34 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.290 - Motor Vehicle Repair and Maintenance; Accessories and Equipment Added to Motor Vehicles; Moveable Specialized Equipment
(a) Definitions. The following words and
terms, when used in this section, shall have the following meanings, unless the
context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1)
Accessories--Nonessential tangible personal property attached to a motor
vehicle for the convenience or comfort of the operator or passengers, or to
assist or aid in the transportation, loading, or unloading of tangible personal
property. Examples include car radio, air conditioner, refrigerator on a meat
van, or a concrete mixer.
(2)
Agreed contract price for materials--The price specified in the contract for
the materials plus any additional charges directly attributable to the
materials. For example, the cost of transportation of the materials, profit
calculated as a percentage of the cost of materials, or markup or handling
charges related directly to the materials charge, is included in the agreed
contract price. A charge calculated as a percentage of the total contract cost
will not be considered a part of the materials' selling price. The agreed
contract price of the materials cannot be less than the price the repairman
paid for materials.
(3)
Component--A part of a motor vehicle such as tires, batteries, shock absorbers,
and mufflers or a motor vehicle system such as the suspension, electrical, or
cooling systems necessary to the proper operation of a motor vehicle and
including any part of the chassis or body.
(4) Consumable supplies--Tangible personal
property, except natural gas and electricity, used directly in a repair
operation or in the repair area, which after used for its intended purpose, is
completely used up, or which is not retained or reusable by the person
providing the service. Consumable supplies do not include office supplies or
other tangible personal property used in the general operation of the
business.
(5) Equipment
attachment--A part attached to a motor vehicle which is neither a component,
nor an accessory, but which may be cargo that the vehicle transports, such as a
welder, crane, compressor, or other type equipment.
(6) Extended warranty or service policy--This
contract is sold to the buyer of the product for an additional amount. The
provisions of the contract become effective after the manufacturer's warranty
expires.
(7) Install or
installation--To set tangible personal property in place for use or service.
Install or installation does not include:
(A)
the removal and/or replacement of a defective or broken part of a motor
vehicle; or
(B) the addition of
tangible personal property causing a change in the motor vehicle that
constitutes remodeling.
(8) Lump-sum contract--A written agreement in
which the agreed price for doing a job is one lump-sum amount and in which the
charges for materials are not separate from the charges for skill and labor.
Separated invoices issued to the customer will not change a written lump-sum
contract into a separated contract unless the terms of the contract require
separated invoices.
(9)
Maintenance--All work on operational and functioning motor vehicles necessary
to sustain or support safe, efficient, continuous operations, or to keep in
good working order by preventing the decline, failure, lapse, or deterioration
of the motor vehicles.
(10)
Manufacturer's written warranty--A guarantee by the manufacturer that the
product at the time of sale is operable and will remain operable for a
specified period of time. The manufacturer's warranty is provided without
additional cost to the buyer.
(11)
Motor vehicle--A self-propelled unit designed to transport property separate
from itself or persons other than the driver upon the public highways. The term
also includes trailers, semi-trailers, and house trailers. A unit which meets
the definition of a "motor vehicle" does not lose its identity as a motor
vehicle if tangible personal property is added to the vehicle allowing the unit
to perform a specialized function but prohibits the vehicle from transporting
separate property or persons other than the driver. An example of this would be
a flatbed truck upon which oil well servicing equipment is attached. All motor
vehicles are subject to the provisions of the Tax Code, Chapter 152.
(12) Moveable specialized equipment--A unit
designed and built specifically to perform a specialized function which does
not include transporting property separate from itself or persons other than
the driver is not a motor vehicle. Examples of moveable specialized equipment
meeting these criteria are motorized cranes, motorized oil well servicing
units, and mobile auto crushers. Moveable specialized equipment is subject to
the provisions of the Tax Code, Chapter 151.
(13) Remodel--To modify the style, shape, or
form of motor vehicles belonging to another.
(14) Repair--To mend or restore to working
order or operating condition a motor vehicle that was broken, worn, damaged,
defective, or malfunctioning.
(15)
Repairman--For the purposes of this section, any person who, operating under a
lump-sum or separated contract, restores, repairs, or replaces an inoperable or
malfunctioning component of a motor vehicle.
(16) Separated contract--A written agreement
which is divided into a separately stated price for materials and a separately
stated price for skill and labor. If prices of materials and labor are
separately stated, the fact that the charges are added together and a sum total
given is irrelevant. When the contract itself does not contain specific amounts
for materials and labor, but provides that all invoices will separate the
charges for materials from the charges for skill and labor, the contract will
be regarded as a separated contract.
(b) Sale and installation. Except when
replacing a defective or inoperative component or accessory, a person engaged
in the sale and installation of motor vehicle component parts and accessories
must collect sales tax on the price charged for the parts, accessories, and
installation. The removal and replacement of defective, worn, or unsafe
accessories or components is a repair and not a sale and installation.
(1) Except when replacing a defective or
inoperative component or accessory, the total charge for the sale and
installation of an accessory or a component is subject to tax regardless of
whether the charge is lump-sum or separated.
(2) The replacement of a defective or
inoperative component or accessory is a repair of a motor vehicle. The tax
responsibility of the persons repairing motor vehicles is covered in
subsections (g) and (h) of this section. The repair of a motor vehicle
component or of an accessory is considered the repair of a motor
vehicle.
(3) The repair of
equipment attachments is considered the repair of tangible personal property
and is taxed according to §
3.292 of this title (relating to
Repair, Remodeling, Maintenance, and Restoration of Tangible Personal
Property).
(c)
Manufacturing. The repair and rebuilding of motor vehicle component parts to be
sold is manufacturing and the labor charged is subject to tax whether included
in the selling price or stated separately.
(d) Repair of motor vehicle components or
accessories. A person may repair a motor vehicle component or accessory for the
general repairman who is performing general repair work on a motor vehicle.
(1) If the person repairing the component or
accessory separates the price charged for parts from the repair labor, the
general repairman may issue a resale certificate for the parts. The repair
labor is not taxable.
(2) If the
person repairing the component or accessory charges one lump-sum amount for the
repair of the component or accessory, the person is a lump-sum repairman under
subsection (g) of this section.
(e) Federal excise tax. The sales price upon
which the tax is based must include any manufacturer's federal excise
tax.
(f) Fuels. Gasoline, LP gas,
diesel, and kerosene are exempt from the sales tax.
(g) Responsibilities of repairman of motor
vehicles operating under lump-sum repair contracts.
(1) Labor to repair motor vehicles is not
taxable. A person repairing a motor vehicle for a lump-sum price is not a
retailer of a taxable item and may not issue a resale certificate for parts or
material used or consumed in such repair.
(2) Under a lump-sum contract, the repairman
is the ultimate consumer of consumable supplies, tools, equipment, and all
materials incorporated into the motor vehicle being repaired. The lump- sum
repairman must pay the tax to suppliers at the time of purchase. The repairman
will not collect tax from customers on the lump-sum charge or any portion of
the charge. Under this type of contract, the repairman will pay the tax on
materials even when the property is repaired for an exempt customer.
(3) A lump-sum repairman may use materials
from inventory that were originally purchased tax free by use of a resale
certificate. In those instances, the repairman incurs a tax liability based
upon the purchase price of the materials and must report and remit the tax to
the comptroller.
(h)
Responsibilities of repairman of motor vehicles operating under separated
repair contracts.
(1) Materials. Under a
separated repair contract, the repairman of a motor vehicle is a retailer and
may issue a resale certificate in lieu of tax to suppliers for materials that
will be incorporated into the motor vehicle of the customer; the repairman must
then collect tax from the customer on the agreed contract price of the
materials, which must not be less than the amount the repairman paid to
suppliers. The repairman must obtain a tax permit to be able to issue a resale
certificate in lieu of tax when materials are purchased. The repairman may also
use materials from inventory upon which tax was paid to the supplier at the
time of purchase. In these instances, tax will be collected from the customer
on the agreed contract price of the materials as if the materials had been
purchased with a resale certificate; however, the repairman will remit tax to
the comptroller only on the difference between the agreed contract price and
the price paid to the supplier. See §
3.338 of this title (relating to
Multistate Tax Credits and Allowance of Credit for Tax Paid to
Suppliers).
(2) Labor. Labor to
repair motor vehicles is not taxable.
(3) Consumable supplies. A repairman of motor
vehicles may issue a resale certificate in lieu of tax to suppliers for
consumable supplies as well as materials incorporated into the motor vehicle.
The repairman of a motor vehicle must then collect sales tax from customers on
the charge for consumable supplies as well as the charge for
materials.
(4) Tools and equipment.
A repairman of a motor vehicle is the ultimate consumer of tools and equipment
used which are not incorporated into the motor vehicle being repaired. The
repairman must pay tax to suppliers of these items at the time of purchase. The
repairman may not collect tax from customers on any charges for these
items.
(5) Exempt customers. In
repairing a motor vehicle belonging to an exempt customer under a separated
contract, the repairman may accept an exemption certificate in lieu of
collecting tax on materials incorporated into the motor vehicle.
(i) Responsibilities of
remodelers. Remodelers of motor vehicles are providing taxable services and
should refer to §
3.292 of this title (relating to
Repair, Maintenance, and Restoration of Tangible Personal Property).
(j) Manufacturer's warranties.
(1) No tax is due on parts or labor furnished
by the manufacturer to repair a motor vehicle under a manufacturer's warranty
or recall campaign.
(2) Records
must be kept by the repairman that show that the service and parts were used in
repairing an item under a manufacturer's warranty or recall.
(3) The repairman may purchase parts to be
used in repairs under a manufacturer's warranty or recall tax free by issuing
an exemption certificate to the supplier.
(k) Extended warranties and service
contracts. A repairman performing services under an extended warranty covering
a motor vehicle must collect tax on the parts as required under subsection (h)
of this section.
(l) Maintenance.
Tax is not due on the labor to maintain motor vehicles. Refer to subsections
(g) and (h) of this section for the repairman's responsibilities for tangible
personal property used in maintenance.
(m) Accessories and equipment added to motor
vehicles.
(1) The purchase of a motor vehicle
and all accessories and equipment attached thereto at the time of sale is
subject to the provisions of the Tax Code, Chapter 152 (motor vehicle sales and
use tax).
(2) The purchase of
accessories and equipment for a motor vehicle attached after the time of sale
of the motor vehicle is subject to the provisions of the Tax Code, Chapter 151
(limited sales, excise, and use tax).
(3) The purchase of tangible personal
property is subject to the provisions of the Tax Code, Chapter 151 (limited
sales, excise, and use tax), if no item can be identified as a motor vehicle
even if the combination of items of tangible personal property becomes a motor
vehicle. If items of tangible personal property are combined to produce a motor
vehicle, the initial titling of the motor vehicle in the name of the person who
produced the motor vehicle is not subject to the provisions of the motor
vehicle sales and use tax. If, however, the motor vehicle is titled in any
other person's name, the transfer is subject to the provisions of the motor
vehicle sales and use tax.
(4) For
this purpose, the terms "accessories" and "equipment" include, but are not
limited to, bodies, cement mixers, refrigeration units, fertilizer spreaders,
and oil well servicing equipment.
(n) Use of resale certificate. For the
purposes of this section, the words "leased" and "rented" are defined by the
Tax Code, Chapter 152 (motor vehicle sales and use tax law).
(1) Items combined into a motor vehicle. A
limited sales tax resale certificate may be used in purchasing tangible
personal property to be combined into a motor vehicle held for sale, lease, or
rental in the purchaser's regular course of business.
(2) Accessories and equipment attached to
rental or lease motor vehicles. A limited sales tax resale certificate may be
used in purchasing accessories and equipment that are attached to a motor
vehicle held for sale, rental, or lease in the purchaser's regular course of
business.
Notes
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