422 Pa. 584 | Pa. | 1966
Opinion by
This is an appeal under Rule 68% by the City of Philadelphia from the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas No. 4 of Philadelphia County reversing the decision of the Tax Review Board of the City of Philadelphia, which held that certain sales by appellee-taxpayer were sales at retail for purposes of the Philadelphia Mercantile License Tax.
Appellee is engaged in business in Philadelphia in the sale of various kinds of paper, paper products, wrapping and packaging materials. The sales in question involved paper sold (1) to customers who used it for printing or embossing for the production of pamphlets, brochures, catalogues and magazines and (2) to book publishers who printed upon it and bound it as pages in books. In each category the Tax Review Board held that the sales were at retail, but was reversed by the court of common pleas which held that they were sales at wholesale.
Section 19-1001(12) defines wholesale dealer or wholesale vendor as “Any person who sells to dealers in or vendors of goods, wares, and merchandise.” All other dealers or vendors are defined by subsection (10) as retailers. In Pennsylvania, “. . . the test of a wholesale dealer is whether its customer buys for the purpose of reselling.” Brown é Zortman Machinery Company v. Pittsburgh, 375 Pa. 250, 256, 100 A. 2d 98, 102 (1953). In Kerchner, Marshall & Company v. Pittsburgh, 406 Pa. 158, 176 A. 2d 645 (1962), we decided that the sale of mineral and metal products to manufacturers of iron, steel and glass products constituted a sale at retail because the customers of the taxpayer
In the present case, when the paper was resold with printing or embossing upon it in the form of pamphlets, brochures, catalogues and magazines, or as pages in a book, the paper was not the same product nor was it in the same condition as the product which the taxpayer had sold to its customer. Furthermore, even though the paper was readily identifiable in the finished article, unlike the components of steel or glass, it was not the subject of the sale. The purchasers from the taxpayer’s customers did not buy paper. Rather, they purchased a new and totally different product, given a new value and utility by virtue of the reproductions placed upon them or by their placement within the binding of a book.
Accordingly, we determine that the taxpayer is a seller at retail under the Philadelphia Mercantile License Tax Ordinance.
Judgment reversed without interest or penalty.