24 Mass. App. Ct. 64 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1987
Roughly in harmony with the life cycle of lawn grass, garage and yard sales erupt on the New England landscape. They are a contemporary phenomenon. A modest service business has developed in aid of these sales. Such is the occupation of the appellant taxpayer, Diane Sherman. She manages garage and yard sales for householders who are casting their surplus baggage into the stream of commerce.
At issue is whether Sherman is liable to collect and return to the Commonwealth sales tax on goods sold at the garage and yard sales she runs. The Commissioner of Revenue has assessed a tax of $24,887.77, interest and penalties included, for periods from January 1, 1978, through March 31, 1982. Leaving aside, for the moment, tax periods as to which the Appellate Tax Board (board) declined jurisdiction, the board determined that Sherman was liable for the tax assessed. She
An excise (the sales tax) falls upon “sales at retail of tangible personal property ... by any vendor . . . except as otherwise provided . . . .” G. L. c. 64H, § 2, as appearing in St. 1967, c. 757, § 1. Exemptions from the sales tax appear in G. L. c. 64H, § 6, as amended by St. 1970, c. 566, § 7, and include paragraph (c), “[c]asual and isolated sales by a vendor who is not regularly engaged in the business of making sales at retail,” although exemption does not extend to casual or isolated sales of a motor vehicle, boat or airplane. It is not disputed by the parties that sales by the property owner who sets up tables in a front yard to dispose of unwanted sofas, clothes, dishes, steamer trunks, Flexible-Flyers, hockey skates, Mickey Mouse lamps, 45 rpm record players, and other doodads fall into the exemption. See 830 Code Mass. Regs. § 16.01 (l)(a) (1979). Does the intervention of a facilitator alter the enterprise and the tax consequences?
We summarize the facts found by the board. There is agreement that those facts have support in substantial evidence. See Pequot Assocs. v. Assessors of Salem, 376 Mass. 270, 274-277 (1978); New Boston Garden Corp. v. Assessors of Boston, 383 Mass. 456, 465-467 (1981).
Sherman’s customers are generally house owners moving into smaller residences who find it necessary to jettison furniture and furnishings. Before a sale, Sherman and a part-time crew she hires move items to be sold from the reaches of the house — attic, basement, bedrooms — to a collecting point on the premises of the owner for display. She establishes prices at which the items are to be offered for sale,
Sherman remits the originals of all sales slips to the owner, together with the net proceeds less her commission, which varies from twenty to thirty percent of the gross. After a sale, Sherman and her crew clean up and box, or otherwise store, the unsold goods for the owner. Sherman manages some fifteen to twenty-five sales of this sort per year. She has not conducted sales more than once for any person.
1. Taxpayer’s liability. If the vendor in the prototypical transaction which Sherman manages is the owner of the goods, it follows that the casual or isolated sale exemption of G. L. c. 64H, § 6(c), applies because § 6(c) confers the exemption upon a “vendor who is not regularly engaged in the business of making sales at retail.” A “vendor,” by statutory definition, is “a retailer or other person selling tangible personal property of a kind” subject to sales tax. G. L. c. 64H, § 1(18), inserted by St. 1967, c. 757, § 1. That definition has a circular quality but serves to focus the inquiry on who, in the prototypical transaction, is doing the selling. The board purported to “find” that the taxpayer, Sherman, was the seller of the property but that determination is one of law and open to judicial review. See Needham v. Winslow Nurseries, Inc., 330 Mass. 95, 99 (1953); Comptroller of Treasury v. Thomson Trailer Corp., 209 Md. 490, 500 (1955).
In a case arising under the Uniform Commercial Code, namely G. L. c. 106, § 2-103(1)(d), the absence of title or possession was thought decisive in determining that the defendant was not a “seller” of the personal property in question. Hitchcock v. Emergency Lighting & Sys., Inc., 12 Mass. App. Ct. 930 (1981). Sherman, in the instant case, never had title.
We conclude that Sherman, in the prototypical transaction described by the board, is not a vendor within the meaning of the statute and, therefore, is not liable for the sales tax. Rather, she is performing personal services in aid of the property owner making a casual or isolated sale, i.e., one “of an infrequent, non-recurring nature made by a person not engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property.” 830 Code Mass. Regs. § 16.01 (1979). The case is much like Harrison Conference Servs. of Mass., Inc. v. Commissioner of Rev., 394 Mass. 21, 24 (1985), in which the personal services of a food preparer did not alter the tax exempt status of meals served by an employer to its employees at its training center. For cases in which other jurisdictions (under varying statutory texts) have concluded that service intermediaries do not alter the nature of an otherwise tax exempt casual sale see: Doolittle v. Johnson, 250 A.2d 822, 824 (Me. 1969) (boat broker); State v. Tysdal, 303 Minn. 233 (1975) (auctioneer). Contrast Oberlander v. Porterfield, 28 Ohio St. 2d 171 (1971) (auctioneer). In Massachusetts an auctioneer is expressly designated a “retailer” by statute for sales tax purposes. G. L. c. 64H, § 1 (9)(b) & (c). See also 830 Code Mass. Regs. § 16.01 (2)(a) (1979). The imposition by the statute of retailer status upon auctioneers
2. Jurisdictional question. For the tax periods from July 1, 1981, to March 31, 1982,
So ordered.
Although her usual written contract reserved to her the right and duty to price sale items, Sherman testified that, as a practical matter, the owners had the last word on prices because owners could withdraw items from sale if Sherman did not acquiesce in their view of the value of particular items.
Sales by intermediaries, such as executors, administrators, trustees, receivers, and other kinds of fiduciaries are, by regulation, regarded as exempt from taxation. 830 Code Mass. Regs. § 16.01 (l)(b) (1979).
As to the filing of sales tax returns, see G. L. c. 62C, § 16(h), and 830 Code Mass. Regs. § 62C. 14(3) (1981). The regulation provides for quarterly returns.