HomeMy WebLinkAboutORD1294ORDINANCE NO. 1294
AN ORDINANCE OF THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
APACHE JUNCTION,ARIZONA,RELATING TO THE PRIVILEGE
LICENSE TAX; ADOPTING "THE 2007 EDITION OF THE TAX CODE
OF THE CITY OF APACHE JUNCTION" BY REFERENCE; REPEALING
CONFLICTING PROVISIONS;PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY;
PROVIDING PENALTIES FOR VIOLATIONS;ESTABLISHING
EFFECTIVE DATES; AND DECLARING AN EMERGENCY.
WHEREAS,the Mayor and City Council on September 1,1987
adopted the "Tax Code of the City of Apache Junction, Arizona"; and
•WHEREAS,the adoption of this tax code recommended by the
Municipal Sales Tax Commission and mandated by Arizona Revised
Statutes Annotated (hereinafter "A.R.S."), Title 42 Taxation is
applicable to all Arizona cities and towns; and
WHEREAS, the City desires to transition from a "program" city
to a "non -program" city and implement self -collection of city
transaction privilege taxes (sales tax) as of July 1, 2007.
WHEREAS, A.R.S. § 9-802 permits municipalities to enact the
provisions of a code or public record theretofore in existence
without setting forth such provisions in full text as long as the
adopting ordinance is published in full text and at least three
copies of the code or public record are filed in the office of the
clerk of the municipality and are made available for public use and
inspection;
WHEREAS, pursuant to A.R.S. §§ 9-801(1) and 9-802, codes which
may be adopted by reference include those relating to tax codes.
.NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAINED BY THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF APACHE JUNCTION, ARIZONA!
SECTION I.ADOPTING BY REFERENCE
That certain document known as "The 2007 Edition of the Tax Code
of the City of Apache Junction," three copies of which are on file
in the office of the ,City Clerk of the City of Apache Junction,
Arizona, which document was made a public record by Resolution No.
ORDINANCE NO. 1294
PAGE 1 OF 3
07-16 of the City of Apache Junation, Arizona, is hereby referred
to, adopted and made a part hereof as if fully set out in this
ordinance.
SECTION II.REPEALING CONFLICTING PROVISIONS
All ordinances and parts of ordinances in conflict with the
provisions of this ordinance or any part of the codes adopted
herein by reference are hereby repealed.
SECTION III..PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY
If any section, subsection, sentence, phrase, clause or portion of
this ordinance or any part of the codes adopted herein by reference
is for any reason held to be invalid or unconstitutional by the
decision of any court of competent jurisdiction,such decision
shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions thereof.
SECTION IV.PROVIDING PENALTIES FOR VIOLATION
Any person found guilty of violating any provision of these
amendments to the -tax code shall be guilty of a class one
misdemeanor as provided for in Apache Junction City Code, Volume I,
Chapter .1,GENERAL,Article 1-8 PENALTY.Each day that a violation
continues shall be a separate offense.
SECTION V.ESTABLISHING EFFECTIVE DATES
The effective date of the 2007 Edition of the Tax Code of the City
of Apache Junction shall be July 1, 2007.
SECTION VI.DECLARING AN EMERGENCY
The immediate operation of the provision of this ordinance is
necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace,
health or safety,and that an emergency is hereby declared to
exist; and this ordinance shall be in full, force and effect from
and after its pas sage, adoption and approval by the Mayor and City
Council of the City of Apache Junction.
ORDINANCE NO. 1294
PAGE 2 OF 3
PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
APACHE JUNCTION, ARIZONA, THIS 3RD.DAY OF APRIL , 2007.
SIGNED AND ATTESTED TO THIS 3RD DAY OF APRIL
DOUGLAS COL
Mayor
ATTEST:
KATHLEEN CONNELLY
City Clerk
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
cz4 -3-27-07
RICHARD J.STERN
City Attorney
ORDINANCE NO.1294
PAGE 3 OF 3
, 2007.
ARTICLE I - GENERAL CONDITIONS AND DEFINITIONS
Pages Section Description
1 8A-1 Words of tense, number and gender; code references.
1 8A-100 General definitions.
7 8A-110 Definitions: income -producing capital equipment.
9 8A-115 Definitions: computer software; custom computer programming.
(Reg. 115.1)
9 8A-120 Reserved
ARTICLE II- DETERMINATION OF GROSS INCOME
Pages Section Description
11 8A-200 Determination of gross income: in general.
11 8A-210 Determination of gross income: transactions between affiliated
companies or persons.
11 8A-220 Determination of gross income: artificially contrived transactions.
11 8A-230 Determination of gross income based upon method of reporting.
12 8A-240 Exclusion of cash discounts, returns, refunds, trade-in values, vendor-
issued coupons, and rebates from gross income.
13 8A-250 Exclusion of combined tax from gross income; itemization; notice;
limitations.
14 8A-260 Exclusion of fees and taxes from gross income; limitations.
14 8A-265 (Reserved)
14.1 8A-266 Exclusion of motor carrier revenues from gross income.
14.1 8A-270 Exclusion of gross income of persons deemed not engaged in business.
16 8A-280 (Reserved)
16 8A-285 (Reserved)
17 8A-290 (Reserved)
ARTICLE III - LICENSING & RECORDKEEPING
Page Section Description
18 8A-300 Licensing requirements.
18 8A-305 Special licensing requirements.
19 8A-310 Licensing: duration of license; transferability; display.
19.1 8A-315 (Reserved)
19.1 8A-320 Licensing: cancellation; revocation.
20 8A-330 Operating without a license.
20 8A-350 Recordkeeping requirements.(Reg. 350.1, Reg. 350.2, Reg. 350.3)
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20 8A-360 Recordkeeping: claim of exclusion, exemption, deduction, or credit;
documentation; liability. (Reg. 360.1, Reg. 360.2)
21 8A-370 Inadequate or unsuitable records.
ARTICLE IV - PRIVILEGE TAXES
Pages Section Description
22 8A-400 Imposition of Privilege Taxes; presumption.
22.1 8A-405 Advertising.(Reg. 405.1, Reg. 405.2)
22.1 8A-407 (Reserved)
22.1 8A-410 Amusements, exhibitions, and similar activities.
23 8A-415 Construction contracting: construction contractors.(Reg. 415.1,
Reg. 415.2)
24 8A-416 Construction contracting: speculative builders. (Reg. 416.1, Reg. 416.2)
25.2 8A-417 Construction contracting: owner -builders who are not speculative
builders.
26 8A-418 (Reserved)
26 8A-420 Feed at wholesale
26 8A-422 (Reserved)
26.1 8A-425 Job printing.(Reg. 425.1)
26.1 8A-427 Manufactured buildings
27 8A-430 Timbering, and other extraction.
27 8A-432 Mining.
28 8A-435 Publishing and periodicals distribution. (Reg. 435.1)
29 8A-440 Rental occupancy tax
30 8A-444 Hotels.
30 8A-445 Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of real property.(Reg. 445.1 and
Reg. 445.3)
32.1 8A-446 (Reserved)
32.1 8A-447 Rental, leasing, or licensing for use of real property: additional tax upon
transient lodging.(Reg. 447.1)
32.1 8A-450 Rental, leasing or licensing for use of tangible personal property.
(Reg. 450.1, Reg. 450.2, Reg. 450.3)
33 8A-452 (Reserved)
33 8A-455 Restaurants and bars.
33 8A-460 Retail sales: measure of tax; burden of proof; exclusions.
35 8A-465 Retail sales: exemptions.
38 8A-470 Telecommunication services.(Reg. 470.1)
38.1 8A-475 Transporting for hire.(Reg. 475.1)
39 8A-480 Utility services.
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40 8A-485
ARTICLE V -
Pages Section
41
41
42
43
43
44
44
45
48
(Reserved)
ADMINISTRATION (Also: Appendix I)
Description
8A-500 Administration of this Chapter; rule making.
8A-510 Divulging of information prohibited; exceptions allowing disclosure.
8A-515
8A-516
8A-517
8A-520
8A-530
8A-540
8A-541
48 8A-542
Duties of the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer.
Taxpayer assistance orders.
Basis for evaluating employee performance.
Reporting and payment of tax.
When tax due; when delinquent; verification of return; extensions.
Interest and civil penalties.
Erroneous advice or misleading statements by the Tax Collector;
abatement of penalties and interest; definition.
Prospective application of new law or interpretation or application of law.
49 8A-545 Deficiencies; when inaccurate return is filed; when no return is filed;
estimates.
49 8A-546 Closing agreements in cases of extensive taxpayer misunderstanding or
misapplication; approval; rules.
50 8A-550 Limitation periods.
51 8A-553 Examination of taxpayer records; joint audits.
51 8A-555 Tax Collector may examine books and other records; failure to provide
records.
52 8A-556 No additional audits or proposed assessments; exceptions.
52 8A-560 Erroneous payment of tax; credits and refunds; limitations.
53 8A-565 Payment of tax by incorrect taxpayer or to the incorrect Arizona city or
town.
54 8A-567 (Reserved)
54 8A-570 Administrative review; petition for hearing or for re -determination; finality
of order.
56 8A-571 Jeopardy assessments.(Reg. 571.1)
57 8A-572 Expedited review of jeopardy assessments.
57 8A-575 Judicial review.
58 8A-577 Refunds of taxes paid under protest.
58.1 8A-578 Reimbursement of fees and other costs; definitions.
59 8A-580 Criminal penalties.
60 8A-590 Civil actions.
61 8A-595 Collection of taxes when there is succession in and/or cessation of
business.
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62 8A-596 Agreement for installment payments of tax.
63 8A-597 Private taxpayer rulings; request; revocation or modification; definition.
ARTICLE VI - USE TAX (Reserved)
REGULATIONS
Paqes Section Description
R1 8A-100.1 Brokers.
R1.1 8A-100.2 Delivery, installation, or other direct customer services.
R3 8A-100.3 Retailers.
R3 8A-100.4 Out-of-City/Out-of-State Sales: Sales to Native Americans.
R3 8A-100.5 Remediation contracting.
R5 8A-115.1 Computer hardware, software, and data services.
R8 8A-120.1 (Reserved)
R9 8A-200.1 When deposits are included in gross income.
R9 8A-250.1 Excess tax collected.
R9 8A-270.1 Proprietary activities of municipalities are not considered activities of a
governmental entity.
R9.1 8A-270.2 Proprietary clubs.
R10 8A-300.1 Who must apply for a license.
R11 8A-300.2 (Reserved)
R11 8A-310.1 (Reserved)
R11 8A-310.2 (Reserved)
R11 8A-310.3 (Reserved)
R11 8A-350.1 Recordkeeping: income.
R12 8A-350.2 Recordkeeping: expenditures.
R13 8A-350.3 Recordkeeping: out -of -City and out -of -State sales.
R14 8A-360.1 Proof of exemption: sale for resale; sale, rental, lease, or license of
rental equipment.
R14 8A-360.2 Proof of exemption: exemption certificate.
R16 8A-405.1 Local advertising examples.
R16 8A-405.2 Advertising activity within the City.
R16 8A-407.1 (Reserved)
R17 8A-415.1 Distinction between the categories of construction contracting.
R17 8A-415.2 Distinction between construction contracting and certain related
activities.
R18 8A-415.3 Construction contracting; tax rate effective date.
R19 8A-416.1 Speculative builders: homeowner's bona fide non -business sale of a
family residence.
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R19 8A-416.2 Reconstruction contracting.
R20 8A-425.1 Distinction between job printing and certain related activities.
R21 8A-435.1 Distinction between publishing of periodicals and certain related
activities.
R21 8A-435.2 Advertising income of publishers and distributors of newspapers and
other periodicals.
R21 8A-445.1 When the rental, leasing, and licensing of real property is exempt as
"casual".
R23 8A-445.2 (Repealed by the 1995 Amendments)
R23 8A-445.3 Rental, leasing, and licensing of real property as lodging: room and
board; furnished lodging.
R23 8A-447.1 (Repealed)
R24 8A-450.1 Distinction between rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible
personal property and certain related activities.
R24 8A-450.2 Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible personal property:
membership fees; other charges.
R25 8A-450.3 Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of equipment with operator.
R25 8A-450.4 Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible personal property:
semi -permanently or permanently installed tangible personal property.
R26 8A-450.5 Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible personal property:
delivery, installation, repair, and maintenance charges.
R26 8A-455.1 Gratuities related to restaurant activity.
R26.1 8A-460.1 Distinction between retail sales and certain other transfers of tangible
personal property.
R27 8A-460.2 Retail sales: trading stamp company transactions.
R27 8A-460.3 Retail sales: membership fees of retailers.
R28 8A-460.4 Retail sales: professional services.
R29 8A-460.5 Retail sales: monetized bullion; numismatic value of coins.
R29 8A-460.6 Retail sales; consignment sales.
R29 8A-465.1 Retail sales: repair services.
R30 8A-465,2 Retail sales: warranty, maintenance, and similar service contracts.
R30 8A-465.3 Retail sales: sale of containers, paper products, and labels.
R31 8A-465.4 Retail sales: aircraft acquired for use outside the State.
R32 8A-470.1 Telecommunication services.
R33 8A-475.1 Distinction between transporting for hire and certain related activities.
R33 8A-520.1 Reports made to the City.
R33 8A-520.2 Change of method of reporting.
R34 8A-555.1 Administrative Request for the attendance of witnesses or the
production of documents; service thereof, remedies and penalties for
failure to respond.
R34 8A-571.1 Collection of tax in jeopardy.
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ARTICLE I
GENERAL CONDITIONS AND DEFINITIONS
Sec. 8A-1. Words of tense, number and gender; code references.
(a)For the purposes of this Chapter, all words of tense, number, and gender shall comply with
A.R.S. Section 1-214 as amended.
(b)For the purposes of this Chapter, all code references, unless specified otherwise, shall:
(1)refer to this City Code.
(2)be deemed to include all amendments to such code references.
Sec. 8A-100.General definitions.
For the purposes of this Chapter, the following definitions apply:
"Assembler"means a person who unites or combines products, wares, or articles of manufacture
so as to produce a change in form or substance of such items without changing or altering
component parts.
"Broker"means any person engaged or continuing in business who acts for another for a
consideration in the conduct of a business activity taxable under this Chapter, and who receives
for his principal all or part of the gross income from the taxable activity.
"Business"means all activities or acts, personal or corporate, engaged in and caused to be
engaged in with the object of gain, benefit, or advantage, either direct or indirect, but not casual
activities or sales.
"Business Day"means any day of the week when the Tax Collector's office is open for the public
to conduct the Tax Collector's business.
"Casual Activity or Sale"means a transaction of an isolated nature made by a person who neither
represents himself to be nor is engaged in a business subject to a tax imposed by this Chapter.
However, no sale, rental, license for use, or lease transaction concerning real property nor any
activity entered into by a business taxable by this Chapter shall be treated, or be exempt, as
casual.This definition shall include sales of used capital assets, provided that the volume•and
frequency of such sales do not indicate that the seller regularly engages in selling such property.
"Combined Taxes"means the sum of all applicable Arizona Transaction Privilege and Use Taxes;
all applicable transportation taxes imposed upon gross income by this County as authorized by
Article Ill, Chapter 6, Title 42, Arizona Revised Statutes; and all applicable taxes imposed by this
Chapter.
"Commercial Property"is any real property, or portion of such property, used for any purpose
other than lodging or lodging space, including structures built for lodging but used otherwise, such
as model homes, apartments used as offices, etc.
"Communications Channel"means any line, wire, cable, microwave,radio signal,light beam,
telephone, telegraph, or any other electromagnetic means of moving a message.
"Construction Contracting"refers to the activity of a construction contractor.
"Construction Contractor"means a person who undertakes to or offers to undertake to,or
purports to have the capacity to undertake to, or submits a bid to, or does himself or by or through
others, construct, alter,repair, add to, subtract from,improve, move, wreck, or demolish any
building,highway,road,railroad,excavation,or other structure,project,development,or
improvement to real property,or to do any part thereof."Construction contractor"includes
subcontractors, specialty contractors, prime contractors, and any person receiving consideration
for the general supervision and/or coordination of such a construction project except for
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remediation contracting.This definition shall govern without regard to whether or not the
construction contractor is acting in fulfillment of a contract.
"Delivery (of Notice) by the Tax Collector"means "receipt (of notice) by the taxpayer".
"Delivery, Installation, or Other Direct Customer Services"means services or labor, excluding
repair labor, provided by a taxpayer to or for his customer at the time of transfer of tangible
personal property; provided further that the charge for such labor or service is separately billed to
the customer and maintained separately in the taxpayer's books and records.
"Engaging",when used with reference to engaging or continuing in business,includes the
exercise of corporate or franchise powers.
"Equivalent Excise Tax"means either:
(1)a Privilege or Use Tax levied by another Arizona municipality upon the transaction in
question, and paid either to such Arizona municipality directly or to the vendor; or
(2)an excise tax levied by a political subdivision of a state other than Arizona upon the
transaction in question, and paid either to such jurisdiction directly or to the vendor; or
(3)an excise tax levied by a Native American Government organized under the laws of the
federal government upon the transaction in question, and paid either to such jurisdiction
directly or to the vendor.
"Federal Government"means the United States Government, its departments and agencies; but
not including national banks or federally chartered or insured banks, savings and loan institutions,
or credit unions.
"Food"means any items intended for human consumption as defined by rules and regulations
adopted by the Department of Revenue, State of Arizona, pursuant to A.R.S. Section 42-5106.
Under no circumstances shall "food" include alcoholic beverages or tobacco,or food items
purchased for use in conversion to any form of alcohol by distillation, fermentation, brewing, or
other process.
"Hotel" means any public or private hotel, inn, hostelry, tourist home, house, motel,rooming
house, apartment house, trailer, or other lodging place within the City offering lodging, wherein
the owner thereof, for compensation, furnishes lodging to any transient, except foster homes, rest
homes, sheltered care homes, nursing homes, or primary health care facilities.
"Jet Fuel"means jet fuel as defined in A.R.S. Section 42-5351.
"Job Printing"means the activity of copying or reproducing an article by any means, process, or
method."Job printing" includes engraving of printing plates, embossing, copying, micrographics,
and photo reproduction.
"Lessee"includes the equivalent person in a rental or licensing agreement for all purposes of this
Chapter.
"Lessor"includes the equivalent person in a rental or licensing agreement for all purposes of this
Chapter.
"Licensing (for Use)"means any agreement between the user ("licensee") and the owner or the
owner's agent ("licensor") for the use of the licensor's property whereby the licensor receives
consideration,where such agreement does not qualify as a "sale"or "lease"or "rental"
agreement.
"Lodging (Lodging Space)"means any room or apartment in a hotel or any other provider of
rooms, trailer spaces, or other residential dwelling spaces; or the furnishings or services and
accommodations accompanying the use and possession of said dwelling space,including
storage or parking space for the property of said tenant.
"Manufactured Buildings"means a manufactured home, mobile home or factory built building, as
defined in A.R.S. Section 41-2142.
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"Manufacturer"means a person engaged or continuing in the business of fabricating, producing,
or manufacturing products,wares,or articles for use from other forms of tangible personal
property, imparting to such new forms, qualities, properties, and combinations.
"Minim' and Metallurgical Supplies"means all tangible personal property acquired by persons
engaged in activities defined in Section 8A-432 for such use.This definition shall not include:
(1) janitorial equipment and supplies.
(2)office equipment, office furniture, and office supplies.
(3)motor vehicles licensed for use upon the highways of the State.
"Modifier"means a person who reworks, changes, or adds to products, wares, or articles of
manufacture.
"Nonprofit Entity"means any entity organized and operated exclusively for charitable purposes,
or operated by the Federal Government, the State, or any political subdivision of the State.
"Occupancy (of Real Property)"means any occupancy or use, or any right to occupy or use, real
property including any improvements, rights, or interests in such property.
"Out -of -City Sale"means the sale of tangible personal property and job printing if all of the
following occur:
(1)transference of title and possession occur without the City; and
(2)the stock from which such personal property was taken was not within the corporate limits
of the City; and
(3)the order is received at a permanent business location of the seller located outside the City;
which location is used for the substantial and regular conduct of such business sales
activity.In no event shall the place of business of the buyer be determinative of the situs of
the receipt of the order.
For the purpose of this definition it does not matter that all other indicia of business occur within
the City, including, but not limited to, accounting, invoicing, payments, centralized purchasing,
and supply to out -of -City storehouses and out -of -City retail branch outlets from a primary
storehouse within the City.
"Out -of -State Sale"means the sale of tangible personal property and job printing if all of the
following occur:
(1)The order is placed from without the State of Arizona; and
(2)the order is placed by other than a resident of the State to be determined in a manner
similar to "resides within the City"; and
(3)the property is delivered to the buyer at a location outside the State; and
(4)the property is purchased for use outside the State.
"Owner -Builder means an owner or lessor of real property who,by himself or by or through
others, constructs or has constructed or reconstructs or has reconstructed any improvement to
real property.
"Person"means an individual, firm, partnership, joint venture, association, corporation, estate,
trust, receiver, syndicate, broker, the Federal Government, this State, or any political subdivision
or agency of this State.For the purposes of this Chapter, a person shall be considered a distinct
and separate person from any general or limited partnership or joint venture or other association
with which such person is affiliated.A subsidiary corporation shall be considered a separate
person from its parent corporation for purposes of taxation of transactions with its parent
corporation.
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"Prosthetic"means any of the following tangible personal property if such items are prescribed or
recommended by a licensed podiatrist, chiropractor, dentist, physician or surgeon, naturopath,
optometrist,osteopathic physician or surgeon,psychologist,hearing aid dispenser,physician
assistant, nurse practitioner or veterinarian:
(1) any man-made device for support or replacement of a part of the body, or to increase
acuity of one of the senses.Such items include: prescription eyeglasses; contact lenses;
hearing aids; artificial limbs or teeth; neck, back, arm, leg, or similar braces.
(2) insulin, insulin syringes, and glucose test strips sold with or without a prescription.
(3)hospital beds, crutches, wheelchairs, similar home health aids, or corrective shoes.
(4)drugs or medicine, including oxygen.
(5)equipment used to generate,monitor,or provide health support systems,such as
respiratory equipment, oxygen concentrator, dialysis machine.
(6)durable medical equipment which has a federal health care financing administration
common procedure code, is designated reimbursable by Medicare, can withstand repeated
use, is primarily and customarily used to serve a medical purpose, is generally not useful to
a person in the absence of illness or injury and is appropriate for use in the home.
"Qualifying Community Health Center"
(a)means an entity that is recognized as nonprofit under 501(c)(3)of the United States
Internal Revenue Code,that is a community -based,primary care clinic that has a
community -based board of directors and that is either:
(1)the'sole provider of primary care in the community.
(2)a nonhospital affiliated clinic that is located in a federally designated medically
underserved area in this State.
(b)includes clinics that are being constructed as qualifying community health centers.
"Qualifying Health Care Organization"means an entity that is recognized as nonprofit under
Section 501(c) of the United States Internal Revenue Code and that uses, saves or invests at
least eighty percent (80%) of all monies that it receives from all sources each year only for health
and medical related educational and charitable services,as documented by annual financial
audits prepared by an independent certified public accountant, performed according to generally
accepted accounting standards and filed annually with the Arizona Department of Revenue.
Monies that are used, saved or invested to lease, purchase or construct a facility for health and
medical related education and charitable services are included in the eighty percent (80%)
requirement.
"Qualifying Hospital"means any of the following:
(1)a licensed hospital which is organized and operated exclusively for charitable purposes, no
part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or
individual.
(2)a licensed nursing care institution or a licensed residential care institution or a residential
care facility operated in conjunction with a licensed nursing care institution or a licensed
kidney dialysis center, which provides medical services, nursing services or health related
services and is not used or held for profit.
(3)a hospital, nursing care institution or residential care institution which is operated by the
federal government, this State or a political subdivision of this State.
(4)a facility that is under construction and that on completion will be a facility under subdivision
(1), (2) or (3) of this paragraph.
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"Receipt (of Notice) by the Taxpayer'means the earlier of actual receipt or the first attempted
delivery by certified United States mail to the taxpayer's address of record with the Tax Collector.
"Remediation"means those actions that are reasonable, necessary, cost-effective and technically
feasible in the event of the release or threat of release of hazardous substances into the
environment such that the waters of the State are or may be affected, such actions as may be
necessary to monitor,assess and evaluate such release or threat of release,actions of
remediation, removal or disposal of hazardous substances or taking such other actions as may
be necessary to prevent, minimize or mitigate damage to the public health or welfare or to the
waters of the State which may otherwise result from a release or threat of release of a hazardous
substance that will or may affect the waters of the State. Remediation activities include the use of
biostimulation with indigenous microbes and bioaugmentation using microbes that are
nonpathogenic,nonopportunistic and that are naturally occurring.Remediation activities may
include community information and participation costs and providing an alternative drinking water
supply.
"Rental Equipment"means tangible personal property sold,rented,leased,or licensed to
customers to the extent that the item is actually used by the customer for rental, lease, or license
to others; provided that:
(1)(Reserved)
(2) the vendee is regularly engaged in the business of renting,leasing,or licensing such
property for a consideration; and
(3)the item so claimed as "rental equipment" is not used by the person claiming the exemption
for any purpose other than rental, lease, or license for compensation, to an extent greater
than fifteen percent (15%) of its actual use.
"Rental Supply"means an expendable or nonexpendable repair or replacement part sold to
become part of "rental equipment", provided that:
(1)the documentation relating to each purchased item so claimed specifically itemizes to the
vendor the actual item of "rental equipment" to which the purchased item is intended to be
attached as a repair or replacement part; and
(2)the vendee is regularly engaged in the business of renting,leasing,or licensing such
property for a consideration; and
(3)the item so claimed as "rental equipment" is not used by the person claiming the exemption
for any purpose other than rental, lease, or license for compensation, to an extent greater
than fifteen percent (15%) of its actual use.
"Repairer"means a person who restores or renews products, wares, or articles of manufacture.
"Resides within the City"means in cases other than individuals,whose legal addresses are
determinative of residence, the engaging, continuing, or conducting of regular business activity
within the City.
"Restaurant"means any business activity where articles of food,drink,or condiment are
customarily prepared or served to patrons for consumption on or off the premises, also including
bars, cocktail lounges, the dining rooms of hotels, and all caterers.For the purposes of this
Chapter, a "fast food" business, which includes street vendors and mobile vendors selling in
public areas or at entertainment or sports or similar events, who prepares or sells food or drink for
consumption on or off the premises is considered a "restaurant", and not a "retailer".
"Retail Sale (Sale at Retail)"means the sale of tangible personal property, except the sale of
tangible personal property to a person regularly engaged in the business of selling such property.
"Retailer"means any person engaged or continuing in the business of sales of tangible personal
property at retail.
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"Sale" includes any transaction whereby the possession of such property is transferred but the
seller retains the title as security for the payment of the price."Sale" also includes the fabrication
of tangible personal property for consumers who, in whole or in part, furnish either directly or
indirectly the materials used in such fabrication work.
"Speculative Builder"means either:
(1)an owner -builder who sells or contracts to sell, at anytime,improved real property (as
provided in Section 8A-416) consisting of:
A)custom,model,or inventory homes, regardless of the stage of completion of such
homes; or
B)improved residential or commercial lots without a structure; or
(2)an owner -builder who sells or contracts to sell improved real property, other than improved
real property specified in subsection (1) above:
A)prior to completion; or
B)before the expiration of twenty-four (24) months after the improvements of the real
property sold are substantially complete.
"Substantially Complete"means the construction contracting or reconstruction contracting:
(1)has passed final inspection or its equivalent; or
(2)certificate of occupancy or its equivalent has been issued; or
(3)is ready for immediate occupancy or use.
"Supplier"means any person who rents, leases, licenses, or makes sales of tangible personal
property within the City, either directly to the consumer or customer or to wholesalers, jobbers,
fabricators, manufacturers, modifiers, assemblers, repairers, or those engaged in the business of
providing services which involve the use,sale,rental,lease,or license of tangible personal
property.
"Tax Collector"means the City Clerk or his designee or agent for all purposes under this Chapter.
"Taxpayer"means any person liable for any tax under this Chapter.
"Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer"means the individual designated by the City to perform the
duties identified in Sections 8A-515 and 8A-516. In cities with a population of 50,000 or more, the
Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer shall be an employee of the City. In cities with a population
of less than 50,000, the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer need not be an employee of the
City. Regardless of whether the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer is or is not an employee of
the City, the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer shall have substantive knowledge of taxation.
The identity of and telephone number for the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer can be
obtained from the Tax Collector.
"Telecommunication Service"means any service or activity connected with the transmission or
relay of sound,visual image,data,information,images,or material over a communications
channel or any combination of communications channels.
"Transient"means any person who either at the person's own expense or at the expense of
another obtains lodging space or the use of lodging space on a daily or weekly basis, or on other
basis for less than thirty (30) consecutive days.
"Utility Service" means the producing, providing, or furnishing of electricity, electric lights, current,
power, gas (natural or artificial), or water to consumers or ratepayers.
Sec. 8A-110.Definitions: Income -producing capital equipment.
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,;
(a)The following tangible personal property, other than items excluded in subsection (d) below,
shall be deemed "income -producing capital equipment"for the purposes of this Chapter:
(1)machinery or equipment used directly in manufacturing,processing, fabricating, job
printing, refining or metallurgical operations. The terms "manufacturing", "processing",
"fabricating", "job printing", "refining", and "metallurgical" as used in this paragraph refer
to and include those operations commonly understood within their ordinary meaning.
"Metallurgical operations" includes leaching, milling, precipitating, smelting and refining.
(2)mining machinery, or equipment,used directly in the process of extracting ores or
minerals from the earth for commercial purposes,including equipment required to
prepare the materials for extraction . and handling,loading or transporting such
extracted material to the surface. "Mining" includes underground, surface and open pit
operations for extracting ores and minerals.,
tangible personal property, sold to persons engaged in business classified under the
telecommunications classification,consisting of central office switching equipment;
switchboards; private branch exchange equipment; microwave radio equipment, and
carrier equipment including optical fiber, coaxial cable, and other transmission media
which are components of carrier systems.
(4)machinery, equipment, or transmission lines used directly in producing or transmitting
electrical power,but not including distribution.Transformers and control equipment
used at transmission substation sites constitute equipment used in producing or
transmitting electrical power.
pipes or valves four inches (4") in diameter or larger and related equipment, used to
transport oil, natural gas, artificial gas, water, or coal slurry. For the purpose of this
section,related equipment includes:compressor units,regulators,machinery and
equipment, fittings, seals and any other parts that are used in operating the pipes or
valves.
(3)
(5)
(6)aircraft,navigational and communication instruments,and other accessories and
related equipment sold to:
(A)a person holding a federal certificate of public convenience and necessity or
foreign air carrier permit for air transportation for use as or in conjunction with or
becoming a part of aircraft to be used to transport persons,property or United
States mail in intrastate, interstate or foreign commerce.
(B)any foreign government for use by such government outside of this State.
(C) persons who are not residents of this State and who will not use such property in
this State other than in removing such property from this State. This subdivision
also applies to corporations that are not incorporated in this State, regardless of
maintaining a place of business in this State, if the principal corporate office is
located outside this State and the property will not be used in this State other than
in removing the property from this State.
(7)machinery,tools,equipment and related supplies used or consumed directly in
repairing,remodeling or maintaining aircraft,aircraft engines or aircraft component
parts by or on behalf of a certificated or licensed carrier of persons or property.
(8)railroad rolling stock, rails, ties and signal control equipment used directly to transport
persons or property.
(9)machinery or equipment used directly to drill for oil or gas or used directly in the
process of extracting oil or gas from the earth for commercial purposes.
(10)buses or other urban mass transit vehicles which are used directly to transport persons
or property for hire or pursuant to a governmentally adopted and controlled urban mass
transportation program and which are sold to bus companies holding a federal
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certificate of convenience and necessity or operated by a city,town or other
governmental entity or by any person contracting with such governmental entity as part
of a governmentally adopted and • controlled program to provide urban mass
transportation.
(11)metering,monitoring,receiving,and transmitting equipment acquired by persons
engaged in the business of providing utility services or telecommunications services;
but only to the extent that such equipment is to be used by the customers of such
persons and such persons separately charge or bill their customers for use of such
equipment.
(12)groundwater measuring devices required under A.R.S. § 45-604.
(13)machinery or equipment used in research and development.In this paragraph,
"research and development" means basic and applied research in the sciences and
engineering,and designing,developing or testing prototypes,processes or new
products, including research and development of computer software that is embedded
in or an integral part of the prototype or new product or that is required for machinery or
equipment otherwise exempt under this section to function effectively. Research and
development do not include manufacturing quality control, routine consumer product
testing, market research, sales promotion, sales service, research in social sciences or
psychology,computer software research that is not included in the definition of
research and development, or other nontechnological activities or technical services.
(14)(Reserved)
(15)Included in income producing capital equipment are liquid, solid or gaseous chemicals
used in manufacturing,processing,fabricating,mining,refining,metallurgical
operations,research and development or job printing,if using or consuming the
chemicals,alone or as part of an integrated system of chemicals,involving direct
contact with the materials from which the product is produced for the purpose of
causing or permitting a chemical or physical change to occur in the materials as part of
the production process. This subsection does not include chemicals that are used or
consumed in activities such as packaging, storage or transportation but does not affect
any deduction for such chemicals that is otherwise provided by this Code. Chemicals
meeting the requirements of this subsection are deemed not to be expendable under
subsection (d) of this section.
(16)cleanrooms that are used for manufacturing, processing, fabrication or research and
development,as defined in paragraph (13)of this subsection,of semiconductor
products.For purposes of this paragraph,"cleanroom"means all property that
comprises or creates an environment where humidity, temperature, particulate matter
and contamination are precisely controlled within specified parameters, without regard
to whether the property is actually contained within that environment or whether any of
the property is affixed to or incorporated into real property. Cleanroom:
(A) includes the integrated systems, fixtures, piping, movable partitions, lighting and all
property that is necessary or adapted to reduce contamination or to control airflow,
temperature,humidity,chemical purity or other environmental conditions or
manufacturing tolerances,as well as the production machinery and equipment
operating in conjunction with the cleanroom environment.
(B) does not include the building or other permanent, non -removable component of the
building that houses the cleanroom environment.
(17)machinery and equipment that are purchased by or on behalf of the owners of a
soundstage complex and primarily used for motion picture, multimedia or interactive
video production in the complex. This paragraph applies only if the initial construction of
the soundstage complex begins after June 30, 1996 and before January 1, 2002 and
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the machinery and equipment are purchased before the expiration of five years after
the start of initial construction. For purposes of this paragraph:
(A) "motion picture, multimedia or interactive video production" includes products for
theatrical and television release,educational presentations,electronic retailing,
documentaries,music videos,industrial films,cd-rom,video game production,
commercial advertising and television episode production and other genres that are
introduced through developing technology.
(B) "soundstage complex"means a facility of multiple stages including production
offices, construction shops and related areas, prop and costume shops, storage
areas, parking for production vehicles and areas that are leased to businesses that
complement the production needs and orientation of the overall facility.
(18)tangible personal property that is used by either of the following to receive,store,
convert, produce, generate, decode, encode, control or transmit telecommunications
information:
(A) any direct broadcast satellite television or data transmission service that operates
pursuant to 47 Code of Federal Regulations parts 25 and 100.
(B) any satellite television or data transmission facility,if both of the following
conditions are met:
(i)over two-thirds of the transmissions, measured in megabytes, transmitted by
the facility during the test period were transmitted to or on behalf of one or
more direct broadcast satellite television or data transmission services that
operate pursuant to 47 Code of Federal Regulations parts 25 and 100.
(ii)over two-thirds of the transmissions, measured in megabytes, transmitted by or
on behalf of those direct broadcast television or data transmission services
during the test period were transmitted by the facility to or on behalf of those
services.
For purposes of subdivision (B)of this paragraph,"test period"means the three
hundred sixty-five day period beginning on the later of the date on which the tangible
personal property is purchased or the date on which the direct broadcast satellite
television or data transmission service first transmits information to its customers.
(19)machinery and equipment that is used directly in the feeding of poultry,the
environmental control of housing for poultry, the movement of eggs within a production.
and packaging facility or the sorting or cooling of eggs. This exemption does not apply
to vehicles used for transporting eggs.
(20)machinery or equipment, including related structural components, that is employed in
connection with manufacturing, processing, fabricating, job printing, refining,mining,
natural gas pipelines,metallurgical operations,telecommunications,producing or
transmitting electricity or research and development that is used directly to meet or
exceed rules or regulations adopted by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
the United States Environmental Protection Agency,the United States Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality or a political
subdivision of this state to prevent,monitor,control or reduce land,water or air
pollution.
(21)machinery or equipment that enables a television station to originate and broadcast or
to receive and broadcast digital television signals and that was purchased to facilitate
compliance with the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-104; 110 Stat. 56; 47
United States Code Section 336) and the Federal Communications Commission Order
issued April 21, 1997, 47 Code of Federal Regulations Part 73. This paragraph does
not exempt any of the following:
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(A) repair or replacement parts purchased for the machinery or equipment described in
this paragraph.
(B) machinery or equipment purchased to replace machinery or equipment for which
an exemption was previously claimed and taken under this paragraph.
(C) any machinery or equipment purchased after the television station has ceased
analog broadcasting, or purchased after November 1, 2009, whichever occurs first.
(b)The term "income -producing capital equipment" shall further include ancillary machinery and
equipment used for the treatment of waste products created by the business activities which
are allowed to purchase "income -producing capital equipment" defined in subsection (a)
above.
(c)The term "income -producing capital equipment" shall further include repair and replacement
parts, other than the items in subsection (d) below, where the property is acquired to become
an integral part of another item itemized in subsections (a) or (b) above.
(d)The tangible personal property defined as income -producing capital equipment in this Section
shall not include:
(1)expendable materials.For purposes of this paragraph,expendable materials do not
include any of the categories of tangible personal property specified in subsections (a),
(b) or (c) of this Section regardless of the cost or useful life of that property.
(2) janitorial equipment and hand tools.
(3)office equipment, furniture, and supplies.
(4)tangible personal property used in selling or distributing activities.
(5)motor vehicles required to be licensed by the State of Arizona, except buses or other
urban mass transit vehicles specifically exempted pursuant to subsection (a)(10) above
without regard to the use of such motor vehicles.
(6)shops, buildings, docks, depots, and all other materials of whatever kind or character not
specifically included as exempt.
(7)motors and pumps used in drip irrigation systems.
(8)(Reserved)
(e)For the purposes of this Section:
(1)"aircraft" includes:
(A) an airplane flight simulator that is approved by the Federal Aviation Administration for
use as a Phase II or higher flight simulator under Appendix H, 14 Code of Federal
Regulations Part 121.
(B) tangible personal property that is permanently affixed or attached as a component
part of an aircraft that is owned or operated by a certificated or licensed carrier of
persons or property.
(2)"other accessories and related equipment" includes aircraft accessories and equipment
such as ground service equipment that physically contact aircraft at some point during
the overall carrier operation.
Sec. 8A-115.Definitions: computer software; custom computer programming.
(a)"Computer Software"means any computer program,part of such a program,or any
sequence of instructions for automatic data processing equipment.Computer software which
is not "custom computer programming" is deemed to be tangible personal property for the
15
purposes of this Chapter, regardless of the method by which title, possession, or right to use
the software is transferred to the user.
(b)"Custom Computer Programming"means any computer software which is written or prepared
exclusively for a customer and includes those services represented by separately stated
charges for the modification of existing prewritten programs when the modifications are
written or prepared exclusively for a customer.
(1)The term does not include a prewritten program which is held or existing for general or
repeated sale, lease, or license, even if the program was initially developed on a custom
basis for in-house, or for a single customer's, use.
(2)Modification to an existing prewritten program to meet the customer's needs is custom
computer programming only to the extent of the modification, and only to the extent that
the actual amount charged for the modification is separately stated on invoices,
statements, and other billing documents supplied to the customer.
Sec. 8A-120.(Reserved)
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ARTICLE II
DETERMINATION OF GROSS INCOME
Sec. 8A-200. Determination of gross income: in general
(a)Gross income includes:
(1)the value proceeding or accruing from the sale of property, the providing of service,
or both.
(2)the total amount of the sale, lease, license for use, or rental price at the time of such
sale, rental, lease, or license.
(3) all receipts, cash, credits, barter, exchange, reduction of or forgiveness of
indebtedness, and property of every kind or nature derived from a sale, lease, license
for use, rental, or other taxable activity.
(4)all other receipts whether payment is advanced prior to, contemporaneous with, or
deferred in whole or in part subsequent to the activity or transaction.
(b)Barter, exchange, trade -outs, or similar transactions are includable in gross income at the
fair market value of the service rendered or property transferred, whichever is higher, as
they represent consideration given for consideration received.
(c)No deduction or exclusion is allowed from gross income on account of the cost of the
property sold, the time value of money, expense of any kind or nature, losses, materials
used, labor or service performed, interest paid, or credits granted.
Sec. 8A-210. Determination of gross income: transactions between affiliated companies or
persons.
In transactions between affiliated companies or persons, or in other circumstances where the
relationship between the parties is such that the gross income from the transaction is not
indicative of the market value of the subject matter of the transaction, the Tax Collector shall
determine the "market value" upon which the City Privilege and Use Taxes shall be levied.
"Market value" shall correspond as nearly as possible to the gross income from similar
transactions of like quality or character by other taxpayers where no common interest exists
between the parties, but otherwise under similar circumstances and conditions.
Sec. 8A-220. Determination of gross income: artificially contrived transactions.
The Tax Collector may examine any transaction, reported or unreported, if, in his opinion, there
has been or may be an evasion of the taxes imposed by this Chapter and to estimate the amount
subject to tax in cases where such evasion has occurred. The Tax Collector shall disregard any
transaction which has been undertaken in an artificial manner in order to evade the taxes
imposed by this Chapter.
Sec. 8A-230. Determination of gross income based upon method of reporting.
The method of reporting chosen by a taxpayer, as provided in Section 8A-520, necessitates the
following adjustments to gross income for all purposes under this Chapter:
(a)Cash basis - When a person elects to report and pay taxes on a cash basis, gross income for
the reporting period shall include:
(1) the total amounts received on "paid in full" transactions, against which are allowed all
applicable deductions and exclusions; and
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(2)all amounts received on accounts receivable, conditional sales contract, or other similar
transactions, against which no deductions and no exclusions from gross income are
allowed. Interest on finance contracts may be deducted if separately itemized on all
books and records.
(b)Accrual basis - When a person elects to report and pay taxes on an accrual basis, gross
income shall include all gross income for the applicable period regardless of whether receipts
are for cash, credit, conditional, or partially deferred transactions, and regardless of whether
or not any security document or instrument is sold, assigned, or otherwise transferred to
another. Persons reporting on the accrual basis may deduct bad debts, provided that:
(1) the amount deducted for the bad debt must be deducted from gross income of the month
in which the actual charge -off was made, and only to the extent that such amount was
actually charged -off, and also only to the extent that such amount is or was included as
taxable gross income; and
(2)if any amount is subsequently collected on such charged -off account, it shall be included
in gross income for the month in which it was collected, without deduction for expense of
collection.
Sec. 8A-240. Exclusion of cash discounts, returns, refunds, trade-in values, vendor -issued
coupons, and rebates from gross income.
(a) The following items are not included in gross income:
(1)Cash discounts allowed by the vendor for timely payment, but only discounts allowed
against taxable gross income.
(2)The value of property returned by customers to the extent of the amount actually
refunded either in cash or by credit and the amount refunded was included in taxable
gross income.
The trade-in allowance for tangible personal property accepted as payment, not to
exceed the full sales price for any tangible personal property sold, when the full sales
price is included in taxable gross income. Trade-in allowances are not allowed for
manufactured buildings taxable under Section 8A-427.
(4)When coupons issued by a vendor are later accepted by the vendor as a discount
against the transaction, the discount may be excluded from gross income as a cash
discount. Amounts credited or refunded by a vendor for redemption of coupons issued by
any person other than the vendor may not be excluded from gross income.
Rebates issued by the vendor to a customer as a discount against the transaction may
be excluded from gross income as a cash discount. Rebates issued by a person other
than the vendor may not be excluded from gross income, even when the vendee assigns
his right to the rebate to the vendor.
(6)In computing the tax base, gross proceeds of sales or gross income does not include a
manufacturer's cash rebate on the sales price of a motor vehicle if the buyer assigns the
buyer's right in the rebate to the retailer.
(b)If the amount specified in subsection (a) above is credited by a vendor subsequent to the
reporting period in which the original transaction occurs, such amount may be excluded from
the taxable gross income of that subsequent reporting period, but only to the extent that the
excludable amount was reported as taxable gross income in that prior reporting period.
(3 )
(5)
Sec. 8A-250. Exclusion of combined taxes from gross income; itemization; notice;
limitations.
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(a)When tax is separately charged and/or collected.The total amount of gross income shall be
exclusive of combined taxes only when the person upon whom the tax is imposed shall
establish to the satisfaction of the Tax Collector that such tax has been added to the total
price of the transaction. The taxpayer must provide to his customer and also keep a reliable
record of the actual tax charged or collected, shown by cash register tapes, sales tickets, or
other accurate record, separating net transaction price and combined tax. If at any time the
Tax Collector cannot ascertain from the records kept by the taxpayer the total or amounts
billed or collected on account of combined taxes, the claimed taxes collected may not be
excluded from gross income, unless such records are completed and/or clarified to the
satisfaction of the Tax Collector.
(1)Remittance of all tax charged and/or collected.When an added charge is made to cover
City (or combined) Privilege and Use Taxes, the person upon whom the tax is imposed
shall pay the full amount of the City taxes due, whether collected by him or not, and in the
event he collects more than the amount due he shall remit the excess to the Tax
Collector. In the event the Tax Collector cannot ascertain from the records kept by the
taxpayer the total or amounts of taxes collected by him, and the Tax Collector is satisfied
that the taxpayer has collected taxes in an amount in excess of the tax assessed under
this Chapter, the Tax Collector may determine the amount collected and collect the tax so
determined in the manner provided in this Chapter.
(2)Itemization.A taxpayer, in order to be entitled to exclude from his gross income any
amounts paid to him by customers for combined taxes passed on to the customer, must
prove that he has provided his customer with a written record of the transaction showing
at a minimum the price before the tax, the combined taxes, and the total cost. This shall
be addition to the record required to be kept under subsection (a) above,
(b)When tax has been neither separately charged nor separately collected.When the person
upon whom the tax is imposed shall establish by means of invoices, sales tickets, or other
reliable evidence, that no added charge was made to cover combined taxes, the taxpayer
may exclude tax collected from such income by dividing such taxable gross income by 1.00
plus a decimal figure representing the effective combined tax rate expressed as a fraction of
1,00.
Sec. 8A-260. Exclusion of fees and taxes from gross income; limitations.
(a) There shall be excluded from gross income of vendors of motor vehicles those motor vehicle
registration fees, license fees and taxes, and lieu taxes imposed pursuant to Title 28, Arizona
Revised Statutes in connection with the initial purchase of a motor vehicle, but only to the
extent that such taxes or fees or both have been separately itemized and collected from the
purchaser of the motor vehicle by the vendor, actually remitted to the proper registering,
licensing, and taxing authorities, and the provisions of Article III, regarding recordkeeping, are
met. For the purpose of the exclusion provided by this subsection only, the terms vendor and
vendee shall also apply to a lessor and lessee respectively, of a motor vehicle if, in addition
to all other requirements of this subsection, the lease agreement specifically requires the
lessee to pay such fees or taxes, and such amounts are separately itemized in the
documentation provided to the lessee.
(b) There shall be excluded from gross income of vendors at retail of heavy trucks and trailers,
the amount attributable to Federal Excise Taxes imposed by 26 U.S.C. Section 4051, but
only to the extent that the provisions of Article III, relating to recordkeeping, have been met.
(c) There shall be excluded from gross income the following fees, taxes, and lieu taxes, but only
to the extent that such taxes or fees or both have been separately itemized and collected
from the purchaser by the vendor, actually remitted to the proper registering, licensing, and
taxing authorities, and the provisions of Article III, regarding recordkeeping, are met:
(1)emergency telecommunication services excise tax imposed pursuant to A.R.S. Section
42-5252. "Emergency telecommunication services" means telecommunication services or
19
systems that use number 911 or a similarly designated telephone number for emergency
calls;
(2)the telecommunication devices for the deaf and the severely hearing and speech
impaired excise tax imposed pursuant to A.R.S. Section 42-5252;
(3)federal excise taxes on communications services as imposed by 26 U.S.C. § 4251;
(4)car rental surcharge imposed pursuant to A.R.S. Section 48-4234;
(5)federal excise taxes on passenger vehicles as imposed by 26 U.S.C. § 4001(.01);
(6)waste tire disposal fees, imposed pursuant to A.R.S. Section 44-1302.
(d) There shall be excluded from gross income of vendors of motor vehicles dealer
documentation fees, but only to the extent that such fees have been separately itemized and
collected from the purchaser of the motor vehicle by the vendor.
Sec. 8A-265. (Reserved)
Sec. 8A-266. Exclusion of motor carrier revenues from gross income.
There shall be excluded from gross income the gross proceeds of sale or gross income derived
from any of the following:
(a) A motor carrier's use on the public highways in this State if the motor carrier is subject to a
fee prescribed in A.R.S. Title 28, Chapter 15, Article 4 or A.R.S. Title 28, Chapter 16, Article
4.
(b)Leasing, renting or licensing a motor vehicle subject to and upon which the fee has been paid
under A.R.S. Title 28, Chapter 16.
(c)The sale of a motor vehicle and any repair and replacement parts and tangible personal
property becoming a part of such motor vehicle, to a motor carrier who is subject to a fee
prescribed in A.R.S. Title 28, Chapter 16 and who is engaged in the business of leasing,
renting or licensing such property.
(d)For the purposes of these exclusions, "motor carrier" includes a motor vehicle weighing
26,000 pounds or more, a lightweight motor vehicle which weighs 12,001 pounds to 26,000
pounds and a light motor vehicle weighing 12,000 pounds or less, which pay the fee
prescribed in A.R.S. Title 28, Chapter 15, Article 4 or A.R.S. Title 28, Chapter 16.
Sec. 8A-270. Exclusion of gross income of persons deemed not engaged in business.
(a)For the purposes of this Section, the following definitions shall apply:
(1)"Federally Exempt Organization"means an organization which has received a
determination of exemption, or qualifies for such exemption, under 26 U.S.C. Section
501(c) and rules and regulations of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue pertaining to
same, but not including a "governmental entity", "non -licensed business", or "public
educational entity".
(2)"Governmental Entity"means the Federal Government, the State of Arizona, any other
state, or any political subdivision, department, or agency of any of the foregoing; provided
further that persons contracting with such a governmental entity to operate any part of a
governmentally adopted and controlled program to provide urban mass transportation
shall be deemed a governmental entity in all activities such person performs when
engaged in said contract.
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(3)"Non -Licensed Business"means any person conducting any business activity for gain or
profit, whether or not actually realized, which person is not required to be licensed for the
conduct or transaction of activities subject to the tax imposed under this Chapter.
(4)"Proprietary Club"means any club which has qualified or would otherwise qualify as an
exempt club under the provisions of 26 U.S.C. Section 501(c)(7), (8), and (9),
notwithstanding the fact that some or all of the members may own a proprietary interest
in the property and assets of the club.
(5)"Public Educational Entity"means any educational entity operated pursuant to any
provisions of Title 15, Arizona Revised Statutes.
(b) Transactions which, if conducted by any other person, would produce gross income subject
to tax under this Chapter shall not be subject to the imposition of such tax if conducted
entirely by a public educational entity; governmental entity, except "proprietary activities" of
municipalities as provided by Regulation; or non -licensed business.
(c)Transactions which, if conducted by any other person, would produce gross income subject
to the tax under this Chapter shall not be subject to the imposition of such tax if conducted
entirely by a federally exempt organization or proprietary club with the following exceptions:
(1)Transactions involving proprietary clubs and organizations exempt under 26 U.S.C.
Section 501(c)(7), (8), and (9), where the gross revenue of the activity received from
persons other than members and bona fide guests of members is in an amount in excess
of fifteen percent (15%) of total gross revenue, as prescribed by Regulation. In the event
this fifteen percent (15%) limit is exceeded, the entire gross income of such entity shall
be subject to the applicable tax.
(2)Gross income from unrelated business income as that term is defined in 26 U.S.C.
Section 512, including all statutory definitions and determinations, the rules and
regulations of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, and his administrative
interpretations and guidelines.
(3)(Reserved)
(d)Except as may be provided elsewhere in this Chapter, transactions where customers are
exempt organizations, proprietary clubs, public educational entities, governmental entities, or
non -licensed businesses shall be deemed taxable transactions for the purpose of the
imposition of taxes under this Chapter, notwithstanding that property so acquired may in fact
be resold or leased by the acquiring person to others. In the case of sales, rentals, leases, or
licenses to proprietary clubs or exempt organizations, the vendor may be relieved from the
responsibility for reporting and paying tax on such income only by obtaining from its vendee a
verified statement that includes:
(1)a statement that when the property so acquired is resold, rented, leased, or licensed, that
the otherwise exempt vendee chooses, or is required, to pay City Privilege Tax or an
equivalent excise tax on its gross income from such transactions and does in fact file
returns on same; and
(2)the Privilege License number of the otherwise exempt vendee; and
(3)such other information as the Tax Collector may require.
(e)Franchisees or concessionaires operating businesses for or on behalf of any exempt
organization, governmental entity, public educational entity, proprietary club, or non -licensed
business shall not be considered to be such an exempt organization, club, entity, or non-
licensed business, but shall be deemed to be a taxpayer subject to the provisions of this
Chapter, except as provided in the definition of governmental entity, regarding urban mass
transit.
(f)(Reserved)
21
Sec. 8A-280. (Reserved)
Sec. 8A-285. (Reserved)
Sec. 8A-290. (Reserved)
22
ARTICLE III
LICENSING AND RECORDKEEPING
Sec. 8A-300. Licensing requirements.
(a) The following persons shall make application to the Tax Collector for a Privilege License,
accompanied by a nonrefundable fee of fifty dollars ($50.00), and no person shall engage or
continue in business or engage in such activities until he shall have such a license:
(1)every person desiring to engage or continue in business activities within the City upon
which a Privilege Tax is imposed by this Chapter.
(2)(Reserved)
(3)every person required to report and pay a tax upon Rental Occupancy, as imposed by
Section 8A-440.)
(b)A person engaged in more than one activity subject to City Privilege and Use Taxes at any
one business location is not required to obtain a separate license for each activity; provided
that, at the time such person makes application for a license, he shall list on such application
each category of activity in which he is engaged. The licensee shall inform the tax collector of
any changes in his business activities, location, or mailing address within thirty (30) days.
(c)Limitation. The issuance of a Privilege License by the Tax Collector shall in no way be
construed as permission to operate a business activity in violation of any other law or
regulation to which such activity may be subject.
Sec. 8A-305. Special licensing requirements.
(a)Partnerships.Application for a Privilege License for a partnership engaging or continuing in
business in the City shall provide, as a minimum, the names and addresses of all general
partners. Licenses issued to persons engaged in business as partners, limited or general,
shall be in the name of the partnership.
(b)Corporations.Application for a Privilege License for a corporation engaging or continuing in
business in the City shall provide, as a minimum, the names and addresses of both the Chief
Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer of the corporation. Licenses issued to persons
engaged in business as corporations shall be in the name of the corporation.
(c)Multiple Locations or Multiple Business Names.A person engaged in or conducting one or
more businesses at two (2) or more locations or under two (2) or more business names shall
procure a license for each such location or business name. A "location" is a place of a
separate business establishment.
(d)Licenses shall not be issued until all legal requirements are met.It shall be a condition
precedent to the issuance of a license that all statutes, ordinances, regulations, and other
requirements affecting the public peace, health, and safety be complied with in total.
(e)(Reserved)
Sec. 8A-310. Licensing: duration of license; transferability; display.
(a)Except as provided in Section 8A-320, the Privilege License shall be valid only for one (1)
year from the date issued unless renewed each year by filing the appropriate application for
renewal and paying the renewal fee of fifty dollars ($50.00) on or before the last business day
of the month prior to the annual anniversary of the original issuance of such license.
Application and payment for renewal must be received within the Tax Collector's office by
such date to be deemed filed and paid.
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(b)The Privilege License shall be nontransferable between owners or locations, and shall be on
display to the public in the licensee's place of business.
(c)Any licensee who permits his license to expire through cancellation as provided in Section
8A-320, by his request for cancellation, by surrender of the license, or by the cessation of the
business activity for which the license was issued, and who thereafter applies for license,
shall be granted a new license as an original applicant and shall pay the current license fee.
Any licensee who loses or misplaces his Privilege License which is still in effect shall be
charged the current license fee for each re -issuance of a license.
(d)Any taxpayer who fails to renew his license on or before the date provided in subsection (a)
above shall be deemed to be operating without a license after such date and until the
appropriate application for renewal and a renewal fee of seventy-five dollars ($75.00) has
been received by the Tax Collector.
(e)(Reserved)
(f)(Reserved)
(g)(Reserved)
(h)(Reserved)
(i)(Reserved
(j)(Reserved)
Sec. 8A-315. (Reserved)
Sec. 8A-320. Licensing: cancellation; revocation.
(a)Cancellation.The Tax Collector shall be authorized to cancel the City Privilege License of
any licensee as "inactive" if the taxpayer, required to report monthly to the City, has neither
filed any return nor remitted to the City any taxes imposed by this Chapter for a period of six
(6) consecutive months; or, if required to report quarterly, has neither filed any return nor
remitted any taxes imposed by this Chapter for two (2) consecutive quarters; or, if required to
report annually, has neither filed any return nor remitted any taxes imposed by this Chapter
when such annual report and tax are due to be filed with and remitted to the Tax Collector.
(b)Revocation.If any licensee fails to pay any tax, interest, penalty, fee, or sum required to be
paid to the City under this Chapter, or if such licensee fails to comply with any other
provisions of this Chapter, the Tax Collector shall be authorized to revoke the City Privilege
License of said licensee.
(c)Notice and Hearing.The Tax Collector shall deliver notice to such licensee of cancellation or
revocation of the Privilege License. If within twenty (20) days the licensee so notified requests
a hearing, he shall be granted a hearing before the Tax Collector.
(d)After cancellation or revocation of a taxpayer's license, the taxpayer shall not be re -licensed
until all reports have been filed; all fees, taxes, interest, and penalties due have been paid;
and he is in compliance with the provisions of this Chapter.
Sec. 8A-330. Operating without a license.
It shall be unlawful for any person who is required by this Chapter to obtain a Privilege License to
engage in or continue in business within the City without a license. The Tax Collector shall
assess any delinquencies in tax, interest, and penalties which may apply against such person
upon any transactions subject to the taxes imposed by this Chapter.
Sec. 8A-350. Recordkeeping requirements.
24
(a)It shall be the duty of every person subject to the tax imposed by this Chapter to keep and
preserve suitable records and such other books and accounts as may be necessary to
determine the amount of tax for which he is liable under this Chapter. The books and records
must contain, at a minimum, such detail and summary information as may be required by
Regulation; or when records are maintained within an electronic data processing (EDP)
system, the requirements established by the Arizona Department of Revenue for privilege tax
filings will be accepted. It shall be the duty of every person to keep and preserve such books
and records for a period equal to the applicable limitation period for assessment of tax, and
all such books and records shall be open for inspection by the Tax Collector during any
business day.
(b)The Tax Collector may direct, by letter, a specific taxpayer to keep specific other books,
records, and documents. Such letter directive shall apply:
(1)only for future reporting periods, and
(2)only by express determination of the Tax Collector that such specific recordkeeping is
necessary due to the inability of the City to conduct an adequate examination of the past
activities of the taxpayer, which inability resulted from inaccurate or inadequate books,
records, or documentation maintained by the taxpayer.
Sec. 8A-360. Recordkeeping: claim of exclusion, exemption, deduction, or credit;
documentation; liability.
(a) All deductions, exclusions, exemptions and credits provided in this Chapter are conditional
upon adequate proof and documentation of such as may be required either by this Chapter or
Regulation.
(b) Any person who claims and receives an exemption, deduction, exclusion, or credit to which
he is not entitled under this Chapter, shall be subject to, liable for, and pay the tax on the
transaction as if the vendor subject to the tax had passed the burden of the payment of the
tax to the person wrongfully claiming the exemption. A person who wrongfully claimed such
exemption shall be treated as if he is delinquent in the payment of the tax and shall be
subject to interest and penalties upon such delinquency. However, if the tax is collected from
the vendor on such transaction it shall not again be collected from the person claiming the
exemption, or if collected from the person claiming the exemption it shall not also be collected
from the vendor.
Sec. 8A-370. Inadequate or unsuitable records.
In the event the records provided by the taxpayer are considered by the Tax Collector to be
inadequate or unsuitable to determine the amount of the tax for which such taxpayer is liable
under the provisions of this Chapter, it is the responsibility of the taxpayer either:
(1) to provide such other records required by this Chapter or Regulation; or
(2) to correct or to reconstruct his records, to the satisfaction of the Tax Collector.
25
ARTICLE IV
PRIVILEGE TAXES
Sec. 8A-400. Imposition of Privilege Taxes; presumption.
(a)There are hereby levied and imposed, subject to all other provisions of this Chapter, the
following Privilege Taxes for the purpose of raising revenue to be used in defraying the
necessary expenses of the City, such taxes to be collected by the Tax Collector:
(1)a Privilege Tax upon persons on account of their business activities, to the extent
provided elsewhere in this Article, to be measured by the gross income of persons,
whether derived from residents of the City or not, or whether derived from within the City
or from without.
(2)a Privilege Tax upon certain persons for the privilege of occupancy of real property, in
accordance with the provisions of Section 8A-440.
(3)(Reserved)
(b)Taxes imposed by this Chapter are in addition to others.Except as specifically designated
elsewhere in this Chapter, each of the taxes imposed by this Chapter shall be in addition to
all other licenses, fees, and taxes levied by law, including other taxes imposed by this
Chapter.
(c)Presumption.For the purpose of proper administration of this Chapter and to prevent evasion
of the taxes imposed by this Chapter, it shall be presumed that all gross income is subject to
the tax until the contrary is established by the taxpayer.
(d)Limitation of exemptions, deductions, and credits allowed against the measure of taxes
imposed by this Chapter.All exemptions, deductions, and credits set forth in this Chapter
shall be limited to the specific activity or transaction described and not extended to include
any other activity or transaction subject to the tax.
Sec. 8A-405. Advertising.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of "local advertising" by billboards, direct mail, radio, television, or by any other means.
However, commission and fees retained by an advertising agency shall not be includable in
gross income from "local advertising." All delivery or disseminating of information directly to
the public or any portion thereof for a consideration shall be considered "Local Advertising,"
except the following:
(A) the advertising of a product or service which is sold or provided both within and without
the State by more than one "commonly designated business entity" within the State,
and in which the advertisement names either no "commonly designated business
entity" within the State or more than one "commonly designated business entity."
"Commonly Designated Business Entity"means any person selling or providing any
product or service to its customers under a common business name or style, even
though there may be more than one legal entity conducting business functions using
the same or substantially the same business name or style by virtue of a franchise,
license, or similar agreement.
(B)the advertising of a facility or of a service or activity in which neither the facility nor a
business site carrying on such service or activity is located within the State.
(C)the advertising of a product which may only be purchased from an out -of -State
supplier.
(4)political advertising for United States Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates only.
26
(5)advertising by means of product purchase coupons redeemable at any retail
establishment carrying such product but not product coupons redeemable only at a single
commonly designated business entity.
(6) advertising transportation services where a substantial portion of the transportation
activity of the business entity advertised involves interstate or foreign carriage.
(b)(Reserved)
Sec. 8A-407. (Reserved)
Sec. 8A-410. Amusements, exhibitions, and similar activities.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of providing amusement that begins in the City or takes place entirely within the City, which
includes the following type or nature of businesses:
(1)operating or conducting theaters, movies, operas, shows of any type or nature,
exhibitions, concerts, carnivals, circuses, amusement parks, menageries, fairs, races,
contests, games, billiard or pool parlors, bowling alleys, skating rinks, tennis courts, golf
courses, video games, pinball machines, public dances, dance halls, sports events,
jukeboxes, batting and driving ranges, animal rides, or any other business charging
admission for exhibition, amusement, or entertainment.
(2)health spas, fitness centers, dance studios, or other persons who charge for the use of
premises for sports, athletic, other health -related activities or instruction, whether on a
per -event use, or for long-term usage, such as membership fees.
(b)Deductions or Exemptions.The gross proceeds of sales or gross income derived from the
following sources is exempt from the tax imposed by this Section:
(1)(Reserved)
(2)Amounts retained by the Arizona Exposition and State Fair Board from ride ticket sales at
the:anhual Arizona State Fair.
(3)Income received from a hotel business subject to tax under Section 8A-444, if all of the
following apply:
(A)The hotel business receives gross income from a customer for the specific
business activity otherwise subject to amusement tax.
The consideration received by the hotel business is equal to or greater than the
amount to be deducted under this subsection.
(C)The hotel business has provided an exemption certificate to the person engaging in
business under this section.
(4)Income that is specifically included as the gross income of a business activity upon which
another Section of this Article imposes a tax, that is separately stated to the customer
and is taxable to the person engaged in that classification not to exceed consideration
paid to the person conducting the activity.
(5)Income from arranging transportation connected to amusement activity that is separately
stated to the customer, not to exceed consideration paid to the transportation business.
(c)The tax imposed by this Section shall not include arranging an amusement activity as a
service to a person's customers if that person is not otherwise engaged in the business of
operating or conducting an amusement themselves or through others.This exception does
not apply to businesses that operate or conduct amusements pursuant to customer orders
and send the billings and receive the payments associated with that activity, including when
(B)
27
the amusement is performed by third party independent contractors.For the purposes of this
paragraph, "arranging" includes billing for or collecting amusement charges from a person's
customers on behalf of the persons providing the amusement.
Sec. 8A-415. Construction contracting: construction contractors.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business upbn every construction contractor engaging or continuing in the
business activity of construction contracting within the City.
(1)However, gross income from construction contracting shall not include charges related to
groundwater measuring devices required by A.R.S. Section 45-604.
(2)(Reserved)
(3)gross income from construction contracting shall not include gross income from the sale
of manufactured buildings taxable under Section 8A-427.
(b)Deductions and exemptions.
(1)Gross income derived from acting as a "subcontractor" shall be exempt from the tax
imposed by this Section.
(2)All construction contracting gross income subject to the tax and not deductible herein
shall be allowed a deduction of thirty-five percent (35%).
(3)The gross proceeds of sales or gross income attributable to the purchase of machinery,
equipment or other tangible personal property that is exempt from or deductible from
privilege or use tax under:
(A)Section 8A-465, subsections (g) and (p)
(B)(Reserved)
shall be exempt or deductible, respectively, from the tax imposed by this Section.
(4)The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from a contract entered into
for the installation, assembly, repair or maintenance of income -producing capital
equipment, as defined in Section 8A-110, that is deducted from the retail classification
pursuant to Section 8A -465(g), that does not become a permanent attachment to a
building, highway, road, railroad, excavation or manufactured building or other structure,
project, development or improvement shall be exempt from the tax imposed by this
Section. If the ownership of the realty is separate from the ownership of the income-
producing capital equipment, the determination as to permanent attachment shall be
made as if the ownership was the same. The deduction provided in this paragraph does
not include gross proceeds of sales or gross income from that portion of any contracting
activity which consists of the development of, or modification to, real property in order to
facilitate the installation, assembly, repair, maintenance or removal of the income-
producing capital equipment. For purposes of this paragraph, "permanent attachment"
means at least one of the following:
(A)to be incorporated into real property.
(B)to become so affixed to real property that it becomes part of the real property.
(C)to be so attached to real property that removal would cause substantial damage to
the real property from which it is removed.
(5)The gross proceeds of sales or gross income received from a contract for the
construction of an environmentally controlled facility for the raising of poultry for the
production of eggs and the sorting, or cooling and packaging of eggs shall be exempt
from the tax imposed under this Section.
28
(6)The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from the installation,
assembly, repair or maintenance of cleanrooms that are deducted from the tax base of
the retail classification pursuant to Section 8A-465, subsection (g) shall be exempt from
the tax imposed under this Section.
(7)The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from a contract entered into
with a person who is engaged in the commercial production of livestock, livestock
products or agricultural, horticultural, viticulturel or floricultural crops or products in this
State for the construction, alteration, repair, improvement, movement, wrecking or
demolition or addition to or subtraction from any building, highway, road, excavation,
manufactured building or other structure, project, development or improvement used
directly and primarily to prevent, monitor, control or reduce air, water or land pollution
shall be exempt from the tax imposed under this Section.
(8)The gross proceeds of sales or gross income received from a post construction contract
to perform post -construction treatment of real property for termite and general pest
control, including wood destroying organisms, shall be exempt from tax imposed under
this section.
Through December 31, 2009, the gross proceeds of sales or gross income received
from a contract for constructing any lake facility development is a commercial
enhancement reuse district that is designated pursuant to A.R.S. § 9-499.08 if the
contractor maintains the following records in a form satisfactory to the Arizona
Department of Revenue and to the City:
(A)The certificate of qualification of the lake facility development issued by the City
pursuant to A.R.S. § 9-499.08, subsection D.
(B)All state and local transaction privilege tax returns for the period of time during
which the contractor received gross proceeds of sales or gross income from a
contract to construct a lake facility development in a designated commercial
enhancement reuse district, showing the amount exempted from state and local
taxation.
(C)Any other information considered to be necessary.
(10)Development or impact fees included in a construction or development contract for
payment to the state or local government to offset governmental costs of providing
public infrastructure, public safety and other public services to a development.
(d)"Subcontractor"means a construction contractor performing work for either:
(1)a construction contractor who has provided the subcontractor with a written declaration
that he is liable for the tax for the project and has provided the subcontractor his City
Privilege License number.
(2)an owner -builder who has provided the subcontractor with a written declaration that:
(A)the owner -builder is improving the property for sale; and
(B)the owner -builder is liable for the tax for such construction contracting activity; and
(C)the owner -builder has provided the contractor his City Privilege License number.
(3)a person selling new manufactured buildings who has provided the subcontractor with a
written declaration that he is liable for the tax for the site preparation and set-up; and
provided the subcontractor his City Privilege License number.
Subcontractor also includes a construction contractor performing work for another
subcontractor as defined above.
(9)
Sec. 8A-416. Construction contracting: speculative builders.
29
(a)The tax shall be equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross income from the
business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in business as a speculative
builder within the City.
(1)The gross income of a speculative builder considered taxable shall include the total
selling price from the sale of improved real property at the time of closing of escrow or
transfer of title.
(2)"Improved Real Property"means any real property:
(A) upon which a structure has been constructed; or
(B) where improvements have been made to land containing no structure (such as
paving or landscaping); or
(C) which has been reconstructed as provided by Regulation; or
(D) where water, power, and streets have been constructed to the property line.
"Sale of Improved Real Property"includes any form of transaction, whether characterized
as a lease or otherwise, which in substance is a transfer of title of, or equitable ownership
in, improved real property and includes any lease of the property for.a term of thirty (30)
years or more (with all options for renewal being included as a part of the term). In the
case of multiple unit projects, "sale" refers to the sale of the entire project or to the sale of
any individual parcel or unit.
(4)"Partially Improved Residential Real Property",as used in this Section, means any
improved real property, as defined in subsection (a)(2) above, being developed for sale to
individual homeowners, where the construction of the residence upon such property is
not substantially complete at the time of the sale.
(b)Exclusions.
(1)In cases involving reconstruction contracting, the speculative builder may exclude from
gross income the prior value allowed for reconstruction contracting in determining his
taxable gross income, as provided by Regulation.
(2)Neither the cost nor the fair market value of the land which constitutes part of the
improved real property sold may be excluded or deducted from gross income subject to
the tax imposed by this Section.
(3)(Reserved)
(4)A speculative builder may exclude gross income from the sale of partially improved
residential real property as defined in (a)(4) above to another speculative builder only if
all of the following conditions are satisfied:
(A) The speculative builder purchasing the partially improved residential real property
has a valid City privilege license for construction contracting as a speculative builder;
(3)
and
(B)At the time of the transaction,the purchaser provides the seller with a properly
completed written declaration that the purchaser assumes liability for and will pay all
privilege taxes which would otherwise be due the City at the time of sale of the
partially improved residential real property; and
(C) The seller also:
(i)maintains proper records of such transactions in a manner similar to the
requirements provided in this chapter relating to sales for resale; and
(ii)retains a copy of the written declaration provided by the buyer for the transaction;
and
30
(iii) is properly licensed with the City as a speculative builder and provides the City
with the written declaration attached to the City privilege tax return where he
claims the exclusion.
(c)Tax liability for speculative builders occurs at close of escrow or transfer of title, whichever
occurs earlier, and is subject to the following provisions, relating to exemptions, deductions
and tax credits:
(1)Exemptions.
(A) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income attributable to the purchase of
machinery, equipment or other tangible personal property that is exempt from or
deductible from privilege or use tax under:
(i)Section 8A-465, subsections (g) and (p)
(ii)(Reserved)
shall be exempt or deductible, respectively, from the tax imposed by this Section.
(B) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income received from a contract for the
construction of an environmentally controlled facility for the raising of poultry for the
production of eggs and the sorting, or cooling and packaging of eggs shall be exempt
from the tax imposed under this Section.
(C) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from the installation,
assembly, repair or maintenance of cleanrooms that are deducted from the tax base
of the retail classification pursuant to Section 8A-465, subsection (g) shall be exempt
from the tax imposed under this section.
(D) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from a contract entered
into with a person who is engaged in the commercial production of livestock, livestock
products or agricultural, horticultural, viticultural or floricultural crops or products in
this state for the construction, alteration, repair, improvement, movement, wrecking or
demolition or addition to or subtraction from any building, highway, road, excavation,
manufactured building or other structure, project, development or improvement used
directly and primarily to prevent, monitor, control or reduce air, water or land pollution
shall be exempt from the tax imposed under this Section.
(E) development or impact fees included in a construction or development contract for
payment to the state or local government to offset governmental costs of providing
public infrastructure, public safety and other public services to a development.
(2)Deductions.
(A) All amounts subject to the tax shall be allowed a deduction in the amount of thirty-five
percent (35%).
(B) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from a contract entered
into for the installation, assembly, repair or maintenance of income -producing capital
equipment, as defined in Section 8A-110, that is deducted from the retail
classification pursuant to Section 8A -465(g), that does not become a permanent
attachment to a building, highway, road, railroad, excavation or manufactured
building or other structure, project, development or improvement shall be exempt
from the tax imposed by this Section. If the ownership of the realty is separate from
the ownership of the income -producing capital equipment, the determination as to
permanent attachment shall be made as if the ownership was the same. The
deduction provided in this paragraph does not include gross proceeds of sales or
gross income from that portion of any contracting activity which consists of the
development of, or modification to, real property in order to facilitate the installation,
assembly, repair, maintenance or removal of the income -producing capital
31
equipment. For purposes of this paragraph, "permanent attachment" means at least
one of the following:
(i)to be incorporated into real property.
(ii)to become so affixed to real property that it becomes part of the real property.
(iii) to be so attached to real property that removal would cause substantial damage
to the real property from which it is removed.
(3)Tax credits.
The following tax credits are available to owner -builders or speculative builders, not to
exceed the tax liability against which such credits apply, provided such credits are
documented to the satisfaction of the tax collector:
(A) A tax credit equal to the amount of city privilege or use tax, or the equivalent excise
tax, paid directly to a taxing jurisdiction or as a separately itemized charge paid
directly to the vendor with respect to the tangible personal property incorporated into
the said structure or improvement to real property undertaken by the owner -builder or
speculative builder.
(B) A tax credit equal to the amount of privilege taxes paid to this City, or charged
separately to the speculative builder, by a construction contractor, on the gross
income derived by said person from the construction of any improvement to the real
property.
(C) No credits provided herein may be claimed until such time that the gross income
against which said credits apply is reported.
Sec. 8A-417. Construction contracting: owner -builders who are not speculative builders.
(a)At the expiration of twenty-four (24) months after improvement to the property is substantially
complete, the tax liability for an owner -builder who is not a speculative builder shall be at an
amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of:
(1)the gross income from the activity of construction contracting upon the real property in
question which was realized by those construction contractors to whom the owner -builder
provided written declaration that they were not responsible for the taxes as prescribed in
subsection 8A -415(c)(2); and
(2) the purchase of tangible personal property for incorporation into any improvement to real
property, computed on the sales price.
(b)The tax liability of this Section is subject to the following provisions, relating to exemptions,
deductions and tax credits:
(1)Exemptions.
(A) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income attributable to the purchase of
machinery, equipment or other tangible personal property that is exempt from or
deductible from privilege or use tax under:
(i)Section 8A-465, subsections (g) and (p)
(ii)(Reserved)
shall be exempt or deductible, respectively, from the tax imposed by this Section.
(B) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income received from a contract for the
construction of an environmentally controlled facility for the raising of poultry for the
production of eggs and the sorting, or cooling and packaging of eggs shall be exempt
from the tax imposed under this Section.
32
(C) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from the installation,
assembly, repair or maintenance of cleanrooms that are deducted from the tax base
of the retail classification pursuant to Section 8A-465, subsection (g) shall be exempt
from the tax imposed under this Section.
(D) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from a contract entered
into with a person who is engaged in the commercial production of livestock, livestock
products or agricultural, horticultural, viticultural or floricultural crops or products in
this state for the construction, alteration, repair, improvement, movement, wrecking or
demolition or addition to or subtraction from any building, highway, road, excavation,
manufactured building or other structure, project, development or improvement used
directly and primarily to prevent, monitor, control or reduce air, water or land pollution
shall be exempt from the tax imposed under this Section.
(E) Development or impact fees included in a construction or development contract for
payment to the state or local government to offset governmental costs of providing
public infrastructure, public safety and other public services to a development.
(2)Deductions.
(A) All amounts subject to the tax shall be allowed a deduction in the amount of thirty-five
percent (35%)
(B) The gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is derived from a contract entered
into for the installation, assembly, repair or maintenance of income -producing capital
equipment, as defined in Section 8A-110, that is deducted from the retail
classification pursuant to Section 8A -465(g), that does not become a permanent
attachment to a building, highway, road, railroad, excavation or manufactured
building or other structure, project, development or improvement shall be exempt
from the tax imposed by this Section. If the ownership of the realty is separate from
the ownership of the income -producing capital equipment, the determination as to
permanent attachment shall be made as if the ownership was the same. The
deduction provided in this paragraph does not include gross proceeds of sales or
gross income from that portion of any contracting activity which consists of the
development of, or modification to, real property in order to facilitate the installation,
assembly, repair, maintenance or removal of the income -producing capital
equipment. For purposes of this paragraph, "permanent. attachment" means at least
one of the following:
(i)to be incorporated into real property.
(ii)to become so affixed to real property that it becomes part of the real property.
(iii) to be so attached to real property that removal would cause substantial damage
to the real property from which it is removed.
(3)Tax credits.
The following tax credits are available to owner -builders and speculative builders, not to
exceed the tax liability against which such credits apply, provided such credits are
documented to the satisfaction of the tax collector:
(A) A tax credit equal to the amount of city privilege or use tax, or the equivalent excise
tax, paid directly to a taxing jurisdiction or as a separately itemized charge paid
directly to the vendor with respect to the tangible personal property incorporated into
the said structure or improvement to real property undertaken by the owner -builder or
speculative builder.
(B) A tax credit equal to the amount of privilege taxes paid to this City, or charged
separately to the speculative builder, by a construction contractor, on the gross
income derived by said person from the construction of any improvement to the real
property.
33
(C) No credits provided herein may be claimed until such time that the gross income
against which said credits apply is reported.
(c)The limitation period for the assessment of taxes imposed by this Section is measured based
upon when such liability is reportable, that is, in the reporting period that encompasses the
twenty-fifth (25th) month after said unit or project was substantially complete. Interest and
penalties, as provided in Section 8A-540, will be based on reportable date.
(d)(Reserved)
Sec. 8A-418. (Reserved for future use)
Sec. 8A-420. Feed at wholesale.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of the sale of feed, salt, vitamins, and other additives to feed, to persons engaged in the
raising or feeding of livestock or poultry purchased or raised for slaughter, with no deduction
for the income derived from the "resale" of such feed.
(b)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to:
(1)out -of -City sales.
(2)out -of -State sales.
Sec. 8A-422. (Reserved)
Sec. 8A-425. Job printing.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of job printing, which includes engraving of printing plates, embossing, copying,
micrographics, and photo reproduction.
(b)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to:
(1) job printing purchased for the purpose of resale by the purchaser in the form supplied by
the job printer.
(2)out -of -City sales.
(3)out -of -State sales.
(4)(Reserved)
(5)sales of job printing to a qualifying hospital, qualifying community health center or a
qualifying health care organization, except when the property sold is for use in activities
resulting in gross income from unrelated business income as that term is defined in 26
U.S.C. Section 512.
(6)(Reserved)
Sec. 8A-427. Manufactured buildings.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income, including site preparation, moving to the site, and/or set-up, upon every person
engaging or continuing in the business activity of selling manufactured buildings within the
City. Such business activity is deemed to occur at the business location of the seller where
the purchaser first entered into the contract to purchase the manufactured building.
34
(b)Sales of used manufactured buildings are not taxable.
(c)The sale prices of furniture, furnishings, fixtures, appliances, and attachments that are not
incorporated as component parts of or attached to a manufactured building are exempt from
the tax imposed by this Section. Sales of such items are subject to the tax under Section 8A-
460.
(d)Under this Section, a trade-in will not be allowed for the purpose of reducing the tax liability.
Sec. 8A-430. Timbering and other extraction.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the following
businesses:
(1) felling, producing, or preparing timber or any product of the forest for sale, profit, or
commercial use.
(2) extracting, refining, or producing any oil or natural gas for sale, profit, or commercial use.
(b)The rate specified in subsection (a) above shall be applied to the value of the entire product
extracted, refined, produced, or prepared for sale, profit, or commercial use, when such
activity occurs within the City, regardless of the place of sale of the product or the fact that
delivery may be made to a point without the City or without the State.
(c)If any person engaging in any business classified in this Section ships or transports products,
or any part thereof, out of the State without making sale of such products, or ships his
products outside of the State in an unfinished condition, the value of the products or articles
in the condition or form in which they existed when transported out -of -State and before they
enter interstate commerce shall be the basis for assessment of the tax imposed by this
Section.
(d)(Reserved)
Sec.8A-432. Mining •
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%), not to exceed
one tenth of one percent, of the gross income from the business activity upon every person
engaging or continuing in the business of mining, 'smelting, or producing for sale, profit, or
commercial use any copper, gold, silver, or other mineral product, compound, or combination
of mineral products; but not including the extraction, removal, or production of sand, gravel,
or rock from the ground for sale, profit, or commercial use.
(b) The rate specified in subsection (a) above shall be applied to the value of the entire product
mined, smelted or produced for sale, profit, or commercial use, when such activity occurs
within the City, regardless of the place of sale of the product or the fact that delivery may be
made to a point without the City or without the State.
(c)If any person engaging in any business classified in this Section ships or transports products,
or any part thereof, out of the State without making sale of such products, or ships his
products outside of the State in an unfinished condition, the value of the products or articles
in the condition or form in which they existed when transported out -of -State and before they
enter interstate commerce shall be the basis for assessment of the tax imposed by this
Section.
Sec. 8A-435. Publishing and periodicals distribution.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
activity of:
35
(1)publication of newspapers, magazines, or other periodicals when published within the
City, measured by the gross income derived from notices, subscriptions, and local
advertising as defined in Section 8A-405. In cases where the location of publication is
both within and without this State, gross income subject to the tax shall refer only to gross
income derived from residents of this State or generated by permanent business
locations within this State.
(2)distribution or delivery within the City of newspapers, magazines, or other periodicals not
published within the City, measured by the gross income derived from subscriptions.
(b)"Location of Publication"is determined by:
(1)location of the editorial offices of the publisher, when the physical printing is not
performed by the publisher; or
(2)location of either the editorial offices or the printing facilities, if the publisher performs his
own physical printing.
(c)"Subscription income"shall include all circulation revenue of the publisher except amounts
retained by or credited to carriers or other vendors as compensation for delivery within the
State by such carriers or vendors, and further except sales of published items, directly or
through distributors, for the purpose of resale, to retailers subject to the Privilege Tax on such
resale.
(d)"Circulation,"for the purpose of measurement of gross income subject to the tax, shall be
considered to occur at the place of delivery of the published items to the subscriber or
intended reader irrespective of the location of the physical facilities or personnel of the
publisher. However, delivery by the United States mails shall be considered to have occurred
at the location of publication.
(e)Allocation of taxes between cities and towns.In cases where publication or distribution
occurs in more than one city or town, the measurement of gross income subject to tax by the
City shall include:
(1)that portion of the gross income from publication which reflects the ratio of circulation
within this City to circulation in all incorporated cities and towns in this State having
substantially similar provisions; plus
(2)only when publication occurs within the City, that portion of the remaining gross income
from publication which reflects the ratio of circulation within this City to the total circulation
of all incorporated cities or towns in this State within which cities the taxpayer maintains a
location of publication.
(f)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to sales of newspapers, magazines or other
periodicals to a qualifying hospital, qualifying community health.center or a qualifying health
care organization, except when the property sold is for use in activities resulting in gross
income from unrelated business income as that term is defined in 26 U.S.C. Section 512.
Sec. 8A-440. Rental occupancy.
(a)For the purposes of this Section only, the following definitions shall apply:
(1)"Landlord"means any lessor of real property under a pre-existing lease.
(2)"Pre-existinq Lease"means any written lease, license for use, or rental agreement
entered into prior to December 1, 1967; except for the following:
(A) any bilateral amendment to such written agreement which was entered into
subsequent to December 1, 1967, wherein the length of the term or the size of the
premises affected is changed or both.
(B) any such agreement for lodging or lodging space.
36
(3)"Rent" means all consideration paid by the tenant to his landlord or to another in payment
of or diminution of his own or his landlord's obligation in connection with the real property
occupied by the tenant, whether or not such occupancy is designated as a rent, lease or
license for use of real property.
(4)"Tenant"means any lessee of real property under a pre-existing lease.
(b)The tax rate shall be at an amount of two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross rent
paid by a tenant, to the extent of his occupancy of real property in this City under a pre-
existing lease, upon such tenant, for the privilege of such occupancy, subject to the
provisions of this Section.
(c)Exclusions.The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to:
(1)occupancy by a tenant which the Constitution or laws of the United States or of the State
of Arizona prohibit the City from taxing.
(2) occupancy by a tenant of a landlord which the Constitution or laws of the United States or
of the State of Arizona prohibit the City from taxing.
(3)occupancy of lodging or lodging space.
(4)occupancy of real property under other than a pre-existing lease.
(d)Duty of landlords.Every landlord of a tenant subject to the tax:
(1)shall collect the tax imposed by this Section from the tenant liable for the tax at the same
time as and together with the tenant's periodic or other payment of rent. The tax required
to be collected shall constitute a debt owed by the landlord to the City.
(2)shall be considered a taxpayer subject to all licensing, recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements of this Chapter.
(e)Duty of tenants.Every tenant liable for the tax:
(1)shall, in any instance in which the tax has not been collected by his landlord, remit such
tax to the Tax Collector, and in such case, be subject to all licensing and reporting
requirements of this Chapter.
(2) shall maintain, and provide upon request, books and records sufficient for the Tax
Collector to determine the tax liability of such tenant.
Interest and civil penalties shall be the liability of the landlord collecting and remitting the tax;
provided, however, that if the landlord can present clear and convincing evidence that the
delinquency was caused by the tenant, then said interest and penalties shall be the liability of
the tenant.
(g)Extension of rights of appeal to include tenants and landlords,
(1) Any landlord or tenant may avail himself of the provisions of Sections 8A-570 through 8A-
575, relating to appeals, and, except as modified hereunder, all provisions of said
Sections shall apply.
(2)For the purposes of preserving appeal rights, an assessment against a landlord may be
protested and appealed by any tenant paying or liable to pay the tax for the occupancy
included in such assessment.
(3)Payment of the tax herein imposed to a landlord by a tenant shall be deemed payment of
the tax for the tenant for the purposes of allowing a protest to be initiated under Sections
8A-570 through 8A-575.
(4) The filing of a protest petition by a tenant shall not relieve the landlord of his obligation to
report and remit the protested tax, or any subsequent periodic payments of tax governed
by the initial protest.
37
(h)Refunds.Any refunds of taxes authorized by this Chapter shall be made to the tenant. Any
refunds of interest and civil penalties authorized by this Chapter shall be made to the person
liable for such, as provided in subsection (f) above.
Sec. 8A444. Hotels.
The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business of
operating a hotel charging for lodging and/or lodging space furnished to any:
(a)Person.
(b)Exclusions.The tax imposed by this Section shall not include:
(1)Income derived from incarcerating or detaining prisoners who are under the jurisdiction of
the United States, This State or of any other state in a privately operated prison, jail, or
detention facility.
(2)Gross proceeds of sales or gross income that is properly included in another business
activity under this Article and that is taxable to the person engaged in that business
activity, but the gross proceeds of sales or gross income to be deducted shall not exceed
the consideration paid to the person conducting the activity.
Gross proceeds of sales or gross income from transactions or activities that are not
limited to transients and that would not be taxable if engaged in by a person not subject
to tax under this Article.
(3)
(4)Gross proceeds of sales or gross income from transactions or activities that are not
limited to transients and that would not be taxable if engaged in by a person subject ot
taxation under Section 8A-410 or Section 8A-475 due to an exclusion, exemption or
deduction.
Gross proceeds of sales or gross income from commissions received from a person
providing services or property to the customers of the hotel.However, such commissions
may be subject to tax under Section 8A-445 or Section 8A-450 as rental, leasing or
licensing for use of real pr tangible personal property.
(6)Income from providing telephone, fax, or Internet services to customers at an additional
charge that is separately stated to the customer and is separately maintained in the
hotel's books and records.However, such gross proceeds of sales or gross income may
be subject to tax under Section 8A-470 as telecommunication services.
(5 )
Sec. 8A-445. Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of real property.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of leasing or renting real property located within the City for a consideration, to the tenant in
actual possession, or the licensing for use of real property to the final licensee located within
the City for a consideration including any improvements, rights, or interest in such property;
provided further that:
(1)Payments made by the lessee to, or on behalf of, the lessor for property taxes, repairs, or
improvements are considered to be part of the taxable gross income.
(2)Charges for such items as telecommunications, utilities, pet fees, or maintenance are
considered to be part of the taxable gross income.
(3)However, if the lessor engages in telecommunication activity, as evidenced by installing
individual metering equipment and by billing each tenant based upon actual usage, such
activity is taxable under Section 8A-470.
38
(b)If individual utility meters have been installed for each tenant and the lessor separately
charges each single tenant for the exact billing from the utility company, such charges are
exempt.
(c)Charges by a qualifying hospital, qualifying community health center or a qualifying health
care organization to patients of such facilities for use of rooms or other real property during
the course of their treatment by such facilities are exempt.
(d)Charges for joint pole usage by a person engaged in the business of providing or furnishing
utility or telecommunication services to another person engaged in the business of providing
or furnishing utility or telecommunication services are exempt from the tax imposed by this
Section.
(e)(Reserved)
(f)(Reserved)
(g)(Reserved)
(h)(Reserved)
(i)(Reserved)
U)Exempt from the tax imposed by this Section is gross income derived from the activities
taxable under Section 8A-444 of this code.
(k)(Reserved)
(I)(Reserved
(m) (Reserved)
(n)Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 8A -200(b), the fair market value of one (1)
apartment, in an apartment complex provided rent free to an employee of the apartment
complex is not subject to the tax imposed by this Section. For an apartment complex with
more than fifty (50) units, an additional apartment provided rent free to an employee for every
additional fifty (50) units is not subject to the tax imposed by this Section.
(o)Income derived from incarcerating or detaining prisoners who are under the jurisdiction of the
United States, this State or any other state or a political subdivision of this State or of any
other state in a privately operated prison, jail or detention facility is exempt from the tax
imposed by this Section.
(p)Charges by any hospital, any licensed nursing care institution, or any kidney dialysis facility to
patients of such facilities for the use of rooms or other real property during the course of their
treatment by such facilities are exempt.
(q)Charges to patients receiving "personal care" or "directed care", by any licensed assisted
living facility, licensed assisted living center or licensed assisted living home as defined and
licensed pursuant to Chapter 4 Title 36 Arizona Revised Statutes and Title 9 of the Arizona
Administrative Code are exempt.
(r)Income received from the rental of any "low-income unit" as established under Section 42 of
the Internal Revenue Code, including the low-income housing credit provided by IRC Section
42, to the extent that the collection of tax on rental income causes the "gross rent" defined by
IRC Section 42 to exceed the income limitation for the low-income unit is exempt. This
exemption also applies to income received from the rental of individual rental units subject to
statutory or regulatory "low-income unit" rent restrictions similar to IRC Section 42 to the
extent that the collection of tax from the tenant causes the rental receipts to exceed a rent
restriction for the low-income unit. This subsection also applies to rent received by a person
other than the owner or lessor of the low-income unit, including a broker. This subsection
does not apply unless a taxpayer maintains the documentation to support the qualification of
a unit as a low-income unit, the "gross rent" limitation for the unit and the rent received from
that unit.
39
Sec. 8A-446. (Reserved)
Sec. 8A-447. Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of real property: additional tax upon
transient lodging.
In addition to the taxes levied as provided in Section 8A-444, there is hereby levied and shall be
collected an additional tax in an amount equal to Two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity of any hotel engaging or continuing within the City in the
business of charging for lodging and/or lodging space furnished to any transient
Sec. 8A-450. Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible personal property.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of leasing, licensing for use, or renting tangible personal property for a consideration,
including that which is semi -permanently or permanently installed within the City as provided
by Regulation.
(b)Special provisions relating to long-term motor vehicle leases.A lease transaction involving a
motor vehicle for a minimum period of twenty-four (24) months shall be considered to have
occurred at the location of the motor vehicle dealership, rather than the location of the place
of business of the lessor, even if the lessor's interest in the lease and its proceeds are sold,
transferred, or otherwise assigned to a lease financing institution; provided further that the
city or town where such motor vehicle dealership is located levies a Privilege Tax or an
equivalent excise tax upon the transaction.
(c)Gross income derived from the following transactions shall be exempt from Privilege Taxes
imposed by this Section:
(1)rental, leasing, or licensing for use of tangible personal property to persons engaged or
continuing in the business of leasing, licensing for use, or rental of such property.
(2)rental, leasing, or licensing for use of tangible personal property that is semi-
permanently or permanently installed within another city or town that levies an
equivalent excise tax on the transaction.
(3)rental, leasing, or licensing for use of film, tape, or slides to a theater or other person
taxed under Section 8A-410, or to a radio station, television station, or subscription
television system.
(4)rental, leasing, or licensing for use of the following:
(A) prosthetics.
(B)income -producing capital equipment.
(C) mining and metallurgical supplies.
These exemptions include the rental, leasing, or licensing for use of tangible personal
property which, if it had been pUrchased instead of leased, rented, or licensed by the
lessee or licensee, would qualify as income -producing capital equipment or mining and
metallurgical supplies.
rental, leasing, or licensing for use of tangible personal property to a qualifying hospital,
qualifying community health center or a qualifying health care organization, except
when the property so rented, leased, or licensed is for use in activities resulting in gross
income from unrelated business income as that term is defined in 26 U.S.C. Section
512 or rental, leasing, or licensing for use of tangible personal property in this State by
a nonprofit charitable organization that has qualified under Section 501(c)(3) of the
United States Internal Revenue Code and that engages in and uses such property
(5 )
40
exclusively for training, job placement or rehabilitation programs or testing for mentally
or physically handicapped persons.
(6)separately billed charges for delivery, installation, repair, and/or maintenance as
provided by Regulation.
(7)charges for joint pole usage by a person engaged in the business of providing or
furnishing utility or telecommunication services to another person engaged in the
business of providing or furnishing utility or telecommunication services.
(8)(Reserved)
(9)rental, leasing, or licensing of aircraft that would qualify as aircraft acquired for use
outside the State, as prescribed by Regulation, if such rental, leasing, or licensing had
been a sale.
(10)rental, leasing and licensing for use of an alternative fuel vehicle if such vehicle was
manufactured as a diesel fuel vehicle and converted to operate on alternative fuel and
equipment that is installed in a conventional diesel fuel motor vehicle to convert the
vehicle to operate on an alternative fuel, as defined in A.R.S. Section 1-215.
Sec. 8A-452. (Reserved)
Sec. 8A-455. Restaurants and Bars.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of preparing or serving food or beverage in a bar, cocktail lounge, restaurant, or similar
establishment where articles of food or drink are prepared or served for consumption on or off
the premises, including also the activity of catering. Cover charges and minimum charges
must be included in the gross income of this business activity.
(b)Caterers and other taxpayers subject to the tax who deliver food and/or serve such food off
premises, shall also be allowed to exclude separately charged delivery, set-up, and clean-up
charges, provided that the charges are also maintained separately in the books and records.
When a taxpayer delivers food and/or serves such food off premises, his regular business
location shall still be deemed the location of the transaction for the purposes of the tax
imposed by this Section.
(c)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to sales to a qualifying hospital, qualifying
community health center or a qualifying health care organization, except when sold for use in
activities resulting in gross income from unrelated business income as that term is defined in
26 U.S.C. Section 512.
(d)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to sales of food, beverages, condiments and
accessories used for serving food and beverages to a commercial airline, as defined in
A.R.S. § 42-5061(A)(49), that serves the food and beverages to its passengers, without
additional charge, for consumption in flight.
(e)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to sales of prepared food, beverages,
condiments or accessories to a public educational entity, pursuant to any of the provisions of
Title 15, Arizona Revised Statutes, to the extent such items are to be prepared or served to
individuals for consumption on the premises of a public educational entity during school
hours.
(f)For the purposes of this Section, "accessories" means paper plates, plastic eating utensils,
napkins, paper cups, drinking straws, paper sacks or other disposable containers, or other
items which facilitate the consumption of the food.
41
Sec. 8A-460. Retail sales: measure of tax; burden of proof; exclusions.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of selling tangible personal property at retail.
(b)The burden of proving that a sale of tangible personal property is not a taxable retail sale
shall be upon the person who made the sale.
(c)Exclusions.For the purposes of this Chapter, sales of tangible personal property shall not
include:
(1)sales of stocks, bonds, options, or other similar materials.
(2)sales of lottery tickets or shares pursuant to Article I, Chapter 5, Title 5, Arizona Revised
Statutes.
(3)sales of platinum, bullion, or monetized bullion, except minted or manufactured coins
transferred or acquired primarily for their numismatic value as prescribed by Regulation.
(4)gross income derived from the transfer of tangible personal property which is specifically
included as the gross income of a business activity upon which another Section of this
Article imposes a tax, shall be considered gross income of that business activity, and are
not includable as gross income subject to the tax imposed by this Section.
(5)sales by professional or personal service occupations where such sales are
inconsequential elements of the service provided.
(d)Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) above, when the gross income from the sale
of a single item of tangible personal property exceeds dollars ($2,000.00), the two and two-
tenths percent (2.2%) tax rate shall apply to the first $2,000.00. Above $2,000.00, the
measure of tax shall be at a rate of one and two -tenths percent (1.2%).
(e)When this City and another Arizona city or town with an equivalent excise tax could claim
nexus for taxing a retail sale, the city or town where the permanent business location of the
seller at which the order was received shall be deemed to have precedence, and for the
purposes of this Chapter such city or town has sole and exclusive right to such tax.
(f)The appropriate tax liability for any retail sale where the order is received at a permanent
business location of the seller located in this City or in an Arizona city or town that levies an
equivalent excise tax shall be at the tax rate of the city or town of such seller's location.
(g)Retail sales of prepaid calling cards or prepaid authorization numbers for telecommunications
services, including sales of reauthorization of a prepaid card or authorization number, are
subject to tax under this Section.
Sec. 8A-465. Retail sales: exemptions.
Income derived from the following sources is exempt from the tax imposed by Section 8A-460:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
sales of tangible personal property to a person regularly engaged in the business of selling
such property.
out -of -City sales or out -of -State sales.
charges for delivery, installation, or other direct customer services as prescribed by
Regulation.
charges for repair services as prescribed by Regulation, when separately charged and
separately maintained in the books and records of the taxpayer.
sales of warranty, maintenance, and service contracts, when separately charged and
separately maintained in the books and records of the taxpayer.
42
(f)
(9)
(h)
0)
sales of prosthetics.
sales of income -producing capital equipment.
sales of rental equipment and rental supplies.
sales of mining and metallurgical supplies.
sales of motor vehicle fuel and use fuel which are subject to a tax imposed under the
provisions of Article! or 11, Chapter 16, Title 28, Arizona Revised Statutes; or sales of use
fuel to a holder of a valid single trip use fuel tax permit issued under A.R.S. Section 28-
5739, or sales of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gas used to propel a motor vehicle.
(k)sales of tangible personal property to a construction contractor who holds a valid Privilege
Tax License for engaging or continuing in the business of construction contracting where
the tangible personal property sold is incorporated into any structure or improvement to real
property as part of construction contracting activity.
(I)sales of motor vehicles to nonresidents of this State for use outside this State if the vendor
ships or delivers the motor vehicle to a destination outside this State.
(m)sales of tangible personal property which directly enters into and becomes an ingredient or
component part of a product sold in the regular course of the business of job printing,
manufacturing, or publication of newspapers, magazines, or other periodicals. Tangible
personal property which is consumed or used up in a manufacturing, job printing,
publishing, or production process is not an ingredient or component part of a product.
(n)sales made directly to the Federal government to the extent of:
(1)one hundred percent (100%) of the gross income derived from retail sales made by a
manufacturer, modifier, assembler, or repairer.
(2)fifty percent (50%) of the gross income derived from retail sales made by any other
person.
(o)sales to hotels, bars, restaurants, dining cars, lunchrooms, boarding houses, or similar
establishments of articles consumed as food, drink, or condiment, whether simple, mixed,
or compounded, where such articles are customarily prepared or served to patrons for
consumption on or off the premises, where the purchaser is properly licensed and paying a
tax under Section 8A-455 or the equivalent excise tax upon such income.
sales of tangible personal property to a qualifying hospital, qualifying community health
center or a qualifying health care organization, except when the property sold is for use in
activities resulting in gross income from unrelated business income as that term is defined
in 26 U.S.C. Section 512 or sales of tangible personal property purchased in this State by a
nonprofit charitable organization that has qualified under Section 501(c)(3) of the United
States Internal Revenue Code and that engages in and uses such property exclusively for
training, job placement or rehabilitation programs or testing for mentally or physically
handicapped persons.
(q)food purchased with food stamps provided through the food stamp program established by
the Food Stamp Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-113; 91 Stat. 958.7 U.S.C. Section 2011 et seq.) or
purchased with food instruments issued under Section 17 of the Child Nutrition Act (P.L.
95-627; 92 Stat. 3603; and P.L. 99-669; Section 4302; 42 United States Code Section
1786) but only to the extent that food stamps or food instruments were actually used to
purchase such food.
(P)
(r)(Reserved)
(1)(Reserved)
(2)(Reserved)
(3)(Reserved)
43
(if)
(gg)
(s)sales of groundwater measuring devices required by A.R.S. Section 45-604.
(t)(Reserved)
(u)sales of aircraft acquired for use outside the State, as prescribed by Regulation.
(v)sales of food products by producers as provided for by A.R.S. Sections 3-561, 3-562 and 3-
563.
(w)(Reserved)•
(x)(Reserved)
(y)(Reserved)
(z)(Reserved)
(aa)the sale of tangible personal property used in remediation contracting as defined in Section
8A-100 and Regulation 8A-100.5.
(bb)sales of materials that are purchased by or for publicly funded libraries including school
district libraries, charter school libraries, community college libraries, state university
libraries or federal, state, county or municipal libraries for use by the public as follows:
(1)printed or photographic materials.
(2)electronic or digital media materials.
(cc)sales of food, beverages, condiments and accessories used for serving food and
beverages to a commercial airline, as defined in A.R.S. Section 42-5061(A)(49), that serves
the food and beverages to its passengers, without additional charge, for consumption in
flight.For the purposes of this subsection, "accessories" means paper plates, plastic
eating utensils, napkins, paper cups, drinking straws, paper sacks or other disposable
containers, or other items which facilitate the consumption of the food.
(dd)in computing the tax base in the case of the sale or transfer of wireless telecommunication
equipment as an inducement to a customer to enter into or continue a contract for
telecommunication services that are taxable under Section 8A-470, gross proceeds of
sales or gross income does not include any sales commissions or other compensation
received by the retailer as a result of the customer entering into or continuing a contract for
the telecommunications services.
(ee)for the purposes of this Section, a sale of wireless telecommunication equipment to a
person who holds the equipment for sale or transfer to a customer as an inducement to
enter into or continue a contract for telecommunication services that are taxable under
Section 8A-470 is considered to be a sale for resale in the regular course of business.
sales of alternative fuel as defined in A.R.S. Section 1-215, to a used oil fuel burner who
has received a Department of Environmental Quality permit to burn used oil or used oil fuel
under A.R.S. Section 49-426 or Section 49-480.
sales of food, beverages, condiments and accessories to a public educational entity,
pursuant to any of the provisions of Title 15, Arizona Revised Statutes; to the extent such
items are to be prepared or served to individuals for consumption on the premises of a
public educational entity during school hours. For the purposes of this subsection,
"accessories" means paper plates, plastic eating utensils, napkins, paper cups, drinking
straws, paper sacks or other disposable containers, or other items which facilitate the
consumption of the food.
(hh)sales of personal hygiene items to a person engaged in the business of and subject to tax
under Section 8A-444 of this code if the tangible personal property is furnished without
additional charge to and intended to be consumed by the person during his occupancy.
44
Sec. 8A-470. Telecommunication services.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to three and two -tenths percent (3.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of providing telecommunication services to consumers within this City.
(1) Telecommunication services shall include:
(A)two-way voice, sound, and/or video communication over a communications
channel.
one-way voice, sound, and/or video transmission or relay over a communications
channel.
(C)facsimile transmissions.
(D)providing relay or repeater service.
(E)providing computer interface services over a communications channel.
(F)time-sharing activities with a computer accomplished through the use of a
communications channel.
(2)Gross income from the business activity of providing telecommunication services to
consumers within this City shall include:
(A)all fees for connection to a telecommunication system.
(B)
()))
(ii)for the purposes of this Section, the diversion of gas from a pipeline by a person engaged
in the business of operating a natural or artificialgas pipeline, for the sole purpose of
fueling compressor equipment to pressurize the pipeline, is not a sale of the gas to the
operator of the pipeline.
sales of food, beverages, condiments and accessories to a nonprofit charitable
organization that has qualified as an exempt organization under 26 U.S.0 Section 501(c)(3)
and regularly serves meals to the needy and indigent on a continuing basis at no cost. For
the purposes of this subsection, "accessories" means paper plates, plastic eating utensils,
napkins, paper cups, drinking straws, paper sacks or other disposable containers, or other
items which facilitate the consumption of the food.
(kk)sales of motor vehicles that use alternative fuel if such vehicle was manufactured as a
diesel fuel vehicle and converted to operate on alternative fuel and sales of equipment that
is installed in a conventional diesel fuel motor vehicle to convert the vehicle to operate on
an alternative fuel, as defined in A.R.S. Section 1-215.
(B)
toll charges, charges for transmissions, and charges for other telecommunications
services; provided that such charges relate to transmissions originating in the City
and terminating in this State.
(C)fees charged for access to or subscription to or membership in a
telecommunication system or network.
(D)charges for monitoring services relating to a security or burglar alarm system
located within the City where such system transmits or receives signals or data
over a communications channel.
(E)charges for telephone, fax or Internet access services provided at an additional
charge by a hotel business subject to taxation under Section 8A-444.
(b)Resale telecommunication services.Gross income from sales of telecommunication services
to another provider of telecommunication services for the purpose of providing the
purchaser's customers with such service shall be exempt from the tax imposed by this
45
Section; provided, however, that such purchaser is properly licensed by the City to engage in
such business.
(c)Interstate transmissions.Charges by a provider of telecommunication services for
transmissions originating in the City and terminating outside the State are exempt from the
tax imposed by this Section.
(d)Tax credit offset for franchise fees.There shall be allowed as an offset, up to the amount of
tax due, any amounts paid to the City for license fees or franchise fees, but such offset shall
not be allowed against taxes imposed by any other Section of this Chapter. Such offset shall
not be deemed in conflict with or violation of subsection 8A -400(b).
(e)However, gross income from the providing of telecommunication services by a cable
television system, as such system is defined in A.R.S. Section 9-505, shall be exempt from
the tax imposed by this Section.
(f)Prepaid calling cards.Telecommunications services purchased with a prepaid calling card
that are taxable under Section 8A-460 are exempt from the tax imposed under this Section.
(g)Internet access services.The gross income subject to tax under this section shall not include
sales of internet access services to the person's subscribers and customers. For the
purposes of this subsection:
(1)"Internet" means the computer and telecommunications facilities that comprise the
interconnected worldwide network of networks that employ the transmission control
protocol or internet protocol, or any predecessor or successor protocol, to communicate
information of all kinds by wire or radio.
(2)"Internet Access" means a service that enables users to access content, information,
electronic mail or other services over the internet. Internet access does not include
telecommunication services provided by a common carrier.
Sec. 8A-475. Transporting for hire.
The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to two and two -tenths percent (2.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business of
providing the following forms of transportation for hire from this City to another point within the
State:
(a)transporting of persons or property by railroad; provided, however, that the tax imposed by
this subsection shall not apply to transporting freight or property for hire by a railroad
operating exclusively in this State if the transportation comprises a portion of a single
shipment of freight or property, involving more than one railroad, either from a point in this
State to a point outside this State or from a point outside this State to a point in this State. For
purposes of this paragraph, "a single shipment" means the transportation that begins at the
point at which one of the railroads first takes possession of the freight or property and
continues until the point at which one of the railroads relinquishes possession of the freight or
property to a party other than one of the railroads.
(b)transporting of oil or natural or artificial gas through pipe or conduit.
(c)transporting of property by aircraft.
(d)transporting of persons or property by motor vehicle, including towing and the operation of
private car lines, as such are defined in Article VII, Chapter 14, Title 42, Arizona Revised
Statutes; provided, however, that the tax imposed by this subsection shall not apply to:
(1)gross income subject to the tax imposed by Article IV, Chapter 16, Title 28, Arizona
. Revised Statutes.
(2)gross income derived from the operation of a governmentally adopted and controlled
program to provide urban mass transportation.
46
(g)
(3)(Reserved)
(4)(Reserved)
(e)(Reserved)
(f)Deductions or exemptions.The gross proceeds of sales or gross income derived from the
following sources is exempt from the tax imposed by this Section:
(1)income that is specifically included as the gross income of a business activity upon which
another Section of Article IV imposes a tax, that is separately stated to the customer and
is taxable to the person engaged in that classification not to exceed consideration paid to
the person conducting the activity.
(2)income from arranging amusement or. transportation when the amusement or
transportation is conducted by another person not to exceed consideration paid to the
amusement or transportation business.
The tax imposed by this Section shall not include arranging transportation as a convenience
to a person's customers if that person is not otherwise engaged in the business of
transporting persons, freight or property for hire.This exception does not apply to
businesses that dispatch vehicles pursuant to customer orders and send the billings and
receive the payments associated with that activity, including when the transportation is
performed by third party independent contractors.For the purposes of this paragraph,
"arranging" includes billing for or collecting transportation charges from a person's customers
on behalf of the persons providing the transportation.
Sec. 8A-480. Utility services.
(a)The tax rate shall be at an amount equal to three and two -tenths percent (3.2%) of the gross
income from the business activity upon every person engaging or continuing in the business
of producing, providing, or furnishing utility services, including electricity, electric lights,
current, power, gas (natural or artificial), or water to:
(1)consumers or ratepayers who reside within the City.
(2)(Reserved)
(b)Exclusion of certain sales of natural gas to a public utility.Notwithstanding the provisions of
subsection (a) above, the gross income derived from the sale of natural gas to a public utility
for the purpose of generation of power to be transferred by the utility to its ratepayers shall be
considered a retail sale of tangible personal property subject to Sections 8A-460 and 8A-465,
and not considered gross income taxable under this Section.
(c)Resale utility services.Sales of utility services to another provider of the same utility services
for the purpose of providing such utility services either to another properly licensed utility
provider or directly to such purchaser's customers or ratepayers shall be exempt and
deductible from the cross income subject to the tax imposed by this Section, provided that the
purchaser is properly licensed by all applicable taxing jurisdictions to engage or continue in
the business of providing utility services, and further provided that the seller maintains proper
documentation, in a manner similar to that for sales for resale, of such transactions.
(d)Tax credit offset for franchise fees.There shall be allowed as an offset any franchise fees
paid to the City pursuant to the terms of a franchise agreement. However, such offset shall
not be allowed against taxes imposed by any other Section of this Chapter. Such offsets shall
not be deemed in conflict with or violation of subsection 8A -400(b).
(e)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to sales of utility services to a qualifying
hospital, qualifying community health center or a qualifying health care organization, except
when sold for use in activities resulting in gross income from unrelated business income as
that term is defined in 26 U.S.C. Section 512.
47
(f)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to sales of natural gas or liquefied petroleum
gas used to propel a motor vehicle.
(g)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to:
(1)revenues received by a municipally owned utility in the form of fees charged to persons
constructing residential, commercial or industrial developments or connecting residential,
commercial or industrial developments to a municipal utility system or systems if the fees
are segregated and used only for capital expansion, system enlargement or debt service
of the utility system or systems.
(2)revenues received by any person or persons owning a utility system in the form of
reimbursement or contribution compensation for property and equipment installed to
provide utility access to, on or across the land of an actual utility consumer if the property
and equipment become the property of the utility. This exclusion shall not exceed the
value of such property and equipment.
(h)The tax imposed by this Section shall not apply to sales of alternative fuel as defined in
A.R.S. Section 1-215, to a used oil fuel burner who has received a Department of
Environmental Quality permit to burn used oil or used oil fuel under A.R.S. Section 49-426 or
Section 49-480.
Sec. 8A-485. (Reserved)
48
(0
(g)
ARTICLE V
ADMINISTRATION
Sec. 8A-500. Administration of this Chapter; rule making.
(a)The administration of this Chapter is vested in the Tax Collector, except as otherwise
specifically provided, and all payments shall be made to the City of Apache Junction.
(b)The Tax Collector shall prescribe the forms and procedures necessary for the administration
of the taxes imposed by this Chapter.
(c)Except as provided in this Section, no rule or regulation shall be adopted until approved by
formal action of the City Council.
(d)(Reserved)
(e) The Unified Audit Committee shall publish uniform guidelines that interpret the model city tax
code and that apply to all cities and towns that have adopted the model city tax code as
provided by A.R.S. Section 42-6005.
(1)Prior to finalization of uniform guidelines that interpret the model city tax code, the unified
audit committee shall disseminate draft guidelines for public comment.
(2)pursuant to A.R.S. Section 42-6005(D), when the state statutes and the model city tax
code are the same and where the Arizona Department of Revenue has issued written
guidance, the department's interpretation is binding on cities and towns.
Sec. 8A-510. Divulging of information prohibited; exceptions allowing disclosure.
(a)Except as specifically provided, it shall be unlawful for any official or employee of the City to
make known information obtained pursuant to this Chapter concerning the business financial
affairs or operations of any person.
(b)The City Council may authorize an examination of any return or audit of a specific taxpayer
made pursuant to this Chapter by authorized agents of the Federal Government, the State of
Arizona, or any political subdivisions.
(c)The Tax Collector may provide to an Arizona county, city, or town any information concerning
any taxes imposed in this Chapter relative to the taxing ordinances of that county, city, or
town.
(d)Successors, receivers, trustees, personal representatives, executors, guardians,
administrators, and assignees, if directly interested, may be given information by the Tax
Collector as to the items included in the measure and amounts of any unpaid tax, interest,
and penalties required to be paid.
(e)Upon a written direction by the City Attorney or other legal advisor to the City designated by
the City Council, officials or employees of the City may divulge the amount and source of
income, profits, leases, or expenditures disclosed in any return or report, and the amount of
such delinquent and unpaid tax, penalty, or interest, to a private collection agency having a
written collection agreement with the City.
The Tax Collector shall provide information to appropriate representatives of any Arizona city
or town to comply with the provisions of A.R.S. Section 42-6003, A.R.S. Section 42-6005,
and A.R.S. Section 42-6056.
The Tax Collector may provide information to authorized agents of any other Arizona
governmental agency involving the allocation of taxes imposed by Section 8A-435 upon
publishing and distribution of periodicals.
49
(h)The Tax Collector may provide information regarding the enforcement and collection of taxes
imposed by this Chapter to any governmental agency with which the City has an agreement.
Sec. 8A-515. Duties of the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer.-
(a)The Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer shall assist taxpayers in:
(1)obtaining easily understandable tax information and information on audits, corrections
and appeals procedures of the City.
(2)answering questions regarding preparing and filing the returns required under this
chapter.
(3)locating documents filed with or payments submitted to the Tax Collector by the taxpayer.
(b)The Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer shall also:
(1)receive and evaluate complaints of improper, abusive or inefficient service by the Tax
Collector or any of his designees, employees, or agents and recommend to the City
Manager or, for a City without a City Manager, the Chief Administrative Officer
appropriate action to correct such service.
(2)identify policies and practices of the Tax Collector or any of his designees, employees, or
agents that might be barriers to the equitable treatment of taxpayers and recommend
alternatives to the City Manager or, for a City without a City Manager, the Chief
Administrative Officer.
(3)provide expeditious service to taxpayers whose problems are not resolved through
normal channels.
(4)negotiate with the Tax Collector, his designees, employees, or agents to resolve the most
complex and sensitive taxpayer problems.
(5)take action to stop or prohibit the Tax Collector from taking an action against a taxpayer.
(6)participate and present taxpayers' interests and concerns in meetings formulating the
City's policies and procedures under and interpretation of this Chapter.
compile data each year on the number and type of taxpayer complaints and evaluate the
actions taken to resolve those complaints.
(8)survey taxpayers each year to obtain their evaluation of the quality of service provided by
the Tax Collector, his designees, employees, and agents.
(9)perform other functions which relate to taxpayer assistance as prescribed by the City
Manager or, for a City without a City Manager, the Chief Administrative Officer.
(c)Actions taken by the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer may be reviewed and/or modified
only by the City Manager or, for a City without a City Manager, the Chief Administrative
Officer upon request of the Tax Collector or a taxpayer.
(d)The Mayor and Council of the City shall be provided with a report quarterly which identifies:
(1)any complaints of improper, abusive or inefficient service received by the Taxpayer
Problem Resolution Officer since the date of the last report.
(2)any recommendations made, action taken or surveys obtained by the Taxpayer Problem
Resolution Officer pursuant to subsection (b)(1)-(9), above, since the date of the last
report.
(7 )
Sec. 8A-516. Taxpayer Assistance Orders.
(a) The Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer, with or without a formal written request from a
taxpayer, may issue a taxpayer assistance order that suspends or stays an action or
50
proposed action by the Tax Collector if, in the problem resolution officer's determination, a
taxpayer is suffering or will suffer a significant hardship due to the manner in which the Tax
Collector is administering the tax laws.
(b) A taxpayer assistance order may require the Tax Collector to release any lien perfected
under this Chapter, or cease any action or refrain from taking any action to enforce against
the taxpayer any Section of this Chapter pending resolution of the issue giving rise to the
taxpayer assistance order.
(c)The Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer, City Manager or, for a City without a City
Manager, the Chief Administrative Officer may modify, reverse or rescind a taxpayer
assistance order. A taxpayer assistance order is binding on the Tax Collector until it is
reversed or rescinded.
(d)The running of the applicable statute of limitations for any action that is the subject of a
taxpayer assistance order is suspended from the date the taxpayer applies for the order or
the date the order is issued, whichever is earlier, until the order's expiration date, modification
date or rescission date, if any. Interest that would otherwise accrue on an outstanding tax
obligation is not affected by the issuance of a taxpayer assistance order.
(e)A taxpayer assistance order may not be used:
(1)to contest the merits of a tax liability.
(2)to substitute for informal protest procedures or administrative or judicial proceedings to
review a deficiency assessment, collection action or denial of a refund claim.
Sec.8A-517. Basis for evaluating employee performance.
(a)The Tax Collector shall solicit evaluations from taxpayers and include such evaluations in the
performance appraisals of his employees, where applicable.
(b)The Tax Collector shall not evaluate an employee on the basis of taxes assessed or collected
by that employee.
Sec. 8A-520. Reporting and payment of tax.
(a)Returns.The returns required under this Chapter shall be made upon forms prescribed or
approved by the Tax Collector, and shall be considered filed only when the accuracy of the
return has been attested to, by signature upon the form, by an authorized agent of the
taxpayer, and when such form has been received by the Tax Collector.
(b)Payment.If payment is made in any form other than United States legal tender, the tax
obligation shall not be satisfied until the payment has been honored in funds.
(c)Requirement of Security.If a taxpayer has remitted payment in the form of a check or other
form of draw upon a bank or third party and such remittance has not been honored in funds,
the Tax Collector may demand security for future payments.
(d)Method of Reporting.Each taxpayer shall elect to report on either a cash receipts basis or an
accrual basis and shall indicate the choice on the Privilege License application. A taxpayer
shall not change his reporting method without receiving prior written approval by the Tax
Collector.
(1)Taxpayers must report all gross income subject to the tax using the same basis of
reporting.
(2)Taxes imposed upon construction contracting shall be reported as follows:
(A)Construction contractors shall report on either a progressive billing ("accrual")
basis or cash receipts basis.
51
(B)Speculative builders shall report the gross income derived from sale of improved
real property at close of escrow or at transfer of title or possession, whichever
occurs earlier.
(C)Owner -builders who are not speculative builders shall report taxable amounts as
provided in Section 8A-417.
Sec. 8A-530. When tax due; when delinquent; verification of return; extensions.
(a)Except as provided elsewhere in this Section, the taxes shall be due and payable monthly on
or before the twentieth (20th) day of the month next succeeding the month in which the tax
accrues.
(1)Quarterly returns.The Tax Collector may authorize a taxpayer whose reporting history
indicates an estimated annual City Privilege and Use Tax liability on taxable gross
income in excess of five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) but less than fifty thousand dollars
($50,000.00) to file returns on a calendar -quarterly basis. The taxes for each calendar
quarter shall be due and payable on or before the twentieth (20th) day of the month next
succeeding the end of each calendar quarter.
(2)Annual returns.The Tax Collector may authorize a taxpayer whose reporting history
indicates an estimated annual City Privilege and Use Tax liability on taxable gross
income of not more than five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) to file returns for such taxes on
a calendar -annual basis. The taxes for each calendar year shall be due and payable on
or before the twentieth (20th) day of January of the following year.
(b)Special Requirements of taxpayers filing quarterly or annual returns.No taxpayer may report
on a quarterly or annual basis until he has established, to the Tax Collector's satisfaction, six
(6) months reporting history. It is the taxpayer's responsibility to notify the Tax Collector and
increase his reporting frequency (to quarterly or monthly as applicable) when his taxable
income or tax due exceeds the maximum limits for his current reporting frequency. Failure to
do so may be deemed negligence or evasion, and penalties may apply. Failure to file returns
timely, without good cause shown to the satisfaction of the Tax Collector, is sufficient cause
for the Tax Collector to deny future filings by the taxpayer on a quarterly or annual basis.
(c)Delinquency Date.Except as provided in subsection (d) below, all returns and remittances
received within the Tax Collector's office on or before the last business day of the month
when due shall be regarded as timely filed. The start of business of the first business day
following the month when due shall be the delinquency date.It shall be the taxpayer's
responsibility to cause his return and remittance to be timely received. Mailing the return or
remittance on or before the due date or delinquency date does not relieve the taxpayer of the
responsibility of causing his return or remittance to be received by the last business day of
the month when due.
(d)Jeopardy reporting.If the Tax Collector determines that the collection of any tax due to the
City is in jeopardy, the Tax Collector may direct the taxpayer to file his return and remit the
tax on a weekly, daily, or transaction -by -transaction basis. Such return and remittance shall
be due upon the date fixed by the Tax Collector, and the "delinquency date" shall be the
following day.
(e)Extensions.The Tax Collector may extend the time for filing a return, for good cause shown,
and only when requested in writing and received by the Tax Collector prior to the tax due
date. However, the time for filing such return shall not be extended beyond the last business
day of the month next succeeding the due date of such return. In such cases, only the
penalties for late filing and late payment may be waived by the Tax Collector for filing and
payment within the extension period. Notwithstanding the granting of an extension, the
interest payable for late payment of taxes shall be paid for the period commencing upon the
original delinquency date and ending on the date the tax is paid. The interest may not be
waived by the Tax Collector.
52
Sec. 8A-540. Interest and civil penalties.
(a) Any taxpayer who failed to pay any of the taxes imposed by this Chapter which were due or
found to be due before the delinquency date shall be subject to and shall pay interest upon
such tax until paid. From and after October 1, 2005, the interest rate shall be determined in
the same manner and at the same times as prescribed by Section 6621 of the United States
Internal Revenue Code and compounded annually under the method described in subsection
(1) below. The rate of interest for both overpayments and underpayments for all taxpayers is
the federal short-term rate, determined pursuant to Section 6621(b) of the Internal Revenue
Code, plus three percentage points. The interest rate prior to October 1, 2005 shall be one
percent (1%) per month. Said interest may be neither waived by the Tax Collector nor abated
by the Hearing Officer except as it might relate to a tax abated as provided by Section 8A-
570.
(1)On January 1 of each year any interest outstanding as of that date that was accrued from
and after October 1, 2005 is thereafter considered a part of the principal amount of the
tax and accrues interest pursuant to this section.
(2)Interest accrued prior to October 1, 2005 shall not be added to the principal.
(b)In addition to interest assessed under subsection (a) above, any taxpayer who failed to pay
•any of the taxes imposed by this Chapter which were due or found to be due before the
delinquency date shall be subject to and shall pay any or all of the following civil penalties, in
addition to any other penalties prescribed by this Chapter:
(1)A taxpayer who fails to timely file a return for a tax imposed by this Chapter shall pay a
penalty of five percent (5%) of the tax for each month or fraction of a month elapsing
between the delinquency date of the return and the date on which it is filed, unless the
taxpayer shows that the failure to timely file is due to reasonable cause and not due to
willful neglect. This penalty shall not exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the tax due.
(2)A taxpayer who fails to pay the tax within the time prescribed shall pay a penalty of ten
percent (10%) of the unpaid tax, unless the taxpayer shows that the failure to timely pay
is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect. If the taxpayer is also subject to
a penalty under subsection (b)(1) above for the same tax period, the total penalties under
subsection (b)(1) and this subsection shall not exceed twenty-five percent (25%) of the
tax due.
(3)A taxpayer who fails or refuses to file a return within thirty (30) days of having received a
written notice and demand from the Tax Collector shall pay a penalty of twenty-five
percent (25%) of the tax, unless the taxpayer shows that the failure is due to reasonable
cause and not due to willful neglect or the Tax Collector agrees to a longer time period.
(4)If the cause of a tax deficiency is determined by the Tax Collector to be due to
negligence, but without regard for intent to defraud, the taxpayer shall pay a penalty of
ten percent (10%) of the amount of deficiency. If the taxpayer is also subject to a penalty
under subsection (b)(1) or (b)(2) above for the same tax period, the total penalties
imposed under subsection (b)(1), (b)(2) and this subsection shall not exceed twenty-five
percent (25%) of the tax due.
If the cause of a tax deficiency is determined by the Tax Collector to be due to civil fraud
or evasion of the tax, the taxpayer shall pay a penalty of fifty percent (50%) of the amount
of deficiency.
(c)Penalties and interest imposed by this Section are due and payable upon notice by the Tax
Collector.
(5)
(d)If, following an audit, penalties attributable to the audit period are to be assessed pursuant to
subsection (b)(1) or (b)(2) above, the Tax Collector, before assessing such penalties, must
take into consideration any information or explanations provided by the taxpayer as to why
the return was not timely filed and/or the tax was not timely paid. If such information and/or
53
explanations are provided by the taxpayer, and the Tax Collector nevertheless decides to
assess penalties pursuant to subsection (b)(1) or (b)(2) above, then, at the time the penalties
are assessed, the Tax Collector must provide the taxpayer with a detailed written explanation
of the basis for the Tax Collector's determination that the information and/or explanations
provided by the taxpayer did not constitute reasonable cause.
(e)The assessment of the penalties prescribed by subsections (b)(3) through (b)(5) above must
be approved on a case -by -case basis by the Tax Collector prior to such assessment. In
addition, any assessment which includes penalties based upon subsection (b)(3), (b)(4), or
(b)(5) above must be accompanied by a statement signed by the Tax Collector setting forth in
detail the basis for the Tax Collector's determination that the penalties are warranted under
the circumstances.
(f)The Tax Collector shall waive or adjust penalties imposed by subsections (b)(1) and (b)(2)
above upon a finding that:
(1)
(2)
(3)
in the past, the taxpayer has consistently filed and paid the taxes imposed by this
Chapter in a timely manner; or
the amount of the penalty is greatly disproportionate to the amount of the tax; or
the failure of a taxpayer to file a return and/or pay any tax by the delinquency date was
caused by any of the following circumstances which must occur prior to the
delinquency date of the return or payment in question:
(1)the return was timely filed but was inadvertently forwarded to another taxing
jurisdiction.
(2)erroneous or insufficient information was furnished the taxpayer by the Tax
Collector or his employee or agent.
(3)death or serious illness of the taxpayer, member of his immediate family, or the
preparer of the reports immediately prior to the due date.
(4)unavoidable absence of the taxpayer immediately prior to the due date.
(5)destruction, by fire or other casualty, of the taxpayer's place of business or
records.
(6)prior to the due date, the taxpayer made application for proper forms which could
not be furnished in sufficient time to permit a timely filing.
the taxpayer was in the process of pursuing an active protest of the tax in
question in another taxing jurisdiction at the time the tax and/or return was due.
(8)the taxpayer establishes through competent evidence that the taxpayer
contacted a tax advisor who is competent on the specific tax matter and, after
furnishing necessary and relevant information, the taxpayer was incorrectly
advised that no tax was owed and/or the filing of a return was not required.
(9)the taxpayer has never been audited by a City for the tax or on the issue in
question and relied, in good faith, on a state exemption or interpretation.
(10)the taxpayer can provide some public record (court case, report in a periodical,
professional journal or publication, etc.) stating that the transaction is not subject
to tax.
(7)
(11)the Arizona Department of Revenue, based upon the same facts and
circumstances, abated penalties for the same filing period:
A taxpayer may also re'que-st a waiver or adjustment of penalty for a reason thought to
be equally substantive to those reasons itemized above. All requests for waiver or
adjustment of penalty must be in writing and shall contain all pertinent facts and other
54
reliable and substantive evidence to support the request. In all cases; the burden of
proof is upon the taxpayer.
(g)No request for waiver of penalty under subsection (f) above may be granted unless written
request for waiver is received by the Tax Collector within forty-five (45) days following the
imposition of penalty. Any taxpayer aggrieved by the refusal to grant a waiver under
subsection (f) above may appeal under the provisions of Section 8A-570 provided that a
petition of appeal or request for an extension is submitted to the Tax Collector within forty-five
(45) days of the taxpayer's receipt of notice by the City that waiver has been denied.
(h)For the purpose of this Section, "reasonable cause" shall mean that the taxpayer exercised
ordinary business care and prudence, i.e., had a reasonable basis for believing that the tax
did not apply to the business activity or the storage or use of the taxpayer's tangible personal
property in this City.
(i)For the purpose of this Section, "negligence" shall be characterized chiefly by inadvertence,
thoughtlessness, inattention, or the like, rather than an "honest mistake". Examples of
negligence include:
(1)the taxpayer's failure to maintain records in accordance with Article III of this Chapter;
(2)repeated failures to timely file returns; or
(3)gross ignorance of the law.
Sec. 8A-541. Erroneous advice or misleading statements by the Tax Collector; abatement
of penalties and interest; definition.
(a)Notwithstanding Section 8A -540(a), no interest or penalty may be assessed on an amount
assessed as a deficiency if either:
(1)the deficiency assessed is directly attributable to erroneous written advice furnished to
the taxpayer by an employee of the City acting in an official capacity in response to a
specific request from the taxpayer and not from the taxpayer's failure to provide adequate
or accurate information.
(2)all of the following are true:
(A) a tax return form prepared by the Tax Collector contains a statement that, if followed
by a taxpayer, would cause the taxpayer to misapply this Chapter.
(B) the taxpayer reasonably relies on the statement.
(C) the taxpayer's underpayment directly results from this reliance.
(b)Each employee of the Tax Collector, at the time any oral advice is given to any person, shall
inform the person that the Tax Collector is not bound by such oral advice.
(c)For purposes of this Section "tax return form" includes the instructions that the Tax Collector
prepares for use with the tax return form.
Sec. 8A-542. Prospective application of new law or interpretation or application of law.
(a)Unless expressly authorized by law, the Tax Collector shall not apply any newly enacted
legislation retroactively or in a manner that will penalize a taxpayer for complying with prior
law.
(b)If the Tax Collector adopts a new interpretation or application of any provision of this Chapter
or determines that any provision applies to a new or additional category or type of business
and the change in interpretation or application is not due to a change in the law:
55
(1)the change in interpretation or application applies prospectively only unless it is favorable
to taxpayers.
(2)the Tax Collector shall not assess any tax, penalty or interest retroactively based on the
change in interpretation or application.
(c)for purposes of subsection (b),"New interpretation or application" includes policies and
procedures which differ from established interpretations of this Chapter.
(d)(Reserved)
Sec. 8A-545. Deficiencies; when inaccurate return is filed; when no return is filed;
estimates.
(a)If the taxpayer has failed to file a return, or if the Tax Collector is not satisfied with the return
and payment of the amount of tax required, and additional taxes are determined by the Tax
Collector to be due, the Tax Collector shall deliver written notice of his determination of a
deficiency to the taxpayer, and such deficiency, plus penalties and interest, shall be due and
payable forty-five (45) days after receipt of the notice and demand. Such additional taxes
shall bear any applicable civil penalties and interest as provided in Section 8A-540, and every
such notice of a determination of an additional amount due shall be assessed within the
limitation period provided in Section 8A-550.
(1)When a return is filed.If the Tax Collector is not satisfied with a return and payment of
the amount of tax required by this Chapter to be paid to the City, he may examine the
return or examine the records of the taxpayer, and redetermine the amount of tax,
penalties, and interest required to be paid, for any periods available to the Tax Collector
under Section 8A-550, based upon the information contained in the return or records or
based upon any information within his possession or which comes into his possession.
(2)When no return is filed.If any person fails to make a return, the Tax Collector may make
an estimate of the amount of tax due under this Chapter and compute any applicable
penalties and interest due, based upon any information within his possession or which
comes into his possession.
(b)Estimates by the Tax Collector.Any estimate made by the Tax Collector is to be made on a
reasonable basis. The existence of another reasonable basis of estimation does not, in any
way, invalidate the Tax Collector's estimate. It is the responsibility of the taxpayer to prove
that the Tax Collector's estimate is not reasonable and correct, by providing sufficient
documentation of the type and form required by this Chapter or satisfactory to the Tax
Collector.
Sec. 8A-546. Closing agreements in cases of extensive taxpayer misunderstanding or
misapplication; approval; rules.
(a)If the Tax Collector determines that noncompliance with tax obligations results from extensive
misunderstanding or misapplication of provisions of this Chapter it may enter into closing
agreements with those taxpayers under the following terms and conditions:
(1)Extensive misunderstanding or misapplication of the tax laws occurs if the Tax Collector
determines that more than sixty percent (60%) of the persons in the affected class have
failed to properly account for their taxes owing to the same misunderstanding or
misapplication of the tax laws.
(2)The Tax Collector shall publicly declare the nature of the possible misapplication and the
proposed definition of the class of affected taxpayers and shall conduct a public hearing
to hear testimony regarding the extent of the misapplication and the definition of the
affected class.
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(3)If, after the public hearing, the Tax Collector determines that a class of affected taxpayers
has failed to comply with their tax obligations because of extensive misunderstanding or
misapplication of the tax laws it shall issue a tax ruling announcing that finding and
publish the ruling in a newspaper of general circulation in the City and through the next
two model city tax code updates.
(4) A closing agreement under this Section may abate some or all of the penalties, interest
and tax that taxpayers have failed to remit, or the agreement may provide for the
prospective treatment of the matter as to the class of affected taxpayers. All taxpayers in
the class shall be offered the opportunity to enter into a similar agreement for the same
tax periods.
(5) Taxpayers in the affected class who have properly accounted for their tax obligations for
these tax periods shall be offered the opportunity to enter into an equivalent closing
agreement providing for a pro rata credit or refund of their taxes previously paid.
(6)The closing agreement shall require the taxpayers to properly account for and pay such
taxes in the future. If a taxpayer fails to adhere to such a requirement, the closing
agreement is voidable by the Tax Collector and he may assess the taxpayer for the
delinquent taxes. The Tax Collector may issue such a proposed assessment within six
months after the date that he declares that closing agreement void or within the period
prescribed by Section 8A-550 of this Chapter.
(b)Before entering into closing agreements pursuant to this Section, the Tax Collector shall
secure such approval as required by charter, ordinance or administrative regulation.
(c)After a closing agreement has been signed pursuant to this Section, it is final and conclusive
except on a showing of fraud, malfeasance or misrepresentation of a material fact. The case
shall not be reopened as to the matters agreed upon or the agreement shall not be modified
by any officer, employee or agent of the City. The agreement or any determination,
assessment, collection, payment abatement, refund or credit made pursuant to the
agreement shall not be annulled, modified, set aside or disregarded in any suit, action or
proceeding.
(d)The Tax Collector shall report in writing its activities under this Section to the Mayor and City
Council on or before February 1 of each year.
Sec. 8A-550. Limitation periods.
(a)Limitation when a return has been filed.
(1)Except as provided elsewhere in this Section, the Tax Collector may assess additional
tax due at any time within four (4) years after the date on which the return is required to
be filed, or within four (4) years after the date on which the return is filed, whichever
period expires later.
(2)However, if a taxpayer does not report an amount properly reportable which is in excess
of twenty-five percent (25%) of the taxable amount stated on the return, the Tax Collector
may assess additional tax due at any time within six (6) years after the date on which the
return was filed.
(3)Any delay in commencement or completion of any examination by the Tax Collector,
which is requested or agreed to in writing by the taxpayer, shall be excluded from the
computation of any limitation period prescribed by this Section, and the Tax Collector
shall be entitled to make a determination for taxes due without exclusion of any such time
period, and any limitation period shall be extended for a length of time equivalent to the
period of the agreed upon delay.
(4) Any assessment of additional tax due by the Tax Collector shall be deemed to have been
made by mailing a copy of a notice of audit assessment by certified mail to the taxpayer's
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address of record with the Tax Collector or by personal delivery of a copy of a notice of
audit assessment to the taxpayer or his authorized agent.
(b)Suspension of limitation period.The limitation period on assessment shall be suspended for
any period:
(1)The assets of the taxpayer are in the control or custody of the court in any proceeding
before any court of jurisdiction within the United States of America, and for one hundred
and eighty (180) calendar days thereafter; or
(2)Which the taxpayer and the Tax Collector agree upon in writing.
(c)When no return filed: fraudulent return.In the case of a fraudulent return with the intent to
evade tax, or the failure or refusal to file a return for any month, the Tax Collector may assess
the amount of taxes payable for that month at any time, without any reliance by the taxpayer
upon any time limitation provided elsewhere in this Chapter.
(d)Special provisions relating to owner -builders.The limitation for an owner -builder subject to
the tax as prescribed in Section 8A-417 shall be based upon the date such tax liability is
reportable or was reported, as provided in Section 8A-417.
Sec. 8A-553. Examination of taxpayer records; joint audits.
(a)Waiver of joint audit.A taxpayer that does not authorize a joint audit to be conducted for a tax
jurisdiction is subject to audit by that tax jurisdiction at any time subject to the limitation
provisions provided in Section 8A-550.
(b)Tax jurisdiction acceptance of ioint audit.If the Arizona Department of Revenue intends to
conduct an audit of a taxpayer, the cities or towns for whom a joint audit is being conducted
may accept the audit by the Arizona Department of Revenue or may elect to have a
representative participate, provided that no more than two city or town representatives in total
may participate.
(1)If a city or town does not accept the audit as a joint audit, the city or town may not
conduct an audit of the taxpayer for forty-two months from the close of the last tax period
covered by the audit unless an exception applies to that taxpayer pursuant to A.R.S.
Section 42-2059.
(2)If a joint audit is performed by a city or town, the Arizona Department of Revenue is not
prohibited from conducting an audit that does not violate the provisions of A.R.S. Section
42-2059.
Sec. 8A-555. Tax Collector may examine books and other records; failure to provide
records.
(a)The Tax Collector may require the taxpayer to provide and may examine any books, records,
or other documents of any person who, in the opinion of the Tax Collector, might be liable for
any tax under this Chapter, for any periods available to him under Section 8A-550.
(b)In order to perform any examination authorized by this Chapter, the Tax Collector may issue
an Administrative Request for the attendance of witnesses or for the production of
documents, as provided by Regulation.
(c)If within sixty (60) days of receiving a written request for information in the possession of the
taxpayer, the taxpayer fails or refuses to furnish the requested information, the Tax Collector
may, in addition to penalties prescribed under Section 8A-540, impose an additional penalty
of twenty-five percent (25%) of the amount of any tax deficiency which is attributable to the
information which the taxpayer failed to provide, unless the taxpayer shows that the failure
was due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect.
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(d) The Tax Collector may use any generally accepted auditing procedures, including sampling
techniques, to determine the correct tax liability of any taxpayer. The Tax Collector shall
ensure that the procedures used are in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards.
(e)The fact that the taxpayer has not maintained or provided such books and records which the
Tax Collector considers necessary to determine the tax liability of any person does not
preclude the Tax Collector from making any assessment. In such cases, the Tax Collector is
authorized to use estimates, projections, or samplings, to determine the correct tax. The
provisions of Section 8A -545(b), concerning estimates, shall apply.
(f)The Tax Collector shall give the taxpayer written notice of his determination of a deficiency by
certified mail to the taxpayer's address of record with the tax collector, and the tax deficiency,
plus interest and penalties, is final forty-five (45) days from the date of receipt of the notice by
the taxpayer, unless an appeal is taken pursuant to the provisions of Sections 8A-570
through 8A-575.
Sec. 8A-556. No additional audits or proposed assessments; exceptions.
(a)Once the Tax Collector completes an examination authorized by Section 8A -r555 and a
written notice of the determination of a deficiency has been issued to the taxpayer pursuant
to Section 8A -545(a) or 8A -555(f), the taxpayer's liability for the time period subjected to the
examination is fixed and determined, and no additional audit or examination may be
conducted by the Tax Collector with respect to such time period except under the following
circumstances.
(1)If a taxpayer files a claim for refund under Section 8A-560, the Tax Collector may conduct
an examination limited to the issues presented in the refund claim.
(2)If the taxpayer failed to disclose material information during the initial examination,
falsified books or records, or otherwise engaged in conduct which prevented the Tax
Collector from conducting an accurate examination. The applicability of this subsection,
and the Tax Collector's right to precede hereunder, may be raised and contested by the
taxpayer in a subsequent administrative review brought pursuant to Section 8A-570.
(b) An audit or examination conducted by any other taxing jurisdiction will not preclude the Tax
Collector from conducting an audit or examination for the same time period.
(c)If the Tax Collector issues a notice of deficiency pursuant to either Section 8A -545(a) or
Section 8A -555(f), the Tax Collector may not increase the proposed deficiency except in one
or more of the following circumstances:
(1)the taxpayer made a material misrepresentation of fact.
(2)the taxpayer failed to disclose a material fact.
(3)the Tax Collector submitted a written request for information prior to issuance of the
assessment, and the taxpayer, despite possessing or having access to such information,
failed to provide it within 60 days as required by Section 8A -555(c).
(4)after issuing the notice of determination of deficiency but before the deficiency became
final, the Arizona Tax Court, Court of Appeals or Supreme Court issued a decision, the
applicability of which causes the deficiency initially proposed to increase.
Sec. 8A-560. Erroneous payment of tax; credits and refunds; limitations.
(a) The Tax Collector may authorize either credits or payments of refunds for any taxes,
penalties or interest paid in excess of the amount actually due. Any credit authorized by the
Tax Collector shall be canceled from the accounts of the City if no timely filed request for
credit or refund is made by the claimant claiming same within one (1) year following the date
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of determination and notice by the Tax Collector of the excess payment. For purposes of this
section, "claimant" means a taxpayer that has paid a tax imposed under this article and has
submitted a credit or refund claim under this Section. Except where the taxpayer has granted
a customer a power of attorney to -pursue a credit or refund claim on the taxpayer's behalf,
claimant does not include any customer of such taxpayer, whether or not the claimant
collected the tax from customers by separately stated itemization.
(b)No credit shall be allowed or refund paid except under one of the following conditions:
(1)as provided in Section 8A-565.
(2)upon examination of filed returns for any period not excluded by Section 8A-550, and not
to exceed the tax, penalty, or interest actually paid with such returns.
upon audit or other examination of the books and records of the taxpayer, but only for
periods as provided in Section 8A-550. In the case of an examination performed at the
taxpayer's request, credit shall be allowed or refund paid only for any excess taxes,
penalties, or interest actually paid within the limitation period provided in Section -550,
such period to be calculated from the date of receipt of the taxpayer's request by the Tax
Collector. Requests by taxpayers for audits to authorize credits shall be honored unless,
in the opinion of the Tax Collector, the taxpayer has made excessive requests for audits.
(4)upon the claimant's submission of a written claim for credit or refund of any taxes,
penalties, or interest paid to the City by the claimant.
(c)A credit or refund claim submitted by a claimant for credit or refund of any taxes, penalties, or
interest paid must be in writing and:
(1)identify the name, address and city tax identification number of the taxpayer; and
(2)identify the dollar amount of the credit or refund requested; and
(3)identify the specific tax period involved; and
(4)identify the specific grounds upon which the claim is based.
(d)When a written claim for credit or refund is submitted pursuant to subsection (b)(4) of this
section, no credit shall be allowed or refund paid except for those taxes, penalties, or interest
paid in excess of the amount due within the limitation period provided in Section 8A-550. The
credit or refund limitation period shall be calculated from the date the Tax Collector receives
the claimant's written claim meeting the requirements of subsection (c) of this Section.
(e)The following additional requirements apply to the Tax Collector and the claimant for claims
for credit or refund submitted pursuant to subsection (b)(4) of this Section:
(1)The Tax Collector shall notify the claimant that the claim for credit or refund has been
received and shall indicate whether the claim meets the requirements of subsection (c) of
this Section. If the claim does not meet the requirements of subsection (c) of this Section,
the Tax Collector shall identify the deficiency in writing. Any claim that does not meet the
requirements of subsection (c) of this Section shall not secure the limitation period
pursuant to Section 8A-550.
(2)The Tax Collector may request, in writing, additional information or documentation from
the claimant to support the requested credit or refund. Such information or documentation
must be reasonably related to the claim and required to be maintained under this Chapter
in the normal course of business.
(3)
(A) The claimant may request in writing one or more extensions to supply the requested
information or documentation. The Tax Collector may reject an extension request
only by denying the claim in whole or in part, subject to appeal by the claimant
pursuant to Section 8A-570.
(B) A claimant aggrieved by a request for information or documentation under this
subsection may file an appeal in the manner provided for in Section 8A-570
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(f
(g)
regarding the scope of the request for information or documentation. Such petition
must be filed no later than the last day by which requested information or
documentation must be provided to the Tax Collector, including any extensions. The
decision of the Hearing Officer regarding a request for information or documentation
may not be appealed by either party until the claim has been approved or denied, in
whole or in part, under subsection (h) of this Section or through subsections (e)(3) or
(e)(4) of this Section. A claimant shall not be barred from raising the issue of the
reasonableness of the Tax Collector's information or documentation request in an
appeal filed under subsection (h) of this Section or through subsections (e)(3) or
(e)(4) of this Section through a lack of filing a petition under this subsection.
(3)If the Tax Collector fails to request additional information or documentation pursuant to
this Section and fails to issue a determination on any claim for credit or refund within six
(6) months after the claim is filed, the claimant may consider the claim denied and may
file an appeal pursuant to Section 8A-570.
(4)If the Tax Collector fails to issue a determination within six (6) months of receiving all
requested additional information or documentation, the claimant may consider the claim
for credit or refund denied and may file an appeal pursuant to Section 8A-570.
(5)The burden of proof to show that a notice, request, determination or other communication
was received by the Claimant in this Section is on the Tax Collector, and will be satisfied
by receipt of notice. The burden of proof to show that a claim or additional information or
documentation was received by the Tax Collector is on the claimant and will be satisfied
by receipt of notice.
Interest shall be allowed on the overpayment of tax for any credit or refund authorized
pursuant to subsections (b)(3) or (b)(4) of this Section. Such interest shall be allowed on the
overpayment of tax at the rate and in the manner set forth in Section 8A -540(a), except that
interest shall be allowed prior to October 1, 2005 at the rate of interest earnings on the City of
Flagstaff Treasurer's pool for the period of time the cash was held through September 30,
2005. Interest shall be allowed as follows:
(1)For credits or refunds authorized pursuant to subsection (b)(3) of this Section, interest
shall be calculated from the date the Tax Collector receives the claimant's written claim
following the date of notice to the claimant authorizing the credit or refund.
(2)For credits or refunds authorized pursuant to subsection (b)(4) of this Section, interest
shall be calculated from the date the Tax Collector receives the claimant's written claim
meeting the requirements of subsection (c) of this Section.
The Tax Collector shall give the claimant a written notice of determination for a claim made
under subsection (b) of this Section. If the determination is a denial of a claim, in whole or in
part, the determination must state that the claim for credit or refund has been denied in whole
or in part, with the reason for denial, and must include the claimant's rights of appeal
pursuant to Section 8A-570.
(h) A determination by the Tax Collector under this section, whether an approval of a claim or a
denial of a claim, in whole or in part, shall become final forty-five (45) days from the date of
receipt of the notice by the claimant, unless an appeal is made pursuant to Section 8A-570. If
the claimant is the prevailing party in an appeal of a determination under this Section, Section
8A-578 shall apply, except that reasonable fees and other costs may be awarded either by
the Hearing Officer or court and are not subject to the monetary limitations of subsection 8A-
578(e) if the Tax Collector's position was not substantially justified or was brought for the
purpose of harassing the claimant, frustrating the credit or refund process or delaying the
credit or refund. For the purposes of this Section, "reasonable fees and other costs" means
fees and other costs that are based on prevailing market rates for the kind and quality of the
furnished services, not to exceed the amounts actually paid for expert witnesses, the cost of
any study, analysis, report, test, project or computer program that is found to be necessary to
prepare the claimant's case and necessary fees for attorneys or other representatives.
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(I)The amendments to this Section as enacted in Ordinance # 1269 shall be effective as
follows:
(1)For any claim for refund or credit received by the Tax Collector before October 1, 2005,
(A) the provisions of this Section as it existed prior to the adoption of Ordinance # 1269
shall apply, except that interest shall be allowed from and after October 1, 2005 as
provided in subsection (f) of this Section as enacted by Ordinance # 1269.
(B) Except as noted in subsection (1)(a) above, the amendments to this Section as
enacted in Ordinance # 1269 shall not be cited or considered in the construction or
the interpretation of the City tax refund or credit provisions, interest provisions, or
appeal provisions in effect prior to October 1, 2005.
(2)The provisions of this Section enacted by Ordinance # 1269 shall apply to all claims for
refund or credit, for any periods as determined by subsections (d) or (e) of this Section,
received by the Tax Collector from and after October 1, 2005, except for claims that, in
whole or in part, had been received by the Collector prior to October 1, 2005.
(j)Any refund paid under the provisions of this Section shall be paid from the Privilege Tax
revenue accounts.
Sec. 8A-565. Payment of tax by the incorrect taxpayer or to the incorrect Arizona city or
town.
(a)When it is determined that taxes have been reported and paid to the City by the wrong
taxpayer, any taxes erroneously paid shall be transferred by the City to the privilege tax
account of the person who actually owes and should have paid such taxes, provided that the
City receives an assignment and waiver signed by both the person who actually paid the tax
and the person who should have paid the tax.
(b)An assignment and waiver provided under this Section, must:
(1)identify the name and City privilege license number of the person who erroneously paid
the tax and the person who should have paid the tax.
(2)provide that the person who erroneously paid the tax waives any right such person may
have to a refund of the taxes erroneously paid.
(3)authorize the City Treasurer to transfer the erroneously paid tax to the privilege tax
account of the person who should have paid the tax.
(c)When it is determined that taxes have been reported and paid to the wrong Arizona city or
town, such taxes shall be remitted to the correct city or town, provided that the city or town to
whom the taxes were erroneously paid receives an assignment and waiver signed by both
the person who actually paid the tax and the person who should have paid the tax. Where the
person who actually paid the tax and the person who should have paid the tax are one and
the same, no assignment and waiver need be provided. The City shall neither pay nor charge
any interest or penalty on any overpayment or underpayment except such interest and
penalty actually paid by the taxpayer relating to such tax.
(d)This Section in no way limits or restricts the applicability of any remedies which may
otherwise be available under A.R.S. Section 42-6003. The limitations and procedures set
forth in A.R.S. Section 42-6003 shall apply to all payments under this Section.
(e)When reference is made in this Section to this City or an Arizona city or town, and payments
made to or requested from this City or an Arizona city or town, the provisions shall be
applicable to the Arizona Department of Revenue when it is acting for or on behalf of this City
or an Arizona city or town.
Sec. 8A-567. (Reserved)
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Sec. 8A-570. Administrative review; petition for hearing or for re -determination; finality of
order.
For the purposes of this section, "Municipal Tax Hearing Office" means the administrative offices
of the Municipal Tax Hearing Officer.
(a)lpformal Conference.A taxpayer shall have the right to discuss any proposed assessment
with the auditor prior to the issuance of any assessment, but any such informal conference is
not required for the taxpayer to file a petition' for administrative review.
(b)Administrative Review.
(1)Filing a Petition.Other than in the case of a jeopardy assessment,a taxpayer may
contest the applicability or amount of tax, penalty, or interest imposed upon or paid by
him pursuant to this Chapter by filing a petition for a hearing or for redetermination with
the Tax Collector as set forth below:
(A) within forty-five (45) days of receipt by the taxpayer of notice of a determination by
the Tax Collector that a tax, penalty, or interest amount is due, or that a request for
refund or credit has been denied; or
(B)by voluntary payment of any contested amount when accompanied by a timely filed
return and a petition requesting a refund of the protested portion of said payment; or
(C) by petition accompanying a timely filed return contesting an amount reported but not
paid; or
(D) by petition requesting review of denial of waiver of penalty as provided in subsection -
540(g).
(2)Extension to file a petition.In all cases, the taxpayer may request only one (1) extension
from the Tax Collector. Such request must be in writing, state the reasons for the
requested delay and time of delay requested, and must be filed with the Tax Collector
within the period allowed above for originally filing a petition. The Tax Collector shall
allow such extension to file a petition, when such written request has been properly and
timely made by the taxpayer, but such extension shall not exceed forty-five (45) days
beyond the time provided for originally filing a petition.
(3)Requirements for petition.
(A) The petition shall be in writing and shall set forth the reasons why any correction,
abatement, or refund should be granted, and the amount of reduction or refund
requested. The petition may be amended at any time prior to the time the taxpayer
rests his case at the hearing or such time as the Hearing Officer allows for submitting
of amendments in cases of redeterminations without hearings. The Hearing Officer
may require that amendments be in writing, and in that case, he shall provide a
reasonable period of time to file the amendment. The Hearing Officer shall provide a
reasonable period of time for the Tax Collector to review and respond to the petition
•and to any written amendments.
(B) The taxpayer, as part of the petition, may request a hearing which shall be granted by
the Hearing Officer. If no request for hearing is made the petition shall be considered
to be submitted for decision by the Hearing Officer on the matters contained in the
petition and in any reply made by the Tax Collector.
(C) The provisions of this Section are exclusive, and no petition seeking any correction,
abatement, or refund shall be considered unless the petition is timely and properly
filed under the Section.
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(5)
(4)Transmittal to Hearing Officer.The City shall designate a Hearing Officer, who may be
other than an employee of the City. The Tax Collector, if designated to receive petitions,
shall forward any petition to the Municipal Tax Hearing Officer within twenty (20) days
after receipt, accompanied by documentation as to timeliness. In cases where the
Hearing Officer determines that the petition is not timely or not in proper form, he shall
notify both the taxpayer and the Tax Collector; and in cases of petitions not in proper
form only, the Hearing Officer shall provide the taxpayer with an extension up to forty-five
(45) days to correct the petition.
Hearings shall be conducted by a Hearing Officer and shall be continuous until the
Hearing Officer closes the record. The taxpayer may be heard in person or by his
authorized representative at such hearing. Hearings shall be conducted informally as to
the order of proceeding and presentation of evidence. The Hearing Officer shall admit
evidence over hearsay objections where the offered evidence has substantial probative
value and reliability. Further, copies of records and documents prepared in the ordinary
course of business may be admitted, without objection as to foundation, but subject to
argument as to weight, admissibility, and authenticity. Summary accounting records may
be admitted subject to satisfactory proof of the reliability of the summaries. In all cases,
the decision of the Hearing Officer shall be made solely upon substantial and reliable
evidence. All expenses incurred in the hearing shall be paid by the party incurring the
same.
(6)Redeterminations upon a "petition for redetermination" shall follow the same conditions,
except that no oral hearing shall be held.
(7)Hearing Ruling.In either case, the Hearing Officer shall issue his ruling not later than
forty-five (45) days after the close of the record by the Hearing Officer.
(8)Notice of refund or adjusted assessment.Within sixty (60) days of the issuance of the
Hearing Officer's decision, the Tax Collector shall issue to the taxpayer either a notice of
refund or an adjusted assessment recalculated to conform to the Hearing Officer's
decision.
(c)Stipulations that future tax is also protested.A taxpayer may enter into a stipulation with the
Tax Collector that future taxes of similar nature are also at issue in any protest or appeal.
However, unless such stipulation is made, it is presumed that the protest or appeal deals
solely and exclusively with the tax specifically protested and no other. When a taxpayer
enters into such a stipulation with the Tax Collector that future taxes of similar nature will be
included in any redetermination, hearing, or court case, it is the burden of that taxpayer to
identify, segregate, and keep record of such income or protested taxable amount in his books
and records in the same manner as the taxpayer is required to segregate exempt income.
(d)When an assessment is final.
(1)If a request for administrative review and petition for hearing or redetermination of an
assessment made by the Tax Collector is not filed within the period required by
subsection (b) above, such person shall be deemed to have waived and abandoned the
right to question the amount determined.to be due and any tax, interest, or penalty
determined to be due shall be final as provided in subsections 8A -545(a) and 8A -555(f).
(2)The decision made by the Hearing Officer upon administrative review by hearing or
redetermination shall become final thirty (30) days after the taxpayer receives the notice
of refund or adjusted assessment required by subsection (b)(8) above, unless the
taxpayer appeals the order or decision in the manner provided in Section 8A-575.
(e)(Reserved)
Sec. 8A-571. Jeopardy assessments.
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(a)If the Tax Collector believes that the collection of any assessment or deficiency of any
amounts imposed by this Chapter will be jeopardized by delay, he shall deliver to the
taxpayer a notice of such finding and demand immediate payment of the tax or deficiency
declared to be in jeopardy, including interest, penalties, and additions.
(b)Jeopardy assessments are immediately due and payable, and the Tax Collector may
immediately begin proceedings for collection.The taxpayer, however, may stay collection by
filing, within ten (10) days after receipt of notice of jeopardy assessment, or within such
additional time as the Tax Collector may allow, by bond or collateral in favor of the City in the
amount Tax Collector declared to be in jeopardy in his notice.
(c)"Bond or Collateral", as required by this Section,
(1)shall mean either:
(A)a bond issued in favor of the City by a surety company authorized to transact
business in this State and approved by the Director of Insurance as to solvency
and responsibility, or
(B)collateral composed of securities or cash which are deposited with, and kept in
the custody of, the Tax Collector.
(2)shall be of such form that it may, at any time without notice, be applied to any tax,
penalties, or interest due and payable for the purposes of this Chapter.Securities held
as collateral by the Tax Collector must be of a nature that they may be sold at public or
private sale without notice to the taxpayer.
(d)If bond or collateral is not filed within the period prescribed by subsection (b) above, the tax
collector may treat the assessment as final for purposes of any collection proceedings.The
taxpayer nevertheless shall be afforded the appeal rights provided in Sections 8A-570 and
8A-575.The filing of a petition by the taxpayer under Section 8A-570, however, shall not stay
the tax collector's rights to pursue any collection proceedings.
(e)If the taxpayer timely files sufficient bond or collateral, the jeopardy requirements are deemed
satisfied, and the taxpayer may avail himself of the provisions of Section 8A-570, including
requests for additional time to file a petition.
Sec. 8A-572. Expedited review of jeopardy assessments.
(a)Within thirty (30) days after the day on which the Tax Collector furnishes the written notice
required by Section 8A -571(a), the taxpayer, pursuant to Section 8A-570, may request the
Tax Collector to review the action taken. Within fifteen (15) days after the request for review,
the Tax Collector shall determine whether both the jeopardy determination and the amount
assessed are reasonable.
(b) Within thirty (30) days after the Tax Collector notifies the taxpayer of the determination he
reached pursuant to subsection (a) above, the taxpayer may bring a civil action in the
appropriate court. If the taxpayer so requests, the City shall stipulate to an accelerated and
expedited resolution of the civil action. If the court determines that either the jeopardy
determination or the amount assessed is unreasonable, the court may order the Tax
Collector to abate the assessment, to re -determine any part of the amount assessed or to
take such other action as the court finds to be appropriate. A determination made by the court
under this subsection is final except as provided in Arizona Revised Statutes § 12-170.
Sec. 8A-575. Judicial review.
(a)A taxpayer may seek judicial review of all or any part of a Hearing Officer's decision by
initiating an action against the City in the appropriate Court of this County. A taxpayer is not
required to pay any tax, penalty, or interest upheld by the Hearing Officer before seeking
such judicial review.
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(b)The Tax Collector may seek judicial review of all or any part of a Hearing Officer's decision by
initiating an action in the appropriate Court of this County.
(c)An action for judicial review can not be commenced by either the taxpayer or the Tax
Collector more than thirty (30) days after receipt by the taxpayer of notice of any refund or
assessment recalculated or reduced to conform to the Hearing Officer's decision, unless the
time to commence such an action is extended in writing signed by both the taxpayer and the
Tax Collector. Failure to bring the action within thirty (30) days or such other time as is
agreed upon in writing shall constitute a waiver of any right to judicial review, except as
provided in subsection (g) below.
(d)The court shall hear and determine the appeal as a trial de novo; however, the Tax Collector
cannot raise in the court any grounds or basis for the assessment not asserted before the
Hearing Officer. Nothing in this subsection, however, shall preclude the Tax Collector from
responding to any arguments which are raised by the taxpayer in the appeal.
(e)The City has the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence in any court proceeding
regarding any factual issue relevant to ascertaining the tax liability of a taxpayer. This
subsection does not abrogate any requirement of this Chapter that requires a taxpayer to
substantiate an item of gross income, exclusion, exemption, deduction, or credit. This
subsection applies to a factual issue if a preponderance of the evidence demonstrates that:
(1)the taxpayer asserts a reasonable dispute regarding the issue.
(2)the taxpayer has fully cooperated with the tax collector regarding the issue, including
providing within a reasonable period of time, access to and inspection of all witnesses,
information and documents within the taxpayer's control, as reasonably requested by the
tax collector.
(f)
(3)the taxpayer has kept and maintained records as required by the City.
The issuance of an adjusted or corrected assessment or notice of refund due to the taxpayer,
where made by the Tax Collector pursuant to the decision of the Hearing Officer, shall not be
deemed an acquiescence by the City or the Tax Collector in said decision, nor shall it
constitute a bar or estoppel to the institution of an action or counterclaim by the City to
recover any amounts claimed to be due to it by virtue of the original assessment.
(g)After the initiation of any action in the appropriate court by either party, the opposite party
may file such counterclaim as would be allowed pursuant to the Arizona Rules of Civil
Procedure.
Sec. 8A-577.Refunds of taxes paid under protest.
In the event the Hearing Officer's decision or a final judgment by the Court is rendered in favor of
the taxpayer to recover protested taxes, it shall be the duty of the Tax Collector, upon receipt of
such decision or of a certified copy of such final judgment, to authorize a warrant in favor of the
taxpayer in an amount equal to the amount of the tax found by such decision or by the final
judgment to have been paid under protest, and such warrant shall include the amount of interest
or other cost that may have been recovered against the City by the final judgment in such action
in the courts, to be paid from the Privilege Tax revenue accounts.
Sec. 8A-578. Reimbursement of fees and other costs; definitions.
(a)A taxpayer who is a prevailing party may be reimbursed for reasonable fees and other costs
related to any administrative proceeding brought by the taxpayer pursuant to Section 8A-
570(b). For purposes of this Section, a taxpayer is considered to be the prevailing party only
if both of the following are true:
(1) the Tax Collector's position was not substantially justified.
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(2) the taxpayer prevails as to the most significant issue or set of issues.
(b)Reimbursement under this Section may be denied if any of the following circumstances
apply:
(1) during the course of the proceeding the taxpayer unduly and unreasonably protracted the
final resolution of the matter.
(2) the reason that the taxpayer prevailed is due to an intervening change in the applicable
law.
(c)The taxpayer shall present an itemization of the reasonable fees and other costs to the
Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer within thirty (30) days after receipt by the taxpayer of a
notice of refund or recalculated assessment issued by the Tax Collector pursuant to Section
8A -570(b)(8). The Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer shall determine the validity of the
fees and other costs within thirty (30) days after receiving the itemization. The Taxpayer
Problem Resolution Officer's decision is considered a final decision. Either the taxpayer or
the Tax Collector may seek judicial review of the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer's
decision. An action for judicial review, however, shall not be commenced more than thirty (30)
days after receipt of the resolution officer's decision.
(d)In the event judicial review is not sought pursuant to subsection (c) above, the City shall pay
the fees and other costs awarded as provided in this Section within thirty days after demand
by a person who has received an award pursuant to this Section.
(e)Reimbursement to a taxpayer under this Section shall not exceed twenty thousand dollars or
actual monies spent, whichever is less. The reimbursable attorney or representative fees
shall not exceed one hundred dollars per hour or actual monies spent, whichever is less,
unless the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer determines that an increase in the cost of
living or a special factor such as the limited availability of qualified attorneys or
representatives for the proceeding involved justifies a higher fee.
(f)For purposes of this Section "reasonable fees and other costs" means fees and other costs
that are based on prevailing market rates for the kind and quality of the furnished services,
but not exceeding the amounts actually spent for expert witnesses, the cost of any study,
analysis, report, test or project that is found to be necessary to prepare the party's case and
necessary fees for attorneys or.other representatives.
Sec. 8A-580. Criminal penalties.
(a)It is unlawful for any person to knowingly or willfully:
(1)fail or refuse to make any return required by this Chapter.
(2)fail to remit as and when due the full amount of any tax or additional tax or penalty and
interest thereon.
(3)make or cause to be made a false or fraudulent return.
(4)make or cause to be made a false or fraudulent statement in a return, in written support
of a return, or to demonstrate or support entitlement to a deduction, exclusion, or credit or
to entitle the person to an allocation or apportionment or receipts subject to tax.
(5)fail or refuse to permit any lawful examination of any book, account, record, or other
memorandum by the Tax Collector.
(6)fail or refuse to remit any tax collected by such person from his customer to the Tax
Collector before the delinquency date next following such collection.
(7)advertise or hold out to the public in any manner, directly or indirectly, that any tax
imposed by this Chapter, as provided in this Chapter, is not considered as an element in
the price to the consumer.
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(8)fail or refuse to obtain a Privilege License or to aid or abet another in any attempt to
intentionally refuse to obtain such a license or evade the license fee.
(9)reproduce, forge, falsify, fraudulently obtain or secure, or aid or abet another in any
attempt to reproduce, forge, falsify, or fraudulently obtain or secure, an exemption from
taxes imposed by this Chapter.
(b)The violation of any provision of subsection (a) above shall constitute a Class One
Misdemeanor.
(c)In addition to the foregoing penalties, any person who shall knowingly swear to or verify any
false or fraudulent statement, with the intent aforesaid, shall be guilty of the offense of perjury
and on conviction thereof shall be punished in the manner provided by law.
Sec. 8A-590.Civil actions.
(a)•Liens.
(1)Any tax, penalty, or interest imposed under this Chapter which has become final, as
provided in this Chapter, shall become a lien when the City perfects a notice and claim of
lien setting forth the name of the taxpayer, the amount of the tax, penalty, and interest,
the period or periods for which the same is due, and the date of accrual thereof, the
amount of the recording costs by the county recorder in any county in which the taxpayer
owns real property and the documentation and lien processing fees imposed by the City
Council and further, stating that the City claims a lien thereof.
(2)The notice of claim of lien shall be signed by the City Manager under his official seal or
the official seal of the City, and, with respect to real property, shall be recorded in the
office of the County Recorder of any county in which the taxpayer owns real property,
and, with respect to personal property shall be filed in the office of the Secretary of State.
After the notice and claim of lien is recorded or filed, the taxes, penalties, interest and
recording costs and lien processing fees referred to above in the amounts specified
therein shall be a lien on all real property of the taxpayer located in such county where
recorded, and all tangible personal property of the taxpayer within the State, superior to
all other liens and assessments recorded or filed subsequent to the recording or filing of
the notice and claim of lien.
(3)Every tax and any increases, interest, penalties, and recording costs and lien processing
fees referred to above, shall become from the time the same is due and payable a
personal debt from the person liable to the City, but shall be payable to and recoverable
by the Tax Collector and which may be collected in the manner set forth in subsection (b)
below.
(4)Any lien perfected pursuant to this Section shall, upon payment of the taxes, penalties,
interest, recording costs and lien processing fees referred to above and lien release fees
imposed by the county recorder in any county in which the lien was recorded, thereby, be
released by the Tax Collector in the same manner as mortgages and judgments are
released.The Tax Collector may, at his sole discretion, release a lien in part, that is,
against only specified property, for partial payment of moneys due the City.
(b)Actions to recover tax.An action may be brought by the City Attorney or other legal advisor
to the City designated by the City Council, at the request of the Tax Collector, in the name of
the City, to recover the amount of any taxes, penalties, interest, recording costs, lien
processing fees and lien release fees due under this Chapter; provided that:
(1)no action or proceeding may be taken or commenced to collect any taxes levied by this
Chapter until the amount thereof has been established by assessment, correction, or
reassessment; and
(2)such collection effort is made or the proceedings begun:
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(A) within six (6) years after the assessment of the tax; or
(B)prior to the expiration of any period of collection agreed upon in writing by the Tax
Collector and the taxpayer before the expiration of such six (6) year period, or any
extensions thereof; or
(C) at any time for the collection of tax arising by reason of a tax lien perfected, recorded,
or possessed by the City under this Section.
Sec. 8A-595. Collection of taxes when there is succession in ancltor cessation of business.
(a)In addition to any remedy provided elsewhere in this City Code that may apply, the Tax
Collector may apply the provisions of subsections (b) through (d) below concerning the
collection of taxes when there is succession in and/or cessation of business.
(b)The taxes imposed by this Chapter are a lien on the property of any person subject to this
Chapter who sells his business or stock of goods, or quits his business, if the person fails to
make a final return and payment of the tax within fifteen (15) days after selling or quitting his
business.
(c) Any person who purchases, or who acquires by foreclosure, by sale under trust deed or
warranty deed in lieu of foreclosure, or by any other method, improved real property or a
portion of improved real property for which the Privilege Tax imposed by this Chapter has not
been paid shall be responsible for payment of such tax as a speculative builder or owner
builder, as provided in Sections 8A-416 and 8A-417.
(d)A person's successors or assignees shall withhold from the purchase money an amount
sufficient to cover the taxes required to be paid, and interest or penalties due and payable,
until the former owner produces a receipt from the Tax Collector showing that all City tax has
been paid or a certificate stating that no amount is due as then shown by the records of the
Tax Collector. The Tax Collector shall respond to a request from the seller for a certificate
within fifteen (15) days by either providing the certificate or a written notice stating why the
certificate cannot be issued.
(1)If a subsequent audit shows a deficiency arising before the sale of the business, the
deficiency is an obligation of the seller and does not constitute a liability against a buyer
who has received a certificate from the Tax Collector.
(2)If the purchaser of a business or stock of goods fails to obtain a certificate as provided by
this Section, he is personally liable for payment of the amount of taxes required to be
paid by the former owner on account of the business so purchased, with interest and
penalties accrued by the former owner or assignees.
Sec. 8A-596. Agreement for installment payments of tax.
(a)The City may enter into an agreement with a taxpayer to allow the taxpayer to satisfy a
liability for any tax imposed by this Chapter by means of installment payments. The Tax
Collector may require a taxpayer who requests an installment payment agreement to
complete a financial report in such form and manner as the Tax Collector may prescribe.
(b)The Tax Collector, without notice, may alter, modify or terminate an installment payment
agreement if the taxpayer:
(1)fails to pay an installment at the time the installment payment is due under the
agreement.
(2)fails to pay any other tax liability at the time the liability is due.
(3)fails to file any tax report or return at the time the report or return is due.
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(4)fails to furnish any information requested by the Tax Collector within thirty days after
receiving a written request for such information.
(5)fails to notify the Tax Collector of a material improvement in the taxpayer's financial
condition above the income previously reported in the most recent income statement
within thirty days after the material improvement.
(6)provides inaccurate, false or incomplete information to the Tax Collector.
(c)Notwithstanding any installment payment agreement, the Tax Collector may offset any tax
refunds against the liabilities provided for in the installment payment agreement, may file and
perfect any tax liens and, in the event the taxpayer breaches any term or provision of the
installment payment agreement, may engage in collection activities.
(d)The Tax Collector, without notice, may terminate an installment payment agreement if the
Tax Collector believes that the collection of tax to which the payment agreement pertains is in
jeopardy.
(e)If the Tax Collector determines that the financial condition of a taxpayer has improved, the
Tax Collector may alter, modify or terminate the agreement by providing notice to the
taxpayer at least thirty days before the effective date of the action. The notice shall include
the reasons why the Tax Collector believes the alteration, modification or termination is
appropriate.
An installment payment agreement shall remain in effect for the term of the agreement except
as otherwise provided in this Section.
A taxpayer who is aggrieved by a decision of the Tax Collector to refuse to enter into an
installment payment agreement or to alter, modify or terminate an agreement entered into
pursuant to this Section may petition the Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer to review that
determination. The Taxpayer Problem Resolution Officer may stay such alteration,
modification or termination pending its review and may modify or nullify the determination. •
(h)The City and the taxpayer may modify any installment payment agreement at any time by
entering into a new or modified agreement.
(f)
(9)
Sec. 8A-597. Private taxpayer rulings; request; revocation or modification; definition.
(a)The Tax Collector shall issue private taxpayer rulings to taxpayers and potential taxpayers on
request. Each request shall be in writing and shall:
(1) state the name, address and, if applicable, taxpayer identifying number of the taxpayer or
potential taxpayer who requests the ruling.
(2) describe all facts that are relevant to the requested ruling.
(3) state whether, to the best knowledge of the taxpayer or potential taxpayer, the issue or
related issues are being considered by the Tax Collector or any other taxing jurisdiction in
connection with an active audit, protest or appeal that involves the taxpayer or potential
taxpayer and whether the same request has been or is being submitted to another taxing
jurisdiction for a ruling.
(4) be signed by the taxpayer or potential taxpayer who makes the request or by an
authorized representative of the taxpayer or potential taxpayer.
(b)A private taxpayer ruling may be revoked or modified by either:
(1) a change or clarification in the law that was applicable at the time the ruling was issued,
including changes or clarifications caused by regulations and court decisions.
(2) actual written notice by the Tax Collector to the last known address of the taxpayer or
potential taxpayer of the revocation or modification of the private taxpayer ruling.
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(c)With respect to the taxpayer or prospective taxpayer to whom a private taxpayer ruling is
issued, the revocation or modification of a private taxpayer ruling shall not be applied
retroactively to tax periods or tax years before the effective date of the revocation or
modification and the Tax Collector shall not assess any penalty or tax attributable to
erroneous advice that is furnished to the taxpayer or potential taxpayer in the private taxpayer
ruling if:
(1) the taxpayer reasonably relied on the private taxpayer ruling.
(2) the penalty or tax did not result either from a failure by the taxpayer to provide adequate
or accurate information or from a change in the information.
(d) A private taxpayer ruling may not be relied upon, cited nor introduced into evidence in any
proceeding by any taxpayer other than the taxpayer who received the ruling.
(e) A taxpayer may appeal the propriety of a retroactive application of a revoked or modified
private taxpayer ruling by filing a written petition with the Tax Collector pursuant to Section
8A-570 within forty-five (45) days after receiving written notice of the intent to retroactively
apply a revoked or modified private taxpayer ruling.
A private taxpayer ruling constitutes the Tax Collector's interpretation of the Sections of this
Chapter only as they apply to the taxpayer making, and the particular facts contained in, the
request.
A private taxpayer ruling which addresses a taxpayer's ongoing business activities will apply
only to transactions that occur or tax liabilities that accrue from and after the date of the
taxpayer's ruling request.
(h)The Tax Collector shall attempt to issue private taxpayer rulings within forty-five (45) days
after receiving the written request and on receiving the facts that are relevant to the ruling. If
the ruling is expected to be delayed beyond the forty-five (45) days, the Tax Collector shall
notify the requestor of the delay and the proposed date of issuance.
(i)Within thirty (30) days after being issued, the Tax Collector shall maintain the private
taxpayer ruling as a public record and make it available at a reasonable cost for public
inspection and copying. The text of private taxpayer rulings are open to public inspection
subject to the confidentiality requirements prescribed by Section 8A-510.
(j)In this Section, "private taxpayer ruling" means a written determination by the Tax Collector
issued pursuant to this Section that interprets and applies one or more Sections contained in
this Chapter and any applicable regulations.
(k)A private taxpayer ruling issued by the Arizona Department of Revenue pursuant to A.R.S.
Section 42-2101 may be relied upon by the taxpayer to whom the ruling was issued and must
be recognized and followed by any City in which such taxpayer has obtained a privilege
license if the City has not issued a ruling addressing the facts described in the taxpayer's
ruling request and the statute at issue in the taxpayer's ruling request is,in essence, worded
and written the same as the applicable Section hereunder.
(1)
(g)
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REG UALTIONS
PRIVILEGE AND EXCISE TAXES
Reg. 8A-100.1. Brokers
(a)For the purposes of proper administration of this Chapter and to prevent evasion of taxes
imposed, brokers shall be wherever necessary treated as taxpayers for all purposes, and
shall file a return and remit the tax imposed on the activity on behalf of the principal.No
deduction shall be allowed for any commissions or fees retained by such broker, except as
provided in Section 8A-405, relating to advertising commissions.
(b)Brokers for vendors.A broker acting for a seller, lessor, or other similar person deriving
gross income in a category upon which this Chapter imposes a tax shall be liable for such
tax, even if his principal would not be subject to the tax if he conducted such activity in his
own behalf, by reason of the activity being deemed a "casual" one.For example:
(1)An auctioneer or other sales agent of tangible personal property is subject to the tax
imposed upon retail sales, even if such sales would be deemed "casual" if his principal
had sold such items himself.
(2)A property manager is subject to the tax imposed upon rental, leasing, or licensing of real
property, even if such rental, leasing, or licensing would be deemed "casual" if his
principal managed such real property himself.
(c)Brokers for vendees.A broker acting solely for a buyer, lessee, tenant, or other similar
person who is a party to a transaction which may be subject to the tax, shall be liable for such
tax and for filing a return in connection with such tax only to the extent his principal is subject
to the tax.
(d)The liability of a broker does not relieve the principal of liability except upon presentation to
the Tax Collector of proof of payment of the tax, and only to the extent of the correct
payment.The broker shall be relieved of the responsibility to file and pay taxes upon the
filing and correct payment of such taxes by the principal.
(e)(Reserved)
(f)Location of Business.Retail sales by brokers acting for another person shall be deemed to
have occurred at the regular business location of the broker, in a manner similar to that used
to determine "out -of -city sales"; provided, however, that an auctioneer is deemed to be
engaged in business at the site of each auction
Reg. 8A-100.2.Delivery, installation, or other direct customer services.
(a)"Delivery Charges" exist only when the total charges to the ultimate customer or consumer
include, as separately charged to the ultimate customer, charges for delivery to the ultimate
consumer, whether the place of delivery is within or without the City, and when the taxpayer's
books and records show the separate delivery charges.
(1)Identification to the customer or consumer that the listed price has "delivery included" or
other similar expression is insufficient to show the delivery as a separate charge.Only
the separately stated charge for the delivery shall be deemed a "delivery charge".
(2)Freight in.Charges for delivery from place of production or the manufacturer to the
vendor either directly or through a chain of wholesalers or jobbers or other middlemen
are deemed "freight -in" and are not considered delivery.
(b)"Installation",as used in this definition, relates only to tangible personal property.Installation
to real property is deemed construction contracting in this Chapter.Examples of installation
relating to tangible personal property are: installing a radio in an automobile; applying sun
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screens on the windows of a boat; installing cabinets, carpeting, or "built-in appliances" to a
camper or motorized recreational vehicle.
(c)Repair of tangible personal property is not included in this definition. See Regulation 8A-
465.1.
(d)"Direct Customer Services"means services other than repair rendered directly to the
customer.Services or labor provided by any person prior to the transfer of tangible personal
property to the customer or consumer are not included in this definition.In the following
examples, the requirements of subsection (e) below are referred to by the words "identify" or
"identification."
(1) A retailer sells a customer a $100 "plug-in" appliance, with a $25 delivery and installation
charge.If the retailer identifies the $25 delivery and installation charge, it is a charge for
direct customer services.
(2) A caterer charges his customer $1,000 for the food and drink served, $300 for setup and
site cleanup, and $500 for bartender and waiters.If all charges are properly identified,
only the $300 for set up and cleanup is a charge for direct customer services, and the
$1,500 for food and service is restaurant gross income,
(3)Persons engaged in engraving on wood, metal, stone, etc. or persons engaged in
retouching photographs or paintings may consider such charges for labor as direct
customer services.
(4) All charges by a photographer resulting in the sale of a photograph (sitting charges,
developing, making enlargements, retouching, etc.) for services that occur prior to
transfer of tangible personal property are not direct customer services.
(5) An equipment rental company charging $25 for delivery may consider such delivery
charge as a charge for direct customer service only if such charge is properly identified.
(6)Even if identified, charges for labor incurred in the production of any manufactured article
or of a custom-made article (jewelry, artwork, tailoring, draperies, etc.) are not included in
this definition, as such labor occurs prior to the transfer of property.
(e)Recordkeepinq requirements.
(1)Any person who engages in transactions involving these services must:
(A) Separately bill, invoice, or charge the customer for such services in a manner by
which the customer or consumer may readily identify the specific dollar amount of the
service charge; and
(B) Maintain business books and records in a manner in which the separate charge for
such services can be clearly identified, to the satisfaction of the Tax Collector.
(2)Rendering a statement to a customer for a transaction involving such services and the
transfer of tangible personal property which only indicates the total amount of the charges
with words such as "services included" or "charge includes labor and parts" or a similar
expression does not satisfy the requirements of this subsection.
Reg. 8A-100.3.Retailers.
When in the opinion of the Tax Collector it is necessary for efficient administration of this Chapter,
he may regard any salesman, representative, peddler, canvasser, or agent of any dealer,
distributor, supervisor, or employer under whom he operates or from whom he obtains tangible
personal property for sale, rental, lease, or license as a retailer for the purposes of this Chapter,
irrespective of whether he is making sales, rentals, leases, or licenses on his own behalf or on
behalf of others.The Tax Collector may also regard such dealer, distributor, supervisor, or
employer as a retailer for the purposes of this Chapter.
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Reg. 8A-100.4.Out-of-City/Out-of-State Sales: Sales to Native Americans.
Sales to Native Americans or tribal councils by vendors located within the City shall be deemed
sales within the City, unless all of the following conditions exist:
(1)The vendor has properly accounted for such sales, in a manner similar to the recordkeeping
requirements for out -of -City sales; and ,
(2) All of the following elements of the sale exist:
(a)solicitation and placement of the order occurs on the reservation; and
(b)delivery is made to the reservation; and
(c)payment originates from the reservation.
Reg. 8A-100.5. Remediation Contracting
The following activities are considered remediation contracting and are exempt:
(1)excavation, transportation, treatment, and/or disposal of contaminated soil for purposes of
site remediation (rather than characterization);
(2)installation of groundwater extraction and/or injection wells for purposes of groundwater
remediation;
(3)installation of pumps and piping into groundwater extraction wells for remediation purposes;
(4)installation of vapor extraction wells for the purpose of soil or groundwater remediation;
(5)construction of remediation systems, such as groundwater treatment plants, vapor
extraction systems, or air injection systems;
(6)connection of remediation systems to utilities;
(7)abandonment of groundwater or vapor extraction wells;
(8)removal/demolition of remediation systems;
(9)capping/closure construction activities; and
(10)service or handling charges for subcontracted remediation contracting activities.
Reg. 8A-115.1. Computer hardware, software, and data services.
(a)Definitions.
(1)"Computer Hardware"(also called "computer equipment" or "peripherals") is the
components and accessories which constitute the physical computer assembly, including
but not limited to: central processing unit, keyboard, console, monitor, memory unit, disk
drive, tape drive or reader, terminal, printer, plotter, modem, document sorter, optical
reader and/or digitizer, network.
(2)"Computer Software" (also called "computer program") is tangible personal property, and
includes:
(A)"Operating Program (Software)" (also called "executive program (software)"), which
is the programming system or technical language upon which or by means of which
the basic operating procedures of the computer are recorded. The operating program
serves as an interface with user applied programs and allows the user to access the
computer's processing capabilities.
(B)"Applied Program (Software)",which is the programming system or technical
language (including the tape, disk, cards, or other medium upon which such
language or program is recorded) designed either for application in a specialized use,
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or upon which or by means of which a plan for the solution of a particular problem is
based.Typically, applied programs can be transferred from one computer to another
via storage media.Examples of applied programs include: payroll processing,
general ledger, sales data, spreadsheet, word processing, and data management
programs.
(3)"Storage Medium"is any hard disk, compact disk, floppy disk, diskette, disk pack,
magnetic tape, cards, or other medium used for storage of information in a form readable
by a computer, but not including the memory of the computer itself.
(4)A "Terminal Arrangement"(also called "on-line' arrangement") is any agreement allowing
access to a remote central processing unit through telecommunications via hardware.
(5) A "Computer Services Agreement"(also called "data services agreement") is an
agreement allowing access to a computer through a third -party operator.
(b)For the purposes of this Chapter, transfer of title and possession of the following are deemed
sales of tangible personal property and any other transfer of title, possession, or right to use
for a consideration of the following is deemed rental, leasing, or licensing of tangible personal
property:
(1)Computer hardware_or storage media.Rental, leasing, or licensing for use of computer
hardware or storage media includes the lessee's use of such hardware or storage media
on the lessor's premises.
(2)Computer software which is not custom computer programming. Such prewritten
("canned") programs may be transferred to a customer in the form of punched cards,
magnetic tape, or other storage medium, or by listing the program instructions on coding
sheets.Transfer is deemed to have occurred whether title to the storage medium upon
which the program is recorded, coded, or punched passes to the customer or the
program is recorded, coded, or punched on storage medium furnished by the customer.
Gross income from the transfer of such prewritten programs includes:
(A) the entire amount charged to the customer for the sale, rental, lease, or license for
use of the storage medium or coding sheets on which or into which the prewritten
program has been recorded, coded, or punched.
(B)the entire amount charged for the temporary transfer or possession of a prewritten
program to be directly used or to be recorded, coded, or punched by the customer on
the customer's premises.
(C) license fees, royalty fees, or program design fees; any fee present or future, whether
for a period of minimum use or of use for extended periods, relating to the use of a
prewritten program.
(D) the entire amount charged for transfer of a prewritten ("canned") program by remote
telecommunications from the transferor's place of business to or through the
customer's computer.
(E) any charge for the purchase of a maintenance contract which entitles the customer to
receive storage media on which prewritten program improvements or error
corrections have been recorded or to receive telephone or on -site consultation
services, provided that:
(i)if such maintenance contract is not optional with the customer, then the charges
for the maintenance contract, including the consultation services, are deemed
gross income from the transfer of the prewritten program.
(ii)if such maintenance contract is optional with the customer but the customer does
not have the option to purchase the consultation services separately from the
storage media containing the improvements or error corrections, then the
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charges for the maintenance contract, including the consultation services, are
deemed gross income from the transfer of the prewritten program.
(iii) if such maintenance contract is optional with the customer and the customer may
purchase the consultation services separately from the storage media containing
the improvements or error corrections, then only the charges for such
improvements or error corrections are deemed gross income from the transfer of
a prewritten program and charges for consultation are deemed to be charges for
professional services.
(c)Producing the following by means of computer hardware is deemed to be the activity of job
printing for the purposes of this Chapter:
(1)statistical reports, graphs, diagrams, microfilm, microfiche, photo recordings, or any other
information produced or compiled by a computer; except as provided in subsection (e)
below.
(2)additional copies of records, reports, manuals, tabulations, etc."Additional Copies"are
any copies in excess to those produced simultaneously with the production of the original
and on the same printer, whether such copies are prepared by running the same
program, by using multiple printers, by looping the program, by using different programs
to produce the same output, or by other means.
(d)Charges for the use of communications channel in conjunction with a terminal arrangement
or data services agreement are deemed gross income from the activity of providing
telecommunication services.
(e)The following transactions are deemed direct customer services, provided that charges for
such services are separately stated and maintained as provided by Regulation 8A -100.2(e):
(1)"Custom (Computer) Programming",which is any computer software which is written or
prepared for a single customer, including those services represented by separately stated
charges for the modification of existing prewritten programs.
(A) Custom computer programming is deemed a professional service regardless of the
form in which the programming is transferred.
(B) Custom programming includes such programming performed in connection with the
sale, rental, lease, or license for use of computer hardware, provided that the
charges for such are separately stated from the charges for the hardware.
(C) Custom computer programming includes a program prepared to the special order of
a customer who will use the program to produce copies of the program for sale,
rental, lease, or license.The subsequent sale, rental, lease, or license of such a
program is deemed the sale, rental, lease, or license of a prewritten program.
(2)Training services related to computer hardware or software, provided further that:
(A) the provider of such training services is deemed the ultimate consumer of all tangible
personal property used in training others or provided to such trainees without
separately itemized charge for the materials provided.
(B)training deemed a direct customer service does not include:
(i)training materials, books, manuals, etc. furnished to customers for a charge
separate from the charge for training services.
(ii)training provided to customers without separate charge as part of the sale,
rental, lease, or license of computer hardware or software, or as part of a
terminal arrangement or data services agreement.
The use of computer time through the use of a terminal arrangement or a data service
agreement, but not charges for computer hardware located at the customer's place of
(3 )
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business (for example, the terminal, a printer attached to the terminal, a modem used to
communicate with the remote central processing unit over a telephone line).
(4)Compiling and producing, as part of a terminal arrangement or computer services
agreement, original copies of statistical reports, graphs, diagrams, microfilm, microfiche,
photo recordings, or other information for the same person who supplied the raw data
used to create such reports.
(f)(Reserved)
Reg. 8A-120.1.(Reserved)
Reg. 8A-200.1. When deposits are includable in gross income.
(a)Refundable deposits shall be includable as gross income of the taxpayer for the month in
which the deposits are forfeited by the lessee.
(b)Nonrefundable deposits for cleaning, keys, pet fees, maintenance, or for any other purpose
are deemed gross income upon receipt.
Reg. 8A-250.1. Excess tax collected.
If a taxpayer collects taxes in excess of the combined tax from any customer in any transaction,
all such excess tax shall be paid to the taxing jurisdictions in proportion to their effective rates.
The right of the taxpayer to charge his customer for his own liability for tax does not allow the
taxpayer to enrich himself at the cost of his customers.Tax paid on an activity that is not subject
to tax or that qualifies for an exemption, deduction, exclusion or credit is not excess tax collected.
Reg. 8A-270.1. Proprietary activities of municipalities are not considered activities of a
governmental entity.
The following activities, when performed by a municipality, are considered to be activities of a
person engaged in business for the purposes of this Chapter, and not excludable by reason of
Section 8A-270:
(a)rental, leasing, or licensing for use of real property to other than another department or
agency of the municipality.
(b)producing, providing, or furnishing electricity, electric lights, current, power, gas (natural or
artificial), or water to consumers or ratepayers.
(c)sale of tangible personal property to the public, when similar tangible personal property is
available for sale by other persons, as, for example, at police or surplus auctions.
(d)(Reserved)
Reg. 8A-270.2. Proprietary clubs.
(a)Equity requirements.In order to qualify for exclusion under Section 8A-270, a proprietary club
must actually be owned by the members. For the purposes of qualification, a club will be
deemed to be member -owned if at least eighty-five percent (85%) of the equity of the total
amount of club -owed property is owned by bona fide individual members whose membership
is represented in the form of shares, certificates, bonds, or other indicia of capital interest. A
corporation may be considered an -individual owner provided that it owns a membership
solely for the benefit of one or more of its employees and it is not engaged in any business
activity connected with the operation of the club.
(b)Gross revenue requirements.In computing gross revenue for the computation of this fifteen
percent (15%) rule of subsection 8A -270(c)(1),
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(1)the following shall be excluded:
(A) membership dues.
(B) membership fees which relate to the general admission to the club on a periodic (or
perpetual) basis.
(C) assessments.
(D) special fund raising events, raffles, etc.
(E) donations, gifts, or bequests.
(F) gate receipts, admissions, and program advertising for not more than one tournament
in any calendar year.
(2)the following must be included:
(A) green fees, court use fees, and similar charges for the actual use of a facility or part
thereof.
(B) pro shop sales if the shop is owned by the club.
(C) golf cart rental if the carts are owned by the club.
(D) rentals, percentages, or commissions received for permitting the use of the premises
or any portion thereof by a caterer, concessionaire, professional, or any other person
for sales, rental, leasing, licensing, catering, food or beverage service, or instruction.
(E) all receipts from food or beverage sales, room use or rental charge, corkage and
catering charges, and similar receipts.
(F)locker and locker room fees and attendants charges if paid to the club.
(G) tournament entry fees other than entry fees for the one annual tournament exempt
under subsection (b)(1)(F) above.
Reg. 8A-300.1. Who must apply for a license.
(a)For the purposes of determining whether a license is required under Section 8A-300, a
person shall be deemed to be "engaged in or continuing in business" within the City, if he
meets any of the following conditions:
(1)He is engaged in any activity subject to the City's Privilege Taxes as principal or broker.
(2)He has or maintains within the City directly, or if a corporation by a subsidiary, an office,
distribution house, sales house, warehouse or other place of business, or any agent or
other representative operating within this City under the authority of such person or if a
corporation its subsidiary, irrespective of whether such place of business or agent or
other representative is located here permanently or temporarily or whether such person
or subsidiary is authorized or licensed to do business in this State or this City.
He is soliciting sales, orders, contracts, leases, and other similar forms of business
relationships, within the City from customers, consumers, or users located within the City,
by means of salesmen, solicitors, agents, representatives, brokers, and other similar
agents or by means of catalogs or other advertising, whether such orders are received or
accepted within or without this City.
(Reserved)
He is required to report and pay the tax upon Rental Occupancy imposed by Section 8A-
440.
(3)
(4)
(5)
(b)(Reserved)
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(0
Reg. 8A-300.2. (Reserved)
Reg. 8A-310.1. (Reserved)
Reg. 8A-310.2. (Reserved)
Reg. 8A-310.3. (Reserved)
•
Reg. 8A-350.1. Recordkeeping: income.
The minimum records required for persons having gross income subject to, or exempt or
excluded from, tax by this Chapter must show:
(a)the gross income of the taxpayer attributable to any activity occurring in whole or in part in the
City.
(b)the gross income taxable under this Chapter, divided into categories as stated in the official
City tax return.
(c)the gross income subject to Arizona Transaction Privilege Taxes, divided into categories as
stated in the official State tax return.
(d)the gross income claimed to be exempt, and with respect to each activity or transaction so
claimed:
(1)if the transaction is claimed to be exempt as a sale for resale or as a sale, rental, lease,
or license for use of rental equipment:
(A) the City Privilege License number and State Transaction Privilege Tax License
number of the customer (or the equivalent city, if applicable, and state tax numbers of
the city and state where the customer resides), and
(B) the name, business address, and business activity of the customer, and
(C) evidence sufficient to persuade a reasonably prudent businessman that the
transaction is believed to be in good faith a purchase for resale, or a purchase,
rental, lease, or license for use of rental equipment, by the vendee in the ordinary
and regular course of his business activity, as provided by Regulation.
(2)if the transaction is claimed to be exempt for any other reason:
(A) the name, business address, and business activity of the customer, and
(B)evidence which would establish the applicability of the exemption to a reasonably
prudent businessman acting in good faith. Ordinary business documentation which
would reasonably indicate the applicability of an exemption shall be sufficient to
relieve the person on whom the tax would otherwise be imposed from liability therein,
if he acts in good faith as provided by Regulation.
(e) with respect to those allowed deductions or exclusions for tax collected or charges for
delivery or other direct customer services, where applicable, evidence that the deductible
income has been separately stated and shown on the records of the taxpayer and on
invoices or receipts provided to the customer. All other deductions, exemptions, and
exclusions shall be separately shown and substantiated.
with respect to special classes and activities, such other books, records, and documentation
as the Tax Collector, by regulation, shall deem necessary for specific classes of taxpayer by
reason of the specialized business activity of any such class.
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(g)In all cases, the books and records of the taxpayer shall indicate both individual transaction
amounts and totals for each reporting period for each category of taxable, exempt, and
excluded income defined by this Chapter.
Reg. 8A-350.2. Recordkeeping: expenditures.
The minimum records required for persons having expenditures, costs, purchases and rental or
lease or license expenses subject to, or exempt or excluded from, tax by this Chapter are:
(a)the total price of all goods acquired for use or storage in the City.
(b)the date of acquisition and the name and business address of the seller or lessor of all goods
acquired for use or storage in the City.
(c)documentation of taxes, freight, and direct customer service labor separately charged and
paid for each purchase, rental, lease, or license.
(d)the gross price of each acquisition claimed as exempt from tax, and with respect to each
transaction so claimed, sufficient evidence to satisfy the Tax Collector that the exemption
claimed is applicable.
(e)as applicable to each taxpayer, documentation sufficient to the Tax Collector, so that he may
ascertain:
(1)all construction expenditures and all Privilege and Use Taxes claimed paid, relating to
owner -builders and speculative builders.
(2)disbursement of collected gratuities and related payroll information required of
restaurants.
(f)
(g)
(3)franchise and license fee payments and computations thereto which relate to:
(A) utility service
(B) telecommunication service.
(4)the validity of any claims of proof of exemption, as provided by Regulation.
(5)a claimed alternative prior value for reconstruction.
(6)(Reserved)
(7)(Reserved)
(8)payments of tax to the Arizona Department of Transportation and computations thereof,
when a motor -vehicle transporter claims such the exemption.
(9)payments by tenants subject to the tax upon Rental Occupancy imposed by Section 8A-
440.
any additional documentation as the Tax Collector, by Regulation, shall deem necessary for
any specific class of taxpayer by reason of the specialized business activity of specific
exemptions afforded to that class of taxpayer.
In all cases, the books and records of the taxpayer shall indicate both individual transaction
amounts and totals for each reporting period for each category of taxable, exempt, and
excluded expenditures as defined by this Chapter.
Reg. 8A-350.3. Recordkeeping: out -of -City and out -of -State sales.
(a)Out -of -City Sales.Any person engaging or continuing in a business who claims out -of -City
sales shall maintain and keep accounting records or books indicating separately the gross
income from the sales of tangible personal property from such out -of -City branches or
locations.
80
(b)Out -of -State sales.Persons engaged in a business claiming out -of -State sales shall maintain
accounting records or books indicating for each out -of -State sale the following
documentation:
(1)documentation of location of the buyer at the time of order placement; and
(2)documentation of residency of the buyer, determined in the manner one determines if a
person "resides within the City"; and
(3)shipping, delivery, or freight documents showing where the buyer took delivery; and
(4)documentation of intended location of use or storage of the tangible personal property
sold to such buyer.
Reg. 8A-360.1. Proof of exemption: sale for resale; sale, rental, lease, or license of rental
equipment.
A claim of purchase for resale or of purchase, rental, lease, or license for rent, lease, or license is
valid only if the evidence is sufficient to persuade a reasonably prudent businessman that the
particular item is being acquired for resale or for rental, lease, or license in the ordinary course of
business. The fact that the acquiring person possesses a Privilege License number, and makes a
verbal claim of "sale for resale or lease" or "lease for re -lease" does not meet this burden and is
insufficient to justify an exemption. The "reasonable evidence" must be evidence which exists
objectively, and not merely in the mind of the vendor, that the property being acquired is normally
sold, rented, leased, or licensed by the acquiring person in the ordinary course of business.
Failure to obtain such reasonable evidence at the time of the transaction will be a basis for
disallowance of any claimed deduction on returns filed for such transactions.
Reg. 8A-360.2. Proof of exemption: exemption certificate.
For the purpose of proof of exemption, in transactions other than those in which the proof is set
by standard documentation as detailed in Regulations 8A-350.1 and 8A-360.1, the minimum
acceptable proof and documentation for each transaction shall be the completion, at the time of
the transaction, in all material respects, of a certificate containing all the information set forth
below. For the purpose of validating the vendor's claim of exemption, such certificate is sufficient
if executed by any person with apparent authority to act for the customer, and the information
provided validates the claim.
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INVALID UNLESS COMPLETED IN FULL
VENDOR'S NAME Sales Invoice No.
Customer's Exemption Claim
City of Apache Junction Privilege License (Sales) Tax
Customer's Business Name:
Customer's Business Address:
Specific Business Activity:
(e.g., if retailer, lessor, or
manufacturer, specify items
leased, sold or made, i.e.,
cars, computers, clothes, etc.)
Customer's License Nos.City:State:
ITEMS CLAIMED AS EXEMPT FROM TAX
: All Items on This Invoice or Purchase Order.
or .
: Only Those Items Marked With an "E".
REASON FOR CLAIMED EXEMPTION:
: The items claimed as exempt are sold, rented, leased, or licensed by the above
named customer in the normal course of its business activity.
or
: The items claimed as exempt are exempt from the City of Privilege Tax for the
following specific reason(s):
CUSTOMER'S CERTIFICATE
I certify that the above information is accurate to the best of my information and belief, and that I am
authorized by the Customer above to acquire the items claimed as exempt on a tax-free basis on its
behalf. I further understand that the making of a false or fraudulent claim to obtain a tax exemption is a
Class One Misdemeanor under City Code Section 8A-580.
Name
Date
Title
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Reg. 8A-405.1. Local advertising examples.
For the purposes of illustration only, and not by way of limitation, the following are provided as
examples of local advertising subject to the tax:
(1)retail sales and rental establishments doing business within the State when only one
commonly designated business entity is identified by name in the advertisement.
(2)financial institutions doing business within the State whether part of a national chain or local
business only.
(3)sales of real estate located within the State.
(4)health care facilities located within the State.
(5)hotels, motels, and apartments, whether a national chain or local as long as the
advertisement identifies any location within the State.
(6)brokers doing business within the State whether stockbrokers, real estate brokers,
insurance brokers, etc.
(7)nonprofit organizations, which even though tax exempt, have an office, whether national,
local, or branch, within the State.
(8)political activity, except United States Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates.
(9)restaurants or food service establishments which have one or more branches, outlets, or
franchises within the State even though the local franchisee or licensee may not be
responsible for the placement of the advertisement.
(10)services provided by individuals or entities within the State such as doctors, lawyers,
architects, hairdressers, auto repair shops, counseling services, utilities, contractors,
auction houses, etc.
(11)coupons redeemable only at a single commonly designated business entity within the
State.
(12)theater, sports, and other entertainment events held at locations within the State.
Reg. 8A-405.2. Advertising activity within the City.
(a)In General.Except as provided elsewhere in this Regulation, a person engaged in advertising
activity shall be considered to be doing business entirely within the City if all or a major
portion of the dissemination facilities such as broadcasting studios, printing plants, or
distribution centers are located within the City limits. Remote studios patched to an in -City
studio and subject to engineering modulation or control at the in -City studio are considered
studios doing business in the City.
(b)Billboards and other outdoor advertising companies shall be considered to be doing business
within the City to the extent they have billboards or similar displays within the City.
(c)Publishers and distributors of newspaper and other periodicals shall be subject to the tax
upon advertising imposed by Section 8A-405 and such tax shall be allocated in the manner
prescribed by subsection (e) of Section 8A-435.
Reg. 8A-407.1. (Reserved)
Reg. 8A-415.1. Distinction between the categories of construction contracting.
For the purposes of this Chapter, transactions involving improvements to, or sales of, real
property are designated into one of the following categories, and these categorizations shall
74
apply, whether or not a person designates himself as a contractor, construction manager,
developer, or otherwise:
(a) A person performing improvements to real property is one of the following:
(1)an "Owner -Builder"when the work is performed by the owner or lessor or lessee -in-
possession. An "owner -builder" may also be a "speculative builder".
(2)a "Construction Contractor"when performing Work for the owner or lessor or lessee -in-
possession of the real property, unless that person has provided a written declaration
stating that:
(A) the owner -builder is improving the property for sale; and
(B) the owner -builder is liable for the tax for such construction contracting activity; and
(C) the owner -builder has provided the contractor his City Privilege License number.
(3)a "Subcontractor"as provided in Section 8A-415 (c).
(b)An owner or lessor ("owner -builder") of improved real property is one of the following:
(1)a "Speculative Builder"as provided in Section 8A-100; or
(2)an "owner -builder who is not a speculative builder" in all other cases.
(c)The terms "owner", "lessor", and "lessee -in -possession" shall be deemed to include any
authorized agent for such person.
Reg. 8A-415.2. Distinction between construction contracting and certain related activities.
(a)Certain rentals, leases, and licenses for use in connection with construction contracting.
Rental, leasing, or licensing of earthmoving equipment with an operator shall be deemed
construction contracting activity. Rental, leasing, or licensing of any other tangible personal
property (with or without an operator) or of earthmoving equipment without an operator shall
be deemed rental, leasing, or licensing of tangible personal property. For example:
(1)Rental of a backhoe, bulldozer, or similar earthmoving equipment with operator is
construction contracting. Rental of these items without an operator is rental of tangible
personal property.
(2)Rental of scaffolding, temporary fences, or barricades is rental of tangible personal
property.
(3)Rental of pumps or cranes is rental of tangible personal property, whether or not an
operator is provided with the equipment rented.
(b)Distinction between construction contracting, retail, and certain direct customer service
activities.
(1)When an item is attached or installed on real property, it is a construction contracting
activity and any subsequent repair, removal, or replacement of that item is construction
contracting.
(2)Items attached or installed on tangible personal property are retail sales.
(3)Transactions where no tangible personal property is attached or installed are considered
direct customer service activities (for example: carpet cleaning, lawn mowing,
landscaping maintenance).
(4)Demolition, earth moving, and wrecking activities are considered construction
contracting.
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(c)Sale of consumable goods incorporated into or applied to real property is considered a retail
sale and not construction contracting. Examples of consumable goods are lubricants, faucet
washers, and air conditioning coolant, but not paint.
(d)Installation or removal of tangible personal property which has independent functional utility is
considered a retail activity.
(1)"Tangible personal property which has independent functional utility" must be able to
substantially perform its function(s) without attachment to real property. "Attachment to
real property" must include more than connection to water, power, gas, communication,
or other service.
(2)Examples of tangible personal property which has independent functional utility include
artwork, furnishings, "plug-in" kitchen equipment, or similar items installed by bolts or
similar fastenings.
(3)Examples of tangible personal property which does not have independent functional
utility include wall-to-wall carpeting, flooring, wallpaper, kitchen cabinets, or "built-in"
dishwashers or ranges.
(4)The installation of window coverings (drapes, mini -blinds, etc.) is always a retail activity.
Reg. 8A-415.3. Construction contracting; tax rate effective date.
A.In the event of a tax rate change, the rate imposed on gross income from construction
contracting shall betomputed based upon the rate in effect when the contract was executed,
subject to the "enactment date" as defined in this section. Gross income from a contract
executed prior to the enactment date shall not be subject to the tax rate change, provided the
contract contains no provision that entitles the construction contractor to recover the amount
of the tax.
B.In the event of a rate increase, in order to qualify for the lower rate, the construction
contractor shall, upon request, provide sufficient documentation, in a manner and form
prescribed by the tax collector, to verify that a contract was entered into before the enactment
date.
C.For purposes of this section, "enactment date" shall be:
(1)in the event an election is held, the date of election.
(2)in the event no election is held, the date of final adoption by the mayor and council.
(3)notwithstanding the above, nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent the city
from establishing a later enactment date.
Reg. 8A-416.1. Speculative builders: homeowner's bona fide non -business sale of a family
residence.
(a) A sale of a custom home, regardless of the stage of completion of such home shall be
considered a "homeowner's bona fide non -business sale" and not subject to the tax on
speculative builders if:
(1)the property was actually used as the principal place of family residence or vacation
residence by the immediate family of the seller for the six (6) months next prior to the
offer for sale; and
(2)the seller has not sold more than two (2) such residences (or, if the residence is a
vacation residence, two (2) such vacation residences) within the thirty-six (36) months
immediately prior to the offer for sale; and
(3)the seller has not licensed, leased, or rented the sold premises for any period within
twenty-four (24) months prior to the offer for sale.
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(b)In the event that a homeowner of a family residence contracts with a licensed construction
contractor for improvements to a residence, the construction contracting on a family
residence shall be presumed to be for an owner's bona fide non -business purpose and all
construction contractors shall be required to report and pay the tax imposed on all such
improvements.
(c)Purchases by a homeowner of tangible personal property for inclusion in any construction,
alteration, or repair of his residence shall be subject to tax as retail sales to the ultimate
consumer.
(d)"Owner"and "Homeowner"as used in this Regulation shall only mean an individual, and no
other entity, association, or representative shall qualify; except that an administrator,
executor, personal representative, or guardian in guardianship or probate proceedings, for
the estate of a deceased or incompetent person or a minor, may claim "homeowner" status
for such person if such person would have otherwise qualified with respect to the specific
property involved.
Reg. 8A-416.2. Reconstruction contracting.
(a)"Reconstruction (of Real Property)"shall mean the subdividing of real property and, in
addition, all construction contracting activities performed upon said real property; provided,
however, that each of the following conditions are met:
(1)a structure existed on said real property prior to the reconstruction activity; and
(2)the "prior value" of said structure exceeds fifteen percent (15%) of the "prior value" of the
integrated property (land, improvements, and structure); and
the total cost of all construction contracting activities performed on said real property in
the twenty-four (24) month period prior to the sale of any part of the real property
exceeds fifteen percent (15%) of the "prior value" of the real property; and
(4)the structure which existed on the real property prior to the reconstruction activity still
exists in some form upon the property, and is included, in whole or in part, in the property
sold.
(3)
(b)Except as provided in subsection (c) below,"prior value"means the value of the total
integrated property, with improvements, as existing immediately prior to any reconstruction
activity. Where, according to Title 42 of the Arizona Revised Statutes, a property's full cash
value for secondary tax purposes is intended to represent the property's fair market value,
"prior value"shall be the property's full cash value for secondary property tax purposes as
determined by the County Assessor in the year immediately preceding the year in which the
reconstruction improvement(s) are or could have been included in the County Assessor's
valuation. If the County Assessor's valuation is contested or appealed, the final determination
at either the administrative or judicial level shall apply. Where, according to Title .42 of the
Arizona Revised Statutes, a property's full cash value for secondary property tax purposes is
not intended to represent the property's fair market value,"prior value"shall be the property's
fair market value prior to the reconstruction improvement(s).
(c)"Alternative Prior Value"shall mean that as an alternative to the "prior value" defined above,
the taxpayer may use his actual cost of the reconstructed property prior to reconstruction,
provided that evidence of such cost is presented to the Tax Collector and is determined by
the Tax Collector, in his sole discretion, to be satisfactory. Such evidence shall consist, at a
minimum, of proof of the actual, arms -length acquisition price, accompanied by a full
appraisal of all property involved which appraisal shall have been performed by a real estate
broker or MAI appraiser specifically for the purpose of assisting in the acquisition and further
shall have been performed on behalf of the seller or a lending institution which has lent at
least sixty-five percent (65%) of the acquisition price. (Only long term lending - not interim or
construction financing will be considered.) This alternative value shall be used only if the
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property was acquired by the reconstruction taxpayer not more than thirty-six (36) months
prior to a "sale" as defined below.
(d)A "sale" for the purpose of determining "alternative prior value" or "reconstruction" only shall
be deemed to have occurred as of the date of the execution of a contract of sale or a deed
(joint tenancy or warranty) whichever is earlier, to a purchaser or grantee of any single
residential or other occupancy unit. In addition to the foregoing, a lease with option to
purchase a single residential unit shall be considered a "sale" at the date of execution of such
lease if said option is exercisable by the lessee in not later than nine (9) months. Further in
the case of cooperative apartments, the sale date shall be the date of execution of the
contract selling (subject or not to encumbrances, liens or security interests) of a share, or a
sufficient number of shares which entitle the purchaser to the occupancy of a residential unit.
In all cases a person shall include a husband and wife as a community, or any co -occupants
of a single unit as joint tenants.
Reg. 8A-425.1. Distinction between job printing and certain related activities.
(a)Computerized Printing.Computerized versions of all items which would be taxable under
Section 8A -4r25 if performed without computerized assistance are considered taxable under
that Section, and therefore, are not exempt services.
(b)Book publishing.The printing of books shall be deemed job printing. Sales of books shall be
deemed retail sales.
(c)Publication of newspapers, magazines, or other periodicals shall not be considered job
printing for the purposes of this Chapter.
Reg. 8A-435.1. Distinction between publishing of periodicals and certain related activities.
(a)Book publishing shall not be considered publication of newspapers, magazines, or other
periodicals for purposes of this Chapter. Sales of books shall be deemed retail sales. The
printing of books shall be deemed job printing.
(b)Publication of newspapers, magazines, or other periodicals shall not be considered job
printing for the purposes of this Chapter.
Reg. 8A-435.2. Advertising income of publishers and distributors of newspapers and other
periodicals.
Publishers and distributors of newspapers and other periodicals shall be subject to the tax upon
advertising imposed by Section 8A-405 and such tax shall be allocated in the manner prescribed
by subsection (e) of Section 8A-435.
Reg. 8A-445.1. (Reserved)
Reg. 8A-445.2. (Repealed by the 1995 Amendments)
Reg. 8A-445.3. Rental, leasing, and licensing of real property as lodging: room and board;
furnished lodging.
(a)Room and board.
(1)Rooming houses, lodges, or other establishments providing both lodging and meals, shall
maintain a record of the separate charges made for the lodging and the meals.
(2)The charge for lodging shall be subject to the tax imposed by Section 8A-444 or Section
8A-445. The charge for meals is subject to the tax upon restaurants and bars prescribed
by Section 8A-455.
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(b)Furnished lodging.A person who provides lodging with furnishings shall be deemed to be
only in the business of rental, leasing, and licensing of lodging, and not in the business of
rental, leasing, and licensing of such furnishings as tangible personal property, unless:
(1)Any tenant of any lodging space may choose to rent, lease, or license such lodging
space either furnished or unfurnished; and
(2)The lessor separately charges tenants for lodging and for furnishings; and
(3)• The lessor separately maintains his gross income from lodging and from furnishings
separately in his accounting books and records.
If all of the above conditions are met, such person shall report both sources of income separately
to the City.
Reg. 8A-447.1. (Repealed)
Reg. 8A-450.1. Distinction between rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible
personal property and certain related activities.
(a)Certain rentals, leases, and licenses for use in connection with construction contracting.
Rental, leasing, or licensing of earthmoving equipment with an operator shall be deemed
construction contracting activity. Rental, leasing, or licensing of any other tangible personal
property (with or without an operator) or of earthmoving equipment without an operator shall
be deemed rental, leasing, or licensing of tangible personal property. For example:
(1)Rental of a backhoe, bulldozer, or similar earthmoving equipment with operator is
construction contracting. Rental of these items without an operator is rental of tangible
personal property.
(2)Rental of scaffolding, temporary fences, or barricades is rental of tangible personal
property.
(3)Rental of pumps or cranes is rental of tangible personal property, regardless of whether
or not an operator is included with the equipment rented.
(b)Distinction between equipment rental, leasing, or licensing for use and transporting for hire.
The hiring of mobile equipment (cranes, airplanes, limousines, etc.) is considered rental,
leasing, or licensing of tangible personal property whenever the charge is for a fixed sum or
hourly rate. By comparison, the activity of a common carrier conveying goods or persons for
a fee based upon distance, and not time, shall be considered transporting for hire.
Reg. 8A-450.2. Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible personal property:
membership fees; other charges.
(a)Membership, admission, or other fees charged by any rental club or limited access lessor are
considered part of taxable gross income.
(b)Gross income from rental, leasing, or licensing for use of tangible personal property must
include all charges by the lessor to the lessee for repair, maintenance, or other service upon
the tangible personal property rented, leased, or licensed.
(c)Sale of a warranty, maintenance, or service contract as a requirement of, or in conjunction
with, a rental, leasing, or licensing contract is exempt.
Reg. 8A-450.3. Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of equipment with operator.
In cases where the tangible personal property is rented, leased, or licensed with an operator
provided by the lessor, the charge for the operator shall not be includable in the gross income
from the rental, lease, or license of such tangible personal property if the charge for the operator
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and the charge for the use of the equipment are separately itemized to the lessee and separately
maintained on the books and records of the lessor.
Reg. 8A-450.4. Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible personal property: semi-
permanently or permanently installed tangible personal property.
(a)The term "semi -permanently or permanently installed" means that the item of tangible
personal property has and is expected to have at the time of installation a permanent location
at the site installed, as under a long-term lease agreement, except that the person using or
applying said property may eventually replace it because it has become worn out or has
become obsolete or the person ceases to have the right to possession of said property.
(b)An item of tangible personal property is deemed permanently installed if its installation
requires alterations to the premises.
(c)Examples of "semi -permanently or permanently installed tangible personal property" include,
but are not limited to: computers, duplicating machines, furniture not of portable design, major
appliances, and store fixtures.
(d)The term does not include mobile transportation equipment or tangible personal property
designed for regular use at different locations or customarily used at different locations, as
under numerous short-term rental, lease, or license agreements, whether or not such
property is in fact so used.
(1)For example, use of a mobile crane, trencher, automobile, or other similar equipment
shall be considered a rental, lease, or license transaction subject to taxation only by the
city or town in which such business office of the lessor is based.
(2)Other similar examples include, but are not limited to: camping equipment, contracting
equipment, chain saw, forklift, household items, invalid needs, janitorial equipment,
reducing equipment, furniture of portable design, trucks or trailers, tools, tow bars, sump
pumps, arc welders.
(e) A rental, lease, or license agreement which specifies that the item in question shall remain,
under the terms of the agreement, located within the same city or town for more than one
hundred eighty (180) consecutive days shall be sufficient evidence that such rented, leased,
or licensed item is "permanently or semi -permanently installed" in said city or town, except
when the item is mobile transportation equipment or one of the other types of portable
equipment or property described in subsection (d) above.
Reg. 8A-450.5. Rental, leasing, and licensing for use of tangible personal property:
delivery, installation, repair, and maintenance charges.
(a)Delivery and installation charges in connection with the rental, leasing, and licensing of
tangible personal property are exempt from the tax imposed by Section 8A-450; provided that
the provisions of Regulation 8A-100.2 have been met.
(b)Gross income from the sale of a warranty, maintenance, or similar service contract in
connection with the rental, leasing, and licensing of tangible personal property shall be
exempt.
(c)Separately stated charges for repair not included as part of a warranty, maintenance, or
similar service contract relating to the rental, leasing, or licensing of tangible personal •
property are exempt from the tax imposed by Section 8A-450; however, such income is
subject to the provisions of Sections 8A-460 and 8A-465, and the provisions of Regulation
8A-465.1.
Reg. 8A-455.1. Gratuities related to restaurant activity.
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Gratuities charged by or collected by persons subject to the tax imposed by Section 8A-455 may
be excluded from gross income if:
(1)such charge is separately stated upon the bill, invoice, etc. provided the customer, and such
amounts are maintained separately in the books and records of the taxpayer; and
(2)such gratuities are distributed in total to employees of the taxpayer in addition to customary
and regular wages.
Reg. 8A-460.1. Distinction between retail sales and certain other transfers of tangible
personal property.
(a)Charges for transfer of tangible personal property included in the gross income of the
business activity of persons engaged in the following business activities shall be deemed only
as gross income from such business activity and not sales at retail taxed by Section 8A-460:
(1)tangible personal property incorporated into real property as part of reconstruction or
construction contracting, per Sections 8A-415 through 8A-418.
(2)sales of feed at wholesale, per Section 8A-420.
(3)job printing, per Section 8A-425.
(4)mining, timbering, and other extraction, but not sales of sand, gravel, or rock extracted
from the ground, per Section 8A-430.
(5)publication of newspapers, magazines, and other periodicals, per Section 8A-435.
(6)rental, leasing, and licensing of real or tangible personal property, per Sections 8A-445
or 8A-450.
(7)restaurants and bars, per Section 8A-455.
(8)telecommunications services, per Section 8A-470.
(9)utility services, per Section 8A-480.
(10)(Reserved)
(b)Distinction between construction contracting, retail, and certain direct customer service
activities.
(1)When an item is attached or installed on real property, it is a construction contracting
activity and any subsequent repair, removal, or replacement of that item is construction
contracting.
(2)Items attached or installed on tangible personal property are retail sales.
(3)Transactions where no tangible personal property is attached or installed are considered
direct customer service activities (for example: carpet cleaning, lawn mowing, and
landscape maintenance).
(4)Demolition, earth moving, and wrecking activities are considered construction
contracting.
(c)The sale of sand, rock, and gravel extracted from the ground shall be deemed a sale of
tangible personal property and not mining or metallurgical activity.
(d)Sale of consumable goods incorporated into or applied to real property is considered a retail
sale and not construction contracting. Examples of consumable goods are lubricants, faucet
washers, and air conditioning coolant, but not paint.
(e)Installation or removal of tangible personal property which has independent functional utility is
considered a retail activity.
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(1) "Tangible personal property which has independent functional utility" must be able to
substantially perform its function(s) without attachment to real property. "Attachment to
real property" must include more than connection to water, power, gas, communication,
or other service.
(2)Examples of tangible personal property which has independent functional utility include
artwork, furnishings, "plug-in" kitchen equipment, or similar items installed by bolts or
similar fastenings.
(3)Examples of tangible personal property which does not have independent functional
utility include wall-to-wall carpeting, flooring, wallpaper, kitchen cabinets, or "built-in"
dishwashers or ranges.
(4)The installation of window coverings (drapes, mini -blinds, etc,) is always a retail activity.
Reg. 8A-460.2. Retail sales: trading stamp company transactions.
A trading stamp transaction is defined as follows: the trading stamp company issues stamps to a
vendor; the vendor then provides them to its customers; and the customer then exchanges the
stamps for merchandise from the trading stamp company.
The exchange transaction for the merchandise shall be deemed a retail sale and the trading
stamp company a retailer. All taxes imposed by this Chapter applicable to retail transactions are
therefore applicable to such exchange transactions.
The rate of tax shall be the retail rate based upon the retail dollar value of the redeemed
merchandise as expressed in the redemption dollar value per book of stamps or portion thereof.
The tax imposition described herein is in lieu of any Privilege or Use Tax upon the business of
issuing stamps, redeeming the same, or using or storing property redeemed.
Reg. 8A-460.3. Retail sales: membership fees of retailers.
Membership, admission, or other fees charged by limited access retailers are considered part of
taxable gross income of the business activity of selling tangible personal property.
Reg. 8A-460.4. Retail sales: professional services.
(a)"Professional Services"refer to services rendered by such persons as doctors, lawyers,
accountants, architects, etc. for their customers or clients where the services meet particular
needs of a specific client and only apply in the factual context of the client and the final
product has no retail value in itself. For example, opinion letters, work papers, reports, etc.
are not in a form which would be subject to retail sales to customers, However, transfer of
items in a form which would be subject to retail sales (e.g., artwork, forms, manuals, etc.)
would not be considered professional services. The issue is one of fact which must be
resolved in each situation.
(b)Creative ("idea") labor and design labor that do not result in tangible personal property that
will be or can be sold are deemed professional services and, if charged separately and
maintained separately in the taxpayer's books and records, are not includable in gross
income.
(c)"Professional services"shall be deemed to include those items of tangible personal property
which are incidental to the services rendered, provided such tangible personal property is
"inconsequential."
(1)Incidental transfers of tangible personal property shall be regarded as "inconsequential"
if,
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(A) the purchase price of the tangible personal property to the person rendering the
professional services represents less than fifteen percent (15%) of the charge, billing,
or statement rendered to the purchaser in connection with the transaction, and
(B) the tangible personal property transferred is not itself in a form which is subject to
retail sale.
(2)In cases where the tangible personal property transferred is deemed inconsequential, the
provider of the tangible personal property so transferred is deemed the ultimate
consumer of such tangible personal property, and subject to all applicable taxes imposed
by this Chapter upon such transfer.
(d)Examples:
(1)The transfer of paper embodying the result or work product of the services rendered by
an attorney or certified public accountant is regarded as inconsequential to the charges
for professional services.
(2)An appraisal report issued by an appraiser, reflecting such appraiser's efforts to appraise
real estate, is regarded inconsequential.
Use of a hair care product on a client's hair by a barber or beautician in connection with
performing professional services is usually inconsequential. On the other hand, if the
barber or beautician supplies the customer with a bottle of the product for the client's use
thereafter and without the professional's assistance, the transfer of the bottle of hair care
product is deemed not inconsequential.
(4)If a mortician properly segregates his professional services from other taxable activities
on his bill (invoice, contract), his gross income would include only the income derived
from the sale of tangible personal property (casket, cards, flowers, etc.) and rental,
leasing, or licensing of real and tangible personal property. His charges for professional
services (embalming, cosmetic work, etc.) would not be includable in gross income.
(3 )
Reg. 8A-460.5. Retail sales: monetized bullion; numismatic value of coins.
(a)"Monetized Bullion"means coins or other forms of money manufactured or minted from
precious metals or other metals and issued as legal tender or a medium of exchange by or
for any government authorized to do so.
(b) Any coin shall be considered to have been transferred or acquired primarily for its
"Numismatic value"if the sale or acquisition price:
(1)is equal to or greater than twice (2 times) the value of the metallic content of the coin as
of the date of transfer or acquisition; and
(2)is equal to or greater than twice (2 times) its face value, in the case of a coin which, at the
time of transfer or acquisition, was legal tender or a medium of exchange of the
government issuing or authorizing its issuance.
Reg. 8A-460.6. Retail sales: consignment sales.
Sales of merchandise acquired on consignment are taxable as retail sales. In cases where the
merchant is acting as an agent on behalf of another dealer, sales of the consigned merchandise
are taxable to the principal, provided the merchant makes full disclosure to customers that he is
acting only as an agent for the named principal. However, when the principal is not deemed to be
a dealer, such sales are considered to be those of the merchant and are taxable to him.
Reg. 8A-465.1. Retail sales: repair services.
(a)Fair market value of parts and labor charges.The Tax Collector may examine the reporting of
all transactions covered by this Section to determine if an "arms -length" price is charged for
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the parts and materials. The applicable tax may not be avoided by pricing a part, which
ordinarily sells to the customer at $10, at $5 and including the difference as "service" or
"labor". In the absence of satisfactory evidence supplied by the taxpayer as to industry or
business practice, the Tax Collector may use the cost of the part or materials to the taxpayer
marked up by a reasonable profit, to estimate the gross income subject to tax.
(b)(Reserved)
Reg. 8A-465.2. Retail sales: warranty, maintenance, and similar service contracts.
(a)Gross income from sales of warranty, maintenance, and service contracts is exempt from the
tax imposed by Section 8A-460.
(b)Transfers of tangible personal property in connection with a service, warranty, guaranty, or
maintenance agreement between a vendor and a vendee shall be subject to tax under
Section 8A-460 only to the extent of gross income received from separately itemized charges
made for the items of property transferred.
(c)The gross income derived from a maintenance insurance agreement, which agreement is
entered into between the purchaser and any person other than the seller is not subject to tax
imposed by Section 8A-460. If the provider of the maintenance insurance agreement pays for
tangible personal property on behalf of the insured in the performance of the agreement,
such sales are subject to all applicable taxes imposed by this Chapter.
(d)Charges for tangible personal properly provided under the terms of a warranty, maintenance,
or service contract exempted under Section 8A-465 are subject to tax as retail sales.
(e)However, gross income received by a dealer from a manufacturer for work performed under a
manufacturer's warranty is not taxable under Section 8A-460.
Reg. 8A-465.3. Retail sales: sale of containers, paper products, and labels.
(a)The sale of a container or similar packaging material which contains personal property and
which is transferred to the customer with the sale of the product is not taxable as a sale for
resale. Examples of such nontaxable containers include but are not limited to:
(1)packaging materials sold to a manufacturer of video equipment for containment of the
product during shipment.
cellophane -type wrap sold to a meat department or butcher for containment of the
individually wrapped or contained meat.
(3)bags used to contain loose fungible goods such as fruits, vegetables, and other products
sold in bulk, where such bags or containers are used to contain and measure the amount
purchased by the customer.
(4)shopping bags and similar merchandising bags sold to grocery stores, department stores
or other retailers.
(?)
(5)gift wrappings and gift boxes sold to department stores or other retailers.
(b)Sales of non -returnable or disposable paper (and similar products such as plastic or
styrofoam) cups, lids, plates, bags, napkins, straws, knives, forks and other similar food
accessories to a restaurant or others taxable under Section 8A-455 for transfer by the
restaurant to its customer to contain or facilitate the consumption of the food, drink or
condiment are sales for resale and not taxable.
(c)Where a retailer imposes a charge for gift wrapping and the charge includes the container,
paper, and other appropriate materials, the wrapping charge shall be considered a sale.
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(d)Charges for returnable containers, where the charges are imposed on the customer, are
subject to tax at the time of the transaction. A credit may be taken for the amount of refund
after such refund is made.
(e)The sale of labels to a purchaser who affixes them to a primary container is a sale for resale
and not taxable. Directional or instructional materials included with products sold are
considered to be part of the product and a sale for resale. However, the sale of items such as
price tags, shipping tags, and advertising matter delivered to the customer in connection with
the retail sale is taxable to the retailer as a retail sale to it, and is not exempt as a sale for
resale.
Reg. 8A-465.4. Retail sales: aircraft acquired for use outside the State.
"Aircraft acquired for use outside the State"means aircraft, navigational and communication
instruments, and other accessories and related equipment sold to:
(a)Any foreign government for use by such government outside of this State.
(b)Persons who are not residents of this State and who will not use such property in this State
other than in removing such property from this State. This subsection also applies to
corporations that are not incorporated in this State, regardless of maintaining a place of
business in this State, if the principal corporate office is located outside this State and the
property will not be used in this State other than in removing the property from this State.
Reg. 8A-470.1. Telecommunication services.
(a)Gross income from the business activity of providing telecommunication services to
consumers within this City shall not include:
(1)charges for installation, maintenance, and repair of telecommunication equipment which
are subject to the provisions of Sections 8A-415, 8A-416, or 8A-417 (construction
contracting); 8A-445 (real property rental); 8A-450 (tangible personal property rental); or
8A-460 (retail sales); depending upon the nature of the work performed.
(2)separately billed advertising charges which are subject to the provisions of Section 8A-
405 or 8A-435.
(b)Mobile equipment.In cases where the customer is being provided telecommunication
services to receiving/transmission equipment designed to be mobile in nature (for example,
mobile telephones, portable hand-held two-way radios, paging devices, etc.), the provider
shall, for the purposes of the tax imposed by this Section, determine whether such provider's
customers are "within this City" as follows:
(1)by the billing address of the customer, provided that such address is a permanent
residence or business location of the consumer within the State.
(2)in all other cases, the business location of the telecommunications provider.
Reg. 8A-475.1. Distinction between transporting for hire and certain related activities.
The hiring of mobile equipment (cranes, airplanes, limousines, etc.) is deemed rental, leasing, or
licensing for use of tangible personal property whenever the charge is for a fixed sum or hourly
rate. By comparison, the activity of a common carrier conveying goods or persons for a fee based
upon distance, and not time, shall be considered transporting for hire.
Reg. 8A-520.1. Reports made to the City.
(a)Each taxpayer shall provide, as a minimum, all of the following when reporting taxes due as
provided in this Chapter:
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(1)legal business name of the taxpayer or his agent.
(2)mailing address of the taxpayer.
(3)City Privilege License number of the taxpayer.
(4)period of time for which the report is intended.
(5)for each category of income to which the taxpayer is subject, for the reporting period,
as provided on the official City tax return:
(A)all amounts subject to, excluded from, exempt from, or deductible from the
taximposed upon that category of business activity, summarized in total as "gross
receipts" of that category of business activity.
(B)the total amount claimed as excludable, exempted, or deducted from such "gross
receipts", itemized as provided on the official City tax return, and summarized in
total as "total deductions" for that category.
(C)the difference between such "gross receipts" and "total deductions" as "net
taxable" for that category.
(D)the tax due and payable for that category.
(6)(Reserved)
(7)any excess tax collected which is due and payable.
(8)any claimed tax credits against taxes due and payable.
(9)total amount remitted with the return.
(10)a statement verifying that the information provided on the return is accurate to the best
of the preparer's knowledge. Such statement must be accompanied by a dated
signature of the preparer, and also show the preparer's title or relationship to the
taxpayer.
(11)The Tax Collector may prescribe and will notify taxpayers of alternative methods for
signing, subscribing or verifying any report or statement required to be filed, including
but not limited to electronic signatures and/or security codes, and such methods shall
have the same validity and consequence as the actual signature or written declaration
of the taxpayer or other person required to sign, subscribe or verify the return,
statement or other document.
Reg. 8A-520.2. Change of method of reporting.
(a) Any taxpayer electing to change his reporting method shall be permitted to do so only upon
filing a written request to the Tax Collector and after receiving written approval of the Tax
Collector. The approval shall state the effective date of the change.
(b)The Tax Collector may postpone such approval to allow for examination of the records of the
taxpayer and may further require that all tax liability be satisfied up to the effective date of the
change.
(c)Failure of the taxpayer to notify the Tax Collector and await approval before changing the
method of reporting will subject the taxpayer to interest and penalties if his original method of
reporting would produce higher taxes due the City. When a person makes such change
without the consent of the Tax Collector, the Tax Collector may audit his books and records
to verify the tax liability as of the date of the change.
(d) Any taxpayer who has failed to indicate a choice of reporting method upon the application for
a Privilege License shall be deemed to have chosen the accrual method of reporting.
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Reg. 8A-555.1. Administrative Request for the attendance of witnesses or the production
of documents; service thereof; remedies and penalties for failure to respond.
(a)If a taxpayer refuses or fails to comply in whole or in part with a request to provide records
authorized by Section 8A-555, the Tax Collector may issue his written Administrative Request
which shall:
(1)designate the individual to provide information.
(2)describe specifically or generally the information to be provided, and any documents
sought to be examined.
(3)state the date, time, and place in which the individual shall appear before the Tax
Collector to provide the information and to produce the documents sought.
(4)be directed to:
(A) any director, officer, employee, agent, or representative of the person sought to be
examined; or
(B) any independent accountant, accounting firm, bookkeeping or financial service
retained or employed by such person for any purpose connected with business
activity subject to taxation; or
(C) any other person who, in the opinion of the Tax Collector, has knowledge of facts
bearing upon any tax liability of the person or taxpayer from whom information is
sought.
(b)The failure of a taxpayer to comply with reasonable requests for records without good reason
or cause may, in the exercise of judicial discretion by a court, be held to constitute a failure to
exhaust administrative remedies.
Reg. 8A-571.1. Collection of tax in jeopardy.
Evidence that collection of tax due is in jeopardy shall include documentation that:
(a)the taxpayer is going out of business.
(b)the taxpayer has no City Privilege License or has no permanent business location in the
State.
(c)the taxpayer has failed to timely pay any tax (or penalties and interest thereon) due to the
City on three (3) or more occasions within the previous thirty-six (36) calendar months.
(d) the taxpayer has remitted payment by check, which has been dishonored.
(e)the taxpayer has failed to comply with a formal written request of the Tax Collector made
pursuant to Regulation 8A-555.1.
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