[Ord. of 1-6-1997[1]]
Except as may be otherwise provided by the laws of the commonwealth, and notwithstanding any other current ordinances or resolutions enacted by this governing body, whether or not compiled in the Town Code, to the extent of any conflict, the following provisions shall be applicable to the levy, assessment, and collection of licenses required and taxes imposed on businesses, trades, professions and callings and upon the persons, firms and corporations engaged therein within this locality.
[1]
Editor's Note: This ordinance superseded former §§ 18-26 — 18-35, which contained similar provisions and derived from §§ 9-1 — 9-6, 9-8, 9-9, 9-11, and 9-12 of the 1985 Code.
[Ord. of 1-6-1997]
(a) 
For the purposes of this article, unless otherwise required by the context:
AFFILIATED GROUP
(1) 
One or more chains of includable corporations connected through stock ownership with a common parent corporation, which is an includable corporation if:
a. 
Stock possessing at least 80% of the voting power of all classes of stock and at least 80% of each class of the nonvoting stock of each of the includable corporations, except the common parent corporation, is owned directly by one or more of the other includable corporations; and
b. 
The common parent corporation directly owns stock possessing at least 80% of the voting power of all classes of stock and at least 80% of each class of the nonvoting stock of at least one of the other includable corporations. As used in this subsection, the term "stock" does not include nonvoting stock which is limited and preferred as to dividends. The term "includable corporation" means any corporation within the affiliated group irrespective of the state or country of its incorporation; and the term "receipts" includes gross receipts and gross income.
(2) 
Two or more corporations if five or fewer persons who are individuals, estates or trusts own stock possessing:
a. 
At least 80% of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote or at least 80% of the total value of shares of all classes of the stock of each corporation; and
b. 
More than 50% of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock entitled to vote or more than 50% of the total value of shares of all classes of stock of each corporation, taking into account the stock ownership of each such person only to the extent such stock ownership is identical with respect to each such corporation.
(3) 
When one or more of the includable corporations, including the common parent corporation, is a nonstock corporation, the term "stock" as used in this definition shall refer to the nonstock corporation membership or membership voting rights, as is appropriate to the context.
ASSESSMENT
A determination as to the proper rate of tax, the measure to which the tax rate is applied, and ultimately the amount of tax, including additional or omitted tax, that is due. An assessment shall include a written assessment made pursuant to notice by the assessing official or a self-assessment made by a taxpayer upon the filing of a return or otherwise not pursuant to notice. Assessments shall be deemed made by an assessing official when a written notice of assessment is delivered to the taxpayer by the assessing official or an employee of the assessing official, or mailed to the taxpayer at his last known address. Self-assessments shall be deemed made when a return is filed or, if no return is required, when the tax is paid. A return filed or tax paid before the last day prescribed by ordinance for the filing or payment thereof shall be deemed to be filed or paid on the last day specified for the filing of a return or the payment of tax, as the case may be.
ASSESSOR or ASSESSING OFFICIAL
The Town Manager.
BASE YEAR
The calendar year preceding the license year, except for contractors subject to the provisions of Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3715, and except for beginning businesses which shall use their probable gross receipts for the current license year as the basis for their license tax.
BUSINESS
A course of dealing which requires the time, attention and labor of the person so engaged for the purpose of earning a livelihood or profit. It implies a continuous and regular course of dealing, rather than an irregular or isolated transaction. A person may be engaged in more than one business. The following acts shall create a rebuttable presumption that a person is engaged in a business:
(1) 
Advertising or otherwise holding oneself out to the public as being engaged in a particular business; or
(2) 
Filing tax returns, schedules and documents that are required only of persons engaged in a trade or business.
CONTRACTOR
Shall have the meaning prescribed in Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3714.B, as amended, whether such work is done or offered to be done by day labor, general contract or subcontract.
DEFINITE PLACE OF BUSINESS
An office or a location at which occurs a regular and continuous course of dealing for 30 consecutive days or more. A definite place of business for a person engaged in business may include a location leased or otherwise obtained from another person on a temporary or seasonal basis, and real property leased to another. A person's residence shall be deemed to be a definite place of business if there is no definite place of business maintained elsewhere and the person is not licensable as a peddler or itinerant merchant.
FINANCIAL SERVICES
(1) 
The buying, selling, handling, managing, investing, and providing of advice regarding money, credit, securities and other investments and shall include the service for compensation by a credit agency, an investment company, a broker or dealer in securities and commodities or a security or commodity exchange, unless such service is otherwise provided for in this chapter.
a. 
BROKERAn agent of a buyer or a seller who buys or sells stocks, bonds, commodities, or services, usually on a commission basis.
b. 
COMMODITYStaples, such as wool, cotton, etc., which are traded on a commodity exchange and on which there is trading in futures.
c. 
DEALERAny person engaged in the business of buying and selling securities for his own account, but does not include a bank, or any person insofar as he buys or sells securities for his own account, either individually or in some fiduciary capacity, but not as part of a regular business.
d. 
SECURITYFor purposes of this article, shall have the same meaning as in the Securities Act (Code of Virginia, § 13.1-501 et seq.) or in similar laws of the United States regulating the sale of securities.
(2) 
Those engaged in rendering financial services include, but without limitation, the following:
Buying installment receivables
Chattel mortgage financing
Consumer financing
Credit card services
*Credit unions
Factors
Financing accounts receivable
Industrial loan companies
Installment financing
Inventory financing
Loan or mortgage brokers
Loan or mortgage companies
Safety deposit box companies
Security and commodity brokers and services
Stockbroker
Working capital financing
* Federal credit unions are not subject to state or local license taxation under the Federal Credit Union Act, 12 U.S.C. 1768, are hereby declared exempt.
GROSS RECEIPTS
The whole, entire, total receipts attributable to the licensed privilege, without deduction, except as may be limited by the provisions of Code of Virginia, tit. 58.1, ch. 37.
LICENSE YEAR
The calendar year for which a license is issued for the privilege of engaging in business.
PERSONAL SERVICES
Rendering for compensation any repair, personal, business or other services not specifically classified as "financial, real estate or professional service" under this article, or rendered in any other business or occupation not specifically classified in this article unless exempted from local license tax by Code of Virginia, tit. 58.1.
(1) 
COMMISSION MERCHANTAny person buying or selling any kind of goods, wares, or merchandise for another on commission.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
Services performed by architects, attorneys-at-law, certified public accountants, dentists, engineers, land surveyors, surgeons, veterinarians, and practitioners of the healing arts (the arts and sciences dealing with the prevention, diagnosis, treatment and cure or alleviation of human physical or mental ailments, conditions, diseases, pain or infirmities) and such occupations, and no others, as the state department of taxation may list in the BPOL guidelines promulgated pursuant to Code of Virginia § 58.1-3701. The department shall identify and list each occupation or vocation in which a professed knowledge of some department of science or learning, gained by a prolonged course of specialized instruction and study, is used by its practical application to the affairs of others, either advising, guiding, or teaching them, and in serving their interests or welfare in the practice of an art or science founded on it. The word "profession" implies attainments in professional knowledge as distinguished from mere skill, and the application of knowledge to uses for others rather than for personal profit.
PURCHASES
All goods, wares and merchandise received for sale at each definite place of business of a wholesale merchant. The term shall also include the cost of manufacture of all goods, wares and merchandise manufactured by any wholesaler or wholesale merchant and sold or offered for sale. Such merchant may elect to report the gross receipts from the sale of manufactured goods, wares and merchandise if it cannot determine or chooses not to disclose the cost of manufacture.
REAL ESTATE SERVICES
Rendering a service for compensation as lessor, buyer, seller, agent, or broker and providing a real estate service, unless the service is otherwise specifically provided for in this article, and such services include, but are not limited to, the following:
Appraisers of real estate
Escrow agents, real estate
Fiduciaries, real estate
Lessors of real property
Real estate agents, brokers and managers
Real estate selling agents
Rental agents for real estate
RETAILER or RETAIL MERCHANT
Any person or merchant who sells goods, wares and merchandise for use or consumption by the purchaser or for any purpose other than resale by the purchaser, but does not include sales at wholesale to institutional, commercial and industrial users.
(1) 
PEDDLERAny person who carries from place to place any goods, wares, or merchandise and offers to sell or actually sells and delivers at the same time. Any person who does not keep a regular place of business, whether it be a house or a vacant lot or elsewhere, with regular business hours, but at that place offers to sell goods, wares, and merchandise, is a peddler. Any person who keeps a regular place of business, with regular business hours at the same place, who other than at that regular place of business, personally or through agents, offers for sale or sells and, at the time of such offering for sale, delivers goods, wares and merchandise is a peddler.
(2) 
ITINERANT MERCHANTAny person who engages in, does or transacts any temporary or transient business in the state, either in one locality or in traveling from place to place in the sale of goods, wares and merchandise, and who for that purpose of carrying on such business hires, leases, uses or occupies any building or structure, motor vehicle, tent, car, boat or public room or any part thereof, including rooms in hotels, lodging houses, or houses of private entertainment, or in any street, alley, or public place in any city or Town, or in any public road in any county, for a period of less than one year, for the exhibition of or sale of such goods, wares, or merchandise.
a. 
A charitable institution or other not-for-profit organization that engages in the business of buying and selling merchandise may be subject to a local license tax as a retail or wholesale merchant, even though the proceeds are subsequently used for charitable purposes.
b. 
A lunch counter operated by an organization open to members only, the proceeds from which are used to maintain the organization, may be subject to a local license tax.
c. 
Any hotel, motel, boardinghouse, or lodging house which also furnishes or sells food or merchandise for compensation is engaged in retail sales as to the sales of the food or merchandise.
d. 
A person is not subject to local license tax if his business in this state is limited solely to the solicitation of orders by catalogs mailed from outside this state to mail-order buyers in this state and who fills orders from outside this state; however, if the catalogs are distributed by a state resident by mail or in person or if the person engaged in the mail-order business has a definite place of business in this state at which mail orders are received or filled, the mail order business may be treated the same as any other retail or wholesale business for purposes of local license taxes.
e. 
Any person who merely fills prescriptions for or fits corrective lenses and eyeglass frames is a retail merchant; however, any practitioner who examines eyes is engaged in rendering a professional service.
f. 
Any practitioner of a profession who sells goods, wares, or merchandise in connection with the practice of the profession may be engaged in making retail sales depending on the nature of the products sold and the service performed. Examples in this area are as follows:
1. 
A medical doctor who engages in the sale of drugs or other goods, wares or merchandise as well as the practice of medicine is a merchant as to those sales; however, a medical doctor is not a merchant as to the drugs used in giving an immunization to a patient.
2. 
A chiropodist who sells shoes in connection with his practice is a retail merchant as to such sales.
g. 
A job printer is a manufacturer and is engaged in either retail or wholesale sales as to the sales of the items printed.
h. 
The sales price alone is not determinative of whether the sale is at retail or wholesale. The fact that a person sells goods, wares or merchandise at wholesale prices, at cost, or at less than cost does not prevent the person from being classified as a retail merchant if the sales fall within he definition of a retail sale.
i. 
Any person who purchases rough stone already cut and who then polishes, glazes and cuts lettering in the stone is not a manufacturer and is engaged in either retail or wholesale sales.
j. 
Any person who sells goods at retail through a commission merchant may be held liable for a local license tax as to such sales.
SERVICES
Things purchased by a customer which do not have physical characteristics, or which are not goods, wares, or merchandise.
WHOLESALER or WHOLESALE MERCHANT
Any person or merchant who sells wares and merchandise for resale by the purchaser, including sales when the goods, wares and merchandise will be incorporated into goods and services for sale, and also includes sales to institutional, commercial, government and industrial users which, because of the quantity, price, or other terms, indicate that they are consistent with sales at wholesale.
[Ord. of 1-6-1997]
(a) 
Conditions for application; separate licenses.
(1) 
Every person engaging within the Town in any business, trade, profession, occupation or calling (collectively hereinafter "a business") as defined in this article, unless otherwise exempted by law, shall apply for a license for each such business if:
a. 
Such person maintains a definite place of business within the Town;
b. 
Such person does not maintain a definite office anywhere but does maintain an abode in the Town, which abode, for the purposes of this article, shall be deemed a definite place of business; or
c. 
There is no definite place of business but such person operates amusement machines; is engaged as a peddler or itinerant merchant, carnival or circus as specified in Code of Virginia, §§ 58.1-3717, 58.1-3718, or 58.1-3728, respectively; or is a contractor subject to Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3715; or is a public service corporation subject to Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3731.
(2) 
A separate license shall be required for each definite place of business. A person engaged in two or more businesses or professions carried on at the same place of business may elect to obtain one license for all such businesses and professions if all of the following criteria are satisfied:
a. 
Each business or profession is licensable at the location and has satisfied any requirements imposed by state law or other provisions of the ordinances of the Town;
b. 
All of the businesses or professions are subject to the same tax rate, or, if subject to different tax rates, the licensee agrees to be taxed on all businesses and professions at the highest rate; and
c. 
The taxpayer agrees to supply such information as the Town Manager may require concerning the nature of the several businesses and their gross receipts.
(3) 
Exclusions:
a. 
No license tax shall be imposed upon or collected from any person for selling farm or domestic or nursery products, ornamental or otherwise, or for the planting of nursery products as an incident to the sale thereof, provided such products are grown or produced by such person.
b. 
No license tax shall be required for the privilege or right of printing or publishing any newspaper or for the privilege or right of operating or conducting any radio or television broadcasting station.
c. 
No license tax shall be required for the business of renting, as the owner of such property, real property, other than hotels, motels, motor lodges, auto courts, tourist courts, trailer parks, lodging houses, rooming houses, and boardinghouses.
d. 
No license tax shall be required for the manufacturing and selling of goods, wares, or merchandise at the place of manufacture.
(b) 
Each person subject to a license tax shall apply for a license prior to beginning business, if he was not subject to licensing in the Town on or before January 1 of the license year, or no later than March 1 of the current license year if he had been issued a license for the preceding license year. The application shall be on forms prescribed by the Town Manager.
Every application for a license shall have incorporated therein or annexed thereto the affidavit of the applicant to the effect that the statements contained in the application are true. If the applicant is an individual, the affidavit must be made by him, if by one of the members and, if a corporation, by the officer having knowledge of the correctness of the statements made in the application.
(c) 
The tax shall be paid with the application in the case of any license not based on gross receipts. If the tax is measured by the gross receipts of the business, the tax shall be paid on or before March 1 of each calendar year.
(d) 
The Town Manager may grant an extension of time, not to exceed 90 days, in which to file an application for a license, for reasonable cause. The extension shall be conditioned upon the timely payment of a reasonable estimate of the appropriate tax, subject to adjustment to the correct tax at the end of the extension, together with interest from the due date until the date paid and, if the estimate submitted with the extension is found to be unreasonable under the circumstances, a penalty of 10% of the portion paid after the due date.
(e) 
A penalty of 10% of the tax may be imposed upon the failure to file an application or the failure to pay the tax by the appropriate due date. Only the late filing penalty shall be imposed by the Town Manager if both the application and payment are late; however, both penalties may be assessed if the Town Manager determines that the taxpayer has a history of noncompliance. In the case of an assessment of additional tax made by the Town Manager, if the application and, if applicable, the return were made in good faith and the understatement of the tax was not due to any fraud, reckless or intentional disregard of the law by the taxpayer, there shall be no late payment penalty assessed with the additional tax. If any assessment of tax by the Town Manager is not paid within 30 days, the Town Manager may impose a 10% late payment penalty. The penalties shall not be imposed or, if imposed, shall be abated by the official who assessed them, if the failure to file or pay was not the fault of the taxpayer. In order to demonstrate lack of fault, the taxpayer must show that he acted responsibly and that the failure was due to events beyond his control.
(1) 
"Acted responsibly" means that:
a. 
The taxpayer exercised the level of reasonable care that a prudent person would exercise under the circumstances in determining the filing obligations for the business; and
b. 
The taxpayer undertook significant steps to avoid or mitigate the failure, such as requesting appropriate extensions (where applicable), attempting to prevent a foreseeable impediment, acting to remove an impediment once it occurred, and promptly rectifying a failure once the impediment was removed or the failure discovered.
(2) 
"Events beyond the taxpayer's control" include, but are not limited to, the unavailability of records due to fire or other casualty; the unavoidable absence (e.g., due to death or serious illness) of the person with the sole responsibility for tax compliance; or the taxpayer's reasonable reliance in good faith upon erroneous written information from the Town Manager, who was aware of the relevant facts relating to the taxpayer's business when he provided the erroneous information.
(f) 
Interest shall be charged on the late payment of the tax from the due date until the date paid without regard to fault or other reason for the late payment. Whenever an assessment of additional or omitted tax by the Town Manager is found to be erroneous, all interest and penalty charged and collected on the amount of the assessment found to be erroneous shall be refunded, together with interest on the refund from the date of payment or the due date, whichever is later. Interest shall be paid on the refund of any tax paid under this article from the date of payment or due date, whichever is later, whether attributable to an amended return or other reason. Interest on any refund shall be paid at the same rate charged under Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3916.
No interest shall accrue on an adjustment of estimated tax liability to actual liability at the conclusion of a base year. No interest shall be paid on a refund or charged on a late payment, in event of such adjustment, provided the refund or the late payment is made not more than 30 days from the date of the payment that created the refund, or the due date of the tax, whichever is later.
(g) 
Any person who knowingly falsifies gross receipts or other material fact to obtain a license as required herein for an amount less than that which should be paid hereunder shall be guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor. Each day of violation shall constitute a separate and distinct offense.
(h) 
As one of the means of ascertaining the amount of any license tax, the Town Manager may propound interrogatories to each applicant and use such other evidence as he may procure. Such interrogatories shall be answered under oath, and any applicant refusing to answer such interrogatories under oath shall be fined not less than $50 nor more than $100 for each offense.
[Ord. of 1-6-1997]
(a) 
General rule. Whenever the tax imposed by this article is measured by gross receipts, the gross receipts included in the taxable measure shall be only those gross receipts attributed to the exercise of a licensable privilege at a definite place of business within the Town. In the case of activities conducted outside of a definite place of business, such as during a visit to a customer location, the gross receipts shall be attributed to the definite place of business from which such activities are initiated, directed, or controlled. The situs of gross receipts for different classifications of business shall be attributed to one or more definite places of business or offices as follows:
(1) 
The gross receipts of a contractor shall be attributed to the definite place of business at which his services are performed, or if his services are not performed at any definite place of business, then the definite place of business from which his services are directed or controlled, unless the contractor is subject to the provisions of Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3715.
(2) 
The gross receipts of a retailer or wholesaler shall be attributed to the definite place of business at which sales solicitation activities occur, or if sales solicitation activities do not occur at any definite place of business, then the definite place of business from which sales solicitation activities are directed or controlled; however, a wholesaler or distribution house subject to a license tax measured by purchases shall determine the situs of its purchases by the definite place of business at which or from which deliveries of the purchased goods, wares and merchandise are made to customers. Any wholesaler who is subject to license tax in two or more localities and who is subject to multiple taxation because the localities use different measures may apply to the department of taxation for a determination as to the proper measure of purchases and gross receipts subject to license tax in each locality.
(3) 
The gross receipts of a business renting tangible personal property shall be attributed to the definite place of business from which the tangible personal property is rented, or if the property is not rented from any definite place of business, then the definite place of business at which the rental of such property is managed.
(4) 
The gross receipts from the performance of services shall be attributed to the definite place of business at which the services are performed, or if not performed at any definite place of business, then the definite place of business from which the services are directed or controlled.
(b) 
Apportionment. If the licensee has more than one definite place of business and it is impractical or impossible to determine to which definite place of business gross receipts should be attributed under the general rule (and the affected jurisdictions are unable to reach an apportionment agreement), except as to circumstances set forth in Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3709, the gross receipts of the business shall be apportioned between the definite places of businesses on the basis of payroll. Gross receipts shall not be apportioned to a definite place of business unless some activities under the applicable general rule occurred at, or were controlled from, such definite place of business. Gross receipts attributable to a definite place of business in another jurisdiction shall not be attributed to the Town solely because the other jurisdiction does not impose a tax on the gross receipts attributable to the definite place of business in such other jurisdiction.
(c) 
Agreements. The Town Manager may enter into agreements with any other political subdivision of the state concerning the manner in which gross receipts shall be apportioned among definite places of business; however, the sum of the gross receipts apportioned by the agreement shall not exceed the total gross receipts attributable to all of the definite places of business affected by the agreement. Upon being notified by a taxpayer that its method of attributing gross receipts is fundamentally inconsistent with the method of one or more political subdivisions in which the taxpayer is licensed to engage in business and that the difference has, or is likely to, result in taxes on more than 100% of its gross receipts from all locations in the affected jurisdictions, the Town Manager shall make a good faith effort to reach an apportionment agreement with the other political subdivisions involved. When localities cannot reach an agreement over how gross receipts from a given business should be apportioned among them, the taxpayer or assessing official may seek an advisory opinion from the department of taxation. In cases where the taxpayer is able to demonstrate to a court that double assessment has occurred, the court shall enter such orders pending resolution of the litigation as are necessary to ensure that the taxpayer is not required to pay multiple assessments.
[Ord. of 1-6-1997]
(a) 
Where, before the expiration of the time prescribed for the assessment of any license tax imposed pursuant to this article, both the Town Manager and the taxpayer have consented in writing to its assessment after such time, the tax may be assessed at any time prior to the expiration of the period agreed upon. The period so agreed upon may be extended by subsequent agreements in writing made before the expiration of the period previously agreed upon.
(b) 
Notwithstanding Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3903, the Town Manager shall assess the local license tax omitted because of fraud or failure to apply for a license for the current license year and the six preceding years (this applies to only 1997 and later; prior to 1997 is current plus three preceding years).
(c) 
The period for collecting any local license tax shall not expire prior to the period specified in Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3940, two years after the date of assessment if the period for assessment has been extended pursuant to this subsection, two years after the final determination of an appeal for which collection has been stayed pursuant to subsections 18-31(b) or 18-31(d) of this article, or two years after the final decision in a court application pursuant to Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3984, or similar law for which collection has been stayed, whichever is later.
[Ord. of 1-6-1997]
(a) 
Any person assessed with a licensing tax under this article as the result of an audit may apply within 90 days from the date of the assessment to the Town Manager for a correction of the assessment. The application must be filed in good faith and sufficiently identify the taxpayer, audit period, remedy sought, each alleged error in the assessment, the grounds upon which the taxpayer relies, and any other facts relevant to the taxpayer's contention. The Town Manager may hold a conference with the taxpayer if requested by the taxpayer, or require submission of additional information and documents, further audit, or other evidence deemed necessary for a proper and equitable determination of the applications. The assessment shall be deemed prima facie correct. The Town Manager shall undertake a full review of the taxpayer's claims and issue a determination to the taxpayer setting forth its position. Every assessment pursuant to an audit shall be accompanied by a written explanation of the taxpayer's right to seek correction and the specific procedure to be followed in the Town (e.g., the name and address to which an application should be directed).
(b) 
Provided an application is made within 90 days of an assessment, collection activity shall be suspended until a final determination is issued by the Town Manager, unless the Town Manager determines that collection would be jeopardized by delay or that the taxpayer has not responded to a request for relevant information after a reasonable time. Interest shall accrue in accordance with the provisions of Subsection 18-28(f) of this article, but no further penalty shall be imposed while collection action is suspended. The term "jeopardized by delay" includes a finding that the application is frivolous, or that a taxpayer desires to:
(1) 
Depart quickly from the locality;
(2) 
Remove his property therefrom;
(3) 
Conceal himself or his property therein; or
(4) 
Do any other act tending to prejudice, or to render wholly or partially ineffectual, proceedings to collect the tax for the period in question.
(c) 
Any person assessed with a license tax under this article as a result of an audit may apply within 90 days of the determination by the Town Manager on an application pursuant to Subsection 18-31(a) above to the tax commissioner for a correction of such assessment. The tax commissioner shall issue a determination to the taxpayer within 90 days of receipt of the taxpayer's application, unless the taxpayer and the Town Manager are notified that a longer period will be required. The application shall be treated as an application pursuant to Code of Virginia, § 58.1-1821, and the tax commissioner may issue an order correcting such assessment pursuant to Code of Virginia, § 58.1-1822. Following such an order, either the taxpayer or the Town Manager may apply to the appropriate circuit court pursuant to Code of Virginia, § 58.1-3984; however, the burden shall be on the party making the application to show that the ruling of the tax commissioner is erroneous. Neither the tax commissioner nor the department of taxation shall be made a party to an application to correct an assessment merely because the tax commissioner has ruled on it.
(d) 
On receipt of a notice of intent to file an appeal to the tax commissioner under Subsection 18-31(c) above, the Town Manager shall further suspend collection activity until a final determination is issued by the tax commissioner, unless the Town Manager determines that collection would be jeopardized by delay or that the taxpayer has not responded to a request for relevant information after a reasonable time. Interest shall accrue in accordance with the provisions of Subsection 18-28(f), but no further penalty shall be imposed while collection action is suspended. The term "jeopardized by delay" shall have the same meaning as set forth in Subsection 18-31(b) above.
(e) 
Any taxpayer may request a written ruling regarding the application of the tax to a specific situation from the Town Manager. Any person requesting such a ruling must provide all the relevant facts for the situation and may present a rationale for the basis of an interpretation of the law most favorable to the taxpayer. Any misrepresentation or change in the applicable law or the factual situation as presented in the ruling request shall invalidate any such ruling issued. A written ruling may be revoked or amended prospectively if there is a change in the law and/or a court decision, or the Town Manager notifies the taxpayer of a change in the policy or interpretation upon which the ruling was based; however, any person who acts on a written ruling which later becomes invalid shall be deemed to have acted in good faith during the period in which such ruling was in effect. Anything herein to the contrary notwithstanding, each person or entity who receives gross receipts from the operation of any business, trade, profession, occupation, or calling, as defined in this article, is subject to a license tax. Where two or more persons or entities receive gross receipts from the operation of any such business, trade, or profession, each such person or entity shall pay a license tax in proportion to the share of gross receipts attributable to such person or entity, unless such persons have clearly and unequivocally agreed otherwise.
[Ord. of 1-6-1997]
Every person who is assessable with a license tax shall keep sufficient records to enable the Town Manager to verify the correctness of the tax paid for the license years assessable and to enable the Town Manager to ascertain what is the correct amount of tax that was assessable for each of those years. All such records, books of accounts, and other information shall be open to inspection and examination by the Town Manager in order to allow the Town Manager to establish whether a particular receipt is directly attributable to the taxable privilege exercised within the Town. The Town Manager shall provide the taxpayer with the option to conduct the audit in the taxpayer's local business office, if the records are maintained there. In the event the records are maintained outside of the Town, copies of the appropriate books and records shall be sent to the Town Manager's office upon demand.
[Ord. of 1-6-1997]
(a) 
General rule. Gross receipts for license tax purposes shall not include any amount not derived from the exercise of the licensed privilege to engage in a business or profession in the ordinary course of business or profession.
(b) 
The following items shall be excluded from gross receipts:
(1) 
Amounts received and paid to the United States, the commonwealth, or any county, city or Town for the state retail sales or use tax, or for any local sales tax or any local excise tax on cigarettes, or for any federal or state excise taxes on motor fuels.
(2) 
Any amount representing the liquidation of a debt or conversion of another asset to the extent that the amount is attributable to a transaction previously taxed (e.g., the factoring of accounts receivable created by sales which have been included in taxable receipts even though the creation of such debt and factoring are a regular part of its business).
(3) 
Any amount representing returns and allowances granted by the business to its customer.
(4) 
Receipts which are the proceeds of a loan transaction in which the licensee is the obligor.
(5) 
Receipts representing the return of principal or a loan transaction in which the licensee is the creditor, or the return of principal or basis upon the sale of a capital asset.
(6) 
Rebates and discounts taken or received on account of purchases by the licensee. A rebate or other incentive offered to induce the recipient to purchase certain goods or services from a person other than the offeror, and which the recipient assigns to the licensee in consideration of the sale of goods and services, shall not be considered a rebate or discount to the licensee, but shall be included in the licensee's gross receipts, together with any handling or other fees related to the incentive.
(7) 
Withdrawals from inventory for purposes other than sale or distribution and for which no consideration is received and the occasional sale or exchange of assets other than inventory, whether or not a gain or loss is recognized for federal income tax purposes.
(8) 
Investment income not directly related to the privilege exercised by a licensable business not classified as rendering financial services. This exclusion shall apply to interest on bank accounts of the business, and to interest, dividends and other income derived from the investment of its own funds in securities and other types of investments unrelated to the licensed privilege. This exclusion shall not apply to interest, late fees and similar income attributable to an installment sale or other transaction that occurred in the regular course of business.
(c) 
The following shall be deducted from gross receipts or gross purchases that would otherwise be taxable:
(1) 
Any amount paid for computer hardware and software that are sold to a United States federal or state government entity, provided that such property was purchased within two years of the sale to such entity by the original purchaser, who shall have been contractually obligated at the time of purchase to resell such property to a state or federal government entity. This deduction shall not occur until the time of resale and shall apply to only the original cost of the property and not to its resale price, and the deduction shall not apply to any of the tangible personal property which was the subject of the original resale contract if it is not resold to a state or federal government entity in accordance with the original contract obligation.
(2) 
Any receipts attributable to business conducted in another state or foreign country in which the taxpayer is liable for an income or other tax based upon income.
[Ord. of 1-6-1997]
Every person or business subject to licensure under the article shall be assessed and required to pay annually such fees and taxes as set out under Article 9 of the ordinance from which this article derives and as determined from time to time by the Town Council.