Arup Laboratories, Inc, V State Of Wa Dept Of Revenue ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                                Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    February 11, 2020
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    ARUP LABORATORIES, INC., FORMERLY                                No. 52349-3-II
    KNOW AS ASSOCIATED GENERAL AND
    UNIVERSITY PATHOLOGISTS, INC.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT                              PUBLISHED OPINION
    OF REVENUE,
    Respondent.
    MELNICK, J. — ARUP Laboratories, Inc. appeals the trial court’s determination that it is
    subject to Washington Business and Occupation (B&O) taxes for income derived from the testing
    of bodily fluid and tissue samples in Utah that it received from Washington medical providers.
    ARUP argues that it is excluded from paying B&O taxes because only “persons” are subject to the
    B&O tax and states are excluded from the applicable statutory definition of “persons.” ARUP
    argues it is an “arm of the State of Utah and is therefore the State of Utah.” For those reasons,
    ARUP argues it is not subject to the tax. ARUP also argues that if we determine that it is a “person”
    under the statute, the revenue from its Washington sales should be attributed to Utah rather than
    Washington.1 We affirm.
    1
    ARUP also makes various constitutional arguments that depend on us concluding it is an arm of
    the State of Utah. Based on our resolution of this issue, we need not address these arguments.
    52349-3-II
    FACTS
    ARUP is a pathology laboratory located in Utah. It receives bodily fluid and tissue samples
    from medical providers in all 50 states and performs tests on the samples. Medical providers ship
    the samples to Utah. The samples are not returned to the customer. The test results are sent
    securely through the internet. ARUP contracts with hospitals, clinics, and laboratories to provide
    testing services. ARUP occasionally sends one or more employees to Washington to train in
    specimen collection and transportation, and to encourage providers to use ARUP.
    ARUP is a nonprofit corporation created by the Department of Pathology of the University
    of Utah School of Medicine.2 The University of Utah (University)3 is part of Utah’s higher
    education system under Utah Code. ARUP’s bylaws and articles of incorporation both state that
    the purpose of ARUP is to serve the University’s educational and charitable purposes, and its
    income accrues to the State of Utah or the University to further those purposes.
    ARUP is a component unit of the University, and the University is a component unit of the
    State of Utah.4 The University makes changes to and approves the final budget of ARUP. The
    president of the University determines how much of the profit is payable and distributed to the
    University.
    2
    It is incorporated pursuant to the Utah Revised Nonprofit Corporation Act (U.C.A) 1953 §16-6a-
    101.
    3
    When referring to the University of Utah, it includes the University of Utah School of Medicine.
    4
    A “component unit” is a financial accounting term used by the Government Accounting
    Standards Board to describe a legally separate entity like a nonprofit that is financially accountable
    to the government entity or whose relationship with the entity are such that exclusion would cause
    the entity’s financial statements to be misleading or incomplete.
    2
    52349-3-II
    The University is the sole member of ARUP.5 The Board of Directors, who control the
    management and direction of ARUP, consists of ten members, three of whom are representatives
    appointed by the president of the University, the chairman of the University Department of
    Pathology, and the president of ARUP. The majority of directors “shall be employees, officers, or
    trustees of the University of Utah.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 427. The remaining board members
    are non-University community members. Approximately 80 faculty members of the University
    oversee ARUP’s laboratories, which employs roughly 3,000 technicians and support staff who are
    employees of ARUP but not the University. Approximately 15-20 medical students from the
    University work under supervision at ARUP.
    ARUP maintains its own bank accounts and is not financially dependent on the University.
    It does not receive funding from the State of Utah. ARUP has historically paid settlements and
    judgments out of its own funds. ARUP’s Chief Financial Officer (CFO) explained that there has
    never been a need for the State or the University to pay judgments because ARUP has always been
    capable of meeting the obligations, however, it is “conceivable that if ARUP . . . could not meet
    the obligation, that the university would . . . or the State of Utah.” CP at 234.
    ARUP filed an action against the Department of Revenue (DOR) seeking the refund of
    $713,920.19 in B&O taxes for the tax period from January 2013 to December 2016.6 Both parties
    5
    Utah nonprofits have members, which is the equivalent of a shareholder in a for-profit
    corporation.
    6
    ARUP challenged an assessment of B&O taxes during the tax period January 2008 through
    December 2011 before the Board of Tax Appeals. Associated Reg’l & Univ. Pathologists v. Dep’t
    of Revenue, No. 13-124, 
    2016 WL 3262421
    , at *3 (Wash. Bd. of Tax Appeals May 6, 2016). It
    used the same arguments that it makes here, and the board determined that the DOR had properly
    apportioned ARUP’s income to Washington. Associated Reg’l & Univ. Pathologists, 
    2016 WL 3262421
    , at 5. ARUP did not appeal.
    3
    52349-3-II
    moved for summary judgment. The trial court denied ARUP’s motion for summary judgment and
    granted DOR’s motion for summary judgment. ARUP appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    I.     LEGAL PRINCIPLES
    We review an order granting summary judgment de novo, performing the same inquiry as
    the trial court. Aba Sheikh v. Choe, 
    156 Wash. 2d 441
    , 447, 
    128 P.3d 574
    (2006). “Summary
    judgment is appropriate only if the pleadings, affidavits, depositions, and admissions on file
    demonstrate the absence of any genuine issues of material fact and that the moving party is entitled
    to judgment as a matter of law.” Sheehan v. Cent. Puget Sound Reg’l Transit Auth., 
    155 Wash. 2d 790
    , 797, 
    123 P.3d 88
    (2005).
    We also review questions of statutory interpretation de novo. Bostain v. Food Express,
    Inc., 
    159 Wash. 2d 700
    , 708, 
    153 P.3d 846
    (2007). The “fundamental objective” of statutory
    interpretation “is to ascertain and carry out the Legislature’s intent.” Dept. of Ecology v. Campbell
    & Gwinn, LLC, 
    146 Wash. 2d 1
    , 9, 
    43 P.3d 4
    (2002). Where a “statute’s meaning is plain on its face,
    then the court must give effect to that plain meaning as an expression of legislative intent.”
    Campbell & 
    Gwinn, 146 Wash. 2d at 9-10
    . Such plain meaning “is discerned from all that the
    Legislature has said in the statute and related statutes which disclose legislative intent about the
    provision in question.” Campbell & 
    Gwinn, 146 Wash. 2d at 11
    . If “the statute remains susceptible
    to more than one reasonable meaning” after such inquiry, it is ambiguous and we must “resort to
    aids to construction, including legislative history.” Campbell & 
    Gwinn, 146 Wash. 2d at 12
    .
    The rules of statutory construction also apply to the interpretation of administrative
    regulations adopted pursuant to statutory authority. Cannon v. Dep’t of Licensing, 
    147 Wash. 2d 41
    ,
    56, 
    50 P.3d 627
    (2002). In this context, appellate courts “interpret[ ] a WAC provision to ascertain
    4
    52349-3-II
    and give effect to its underlying policy and intent.” 
    Cannon, 147 Wash. 2d at 56
    . “Rules and
    regulations are to be given a rational, sensible interpretation,” and courts will not consider them
    “ambiguous simply because different interpretations are conceivable.” 
    Cannon, 147 Wash. 2d at 56
    -
    57. As with statutes, courts do not generally apply canons of construction to unambiguous
    administrative regulations. 
    Cannon, 147 Wash. 2d at 57
    . Courts should, however, “avoid a literal
    reading of a provision if it would result in unlikely, absurd, or strained consequences.” 
    Cannon, 147 Wash. 2d at 57
    .
    “As a rule, ‘[a] definition which declares what a term “means” . . . excludes any meaning
    that is not stated.’” Colautti v. Franklin, 
    439 U.S. 379
    , 392 n.10, 
    99 S. Ct. 675
    , 
    58 L. Ed. 2d 596
    (1979) (quoting 2A C. SANDS, STATUTES AND STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION § 47.07 (4th ed. 1978));
    State v. Leek, 
    26 Wash. App. 651
    , 655, 
    614 P.2d 209
    (1980).
    II.    ARUP IS A PERSON UNDER B&O STATUTE
    ARUP contends that it is an “arm of Utah”; therefore, it is the State of Utah. It further
    argues that because only persons, and not states, are subject to the B&O tax, ARUP is not subject
    to the tax. Br. of Appellant at 21. We disagree with ARUP.
    Washington’s B&O tax is “extremely broad.” Steven Klein, Inc. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    183 Wash. 2d 889
    , 896, 
    357 P.3d 59
    (2015). Under RCW 82.04.220(1), “There is levied and collected
    from every person that has a substantial nexus with this state . . . a tax for the act or privilege of
    engaging in business activities.” Thus, the “‘legislature intended to impose the [B&O] tax upon
    virtually all business activities carried on within the state.’” Steven Klein, 
    Inc., 183 Wash. 2d at 896
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Simpson Inv. Co. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    141 Wash. 2d 139
    ,
    149, 
    3 P.3d 741
    (2000)).
    5
    52349-3-II
    Washington’s B&O tax applies to “every person” engaging in business activities within
    the state. RCW 82.04.220(1). “‘Person’ or ‘company’, herein used interchangeably, means any
    individual, . . . corporation, . . . whether mutual, cooperative, fraternal, nonprofit, or otherwise and
    the United States or any instrumentality thereof.” RCW 82.04.030.
    ARUP agrees with DOR that as a nonprofit, it falls within the statutory definition of
    “person” under the B&O statute. However, ARUP also argues that because it is an arm of the
    State of Utah, it is excluded from the definition. ARUP argues that “states” are excluded from the
    definition of “person.” ARUP’s argument ignores the undisputed, material fact that the University
    chose to organize ARUP as a nonprofit corporation, and it was not created as an agency of the
    State of Utah.
    The definition of “person” neither includes nor excludes “states.” RCW 82.04.220(1).
    ARUP argues that because the definition declares what “person” means, under Colautti, “it
    ‘excludes any meaning that is not 
    stated.’” 439 U.S. at 392
    n.10 (quoting 2A C. SANDS, STATUTES
    AND STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION §          47.07). ARUP’s reasoning means that a state is not a person
    subject to the B&O tax.
    ARUP relies on two cases to support its argument that it is an arm of the State of Utah.
    Both cases are distinguishable from the present situation because they involve different factual
    situations and different statutes.
    In the first case, Hontz v. State, 
    105 Wash. 2d 302
    , 
    714 P.2d 1176
    (1986), multiple individuals
    sued Harborview Medical Center and other defendants, alleging that they had been deprived of
    their civil rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Section 1983 does not define “person,” but the Supreme
    Court has held that “person” does not include a state. Edgar v. State, 
    92 Wash. 2d 217
    , 222, 
    595 P.2d 534
    (1979), cert. denied, 
    444 U.S. 1077
    (1980). The State is not suable under section 1983. Hontz,
    6
    
    52349-3-II 105 Wash. 2d at 309
    . The uncontroverted evidence showed that the University of Washington (UW),
    a state agency, operated and managed Harborview, and that UW employed all of Harborview’s
    employees. A fund held by the state treasurer paid claims against Harborview. 
    Hontz, 105 Wash. 2d at 310
    . The suit was “in legal effect a suit against the State” and could not be maintained. 
    Hontz, 105 Wash. 2d at 310
    .
    Here, during the relevant tax period, ARUP’s Board of Directors, who control the
    management and direction of ARUP, consisted of ten members, a majority of whom were
    employees, officers or trustees of the University. However, the employees of ARUP are not all
    employees of the University. Only approximately 80 faculty members of the University oversee
    the laboratories. The laboratories are staffed by roughly 3,000 technicians and support staff who
    are employees of ARUP, not the University.
    In regard to liability, ARUP has historically paid settlements and judgments out of its own
    funds. ARUP’s CFO explained that there has never been a need for the state or the University to
    pay judgments because ARUP has always been capable of meeting the obligations, however, it is
    “conceivable that if ARUP . . . could not meet the obligation, that the university would . . . or the
    State of Utah.” CP at 234. There is no evidence in ARUP’s articles of incorporation, bylaws, or
    other parts of the record that the University or the State of Utah would be liable for any judgment
    against ARUP. Liability of the medical directors is covered under the University’s plan, but
    liability for ARUP’s employees are covered under its own insurance plan. The key facts that the
    court relied on in Hontz to determine that Harborview was an arm of the State of Washington are
    missing here.
    ARUP also relies on Hyde v. University of Washington Medical Center, 
    186 Wash. App. 926
    ,
    
    347 P.3d 918
    (2015), where the court determined that the Association of University Physicians
    7
    52349-3-II
    (UWP), a nonprofit corporation created by the UW School of Medicine, was an arm of the State
    of Washington. The court reversed an order denying summary judgment under the tort claim
    statute, RCW 4.92.100 and .110. 
    Hyde, 186 Wash. App. at 937
    . The court determined that the UW
    School of Medicine, a state agency, controlled UWP. UWP was created to serve the purposes of
    the UW School of Medicine. 
    Hyde, 186 Wash. App. at 927
    . UWP provided physician services in
    hospitals owned and operated by the UW. UWP’s members are UW faculty members. 
    Hyde, 186 Wash. App. at 929
    .
    The court also looked at several factors. First, the articles of incorporation, bylaws and
    operating agreement demonstrated that UWP was a nonprofit corporation created for the benefit
    of the UW School of Medicine. Its principal and income were devoted exclusively to that purpose.
    
    Hyde, 186 Wash. App. at 931
    . Second, a board of trustees managed and directed UWP. The board
    consisted of the chair of each department at the UW School of Medicine and a minority of
    community members appointed by the dean of the medical school. 
    Hyde, 186 Wash. App. at 931
    .
    When UWP is dissolved, all of its remaining assets would go to the UW. 
    Hyde, 186 Wash. App. at 931
    . Third, all UWP physicians were UW faculty members and employees. They were agents of
    UW for professional liability purposes. 
    Hyde, 186 Wash. App. at 933-34
    . The court emphasized
    the liability aspect in making its determination.
    Finally, the court stated that UWP’s status as a separate non-profit corporation did not
    preclude it from being considered an arm of the state. 
    Hyde, 186 Wash. App. at 934
    . The court
    relied on Good v. Associated Students of the University of Washington, 
    86 Wash. 2d 94
    , 97, 
    542 P.2d 762
    (1975). In that case, the court determined that Associated Students of the UW, a separate
    nonprofit corporation, was an arm and agency of the UW. 
    Good, 86 Wash. 2d at 97
    . It was an arm
    8
    52349-3-II
    and agency of the UW because it was subject to the ultimate control by the UW Board of Regents.
    
    Good, 86 Wash. 2d at 98
    .
    Here, ARUP’s bylaws and articles of incorporation both state that the purpose of ARUP is
    to serve the University’s educational and charitable purposes, and its income accrues to the State
    of Utah or the University to further those purposes. The University is the sole voting member of
    ARUP. The composition of ARUP’s Board of Directors is similar to that of UWP. However, in
    regard to the day-to-day operation of ARUP, the majority of employees of ARUP are not
    employees of the University. In regard to liability, ARUP pays settlements and judgments out of
    its own funds.
    Many of the factors relied on in Hyde and Hontz are not present in this case. Unlike there,
    ARUP, and not the State of Utah, is responsible for liability in the case of legal actions. Unlike
    there, ARUP has employees who are not employees of the state. We conclude that ARUP is not
    an arm of the state, like Harborview in Hyde or UWP in Hontz. ARUP is a person subject to the
    B&O tax.
    III.   ARUPS WASHINGTON REVENUE
    ARUP contends that the samples it tests are tangible personal property for tax purposes;
    therefore, the benefit of the service is located where the tangible personal property is located or
    “where the place of principal use occurs.” Br of Appellant at 14 (quoting WAC 458-20-
    19402(303)(b)). It cites the fact that “testing of the tangible personal property” is included as part
    of a non-exclusive list of services that relate to tangible personal property under WAC 458-20-
    19402(303)(b). Br. of Appellant at 14. Therefore, ARUP argues the revenue from testing samples
    in Utah that are sent by Washington customers should be attributed to Utah.
    9
    52349-3-II
    DOR contends that the regulation must be read in the context of RCW 82.04.462 because
    WAC 458-20-19402 was promulgated to help taxpayers assess where the benefit of the service is
    received. It argues that in promulgating the regulation, DOR intended the “testing of tangible
    personal property” example to “describe services where the benefit the customer receives is the
    use or enjoyment of the [property] being tested.” Br. for Resp’t at 26. Therefore, the benefit of
    the service is the information received from the testing services, not the sample itself. We agree
    with DOR.
    A.      Legal Principles
    Washington imposes the B&O tax “for the act or privilege of engaging in business
    activities” here. RCW 82.04.220; Lamtec Corp. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    170 Wash. 2d 838
    , 843, 
    246 P.3d 788
    (2011). The statute requires “every person” who has a substantial nexus with this state
    and who conducts activities here “with the object of gain, benefit, or advantage to the taxpayer or
    to another person or class, directly or indirectly” to pay a percentage of the gross receipts of the
    resulting sales. RCW 82.04.220; RCW 82.04.140; 
    Lamtec, 170 Wash. 2d at 843
    .
    To determine the amount of B&O tax owed, DOR uses an apportionment formula.7 One
    of the important parts of the formula is “the total gross income of the business of the taxpayer
    attributable to [Washington] during the tax year from engaging in an apportionable activity.”
    7
    The DOR explained how the apportionment formula works as follows: “Single factor
    apportionment formula” multiplies a person’s “apportionable income” by its “receipts factor.”
    RCW 82.04.462(1). The “receipts factor” is a fraction where the numerator is the gross income of
    the business attributed to Washington during the tax year, and the denominator is the total gross
    income of the business worldwide during the tax year. RCW 82.04.462(3)(a). To determine the
    numerator of the receipts factor, i.e., the amount of gross income to attribute to Washington, the
    legislature provides that the “gross income of the business generated from each apportionable
    activity is attributable to the state . . . [w]here the customer received the benefit of the taxpayer’s
    service.” Br. of Resp’t at 17 (quoting RCW 82.04.462(3)(b)(i)).
    10
    52349-3-II
    RCW 82.04.462(3)(a). The statute explains that a taxpayer’s “apportionable activity is attributable
    to the state . . . [w]here the customer received the benefit of the taxpayer’s service.” RCW
    82.04.462(3)(b)(i). Customer is defined as the “person or entity to whom the taxpayer makes a
    sale or renders services or from whom the taxpayer otherwise receives gross income of the
    business.” RCW 82.04.462(3)(b)(viii).
    Guidance on “where the taxpayer’s customer receives the benefit of the service” is
    provided in WAC 458-20-19402. The parties refer to this regulation as “Rule 19402.” The
    regulation states in relevant part:
    (303) Benefit of the service explained. . . . This subsection explains the framework
    for determining where the benefit of a service is received.
    ....
    (b) If the taxpayer’s service relates to tangible personal property, then the benefit
    is received where the tangible personal property is located or intended/expected
    to be located.
    (i) Tangible personal property is generally treated as located where the place
    of principal use occurs . . .
    ....
    (iii) The following is a nonexclusive list of services that relate to tangible
    personal property:
    ....
    (C) Inspections of the tangible personal property;
    (D) Testing of the tangible personal property;
    ....
    (c) If the taxpayer’s service does not relate to real or tangible personal property,
    the service is provided to a customer engaged in business, and the service relates
    to the customer’s business activities, then the benefit is received where the
    customer's related business activities occur.
    ....
    (d) If the taxpayer’s service does not relate to real or tangible personal property,
    is either provided to a customer not engaged in business or unrelated to the
    customer’s business activities; and:
    ....
    11
    52349-3-II
    (iii) If (d)(i) and (ii) of this subsection do not apply, the benefit of the service
    is received where the customer resides. The following is a nonexclusive list
    of services whose benefit is received at the customer’s residence:
    ....
    (D) Blood tests (not blood drawing).
    WAC 458-20-19402.
    B.      Where is the benefit of ARUP’s service received?
    ARUP argues that if we determine that it is subject to the B&O tax, the regulations require
    that the income from Washington customers be apportioned to Utah in the apportionment formula.
    DOR argues that the income should be apportioned to Washington. We agree with DOR.
    At issue is the interpretation of RCW 82.04.462(3)(b)(i) which reads, in pertinent part,
    “apportionable activity is attributable to the state . . . [w]here the customer received the benefit of
    the taxpayer’s service.”     A person earning “apportionable income” that is taxable both in
    Washington and another state must apportion to Washington the amount that person derived from
    business activities performed within Washington. “Apportionable income” means gross income
    of the business generated from engaging in activities falling within the “services” classification
    under the B&O tax classification. RCW 82.04.460(4)(a); RCW 82.04.290. ARUP does not
    dispute that it earned “apportionable income,” which is the laboratory services provided to
    Washington customers. However, neither the statute nor any regulation defines “benefit.”
    “An undefined term is ‘given its plain and ordinary meaning unless a contrary legislative
    intent is indicated.’” State v. Donaghe, 
    172 Wash. 2d 253
    , 262, 
    256 P.3d 1171
    (2011) (quoting
    Ravenscroft v. Wash. Water Power Co., 
    136 Wash. 2d 911
    , 920-21, 
    969 P.2d 75
    (1998)). To
    determine the plain meaning of an undefined term, we may look to the dictionary. HomeStreet,
    Inc. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    166 Wash. 2d 444
    , 451, 
    210 P.3d 297
    (2009). Black’s Law Dictionary
    12
    52349-3-II
    defines benefit as “The advantage or privilege something gives; the helpful or useful effect
    something has.” Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
    To determine to which state the income ARUP received from its Washington customers
    should be apportioned, we must determine where ARUP’s customers receive the helpful or useful
    effect of its services. ARUP’s services assist medical providers in diagnosing their patients. The
    medical providers cannot diagnose their patients until they receive the results of the tests they
    ordered from ARUP. Therefore, we agree with DOR and conclude that the benefit is received
    where the medical provider is located, which is in Washington.
    This interpretation is consistent with the legislature’s intent in creating the B&O tax as well
    as the 2010 changes to the apportionment method. “‘[T]he legislature intended to impose the
    [B&O] tax upon virtually all business activities carried on within the state,’ and to ‘leave
    practically no business and commerce free of . . . tax.’” Simpson Inv. 
    Co., 141 Wash. 2d at 149
    (citation omitted) (quoting Time Oil Co. v. State, 
    79 Wash. 2d 143
    , 146, 
    483 P.2d 628
    (1971) and
    Budget Rent-A-Car of Wash.-Or., Inc. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    81 Wash. 2d 171
    , 175, 
    500 P.2d 764
    (1972)).     Additionally, the legislature changed to a single factor apportionment formula
    specifically to reach entities like ARUP.8 “The express purpose of the change in the law was to
    8
    The apportionment formula determines how much tax a company that does business in multiple
    states has to pay to Washington. The previous and more traditional method of apportionment was
    a three-factor apportionment. When the three factor apportionment formula was applied to the
    income of a company that was located outside of Washington and that provided a service (as
    opposed to product manufacturing) to a Washington customer, the income from that service was
    normally apportioned to the state where the company was located. This means that there was very
    little (or no) tax paid by the company to Washington. A single factor apportionment formula, on
    the other hand, apportions the income of the company to where the benefit of the services is
    received, rather than where the company providing the services is located. With this method, more
    tax is paid to Washington where the income originated. See Giles Sutton et al., The Increasingly
    Complex Apportionment Rules for Service-Based Business: Basic Issues (pt. 1), J. MULTISTATE
    TAX'N & INCENTIVES, Oct. 2007, at 24, 26, 
    2007 WL 3201540
    , *2.
    13
    52349-3-II
    require businesses ‘earn(ing) significant income from Washington residents from providing
    services’ to ‘pay their fair share of the cost of services that this state renders and the infrastructure
    it provides.’” WAC 458-20-19402 (quoting LAWS OF 2010, 1st spec. sess., ch. 23, § 101). Because
    ARUP earns a significant amount of income from serving Washington residents, specifically
    medical providers located in Washington, we conclude that the legislature intended to tax out-of-
    state entities like ARUP.
    C.      Do ARUPs Services Relate to Tangible Personal Property?
    ARUP argues that we must look to WAC 458-20-19402, to determine where the benefit is
    received. It argues that the specimen samples are tangible personal property for tax purposes;
    therefore, the benefit of the service is located where the tangible personal property is located or
    “where the place of principal use occurs.” Br of Appellant at 14.
    DOR argues that both RCW 82.04.462 and WAC 458-20-19402 confirm that the benefit
    of the service from ARUP is received in Washington and the revenue should be apportioned to
    Washington. We agree with DOR.
    The regulation and the statute can be read consistent with each other. Section 303(b) of
    the regulation applies when “the taxpayer's service relates to tangible personal property,” and is
    meant to describe services where the benefit that the customer receives is in the use or enjoyment
    of the property. The regulation gives detailed examples of services, including testing, that are
    related to tangible personal property. WAC 458-20-19402(304)(b). All of the examples describe
    the use of widgets, tools and equipment. The services related to these items of property facilitate
    the use and enjoyment of the property. Unlike testing of tools and widgets, the purpose of the
    service provided by ARUP is to provide the results of the testing, rather than the use and enjoyment
    14
    52349-3-II
    of the property. For this reason, the samples are not sent back to the customers after the testing is
    complete, but reports on the results are sent to the medical providers.
    Section 303(c) of the regulation applies when “the taxpayer’s service does not relate to real
    or tangible personal property.” WAC 458-20-19402(303)(c). This section includes the services
    that “involve” the use of tangible personal property, but the benefit received is the result produced
    by the service, not the use or enjoyment of the property. The benefit received from ARUPs services
    is the result, not the use or enjoyment of the specimens.
    This characterization of ARUP’s services is also consistent with section 303(d), which
    applies “[i]f the taxpayer’s service does not relate to real or tangible personal property [and] is
    either provided to a customer not engaged in business or unrelated to the customer’s business
    activities.” WAC 458-20-19402(303)(d). Included under this section in a “nonexclusive list of
    services whose benefit is received at the customer’s residence,” is “Blood tests (not blood
    drawing).” WAC 458-20-19402(303)(d).
    Blood testing is listed as a part of a category of service that “does not relate to real or
    tangible personal property,” for customers not engaged in business. WAC 458-20-19402(303)(d).
    It should be similarly considered for customers engaged in business. The purpose of conducting
    blood tests is to receive results, whether or not the customer is a medical provider in the business
    of diagnosing patients or an individual seeking test results. We therefore determine that the benefit
    of ARUP’s services to Washington customers should be attributed to Washington under both RCW
    82.04.462 and WAC 458-20-19402(303)(c).
    15
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    We affirm.
    Melnick, J.
    I concur:
    Lee, J.
    16
    52349-3-II
    MAXA, C.J. (dissenting in part) – I agree with the majority opinion that ARUP
    Laboratories, Inc. is a “person” for purposes of the Washington Business and Occupation (B&O)
    tax. But I disagree that ARUP is subject to Washington B&O taxes for income derived from
    testing in Utah of bodily fluid and tissue samples received from Washington customers.
    RCW 82.04.462(3)(b)(i) states that income for B&O tax purposes is attributable to the
    state where “the customer received the benefit of the taxpayer’s service.” But for a service like
    the testing of bodily fluid and tissue samples, it is unclear where the benefit of the testing is
    received. Is the benefit received in Utah, where the samples are used to perform testing and the
    usable results are obtained, especially since the samples are not returned to Washington? Or is
    the benefit received in Washington, where the test results are used in diagnosis and treatment?
    RCW 82.04.462(3)(b)(i) provides no assistance in resolving this issue.
    However, the Department of Revenue (DOR) adopted WAC 458-20-19402 (Rule 19402),
    which in subsection (303) “explains the framework for determining where the benefit of a
    service is received.” Subsection (303)(b) states, “If the taxpayer’s service relates to tangible
    personal property, then the benefit is received where the tangible personal property is located or
    intended/expected to be located.” Subsection (303)(b)(i) states, “Tangible personal property is
    generally treated as located where the place of principal use occurs.”
    Here, the bodily fluid and tissue samples clearly are tangible personal property. And
    there is no question that the samples are located and will remain located in Utah and that Utah is
    the place the samples are used. DOR emphasizes that the test results are sent to Washington and
    used in Washington. But the samples clearly remain in and are used in Utah. Therefore,
    subsection (303)(b)(i) suggests that the benefit of ARUP’s testing was received in Utah.
    17
    52349-3-II
    Further, there is no question that subsection (303)(b) of Rule 19402 applies here.
    Subsection (303)(b)(iii) provides a “nonexclusive list of services that relate to tangible personal
    property.” This list includes “(D) Testing of tangible personal property.” ARUP’s testing of
    bodily fluid and tissue samples unequivocally constitutes the “[t]esting of tangible personal
    property.”
    Both DOR and the majority opinion try to explain away subsection (303)(b), but I believe
    that their attempts are unsuccessful. Subsections (303)(b) and (303)(b)(i) could not be more
    clear: (1) testing of tangible property is a service that relates to tangible personal property, (2) for
    such service the benefit is received where the tangible property is located, and (3) tangible
    personal property is located where the principal use occurs. DOR drafted and adopted this
    regulation, and DOR cannot now claim that we should not follow its provisions.
    I would hold that ARUP is not subject to Washington’s B&O taxes for income derived
    from testing in Utah of bodily fluid and tissue samples received from Washington customers.
    Maxa, C.J.
    18