Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep't of Revenue ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                                                                This opinion was flied for record
    ``5
    o        ar   t
    Supreme Court Clerk
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STEVEN KLEIN, INC.~ dba KLEIN                   )
    HONDA,                                          )                 No. 91072-3
    )
    Petitioner,                 )
    )
    v.                                        )                   EnBanc
    )
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                            )
    DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,                          )
    )      Filed        AUG 2 7 2015
    Respondent.                 )
    )
    OWENS, J. -       Klein Honda is a Honda dealership. It purchases vehicles from
    Honda at wholesale and sells them at retail. From time to time, Honda offers a
    "dealer cash" incentive program for its dealerships. Under that program, dealerships
    can earn dealer cash (i.e., a specific amount of extra money) if they sell specific
    Honda models during specific times and comply with other terms and conditions.
    This case requires us to determine whether Klein Honda's dealer cash earnings
    are taxable. We hold that they are. The catchall business and occupation (B&O) tax
    provision applies to other or additional business activities that do not constitute retail
    sales. By participating in the dealer cash program, Klein Honda received additional,
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    separate income beyond its ordinary retail sales. That constitutes an additional
    taxable business activity under the catchall provision. Although dealer cash would
    not be taxable under one of the Washington State Department of Revenue's
    (Department) regulations if it represented a "bona fide discount" on Klein Honda's
    wholesale purchase ofvehicles, former WAC 458-20-108(1), (5) (1987), dealer cash
    is not a bona fide discount because Klein Honda does not purchase vehicles from
    Honda subject to a dealer cash discount. Dealer cash payments are not necessarily
    quantified or even knowable at the time that Klein Honda purchases vehicles from
    Honda. Thus, Klein Honda's dealer cash is taxable.
    FACTS
    Klein Honda is a Honda franchisee car dealership in Everett, Washington.
    Klein Honda's business relationship with Honda is governed by a "Sales and Service
    Agreement" between them. Admin. Record (AR) at 20, 309. Under that agreement,
    Klein Honda purchases cars from Honda at wholesale and then sells those cars to
    customers at retail.
    Klein Honda has "little discretion over [its] inventory." !d. at 20. "Honda
    sends [Klein Honda] a presumptive order," and Klein Honda "may remove vehicles
    from the order, but it cannot add them." !d. Once Honda ships vehicles to Klein
    Honda, it issues an invoice to Klein Honda for each vehicle.
    2
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    "The invoice states a price, and [Klein Honda] remits that amount to Honda."
    
    Id. A typical
    invoice also states, '"Dealer's invoice may not reflect dealer's ultimate
    vehicle cost given any rebates, allowances, collections, discounts, holdback,
    incentives, etc."' Id.; see, e.g., 
    id. at 765.
    A "holdback," for example, is a credit that
    Honda issues to Klein Honda the month following Klein Honda's wholesale purchase
    of a vehicle. Honda provides this holdback credit, along with other similar credits,
    regardless of whether Klein Honda sells the vehicle-they are an adjustment to Klein
    Honda's purchase price of the vehicle. "The ... credits are quantified at or about the
    time the vehicle is purchased by the dealership and delivered by the manufacturer."
    
    Id. at 20.
    Some of the credits that Honda provides are specifically listed on each
    vehicle's invoice. "The Department recognizes that [those] credits reduce the dealer's
    purchase price for the vehicle." 
    Id. All payments
    from Klein Honda to Honda for
    new vehicles and all credits from Honda to Klein Honda are reflected in a monthly
    balance forward statement.
    From time to time, Honda also offers dealer cash incentive programs to
    dealerships. The dealer cash incentive program is designed to stimulate sales of
    specific Honda models during specific periods of time to compete with rival car
    manufacturers. As the general manager of Klein Honda testified,
    Dealer cash is a means by which American Honda kind of puts more
    momentum behind a particular vehicle line or model. And when I say
    that, I mean that what they do is they adjust the vehicle's presence in the
    marketplace, usually as a reaction to competitive action, which typically
    3
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    would be rebates, consumer rebates, and allowing the Honda dealers to
    remain in a competitive position on that particular model.
    Verbatim Tr. of Proceedings (VTP) at 50. When Honda decides to offer a dealer cash
    incentive program, it sends a marketing bulletin to dealerships informing them what
    they need to do to earn dealer cash. For example, on October 3, 2006, Honda sent out
    a marketing bulletin for dealer cash on the 2006 Honda Pilot, informing dealerships
    that they could receive "$2,500 Dealer Cash on eligible 2006 Pilot models" by selling
    the cars between October 3 and October 31, 2006, provided the dealerships complied
    with detailed rules, terms, and conditions. AR at 754. Among other terms and
    conditions, dealerships could not sell the car to an entity that would resell the vehicle
    and they were required to perform a self-audit at the end of every dealer cash program
    and verify by "signed affidavit" that they met the eligibility requirements. !d. at 757.
    Klein Honda's general manager characterized Honda's dealer cash incentive
    program as a "conditional offer," and he agreed it was conditional "because you don't
    get the dealer cash unless you sell a particular vehicle model during a particular time."
    VTP at 62. Klein Honda's owner, Steven Klein, also recognized the detailed and
    conditional nature of the offer, saying that "this is our contract with the factory to get
    our money, and if we don't do everything to the letter of these bulletins they can say,
    we're not .going to give you the dealer cash." AR at 100. If Klein Honda meets all
    the requirements of Honda's dealer cash offer, Honda issues a credit in the monthly
    balance forward statement, and Honda also sends a separate "miscellaneous billing
    4
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    invoice" detailing how much dealer cash Klein Honda earned for a time period. 
    Id. at 779
    (formatting omitted). "Klein Honda does not account for dealer cash in its
    accounting records as a reduction in the cost of goods sold." 
    Id. at 26.
    Klein Honda earned $1,037,450 in dealer cash from Honda during the audit
    period of January 1, 2003 to December 31, 2006. The Department assessed Klein
    Honda $16,963 in B&O taxes under the catchall "Service and Other Activities" B&O
    tax category. 
    Id. at 795.
    Klein Honda paid the assessment but petitioned the
    Department's appeals division for a refund. The appeals division ultimately upheld
    the assessment.
    Klein Honda appealed to the Board of Tax Appeals (Board), and the Board
    affirmed the Department's assessment. In its conclusions of law, the Board stated that
    a "taxpayer engaged in any business activity not specifically set forth in [the
    provisions regarding specific taxable business activities] shall be taxed at the rate of
    1.5 percent." 
    Id. at 26.
    The Board concluded that the dealer cash credits were taxable
    as business revenue.
    Klein Honda appealed to the Thurston County Superior Court. The superior
    court affirmed, concluding "that the Board's Decision affirming the Department's
    treatment of dealer cash as part of Klein Honda's taxable 'gross income of the
    business' was not an error of law." Clerk's Papers at 84.
    5
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    Klein Honda appealed again, and the Court of Appeals affirmed with two
    separate holdings. Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't ofRevenue, 
    184 Wash. App. 344
    , 3 53-54,
    356, 
    336 P.3d 663
    (2014). First, it held that Klein Honda's participation in the dealer
    cash program was a separate business activity subject to the catchall B&O provision.
    
    Id. at 353-54.
    The court reasoned that "[t]he business activity was accepting the offer
    of American Honda to apply for dealer cash, selling specific models during specific
    times, documenting those sales as required by the manufacturer, applying to the
    manufacturer for the dealer cash, and accepting the payment." 
    Id. at 353.
    However,
    in its analysis, the court included language that-when taken out of context-appears
    to blend the concept of "business activities" with the definition of "gross income of
    the business," such that one could conclude the court held that the B&O tax applies to
    gross income instead of business activities. See 
    id. at 352.
    As discussed further
    below, the petitioners seize on that language to challenge the Court of Appeals'
    decision.
    For the court's second holding, it recognized that if Klein Honda's dealer cash
    represented "an adjustment or bona fide discount to the wholesale purchase price of
    the vehicles," it would not be taxable under one of the Department's regulations. 
    Id. at 354.
    The court held, however, that Klein Honda's dealer cash was not a bona fide
    discount because Klein Honda did not originally purchase the relevant vehicles from
    Honda subject to dealer cash discounts. 
    Id. at 355.
    The court reasoned that "dealer
    6
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    cash payments are not automatic upon Klein Honda's vehicle purchases from ...
    Honda. Rather, dealer cash applies to eligible vehicles already in Klein Honda's
    inventory and is contingent upon Klein Honda selling those vehicles during a
    specified time period." 
    Id. We granted
    discretionary review. Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't ofRevenue, 
    182 Wash. 2d 1020
    , 
    345 P.3d 784
    (2015).
    ISSUE
    Is Klein Honda's dealer cash subject to the B&O tax?
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When the Board renders decisions pursuant to a formal hearing, we review
    those decisions under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), chapter 34.05 RCW.
    RCW 82.03.180. Under the APA, we may grant relief from an agency order when
    "[t]he agency has erroneously interpreted or applied the law." RCW 34.05.570(3)(d).
    We review the Board's factual findings for substantial evidence, RCW
    34.05.570(3)(e), and we review the Board's legal conclusions de novo, Olympic Tug
    & Barge, Inc. v. Dep 't ofRevenue, 
    163 Wash. App. 298
    , 306, 
    259 P.3d 338
    (2011)
    (citing Dot Foods, Inc. v. Dep't ofRevenue, 166 Wn.2d 912,919,215 P.3d 185
    (2009)). "The burden of demonstrating the invalidity of agency action i,~ on the party
    asserting invalidity"-in this case, Klein Honda. RCW 34.05.570(1)(a). Klein Honda
    challenges the Board's legal conclusions. Thus, the standard of review is de novo.
    7
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    ANALYSIS
    At issue in this case is whether Klein Honda's dealer cash earnings are taxable
    under the B&O tax statutes. We hold that Klein Honda's dealer cash is taxable under
    the catchall B&O tax provision because it is a separate business activity beyond Klein
    Honda's ordinary retail sales and does not represent a bona fide discount on its
    wholesale purchase of vehicles.
    a. Overview of the B&O Tax System
    Washington's B&O tax system is extremely broad. "In adopting our State's
    B&O tax system 'the legislature intended to impose the business and occupation tax
    upon virtually all business activities carried on within the state."' Simpson Inv. Co. v.
    Dep'tofRevenue, 
    141 Wash. 2d 139
    , 149,3 P.3d 741 (2000) (quoting Time Oil Co. v.
    State, 
    79 Wash. 2d 143
    , 146, 
    483 P.2d 628
    (1971)). The legislature intended "to 'leave
    practically no business and commerce free of ... tax."' !d. (alteration in original)
    (quoting Budget Rent-A-Car ofWash.-Or., Inc. v. Dep 't ofRevenue, 
    81 Wash. 2d 171
    ,
    175, 
    500 P.2d 764
    (1972)). Indeed, RCW 82.04.220(1) provides,
    There is levied and collected from every person that has a substantial
    nexus with this state a tax for the act or privilege of engaging in business
    activities. The tax is measured by the application of rates against value
    of products, gross proceeds of sales, or gross income of the business, as
    the case may be.
    That language indicates that in order for the government to impose this tax, it must
    first identify a business activity and then determine which tax measure and rate
    8
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    applies (depending on the business activity). See 
    id. "'Business' includes
    all
    activities engaged in with the object of gain, benefit, or advantage to the taxpayer or
    to another person or class, directly or indirectly." RCW 82.04.140.
    There are a variety of business activities that receive different tax measures and
    rates. For example, for those making retail sales, their tax "is equal to the gross
    proceeds of sales of the business, multiplied by the rate of 0.471 percent." RCW
    82.04.250(1). There is also a catchall provision covering other business or service
    activities. RCW 82.04.290(2). Under that provision, for persons engaging in a
    business activity "other than or in addition to an activity taxed explicitly under
    another section in this chapter," their tax "is equal to the gross income of the business
    multiplied by the rate of 1.5 percent." RCW 82.04.290(2)(a). "'Gross income of the
    business' means the value proceeding or accruing by reason of the transaction of the
    business engaged in and includes gross proceeds of sales, compensation for the
    rendition of services, ... interest, ... and other emoluments however designated."
    RCW 82.04.080(1 ). The "other" business activities in the catchall provision include
    any type of business activity or service "which does not constitute a 'sale at retail' or a
    'sale at wholesale.'" RCW 82.04.290(2)(a), (b). "Retail sale" means a "sale of
    tangible personal property ... to all persons." RCW 82.04.050(1 )(a).
    However, a bona fide discount is not subject to the B&O tax. Former WAC
    458-20-108(1), (5). Under that regulation, "[w]hen a ... sale is made subject to cash
    9
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    or trade discount, the gross proceeds actually derived from the contract and the selling
    price are determined by the transaction as finally completed." Former WAC 458-20-
    108(1). "The selling price of a service or of an article of tangible personal property
    does not include the amount of bona fide discounts actually taken by the buyer and the
    amount of such discount may be deducted from gross proceeds of sales." Former
    WAC 458-20-108(5). Thus, when a retailer sells a car subject to a discount from a
    manufacturer, the Department does not tax the money the retailer saved from the
    discount-the Department taxes the final transaction after factoring in the retailer's
    savmgs.
    In this case, Klein Honda's dealer cash is subject to the B&O tax if(1) Klein
    Honda's participation in the dealer cash program is a business activity under one of
    the B&O tax provisions and (2) the dealer cash program is not a bona fide discount on
    Klein Honda's wholesale purchase of cars. Here, both conditions are met.
    b. Klein Honda's Participation in the Dealer Cash Program Constitutes an
    Additional Business Activity beyond Retail Sales Because It Confers upon
    and Receives from Honda an Extra Benefit
    Under the B&O tax scheme, the dealer cash program does not fit under any of
    the specifically articulated business activities that are taxed-dealer cash is not
    taxable as a retail sale because Klein Honda does not sell vehicles to Honda (to be a
    "sale at retail," a dealer has to sell tangible personal property to a person). See RCW
    82.04.050(1)(a), .250(1). Instead, to earn dealer cash from Honda, Klein Honda must
    10
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    sell a vehicle to a consumer pursuant to the requirements set out by Honda's
    conditional offer. Since dealer cash does not fit within the specific B&O tax
    provisions, we must analyze the catchall provision.
    As discussed above, the catchall provision applies to "other" or "addition[al]"
    business activities that do not constitute a retail sale. RCW 82.04.290(2)(a), (b).
    Here, Klein Honda's participation in the dealer cash program fits within the catchall
    provision because it is an "other" or "additional" business activity and does not
    constitute a retail sale. To earn dealer cash from Honda, Klein Honda must sell cars
    pursuant to the terms of Honda's dealer cash marketing bulletin, the primary
    requirement being that Klein Honda sell certain cars at certain periods of time. That is
    a business activity-it is an "activit[y] engaged in with the object of gain, benefit, or
    advantage to the taxpayer or to another person or class, directly or indirectly." RCW
    82.04.140. Klein Honda benefits by earning money from Honda in addition to the
    money it would ordinarily make from retail sales without the dealer cash program.
    Honda benefits by staying competitive in the marketplace and having more cars sold
    by dealerships like Klein Honda. And, as discussed above, the dealer cash program
    does not constitute a retail sale, so RCW 82.04.290(2)(b)'s requirement that a catchall
    business activity cannot "constitute a 'sale at retail'" is satisfied. Thus, Klein Honda's
    participation in the dealer cash program is taxable under the catchall provision and the
    11
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    Department properly taxed the "gross income" of Klein Honda's dealer cash at the
    provision's 1.5 percent rate. RCW 82.04.290(2)(a).
    Klein Honda argues its dealer cash is not taxable under the catchall provision
    because it does not perform "a separate or additional service" apart from selling cars,
    and it argues that the Court of Appeals' opinion holding that "the income itself was
    taxable, with or without an activity, ... turns the B&O tax from a tax on the privilege
    of doing business into an income tax," which is inconsistent with this court's
    precedent. Suppl. Br. ofPet'r at 2-3. However, Klein Honda is factually incorrect
    and mischaracterizes the Court of Appeals' opinion. Regarding Klein Honda's
    business activity argument, although Klein Honda must sell a car to a customer to be
    eligible for dealer cash, the dealer cash program is a distinct program that provides
    Klein Honda with income in addition to its income from retail sales through a separate
    contract with another party (Honda, as opposed to a customer). Klein Honda is not
    entitled to dealer cash by merely selling a car to a consumer; it must fulfill the terms
    of Honda's conditional offer by selling specific cars during specific times and
    complying with terms and conditions.
    Klein Honda's other argument is based on one statement in the Court of
    Appeals' opinion taken out of context. In the Court of Appeals' opinion, it stated that
    "the B&O tax is not a tax on only specific enumerated business activities, but rather
    on 'the gross revenues received in the course of doing business."' Steven Klein, Inc.,
    12
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 
    91072-3 184 Wash. App. at 353
    (quoting Budget 
    Rent-A-Car, 81 Wash. 2d at 173
    ). Klein Honda
    argues the Court of Appeals' statement conflicts with this court's precedent, State ex
    rei. Stiner v. Yelle, 
    174 Wash. 402
    , 407, 
    25 P.2d 91
    (1933), in which this court
    "upheld the B&O tax because it was a tax on business activity and not income."
    Suppl. Br. ofPet'r at 8. Although the Court of Appeals' reference to the B&O tax as
    a tax "on" gross income appears imprecise when taken out of context, the Court of
    Appeals' opinion, when read as a whole, correctly lays out the B&O tax scheme. The
    court correctly concluded that Klein Honda's participation in the dealer cash program
    "was a discrete business activity" taxable under the catchall provision. Steven Klein,
    
    Inc., 184 Wash. App. at 353-54
    .
    c. The Dealer Cash Program Is Not a Bona Fide Discount Because Klein
    Honda Did Not Purchase Vehicles from Honda Subject to a Dealer Cash
    Discount,· Rather, Dealer Cash Was Separate Income
    As discussed above, under former WAC 458-20-108, bona fide discounts are
    not subject to the B&O tax. Under that regulation, "[w]hen a ... sale is made subject
    to cash or trade discount, the gross proceeds actually derived from the contract and the
    selling price are determined by the transaction as finally completed." Former WAC
    458-20-108(1) (emphasis added).
    Both parties agree that when Klein Honda sells a car to a customer, the
    Department does not tax Klein Honda's savings from holdbacks and other similar
    credits because Klein Honda purchases vehicles from Honda subject to those credits
    13
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    (and the credits are thus bona fide discounts). Importantly, as the Board found, Klein
    Honda's wholesale purchases were subject to the above mentioned credits because
    "[t]he ... credits are quantified at or about the time the vehicle is purchased by the
    dealership and delivered by the manufacturer" and because every invoice specifically
    listed amounts for some credits. AR at 20. Klein Honda is automatically entitled to
    have those savings offset its wholesale purchase price of cars; the savings are not
    contingent on Honda selling vehicles.
    However, dealer cash payments are not bona fide discounts to the wholesale
    purchase price of vehicles because Klein Honda does not buy vehicles from Honda
    subject to dealer cash savings. Unlike the credits mentioned above, dealer cash
    payments are not necessarily quantified or even knowable at the time Klein Honda
    purchases vehicles from Honda, and the invoices for cars do not list amounts for
    dealer cash savings. Also, Klein Honda is not automatically entitled to dealer cash
    when it purchases vehicles at wholesale; rather, Klein Honda must earn dealer cash by
    accepting Honda's conditional offer and complying with various terms and
    conditions. Klein Honda could sell a car eligible for dealer cash but not earn dealer
    cash depending on the timing and the manner in which it sold the car.
    Klein Honda argues that it purchases vehicles subject to dealer cash savings
    because each vehicle invoice states, "'Dealer's invoice may not reflect dealer's
    ultimate vehicle cost given any rebates, allowances, collections, discounts, holdback,
    14
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    incentives, etc.,"' 
    id. at 20,
    765, but Klein Honda does not treat dealer cash payments
    as adjustments on its vehicle costs. As the Board found, "Klein Honda does not
    account for dealer cash in its accounting records as a reduction in the cost of goods
    sold." AR at 26. Since dealer cash payments are not necessarily quantified or
    knowable at the time Klein Honda purchases vehicles, Klein Honda does not purchase
    vehicles from Honda subject to dealer cash savings. Thus, the Court of Appeals
    correctly held that dealer cash payments are not bona fide discounts (and are thus still
    taxable).
    CONCLUSION
    We hold that the Department properly taxed Klein Honda's dealer cash under
    the catchall B&O tax provision. By selling specific cars during specific times and
    complying with Honda's terms and conditions, Klein Honda received a benefit
    (income) from Honda in addition to its income from retail sales. That constitutes an
    additional taxable business activity. Additionally, dealer cash payments are not bona
    fide discounts to the wholesale purchase price of vehicles because Klein Honda does
    not buy vehicles from Honda subject to dealer cash savings. We affirm the Court of
    Appeals.
    15
    Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep 't of Revenue
    No. 91072-3
    ``
    WE CONCUR:
    14~9·
    16