each lease payment.
This type of transaction is complex, but the sales tax is paid only once
so long as the initial purchase was made for resale. Let us caution you that if your client purchases the equipment,
uses it for a time, then decides to enter this type of lease arrangement with
your company, the initial purchase is not eligible for a resale exemption. Although your company can purchase the
equipment tax free, you must still collect sales tax on the lease
payments. Under these circumstances,
your client pays sales tax on his initial purchase and again on the lease
payments.
For
the Commission,
Alice
Shearer,
Commissioner