In the case of a time and material contract, if the contractor bills his or her customer an amount for "sales tax" computed upon his or her marked up billing for materials, it will be assumed, in the absence of convincing evidence to the contrary, that he or she is the retailer of the materials.
If the sale occurs in this state, the sales tax applies to the contractor's (retailer's) gross receipts from the sale of the materials. If the sale occurs prior to the time the property is brought into this state, the contractor's (retailer's) customer is the consumer and his or her use (unless otherwise exempt) is subject to use tax measured by the sales price. The contractor must collect the use tax and pay it to this state.
If the contractor purchases the fixtures in a completed condition, the cost price is deemed to be the sale price of the fixture to him or her and shall include any manufacturer's excise tax or import duty imposed with respect to the fixture prior to its sale by the contractor.
If the contractor is the manufacturer of the fixture, the cost price is deemed to be the price at which similar fixtures in similar quantities ready for installation are sold by him or her to other contractors.
If similar fixtures are not sold to other contractors ready for installation, then the cost price shall be deemed to be the amount stated in the price lists, bid sheets or other records of the contractor.
If the sale price cannot be established in the above manner and the fixture is manufactured by the contractor, the cost price shall be deemed to be the aggregate of the following:
Jobsite fabrication labor and its prorated share of manufacturing overhead must be included in the sale price of the fixture. Jobsite fabrication labor includes assembly labor performed prior to attachment of a component or a fixture to a structure or other real property.
In this case the construction contractor may take a resale certificate from the lessor at the time of the transaction and the sale to the lessor will be considered to be a sale for resale. The resale certificate should indicate that the fixture is purchased for resale by the purchaser as tangible personal property under section 6016.3 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
If there is no such retail price for the machinery and equipment, then the gross receipts shall be determined from the contracts, price lists, bid sheets, or other records of the contractor.
If the gross receipts cannot be established in the above manner and the machinery and equipment is manufactured by the contractor, the gross receipts from the sale shall be the aggregate of the following:
Jobsite fabrication labor and its prorated share of manufacturing overhead must be included in the sale price of the machinery or equipment. Jobsite fabrication labor includes assembly labor performed prior to attachment of a component or the machinery or equipment to a structure or other real property.
A contractor cannot avoid liability for sales or use tax on materials or fixtures furnished and installed by him or her by taking a resale certificate from the prime contractor, interior decorators, designers, department stores, or others. However, under the circumstances described in subsection (b) (2) (B)3., a contractor may take a resale certificate for fixtures furnished and installed by him or her for a person other than the owner of the realty.
If the property purchased under a certificate is used by the contractor in any other manner or for any other purpose than stated in the certificate, the contractor shall be liable for sales tax as if he or she were a retailer making a retail sale of the property at the time of such use, and the sale price of the property to him or her shall be deemed the gross receipts from the sale.
The department stores or other sellers furnishing resale certificates are required to pay the tax to the state upon their selling price of the draperies and drapery hardware, exclusive of installation charges. The installer should segregate his or her installation charge in order that the department store or other seller may properly segregate its charge attributable to installation for purposes of determining its taxable gross receipts.
A contract to furnish and install a prefabricated or modular building which is not a factory-built school building (relocatable classroom) is a construction contract whether the building rests in place by its own weight or is physically attached to realty. It is immaterial whether the building is erected upon or affixed to land owned by the owner of the building or is leased to the landowner or lessee of the land.
Generally, a contract to furnish and install a small prefabricated building, such as a shed or kiosk, which is movable as a unit from its site of installation, is a construction contract only if the building is required to be physically attached to real property by the seller, upon a concrete foundation or otherwise. The sale of such a unit to rest in place by its own weight, whether upon the ground, a concrete slab, or sills or piers, is not a construction contract even though the seller may deliver the unit to its site of use.
Prefabricated or modular buildings which are "factory-built housing" where permanently affixed to the realty are improvements to realty. The manufacturer of factory-built housing who contracts to furnish and install the factory-built housing manufactured by him or her is the consumer of the materials used in building and installing the factory-built housing and the retailer of the fixtures. Tax applies as provided in (b) above.
The term does not include buildings licensed by either the Department of Motor Vehicles or the Department of Housing and Community Development. The term also does not include prefabricated or modular buildings which are similar in size to, but which are not, "factory-built school buildings". It is immaterial whether the building is erected upon or affixed to land owned by the owner of the building or is leased to the landowner or lessee of the land.
A separate contract to furnish and install tangible personal property in a factory-built school building after installation of the building at the site is a construction contract and the tax applies as in (b) above. Any contract or subcontract for site preparation (e.g., foundation) is a construction contract and tax applies as in (b) above.
CLAIM FOR 60% EXCLUSION FROM TAX ON PURCHASE OF FACTORY-BUILT SCHOOL BUILDINGS
(Sec. 6012.6. Rev. & Tax. Code)
I hereby certify that the factory-built school building that I
___________________________
(Name of Purchaser-Consumer)
am purchasing under the authority of this certificate from
___________________________
(Name of Retailer)
will be used as a school building as defined in Sales and Use Tax Regulation 1521. My seller's permit number, if any, is ____________________.
I further certify that I understand and agree that if the property purchased under the authority of this certificate is used by the purchaser for any purpose other than indicated above, the purchaser shall be liable for payment of tax to the State Board of Equalization at the time of such use measured by 60% of the sales price of the factory-built school building.
___________________________
Signed by
(Name of Purchaser)
___________________________
As:
(Owner, Partner, Purchasing Agent, etc.)
___________________________
Date
Operative July 1, 1980, a special measure of sales or use tax is provided for a mobilehome sold to be affixed to realty for occupancy as a residence.
A mobilehome dealer who sells a new mobilehome to a construction contractor to be affixed to land for occupancy as a residence is the "retailer-consumer" of the property and is required to pay tax for the period in which the sale was made by the dealer measured by an amount equal to 75 percent of the retailer-consumer's purchase price of the mobilehome.
A construction contractor who withdraws a new mobilehome from an inventory purchased for resale to be affixed to realty for occupancy as a residence in the performance of a construction contract is required to pay tax measured by 75 percent of the purchase price by his or her mobilehome vendor except where the purchase is made directly from a mobilehome manufacturer. In the absence of satisfactory evidence of the vendor's purchase price it shall be presumed that the measure of tax for the transaction is an amount equivalent to 60 percent of the sales price of the mobilehome to the construction contractor.
A mobilehome manufacturer who sells a new mobilehome directly to a construction contractor for installation to real property for occupancy as a residence is required to pay tax measured by 75 percent of the sales price at which a similar mobilehome ready for installation would be sold by the manufacturer to a retailer-consumer in this state. A construction contractor who withdraws a new mobilehome from an inventory purchased from a manufacturer for resale must pay tax measured by 75 percent of his or her purchase price.
A mobilehome manufacturer who performs a construction contract by permanently affixing a new mobilehome to real property is the consumer of the material and the retailer of fixtures installed by him or her and the tax applies as set forth in paragraph (b) above.
Reference should also be made to the provisions of Regulation 1610.2 for additional interpretative rules relating to custom additions to the mobilehome prior to sale, transfers of nonvehicle items, and the application of the tax to a purchase made from an out-of-state retailer.
Similarly, installation of escalators and moving sidewalks are in part fixtures and in part materials.
Following are examples of components constituting part of the cage or platform and its hoisting machinery, and which are fixtures:
alarm bell
cab or car
car doors
car platform and sling
door hanger on cab
door openers
door operator on cab or car
door safety edge on cab
door sills on cab
electronic door protector
jack assembly
motors
power units and control boxes
pumps
pushbuttons on cab
wire and piping (which are components of a fixture)
Following are examples of components constituting "materials" when attached to realty:
car guides
casing section of jack assembly
guide rails
hoistway doors
hoistway door frames
hoistway door safety edge
hoistway door sills and jambs
hoistway door supports
hoistway entrance
pushbuttons on hoistway
rail brackets
sill, struts
sound insulating panels on "materials"
structural steel (unless part of cab, car, or other "fixture")
valve strainer
wire and piping attached to "materials"
Following are examples of components constituting parts of escalators or moving sidewalks which are fixtures:
staircase
moving sidewalk
moving handrails
chains
sprockets
motors
other operating mechanisms
Telephone handsets, modular switching equipment and standardized, off-shelf, general purpose switching equipment sold for use in general purpose office buildings constitute machinery and equipment under paragraph (a)(6) of this regulation. Handsets, modular switching equipment and standardized equipment were previously classified as fixtures.
This change in classification shall be applied prospectively only with respect to construction contracts entered into on and after July 1, 1988, by contractors other than United States construction contractors.
The pump is a fixture if:
The excess tax reimbursement provisions of Regulation 1700 apply to construction contractors.
Separately stated charges for transportation are subject to tax as defined in Regulation 1628, Transportation Charges.
Other materials include, but are not limited to, wiring, wiring harnesses, strapping, piping, and mounting systems. Mounting systems include rack framing brackets that are installed on roofs.
Other items included in the solar energy system which are considered fixtures include, but are not limited to, terminal boxes, DC and AC disconnect boxes, inverters, transformers, batteries and pumps.
Contractors furnishing and installing solar energy systems that include fixtures are required to hold seller's permits as described in subdivision (b)(4).
Appendix A
The following is a list of typical items regarded as materials:
Asphalt
Bricks
Builders' hardware
Caulking material
Cement
Conduit
Doors
Ducts
Electric wiring and connections
Flooring
Glass
Gravel
Insulation
Lath
Lead
Lime
Linoleum
Lumber
Macadam
Millwork
Mortar
Oil
Paint
Paper
Photovoltaic (solar) integrated roofing tiles and skylights
Piping, valves, and pipe fittings
Plaster
Power poles, towers, and lines
Putty
Reinforcing mesh
Roofing
Sand
Sheet metal
Steel
Stone
Stucco
Tile
Wall coping
Wallboard
Wallpaper
Wall-to-wall carpeting (when affixed to the floor)
Weather stripping
Windows
Window screens
Wire netting and screen
Wood preserver
Appendix B
The following is a list of typical items regarded as fixtures:
Air conditioning units
Awnings
Burglar alarm and fire alarm fixtures
Cabinets, counters, and lockers (prefabricated)
Cranes1 (including moving parts of cranes) affixed or annexed to a building, structure or fixed work
Electric generators (affixed to and accessory to a building, structure or fixed works)
Elevators, hoists, and conveying units
Furnaces, boilers, and heating units
Lighting fixtures
Plumbing fixtures
Refrigeration units
Signs
Television antennas
Transformers and switchgear
Vault doors and equipment
Venetian blinds
Appendix C
The following are lists of typical items regarded as:
Machinery and Equipment
Drill presses
Electric generators (unaffixed, or, if affixed, which meet the requirements
of subparagraph (a)(6))
Lathes
Machine tools
Printing presses
Not Machinery or Equipment
Fixtures and materials as defined in this regulation
Wiring, piping, etc., used as a source of power, water, etc., for machinery and equipment
Radio transmission antennas
Large tanks (i.e., over 500 barrel capacity)
Fire alarm systems
Street light standards
Cooling towers other than small prefabricated cooling units
__________
1 Moving parts of cranes are classified as machinery and equipment when furnished and installed pursuant to fixed price construction contracts entered into prior to July 1, 1985.
Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 18, § 1521
2. Amendment of subsection (g) filed 11-12-71; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 71, No. 46).
3. Amendment filed 2-25-76; designated effective 4-1-76 (Register 76, No. 9).
4. Amendment filed 8-20-76; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 76, No. 34).
5. Amendment of subsections (a)(3), (b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B), (b)(6)(C), (c)(7) and (d) filed 1-19-79; effective thirtieth day thereafter. Pursuant to Chapter 1211, Statutes of 1978, the order designates an operative date of 1-1-79 (Register 79, No. 3).
6. Amendment of subsection (c) filed 8-22-80 as an emergency; effective upon filing (Register 80, No. 34). A Certificate of Compliance must be transmitted to OAL within 120 days or emergency language will be repealed on 12-22-80.
7. Certificate of Compliance including amendment of subsection (b) transmitted to OAL 12-19-80 and filed 1-16-81 (Register 81, No. 3).
8. Amendment of subsections (c)(3), (8) and (9) filed 3-15-84; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 84, No. 11).
9. Amendment of subsections (c)(4) and Appendices B and C filed 4-11-86; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 86, No. 15).
10. Amendment of subsections (b)(1)(A), (c)(4), (c)(7)-(10) and Appendices B and C filed 6-2-88; operative 7-2-88 (Register 88, No. 24).
11. Amendment of subsections (a), (c)(3) and Appendix C filed 5-18-89; operative 6-17-89 (Register 89, No. 20).
12. Amendment of subsection (c) filed 7-19-91; operative 8-17-91 (Register 91, No. 49).
13. Amendment filed 6-16-95; operative 7-17-95 (Register 95, No. 24).
14. Amendment of subsection (a)(2) filed 1-14-99; operative 2-13-99 (Register 99, No. 3).
15. New subsections (c)(12)-(c)(12)(B) filed 5-18-2000; operative 6-17-2000 (Register 2000, No. 20).
16. New subsections (c)(13)-(c)(13)(C) and amendment of Appendix A and NOTE filed 1-4-2008; operative 2-3-2008 (Register 2008, No. 1).
Note: Authority cited: Section 7051, Revenue and Taxation Code. Reference: Sections 6006- 6010, 6012, 6012.2, 6012.6, 6012.8, 6012.9, 6015, 6016, 6016.3, 6016.5, 6055, 6091- 6095, 6203.5, 6241- 6246, 6276.1, 6379, 6384, 6386, 6421 and 6901.5, Revenue and Taxation Code.
2. Amendment of subsection (g) filed 11-12-71; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 71, No. 46).
3. Amendment filed 2-25-76; designated effective 4-1-76 (Register 76, No. 9).
4. Amendment filed 8-20-76; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 76, No. 34).
5. Amendment of subsections (a)(3), (b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B), (b)(6)(C), (c)(7) and (d) filed 1-19-79; effective thirtieth day thereafter. Pursuant to Chapter 1211, Statutes of 1978, the order designates an operative date of 1-1-79 (Register 79, No. 3).
6. Amendment of subsection (c) filed 8-22-80 as an emergency; effective upon filing (Register 80, No. 34). A Certificate of Compliance must be transmitted to OAL within 120 days or emergency language will be repealed on 12-22-80.
7. Certificate of Compliance including amendment of subsection (b) transmitted to OAL 12-19-80 and filed 1-16-81 (Register 81, No. 3).
8. Amendment of subsections (c)(3), (8) and (9) filed 3-15-84; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 84, No. 11).
9. Amendment of subsections (c)(4) and Appendices B and C filed 4-11-86; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 86, No. 15).
10. Amendment of subsections (b)(1)(A), (c)(4), (c)(7)-(10) and Appendices B and C filed 6-2-88; operative 7-2-88 (Register 88, No. 24).
11. Amendment of subsections (a), (c)(3) and Appendix C filed 5-18-89; operative 6-17-89 (Register 89, No. 20).
12. Amendment of subsection (c) filed 7-19-91; operative 8-17-91 (Register 91, No. 49).
13. Amendment filed 6-16-95; operative 7-17-95 (Register 95, No. 24).
14. Amendment of subsection (a)(2) filed 1-14-99; operative 2-13-99 (Register 99, No. 3).
15. New subsections (c)(12)-(c)(12)(B) filed 5-18-2000; operative 6-17-2000 (Register 2000, No. 20).
16. New subsections (c)(13)-(c)(13)(C) and amendment of Appendix A and Note filed 1-4-2008; operative 2-3-2008 (Register 2008, No. 1).