Court Opinion

ID: 9610090
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 03:36:34.893149+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:26:42.620485
License: Public Domain

Justice KIRSHBAUM
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
In Investment Hotel Properties, Ltd. v. City of Colorado Springs, 781 P.2d 113 (Colo.App.1989), the Court of Appeals held that purchase of certain items of tangible personal property by respondent Investment Hotel Properties, Ltd. (Investment Ltd.) were wholesale purchases for taxable resale as defined by the Code of the City of Colorado Springs, as amended (the Code), and thus not subject to the imposition of use taxes by petitioners the City of Colorado Springs (the City) and the City Director of Finance (the Director). We granted petitioners’ request for certiorari review of the Court of Appeals judgment. We reverse.
I
The parties have stipulated to the following pertinent facts. In December of 1984, Investment Ltd. purchased the Clarion Hotel in Colorado Springs, Colorado, from Denver S.I. Company (Denver Co.). The purchase included the transfer of certain items of tangible personal property (hotel property) from Denver Co. to Investment Ltd. A portion of the hotel property was located and used exclusively in private guest rooms of the hotel.1 The rest of the hotel property was located and used in common areas of the hotel.2
On February 7, 1986, the City assessed a use tax against Investment Ltd. on the purchase price of the hotel property. After agreeing to pay the assessed tax by installments, Investment Ltd. filed a timely protest with the City Revenue Board and requested a hearing, pursuant to Code section 7-2-903:A (1968 rev. 1976).
At an informal hearing conducted by the City Controller on July 10, 1986, Investment Ltd. requested a refund of use taxes paid insofar as the taxes had been assessed on the purchase of certain items of hotel property used exclusively in the guest rooms of the hotel. It argued that the purchase was not subject to taxation because it was a wholesale purchase “for purposes of taxable resale” as described in Code section 7-2-442 (1968 rev. 1976). Alternatively, it argued that the purchase was exempt from the imposition of use taxes pursuant to the manufacturing exemption contained in Code section 7-2-421 (1968 rev. 1975). The Controller concluded that the rental of guest rooms did not qualify as a “resale” of the hotel property contained therein for purposes of the Code. The Controller also rejected Investment Ltd.’s argument that the purchase was exempt from taxation under the manufacturing exemption contained in the Code.3
In December of 1986, Investment Ltd. was granted a formal hearing by the City’s *377Director of Finance pursuant to Code section 7-2-903:H (1968 rev. 1976). On March 20, 1987, after reviewing the arguments and briefs, the Director affirmed the Controller’s ruling. Investment Ltd. then filed an action for judicial review in the El Paso County District Court, pursuant to Code section 7-2-904 (1968 rev. 1976), and C.R. C.P. 106(a)(4). On January 13, 1988, the district court affirmed the Director’s ruling.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed the district court’s judgment. Investment Hotel Properties, 781 P.2d 113. The court determined that Investment Ltd.’s rentals of guest rooms constituted resales of the hotel property contained therein and that the original purchase of that personal property was a wholesale purchase for taxable resale and not subject to retail sales taxes or use taxes. Id. at 115.
II
The City and the Director argue that the rental of a hotel room does not constitute a “resale” of the furnishings located therein for purposes of the Code. We agree.
The Code authorizes the imposition of retail sales taxes and use taxes on purchases of tangible personal property “purchased or sold at retail by every person exercising the taxable privilege ... by the sale, lease, rental, purchase, use, storage, distribution or consumption of” such property. Code § 7-2-201 (1968 rev. 1978).4 The Code defines the terms “purchase” and “sale” as follows:
PURCHASE or SALE: The acquisition for a price by any person of tangible personal property or taxable services which are purchased, sold, used, stored, distributed or consumed. A transaction shall be deemed to be a purchase or sale if the acquisition of tangible personal property or service was effected by:
A.The transfer, either conditionally or absolutely, of title or possession, or both, of the tangible personal property; or
B. A lease, rental or grant of a license to use (including royalty agreements), store, distribute or consume the tangible personal property; or
C. The right to continuous possession or use of tangible personal property is granted under a lease or contract.
Code § 7-2-104 (1968). A “retail sale” is defined as “[a]ny sale, purchase, lease, rental or grant of license to use tangible personal property, or taxable services within the City except a wholesale sale or purchase for taxable resale.” Code § 7-2-104 (1968 rev. 1981). A “wholesale sale” is defined as follows:
WHOLESALE SALE or WHOLESALE PURCHASE or SALES FOR TAXABLE RESALE: A sale by wholesalers or retailers to retail merchants, jobbers, dealers, vendors or other wholesalers for taxable resale. It does not include a sale by a wholesaler or retailer to users, consumers, purchasers or customers not for taxable resale, which sales shall be deemed retail sales and subject to the provisions of this Article.
Code § 7-2-104 (1968 rev. 1981). The Code also contains a separate exemption from use tax for “wholesale sales,” as follows:
WHOLESALE SALES: The sale by wholesalers or retailers to a licensed retailer, jobber, dealer or other wholesaler for purposes of taxable resale, and not for the retailer’s, jobber’s, dealer’s or wholesaler’s own, consumption, use, storage or distribution, shall be deemed to be wholesale sales and exempt from taxation.
Code § 7-2-442 (1968 rev. 1976). The Code does not define the terms “resale” or “taxable resale.”
Construing these provisions together, as we must, see Martinez v. Continental Enterprises, 730 P.2d 308 (Colo.1986), it is apparent that the Code authorizes the imposition of retail sales taxes and use taxes on a broad range of purchases of *378tangible personal property. Whether the taxable event involves sales, rentals, leases, or simply storage or use of property, the original purchase or sale of such property is subject to taxation unless exempted by specific Code provisions.
The Court of Appeals emphasized the fact that the Code’s definition of “purchase or sale” provides that lease or rental transactions involving tangible personal property shall be deemed “sales.” The Court of Appeals then concluded that each rental of a hotel room to guests constitutes a “sale,” that for purposes of the Code the acquisition of the room was for “resale” of the room, and that therefore no sales tax may be imposed on the purchase price of the hotel rooms. The Court of Appeals apparently expanded this rationale to conclude that the hotel property located in guest rooms was “sold” to each guest as part of every rental transaction, and was therefore purchased initially for resale.
This rationale cannot withstand an examination of the Code as a whole and ignores the realities of the relevant transactions. It is not every “sale” that may be exempt from the imposition of retail sales taxes or use taxes, but only a sale for resale. The question of what constitutes a “resale” is not answered by any definitional provision of the Code. Adoption of the broad definition of resale urged by Investment Ltd. and suggested by the Court of Appeals decision would substantially undermine the purpose of the Code to authorize the imposition of retail sales taxes or use taxes on most commercial transactions. We reject this proposed construction of the Code.
Although we have not previously construed the retail sales tax provisions of the Code, we recently construed substantially similar provisions contained in the Emergency Retail Sales Tax Act of 1935, codified at sections 39-26-101 to -211, 16B C.R.S. (1982), Regional Transportation District v. Martin Marietta Corp., 805 P.2d 1102 (Colo.1991), and the sales tax and use tax ordinance of the City and County of Denver, codified at sections 53-1 to 53-145 of the Denver, Colorado Revised Municipal Code (Denver Code). See A.B. Hirschfeld Press, Inc. v. City and County of Denver, 806 P.2d 917 (Colo.1991).
In Hirschfeld, we concluded that under the scheme and language of the Denver Code, a purchase is a purchase for resale, and therefore not a taxable purchase at retail, if the primary purpose of the transaction is the acquisition of tangible personal property for resale in an unaltered and basically unused condition. Relying to some degree on our prior discussions concerning the statutory definitions of wholesale sales and retail sales in earlier decisions of this court,5 we indicated that the factors to be considered in determining whether a particular transaction constitutes a purchase for resale include the nature of the purchaser’s contractual obligations, if any, to use, alter or consume the property to produce goods or perform services; the degree to which the items in question are essential to the purchaser’s performance of those obligations; the degree to which the purchaser controls the manner in which the items are used, altered or consumed prior to their transfer to third parties; and the degree to which the form, character or composition of the items when transferred to third parties differs from the form, character or composition of those items at the time they were initially purchased. Hirschfeld, at 921. In Regional Transportation District, we concluded that the same test applied to questions arising under the state retail sales and use tax statute. Regional Transp. Dist., at 1104-1105.
A taxpayer challenging an assessment of tax must prove the merits of the challenge by a preponderance of the evidence. Hirschfeld, at 920; Honeywell Info. Systems v. Board of Assessment Appeals, 654 *379P.2d 337 (Colo.App.1982); see Gerner v. Sullivan, 768 P.2d 701 (Colo.1989). Upon reviewing the record, we conclude that Investment Ltd. did not satisfy its burden of proof to establish that the purchase of the hotel property was a wholesale purchase for resale and therefore not subject to the imposition of a use tax. To the contrary, the record requires the conclusion that, pursuant to the test articulated in Hirsch-feld and in Regional Transportation District, Investment Ltd. purchased the hotel property primarily for its own use in the conduct of its business of providing furnished rooms to guests for rental fees.
Although Investment Ltd. did not enter into any specific contractual obligations to use the hotel property when it purchased the property, its subsequent conduct indicates that at the time of the purchase, it intended to enter into agreements with guests to furnish rooms to those guests and to use the hotel property in question to fulfill its contractual obligations to provide such accommodations. Investment Ltd.’s use of the hotel property in the guest rooms was essential to the performance of such contractual obligations. Investment Ltd. at no time transferred any incidents of ownership in the hotel property to any guests of the hotel, and it no doubt reserved the right to use, repair, replace and store some or all of such property as it, in its sole discretion, determined to be appropriate. For these reasons, we conclude that Investment Ltd. purchased the hotel property located exclusively in the guest rooms primarily for its own use.
As noted above, the Court of Appeals reasoned that because Investment Ltd. “resold” the guest room hotel property to its guests the purchase of such property was exempt from the imposition of retail sales or use taxes under the wholesale for taxable resale exemption to the Code. Code § 7-2-442 (1968 rev. 1976). We do not agree with this reasoning.
In Bedford v. Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp., 102 Colo. 538, 81 P.2d 752 (1938), we noted that the terms “wholesale” and “retail” sale, as contained in the then applicable provisions of the Emergency Retail Sales Tax Act of 1935, differed from the “ordinarily accepted general conception” of those terms. Id., 102 Colo. at 543, 81 P.2d at 754. In Hirschfeld, we held a purchaser’s transfer of title to tangible personal property to a third party does not establish that the property was initially “purchased for resale” within the meaning of the wholesale for resale exemption from the imposition of use tax. Hirschfeld, at 920; Regional Transp. Dist., at 1105; Carpenter v. Carman Distrib. Co., 111 Colo. 566, 144 P.2d 770 (1943); Craftsman Painters & Decorators v. Carpenter, 111 Colo. 1, 137 P.2d 414 (1942). A purchaser’s use of property, not the purchaser’s transfer of title thereto, is the pertinent inquiry for determination of the primary purpose for which the property was acquired. Hirschfeld, at 920-921; Regional Transp. Dist., at 1105. See Howard Elec. and Mech. v. Department of Revenue, 771 P.2d 475, 477 (Colo.1989); Tri-State Generation & Transmission Ass’n, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 636 P.2d 1335, 1337 (Colo.App.1981). Other courts have adopted this mode of analysis to resolve cases arising under various taxing schemes. See Atlanta Americana Motor Hotel Corp. v. Undercofler, 222 Ga. 295, 149 S.E.2d 691 (1966); Hotels Statler Co. v. District of Columbia, 199 F.2d 172 (D.C.Cir.1952); Theo. B. Robertson Products Co. v. Nudelman, 389 Ill. 281, 59 N.E.2d 655 (1945); Kentucky Bd. of Tax Appeals v. Brown Hotel Co., 528 S.W.2d 715 (Ky.1975).
In the present case, Investment Ltd. used the hotel property located in guest rooms subsequent to its purchase thereof. Although it periodically rented the property to its guests, and such rental may satisfy the Code’s definition of “purchase or sale,” we conclude that the primary purpose of the acquisition of the property was for Investment Ltd.’s use thereof in fulfilling its contractual obligations to its guests.
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Investment Ltd.’s purchase of the hotel property located in the hotel’s guest rooms was not a purchase primarily for taxable resale and therefore was subject to *380the imposition of use taxes under the Code, as the Controller and the district court concluded.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
ERICKSON, J., dissents.

. The parties' stipulation reflects that this property included: furniture and fixtures, televisions, carpets, drapes and operating stock. The stipulation does not contain a definition of "operating stock.”

. The parties’ stipulation reflects that this property was located in the lobby, kitchen, restaurant and other common areas of the hotel, and included: furniture and fixtures, machinery and equipment, transportation equipment, carpets and drapes, and operating stock. The stipulation does not contain definitions of "operating stock” or "machinery and equipment.”

.The Court of Appeals also concluded that the purchase was not exempt from taxation pursuant to the manufactured product exemption contained in Code § 7-2-421 (1968 rev. 1975). Investment Ltd. has not sought certiorari review of this conclusion.

. The Code also authorizes the imposition of a separate tax on retail charges received by hotels for transactions "of furnishing rooms or other accommodations.” Code § 7-2-311 (1968 rev. 1976).

. See, e.g., Howard Elec. and Mech. v. Department of Revenue, 771 P.2d 475 (Colo.1989); C.F. & I. Steel Corp. v. Charnes, 637 P.2d 324 (Colo.1981); International Business Machs. Corp. v. Charnes, 198 Colo. 374, 601 P.2d 622 (1979); Carpenter v. Carman Distrib. Co., 111 Colo. 566, 144 P.2d 770 (1943); Craftsman Painters & Decorators v. Carpenter, 111 Colo. 1, 137 P.2d 414 (1942); Bedford v. Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp., 102 Colo. 538, 81 P.2d 752 (1938).