48 Conn. Supp. 221 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 2002
The plaintiff, Renaissance Management Company, Inc.(Renaissance), appeals from a determination by the defendant, Commissioner of Revenue Services (Commissioner), pursuant to General Statutes §
During the audit period, Renaissance was a property management company that managed eight low income housing projects in the New Haven area totaling 318 apartment units. Each of the eight projects was separately owned by a limited partnership. Each of the limited partnerships entered into management agreements with Renaissance to provide direct bookkeeping and accounting service personnel through a consolidated payroll account maintained by Renaissance, and to maintain each property owned by the limited partnerships in a good, safe and sanitary condition and in a rentable state of repair, in accordance with regulatory agreements between the limited partnerships and the State of Connecticut. The management agreements between the limited partnerships and Renaissance provided that all employees must be employees of Renaissance except those employees that Renaissance hired to supervise and discharge maintenance and janitorial employees. The regulatory agreements required the limited partnerships to pay the salaries and fringe benefits and local, state and federal taxes incident to the employment of such maintenance and on site personnel. The limited partnerships reimbursed Renaissance for the payment of such operating expenses from an operating account established by Renaissance for the benefit of the eight limited partnerships. Because CT Page 12283 each property managed by Renaissance was not large enough to require an employee dedicated to it on a full time basis, Renaissance's employees performed management and janitorial services at or for the various properties owned by the limited partnerships.
In AirKaman, Inc. v. Groppo,
General Statutes (Rev. to 1993) §
The Commissioner interprets the provision in (A) above to exempt only the payroll expenses of employees who work solely at one property for one owner. Renaissance argues that none of the individual apartment projects are large enough to require each of the limited partnerships to hire a person dedicated on a full time basis to handle the accounting, maintenance and janitorial work for each project. Renaissance claims that neither logic nor our statutes require such a result to make taxable the accounting, maintenance and janitorial costs paid by Renaissance but reimbursed by the limited partnerships.
The Commissioner views this narrow exception to the taxation of management services to apply in this case only to the situation where a Renaissance employee has been assigned to one of the apartment projects and works full time at that project. See Department of Revenue Services, SN 93(2), supra. We agree with the Commissioner' s understanding of this exemption. A management service retailer, such as Renaissance, may exempt payroll expenses of an employee from its taxable gross receipts only when the employee works solely for one service recipient, in this case one of the eight housing projects, and the employee is located only at that single business property.
In construing a statutory exemption, "we employ three overlapping presumptions. First, statutes that provide exemptions from taxation are a matter of legislative grace that must be strictly construed against the taxpayer. Second, any ambiguity in the statutory formulation of an exemption must be resolved against the taxpayer. Third, the taxpayer must bear the burden of proving the error in an adverse assessment concerning an exemption." Oxford Tire Supply, Inc. v. Commissioner of RevenueServices,
Accordingly, judgment may enter in favor of the defendant Commissioner dismissing this appeal without costs to either party. CT Page 12285
Arnold W. Aronson Judge Trial Referee