Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 12, § 10-5.070
PURPOSE: This rule indicates that delivery from outside Missouri does not remove the seller’s liability for city sales tax and interprets and applies section 94.540.5., RSMo (1986).
(1) When a Missouri seller makes a taxable sale to a Missouri purchaser and the property is to be delivered from a point outside Missouri to a point either within or beyond the limits of a taxing city, the sale is subject to the city sales tax.
vendor located outside Missouri without an office in the state of Missouri. Mr. Dudly calls on Mr. LeBeau at Mr. LeBeau’s place of business. Mr. Dudly takes the order for merchandise and returns to his out-of-state location from which the merchandise is then shipped to Mr. LeBeau’s place of business. The Kam Company is not subject to Sun City’s sales tax on the merchandise sold to Mr. LeBeau because the Kam Company has no place of business within Sun City.
AUTHORITY: section 94.530, RSMo 1986. C.S.T. regulation 540-6 originally filed Oct. 28, 1975, effective Nov. 7, 1975. Refiled Dec. 31, 1975, effective Jan. 10, 1976. Amended: Filed Sept. 7, 1984, effective Jan. 12, 1985. Fabick and Co. v. Schaffner, 492 SW2d 737 (1973). Jurisdictional arguments based upon lack of reciprocal benefit under city tax law are unavailing because the retailer is within the city imposing the tax and is the recipient of governmental services provided by the city. The contention that only a rebuttable presumption was intended by the phrase “shall be deemed to be consummated at the place of business of the retailer” was rejected. The obvious purpose of the premium was to fix the taxable situs of transactions which might have a nexus with more than one municipality. City sales tax of Jefferson City, like the state sales tax, is a gross receipts tax, not a transactions tax. See also, Mobil-Teria Catering Co., Inc. v. Spradling, 576 SW2d 282 (Mo. en banc 1978). For purposes of public mass transportation tax and transportation sales, “place of business” of mobil food service business referred to place where trucks were parked, wares displayed, initial orders taken and filed, payments made and sales consummated. Thus, the public mass transportation tax or transportation sales tax could not be imposed by municipal corporation on gross receipts from places of business outside the geographical limits of the city of municipality. Due to similarity with rule, see also section 94.540.5, RSMo.