NATURE OF CASE
Thе Nebraska Department of Revenue and State Tax Commissioner Mary Jane Egr appeal from an order of the district court for Lancaster County. At issue is whether sales of certain products by American Business Information, Inc., now known as infoUSA Inc. (ABI), are “sales of tangible personal property” under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-2734.14 (Reissue 1990).
BACKGROUND
ABI provides comprehensive business data and products to other businesses to help those businesses find new customers. The data and products are derived from ABI’s database, which contains entries from over 10 million businesses in the United States and Canada. The database is compiled using yellow page directories and other sources of public information. ABI also conducts telephone verification of its database to ensure that the database is accurate and up to date.
Using this database, ABI markets a number of customized and noncustomized products. Customized products include only businesses meeting criteria specified by the customer and are produced in the type of medium requested by the customer. Generally, customized products are priced on a per-name basis. Pricing varies according to the number of names supplied, the type of data delivered, and the medium on which the data is delivered. ABI distributes its products under agreements that grant customers a license to use ABI’s products in the ordinary course of their businesses and prohibit the unauthorized reproduction of *576 ABI’s products. The types of products marketed by ABI, and which are the subjects of this appeal, are described below.
The most basic product marketed by ABI is the prospect list. Prospect lists, which are customized products, are printed on 8V2- by 11-inch paper and contain entries on individual businesses. The data reported include a business’ name, address, telephone number, fax number, type of business, number of employees, sales volume, and other information. Prospect lists are typically three-hole-punched for use in a notebook binder. Prospect lists have a vаriety of marketing applications, including direct sales.
ABI also markets 3- by 5-inch index cards to its customers. Index cards are also customized products and contain the same data as prospect lists. On the back of each card, space is provided where comments may be written. Index cards are often used for telemarketing purposes because of the convenience of distributing them to numerous sales associates. Index cards were developed by ABI in response to customers’ comments about the limitations of prospect lists.
ABI also prоvides business data via computer diskettes and magnetic tapes. Each of these media is a customized product. Each allows the customer to obtain the data the customer desires from ABI and then to format that data in the manner the customer chooses to produce its own reports, labels, cards, et cetera. The only difference between computer diskettes and magnetic tapes is that magnetic tapes are suitable for use on large mainframe computers.
CD-ROM’s are noncustomized products. Each CD-ROM contains the entire ABI databasе, enabling customers to access and format the data they need. CD-ROM’s are “metered” so that customers have access to only the number of records paid for by the customer.
ABI also delivers online data from its database by computer communications over telephоne lines. Customers purchasing online data use computer equipment capable of receiving, interpreting, and storing an electronic signal transmitted by ABI. Customers are able to conduct their own search query and download data directly from ABI’s database.
*577 Two other products not at issue in this appeal, mailing labels and business directories, are also marketed by ABI. Business directories are bound volumes and are noncustomized products. Mailing labels are customized products and can be directly attached to brochures for direct mail use. ABI and the depаrtment have stipulated that sales of business directories and mailing labels are “[s]ales of tangible personal property” under § 77-2734.14(2).
During 1990 and 1991, ABI and its shareholders filed income tax returns which reflected their opinion that the sales of the aforementioned products were “[s]ales of tangiblе personal property” under § 77-2734.14(2). The department audited ABI for the 1990 and 1991 tax years and determined that ABI’s sales were “other than sales of tangible personal property” under § 77-2734.14(3). Based on that determination, the department assessed deficiency notices to ABI for corporate income tax. During 1990 and 1991, ABI was organized as a subchapter S corporation, meaning that ABI’s income was passed on to its shareholders on a proportional basis for taxation purposes. Thus, the department also assessed deficiency notices to ABI’s shareholders fоr individual income taxes. ABI and its shareholders (hereinafter collectively referred to as “ABI”) protested the department’s deficiency assessments, which assessments the commissioner later sustained. ABI appealed the commissioner’s decision to the district court for Lancaster County.
The district court reversed the commissioner’s decision for two reasons. First, the district court concluded that it was not logical to conclude that the business directories and mailing labels were tangible personal property, as stipulated by the parties, while finding that ABI’s remaining products were not. Second, the district court felt compelled to reverse the decision based on the language of
May Broadcasting Co.
v.
Boehm,
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
The department and commissioner assign, rephrasеd, that the district court erred in finding that ABI’s sales of business data products were “[s]ales of tangible personal property” under § 77-2734.14(2) rather than “[s]ales, other than sales of tangible personal property” under § 77-2734.14(3).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A judgment or final order rendered by a district court in a judicial review pursuant to the Administrativе Procedure Act may be reversed, vacated, or modified by an appellate court for errors appearing on the record.
Big John’s Billiards v. Balka,
Whether a decision conforms to law is by definition a question of law, in connection with which an appellate court reaches a conclusion independent of that reached by the lower court. Id.
Statutory interpretаtion presents a question of law, in connection with which an appellate court has an obligation to reach an independent conclusion irrespective of the decision made by the court below. Id.
ANALYSIS
The income derived from the sales of ABI’s products is apportioned to Nebraska pursuant to § 77-2734.14. That section provides in relevant part:
(1) The sales factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is the total sales of the taxpayer in this state during the tax period, and the denominator of which is the total sales everywhere during the tax period.
*579 (2) Sales of tangible personal property are in this state if:
(3) Sales, other than sales of tangible personal property, are in this state if ....
Thus, the statute distinguishes between sales of tangible personal property and sales of other than tangible personal property when apportioning income to Nebraska. Because of other stipulated facts unimportant to our decision, the apportionment of ABI’s income hinges on whether the sales of the prospect lists, 3- by 5-inch index cards, computer diskettes, magnetic tapes, CD-ROM’s, and online information are sales of tangible personal property under § 77-2734.14(2), or whether they are sales of other than tangible personal property under § 77-2734.14(3).
In support of their argument that the sales of ABI’s products are sales of other than tangible personal property, the department and cоmmissioner cite a number of cases from other states. See, e.g.,
Fingerhut Products Co.
v.
Commissioner of Revenue,
Upon review of these cases, we cоnclude that the department and commissioner’s emphasis on them is misplaced. In each of these cases, the respective state courts inquired into the meaning of the term “tangible personal property” and interpreted that term under state law. However, in the present case, we are required to interpret that term consistent with the meaning given to it under federal law. In addition, we conclude that
May Broadcasting Co. v. Boehm,
The Legislature has directed that the term “tangible personal property,” as used in § 77-2734.14,
shall have the same meaning as when used in a comparable context in the laws of thе United States relating to federal income taxes, unless a different meaning is clearly required. Any reference to the laws of the United States shall mean the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 ....
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 77-2714 (Reissue 1996). Thus, we consider the meaning of the term “tangible personal prоperty” under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
In
Norwest Corp. & Subs. v. Commissioner,
The Tax Court held that the software was tangible personal property. Relying primarily on legislative history to reach this conclusion, the Tax Court stated that the “exрlicit legislative intent to define broadly the term ‘tangible personal property’ suggests that the term may encompass all personal property that is not intangible property in the narrow, traditional sense; i.e., rights and obligations created by law.” Id. at 374-75.
Intangible intellectual property rights аnd the tangible or physical manifestations or embodiments of those rights are distinct property interests. ... A purchaser of a particular tangible manifestation or embodiment of intellectual property acquires only property rights in that manifestation *581 or embodiment and does not аcquire any rights to the underlying intellectual property.
(Citation omitted.) Id. at 375.
This distinction between the acquisition of intellectual property rights and the acquisition of a license to use the physical embodiment of intellectual property leads us to conclude that the products sold by ABI constitute tangible personal property. ABI distributes its products under agreements that grant customers a license to use ABI’s products in the ordinary course of their businesses. Those agreements also contain terms and conditions prohibiting the unauthorized reproduction of ABFs products. ABI’s customers acquired no intangible intellectual property rights when purchasing ABFs products.
In
Norwest Corp. & Subs.,
it was important to the Tax Court’s reasoning that the magnetic disks and tapes at issue in that case had a tangible, physical manifestation or embodiment. However, an online data product similar to that in the present case was not at issue in
Norwest Corp. & Subs.
In the present case, it is clear that the prospect lists, the 3- by 5-inch index cards, the computer diskettes, the magnetic tapes, and the CD-ROM’s sold by ABI have a tangible, physical manifestation or embodiment. Less clear is whether the online data sold by ABI has a tangible, рhysical manifestation or embodiment. However, in
May Broadcasting Co. v. Boehm,
*582 CONCLUSION
The sales of business data products by ABI are “[s]ales of tangible personal property” under § 77-2734.14(2). Thus, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
