STATE-REG, PA-TAXRPTR-04 ¶64-514, Reg. Sec. 46.9.
Financial Institution Security Equipment. –
Pennsylvania Regulation, Reg. Sec. 46.9. Financial
Institution Security Equipment. --
(a) General. This ruling pertains to the
sale, installation and repair of security equipment utilized by financial
institutions. The effective date of this ruling is the date of adoption. Its
effect is, therefore, prospective only, and it applies only to transactions
involving security equipment consummated after the date of its adoption.
(b) Definitions. The following words and
terms, when used in this section, shall have the following meanings, unless the
context clearly indicates otherwise:
Financial institution --A corporation or
association such as a bank, a bank and trust company, a trust company, a
savings bank, a mutual banking association, a savings and loan association, a
finance company, a credit union, or other similar institution, which maintains
a place of business in the Commonwealth.
Installation --An attachment or affixation
of security equipment to real estate by means of one of the following:
(i) A hook, bolt, screw, nail, or other similar
method.
(ii) Inserting equipment through a building wall
or floor, or mounting it upon a specially prepared foundation, the removal of
which may result in damage to the real estate.
(iii) Wire which is integrated into an
electrical system.
Security equipment --Systems, devices
and equipment, and their components, utilized by a financial institution for
its protection or convenience in conducting financial transactions.
(c) Sales and installation. Sales and
installation shall conform with the following:
(1) A sale of security equipment which is also
installed, as defined in subsection (b) by the seller or the seller's designee
is a construction contract. The seller-installer may not charge sales tax of
the Commonwealth to his customer upon the contract price. Rather, the
seller-installer, as a construction contractor, is considered to be the
consumer of property transferred in connection with the construction contract.
He shall pay the applicable sales or use tax upon his purchase price of the
installed equipment, or upon his purchase price of material acquired and
incorporated into the installed equipment during the process by which it is
produced by the seller-installer, in accordance with §§33.1 and 33.2 of this
title (relating to purchase price).
Examples. "S" Seller purchases
10,000 lbs. of material at $1.00 per pound from "C" Company. The
invoice submitted by "C" to "S" includes a $10,000 charge
for the material and a $100 charge for the delivery of the material.
"S" then produces a vault door with 100
lbs. of the material, sells the vault door to "T" Trust Company, and
installs it. "S" should not charge sales tax to "T". Rather,
"S" is himself liable for the payment of sales or use tax on his
purchase price of the material incorporated into the door, or $101 --the price
which "S" paid for the material plus a proportionate amount of the
charge incidental to the delivery of the material.
"S" Seller sells a drive-in teller
window to "B" Bank. Prior to delivery of the window, "S"
sends "B" specifications for construction of the wall in which the
drive-in teller window will be installed. "S" does not prepare the
wall into which the window will be installed. After the wall has been
constructed by "B", "S" delivers the drive-in teller
window, inserts it into the previously prepared opening, and bolts it into
position. "S" is a construction contractor and is required to pay the
applicable sales and use tax of the Commonwealth upon his purchase price of the
drive-in teller window installed in "B" Bank.
(2) As a construction contractor, a
seller-installer must also pay tax upon all property, such as tools, equipment
and supplies, which is used in the performance of a construction contract, but
which is not transferred to a customer, in accordance with §§33.1 and 33.2 of
this title (relating to purchase price) and §46.7 of this title (relating to
nonresident contractors' equipment and supplies used in Pennsylvania).
(d) Straight sale. A straight sale is one
in which security equipment of a type which does not require installation, as
defined in subsection (b) of this section is transferred, or one in which any
type of security equipment is sold directly to a customer without installation
by the seller or his designee. A straight sale is a taxable transfer of
tangible personal property, and the seller is required to register with the
department, to collect tax upon the total purchase price paid by a customer for
security equipment, and to remit the tax collected to the department.
(e) Maintenance. Maintenance shall conform
with the following:
(1) Maintenance of installed security equipment
on the premises in which it is installed, or maintenance of installed security
equipment by a person who removes it from the premises for the work and later
reinstalls it, is a construction contract. As a construction contract, the work
is a nontaxable service to real estate, and the person performing the service
may not charge tax to his customer upon the contract price. Rather, the person
performing the service is responsible for the payment of tax upon his purchase
price of any part or other tangible personal property which is transferred to
the customer in the course of the service.
(2) Maintenance of security equipment which is
the subject of a straight sale because it does not require installation as
defined in subsection (b), or maintenance of installed security equipment which
is removed by the owner or a designee and taken to the service premises, is a
taxable service to tangible personal property. The person rendering the service
is required to register with the Department and to collect tax upon both the
labor charge and the charge for any part or other tangible personal property
which is transferred to the customer in the course of the service. The resale
exemption from tax is available to the serviceman upon his purchase of property
which is to be transferred.
(f) Categories of security equipment. Examples
of security equipment upon the transfer of which the seller is liable for the
payment of tax when installed by him or his designee are as follows:
Accelerated
cash terminals or cash guards.
Access control
systems.
After-hour
depositories.
Alarm systems
(burglar, police, fire, and the like).
Automatic
banking systems.
Bandit reserve
barriers.
Bulletproof
windows.
Customer
convenience counters.
Drive-in windows
(bay, flush, counter, and the like).
Fire doors.
Quick
depositories.
Receiving
lockers, heads or chests.
Safes.
Safety deposit
boxes.
Surveillance and
security systems.
Television
banking systems.
Teller rails and
lockers.
Vaults.
Vault doors
(automatic, manual, emergency, and the like).
Vault
ventilators.
(Adopted August
11, 1978; amended March 20, 1993.)