Lead Opinion
[¶ 1] In this сase, we must decide whether an aircraft was exempt from Maine’s use tax when it was purchased and delivered outside of Maine and was never registered in Maine but was present in the state on 156 days during its first twelve months of use. We considered a similar question in Blue Yonder, LLC v. State Tax Assessor,
[¶ 3] The Assessor cross-appeals from the court’s decision vacating the Assessor’s
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 4] The parties do not dispute that Victor Bravo is a limited liability company organized in Connecticut in 2002. Between November 20, 2002, and January 5, 2005, Victor Bravo had two members, E. Brian Cleary and his wifе, Vicki Cleary. On January 5, 2005, the structure of ownership changed, and the sole member of Victor Bravo was Cleary Benefits Group, Inc., the Clearys’ primary business. The Clearys also formed an LLC in Maine called Saddle Ridge Holdings, LLC, in May 2004 and were its sole members through April 2008. During 2005 and 2006, E. Brian Cleary was also the half-owner of Danbury Powersports, Inc., a Connecticut corporation.
[¶ 5] In December 2004, Victоr Bravo contracted to purchase an aircraft from Columbia Aircraft Sales in Connecticut. The aircraft was constructed in France and flown to the United States in May 2005 with stops in Maine along its way to Connecticut, where Victor Bravo took possession of the aircraft. The aircraft was used both in Maine and in other states, including Connecticut, during the first twelve months that Victor Bravo owned it. According to a stipulation of the parties, the aircraft made thirty-seven trips to Maine, was present in the state on 156 days during that time period, and was in Maine overnight on at least 121 occasions. The aircraft was in Maine for the entire day on eighty-nine days during the first twelve months that Victor Bravo owned it.
[¶ 6] Victor Bravo never registered the aircraft in Maine. On oсcasion, however, the aircraft was placed in a hangar in Maine that Victor Bravo owned for storage of another aircraft that it owned. Victor Bravo had paid a use tax for the other aircraft in Maine, but it did not pay sales or use tax in any jurisdiction on the aircraft at issue here.
[¶ 7] Although the parties agree on these basic facts, they dispute whether making thе above-listed trips constituted “use” in Maine by Victor Bravo or whether the trips instead constituted “use” by Saddle Ridge, Cleary Benefits, or Danbury Powersports, which rented the aircraft from Victor Bravo to make those trips. Saddle Ridge, Cleary Benefits, and Dan-bury Powersports entered into written rental agreements with Victor Bravo and compensated Victor Bravo when they leased the aircraft.
[¶ 8] On or about February 2, 2007, Victor Bravo was assessed with Maine use tax on the aircraft of $120,850, plus interest of $20,397.12 and penalties and costs of $36,255. Maine Revenue Services asserted that Victor Bravo owed $177,502.12. Upon reconsideration, the Assessor upheld the assessment of the tax. Victor Bravo appealed and sought a de novo determination from the Superior Court. See 36 M.R.S. § 151 (2010); M.R. Civ. P. 80C. Upon cross-motions for summary judgment, see M.R. Civ. P. 56, the court entered a summary judgment for the Assessor on the assessment of the tax and interest but for Victor Bravo on the issue of penalty waiver or abatement.
II. DISCUSSION
[¶ 9] As we observed in Blue Yonder, LLC,
[¶ 10] We review the decision of the court in this matter because the сourt was required by statute to determine questions of law and fact raised in an appeal from the Assessor’s decision de novo. See 36 M.R.S. § 151; see Blue Yonder, LLC,
[¶ 11] Guided by the principles established in Blue Yonder, LLC,
A. Use of the Aircraft in Maine
[¶ 12] Before addressing any of the asserted exemptions, we must determine whether Victor Bravo was using the aircraft during that twelve-month period. By statute, the term “use” was defined as follows:
“Use” includes the exercise in this State of any right or power over tangible personal property incident to its ownership, including the derivation of income, whether received in money or in the form of other benefits, by a lessor from the rental of tangible personal property located in this State.
36 M.R.S. § 1752(21) (emphasis added). The statute plainly included the lease of property for consideration as a form of use by the lessor, Victor Bravo. The remaining question is whether the aircraft was “located in this State.”
[¶ 13] We hаve interpreted the phrase “located in this State” to mean “coming to rest in the State after importation and ... becoming part of the common mass of property within the State.” Realco Servs., Inc. v. Halperin,
B. Exemptions from Sales Tax for Certain Purchases in Maine
[¶ 15] Subsection (23 — C) exempted from use taxation any sale or lease of an aircraft to a nonresident if the aircraft was “intended to be driven or transported outside the State immediately upon delivery.” 36 M.R.S. § 1760(23-0. If the aircraft was “registered for use in the State within 12 months of the date of purchase,” however, “the person seeking registration [would be] liable for use tax on the basis of the original purchase price.” Id.
[¶ 16] For the reasons set forth in Blue Yonder, LLC,
C. Exemption for Certain Property Purchased Outside of Maine
[¶ 17] At the relevant time, as it pertains to this case, the following statutory exemption applied to certain property purchased outside of Maine:
Subject to the. provisions of section 1760-C, no tax on sales, storage or use may be collected upon or in connection with:
45. Certain property purchased outside State. Sales of property purchased and used by the present owner outside the State:
B. For more than 12 months.... Property, other than automobiles, watercraft, snowmobiles and all-terrain vehicles, that is required to be registered for use in this State does not qualify for this exemption unless it was registered by its present owner outside this State more than 12 months prior to its registration in this State. If property required to be registered for use in this State was not required to be registered for use outside this State, the owner must be able to document actual use of the property outside this State for more than 12 months prior to its registration in this State.3 *1243 For purposes of this subsection, “use” does not include storage but means actual use of the property for a purpose consistent with its design.
36 M.R.S. § 1760 (2005).
[¶ 18] We interpreted a prior version of subsection (45) to exempt from use taxation an aircraft that was used extensively outside of Maine for the first twelve months and was used in Maine only on approximately twenty-one days during that time. Blue Yonder, LLC,
[¶ 19] Accordingly, we examine the extent of the aircraft’s use inside and outside of Maine to determine whether Victor Bravo’s use of the aircraft outside of Maine was sufficiently substantial for the exemption to apply. See Blue Yonder, LLC,
[¶ 20] The aircraft made thirty-seven trips to Maine and was present in the state on 156 days during the first year after purchase. Thus, the aircraft was present in Maine during approximately forty-three percent of Victor Bravo’s first year of ownership. The aircraft was in Maine overnight on 121 occasions, and it was in Maine for the entire day on eighty-nine days. The aircraft was sometimеs placed in a hangar that was owned by Victor Bravo. The aircraft operated in various other states, including Connecticut, where Victor Bravo was organized, when it was not in Maine.
[¶ 21] This aircraft was not used so substantially outside of Maine during the first twelve months after purchase as to negate the imposition of a use tax. See 36 M.R.S. § 1760(45)(B); Blue Yonder, LLC,
[¶ 22] In these circumstances, applying a reasonable interpretation of the statute, we hold that the aircraft was not used so substantially outside of Maine during the first twelve months of ownership that it would be unjust to impose a use tax in Maine. See id. § 1760(45)(B); Blue Yonder, LLC,
D. Penalties
[¶ 23] The Assessor also challenges the court’s decision to waive оr abate Victor Bravo’s penalty. The pertinent statute requires the waiver or abatement of a penalty imposed for failure to pay taxes when due if the taxpayer meets its burden of showing reasonable cause. See 36 M.R.S. § 187-B(7); John Swenson Granite, Inc.,
[¶ 24] The court was directed by statute to determine de novo whether penalties must be waived, see 36 M.R.S. §§ 151, 187-B(7), and we review the court’s decision, see Linnehan Leasing v. State Tax Assessor,
[¶ 25] In support of its claim for waiver or abatement, Victor Bravo offered evidence that the Assessor’s own publications improperly indicated, “The same exemptions that apply to sales tax apply to use tax.” Given the undisputed lаnguage of these publications and the statutory ambiguities identified in Blue Yonder and in the present case, we agree with the Superior Court that Victor Bravo provided “substantial authority” for its failure to pay the use tax, notwithstanding that it was ultimately in error. Because we agree with the Superior Court’s conclusion, we affirm the Superior Court’s abatement of penalties.
E. Interest
[¶ 26] “If the failure to pay a tax when required is explained to the satisfaction of the assessor, the assessor may abate or waive the payment of all or any part of that interest.” 36 M.R.S. § 186. Here, the Assessor declined to abate or waive the interest on Victor Bravo’s aircraft, and the Superior Court affirmed the Assessor’s exercise of discretion. By statute, however, the Superior Court was required to determine the merits of the case de novo rather than undertaking traditional appellate review of agency action. See 36 M.R.S. § 151; Stewart Title Guar. Co.,
The entry is:
Judgment on interest vacated and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. In all other aspects, judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Section 1760 provided the three exemрtions addressed by the parties here:
Subject to the provisions of section 1760-C, no tax on sales, storage or use may be collected upon or in connection with:
23-C. Certain vehicles purchased or leased by nonresidents. Sales or leases of the following vehicles to a nonresident if the vehicle is intended to be driven or transported outside the State immediately upon delivery:
A. Motor vehicles, except automоbiles rented for a period of less than one year, all-terrain vehicles and snowmobiles as defined in Title 12, section 13001;
B. Semitrailers;
C. Aircraft:
D. Truck bodies and trailers manufactured in the State; and
E. Camper trailers, including truck campers.
If the vehicles are registered for use in the State within 12 months of the date of purchase, the person seeking registration is liable for use tax on the basis of the original purchase price.
Notwithstanding section 1752-A, for purposes of this subsection, the term "nonresident” may include an individual, an association, a society, a club, a general partnership, a limited partnership, a domestic or foreign limited liability company, a trust, an estate, a domestic or foreign corporation and any other legal entity.
45. Certain property purchased outside State. Sales of property purchased and used by the present owner outside the State:
A. If the property is an automobile, as defined in Title 29-A, section 101, subsection 7, and if the owner was, at the time of purchase, a resident of the other state and either employed or registered to vote there;
A-l. If the property is a watercraft that is registered outside the State by an owner who at the time of purchase was a resident of another state and the watercraft is present in the State not more than 30 days during the 12 months following its purchase for a purpose other than temporary storage;
A-2. If the property is a snowmobile or all-terrain vehicle as defined in Title 12, section 13001 and the purchaser is not a resident of the State; or
B. For more than 12 months in all other cases.
Property, other than automobiles, watercraft, snowmobiles and all-terrain vehicles, that is required to be registered for usе in this State does not qualify for this exemption unless it was registered by its present owner outside this State more than 12 months prior to its registration in this State. If property required to be registered for use in this State was not required to be registered for use outside this State, the owner must be able to document actual use of the property outside this State for more than 12 months prior to its registration in this State. For purposes of this subsection, "use” does not include storage but means actual use of the property for a purpose consistent with its design.
82. Sales of property delivered outside this State. Sales of tangible personal property when the seller delivers the property to a location outside this State or to the United States Postal Service, a common carrier or a contract carrier hired by the seller for delivery to a location outside this State, regardless of whether the property is purchased F.O.B. shipping point or other point in this State and regardless of whether passage of title occurs in this State.
36 M.R.S. § 1760 (2005) (emphasis added).
. The version of 36 M.R.S. § 1760(23-C) in effect when Victor Bravo purchased the aircraft was substantially the same as the 2002 version of subsection (23 — C) construed in Blue Yonder. See 36 M.R.S.A. § 1760(23-C) (Supp.2002); Blue Yonder, LLC v. State Tax Assessor,
. It is not clear from the summary judgment record whether the aircraft at issue was registered in any other state.
Concurrence Opinion
[¶ 27] For the reasons expressed in my separate opinion in Blue Yonder, LLC v. State Tax Assessor,
