Plaintiff, a California corporation, brought this action for the recovery of sales taxes paid under protest. The gross receipts, the subject of the tax, were derived from the sale of three aircraft by plaintiff to two foreign corporations. ■ The facts not being in dispute, the sole issue involves the applicability of a statute which provides for the exemption from taxation of the gross receipts of aircraft “sold to persons who are not residents of this State and who will not use such aircraft in this State otherwise than in the removal of such aircraft from this State.” (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 6366.)
In 1954 plaintiff sold an aircraft in California to National Cash Register, a Maryland corporation with its principal place of business in Ohio. The plane was flown to Dayton, Ohio, and was not returned to California except for servicing. In 1956 it sold another aircraft in California to the same company; this plane was flown to Ohio and never returned. Although the officers and directors of National Cash Register resided in Ohio and elsewhere, none resided in California. The company, however, was qualified to do business in this state prior to 1954, in which year it had 35 business locations situated in 29 California cities, it employed approximately 800 employees and its gross volume of business was in excess of $12,000,000. In 1956 it had approximately 1,000 employees in this state, and its gross volume of business here was $19,683,176.
In 1956 plaintiff sold an aircraft to Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company, an Ohio corporation with its principal place of business in that state. The plane was flown out of California and returned once for maintenance service. The officers and directors of Libbey-Owens-Ford resided in Ohio and other *506 states, but not in California. As with National Cash Register, the company was qualified to do business in this state prior to 1956; in that year it had places of business in San Francisco and Los Angeles staffed by 18 persons, and did a gross business of $9,000,000.
The single question for determination is whether the trial court erred in finding that the vendee corporations were “residents of this State” within the meaning of that term as found in section 6366, supra-, the matter appears to be one of first impression.
Appellant contends that the “residence” of a corporation is in the jurisdiction where it was organized, even though its officers and stockholders reside elsewhere, and although it may do business in other jurisdictions. “... it is hardly necessary to cite authorities on the proposition that the residence of a corporation is where it was organized, and not where it may be transacting business in some other place . . . ‘They are citizens, so to speak, of the state of their creation, and they are in contemplation of law absent from all other states than the one of their
situs’
[citations].”
(Keystone Driller Co.
v.
Superior Court,
Respondent, on the other hand, maintains that the only possible concept of the word “resident” is not a domiciliary one; it argues that the term may have different meanings dependent upon the context in which it is used: “Courts and legal writers usually distinguish ‘domicile’ and ‘residence,’ so that ‘domicile’ is the one location with which for legal purposes a person is considered to have the most settled and permanent connection, the place where he intends to remain and to which, whenever he is absent, he has the intention of returning, . . . whereas ‘residence’ connotes any factual place of abode of some permanency, more than a mere temporary sojourn. ‘Domicile’ normally is the more comprehensive term, in that it includes both the
act
of residence and an
*507
intention
to remain; a person may have one domicile at a given time, but he may have more than one physical residence separate from his domicile, and at the same time (citations).”
(Smith
v.
Smith,
The state sales tax has been judicially construed as an excise tax for the privilege of conducting a retail business measured by the gross receipts from sales.
(City of Pomona
v.
State Board of Equalization,
Appellant, on the other hand, points to certain statutes (the pertinent language of which we have emphasized) for the asserted proposition that the Legislature did not intend that “residents,” as used in section 6366, should include all corporations doing business in California. Thus, section 114 of the Revenue and Taxation Code defines debts for property taxation purposes as unsecured liabilities, to “bona fide residents of this State, or to
persons doing business in this State
(emphasis added)”; also, section 23151 of the same code provides for a tax on the net income of corporations in the following language: “With the exception of financial-corporations, every corporation
doing business within the limits of this State
and not expressly exempted from taxation . . . shall annually pay to the State, for the privilege of exercising its corporate franchises within this State, a tax according to or
*509
measured by its net income ...” (emphasis added). Says appellant: “For ‘persons who are not residents of this State’ (as used in § 6366) the State would have us read ‘persons who are not doing business in this State, ’ ” from which it is concluded that “if this is what the Legislature intended, the Legislature would have said so in those very words.” There are two answers to such contention. First, unlike the statutes relied on by appellant, section 6005 (defining the word “person”) is an integral part of the Sales and Use Tax Law; dealing with the particular subject at hand, it must prevail over other statutes less specific in scope or pertaining to a different area of the California taxing system. Although statutes should be harmonized whenever possible, as against a general provision (broad enough to include a particular subject) a specific provision relating to the same particular subject will govern
(Rose
v.
State,
Although conceding that the rule of strict construction here applies, appellant properly argues that we are not thereby forbidden from giving a “strict but reasonable” construction
*510
to section 6366; cited by appellant is
Pan American World Airways
v.
State Board of Equalization,
In summary, to adopt the view that the corporation—purchasers here concerned—did not have a factual abode in this state of same permanency and therefore, were not residents within the meaning of section 6366 would be simply unrealistic in the light of the uneontradieted facts. Both companies, as heretofore related, had places of business in California staffed by numerous employees and grossing millions of dollars during *511 the years in question. Neither theoretically nor as a practical matter is appellant’s thesis sustainable.
It is next contended that there exists in the Sales and Use Tax Law a legislative intent not to impose a tax on goods which are to be removed from the state and not used here. As authority therefor reliance is had on title 18, section 2015 (a) (1) (C) of the California Administrative Code which exempts from the sales tax all transactions in which the goods are transported outside the state by the retailer, a carrier or a forwarding agent; appellant, however, concedes that the exemption will not “normally” be available if the sale and delivery take place in California (section 2015 (a) (2) (B), Cal. Admin. Code). It seems that the statutory basis for section 2015,
supra,
is found in section 6352 of the Revenue and Taxation Code which exempts from taxation the gross receipts from sales made in interstate commerce; as therein declared, “this State is prohibited from taxing [such sales] under the Constitution or laws of the United States . . .” Section 2015 simply endeavors to define when the goods have entered the flow of interstate commerce. Contrary to appellant’s assertion, it appears that the established policy of this state is to tax the gross receipts from all sales in this state
(Chicago Bridge
&
Iron Co.
v.
Johnson,
Appellant’s final point concerns the discrimination which will attend the construction urged by respondent board: “To
*512
make the exemption turn upon the form of business entity is to add a qualification to the statute which is not there . . it is also argued that the exemption was adopted to aid the aircraft industry whose contribution to the economic growth of California cannot be gainsaid. “But,” as the trial judge observed, “it is one thing to be sympathetic and quite another thing to interpret the law”; furthermore, the construction contended for by appellant would discriminate between corporations and residents of this state as opposed to out-of-state corporations, and it is a part of our constitution that “No corporation organized outside the limits of this State shall be allowed to transact business within this State on more favorable conditions than are prescribed by law to similar corporations organized under the laws of this State.” (Const., art. XII, § 15.) Courts must take a statute as they find it; if its operation results in inequality or hardship, the remedy is with the Legislature.
(Jordan
v.
Retirement Board,
The judgment is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
Notes
The Briggs ease, in turn, quotes from
Hanson
v.
Graham,
Sections 6005 and 6366 were last amended in 1951; on the other hand, section 114 was last amended in 1941, while section 23151, added in 1949, was amended in 1959—subsequent to the institution of the present action.
