v.
US Sugar Corp.
[*597] Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., and Cecil L. Davis, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, for Dept. of Revenue and Dept. of Banking and Finance.
K. Lawrence Gragg of Mershon, Sawyer, Johnston, Dunwody & Cole, Miami, for U.S. Sugar Corp.
SHAW, Judge.
The taxpayer, United States Sugar Corporation, has a division which raises and sells cattle to buyers throughout the United States. All cattle are sold f.o.b. Clewiston, Florida, the location of the corporation's ranch, purchaser providing transportation from Clewiston to the point of final destination.
Based upon the taxpayer's interpretation of § 214.71(3)(a), Florida Statutes (1977), which reads in pertinent part as follows, a refund was sought:
Sales of tangible personal property are in this state if the property is delivered or shipped to a purchaser within this state, regardless of the f.o.b. point or other conditions of the sale.
The Department of Revenue denied the claim and the taxpayer filed a petition for formal proceedings under § 120.57(1), Florida Statutes, challenging the Department's position. Subsequent to the filing of the petition it was brought to the Department's attention that the cattle had been shipped by private contract carriers. In refusing a refund the Department advised the taxpayer that:
It was determined that cattle were shipped via commercial carrier. Further, it was ascertained that these carriers were "contract carriers" and not "common carriers". Because the purchaser could redirect shipment of cattle by contract carrier (independent cattle haulers and chartered aircraft), the sales are deemed to have been made in Florida at the point where carrier took possession of cattle. The contract carrier, under the described circumstances, is acting as purchaser's agent. In the capacity of special agent for purchaser, the carrier accepted delivery of the cattle in Florida. (Tax Audit Statement)
Following this position statement U.S. Sugar filed a petition for formal proceedings to determine the validity of a rule pursuant to § 120.56, Florida Statutes, asserting that the Department's policy, as set forth in the tax audit statement, constituted a rule not properly promulgated. The petitions were consolidated, and the hearing officer entered an order in the § 120.56 proceeding and a recommended order in the § 120.57(1) proceeding.
In the recommended order the hearing officer found that had the cattle been picked up by a common carrier for shipment outside of Florida the Department would have held that the sales were out-of-state, but because the cattle were picked up by contract carrier the Department classified them as in-state and directed its auditors to so conclude on all audits. The Department rejected the recommended order and submitted a proposed substitute order which was adopted as the final order.
In light of testimony by Department personnel that the only reason the cattle sales in issue were treated as in-state sales was because they were shipped by contract carrier, it is difficult to accept the Department's argument that its policy of classifying sales on the basis of the type of carrier utilized is not a policy of general applicability. Section 214.71(3)(a), Florida Statutes, makes no distinction between common carrier [*598] and contract carrier. The Department, by making such a distinction, has placed upon the statute an interpretation that is not readily apparent from a reading of the statute, but impacts upon the taxpayer with the consistent effect of law. We agree with the hearing officer's conclusion that the statement is one of general applicability that implements, interprets or prescribes law, policy, procedure or practice requirements of the agency and falls squarely within the definition of a rule as defined by § 120.52(14), Florida Statutes (1977). State, Dept. of Com., Etc. v. Matthews Corp., 358 So.2d 256 (Fla. 1st DCA 1978); State, Dept. of Admin., Etc., Person. v. Harvey, 356 So.2d 323 (Fla. 1st DCA 1978); State, Dept. of Administration v. Stevens, 344 So.2d 290 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977). See also Fraser v. Lewis, 360 So.2d 1116 (Fla. 1st DCA 1978) and McDonald v. Dept. of Banking and Finance, 346 So.2d 569 (Fla. 1st DCA 1977).
Affirm MM-389.
Reverse NN-467.
SHIVERS, J., concurs.
ERVIN, J., specially concurring, with opinion.
ERVIN, Judge., specially concurring.
I agree with the conclusions expressed by the majority in these consolidated appeals, but because of the posture of the record,[1] I think it unnecessary to reach the issue presented in the appeal from the order declaring the agency's action an invalid rule because not regularly adopted. When as here the policy reasons supporting agency action are crystallized through adjudication,[2] I see no necessity to classify the action taken as either rule or order. The thrust of our inquiry should be directed simply to whether the final agency order, recognizable under Section 120.59, sufficiently explained the action taken, and, if it did so, whether it was "within the agency's exercise of delegated discretion." Section 120.68(7). If we find the action met the above conditions, then we should sustain it even though the agency's statement may have all the characteristics of Section 120.52(14)'s definition of rule. If on the other hand the action complied with neither condition, we should for that reason only reject it.
The department's justification for treating the sales as "in this state" under Section 214.71(3), was that if the corporation sells goods to an out-of-state buyer, and the goods are transported by the seller to the buyer, either by common carrier, contract carrier, or the seller's vehicles, it does not consider such sales as occurring in Florida because delivery between the seller and buyer did not occur until the goods were in interstate commerce. If, however, goods are picked up in Florida by the buyer's own trucks, or by private contract carriers hired by the buyer, the department considers the sales occur in Florida and are therefore includable within the numerator of the Florida sales factor, Section 214.71(3), because "delivery between the seller and buyer took place before the goods were shipped in interstate commerce and were shipped out of Florida."[3] Additionally, it views delivery to the buyer's agents under such circumstances as delivery to the buyer in this state.
[*599] The department's interpretation of Section 214.71(3)(a) is supported by both the Uniform Commercial Code relating to sales transactions[4] and the Florida Revenue Act of 1949.[5] And its policy reasons were fully explained in its final order, but its interpretation of Section 214.71(3)(a)1 conflicts with the unambiguous legislative intent that the disputed sales, occurring in the manner described, are taxable only by the state where the goods are shipped.
Florida's income tax code is partially derived from the Uniform Division for Income Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA). Specifically, Section 16 of UDITPA provides:
Sales of tangible personal property are in this state if:
(a) the property is delivered or shipped to a purchaser, other than the United States Government, within this state regardless of the f.o.b. point or other conditions of the sale; or
(b) the property is shipped from an office, store, warehouse, factory or other place of storage in this state and (1) the purchaser is the United States government or (2) the taxpayer is not taxable in the state of the purchaser.
During the formulation of the Uniform Act, approved by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1957, three factors were considered necessary to determine each state's apportionment formula: property, payroll and sales. Lynn, The Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act, 19 Ohio St.L.J. 41, 47 (1958). The question of how to assign sales of tangible personal property was the most controversial item before the conference. Id. at 49. It considered four different tests: (1) the sales destination test, attributing sales receipts to the state in which the goods are shipped or delivered to the customer; (2) the sales origin test, attributing sales receipts to the state of the factory, warehouse, or office from which the goods are shipped; (3) the sales office negotiation test, attributing such receipts to the state where the sale was principally negotiated, and (4) the sales activity test, attributing them to the state where the sales employees principally conduct their selling activities. J. Hellerstein and W. Hellerstein, State and Local Taxation: Cases and Materials 459 (4th ed. 1978).
The draftsmen's adoption of the destination test, reflected in Section 16(a), UDITPA, sought to give recognition to the consumer state's contribution to the production of the corporation's income. Pierce, The Uniform Division of Income for State Tax Purposes, 35 Taxes 747, 780 (1957). While recognizing that the origin test was the preferred choice of the manufacturing states, the "conference was of the opinion that [the adoption of such test] would merely duplicate the property and payroll factors which emphasize the activity of the manufacturing states, so that there would tend to be a duplication by such a sales factor." Pierce, supra at 780. Finally, other commentators commend the attribution of sales to the state of destination over all other tests, including the test dependent on where title passes, the latter criticized as dependent "wholly upon legal conclusions based upon construction of contracts, terms of waybills, customs in the business, evidence as to the intention of the parties, and other considerations having little or no relation to the problem of determining where income is earned... ." Keesling and [*600] Warren, California's Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act, 15 UCLA L.Rev. 655, 670 (1968).
It clearly appears that the intention of the draftsmen of the Uniform Act was that sales of tangible personal property should be taxed only in the state of destination unless the buyer is the United States government or the taxpayer is not taxable in the state of the purchaser. Lynn, Formula Apportionment of Corporation Income for State Tax Purposes: Natura Non Facit Saltum, 18 Ohio St.L.J. 84, 98 (1957). In the latter case, such sales are assigned, or thrown back, to the state from which the goods are shipped. Id..
The intent of the Florida legislature closely parallels that of the draftsmen of UDITPA, and it goes even further than its prototype since it presently contains none of the throwback provisions of subsection (b). As originally enacted, Section 214.71(3) was almost identical to Section 16. See Ch. 71-359, Part IV, Laws of Florida. However, in response to the recommendation of the Special Tax Counsel to the Florida House of Representatives that the act be amended,[6] the legislature deleted the act's throwback provisions. See Section 2, Chapter 71-980, effective January 1, 1972. As amended, Section 214.71(3)(a)1 reflects the adoption of "a pure `destination test for determining the source of sales, ... ." England, Corporate Income Taxation in Florida: Background, Scope and Analyses, 14-15 (special publication of the Florida State L.Rev., 1972).
The department's interpretation of the statute was clearly at variance with the legislative intent that sales of tangible personal property shipped from the state of origin be included only within the sales factor numerator of the state of destination. If that state does not tax,[7] or lacks jurisdiction to tax,[8] or is otherwise prohibited by law to tax,[9] such sales are apparently not taxable anywhere.[10]
[*601] Because the department's policy was not within its exercise of delegated discretion, I agree with the majority that the agency action must be set aside.