EXPEDITED RULES
Title of Rule and Other Identifying Information: WAC 458-20-102 Resale certificates (Rule 102). Rule 102 explains
the resale certificate and conditions under which a buyer may
furnish a resale certificate to a seller. The rule includes
tax reporting information for persons who purchase articles or
services for dual purposes.
THIS RULE IS BEING PROPOSED UNDER AN EXPEDITED RULE-MAKING PROCESS THAT WILL ELIMINATE THE NEED FOR THE AGENCY TO HOLD PUBLIC HEARINGS, PREPARE A SMALL BUSINESS ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT, OR PROVIDE RESPONSES TO THE CRITERIA FOR A SIGNIFICANT LEGISLATIVE RULE. IF YOU OBJECT TO THIS USE OF THE EXPEDITED RULE-MAKING PROCESS, YOU MUST EXPRESS YOUR OBJECTIONS IN WRITING AND THEY MUST BE SENT TO Gayle Carlson, Department of Revenue, P.O. Box 47453, Olympia, WA 98504-7453, fax (360) 586-0127, e-mail GayleC@dor.wa.gov , AND RECEIVED BY October 6, 2008.
Purpose of the Proposal and Its Anticipated Effects, Including Any Changes in Existing Rules: WAC 458-20-102 (Rule 102) explains that a resale certificate provided for multiple purchases over a period must be renewed every four years. The department is proposing to amend Rule 102 to recognize that the requirement to renew a resale certificate every four years no longer applies. As of July 1, 2008, a resale certificate continues as long as the buyer has a "recurring business relationship" with the seller, which is defined by law as making at least one purchase from the seller within a period of twelve consecutive months.
While there is no longer a requirement to renew a resale certificate if the seller can substantiate that a recurring business relationship exists, the rule also explains that the department will accept a resale certificate as evidence for wholesale sales that occur within four years of the certificate's effective date without evidence of sales transactions being made once every twelve months. Some language in the existing rule has been relocated within the rule to provide the information in a more useful manner, or eliminated as unnecessary. The sample resale certificate has been eliminated and the reader is referred to telephone information center, and mailing address for a certificate to be completed.
Copies of draft rules are available for viewing and printing on our web site at http://dor.wa.gov/content/FindALawOrRule/RuleMaking/agenda.aspx.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 82.32.300, 82.32.291, and 82.01.060(2).
Statute Being Implemented: RCW 82.04.470 and 82.32.291.
Rule is not necessitated by federal law, federal or state court decision.
Name of Proponent: [Department of revenue], governmental.
Name of Agency Personnel Responsible for Drafting: Gayle Carlson, 1025 Union Avenue S.E., Suite #544, Olympia, WA, (360) 570-6126; Implementation: Alan R. Lynn, 1025 Union Avenue S.E., Suite #544, Olympia, WA, (360) 570-6125; and Enforcement: Janis P. Bianchi, 1025 Union Avenue S.E., Suite #544, Olympia, WA, (360) 570-6147.
July 29, 2008
Alan R. Lynn
Rules Coordinator
OTS-1701.2
AMENDATORY SECTION(Amending WSR 04-17-024, filed 8/9/04,
effective 9/9/04)
WAC 458-20-102
Resale certificates.
(1) Introduction.
This ((rule)) section explains the conditions under which a
buyer may furnish a resale certificate to a seller, and
explains the information and language required on the resale
certificate. This ((rule)) section also provides tax
reporting information to persons who purchase articles or
services for dual purposes (i.e., for both resale and
consumption).
(a) Legislation passed in 2003. In 2003, the legislature enacted legislation conforming state law to portions of the national Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement (chapter 168, Laws of 2003), which eliminates the good faith requirement when the seller takes from the buyer a resale certificate and also eliminates signature requirements for certificates provided in a format other than paper. These changes apply to resale certificates taken on and after July 1, 2004.
(b) Legislation passed in 2007. Additional Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement legislation was enacted in 2007 (chapter 6, Laws of 2007). It eliminates the provision that resale certificates are only valid for four years from the date they are issued to the seller, as long as there is a recurring business relationship between the buyer and seller. This change is effective on July 1, 2008.
(2) What is a resale certificate? The resale certificate is a document or combination of documents that substantiates the wholesale nature of a sale. The resale certificate cannot be used for purchases that are not purchases at wholesale, or where a more specific certificate, affidavit, or other documentary evidence is required by statute or other section of chapter 458-20 WAC. While the resale certificate may come in different forms, all resale certificates must satisfy the language and information requirements of RCW 82.04.470.
(a) What is the scope of a resale certificate? Depending
on the statements made on the resale certificate, the resale
certificate may authorize the buyer to purchase at wholesale
all products or services being purchased from a particular
seller, or may authorize only selected products or services to
be purchased at wholesale. The provisions of the resale
certificate may be limited to a single sales transaction, or
may apply to all sales transactions ((for a period not to
exceed four years from the effective date)) as long as the
seller has a recurring business relationship with the buyer.
A "recurring business relationship" means at least one sale
transaction within a period of twelve consecutive months. Whatever its form and/or purpose, the resale certificate must
be completed in its entirety and signed by a person who is
authorized to make such a representation on behalf of the
buyer.
(b) Who may issue and sign certificates? The buyer may authorize any person in its employ to issue and sign resale certificates on the buyer's behalf. The buyer is, however, responsible for the information contained on the resale certificate. A resale certificate is not required to be completed by every person ordering or making the actual purchase of articles or services on behalf of the buyer. For example, a construction company that authorizes only its bookkeeper to issue resale certificates on its behalf may authorize both the bookkeeper and a job foreman to purchase items under the provisions of the resale certificate. The construction company is not required to provide, nor is the seller required to obtain, a resale certificate signed by each person making purchases on behalf of the construction company.
The buyer is responsible for educating all persons authorized to issue and/or use the resale certificate on the proper use of the buyer's resale certificate privileges.
(3) Resale certificate renewal. Prior to July 1, 2008,
resale certificates must be renewed at least every four years.
((In addition,)) As of July 1, 2008, the requirement to renew
resale certificates at least every four years has been
eliminated. The buyer must renew its resale certificate
whenever a change in the ownership of the buyer's business
requires a new tax registration. (See WAC 458-20-101 Tax
registration and tax reporting.) The buyer may not make
purchases under the authority of a resale certificate bearing
a tax registration number that has been cancelled or revoked
by the department of revenue (department).
(4) Sales at wholesale. All sales are treated as retail sales unless the seller takes from the buyer a properly executed resale certificate. Resale certificates may only be used for sales at wholesale and may not be used as proof of entitlement to retail sales tax exemptions otherwise provided by law.
(a) When may a buyer issue a resale certificate? The buyer may issue a resale certificate only when the property or services purchased are:
(i) For resale in the regular course of the buyer's business without intervening use by the buyer;
(ii) To be used as an ingredient or component part of a new article of tangible personal property to be produced for sale;
(iii) A chemical to be used in processing an article to be produced for sale (see WAC 458-20-113 on chemicals used in processing);
(iv) To be used in processing ferrosilicon that is subsequently used in producing magnesium for sale;
(v) Provided to consumers as a part of competitive telephone service, as defined in RCW 82.04.065;
(vi) Feed, seed, seedlings, fertilizer, spray materials, or agents for enhanced pollination including insects such as bees for use in the federal conservation reserve program or its successor administered by the United States Department of Agriculture; or
(vii) Feed, seed, seedlings, fertilizer, spray materials, or agents for enhanced pollination including insects such as bees for use by a farmer for producing for sale any agricultural product. (See WAC 458-20-210 on sales to and by farmers.)
(b) Required information. All resale certificates, whether paper or nonpaper format, must contain the following information:
(i) The name and address of the buyer;
(ii) The uniform business identifier or tax registration number of the buyer, if the buyer is required to be registered with the department;
(iii) The type of business;
(iv) The categories of items or services to be purchased at wholesale, unless the buyer is in a business classification that may present a blanket resale certificate as provided by the department by rule;
(v) The date on which the certificate was provided;
(vi) A statement that the items or services purchased either are purchased for resale in the regular course of business or are otherwise purchased at wholesale; and
(vii) A statement that the buyer acknowledges that the buyer is solely responsible for purchasing within the categories specified on the certificate and that misuse of the resale certificate subjects the buyer to a penalty of fifty percent of the tax due, in addition to the tax, interest, and any other penalties imposed by law.
(c) Additional requirements for paper certificates. In
addition to the requirements stated in (b) of this subsection
(((4)(b) of this rule)), paper certificates must contain the
following:
(i) The name of the individual authorized to sign the certificate, printed in a legible fashion;
(ii) The signature of the authorized individual; and
(iii) The name of the seller. RCW 82.04.470.
(5) Seller's responsibilities ((for acceptance of resale
certificates)). When a seller receives and accepts from the
buyer a resale certificate at the time of the sale, or has a
resale certificate on file at the time of the sale, or obtains
a resale certificate from the buyer within ((a reasonable
time)) one hundred twenty days after the sale, the seller is
relieved of liability for retail sales tax with respect to the
sale covered by the resale certificate. The seller may accept
a legible fax, a duplicate copy of an original resale
certificate, or a certificate in a format other than paper. ((The resale certificate will be considered to be obtained
within a reasonable time of the sale if it is received within
one hundred twenty days of the sale or sales in question.))
(a) If the seller has not obtained an appropriate resale certificate or other acceptable documentary evidence (see subsection (8) of this section), the seller is personally liable for the tax due unless it can sustain the burden of proving through facts and circumstances that the property was sold for one of the purposes set forth in subsection (4)(a) of this section. The department will consider all evidence presented by the seller, including the circumstances of the sales transaction itself, when determining whether the seller has met its burden of proof. It is the seller's responsibility to provide the information necessary to evaluate the facts and circumstances of all sales transactions for which resale certificates are not obtained. Facts and circumstances that should be considered include, but are not necessarily limited to, the following:
(i) The nature of the buyer's business. The items being purchased at wholesale must be consistent with the buyer's business. For example, a buyer having a business name of "Ace Used Cars" would generally not be expected to be in the business of selling furniture;
(ii) The nature of the items sold. The items sold must be of a type that would normally be purchased at wholesale by the buyer; and
(iii) Additional documentation. Other available documents, such as purchase orders and shipping instructions, should be considered in determining whether they support a finding that the sales are sales at wholesale.
(b) If the seller is required to make payment to the
department, and later is able to present the department with
proper documentation or prove by facts and circumstances that
the sales in question are wholesale sales, the seller may in
writing request a refund of the taxes paid along with the
applicable interest. Both the request and the documentation
or proof that the sales in question are wholesale sales must
be submitted to the department within the statutory time
limitations provided by RCW 82.32.060. (See WAC 458-20-229
Refunds.) However, refer to (((e))) (f) of this subsection in
event of an audit situation.
(((a))) (c) Timing requirements for single orders with
multiple billings. If a single order or contract will result
in multiple billings to the buyer, and the appropriate resale
certificate was not obtained or on file at the time the order
was placed or the contract entered, the resale certificate
must be received by the seller within one hundred twenty days
after the first billing ((to be considered obtained within a
reasonable time of the sale)). For example, a subcontractor
entering into a construction contract for which it has not
received a resale certificate must obtain the certificate
within one hundred twenty days of the initial construction
draw request ((to consider the resale certificate obtained in
a reasonable time after the sale)), even though the
construction project may not be completed at that time and
additional draw requests will follow.
(((b))) (d) Requirements for resale certificates obtained
after ((reasonable time has)) one hundred twenty days have
passed. If the resale certificate is obtained more than one
hundred twenty days after the sale or sales in question, the
resale certificate must be specific to the sale or sales. The
certificate must specifically identify the sales in question
on its face, or be accompanied by other documentation signed
by the buyer specifically identifying the sales in question
and stating that the provisions of the accompanying resale
certificate apply. A nonspecific resale certificate that is
not obtained within ((a reasonable period of time)) one
hundred twenty days is generally not, in and of itself,
acceptable proof of the wholesale nature of the sales in
question. The resale certificate and/or required
documentation must be obtained within the statutory time
limitations provided by RCW 82.32.050.
(((c))) (e) Examples. The following examples explain the
seller's documentary requirements in typical situations when
obtaining a resale certificate more than one hundred twenty
days after the sale. These examples should be used only as a
general guide. The tax results of other situations must be
determined after a review of all of the facts and
circumstances.
(i) Beginning in January of year 1, MN Company regularly
makes sales to ABC Inc. In June of the same year, MN
discovers ABC has not provided a resale certificate. MN
requests a resale certificate from ABC and, as the resale
certificate will not be received within one hundred twenty
days of many of the past sales transactions, requests that the
resale certificate specifically identify those past sales
subject to the provisions of the certificate. MN receives a
legible fax copy of an original resale certificate from ABC on
July 1st of that year. Accompanying the resale certificate is
a memo providing a list of the invoice numbers for all past
sales transactions through May 15th of that year. This memo
also states that the provisions of the resale certificate
apply to all past and future sales, including those listed. MN Company has satisfied the requirement that it obtain a
resale certificate specific to the sales in question. ((As
the provisions of this resale certificate apply to both past
and future sales transactions, the certificate must be renewed
no later than December 31st four years from the date the
resale certificate became effective.))
(ii) XYZ Company makes three sales to MP Inc. in October
of year 1 and does not charge retail sales tax. In the review
of its resale certificate file in April of the following year,
XYZ discovers it has not received a resale certificate from MP
Inc. and immediately requests a certificate. As the resale
certificate will not be received within one hundred twenty
days of the sales in question, XYZ requests that MP provide a
resale certificate identifying the sales in question. MP
provides XYZ with a resale certificate that does not identify
the sales in question, but simply states "applies to all past
purchases." XYZ Company has not satisfied its responsibility
to obtain an appropriate resale certificate. As XYZ failed to
secure a resale certificate within a reasonable period of
time, XYZ must obtain a certificate specifically identifying
the sales in question or prove through other facts and
circumstances that these sales are wholesale sales. (Refer to
(((d))) (a) of this subsection for information on how a seller
can prove through other facts and circumstances that a sale is
a wholesale sale.) It remains the seller's burden to prove
the wholesale nature of the sales made to a buyer if the
seller has not obtained a valid resale certificate within one
hundred twenty days of the sale.
(((d) Seller's liability. If the seller has not obtained
an appropriate resale certificate or other acceptable
documentary evidence (see subsection (8) of this rule), the
seller is personally liable for the tax due unless it can
sustain the burden of proving through facts and circumstances
that the property was sold for one of the purposes set forth
in subsection (4)(a) of this rule. The department will
consider all evidence presented by the seller, including the
circumstances of the sales transaction itself, when
determining whether the seller has met its burden of proof.
This evidence must be presented within the statutory time
limitations provided by RCW 82.32.060. It is the seller's
responsibility to provide the information necessary to
evaluate the facts and circumstances of all sales transactions
for which resale certificates are not obtained. Facts and
circumstances that should be considered include, but are not
necessarily limited to, the following:
(i) The nature of the buyer's business. The items being purchased at wholesale must be consistent with the buyer's business. For example, a buyer having a business name of "Ace Used Cars" would generally not be expected to be in the business of selling furniture;
(ii) The nature of the items sold. The items sold must be of a type that would normally be purchased at wholesale by the buyer;
(iii) The quantity and frequency of items sold. The number of items sold and the frequency of sales must indicate that the buyer is purchasing such items at wholesale; and
(iv) Additional documentation. Other available documents, such as purchase orders and shipping instructions, should be considered in determining whether they support a finding that the sales are sales at wholesale.
(e))) (f) Additional time to secure documentation
((after)) in audit situation. If in event of an audit the
department discovers that the seller has not secured, as
described in this subsection (5), the necessary resale
certificates and/or documentation, the seller will generally
be allowed ((thirty)) one hundred twenty days in which to
obtain and present appropriate resale certificates and/or
documentation, or prove by facts and circumstances the sales
in question are wholesale sales. The time allotted to the
seller shall commence from the date the auditor initially
provides the seller with the results of the auditor's
wholesale sales review. The processing of the audit report
will not be delayed as a result of the seller's failure within
the allotted time to secure and present appropriate
documentation, or its inability to prove by facts and
circumstances that the sales in question were wholesale sales.
((The audit report will also not be delayed because the time
allotted to the seller expires prior to one hundred twenty
days from the date of the sale or sales in question.
(f) Seller's personal liability. If the seller is unable to provide proper documentation, or unable to prove by facts and circumstances that the sales in question are wholesale sales, the seller becomes personally liable for the taxes in question. If the seller is required to make payment to the department, and later is able to present the department with proper documentation or prove by facts and circumstances that the sales in question are wholesale sales, the seller may in writing request a refund of the taxes paid along with the applicable interest. Both the request and the documentation or proof that the sales in question are wholesale sales must be submitted to the department within the statutory time limitations provided by RCW 82.32.060. (See WAC 458-20-229.)))
(6) Penalty for improper use. Any buyer who uses a
resale certificate to purchase items or services without
payment of sales tax and who is not entitled to use the
certificate for the purchase will be assessed a penalty of
fifty percent of the tax due on the improperly purchased item
or service. This penalty is in addition to all other taxes,
penalties, and interest due, and can be imposed even if there
was no intent to evade the payment of retail sales tax. The
penalty will be assessed by the department and applies only to
the buyer. However, see subsection (12) of this ((rule))
section for situations in which the department may waive the
penalty.
Persons who purchase articles or services for dual
purposes (i.e., some for their own consumption and some for
resale) should refer to subsection (11) of this ((rule))
section to determine whether they may give a resale
certificate to the seller.
(7) Resale certificate - suggested form. While there may
be different forms of the resale certificate, all resale
certificates must satisfy the language and information
requirements provided by RCW 82.04.470. The resale
certificate ((may be in the suggested form shown below,
which)) is available on the department's ((home page))
internet site at http://dor.wa.gov, or can be obtained by
calling the department's telephone information center at
1-800-647-7706 or by writing:
Taxpayer Services
Department of Revenue
P.O. Box 47478
Olympia, WA 98504-7478
A resale certificate may be in any other form that
contains substantially the ((following)) same information and
language, except that certificates provided in a format other
than paper are not required to include the printed name of the
person authorized to sign the certificate, the signature of
the authorized individual, or the name of the seller((:)).
((The undersigned buyer hereby certifies that the tangible personal property or services specified below will be purchased for: (a) Resale in the regular course of business without intervening use by the buyer, (b) use as an ingredient or component part of a new article of tangible personal property to be produced for sale, (c) use as a chemical to be used in processing a new article of tangible personal property to be produced for sale, or (d) use as feed, seed, fertilizer, or spray materials in its capacity as a farmer as defined in chapter 82.04 RCW. This certificate shall be considered a part of each order that I may give to you on or after the effective date of this certificate, unless otherwise specified, and is valid until revoked by me in writing. This certificate is given with full knowledge that the buyer is solely responsible for purchasing within the categories specified on the certificate, and that misuse of the resale privilege claimed on the certificate is subject to the legally prescribed penalty of fifty percent of the tax due, in addition to the tax, interest, and any other penalties imposed by law.
Effective July 1, 2008, buyers also have the option of using a Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement Certificate of Exemption, which has been modified for Washington state laws. It can also be found on the department's internet site at http://dor.wa.gov.
(a) Buyer's responsibility to specify products or services purchased at wholesale. RCW 82.04.470 requires the buyer making purchases at wholesale to specify the kinds of products or services subject to the provisions of the resale certificate. A buyer who will purchase some of the items at wholesale, and consume and pay tax on some other items being purchased from the same seller, must use terms specific enough to clearly indicate to the seller what kinds of products or services the buyer is authorized to purchase at wholesale.
(i) The buyer may list the particular products or services to be purchased at wholesale, or provide general category descriptions of these products or services. The terms used to describe these categories must be descriptive enough to restrict the application of the resale certificate provisions to those products or services that the buyer is authorized to purchase at wholesale. The following are examples of terms used to describe categories of products purchased at wholesale, and businesses that may be eligible to use such terms on their resale certificates:
(A) "Hardware" for use by a general merchandise or building material supply store, "computer hardware" for use by a computer retailer;
(B) "Paint" or "painting supplies" for use by a general merchandise or paint retailer, "automotive paint" for use by an automotive repair shop; and
(C) "Building materials" or "subcontract work" for use by prime contractors performing residential home construction, "wiring" or "lighting fixtures" for use by an electrical contractor.
(ii) The buyer must remit retail sales tax on any taxable product or service not listed on the resale certificate provided to the seller. If the buyer gave a resale certificate to the seller and later used an item listed on the certificate, or if the seller failed to collect the sales tax on items not listed on the certificate, the buyer must remit the deferred sales or use tax due directly to the department.
(iii) RCW 82.08.050 provides that each seller shall collect from the buyer the full amount of retail sales tax due on each retail sale. If the department finds that the seller has engaged in a consistent pattern of failing to properly charge sales tax on items not purchased at wholesale (i.e., not listed on the resale certificate), it may hold the seller liable for the uncollected sales tax.
(iv) Persons having specific questions regarding the use of terms to describe products or services purchased at wholesale may submit their questions to the department for ruling. The department may be contacted on the internet at http://dor.wa.gov/ or by writing:
Taxpayer Services
Department of Revenue
((Taxpayer Services))
P.O. Box 47478
Olympia, WA 98504-7478
(b) Blanket resale certificates. A buyer who will
purchase at wholesale all of the products or services being
purchased from a particular seller will not be required to
specifically describe the items or item categories on the
resale certificate. If the certificate form provides for a
description of the products or services being purchased at
wholesale (((as does the suggested form provided in this
rule),)) the buyer may specify "all products and/or services"
(or make a similar designation). A resale certificate
completed in this manner is often described as a blanket
resale certificate.
(i) The resale certificate used by the buyer must, in all cases, be completed in its entirety. A resale certificate in which the section for the description of the items being purchased at wholesale is left blank by the buyer will not be considered a properly executed resale certificate.
(ii) As of July 1, 2008, renewal or updating of blanket resale certificates is not required as long as the seller has a recurring business relationship with the buyer. A "recurring business relationship" means at least one sale transaction within a period of twelve consecutive months.
To effectively administer this provision during an audit, the department will accept a resale certificate as evidence for wholesale sales that occur within four years of the certificate's effective date without evidence of sales transactions being made once every twelve months. For sales transactions made more than four years after the date of the properly completed resale certificate, the seller must substantiate that a recurring business relationship with the buyer has occurred for any sales outside the period of more than four years after the effective date of the resale certificate.
(c) Resale certificates for single transactions. If the resale certificate is used for a single transaction, the language and information required of a resale certificate may be written or stamped upon a purchase order or invoice. The language contained in a "single use" resale certificate should be modified to delete any reference to subsequent orders or purchases.
(d) Examples. The following examples explain the proper use of types of resale certificates in typical situations. These examples should be used only as a general guide. The tax status of other situations must be determined after a review of all of the facts and circumstances.
(i) ABC is an automobile repair shop purchasing automobile parts for resale and tools for its own use from DE Supply. ABC must provide DE Supply with a resale certificate limiting the certificate's application to automobile part purchases. However, should ABC withdraw parts from inventory to install in its own tow truck, deferred retail sales tax or use tax must be remitted directly to the department. The buyer has the responsibility to report deferred retail sales tax or use tax upon any item put to its own use, including items for which it gave a resale certificate and later used for its own use.
(ii) X Company is a retailer selling lumber, hardware, tools, automotive parts, and household appliances. X Company regularly purchases lumber, hardware, and tools from Z Distributing. While these products are generally purchased for resale, X Company occasionally withdraws some of these products from inventory for its own use. X Company may provide Z Distributing with a resale certificate specifying "all products purchased" are purchased at wholesale. However, whenever X Company removes any product from inventory to put to its own use, deferred retail sales tax or use tax must be remitted to the department.
(iii) TM Company is a manufacturer of electric motors. When making purchases from its suppliers, TM issues a paper purchase order. This purchase order contains the information required of a resale certificate and a signature of the person ordering the items on behalf of TM. This purchase order includes a box that, if marked, indicates to the supplier that all or certain designated items purchased are being purchased at wholesale.
When the box indicating the purchases are being made at wholesale is marked, the purchase order can be accepted as a resale certificate. As TM Company's purchase orders are being accepted as resale certificates, they must be retained by the seller for at least five years. (See WAC 458-20-254 Recordkeeping.)
(8) Other documentary evidence. Other documentary
evidence may be used by the seller and buyer in lieu of the
resale certificate form described in this ((rule)) section.
However, this documentary evidence must collectively contain
the information and language generally required of a resale
certificate. The conditions and restrictions applicable to
the use of resale certificates apply equally to other
documentary evidence used in lieu of the resale certificate
form in this ((rule)) section. The following are examples of
documentary evidence that will be accepted to show that sales
were at wholesale:
(a) Combination of documentary evidence. A combination of documentation kept on file, such as a membership card or application, and a sales invoice or "certificate" taken at the point of sale with the purchases listed, provided:
(i) The documentation kept on file contains all information required on a resale certificate, including, for paper certificates, the names and signatures of all persons authorized to make purchases at wholesale; and
(ii) The sales invoice or "certificate" taken at the point of sale must contain the following:
(A) Language certifying the purchase is made at wholesale, with acknowledgement of the penalties for the misuse of resale certificate privileges, as generally required of a resale certificate; and
(B) The name and registration number of the buyer/business, and, if a paper certificate, an authorized signature.
(b) Contracts of sale. A contract of sale that within the body of the contract provides the language and information generally required of a resale certificate. The contract of sale must specify the products or services subject to the resale certificate privileges.
(c) Other preapproved documentary evidence. Any other documentary evidence that has been approved in advance and in writing by the department.
(9) Sales to nonresident buyers. If the buyer is a
nonresident who is not engaged in business in this state, but
buys articles here for the purpose of resale in the regular
course of business outside this state, the seller must take
from the buyer a resale certificate as described in this
((rule)) section. The seller may accept a resale certificate
from an unregistered nonresident buyer with the registration
number information omitted, provided the balance of the resale
certificate is completed in its entirety. The resale
certificate should contain a statement that the items are
being purchased for resale outside Washington.
(10) Sales to farmers. Farmers selling agricultural
products only at wholesale are not required to register with
the department. (See WAC 458-20-101 Tax registration and tax
reporting.) When making wholesale sales to farmers (including
farmers operating in other states), the seller must take from
the farmer a resale certificate as described in this ((rule))
section. Farmers not required to be registered with the
department may provide, and the seller may accept, resale
certificates with the registration number information omitted,
provided the balance of the certificates are completed in
full. Persons making sales to farmers should also refer to
WAC 458-20-210 (Sales of tangible personal property for
farming -- Sales of agricultural products by farmers).
(11) Purchases for dual purposes. A buyer normally engaged in both consuming and reselling certain types of tangible personal property, and not able to determine at the time of purchase whether the particular property purchased will be consumed or resold, must purchase according to the general nature of his or her business. RCW 82.08.130. If the buyer principally consumes the articles in question, the buyer should not give a resale certificate for any part of the purchase. If the buyer principally resells the articles, the buyer may issue a resale certificate for the entire purchase. For the purposes of this subsection, the term "principally" means greater than fifty percent.
(a) Deferred sales tax liability. If the buyer gives a resale certificate for all purchases and thereafter consumes some of the articles purchased, the buyer must set up in his or her books of account the value of the article used and remit to the department the applicable deferred sales tax. The deferred sales tax liability should be reported under the use tax classification on the buyer's excise tax return.
(i) Buyers making purchases for dual purposes under the provisions of a resale certificate must remit deferred sales tax on all products or services they consume. If the buyer fails to make a good faith effort to remit this tax liability, the penalty for the misuse of resale certificate privileges may be assessed. This penalty will apply to the unremitted portion of the deferred sales tax liability.
A buyer will generally be considered to be making a good faith effort to report its deferred sales tax liability if the buyer discovers a minimum of eighty percent of the tax liability within one hundred twenty days of purchase, and remits the full amount of the discovered tax liability upon the next excise tax return. However, if the buyer does not satisfy this eighty percent threshold and can show by other facts and circumstances that it made a good faith effort to report the tax liability, the penalty will not be assessed. Likewise, if the department can show by other facts and circumstances that the buyer did not make a good faith effort in remitting its tax liability the penalty will be assessed, even if the eighty percent threshold is satisfied.
(ii) The following example illustrates the use of a resale certificate for dual-use purchases. This example should be used only as a general guide. The tax status of other situations must be determined after a review of all of the facts and circumstances. BC Contracting operates both as a prime contractor and speculative builder of residential homes. BC Contracting purchases building materials from Seller D that are principally incorporated into projects upon which BC acts as a prime contractor. BC provides Seller D with a resale certificate and purchases all building materials at wholesale. BC must remit deferred sales tax upon all building materials incorporated into the speculative projects to be considered to be properly using its resale certificate privileges. The failure to make a good faith effort to identify and remit this tax liability may result in the assessment of the fifty percent penalty for the misuse of resale certificate privileges.
(b) Tax paid at source deduction. If the buyer has not given a resale certificate, but has paid retail sales tax on all articles of tangible personal property and subsequently resells a portion of the articles, the buyer must collect the retail sales tax from its retail customers as provided by law. When reporting these sales on the excise tax return, the buyer may then claim a deduction in the amount the buyer paid for the property resold.
(i) This deduction may be claimed under the retail sales tax classification only. It must be identified as a "taxable amount for tax paid at source" deduction on the deduction detail worksheet, which must be filed with the excise tax return. Failure to properly identify the deduction may result in the disallowance of the deduction. When completing the local sales tax portion of the tax return, the deduction must be computed at the local sales tax rate paid to the seller, and credited to the seller's tax location code.
(ii) The following example illustrates the tax paid at
source deduction on or after July 1, 2008. This example
should be used only as a general guide. The tax status of
other situations must be determined after a review of all of
the facts and circumstances. Seller A is located in Spokane,
Washington and purchases equipment parts for dual purposes
from a supplier located in Seattle, Washington. The supplier
ships the parts to Spokane. Seller A does not issue a resale
certificate for the purchase, and remits retail sales tax to
the supplier at the ((Seattle)) Spokane tax rate. A portion
of these parts are sold and shipped to Customer B in
Kennewick, with retail sales tax collected at the ((Spokane))
Kennewick tax rate. Seller A must report the amount of the
sale to Customer B on its excise tax return, compute the local
sales tax liability at the ((Spokane)) Kennewick rate, and
code this liability to the location code for ((Spokane
(3210))) Kennewick (0302). Seller A would claim the tax paid
at source deduction for the cost of the parts resold to
Customer B, compute the local sales tax credit at the
((Seattle)) Spokane rate, and code this deduction amount to
the location code for ((Seattle (1726))) Spokane (3210).
(iii) Claim for deduction will be allowed only if the taxpayer keeps and preserves records in support of the deduction that show the names of the persons from whom such articles were purchased, the date of the purchase, the type of articles, the amount of the purchase and the amount of tax that was paid.
(iv) Should the buyer resell the articles at wholesale, or under other situations where retail sales tax is not to be collected, the claim for the tax paid at source deduction on a particular excise tax return may result in a credit. In such cases, the department will issue a credit notice that may be used against future tax liabilities. However, a taxpayer may request in writing a refund from the department.
(12) Waiver of penalty for resale certificate misuse. The department may waive the penalty imposed for resale certificate misuse upon finding that the use of the certificate to purchase items or services by a person not entitled to use the certificate for that purpose was due to circumstances beyond the control of the buyer. However, the use of a resale certificate to purchase items or services for personal use outside of the business does not qualify for the waiver or cancellation of the penalty. The penalty will not be waived merely because the buyer was not aware of either the proper use of the resale certificate or the penalty. In all cases the burden of proving the facts is upon the buyer.
(a) Considerations for waiver. Situations under which a waiver of the penalty will be considered by the department include, but are not necessarily limited to, the following:
(i) The resale certificate was properly used to purchase
products or services for dual purposes; or the buyer was
eligible to issue the resale certificate; and the buyer made a
good faith effort to discover all of its deferred sales tax
liability within one hundred twenty days of purchase; and the
buyer remitted the discovered tax liability upon the next
excise tax return. (Refer to subsection (11)(a)(i) of this
((rule)) section for an explanation of what constitutes "good
faith effort.")
(ii) The certificate was issued and/or purchases were made without the knowledge of the buyer, and had no connection with the buyer's business activities. However, the penalty for the misuse of resale certificate privileges may be applied to the person actually issuing and/or using the resale certificate without knowledge of the buyer.
(b) One-time waiver of penalty for inadvertent or unintentional resale certificate misuse. The penalty prescribed for the misuse of the resale certificate may be waived or cancelled on a one time only basis if such misuse was inadvertent or unintentional, and the item was purchased for use within the business. If the department does grant a one time waiver of the penalty, the buyer will be provided written notification at that time.
(c) Examples. The following are examples of typical situations where the fifty percent penalty for the misuse of resale privileges will or will not be assessed. These examples should be used only as a general guide. The tax status of other situations must be determined after a review of all of the facts and circumstances.
(i) ABC Manufacturing purchases electrical wiring and tools from X Supply. The electrical wiring is purchased for dual purposes, i.e., for resale and for consumption, with more than fifty percent of the wiring purchases becoming a component of items that ABC manufactures for sale. ABC Manufacturing issues a resale certificate to X Supply specifying "electrical wiring" as the category of items purchased for resale. ABC regularly reviews its purchases and remits deferred sales tax upon the wiring it uses as a consumer.
ABC is subsequently audited by the department and it is discovered that ABC Manufacturing failed to remit deferred sales tax upon three purchases of wiring for consumption. The unreported tax liability attributable to these three purchases is less than five percent of the total deferred sales tax liability for wiring purchases made from X Supply. It is also determined that the failure to remit deferred sales tax upon these purchases was merely an oversight. The fifty percent penalty for the misuse of resale certificate privileges does not apply, even though ABC failed to remit deferred sales tax on these purchases. The resale certificate was properly issued, and ABC remitted to the department more than eighty percent of the deferred sales tax liability for wiring purchases from X Supply.
(ii) During a routine audit examination of a jewelry store, the department discovers that a dentist has provided a resale certificate for the purchase of a necklace. This resale certificate indicates that in addition to operating a dentistry practice, the dentist also sells jewelry. The resale certificate contains the information required under RCW 82.04.470.
Upon further investigation, the department finds that the dentist is not engaged in selling jewelry. The department will look to the dentist for payment of the applicable retail sales tax. In addition, the dentist will be assessed the fifty percent penalty for the misuse of resale certificate privileges. The penalty will not be waived or cancelled as the dentist misused the resale certificate privileges to purchase a necklace for personal use.
(iii) During a routine audit examination of a computer dealer, it is discovered that a resale certificate was obtained from a bookkeeping service. The resale certificate was completed in its entirety and accepted by the dealer. Upon further investigation it is discovered that the bookkeeping service had no knowledge of the resale certificate, and had made no payment to the computer dealer. The employee who signed the resale certificate had purchased the computer for personal use, and had personally made payment to the computer dealer.
The fifty percent penalty for the misuse of the resale certificate privileges will be waived for the bookkeeping service. The bookkeeping service had no knowledge of the purchase or unauthorized use of the resale certificate. However, the department will look to the employee for payment of the taxes and the fifty percent penalty for the misuse of resale certificate privileges.
(iv) During an audit examination it is discovered that XYZ Corporation, a duplicating company, purchased copying equipment for its own use. XYZ Corporation issued a resale certificate to the seller despite the fact that XYZ does not sell copying equipment. XYZ also failed to remit either the deferred sales or use tax to the department. As a result of a previous investigation by the department, XYZ had been informed in writing that retail sales and/or use tax applied to all such purchases. The fifty percent penalty for the misuse of resale certificate privileges will be assessed. XYZ was not eligible to provide a resale certificate for the purchase of copying equipment, and had previously been so informed. The penalty will apply to the unremitted deferred sales tax liability.
(v) AZ Construction issued a resale certificate to a building material supplier for the purchase of "pins" and "loads." The "pins" are fasteners that become a component part of the finished structure. The "load" is a powder charge that is used to drive the "pin" into the materials being fastened together. AZ Construction is informed during the course of an audit examination that it is considered the consumer of the "loads" and may not issue a resale certificate for its purchase thereof. AZ Construction indicates that it was unaware that a resale certificate could not be issued for the purchase of "loads," and there is no indication that AZ Construction had previously been so informed.
The failure to be aware of the proper use of the resale certificate is not generally grounds for waiving the fifty percent penalty for the misuse of resale certificate privileges. However, AZ Construction does qualify for the "one time only" waiver of the penalty as the misuse of the resale certificate privilege was unintentional and the "loads" were purchased for use within the business.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300, 82.32.291, and 82.01.060(2). 04-17-024, § 458-20-102, filed 8/9/04, effective 9/9/04. Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300. 94-13-031, § 458-20-102, filed 6/6/94, effective 7/7/94; 86-09-058 (Order ET 86-7), § 458-20-102, filed 4/17/86; 83-07-034 (Order ET 83-17), § 458-20-102, filed 3/15/83; Order ET 70-3, § 458-20-102 (Rule 102), filed 5/29/70, effective 7/1/70.]