Telephone Charges – State of Utah, B-283464, February 28, 2000

Case: B-283464 Agency: Protester: Telephone Charges – State of Utah, B Date: 2000-02-28 Appropriations Law
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B-283464 Feb 28, 2000 Jump To VIEW DECISION RELATED PAGES GAO CONTACTS Highlights DIGEST The federal government is constitutionally immune from paying telephone charges imposed by the state of Utah because the charges are vendee taxes. Both the 911 charge and the hearing impaired surcharge are vendee taxes. The federal government is constitutionally immune from these taxes. The local exchange telephone company is required to bill telephone customers for the charge and remit the amount collected to the public agency. The money in the fund is available only to pay the costs of establishing. The local exchange telephone company is required to bill telephone customers for the surcharge and remit the amount collected to the Commission. The amount collected is to be used for certain designated purposes in administering the program. View Decision Matter of: Telephone Charges; State of Utah File: B-283464 Date: February 28, 2000 DIGEST DECISION An authorized certifying officer of the Department of Agriculture's National Finance Center has requested an advance decision under 31 U.S.C. Sec. 3529 on the propriety of paying the 911 emergency services telephone charge and the hearing impaired surcharge assessed against federal agencies in the state of Utah. /1/ For the reasons set forth below, both the 911 charge and the hearing impaired surcharge are vendee taxes, the legal burden of which falls directly on the federal government as a user of telephone services. Accordingly, the federal government is constitutionally immune from these taxes. Background Under section 69-2-5(3)(a) of the Utah Code, any public agency /2/ providing 911 emergency telephone service may levy an emergency services telephone charge on each "local exchange service switched access line." /3/ The charge may not exceed fifty-three cents per month for each access line. Utah Code Ann. Sec. 69-2-5(3)(c). The local exchange telephone company is required to bill telephone customers for the charge and remit the amount collected to the public agency. Utah Code Ann. Sec. 69-2-5(3)(e). The money received by the public agency must be deposited in a special emergency telephone service fund. Utah Code Ann. Sec. 69-2-5(4)(a). The money in the fund is available only to pay the costs of establishing, installing, maintaining and operating a 911 emergency telephone system. Utah Code Ann. Sec. 69-2-5(4)(b). Under section 54-8b-10(4) of the Utah Code, the Utah Service Commission may impose a surcharge on each residence and business access line to cover the costs of providing low-income hearing and speech impaired persons with telecommunication devices. The surcharge may not exceed twenty-five cents per month for each access line. The local exchange telephone company is required to bill telephone customers for the surcharge and remit the amount collected to the Commission. Id. The amount collected is to be used for certain designated purposes in administering the program. Utah Code Ann. Sec. 54-8b-10(5). If the anticipated collection is less than the actual administrative costs of collection, the local exchange telephone company does not have to collect the surcharge. Utah Code Ann. Sec. 54-8b-10(6). Analysis It is an unquestioned principle of constitutional law that the United States and its instrumentalities are immune from direct taxation by state and local governments. /4/ McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316 (1819). Direct taxation occurs where the legal incidence of the tax falls directly on the United States as the buyer of goods, Kern-Limerick, Inc. v. Scurlock, 347 U.S. 110 (1954), or as the consumer of services, 53 Comp. Gen. 410 (1973), or as the owner of property, United States v. County of Allegheny, 322 U.S. 174 (1944). These direct taxes, known as "vendee" taxes, are not payable by the federal government unless expressly authorized by Congress. 64 Comp. Gen. 655, 656-57 (1985). We have examined telephone charges in several states, including Alaska, B-2590029, May 30, 1995; Wyoming, B-255092, Feb. 14, 1994; and Indiana, B-248363, Apr. 17, 1992. /5/ We held, in these cases, that the telephone charges at issue were vendee taxes not payable by the federal government. Under these state statutes, the telephone companies were merely collection agents, i.e., required to collect the charges from their customers and then remit the amount collected to the state taxing authorities. Cf. B-238410, Sept. 7. 1990. The Utah statute is not materially different from these state statutes. Under Utah's statute, the telephone company acts merely as a collection agent. The telephone company collects the 911 emergency telephone services charge and the hearing impaired surcharge and remits the amounts collected to the public agency or Utah Service Commission.

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