EXPEDITED RULES
Title of Rule and Other Identifying Information: WAC 458-20-247 Trade-ins, selling price, sellers' tax measures,
the statutory definitions of "selling price" (RCW 82.08.010)
and "value of article used" (RCW 82.12.010) exclude
"separately stated trade-in property of like kind" for
purposes of the retail sales and use taxes. WAC 458-20-247
(Rule 247) explains how and when this exclusion applies, and
the record-keeping requirements needed to document the
transactions.
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 December 21, 2009.
Purpose of the Proposal and Its Anticipated Effects, Including Any Changes in Existing Rules: The department is proposing to amend Rule 247 to:
• | Update language in the rule to more closely follow the current statutory definitions of "selling price" and "value of article used"; and |
• | Update citations to other statutes and rules; Editing changes are also proposed for clarity purposes. |
Reasons Supporting Proposal: To update the rule to recognize current statutory language.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 82.32.300 and 82.01.060(2).
Statute Being Implemented: RCW 82.08.020 and 82.12.010, to the extent they apply to transactions where the buyer delivers property to the seller as consideration.
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: Gilbert Brewer, 1025 Union Avenue S.E., Suite #544, Olympia, WA, (360) 570-6147.
October 14, 2009
Alan R. Lynn
Rules Coordinator
OTS-2380.1
AMENDATORY SECTION(Amending WSR 01-08-003, filed 3/21/01,
effective 4/21/01)
WAC 458-20-247
Trade-ins, selling price, sellers' tax
measures.
(1) Introduction. This section explains the
measure of tax when a trade-in is included in the sale of
tangible personal property. It explains how and when the
retail sales or use tax exclusions apply and the recordkeeping
requirements needed to document the transactions.
The value of "trade-in property of like kind" is excluded
from the definitions of "selling price" in RCW 82.08.010 and
the definition of "value of the article used" in RCW 82.12.010. ((This rule explains how and when the retail sales
or use tax exclusions apply and the recordkeeping requirements
needed to document the transactions. The retail sales and use
tax exemptions provided for core deposits and credits by RCW 82.08.036 and 82.12.038 are discussed in WAC 458-20-250.))
Unless otherwise stated, "tax," "taxable," and
"nontaxable," as used in this ((rule)) section, refer to
retail sales or use tax only. The terms "trade-in," "traded
in," and "property traded in" have their ordinary and common
meaning. The terms refer to property applied, in whole or in
part, toward the selling price of property of like kind. Readers are advised that the fact that sales and purchase
transactions might be characterized as a "like kind" under
Section 1031 of the Internal Revenue Code does not control for
the purpose of the trade-in exclusion in RCW 82.08.010 and
82.12.010.
(a) Examples. This section contains examples which identify a number of facts and then state a conclusion. The 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.
(b) References to related sections. The department of revenue (department) has adopted other sections that readers may want to refer to.
(i) WAC 458-20-106 Casual or isolated sales -- Business reorganizations;
(ii) WAC 458-20-178 Use tax;
(iii) WAC 458-20-208 Exemptions for wholesale sales of new motor vehicles between new car dealers and for accommodation sales;
(iv) WAC 458-20-211 Leases or rentals of tangible personal property, bailments; and
(v) WAC 458-20-272 Tire fee -- Core deposits or credits.
(2) General nature of the trade-in exclusion. RCW 82.08.010 and 82.12.010 define the terms "selling price" and
"value of the article used," in pertinent part, to mean the
total amount of consideration, ((whether money)) except
separately stated trade-in property of like kind, including
cash, credit((s)), ((rights,)) or ((other)) tangible personal
property ((except trade-in property of like kind)), expressed
in terms of money paid or delivered by a buyer to a seller. As a result, the buyer of tangible personal property is
entitled to reduce the measure of retail sales or use tax if
(((a))):
• The buyer delivers the trade-in property to the
seller((, (b)));
• The trade-in property is delivered as consideration for
the purchase((,)); and (((c)))
• The property traded in is "property of a like kind."
(a) The trade-in exclusion applies to all trade-in property of like kind delivered by a buyer to a seller as consideration for a purchase. Thus, if a buyer trades in two motor vehicles when purchasing one motor vehicle, the buyer is entitled to a reduction in the measure of retail sales tax based on the value of both trade-in vehicles.
(b) The trade-in exclusion is limited to retail sales and use taxes. There is no comparable exclusion for business and occupation (B&O) tax. (See definition of "gross proceeds of sales" in RCW 82.04.070 and of "value proceeding or accruing" in RCW 82.04.090.) Sales tax need not have been paid on the item being traded in to be eligible for the trade-in exclusion.
(3) Buyer to deliver trade-in property to seller. The buyer must deliver trade-in property to the "seller."
(a) RCW 82.08.010 defines "seller" as "every person . . . making sales at retail or retail sales to a buyer, purchaser, or consumer, whether as agent, broker, or principal." There is no requirement that the seller be the owner of the property being sold to the buyer. RCW 82.08.010 anticipates and includes situations where a "seller" is selling property that he or she does not actually own, such as in consignment sales transactions.
For example, Broker enters into a consignment sale contract with Susan Smith to sell her Boat A. John Doe contacts Broker expressing interest in purchasing Boat A, provided his Boat B is accepted as a trade-in on the purchase. John Doe executes a purchase agreement with Broker which specifically identifies both Boat A being purchased and the trade-in. Broker accepts delivery and ownership of Boat B and places Boat B into Broker's own inventory. In turn Broker arranges delivery of the craft purchased to John. The buyer (John) has delivered the trade-in property (Boat B) to the seller (Broker). There is no requirement that Broker purchase Boat A from Susan (thereby becoming the owner) prior to selling Boat A to John and accepting Boat B as trade-in property because, as a broker, Broker is a seller under RCW 82.08.010.
(b) The trade-in exclusion does not apply to transactions where a seller transfers tangible personal property in or out of its own inventory in exchange for other property it also owns.
(4) Trade-in as consideration. Property traded in must
be consideration delivered by the buyer to the seller. The
sales documents must identify the tangible personal property
being purchased and the trade-in property being delivered to
the seller. This does not require simultaneous transfers of
the property being traded in and the property being purchased,
but it does require that the delivery of the trade-in and the
purchase be components of a single transaction. Sales
documents, executed not later than the date the trade-in
property is delivered to the seller, must identify the
property purchased and the trade-in property as more fully
explained in subsection (((7) below.
The following examples identify a number of facts and then state conclusions with respect to the trade-in exclusion. These examples should be used only as a general guide. The tax results of other situations must be determined after a review of all the facts and circumstances)) (8) of this section.
Examples:
(a) Jane Doe offers to purchase Sailboat A from Dealer, if Dealer accepts her Sailboat B as a trade-in on the purchase. Dealer declines to accept ownership of Jane's Sailboat B, but instead offers to sell Sailboat B on a consignment basis with the net proceeds to be applied toward the purchase if Sailboat B is sold within three months. Jane accepts and Sailboat B is sold within the three-month period, and the net proceeds are applied to Jane's purchase of Sailboat A.
Jane is not entitled to the trade-in exclusion. An agreement to sell property on consignment does not constitute consideration "paid or delivered by a buyer to a seller," even if the subsequent proceeds are applied to the purchase price.
(b) Sally Jones decides to upgrade from her existing
motor home to a new, larger motor home. The salesperson at a
local RV dealership explains that while the dealership does
not currently have on hand a motor home meeting Sally's needs,
it can order one for her from the manufacturer. The
salesperson also explains that if Sally trades in her motor
home at the time she enters into the purchase contract, the
dealership will accept the motor home as a down payment toward
the purchase of the new motor home. Sally signs the purchase
contract, the dealership orders the new motor home, and Sally
delivers her motor home to the RV ((dealers)) dealership (who
accepts ownership ((thereof)) of the motor home). Sally's new
motor home is delivered to her eight months later.
Sally is entitled to the trade-in exclusion because the motor home was delivered to the RV dealership as consideration paid toward her purchase of the new motor home.
(c) Mr. B and Coastal Brokers enter into a consignment sales agreement. Under the terms of this agreement, Coastal Brokers will sell Mr. B's sailboat on a consignment basis and at the time of sale place the proceeds due Mr. B into a trust account for use toward a possible purchase of a yacht by Mr. B. Mr. B's sailboat is sold and the proceeds due to Mr. B placed in the trust account. Mr. B subsequently purchases a yacht from Coastal Brokers, and the trust account proceeds are applied to the purchase price of the yacht.
Mr. B is not entitled to the trade-in exclusion. The delivery of Mr. B's sailboat to Coastal Brokers and Mr. B's purchase of the yacht are not components of a single transaction. In addition, Mr. B's delivery of his sailboat for consignment sale by Coastal Brokers does not constitute consideration "paid or delivered by a buyer to a seller," even if proceeds from the sale are applied to the purchase of the yacht.
(d) John Smith agrees to purchase Travel Trailer A from Dealer if Dealer accepts John's Travel Trailer B as a trade-in on the purchase. Dealer accepts ownership of Travel Trailer B at an agreed-upon value, on the condition that John pay Dealer a monthly fee to reimburse Dealer for financing costs associated with Travel Trailer B. This fee is to be paid for a period of four months or until Dealer sells Travel Trailer B, whichever is shorter. John has no further responsibility with respect to Travel Trailer B after this period.
John is entitled to the trade-in exclusion because he delivered Travel Trailer B to Dealer as consideration paid toward Travel Trailer A. The fees John paid to reimburse Dealer for financing costs associated with the trade-in property do not change the nature of the transaction, though for the purposes of the trade-in exclusion they do reduce the originally agreed-upon value of the trade-in property.
(5) Property of like kind. The term "property of like kind" means articles of tangible personal property of the same generic classification. It refers to the class and kind of property, not to its grade or quality. The term includes all property within a general classification rather than within a specific category in the classification. Thus, as examples, it means furniture for furniture, motor vehicles for motor vehicles, licensed recreational land vehicles for licensed recreational land vehicles, appliances for appliances, auto parts for auto parts, and audio/video equipment for audio/video equipment. These general classifications are determined by the nature of the property and its function or use. It may be that some kinds of property fit within more than one general classification. For example, a motor home is both a motor vehicle and a licensed recreational land vehicle. Thus, for purposes of the trade-in exclusion, a motor home may be taken as a trade-in on a travel trailer, truck, camper, or a truck with camper attached, and vice versa. Similarly, a travel trailer may be taken as trade-in on a motor home even though a travel trailer is not a motor vehicle; both are licensed recreational land vehicles. Conversely, a utility trailer may not be taken as trade-in on a travel trailer because a utility trailer is neither a motor vehicle nor a licensed recreational land vehicle. Likewise a car may not be taken as trade-in on a camper and vice versa.
It is not required that a car be traded in exclusively on another car in order to get the trade-in reduction of the tax measure. It could, as well, be traded in as part payment for a truck, motorcycle, motor home, or any other qualifying motor vehicle. Similarly, a sofa for a recliner chair, a pistol for a rifle, a sailboat for a motorboat, or a gold chain for a wrist watch are the kinds of generic trade-in transfers which would qualify. The exclusion of the value of property traded in, however, does not include such things as a motorcycle for a boat, a diamond ring for a television set, a battery for lumber, computer hardware for computer software, or farm machinery (including tractors and self-propelled combines) for a car.
(6) Value of property traded in. The seller and buyer establish the value of property traded in. The parties may not overstate the value of the trade-in property in order to artificially lower the amount of retail sales or use tax due. Absent proof of a higher value, the property traded in must be determined by the fair market value of similar property of like quality, quantity, and age, sold or traded under comparable conditions.
(7) Trade-in value exceeds selling price. If the
trade-in value exceeds the selling price of the item sold, the
selling price of the item being purchased should be used as
the trade-in value. For example, a Washington resident
purchases a car with a value of (($5,000)) $15,000 and trades
in a car with a fair market value of (($7,000)) $17,000. The
net due to the purchaser is $2,000. When the seller completes
the excise tax return, he or she should report a trade-in
value of (($5,000)) $15,000 and not (($7,000)) $17,000 because
the trade-in value is capped at selling price of the item
being purchased.
(8) Recordkeeping. RCW 82.32.070 requires every person liable for any tax to keep and preserve records from which tax liability can be determined. To substantiate a claim for the trade-in exclusion, the sales agreement and/or invoice must identify both the property being purchased and the trade-in property. Such identification includes the model number, serial number, year of manufacture, and other information as appropriate. The sales agreement and/or invoice must also specify the selling price and the value of the trade-in property.
A copy of the sales agreement or invoice must be retained as a part of the seller's sales records. The following is an example of an invoice providing the necessary information regarding a sales transaction with trade-in:
Sold: (( |
|
Model MH-20DT, Serial No. 200010 | $(( |
Less "trade-in" - 1983 Meadowlark 8 ft. Camper | |
Model No. ML883, Serial No. 0001 | $2,000 |
Subtotal | $17,075 |
Retail Sales Tax | |
Total |
(10) Casual or isolated sales. The retail sales tax
applies to all casual or isolated retail sales made by any
person who is required to be registered and reporting tax to
the state. The trade-in exclusion applies in the case of a
casual or isolated sale, provided the statutory requirements
are satisfied. The recordkeeping requirements explained in
subsection (((7))) (8) of this section apply to casual or
isolated sales.
Persons who are not engaged in business activity, e.g.,
private persons, are not required to be registered and are not
required to collect sales tax on their casual or isolated
sales. See RCW 82.08.0251 and WAC 458-20-106 (((Casual or
isolated sales -- Business reorganizations))). The use of
property acquired through casual sales is subject to use tax. See RCW ((82.12.0251)) 82.12.020 and WAC 458-20-178.
(11) Trade-ins as sales. RCW 82.04.040 defines the term "sale" in pertinent part to mean "any transfer of the ownership of, title to, or possession of property for a valuable consideration." When property is traded in, ownership in that property is transferred. As a result, under the law a buyer delivering trade-in property to a seller is making a sale of the trade-in property.
(a) If the buyer is not in the business of selling the
type of property being traded in the buyer incurs no B&O tax
liability. ((())See WAC 458-20-106 ((on casual or isolated
sales)).(()))
(b) On occasions where the buyer is in the business of selling the type of property being traded in, the buyer incurs a B&O tax liability.
For example, Don's Leasing purchases a new car from Tom
the Dealer. This car will be part of ((Leasing's)) Don's
inventory of cars that it rents to customers. ((Leasing)) Don
delivers a used car out of its inventory to Tom the Dealer as
a part of the consideration paid for the new car. The
trade-in of the used car by ((Leasing)) Don is considered a
wholesale sale to ((Dealer)) Tom. This is not a casual or
isolated sale because ((Leasing)) Don is in the business of
selling cars in the form of rentals.
(c) In most cases, a buyer delivers trade-in property to a seller who is in the business of reselling trade-in property (e.g., a buyer trading in an automobile to a new car dealer). The buyer in these cases has no responsibility to collect retail sales tax.
(12) Retail services. The exclusion of the value of
property traded in from the selling price tax measure applies
only to sales involving tangible personal property traded in
for tangible personal property sold. It does not apply to any
transactions involving services that have been statutorily
included as "sales at retail." ((())See RCW 82.04.050(())). For example, a construction contractor may not accept part
payment in tangible personal property to thereby reduce the
sales tax measure of the construction contract selling price. Similarly, a seller of tangible personal property may not
accept retail services as part payment to thereby reduce the
selling price tax measure. Such transfers neither qualify as
trade-in transfers of tangible property nor "in-kind"
transfers.
(13) Trade-in for rental property. Under RCW 82.04.050,
rentals or leases of tangible personal property are "retail
sales." The "selling price" is also the measure of tax for
such rentals and leases. Where tangible personal property is
traded in as part payment for the rental or lease of property
of like kind (e.g., a used computer against the rental of a
new one), the sales tax will apply to all payments after the
value of the property traded in has been depleted or consumed
and the lessor of the property actually begins making charges
for the lease or rental of tangible personal property. Refer
to WAC 458-20-211 (((Leases or rentals of tangible personal
property, bailments))) for more information regarding the
tax-reporting responsibilities with respect to lease or rental
transactions.
A lessee must first purchase leased property before trading it in toward the purchase/lease of other property to be entitled to the trade-in exclusion. A buyer cannot satisfy the statutory requirement that the trade-in property be delivered to the seller as a part of the consideration for the purchased property if the buyer does not have ownership of and the right to sell the property being traded in. For example, Jane Doe leases Auto A from Leasing Company. Jane decides to lease a newer Auto B from Leasing Company. Jane exercises her option to purchase Auto A, and then delivers Auto A as a trade-in towards the lease of Auto B. Jane is entitled to the trade-in exclusion. By delivering her ownership of Auto A to Leasing Company, Jane has satisfied the statutory requirement that she as the buyer deliver trade-in property to the seller as a part of the consideration paid for Auto B.
(14) Real property transfers. Because the trade-in exclusion is limited to tangible personal property, the trade-in exclusion does not apply to sales of real property or transactions where real property is traded in for tangible personal property.
(15) Use tax. RCW 82.12.010 defines the measure of the
use tax as the "value of the article used." As explained in
subsection (2) of this ((rule)) section, the statutory
definition excludes "trade-in property of ((like-kind)) like
kind." Therefore, the measure of the use tax for tangible
personal property upon which no retail sales tax has been paid
(e.g., if it were purchased in another state) is the same as
the measure of the retail sales tax. In such cases the value
of the property traded in should be excluded from the use tax
measure.
The consumer-user, or any seller who has a duty to
collect this state's use tax, must retain the sales records
reflecting property "traded in," as explained in subsection
(((7))) (8) of this ((rule)) section.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300. 01-08-003, § 458-20-247, filed 3/21/01, effective 4/21/01; 86-04-024 (Order 86-2), § 458-20-247, filed 1/28/86; 85-02-006 (Order ET 84-6), § 458-20-247, filed 12/21/84.]