Travelocity.com LP n/k/a TVL LP v. Comptroller of Maryland
No. 14
Court of Appeals of Maryland
April 30, 2021
473 Md. 319 | 250 A.3d 175
Opinion by Hotten, J.
Sеptember Term, 2020. Barbera, C.J., McDonald and Watts, JJ., dissent. Argued: December 7, 2020. Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, Case No. C-02-CV-18-003504.
TAXATION – SALES AND USE TAX – ONLINE TRAVEL COMPANIES – PRIOR TO THE 2015 AMENDMENT – VENDORS. Prior to the 2015 amendment to the sales and use tax,
Barbera, C.J., McDonald, Watts, Hotten, Getty, Booth, Biran, JJ.
Opinion by Hotten, J.
Barbera, C.J., McDonald and Watts, JJ., dissent.
Filed: April 30, 2021
The Maryland Tax Court determined that Travelocity was liable for the tax, but not grossly negligent in failing to pay the sales and use tax during the audit period.2 Both parties sought judicial review of the Tax Court decision in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, which affirmed. Thereafter, the parties noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. Prior to the consideration of the case by the Court of Special Appeals, we granted a petition for certiorari from Travelocity and a cross-petition from the Comptroller to address several questions, which we have rephrased and consolidated for the sake of clarity:
- Whether the Tax Court erred by holding Travelocity liable for the sales and use tax during the audit period.
- Whether the Tax Court erred in determining that Travelocity did not act with gross negligence under
Tax–Gen. § 13-1102(b) . Whether the Tax Court erred in determining that the tax recovery charge was not included in the taxable price under Tax–Gen. § 11-302 .3
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Underlying Factual Background
During an audit period between March 1, 2003 and April 30, 2011, Travelocity operated as an online travel company that provided an independent platform to review and request reservations from third-party airlines, hotels, and rental car agencies.4 Travelocity enterеd into contracts with the hotel and car rental agencies whereby it gained access to the central reservation system of the hotels and car rental agencies to ascertain availability. Travelocity subsequently listed the available rooms and vehicles on its website for prices lower than otherwise advertised by the hotel and car rental agencies. To make a hotel or car rental reservation on Travelocity’s website, a customer would select his or her desired reservation, which Travelocity forwarded to the relevant agencies, and awaited the final determination of rate and availability in real time. If the third-party agency issued the reservation, Travelocity then provided the customer with those details. Travelocity
On November 11, 2011, the Maryland Comptroller assessed a sales and use tax on the difference between the tax on the net rate paid by the hotels and car rental agencies and the amount of tax assessed by the Comptroller against Travelocity, relative to the marked up rate. The tax assessment consisted of $3,078,814.11 in sales and use tax, $1,828,515.58 in interest, and $1,077,584.94 in penalties for an aggregate amount of $5,985,214.63. On November 16, 2012, a final determination was issued by the Comptroller, which included updated interest, and amounted to $6,419,897.80.
Procedural History
Tax Court
On December 13, 2012, Travelocity appealed the Comptroller’s sales and use tax assessment to the Maryland Tax Court. Travelocity argued that only a “vendor” of hotel rooms and rental cars was required to pay the tax. As defined during the audit period, a “vendor” sold or delivered “the right to occupy a room or lodging” or transferred “title or possession” of rental cars. Travelocity argued that, as an online travel company, it neither owned nor controlled the right to occupy or possess any hotel rooms or rental cars which could support an assessment of liability for the tax.
On December 18, 2017, the Tax Court issued a final memorandum and order. The Tax Court held that Travelocity’s business of facilitating vehicle rentals and hotel room reservations was included in the sale of tangible personal property in Maryland, thereby rendering it liable for the tax during the audit period. The Tax Court explained that Travelocity was engaged in the business of a retail vendor because it sold the right to occupy a hotel room or rent a vehicle, both of which were considered tangible personal property.
The Tax Court also determined that Travelocity was not negligent in failing to pay the tax during the audit period. The Tax Court acknowledged that “there is a good faith dispute as to whether the tax applies to Travelocity” and that it had acted in good faith in appealing to the Tax Court. The Tax Court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the Comptroller concerning the sales and use tax and granted partial summary judgment in favor of Travelocity limiting the Comptroller’s assessment regarding penalties, interest, and a four-year statute of limitations. The Tax Court reduced the total assessment of the tax, penalties, and interest from $6,419,897.80 as asserted by the Comptroller to
Circuit Court
Both parties petitioned for judicial review of the Tax Court decision in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. For procedural reasons, Travelocity’s cross-petition for judicial review was initially dismissed by the circuit court, but later revived and considered independent of the Comptroller’s petition.
On November 19, 2018, the Comptroller appealed the Tax Court’s finding that Travelocity was not grossly negligent in failing to pay the sales and use tax during the audit period. The Comptroller also challenged the Tax Court’s ruling that the tax recovery charge was not taxable income. Following a hearing on May 6, 2019, the circuit court, in affirming the decision of the Tax Court, found that the decision was legally correct and supported by substantial evidence.
On December 13, 2018, Travelocity filed a cross-petition for judicial review, which was initially dismissed by the circuit court on January 14, 2019 for procedural errors. The circuit court later vacated its earlier dismissal of Travelocity’s petition on July 1, 2019 and held a hearing on November 18, 2019. Travelocity argued that the determination of the Tax Court was not supported by the record and that the Tax Court erred as a matter of law by concluding that it was liable for the tax. On January 30, 2020, the circuit court affirmed the decision of the Tax Court.
Court of Special Appeals
The Comptroller noted an appeal to the Court of Special Appeals on May 23, 2019. On October 21, 2019, the Court of Special Appeals stayed that appeal, pending the circuit court’s final decision on Travelocity’s petition for judicial review. On February 7, 2020, following the decision of the circuit court regarding Travelocity’s cross-petition, Travelocity also noted its appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. On March 17, 2020, the Court of Special Appeals lifted the stay on the Comptroller’s appeal and consolidated the two appeals. Prior to the consideration of the case by the Court of Special Appeals, Travelocity petitioned to this Court for certiorari. The Comptroller also filed a cross-petition, and we granted certiorari on both petitions. Travelocity.com LP v. Comptroller of Maryland, 469 Md. 659, 232 A.3d 259 (2020).
For the reasons expressed below, we conclude that Travelocity was not liable for the tax during the audit period and shall reverse.
DISCUSSION
Standard of Review
“The Maryland Tax Court is an adjudicatory administrative agency” and, as we do when reviewing other administrаtive agencies, we “evaluate[] the decision of the agency[]” to determine whether, based on the “findings and reasons set forth by the Tax Court[,]” its determination can be upheld. Gore Enter. Holdings, Inc. v. Comptroller of Treasury, 437 Md. 492, 503–05, 87 A.3d 1263, 1269–70 (2014) (quotation marks and citations omitted). The factual determinations of the Tax Court are reviewed under the deferential substantial evidence test: “whether a reasoning mind reasonably could have reached the factual
“When the Tax Court interprets Maryland tax law, we accord that agency a degree of deference as the agency that administers and interprets those statutes.” Maryland State Comptroller of Treasury v. Wynne, 431 Md. 147, 160, 64 A.3d 453, 460 (2013), aff’d sub nom. Comptroller of Treasury of Maryland v. Wynne, 575 U.S. 542, 135 S. Ct. 1787 (2015); Gore Enter., 437 Md. at 505, 87 A.3d at 1270 (“The legal conclusions of an administrative agency that are premised upon an interpretation of the statutes that the agency administers are afforded great weight.”) (quotation marks and citations omitted). That degree of deference, however, is not determinative; “a reviewing court is under no statutory constraints in reversing a Tax Court order which is premised solely upon an erroneous conclusion of law.” Ramsay, Scarlett & Co., Inc. v. Comptroller of Treasury, 302 Md. 825, 834, 490 A.2d 1296, 1301 (1985) (citations omitted); Lane v. Supervisor of Assessments of Montgomery Cty., 447 Md. 454, 464, 135 A.3d 828, 834 (2016) (“We affirm the decision of the Tax Court unless that decision is not supported by substantial evidence appearing in the record or is erroneous as a matter of law.”) (quotation marks and citations omitted); Comptroller of Treasury v. M. E. Rockhill, Inc., 205 Md. 226, 233, 107 A.2d 93, 97 (1954)
Statutory Construction
“In matters involving statutory construction, the canons applied by this Court are well-settled and have been oft repeated. The predominant goal of statutory construction is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the legislature.” 75-80 Properties, L.L.C. v. Rale, Inc., 470 Md. 598, 623, 236 A.3d 545, 559 (2020) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “[W]e begin by examining the plain meaning of the statutory language. If the language of the statute is unambiguous and clearly consistent with the statute’s apparent purpose, our inquiry as to legislative intent ends ordinarily and we apply the statute as written, without resort to other rules of construction.” In re R.S., 470 Md. 380, 402, 235 A.3d 914, 927 (2020) (quotation marks and citations omitted). “If the statute’s language is ambiguous, however, we will look towards other sources, such as relevant case law and legislative history, to aid us in determining the legislature’s
With regard to determining whether a statute is ambiguous, we have been clear; an ambiguity may still exist even when the words of the statute are themselves “crystal clear.” That occurs when its application in a given situation is not clear. This is consistent with this Court’s recognition that a term which is unambiguous in one context may be ambiguous in another. We have also acknowledged that language can be regarded as ambiguous in two different respects: 1) it may be intrinsically unclear; or 2) its intrinsic meaning may be fairly clear, but its application to a particular object or circumstance may be uncertain.
Blind Indus. and Services of Maryland v. Maryland Dept. of General Services, 371 Md. 221, 231–32, 808 A.2d 782, 788 (2002) (citations and markings omitted). “Whether the statutory language is clear or ambiguous, it is useful to review the legislative history of the statute[,]” In re R.S., 470 Md. at 403, 235 A.3d at 927 (quotation marks and citations omitted), bearing in mind that any statutory interpretatiоn must be reasonable and avoid “constructions that are illogical or nonsensical, or that render a statute meaningless.” Couret-Rios, 468 Md. at 528, 227 A.3d at 649.
Maryland’s Sales and Use Tax Framework
To address the issues prompting this appeal, we must construe the sales and use tax as it existed during the applicable audit period. The Maryland Tax Code imposed a sales and use tax on “a retail sale in the State; and a use, in the State, of tangible personal property or a taxable service.”
(i) Sale. — (1) “Sale” means a transaction for a consideration whereby:
(i) title or possession of property is transferred or is to be transferred absolutely or conditionally by any means, including by lease, rental, royalty agreement, or grant of a license for use; or
(ii) a person performs a service for another person.
(2) “Sale” does not include a transaction whereby an employee performs a service for the employee’s employer.
* * *
(k) Tangible personal property. — (1) “Tangible personal property” means:
(i) corporeal personal property of any nature; or
(ii) a right to occupy a room or lodgings as a transient guest.
* * *
(l) Taxable price. — (1) “Taxable price” means the value, in money, of the consideration of any kind that is paid, delivered, payable, or deliverable by a buyer to a vendor in the consummation and complete performance of a sale without deduction for any expense or cost[.]
* * *
(o) Vendor. — (1) “Vendor” means a person who:
(i) engages in the business of an out-of-state vendor, as defined in
§11-701 of this title;(ii) engages in the business of a retail vendor, as defined in
§11-701 of the title; or(iii) holds a special license . . .
(2) “Vendor” includes, for an out-of-state vendor, a salesman, representative, peddler, or canvasser whom the Comptroller, for the efficient administration of the title, elects to treat as an agent jointly responsible with the dealer, distributor, employer, or supervisor:
(i) under whom the agent operates; or
(ii) from whom the agent obtains the tangible personal property or taxable service for sale.
The Tax Code,
(b) Engage in the business of an out-of-state vendor. —
(1) “Engage in the business of an out-of-state-vendor” means to sell or deliver tangible personal property or a taxable service for use in the State.
(2) “Engage in the business of an out-of-state vendor” includes:
(i) permanently or temporarily maintaining, occupying, or using any office, sales or sample room, or distribution, storage, warehouse, or other place for the sale of tangible personal property or a taxable service directly or indirectly through an agent or subsidiary;
(ii) having an agent, canvasser, representative, salesman, or solicitor operating in the State for the purpose of delivering, selling, or taking orders for tangible personal property or a taxable service; or
(iii) entering the State on a regular basis to provide service or repair for tangible personal property.
(c) Engage in the business of a retail vendor. —
(1) “Engage in the business of a retail vendor” means to sell or deliver tangible personal property or a taxable service in the State.
(2) “Engage in the business of a retail vendor” includes liquidating a business that sells tangible personal property or a taxable service, when the liquidator holds out to the public that the business is conducted by the liquidator.
(d) License. —
(1) “License” means a license issued by the Comptroller:
(i) to engage in the business of an out-of-state vendor; or
(ii) to engage in the business of a retail vendor.
* * *
Statutory Analysis
The sales and use tax imposed liability on “a retail sale in the State; and a use, in the State, of tangible personal property or a taxable service.”
It is undisputed that the hotel rooms and rental vehicles were “delivered” to the customers, that is, the customers received the hotel rooms and rental cars. However, only “vendors” who “sold” or “delivered” tangible personal property were required to pay the sales and use tax.
Plain Language Analysis
A plain language analysis of the relevant provisions of the Tax Cоde indicates that Travelocity did not “sell” or “deliver” the reservations and was not a “vendor.”
Travelocity did not sell tangible personal property.
For Travelocity to sell the right to occupy the hotel rooms or rent a vehicle, and be liable for the tax, its business conduct would have to meet the definition of a “sale” delineated in
(i) Sale. — (1) “Sale” means a transaction for a consideration whereby:
(i) title or possession of property is transferred or is to be transferred absolutely or conditionally by any means, including by lease, rental, royalty agreement, or grant of a license for use[.]
A review of a sample of contracts submitted as exhibits at the hearing reflects that Travelocity did not “sell” the rooms as a matter of law because they did not result in the transfer of title or possession of the hotel rooms or rental cars. For example, a 2004 agreement with a participating hotel stated in pertinent part:
Sale of Rooms. Participating Hotel hereby grants Travelocity the right to make Rooms at Participating Hotel available for sale to users of the Travelocity Sites upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth herein. It is understood and agreed by the Parties that Travelocity has no obligation or right under this Agreement to acquire an inventory of Rooms
and that Travelocity shall not bear any risk of loss with respect to the sale of Rooms.
(Emphasis added). A 2007 agreement with a participating Maryland hotel stated in pеrtinent part:
Access to Rooms. Participating Hotel hereby grants Travelocity and its affiliate companies the right to make Rooms at Participating Hotel available for booking by Travelocity Customers upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth herein. It is understood and agreed by the Parties that nothing in this Agreement constitutes a sale or rental of Rooms from Participating Hotel to Travelocity and that Travelocity bears no risk of loss with respect to any Rooms made available for sale hereunder.
(Emphasis added). The same language disclaiming Travelocity’s investment in the sale or rental of rooms appeared in 2009 agreements as well as in 2010.
These contracts demonstrate that Travelocity did not acquire title or possession of the hotel rooms or rental cars. An agreement that sold an inventory of hotel rooms and transferred the risk of loss for those rooms would indicate a transfer of “title or possession.” See, e.g., McFadden v. Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Tr. Co., 260 Md. 601, 618, 273 A.2d 198, 206 (1971) (“The principal test to determine whether goods are inventory is that they are held for immediate or ultimate sale.”). However, the terms of the agreements make clear that Travelocity did not purchase or acquire inventory in the hotel rooms and rental vehicles, nor accept any risk of loss for the reservations. The аgreements explicitly state: “nothing in this [a]greement constitutes a sale or rental of [r]ooms . . . to Travelocity[;]” “Travelocity has no obligation or right . . . to acquire an inventory of [r]ooms[;] and that Travelocity shall not bear any risk of loss.” According to the plain terms of the agreements,
The purpose of the agreements further bolsters our analysis that Travelocity did not acquire title or possession of the hotel rooms or rental cars. The agreements explicitly grant Travelocity “the right to make [hotel r]ooms . . . available for booking.” As stated in a 2007 agreement, “[t]his agreement sets forth certain terms and conditions for the distribution of Enterprise travel products and services through www.travelocity.com[.]” (Emphasis added). A 2009 agreement reiterated the same purpose:
This Agreement sets forth certain terms and conditions to broaden the distribution of Hertz’s travel products and services through Travelocity[.]
* * *
4.1. To enhance its overall distribution efforts, Hertz shall make available to Travelocity, for distribution through Travelocity Web Sites, all leisure and commercial vehicle rental rates and corresponding inventory of Hertz . . . that is generally available to all travel agencies. . ..
(Emphasis added).
As the purpose of the agreements was for Travelocity to facilitate hotel and car reservations for the benefit of the hotel and car rental agencies “to broaden the distribution of [the third-party agencies’] travel products and services through Travelocity,” the relationship between Travelocity and the third-party agencies is best described as a joint business venture. Per the agreements, the hotels and car rental agencies remained owners and operators of their hotels and corporeal vehicles. Travelocity’s role was to “broaden the distribution” of travel products via Travelocity’s platform. The agencies provided Travelocity access to their reservation databases, and offered a lower rate, which Travelocity would publish on its online platform. Customers would then examine the hotel
In light of this analysis we find the Comptroller’s arguments unavailing. The Comptroller argues that the use of the term “sale” in the contracts implies a sale of the right to occupy the rooms which would impose liability for the tax. The Comptroller also argues that Travelocity should be liable because it accepted customer payments and was listed as merchant of record on the transactions. However, as explained above, the entirety of the agreements makes clear that Travelocity did not obtain “title or possession” of the hotel rooms and rental cars, regardless of the use of the term “sale” in the agreements. Instead, it was a facilitator of reservations. In that regard, transacting with customers and accepting payments to then pass on to the agencies and being listed as merchant of record on the transactions fully comports with that role.
In sum, Travelocity facilitated the right to occupy a hotel room or rent a vehicle during the audit period, but did not acquire “title or possession” as required for a “sale” under the
Travelocity was not an out-of-state or retail vendor during the audit period.
To be liable for the sales and use tax as either an out-of-state or retail vendor, Travelocity must meet the definitions stated in
(b) Engage in the business of an out-of-state vendor. —
(1) “Engage in the business of an out-of-state-vendor” means to sell or deliver tangible personal property or a taxable service for use in the State.
(2) “Engage in the business of an out-of-state vendor” includes: . . .
(ii) having an agent, canvasser, representative, salesman, or solicitor operating in the State for the purpose of delivering, selling, or taking orders for tangible personal property of a taxable service; or
(c) Engage in the business of a retail vendor. —
(1) “Engage in the business of a retail vendor” means to sell or deliver tangible personal property or a taxable service in the State.
Nor did Travelocity “deliver” the hotel rooms and rental cars for purposes of the tax. Undoubtedly, customers would receive hotel rooms and rental cars as a result of the reservations booked on Travelocity‘s online platform. However, as explained above, Travelocity did not own the hotel rooms and rental cars and could not, therefore, have the right to deliver the actual rooms and cars. A customer reviewing a reservation on Travelocity‘s website would select a reservation which Travelocity would then forward to the hotel and await confirmation in real time. The hotel would be the one to provide the reservation and Travelocity would furnish it to the customer on behalf of the hotel. Thus, Travelocity would not be liable for the sales and use tax as either a retail vendor pursuant to
Unlike the contrary argument by the Comptroller, the third-party agencies were not the in-state agents of Travelocity which would impose liability under
Finally, the Comptroller points to case law from other jurisdictions which held that online travel companies were considered vendors for tax purposes. See, e.g., Expedia, Inc. v. D.C., 120 A.3d 623, 635 (D.C. 2015) (footnote omitted) (“[T]he meaning of the statute is clear: by imposing tax on the ‘sale or charge . . . for any room . . . furnished to transients by any hotel,’ the sales tax statute is taxing the sales transaction by which a customer
These cases are not persuasive. In Travelocity.com LP, the Supreme Court of Wyoming faced a similar issue and concluded that online travel companies were considered vendors under the relevant Wyoming statutory scheme. 2014 WY at ¶ 36, 329 P.3d at 142. In its analysis, the Wyoming Supreme Court considered that “courts have held that [online travel companies] are not vendors or in the business of providing lodging services under particular taxing statutes and ordinances.” Id. at ¶ 27, 329 P.3d at 140 (emphasis added); Id. at ¶ 30, 329 P.3d at 140-41 (listing cases of successful challenges by online travel companies to various tax statutes in different states). Reviewing the “particular taxing statutes” at issue, as we do here, has long been the analytical methodology employed by this Court when specifically addressing a prior version of the
Turning to the sales and use statute as it existed during the audit period, as explained above, the definition of a vendor in the Maryland Tax Code did not include online travel companies. That statute differed from the statutes at issue in Expedia or Travelocity. Compare
Subsequent Legislative History
In 2015, the General Assembly expanded the definition of a vendor liable for the sales and use tax to include an “accommodations intermediary“—a person who facilitates the sale or use of an accommodation for а fee—such as Travelocity.6 2016 Md. Laws ch. 3 (H.B. 1065 & S.B. 190 (2015)). For the reasons expressed below, we conclude that the legislative history supports our conclusion that Travelocity was not liable for the sales and use tax during the audit period.
The General Assembly amended the
FOR the purpose of clarifying the definition of “taxable price” for the State sales and use tax as it applies to the sale or use of an accommodation facilitated by an accommodations intermediary; altering the definition of “vendor” under the State sales and use tax to include an accommodations intermediary; defining certain terms; making a conforming change; and generally relating to clarifying the taxable price for an accommodation under the State sales and use tax.
2016 Md. Laws ch. 3 (H.B. 1065 & S.B. 190 (2015)) (emphasis added). The amendment to the statute expanded the scope of a “vendor” to include an “accommodations intermediary“—“a person, other than an accommodations provider, who facilitates the sale or use of an accommodation and charges a buyer the taxable price for the accommodation[]“—such as Travelocity. 2016 Md. Laws ch. 3 (H.B. 1065 & S.B. 190 (2015)). The Fiscal and Policy Note for Senate Bill 190 (2015) states that “[t]he bill also
The subsequent addition of “accommodations intermediary” to the statute is an indication that prior to the amendment, an accommodations intermediary such as Travelocity was not included in the statutory definition of a vendor liable for the tax. As we noted in State v. Coleman, 423 Md. 666, 683, 33 A.3d 468, 478 (2011), a “contrast between the amended Act and the superseded version demonstrates that the prior language did not mean what the new language does.”
The amendment was passed with the stated purpose of “altering the definition of ‘vendor’ under the State sales and use tax to include an accommodations intermediary[.]”
We have also held that while “a subsequent legislative amendment of a statute is not controlling as to the meaning of the prior law, nevertheless, subsequent legislation can be considered helpful to determine legislative intent.” Chesek v. Jones, 406 Md. 446, 462, 959 A.2d 795, 804 (2008). Based on Chesek, the Comptroller argues that the subsequent legislation helps determine the legislative intent that an accommodations intermediary was always included in the statute, and the amendment simply clarified the original intent.
In our view, Chesek bolsters our analysis. The “subsequent legislation“—the 2015 amendment—is “helpful to determine the legislative intent[]“—that an accommodation intermediary was not included in the definition of vendor liable for the sales and use tax. Chesek, 406 Md. at 462, 959 A.2d at 804. As noted, one of the stated purposes of the 2015 amendment was to “alter[] the definition of ‘vendor’ under the State sales and use tax to include an accommodations intermediary.” 2016 Md. Laws ch. 3 (H.B. 1065 & S.B. 190
In sum, altering the definition of a vendor liable for the sales and use tax to include an accommodations intermediary such as Travelocity indicates that Travelocity was not part of the definition before the amendment. Thus, the subsequent legislative history reflects that Travelocity was not liable for the sales and use tax during the audit period.
Ambiguity
As we have emphasized, “when specifically interpreting tax statutes, this Court recognizes that any ambiguity within the statutory language must be interpreted in favor of the taxpayer.” Comptroller of the Treasury v. Citicorp Int‘l Commc‘ns, Inc., 389 Md. 156, 165, 884 A.2d 112, 117 (2005); Rockhill, 205 Md. at 234, 107 A.2d at 98 (“In interpreting a tax statute, the court must not extend its provisions by implication beyond the clear import of the language employed. Such a statute, in case of doubt as to its scope, should be construed most strongly in favor of the citizen and against the State.“). Even the Tax Court acknowledged that the tax code was ambiguous as to whether Travelocity was liable for the sales and use tax. In discussing the subsidiary issue of whether Travelocity would be subject to penalties and interest if found liable for the tax during the audit period, the Tax Court found that:
There is a good faith dispute as to whether the tax applies to Travelocity, and the appeal was taken without any intent to avoid or delay the proper payment of any taxes which were owed to the government. Although the law supports
the tax assessment by the Comptroller, reasonable cause exists to justify waiving penalties and interest аnd enforcing the four-year statute of limitations. Travelocity has demonstrated with affirmative evidence that reasonable cause exists that it was not grossly negligent i[n] not paying any sales and use tax as a newly defined vendor. Moreover, the [General Assembly‘s] efforts to clarify and alter the definition of a vendor suggest that substantial uncertainty exists as to the applicability of the law to Travelocity and similar [online travel companies].
Travelocity.com LP v. Comptroller of Maryland, No. 12-SU-OO-1184, 2017 WL 11295796, at *4 (Md. Tax Dec. 18, 2017) (emphasis added). The fact that the General Assembly clarified and amended the statute to include an accommodations intermediary such as Travelocity, indicates that the statute was at least ambiguous as to whether Travelocity was included beforehand. In this case, we interpret any potential ambiguity in favor of Travelocity and conclude that Travelocity was not liable for the sales and use tax during the audit period.
CONCLUSION
Travel industry practices have long informed the developments of the State‘s tax legislation, and the instant case serves as another example.8 In Rockhill, for example, this
In the case аt bar, Travelocity‘s business and technological acumen preceded the State‘s tax legislation, until the General Assembly ‘caught up’ with the 2015 amendment. Therefore, as explained above, the Tax Court erroneously concluded that Travelocity was liable for the sales and use tax during the audit period. Thus, the circuit court erred in affirming the decision of the Tax Court.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY IS REVERSED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY RESPONDENT.
Filed: April 30, 2021
Respectfully, I dissent. In my view, Travelocity.com LP n/k/a TVL LP (“Travelocity“), Petitioner/Cross-Respondent, was required to pay the sales and use tax on the fees that it charged its customers. I would affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, which affirmed the decision of the Maryland Tax Court. I would hold that the Maryland Tax Court was correct in concluding that Travelocity was a “vendor” under
The Maryland Tax Court‘s findings of fact establish that, when a customer used Travelocity‘s website to reserve a hotel room or rental car, Travelocity acted as a vendor and made a sale to the customer. The Maryland Tax Court found that, when a customer tried to reserve a hotel room on Travelocity‘s website, Travelocity immediately forwarded the customer‘s request to the hotel and waited for the hotel to accept or deny it. See Travelocity.com, 2017 WL 11295796, at *1. If the hotel accepted the customer‘s request, the hotel informed Travelocity of the confirmation number, and Travelocity provided the
Under these circumstances, when a customer used Travelocity‘s website to reserve a hotel room or rental car, Travelocity engaged in a sale—i.e., Travelocity engaged in a “transaction for consideration” and “transferred” to the customer a “grant of a license for use” or “possession of” the hotel room or rental car.
Although the plain language of both
From my perspective, Travelocity‘s contention that the 2016 amendment to the definition of “vendor” in
WHEREAS, The clear intent of the State‘s existing sales and use tax law is to impose the tax on all consideration paid by transient guests in furtherance of the rental of sleeping accommodations; and
WHEREAS, The purpose of this Act is to affirm that intent by clarifying the scope of certain terms used in the sales and use tax law, thereby facilitating the full and proper collection of the tax as originally intended[.]
What can be gleaned from the legislative history is that the General Assembly believed that it was obvious that online travel companies were “vendors” under
The legislative history of the 2016 amendment to the definition of “vendor” in
The bill is intended to clarify current law with regards to the taxable price of hotel room rentals. As such, it would be expected that the amount of sales
The clarification of the meaning of taxable price would obviously only apply to vendors who are responsible for paying the sales and use tax. To the extent that the Fiscal and Policy Note stated that online travel companies were not using the State‘s interpretation of taxable price and referenced this case, it is reasonable to infer that the General Assembly knew that, in this case, Travelocity had contended that it was not a “vendor” under
In doing so, the General Assembly in no way indicated that it believed that the definition of “vendor” in
I differ with the reasoning that Travelocity did not sell hotel rooms or rental cars because Travelocity did not have title to or possession of hotel rooms or rental cars. See
The comparison of Travelocity “to a postal carrier who delivered, for a fee, items from a seller to a buyer” is not applicable. Maj. Slip Op. at 18. First, postal carriers do not sell the right to use products on behalf of a seller. Moreover, where a person (the seller in the analogy) mails an item to a recipient (the buyer), the postal service charges the person who mails the item, i.e., the purported seller, not the buyer, for the cost of the service. By contrast, when Travelocity sold hotel rooms and rental cars on behalf of hotels and rental car companies, Travelocity, like any other seller, charged the buyer. In other words, unlike
Similarly, Travelocity‘s reliance on the circumstance that, when a customer used Travelocity‘s website to reserve a hotel room or rental car, the customer was required to agree to the hotel‘s or rental car company‘s terms and conditions before taking possession of the room or car is of no moment. Under the plain language of
Notwithstanding Travelocity‘s contention otherwise, there was substantial evidence to support the findings of fact by the Maryland Tax Court that underlay its conclusion that Travelocity was a “vendor” under
Travelocity‘s reliance on Comptroller of Treasury v. M. E. Rockhill, Inc., 205 Md. 226, 107 A.2d 93 (1954) and Western Maryland Railway Company v. Comptroller of the Treasury, Sales Tax No. 17, 1986 WL 9565 (Md. Tax Feb. 20, 1970) for the contention that the sales and use tax did not apply to the fees that Travelocity charged its customers because hotel owners and operators are the only entities that must pay the sales and use tax on sales of hotel rooms is unwarranted. Both of the cases on which Travelocity relies are at least five decades old, and both of them involved definitions of the term “sale at retail” that are no longer in effect. See Rockhill, 205 Md. at 228-29, 107 A.2d at 95; Western Maryland Railway, 1986 WL 9565, at *1. For example, Rockhill, 205 Md. at 228-29, 107 A.2d at 95, involved a definition of “sale at retail” that included, in pertinent part, “[t]he sale or charges for any room or rooms, lodgings, or accommodations furnished by any hotel[.]” By contrast, here, the applicable provision is the definition of “sale” in
Put simply, for the myriad of reasons discussed herein, the Maryland Tax Court was correct in concluding that Travelocity was a “vendor” under
For the above reasons, respectfully, I dissent.
Chief Judge Barbera and Judge McDonald have authorized me to state that they join in this opinion.
Notes
- Whether [Petitioner]‘s activities in Maryland during the periods covered by the assessment, March 1, 2003 through April 30, 2011 (the “Periods in Issue”) resulted in the provision of a “right to occupy a room or lodgings as transient guest,” within the meaning of Section 11-101(k)(1)(ii) of the Tax–General Article.
- Whether [Petitioner] was a “Vendor” during tax relevant periods, within the meaning of Section 11-101(o) of the Tax–General Article.
- Whether the Tax Court failed to give effect to Chapter 3, Act of 2015 which altered the definitions of “Tangible personal property” and “Vendor.”
- Whether the Tax Court erred in determining that the base for calculating the sales tax had to be reduced by the “Tax Recovery Charge.”
- Whether the Tax Court erred in deciding that Section 13-1102(b) did not apply to permit the Comptroller to assess sales taxes beyond the four year limitation period.
- Did the evidence in the record establish that [Petitioner] sold its customers the right to occupy a room or lodgings as a transient guest, a transaction subject to the sales-and-use tax under § 11-101(k)(1)(ii) of the Tax–General Article, when the customers reserved the room on [Petitioner]‘s website and paid [Petitioner] for the room reservations made on [Petitioner]‘s website?
- Did the evidence in the record establish that [Petitioner] rented to its customers, on a short-term basis, passenger cars or other vehicles, a transaction that is subject to the sales-and-use tax under § 11-101(k)(1)(i) of the Tax–General Article, when the customers paid [Petitioner] for the rental car reservations made on [Petitioner]‘s website?
- Did the Maryland Tax Court correctly conclude that because [Petitioner] sold tangible personal property located in Maryland, [Petitioner] was required to collect and remit sales-and-use tax as a vendor engaged in the business of a retail vendor or out-of-state vendor under § 11-701 of the Tax–General Article?
- Did the Maryland Tax Court err in holding that sales-and-use tax (continued . . .)
Senate Bill 190 (2015) amended
(A-1) “ACCOMMODATION” MEANS A RIGHT TO OCCUPY A ROOM OR LODGINGS AS A TRANSIENT GUEST.
(A-2) (1) “ACCOMMODATIONS INTERMEDIARY” MEANS A PERSON, OTHER THAN AN ACCOMMODATIONS PROVIDER, WHO FACILITATES THE SALE OR USE OF AN ACCOMMODATION AND CHARGES A BUYER THE TAXABLE PRICE FOR THE ACCOMMODATION.
(2) FOR PURPOSES OF THIS SUBSECTION, A PERSON SHALL BE CONSIDERED TO FACILITATE THE SALE OR USE OF AN ACCOMMODATION IF THE PERSON BROKERS, COORDINATES, OR IN ANY OTHER WAY ARRANGES FOR THE SALE OR USE OF AN ACCOMMODATION BY A BUYER.
(A-3) “ACCOMMODATIONS PROVIDER” MEANS A PERSON THAT OWNS, OPERATES, OR MANAGES AN ACCOMMODATION AND MAKES THE ACCOMMODATION AVAILABLE FOR SALE OR USE TO A BUYER.
Id. at 2910-11. On February 20, 2016, the amendments to
This case revolves around Travelocity’s business model during the relevant audit period. In January of 2015, Travelocity.com LP sold its assets and operatiоns to Expedia, Inc. and now operates as TVL LP, which does not run an online travel company. The Comptroller initiated an audit of Travelocity‘s Maryland sales and use tax returns for the eight-year period from March 1, 2003 through April 30, 2011. During that period,
I am aware that, in its opinion, the Maryland Tax Court stated:
The modified definition of “taxable price” “includes, for the sale or use of an accommodation facilitated by an accommodations intermediary, the full amount of the consideration paid by a buyer for the sale or use of an accommodation, but not including any tax that is remitted to a taxing authority.” The legislature claims that the purpose of the amendments to the definition of “taxable price” was for clarification in that some ambiguity existed in the statute prior to amendment. The inclusion of newly defined terms of a vendor in the statute is in fact more substantive than a mere clarification.
Travelocity.com, 2017 WL 11295796, at *3. With this statement, the Maryland Tax Court recognized the legislative intent of the 2016 amendment was to clarify the term “vendor” and to eliminate some ambiguity—undoubtedly, the ambiguity caused by Travelocity‘s claim. The circumstance that the Maryland Tax Court referred to the modified definition of the word “vendor” as more substantive than stated by the General Assembly does not change the legislative intent, which the Maryland Tax Court clearly recognized.
We recognize, as the dissent points out, that the preamble of Senate Bill 190 (2015) states that
[t]he clear intent of the State‘s existing sales and use tax law is to impose the tax on all consideration paid by transient guests in furtherance of the rental of sleeping accommodations; and [t]he purpose of this Act is to affirm that intent by clarifying the scope of certain terms used in the sales and use tax law, thereby facilitating the full and proper collection of the tax as originally intended[.]
However, the complete intention of the Bill, as indicated by the purpose and fiscal policy note, also includes “altering the definition of vendor . . . to include an accommodations intermediary” such as Travelocity. 2016 Md. Laws ch. 3 (H.B. 1065 & S.B. 190 (2015)) (emphasis added); S.B. 190 (2015) Fiscal and Policy Note at 1. See also Blackstone v. Sharma, 461 Md. 87, 122, 191 A.3d 1188, 1208 (2018) (citing the Fiscal and Policy Note for the Senate Bill as part of the legislative history analysis). Even according to the dissent, at the very least, this should not be considered one of the situations in which the legislative purpose is “overwhelmingly” clear, see McAlear v. McAlear, 298 Md. 320, 344, 469 A.2d 1256, 1268 (1984), and we would construe the ambiguity in favor of Travelocity as the taxpayer. Comptroller of the Treasury v. Citicorp Int‘l Commc‘ns, Inc., 389 Md. 156, 165, 884 A.2d 112, 117 (2005).
