Opinion
No. 31315
Decided July 28, 1948.
Taxation — Sales tax — Vendor failed to keep complete and accurate records — Section 5546-12, General Code — Deficiency sales-tax assessment made by Tax Commissioner — Appeal by vendor to Board of Tax Appeals — Food consumed by vendor, his family and employees — Food for consumption off premises where sold — Losses of merchandise through spoilage, wastage or theft — Burden on vendor to establish insufficient allowances for tax-exempt sales.
APPEAL from the Board of Tax Appeals.
From May 19, 1943, to February 17, 1947, the vendor, who is appellant in this appeal, conducted a restaurant in Toledo for the sale of food, soft drinks, beer, wine, liquor and cigarettes, the latter being sold from a vending machine.
An audit for that period by the Department of Taxation of the books of the vendor showed total sales of $496,438.80, of which $168,627 were of beer, liquor and wine, and $327,811.80 were of food and other taxable sales.
The Tax Commissioner made a deficiency assessment of $3,961.34, with a 15% penalty of $594.20, or a total assessment of $4,555.54, based on a purchase audit and markups by an examiner, showing taxable sales of $418,990.22, of which $90,877.47 were liquor sales, $323,970.78 were food sales and $4,141.97 soft drink sales.
The vendor protested such assessment and requested a hearing on the grounds that no allowance was made for food sold for consumption off the premises where sold, that a wrong-size glass was used in making the liquor-sales analysis, and that no allowance was made for soft drinks "used as supplies."
The vendor and his bookkeeper attended a hearing, after which the Tax Commissioner issued a final assessment order finding the vendor's records showed total sales of $496,438.80, as hereinbefore stated, and accepting the figure of $327,811.80 for the food and other taxable sales.
That order recited that, since the liquor sales were included with the beer and wine sales, a liquor-sales analysis was made using a one-ounce glass, and that liquor sales amounted to $68,280.82, total taxable sales were $396,092.62, and a tax credit of $686.93 was allowed. That order made no allowance for sales of food sold for consumption off the premises where sold, as the vendor's record of food sales was acceptable and no record of exempt sales was kept; no allowance was made for soft drinks used as rinses, as the soft-drink sales were included in the food sales; a portion of the penalty in excess of 10% of the adjusted tax deficiency was cancelled; and the Tax Commissioner made a final assessment of $3,274.41, plus $327.44 penalty, or a total deficiency assessment of $3,601.85.
The vendor took an appeal to the Board of Tax Appeals which affirmed the final assessment by the Tax Commissioner.
Thereafter the vendor perfected an appeal to this court from the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals.
Additional facts are stated in the per curiam opinion.
Messrs. Welles, Kelsey, Fuller, Cobourn Harrington and Mr. Edward R. Moran, for appellant.
Mr. Hugh S. Jenkins, attorney general, and Mr. Joseph S. Gill, for appellee.
The vendor's record of purchases was divided into the four classifications of beer and wine, liquor, food, soft drinks.
The vendor had three and then two cash registers, on no one of which could taxable and nontaxable sales be recorded separately. At the close of business each night, the vendor took totals from the cash register tapes, compared some with the customer purchase checks and entered the totals in round numbers in a book. The vendor at intervals delivered that book to his bookkeeper, but no cash register tapes or customer purchase checks were furnished to the bookkeeper. No separate records were made or kept of the taxable and nontaxable sales; sales of liquor, beer and wine were combined on the vendor's books, and sales of soft drinks were included with sales of food. The vendor and his bookkeeper appeared at the hearing before the Tax Commissioner, but no books, cash register tapes or customer purchase checks were produced during that hearing or the hearing before the Board of Tax Appeals.
The vendor's cashier, who was in charge of the mail cash register, testified that there were pads of sales-tax stamps at each cash register and she tore off stamps for each taxable sale recorded on the main cash register; and that there were pads of sales-tax stamps at the bar, and when she substituted for the bartender she tore off sales-tax stamps for each liquor sale. The bartender testified that he very seldom had a pad of sales-tax stamps, that he occasionally had a pad but did not use the tax stamps and that his orders were not to give a customer a stamp when the latter purchased a 30-cent drink. The vendor testified there were sales-tax stamp pads at the bar, that the bartenders would forget or would not bother to tear off the stamps, that vendor went on the assumption the bartenders were not tearing off the right amount of stamps and that he daily allocated for beer, wine and liquor sold and tore off stamps for the amount he determined from gross sales at the bar.
The errors assigned in this appeal will be stated and considered seriatim.
The vendor contends the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals presumes all food purchased by vendor was sold at a profit and such sales were taxable, without making allowance for (a) a portion of the food purchased in the business and consumed by the vendor and the members of his family, (b) nontaxable sales of food prepared and sold for human consumption off the premises where sold and (c) food or meals furnished employees in the place of business.
The purchase audit was not used in determining food sales, but the vendor's sales figure of $327,811.80 was accepted. The vendor estimated the cost of food consumed by him and his family, but there was no evidence that such consumption was recorded by customer check, cash register tape or bookkeeping entry. The claimed allowance for nontaxable sales for consumption off the premises is not supported by such checks, tapes or bookkeeping entries, but was attempted to be sustained by estimates. Likewise, the claimed allowance for meals to employees was not so supported, but was based on an estimate by vendor which was not substantiated by the testimony of two of his employees as to the daily or weekly sum each employee was allowed or charged for such food.
The vendor contends no allowance was made for losses of merchandise sustained through spoilage, spillage, wastage, theft, overmeasure, etc.
As hereinbefore stated, a purchase audit was not used to determine food sales. Therefore, no allowance for spoilage, wastage or theft of food should have been allowed.
There was some testimony as to spillage, theft and overmeasure of liquor, but all such claimed losses were not supported by estimates before the Board of Tax Appeals.
It is contended the Board of Tax Appeals should have made an allowance for inventories of food and soft drinks on hand at the close of the tax period, as shown by the testimony of an auditor employed in the office of counsel for vendor. The final assessment by the Tax Commissioner was based upon vendor's record of receipts from sales of food and soft drinks, as recited in the foregoing statement of facts, and, consequently, inventories of food and soft drinks were not involved in that computation of the assessment. With respect to claimed credit for liquor inventory, as ascertained by counsel's accountant and urged for the first time in this court by reply brief, the record shows an allowance was made based upon an inventory receipt for liquor, signed by vendor's purchaser of the. business.
Section 5546-12, General Code, provides that "each vendor shall keep complete and accurate records of sales of taxable property, together with a record of the tax collected thereon, which shall in every instance be the amount due under the provisions of this act, and shall keep all invoices, bills of lading retained parts of cancelled prepaid tax receipts and such other pertinent documents, in such form as the commission [Tax Commissioner] may by regulation require. * * *"
The record in this case discloses that the vendor kept no such "complete and accurate records," but his books combined receipts from taxable and nontaxable sales of merchandise and contained no record of sales tax collected.
Where a vendor claims the Tax Commissioner made an insufficient allowance for nontaxable sales and the vendor's gross receipts from sales are known, the burden rests upon him to show what part, if any, of such receipts resulted from tax-exempt sales of merchandise. Obert v. Evatt, Tax Commr., 144 Ohio St. 492, 59 N.E.2d 931, paragraphs two and three of the syllabus. See, also, Edelstein v. Glander, Tax Commr., 148 Ohio St. 19, 72 N.E.2d 384.
The vendor in the present proceeding failed to sustain the burden of proving the allowances claimed by him.
The sales tax deficiency and penalty assessment is not excessive, unreasonable or arbitrary.
The decision of the board is neither unreasonable nor unlawful and is, therefore, affirmed.
Decision affirmed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., TURNER, MATTHIAS, HART, ZIMMERMAN, SOHNGEN and STEWART, JJ., concur.