Tax Law, § 1105(b)
Cross reference:
Exemptions, see Part 528 of this Title.
Example 1:
A resident of a city purchases 50 cubic feet of natural gas from a regulated company (public utility). The transaction is the purchase of a gas service.
Example 2:
A dealer in LP gas visits a residence on a monthly basis, and refills or replaces the cylinders. The charge that is made for the gas consumed is for a gas service.
Example 3:
A dealer in LP gas sells 20 pound cylinders for use on trailers, or by plumbers and also refills such cylinders. The receipts from all such sales are receipts from the sale of tangible personal property.
Example 4:
A person purchases two 100 pound tanks of LP gas from a non-regulated company. The transaction is the purchase of gas.
Example 5:
A welding shop purchases a tank of oxygen and a tank of acetylene. The transaction is not the purchase of a gas service but is the purchase of tangible personal property.
Example:
A lease provides that a landlord will furnish the tenant with air conditioning service during normal business hours and further provides for an additional charge, for air conditioning service during other hours at $10 an hour. This additional charge is for the sale of refrigeration service.
Example 1:
Dispatch services, commonly used by taxicab companies, trucking firms and similar operations, which provide two-way voice communication between a base location and mobile units or between mobile units are considered telephony even though the base and mobile units are not interconnected with a telephone system.
Example 2:
Paging service which is a one-way transmission of communication by signal or voice or both signal and voice from a base unit to a mobile unit is considered telephony.
Example 3:
Message switching services, transmitted to a computer over lines leased from a communication carrier are telegraph services subject to the tax imposed under section 1105 (b) of the Tax Law.
Example 4:
Facsimile transmission services are telegraph services subject to the tax imposed under section 1105 (b) of the Tax Law.
Example 5:
The use of a teletypewriter is a telegraph service subject to tax imposed under section 1105 (b) of the Tax Law.
Example 6:
A company offers its customers a protective service using a central station alarm system, which transmits signals telegraphically. The customer is purchasing a protective service.
Example 7:
A telephone company installs station apparatus, owned by it, on the premises of a customer. The installation is a service taxable under section 1105 (b) of the Tax Law.
Example 8:
A business located in Nassau County has two telephone numbers, one with a Nassau exchange and one with a Queens exchange. This enables his Queens customers to phone him toll free. Service on the Queens exchange is considered to be purchased in Queens County even though the telephone is physically located in Nassau County.
Purchases of utility services by a utility for resale as such may be made without payment of the sales tax. The purchaser must furnish the supplier of the utility to be resold with a resale certificate (Form ST-120). When the utility services are resold by the purchaser he must collect the sales tax on the receipts from his sales as imposed under section 1105 (b) of the Tax Law. A purchase of a utility service which is not resold is subject to tax as a purchase at retail.
Example:
A utility company purchases excess power from an industrial organization or through a power pool for resale to its customers. Such purchase may be made without payment of tax upon the presentation of a properly completed resale certificate.
Where a utility company bills a customer and indicates on such bill the amount for the service and a late payment charge which may be imposed because of the failure of the customer to pay such bill within a specified period of time, the sales tax is computed on the amount billed without consideration of the late payment charge. The late payment charge constitutes a charge for interest and is not part of the sale price of the service rendered. (See section 526.5[h] of this Title.)
N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. Tit. 20 § 527.2