DocketNumber: Docket No. 23084-80.
Filed Date: 4/4/1983
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
FORRESTER,
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
Petitioners Harvey and Rosalind Bennett (petitioner*607 husband is hereinafter referred to as Harvey) resided in Monkton, Maryland, when the petition in this case was filed.
In 1977, petitioners entered into an agreement with Bernard Meyer (hereinafter Meyer), a builder. *608 supplier's store, and informed Meyer of his selection, Meyer would call the supplier and order delivery to the jobsite. Harvey inspected and approved each delivery, and Meyer then paid for the supplies.
The agreement called for progress payments to be made as follows: "Payments to be made as per draws setup by loaning institute [sic]. Any extras to be paid for at time of ordering or as agreed upon between owner and contractor."
The evidence as to how progress payments were calculated is murky, but it is clear from the record that Meyer did not present individual bills to petitioners for payment.
Meyer employed two workers to help construct petitioners' house. He hired both workers independently of petitioners, and without seeking petitioners' approval. Meyer, and not petitioners, supervised their work.
Petitioners were present at the jobsite the entire time their house was being built. They consulted with Meyer about the construction of the house, and made various modifications in and additions to the original plans.
Petitioners had spent two years researching house construction before beginning their house, but they were not as knowledgeable about construction*609 as was Meyer, and they relied upon his expertise.
Before construction of petitioners' house began, petitioners and Meyer reached an oral agreement that petitioners and not Meyer would be entitled to deduct the Maryland sales tax paid on materials purchased for use in construction, and that Meyer would furnish to petitioners a separate list of all sales taxes paid. At the end of construction, Meyer furnished petitioners with only an estimate of the total sales taxes paid.
OPINION
State sales taxes may be deducted in the year paid.
The record shows that it was Meyer who actually purchased the materials he used to construct petitioners' house, and that he was not reimbursed directly for these purchases by petitioners. This is not dispositive of the issue before us, however, for petitioners can still prevail if they establish that in purchasing the building materials Meyer acted as their agent, and not as an independent contractor.
Whether or not Meyer was petitioners' agent is a question to be determined under Maryland law.
Harvey visited all suppliers and personally selected the building materials used in the construction of petitioners' house before Meyer ordered delivery of such materials. This pattern of behavior suggests that Meyer may have had an implied right to act for petitioners in ordering goods from the suppliers. *612 and judgment in building the house. We conclude and hold from these facts that Meyer was not controlled by petitioners, but independently carried out his duties under the contract.
The agreement also provides that Meyer will receive a fixed price, plus any increase due to modifications requested by petitioners. Any increase in the cost of materials or labor required for the house
Petitioners' reliance on "Your Federal Income Taxes" is misplaced, since the language in question is not directed to their situation under the Maryland sales tax, but rather to sales taxes which impose the incidence of taxation upon the seller. Cf.
1. The agreement between petitioners and Meyer was embodied in a standard form construction contract, signed by Meyer but not by petitioners who did not sign the contract because Harvey did not like to sign documents. However, it is stipulated that the form is the contract between petitioners and Meyer, and we are satisfied that it accurately expresses the agreement between them.↩
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the year in issue.↩
3. No explicit right was created in the written agreement between petitioners and Meyer, nor did petitioners suggest an explicit right was otherwise created.↩
4. In
5. The language in question is inapplicable to petitioners in any event, since, as we have found, Meyer, and not petitioners, was the purchaser of the tangible personal property used in the construction of petitioners' house.↩
6.