OPINION
Respondent taxpayers are in the business of operating various video games, pinball machines, juke boxes and similar amusement devices at business establishments such as video arcades, restaurants and pool halls. Respondents, 17 separate businesses, sought refunds of sales tax paid on their purchases of amusement devices used in their businesses. The tax court, relying on its previous decision in
Minntertainment Co. v. Commissioner of Revenue,
No. 6659,
Between March 1990 and November 1997, respondents purchased amusement devices and equipment replacement parts and paid sales tax on these purchases. 1 Respondents also paid sales tax on the revenues generated by collecting coins deposited in the amusement devices and selling tokens used to operate the amusement devices.
Following the tax court’s decision in Minntertainment, each of the respondents filed a timely request for a refund of sales *546 tax paid on the initial purchase of the amusement devices, as well as sales tax paid on the purchase of repair and upkeep material. Respondents contended that because the amusement devices were purchased for the purpose of selling the use of the devices to customers, the purchases of the amusement devices were for the tax-exempt purpose of resale under Minn.Stat. § 297A.01, subd. 4. In notices dated February 6, 1998, 2 the Commissioner denied respondents’ requests for refunds on the ground that the purchases of the amusement devices were “sales at retail” as defined in Minn.Stat. § 297A.01, subd. 4, and therefore an excise tax was due under Minn.Stat. § 297A.02, subd. 1 (1998).
Respondents jointly appealed to the tax court and filed a motion for summary judgment. The Commissioner opposed the motion and filed a separate motion for summary judgment arguing that the 1997 Amendment
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to section 297A.01, subd. 4,
4
explicitly rejected the notion that the purchase of amusement devices was for a “resale” purpose. The Commissioner also filed an affidavit stating that the claimed refunds had not been audited for accuracy. The tax court granted summary judgment to the respondents and awarded sales tax refunds totaling $1,086,226.80.
See A & H Vending Co. v. Commissioner of Revenue,
No. 7051,
The tax court held that the legislature’s 1997 Amendment to Minn.Stat. § 297A.01, subd. 4(i), did not apply to the taxation of the purchase of amusement devices. The tax court also held, relying on its decision in Minntertainment, that respondents’ purchases of amusement devices fell within the “purchased for resale” exclusion to sales tax. The Commissioner then sought review by this court.
In
Minntertainment,
the tax court was faced with a request for refunds of sales tax paid on initial purchases of amusement devices used by the Minntertainment company in operating Camp Snoopy at the Mall of America. In
Minntertainment,
the tax court observed that the granting of the privilege of having access to and use of amusement devices is a “sale” subject to tax under Minn.Stat. § 297A.01, subd. 3, and reasoned that the initial purchase of the devices must therefore be a “purchase for resale.”
We review a grant of summary judgment to determine whether there are any genuine issues of material fact and whether the granting court erred in its application of the law.
See Hedglin v. City of Willmar,
Respondents first argue that the doctrine of collateral estoppel precludes the Commissioner from relitigating the tax court’s holding in Minntertainment. We have held that for collateral estoppel to apply, “each of the following elements must be satisfied”:
(1) [t]he issue was identical to one in a prior adjudication; (2) there was a final judgment on the merits; (8) the es-topped party was a party or in privity with a party to the prior adjudication; and (4) the estopped party was given a full and fair opportunity to be heard on the adjudicated issue.
Care Institute, Incorporated-Maplewood v. County of Ramsey,
Collateral estoppel in income tax cases “must be confined to situations where the matter raised in the second suit is identical in all respects with that decided in the first proceeding and where the controlling facts and applicable legal principles remain unchanged.”
We declined to apply collateral es-toppel against Ramsey County in
Care Institute
where Care Institute, Inc. was not a party to the prior litigation and the issues were not identical.
See
We turn next to an analysis of the statute governing sales tax. This is a question of law that we review de novo.
See Hedglin,
The presumption in Minnesota is that all sales and purchases are taxable. Minnesota Statutes § 297A.09 (1998), provides:
For the purpose of the proper administration of this chapter and to prevent evasion of the tax, it shall be presumed that all gross receipts are subject to the tax until the contrary is established. The burden of proving that a sale is not a sale at retail is upon the person who makes the sale, but that person may take from the purchaser, at the time the exempt purchase occurs, an exemption *548 certificate to the effect that the property purchased is for resale or that the sale is otherwise exempt from the application of the tax imposed by sections 297A.01 to 297A.44. A person asserting a claim that certain sales are exempt, who does not have the required exemption certificates in their possession, shall acquire the certificates within 60 days after receiving written notice from the commissioner that the certificates are required. If the certificates are not obtained within the 60-day period, the sales are deemed taxable sales under this chapter.
(Emphasis added.) The general goal of sales and use taxes is to establish a complementary scheme whereby every sale is presumed taxable unless specifically exempted.
See Morton Buildings v. Commissioner of Revenue,
Respondents and the Commissioner agree that sales tax is properly imposed on the revenue generated from sales of game-operating tokens and from the coins deposited into the amusement devices. They strongly disagree on whether the purchase of an amusement device for the purpose of generating income is subject to sales tax or is exempted by the purchase for resale provision of chapter 297A. That provision, contained in section 297A.01, subd. 4, provides: “(a) A ‘retail sale’ or ‘sale at retail’ means a sale for any purpose other than resale in the regular course of business.” (Emphasis added.) A purchase intended for resale in the regular course of business is exempt from the tax imposed on a “sale at retail” because the state will presumably collect the sales tax at the time of “resale,” thereby avoiding double taxation. Respondents argue that their purchase of the amusement devices is exempt because respondents will resell the use of the amusement devices to their customers. We must therefore determine whether respondents’ purchase of the amusement devices was a purchase for resale under Minn.Stat. § 297A.01, subd. 4.
Minnesota Statutes § 297A.01, subd. 3 (1998), defines sales that are subject to sales and use tax as follows:
A “sale” and a “purchase” includes, but is not limited to, each of the following transactions:
(a) Any transfer of title or possession, or both, of tangible personal property, whether absolutely or conditionally, and the leasing of or the granting of a license to use or consume tangible personal property other than manufactured homes used for residential purposes for a continuous period of 30 days or more, for a consideration in money or by exchange or barter;
* * * *
(d) The granting of the privilege of admission to places of amusement, recreational areas, or athletic events, except a world championship football game sponsored by the national football league, and the privilege of having access to and the use of amusement devices, tanning facilities, reducing salons, steam baths, turkish baths, health clubs, and spas or athletic facilities[.]
(Emphasis added.)
Under subdivision 3(d) the taxable event at issue in this case is the granting of the privilege of having access to and the use of amusement devices. For sales tax purposes, the taxable event is not the customers’ use of the amusement devices, but rather the customers’ acquisition of the privilege of having access to the amusement devices. No actual use of the amusement devices is required when respondents sell tokens to their customers or when customers deposit coins in the devices. If, for example, a person buys a pocketful of tokens but never uses them, the purchase is nevertheless a taxable event. "Whether the customers actually use the devices after paying consideration for the privilege of having access to the devices is not rele *549 vant to the taxation. Thus, we are not persuaded by the Minntertainment court’s reasoning that having access to an amusement device is a use, a use is a sale, and the initial purchase is necessarily a purchase for resale.
We first dealt with section 297A.01, subd. 4, in
Sellner Mfg. Co., Inc. v. Commissioner of Taxation,
We examined section 297A.01, subd. 4, most recently in Minnesota Twins. We held there that the Minnesota Twins did not resell ticket stock and novelty items to their fans, but instead provided those items as part of the fans’ overall purchase of the service of being entertained by a ball game. See Minnesota Twins, 587 N.W.2d at 290. We held that customers did not pay consideration for the actual ticket stub, but instead bought the privilege of having access to the service of being entertained. See id. at 289-90. Supplies purchased and used for the purpose of providing services are ultimately used by the service provider, who is in turn responsible for sales or use tax. See id. at 289.
Similarly here, customers purchase tokens or deposit coins in the amusement devices in order to be entertained by the devices. Customers who pay for “the privilege of having access to and the use of amusement devices” do not temporarily purchase the amusement devices themselves, or purchase a license
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to operate the devices as argued by respondents. Instead, customers pay for the amusement that they expect to receive from the device. Respondents’ purchase of the amusement devices was not for the purpose of resale, but rather to support the service of entertainment provided by respondents. The taxation of the purchase of the amusement devices does not violate the general sales tax scheme in Minnesota that seeks to impose tax only on sales of the finished product to the ultimate user.
See Black Photo U.S.A., Inc. v. Commissioner of Revenue,
We have stated that, “[i]n ascertaining legislative intent, administrative interpretations of a statute may be considered, and where such interpretations are of long standing, they are entitled to great respect and should not be disturbed except for very cogent reasons.”
Gale v. Commissioner of Taxation,
When the tax court issued Minntertainment, the purchase for resale provision of the sales tax statute did not contain any specific reference to coin-operated amusement devices. That language was, as we have observed, added in the 1997 Amendment. The language seems clearly to have been intended to, and in fact did, address the decision in Minntertainment. The statute refers pointedly to coin-operated dispensers of goods or services; it exempts cases “currently pending before the Minnesota Supreme Court” (an appeal of Minntertainment was currently pending before this court); and the case was discussed on the floor of the Senate. Nevertheless, the tax court in this case decided that the 1997 Amendment affirmed the tax court’s holding in Minntertainment. The tax court reasoned that because it had said that Minntertainment did not sell the “service” of providing entertainment, in order to overrule Minntertainment the legislature would have had to expand the definition of taxable “services” to include the “service of providing entertainment.”
Although amending the definition of services would have been one way to address the Minntertainment decision, we believe the legislature intended to achieve the same result with the addition of subdivision 4(i) to section 297A.01. In that amendment the legislature expressly stated that coin-operated devices that “furnish, provide, or dispense goods or services” shall not be considered property for resale. Id. The most reasonable interpretation of this language is that the legislature intended to define the universe of coin-operated machines by including those that furnish goods and services. The tax court’s reading would mean that the legislature thought there was a third category of coin-operated machines that provides neither goods nor services, that amusement devices fall within that category, and that this undefined third category of machines should be treated differently for sales tax purposes. We can see no logical reason why the legislature would intend such a result and decline to interpret the amendment in that manner. See Minn.Stat. § 645.17(1) (1998) (establishing presumption that legislature does not intend absurd or unreasonable result). Rather, it is clear that the legislature considered coin-operated devices to dispense a service, notwithstanding the opinion of the tax court to the contrary.
The 1997 Amendment contained language indicating that it was a “clarifying amendment,” not intended to change, but to clarify the law. • Naturally, we are not bound to and do not accept the legislature’s interpretation of a prior legislature’s intent. 7 Because the legislature in 1997 said that amusement devices dispense services does not mean that that was the law before the amendment. However, it does not 'preclude an interpretation consistent with the legislature’s “clarification.”
We are of the opinion that respondents do not resell the devices, but that respondents sell the service of entertainment to their customers through the use of the devices. Moreover, we hold that this was the intended application of the law even before the 1997 Amendment and thus disagree with the contrary conclusion in Minntertainment.
*551 Because we hold that Minntertainment’s construction of chapter 297A was erroneous, we need not address respondents’ arguments on the constitutionality of the 1997 Amendment’s retroactivity. The 1997 Amendment did not change the law; it reaffirmed the law’s proper pre- Minntertamment meaning.
The decision of the tax court is reversed.
Reversed.
Notes
. Respondents only seek refunds dating back to 1992.
. The Commissioner denied the refund request of respondent Kerrs Co. Inc. (Twin Ports Arrowhead Amusement) on January 23, 1998. The sixteen other respondents' refund requests were denied in separate orders that were released together on February 6, 1998.
. Act of June 2, 1997, ch. 231, art. 7, §§ 5, 42, 1997 Minn. Laws 2395, 2529, 2546 (hereinafter 1997 Amendment).
. Minn.Stat. § 297A.01, subd. 4(i) (1998), was added to subdivision 4, and provides:
Tangible personal property that is utilized or employed in the furnishing or providing of services under section 297A.01, subdivision 3, paragraph (d), or in conducting lawful gambling under chapter 349 or the state lottery under chapter 349A, including property given as promotional items, shall not be considered property purchased for resale. Machines, equipment, or devices that are used to furnish, provide, or dispense goods or services, including coin-operated devices, shall not be considered property purchased for resale.
(Emphasis added.)
. Non-mutual offensive collateral estoppel occurs when a different plaintiff seeks to preclude a defendant from relitigating an issue that the defendant had previously litigated and lost in a prior action.
See Mendoza,
. Respondents rely on
Copy Duplicating Products, Inc. v. Commissioner of Revenue,
No. 6378,
.
See Anderson v. Firle,
