09-005759RX
Gamestop, Inc. vs.
Department Of Revenue
Status: Closed
DOAH Final Order on Tuesday, May 4, 2010.
DOAH Final Order on Tuesday, May 4, 2010.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8GAMESTOP, INC., )
11)
12Petitioners, )
14)
15vs. ) Case No. 09-5759RX
20)
21DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, )
25)
26Respondent. )
28)
29FINAL ORDER
31Pursuant to notice, a formal hearing was held in this case
42on February 15, 2010, in Tallahassee, Florida, before
50Lawrence P. Stevenson, a duly-designated Administrative Law
57Judge of the Division of Administrative Hearings.
64APPEARANCES
65For Petitioner: Martha Harrell Chumbler, Esquire
71Matthew Bernier, Esquire
74Carlton Fields, P.A.
77215 South Monroe Street, Suite 500
83Post Office Drawer 190
87Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0190
90For Respondent: Jeffrey M. Dikman, Esquire
96Office of the Attorney General
101The Capitol, Plaza 01
105Tallahassee, Florida 32399
108STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
112Whether subsections (1) and (2) of Florida Administrative
120Code Rule 12A-1.074 enlarge, modify or contravene the specific
129provisions of law implemented, or are arbitrary or capricious,
138and thus constitute an invalid exercise of delegated legislative
147authority.
148PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
150On October 20, 2009, Petitioner GameStop, Inc. ("GameStop")
160filed a Petition to Determine the Invalidity of an Existing
170Rule, challenging Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A-1.074(1)
177and (2). The case was assigned to the undersigned and scheduled
188for hearing on November 19, 2009. On October 30, 2009,
198Respondent Department of Revenue (the "Department") filed a
207motion seeking to continue the hearing and to conduct out-of-
217state depositions via telephone. On November 4, 2009, GameStop
226filed a responsive pleading in opposition to both the
235continuance and the telephonic depositions. By Order dated
243November 5, 2009, the undersigned denied the motion to continue
253the hearing but granted the motion to conduct telephonic
262depositions.
263On November 5, 2009, GameStop's current counsel entered
271their appearance and filed an unopposed motion to continue the
281hearing. The motion was granted by way of an amended notice of
293hearing re-scheduling the final hearing for February 15, 2010.
302On November 17, 2009, GameStop filed a Motion for Leave to
313File an Amended Petition. The Department did not oppose the
323motion, which was granted by Order dated December 4, 2009.
333GameStop filed its Amended Petition to Determine the Invalidity
342of an Existing Rule on December 4, 2009.
350The Amended Petition alleges that subsections (1) and (2)
359of Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A-1.074 constitute an
367invalid exercise of delegated legislative authority because they
375enlarge, modify or contravene the specific provisions of the
384laws implemented, Sections 212.02(15) and (16) and 212.09(1) and
393(2), Florida Statutes. The Amended Petition also alleges that
402subsections (1) and (2) of Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A-
4121.074 are arbitrary or capricious.
417On January 25, 2010, the parties filed a Joint Prehearing
427Stipulation. On February 2, 2010, GameStop filed a motion for
437summary final order. On February 8, 2010, the Department filed
447its written response in opposition to the motion, with the
457supporting affidavit of H. French Brown, IV.
464At the outset of the final hearing, the parties agreed that
475there remained no issues of material fact, and that the case
486could proceed to decision based on GameStop's motion for summary
496final order, the Department's response, the agreed facts set
505forth in the Joint Prehearing Stipulation, and Mr. Brown's
514affidavit. The final hearing consisted of legal argument, with
523no live testimony presented and no exhibits offered into
532evidence.
533The one-volume Transcript of the hearing was filed at the
543Division of Administrative Hearings on February 24, 2010. The
552parties filed their Proposed Final Orders on March 8, 2010. All
563references are to the 2009 codification of Florida Statutes
572unless otherwise indicated.
575FINDINGS OF FACT
578Based on the stipulated facts and the uncontested affidavit
587of H. French Brown, IV, the following findings of facts are
598made.
5991. The rule provisions at issue in this proceeding are
609subsections (1) and (2) of Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A-
6191.074, hereinafter referenced as "the Rule." The Rule provides:
62812Aade-Ins.
629(1) Where used articles of tangible
635personal property, accepted and intended for
641resale, are taken in trade, or a series of
650trades, at the time of sale, as a credit or
660part payment on the sale of new articles of
669tangible personal property, the tax levied
675by Chapter 212, F.S., shall be paid on the
684sales price of the new article of tangible
692personal property, less credit for the used
699article of tangible personal property taken
705in trade. A separate or independent sale of
713tangible personal property is not a trade-
720in, even if the proceeds from the sale are
729immediately applied by the seller to a
736purchase of new articles of tangible
742personal property.
744(2) Where used articles of tangible
750personal property, accepted and intended for
756resale, are taken in trade, or a series of
765trades, at the time of sale, as a credit or
775part payment on the sale of used articles,
783the tax levied by Chapter 212, F.S., shall
791be paid on the sales price of the used
800article of tangible personal property, less
806credit for the used articles of tangible
813personal property taken in trade. A
819separate or independent sale of tangible
825personal property is not a trade-in, even if
833the proceeds from the sale are immediately
840applied by the seller to a purchase of new
849articles of tangible personal property. 1 /
8562. The Rule states that it is intended to implement the
867following statutory provisions: Sections 212.02(15), 212.02(16),
873212.07(2), 212.07(3), and 212.09, Florida Statutes.
8793. Section 212.02, Florida Statutes, provides, in relevant
887part:
888212.02 Definitions -- The following terms
894and phrases when used in this chapter have
902the meanings ascribed to them in this
909section, except where the context clearly
915indicates a different meaning:
919* * *
922(15) "Sale" means and includes:
927(a) Any transfer of title or possession, or
935both, exchange, barter, license, lease, or
941rental, conditional or otherwise, in any
947manner or by any means whatsoever, of
954tangible personal property for a
959consideration. . . .
963(16) "Sales price" means the total amount
970paid for tangible personal property,
975including any services that are a part of
983the sale, valued in money, whether paid in
991money or otherwise, and includes any amount
998for which credit is given to the purchaser
1006by the seller, without any deduction
1012therefrom on account of the cost of the
1020property sold, the cost of materials used,
1027labor or service cost, interest charged,
1033losses, or any other expense whatsoever. . .
1041Trade-ins or discounts allowed and taken at
1048the time of sale shall not be included
1056within the purview of this subsection. . .
10644. Section 212.07(2), Florida Statutes, set forth the
1072method and manner by which a dealer is to charge and collect
1084sales tax. Section 212.07(3), Florida Statutes, sets forth
1092penalties for a dealer who fails to collect sales tax. Neither
1103of these provisions affects the matters at issue in this
1113proceeding.
11145. Section 212.09, Florida Statutes, provides, in relevant
1122part:
1123ade-ins deducted; exception.--
1126(1) Where used articles, accepted and
1132intended for resale, are taken in trade, or
1140a series of trades, as a credit or part
1149payment on the sale of new articles, the tax
1158levied by this chapter shall be paid on the
1167sales price of the new article, less the
1175credit for the used article taken in trade.
1183(2) Where used articles, accepted and
1189intended for resale, are taken in trade, or
1197a series of trades, as a credit or part
1206payment on the sale of used articles, the
1214tax levied by this chapter shall be paid on
1223the sales price of the used article less the
1232credit for the used article taken in
1239trade....[ 2 / ]
12436. GameStop is a Minnesota corporation that is authorized
1252to do business in the State of Florida, and a registered dealer
1264for purposes of collecting and remitting sales and use tax to
1275the Department.
12777. GameStop is a publicly held international retailer of
1286new and used video game hardware, software, and accessories,
1295with over 6,000 stores worldwide, including stores in Florida.
1305One of GameStop's customary business practices is to accept from
1315its customers used gaming software, hardware, and accessories
1323that the GameStop store manager determines is in resalable or
1333re-furbishable condition.
13358. In return for the used articles, a GameStop customer
1345may choose among three options:
1350Option 1: The customer may receive cash in exchange
1359for the used items.
1363Option 2: The customer may apply the value assigned
1372to the item by the store manager as part payment
1382toward the immediate purchase of another new or used
1391item from GameStop.
1394Option 3: The customer may receive a credit for the
1404value of the used item, which may be used only toward
1415the purchase of new or used items from GameStop at
1425some time in the future.
14309. If the GameStop customer elects Option 1, he receives
144020 percent less value in the cash exchange than he would have
1452received pursuant to the part payment offered by Option 2 or the
1464credit toward a future purchase offered by Option 3.
147310. For a customer who chooses Option 3, GameStop tracks
1483outstanding credits by issuing to the customer an "EdgeCard."
1492When the customer returns to a GameStop store and requests to
1503apply credits toward the purchase of a new or used item, the
1515GameStop salesperson can swipe the electronic strip on the back
1525of the EdgeCard and learn the credit amount available to the
1536customer.
153711. The EdgeCard system merely tracks the amount of
1546ongoing credits available to the customer. It does not record
1556any request made by the customer to reserve or identify a
1567specific item toward which the credits will later be used.
157712. The credits on an EdgeCard never expire. Once the
1587customer has chosen Option 3, he may go to a GameStop store or
1600access the GameStop website at any time thereafter and apply the
1611credit on his account toward the purchase of new or used items
1623from GameStop.
162513. GameStop also offers traditional gift cards that are
1634purchased via cash or credit card rather than in exchange for
1645used articles. Purchases made using a gift card or gift
1655certificate are taxable for the full purchase price. 3 / When a
1667customer uses a gift card to purchase an item at a GameStop
1679store, GameStop does not reduce the taxable sales price by the
1690amount of the credit or value stored on the gift card and used
1703in the purchase.
170614. GameStop assigns no redeemable cash value to the
1715EdgeCard or to traditional gift cards.
172115. GameStop does not allow a gift card to be used to
1733store credits obtained through the exchange of used items,
1742reserving that function exclusively to the EdgeCard. The value
1751of a GameStop gift card can be redeemed only through the
1762purchase of new or used items from GameStop.
177016. Credits can be added to an EdgeCard only by turning
1781over used articles to GameStop. A customer may not purchase
1791credits. A credit on an EdgeCard can only be redeemed by the
1803subsequent purchase of new or used items from GameStop.
181217. The GameStop customer who selects Option 3 first
1821submits his used game or item of hardware to the GameStop store,
1833which assigns it a dollar value and credits that amount to the
1845customer's EdgeCard account in exchange for the item. At some
1855later date, the customer returns to the GameStop store and
1865trades the credit stored on the EdgeCard for some used or new
1877item. The customer may build up credits on the EdgeCard with
1888any number of transactions over any length of time before
1898trading in the credits for an item from GameStop. The customer
1909is not required to identify the item toward which he wishes to
1921apply his EdgeCard credits until the time he actually trades the
1932credits for the item.
193618. The Edge Card system replaced GameStop's former
1944practice of requiring a customer who chose to obtain a credit
1955for the submission of used articles to retain a cash register
1966receipt showing the amount of the credit. This "paper credit"
1976would then be redeemable toward the purchase of another item at
1987a later date.
199019. There is no expiration date on an EdgeCard, a gift
2001card, or a paper credit.
200620. GameStop does not replace the credits on a lost
2016EdgeCard or a lost gift card.
202221. For purposes of accounting, GameStop carries
2029unredeemed EdgeCard credits on its books for a period of three
2040years as customer liabilities. GameStop does the same for
2049unredeemed value on gift cards.
205422. GameStop continues to honor unredeemed EdgeCard
2061credits and gift card values that are more than three years old,
2073but no longer carries them on its books as customer liabilities.
208423. Prior to 2007, for the purpose of collecting sales tax
2095from its customers, GameStop deducted the value of EdgeCard or
2105any paper credits used in the purchase of new or used items from
2118the purchase price for the purpose of calculating sales tax due.
212924. GameStop has remitted to the Department tax for the
2139entire sales price of new or used items purchased from
2149approximately January 2007 through August 31, 2007, in response
2158to an audit by the Department, without reducing the taxable
2168sales price by the value of any EdgeCard or paper credits used.
218025. GameStop has a return policy that allows a customer
2190who is not satisfied with an item purchased from GameStop to
2201return the item within a certain period of time and under
2212certain conditions.
221426. When a customer returns an item in compliance with
2224GameStop's return policy, the customer receives full retail
2232value back, including the amount of the tax paid on the original
2244purchase. A customer who returns an item in compliance with
2254GameStop's return policy can elect to receive the return value
2264in the form of cash, as a reimbursement to the customer's credit
2276card, or as value stored on a GameStop merchandise card. The
2287GameStop merchandise card does not record credits received via
2296the return of used articles.
230127. The Department states that its historical
2308administration and interpretation of the Rule and the statutes
2317it implements do not strictly limit trade-in credits to a
2327simultaneous exchange situation, or to transactions occurring
2334within any particular time frame. However, the Department
2342states that it does require the customer to identify the
2352merchandise to be purchased with the EdgeCard credits at the
2362time the credits are acquired. The Department does not consider
2372the transaction to constitute a "trade-in" unless the item to be
2383purchased with the EdgeCard credits has been specifically
2391identified by the customer at the time the customer first
2401returned a used item to GameStop.
2407CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
241028. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
2417jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of this
2426proceeding pursuant to Section 120.56(1) and (3), Florida
2434Statutes.
243529. Section 120.56 provides in pertinent part:
2442(1) GENERAL PROCEDURES FOR CHALLENGING
2447THE VALIDITY OF A RULE OR A PROPOSED RULE.--
2456(a) Any person substantially affected by
2462a rule or a proposed rule may seek an
2471administrative determination of the
2475invalidity of the rule on the ground that
2483the rule is an invalid exercise of delegated
2491legislative authority.
2493(b) The petition seeking an
2498administrative determination must state with
2503particularity the provisions alleged to be
2509invalid with sufficient explanation of the
2515facts or grounds for the alleged invalidity
2522and facts sufficient to show that the person
2530challenging a rule is substantially affected
2536by it, or that the person challenging a
2544proposed rule would be substantially
2549affected by it.
2552* * *
2555(3) CHALLENGING EXISTING RULES; SPECIAL
2560PROVISIONS.--
2561(a) A substantially affected person may
2567seek an administrative determination of the
2573invalidity of an existing rule at any time
2581during the existence of the rule. The
2588petitioner has a burden of proving by a
2596preponderance of the evidence that the
2602existing rule is an invalid exercise of
2609delegated legislative authority as to the
2615objections raised.
261730. The parties have stipulated that GameStop has standing
2626to bring this challenge to Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A-
26361.074. The stipulated facts established that GameStop is a
2645registered dealer with the obligation to collect and remit sales
2655tax from its Florida customers, and that as such GameStop is
2666directly affected by the challenged rule. Thus, GameStop has
2675standing to bring this rule challenge.
268131. As the moving party asserting the affirmative by
2690attacking the validity of an existing agency rule, GameStop in
2700this case retains the burden of proof throughout the entire
2710proceeding. § 120.56(3)(a), Fla. Stat. See also Beshore v.
2719Department of Financial Services , 928 So. 2d 411, 414 (Fla. 1st
2730DCA 2006); Espinoza v. Department of Business and Professional
2739Regulation , 739 So. 2d. 1250, 1251 (Fla. 3d DCA 1999); Balino v.
2751Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services , 348 So. 2d 349
2761(Fla. 1st DCA 1977).
276532. The party attacking an existing rule has the burden to
2776prove that the Rule constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated
2786legislative authority. Cortes v. State Board of Regents , 655
2795So. 2d 132, 135-136 (Fla. 1st DCA 1995). The standard of proof
2807is a preponderance of the evidence. See § 120.56(3)(a), Fla.
2817Stat.
281833. An Administrative Law Judge may invalidate an existing
2827Rule only if it is an invalid exercise of delegated legislative
2838authority. See § 120.56(1)(a) and (3)(a), Fla. Stat.
284634. Section 120.52(8) defines "invalid exercise of
2853delegated legislative authority" to mean:
2858[A]ction which goes beyond the powers,
2864functions, and duties delegated by the
2870Legislature. A proposed or existing rule is
2877an invalid exercise of delegated legislative
2883authority if any one of the following
2890applies:
2891(a) The agency has materially failed to
2898follow the applicable rulemaking procedures
2903or requirements set forth in this chapter;
2910(b) The agency has exceeded its grant of
2918rulemaking authority, citation to which is
2924required by s. 120.54(3)(a)1.;
2928(c) The rule enlarges, modifies, or
2934contravenes the specific provisions of law
2940implemented, citation to which is required
2946by s. 120.54(3)(a)1.;
2949(d) The rule is vague, fails to establish
2957adequate standards for agency decisions, or
2963vests unbridled discretion in the agency;
2969(e) The rule is arbitrary or capricious.
2976A rule is arbitrary if it is not supported
2985by logic or the necessary facts; a rule is
2994capricious if it is adopted without thought
3001or reason or is irrational; or;
3007(f) The rule imposes regulatory costs on
3014the regulated person, county, or city which
3021could be reduced by the adoption of less
3029costly alternatives that substantially
3033accomplish the statutory objectives.
3037A grant of rulemaking authority is
3043necessary but not sufficient to allow an
3050agency to adopt a rule; a specific law to be
3060implemented is also required. An agency may
3067adopt only rules that implement or interpret
3074the specific powers and duties granted by
3081the enabling statute. No agency shall have
3088authority to adopt a rule only because it is
3097reasonably related to the purpose of the
3104enabling legislation and is not arbitrary
3110and capricious or is within the agency's
3117class of powers and duties, nor shall an
3125agency have the authority to implement
3131statutory provisions setting forth general
3136legislative intent or policy. Statutory
3141language granting rulemaking authority or
3146generally describing the powers and
3151functions of an agency shall be construed to
3159extend no further than implementing or
3165interpreting the specific powers and duties
3171conferred by the same statute.
317635. In the Amended Petition, GameStop alleged that
3184subsections (1) and (2) of Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A-
31941.074 enlarge, modify or contravene the specific provisions of
3203the laws implemented, and are arbitrary or capricious. In its
3213proposed final order, GameStop narrowed its argument to an
3222assertion that the Rule modifies and contravenes Section 212.09,
3231Florida Statutes, and enlarges Section 212.02(16), Florida
3238Statutes. However, GameStop did not abandon its contention that
3247the Rule is arbitrary or capricious, which will be considered
3257below.
325836. The parties have agreed that neither Option 1 nor
3268Option 2 set forth in Finding of Fact 8, supra , implicates the
3280Rule. Under Option 1, no trade-in occurs because the customer
3290is simply selling his used item to GameStop. Under Option 2,
3301the value of the used item taken in trade is immediately applied
3313to the purchase of a new item from GameStop. The Department
3324agrees that where the trade-in occurs at the time of sale, the
3336value of the trade-in is deducted from the selling price and
3347thus not subject to sales tax. See § 212.02(16), Fla. Stat.
3358See also Fla. Admin. Code Rule 12A-1.018(2)("Trade-ins or
3367discounts allowed and taken at the time of sale are deducted
3378from the selling price, and the tax is due on the net amount
3391paid at the time of sale.").
339837. The dispute concerns Option 3, in which the customer
3408receives a credit for the value of the used item that may be
3421applied toward the purchase of new or used items from GameStop
3432at some time in the future via the EdgeCard device that counts
3444the accumulating credits.
344738. GameStop argues that the Rule operates to make the
3457total purchase price taxable in these situations because the
3466EdgeCard credit is not generated "at the time of sale" and
3477because the credit is created as part of a "separate or
3488independent" transaction from the final sale of new merchandise
3497by GameStop to the customer. GameStop contends that this result
3507is contrary to the mandate of Section 212.09, Florida Statutes.
351739. GameStop notes that Section 212.09 specifically
3524provides for a tax credit where used articles are taken in "a
3536series of trades," whereas the Rule restricts the credit to
3546trades taken "at the time of sale." GameStop contends that the
3557Rule's additional restriction operates to render Section 212.09
3565nugatory.
356640. GameStop's reasoning is as follows. Section
3573212.02(16), Florida Statutes, defines "sales price" generally
3580for purposes of Chapter 212, Florida Statutes. Under that
3589definition, a trade-in or discount "allowed and taken at the
3599time of sale" is not included in the sales price. As noted
3611above, the parties agree that a trade-in occurring at the time
3622of sale is deducted from the sales price and not subject to tax.
363541. GameStop argues that in Section 212.09, Florida
3643Statutes, the Legislature has enacted an entire statute
3651specifically dealing with trade-ins that expands upon the
3659general definition found in Section 212.02(16). The general
3667definition simply refers to "trade-ins or discounts" that occur
"3676at the time of sale." Section 212.09 does not address all
3687trade-ins. It is limited specifically to "used articles,
3695accepted and intended for resale." As to those specific
3704articles, Section 212.09 expands the temporal limitation imposed
3712by Section 212.02(16). The "at the time of sale" restriction no
3723longer applies because Section 212.09 allows for "a series of
3733trades" to occur over time and to constitute creditable items
3743against the price of the new article.
375042. GameStop notes the basic rule of statutory
3758construction that words used in a statute are to be given their
3770plain meaning. Courson v. State , 24 So. 3d 1249, 1251 (Fla.
37812009) ("One of the first rules of statutory construction is that
3793the plain meaning of the statute is controlling."). See also
3804Jackson County Hospital Corp. v. Aldrich , 835 So. 2d 318, 328-
3815329 (Fla. 1st DCA 2002) ("In construing a statute, the plain
3827meaning of the statutory language is the first consideration.").
3837The plain language of Section 212.09 allows the deduction for "a
3848series of trades," but the statute provides no definition for
3858the term "series." Where the statute provides no definition, it
3868is appropriate to refer to dictionary definitions when
3876construing the statute in order to ascertain the plain and
3886ordinary meaning of the words used therein. School Board of
3896Palm Beach County v. Survivors Charter Schools, Inc. , 3 So. 2d
39071220, 1233 (Fla. 2009). One dictionary defines the word
"3916series" to mean "a group or number of related or similar
3927things, events, etc., arranged or occurring in a temporal,
3936spatial, or other order of succession; sequence." 4 / Another
3946dictionary defines the term as "a number of things or events of
3958the same class coming one after another in spatial or temporal
3969succession." 5 /
397243. GameStop argues that the definition of "series"
3980naturally contemplates that "a series of trades," all properly
3989credited against the price of the purchased article, will occur
3999in succession over a period of time. There can be no other
4011meaning to the term "a series of trades." GameStop contends
4021that the Rule improperly conflates the two statutes it purports
4031to implement. The Rule appends the "at time of sale" language
4042of Section 212.02(16) to the criteria of Section 212.09, with
4052the absurd result that credit is allowed only if the "series of
4064trades" contemplated by Section 212.09 all somehow occur "at the
4074time of sale."
407744. GameStop further argues that the Rule's statement that
4086a "separate or independent sale of tangible personal property is
4096not a trade-in" effectively prevents a deduction where there is
4106a series of transactions that begins with one or more used
4117articles being turned in to the merchant for a cumulative credit
4128against the eventual purchase of a new item. GameStop asserts
4138that the plain language of Section 212.09 contemplates and
4147allows such a deduction.
415145. GameStop is correct that, by limiting trade-in
4159deductions to those trades occurring "at the time of sale," the
4170Rule effectively negates Section 212.09. If the only allowable
4179trade-ins are those occurring "at the time of sale," then the
4190general definition of Section 212.02(16) is entirely sufficient;
4198Section 212.09 has no independent effect and is statutory
4207surplusage. 6 It is impermissible for the Department to ignore,
4217and thereby effectively eliminate, statutory terms used by the
4226Legislature. It is an "elementary principle of statutory
4234construction that significance and effect must be given to every
4244word, phrase, sentence, and part of the statute if possible, and
4255words in a statute should not be construed as mere surplusage."
4266Survivors Charter Schools , 3 So. 3d at 1233, quoting Gulfstream
4276Park Racing Association v. Tampa Bay Downs, Inc. , 948 So. 2d
4287599, 606 (Fla. 2006).
429146. Section 212.02, Florida Statutes, provides: "The
4298following terms and phrases when used in this chapter have the
4309meanings ascribed to them in this section, except where the
4319context clearly indicates a different meaning." The definition
4327of "sales price" in Section 212.02(16) thus stands as the
4337general definition of the term, including as that term is used
4348in Section 212.09, Florida Statutes. Section 212.09's
4355description of what is to be deducted from the "sales price"
4366must be read to mean a deduction other than that which is
4378already deducted by operation of Section 212.02(16): a trade-in
4387taken at the time of sale. By adding the phrase "at the time of
4401sale" to the Rule, the Department has limited the deduction to
4412that authorized under Section 212.02(16). By making no
4420provision for the additional deduction mandated by Section
4428212.09, the Department has modified and contravened the
4436provisions of that statute.
444047. The Legislature included the term "at the time of
4450sale" in Section 212.02(16), and did not include the term in
4461Section 212.09. "[T]he presence of a term in one portion of a
4473statute and its absence from another argues against reading it
4483as implied by the section from which it is omitted." St. George
4495Island, Ltd. v. Rudd , 547 So. 2d 958, 961 (Fla. 1st DCA 1989).
4508The Rule operates to import "at the time of sale" into Section
4520212.09, a change that would render Section 212.09 an unnecessary
4530and ineffective restatement of Section 212.02(16). See State v.
4539Mark Marks, P.A. , 698 So. 2d 533, 541 (Fla. 1997)(legislative
4549use of different terms in different portions of the same statute
4560is strong evidence that different meanings were intended). 7
456948. According to GameStop, the only construction that
4577gives meaning to all of the statutes implemented by the Rule is
4589that the taxable sales price must include a deduction both when
4600an item is traded in and the value is immediately applied to a
4613sale, and when the customer purchases a new or used item using
4625credit previously obtained from a "series of trades" of used
4635items. GameStop's argument is persuasive that the inclusion of
"4644at the time of sale" in the Rule constitutes an effective
4655modification and contravention of Section 212.09, Florida
4662Statutes.
466349. Finally, GameStop argues that the Rule improperly
4671expands the Department's taxing authority through the addition
4679of the restriction that "a separate or independent sale of
4689tangible personal property is not a trade-in, even if the
4699proceeds from the sale are immediately applied by the seller to
4710a purchase of new articles of tangible personal property." The
4720exclusion of these "separate or independent sales" from the
4729deduction serves to negate the statutory mandate that the
4738deduction be calculated when there has been a series of trades.
4749GameStop notes that the Department lacks the power to enact a
4760rule restricting deductions that are specifically provided for
4768by statute. Golden West Financial Corporation v. Department of
4777Revenue , 975 So. 2d 567, 571-572 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008). For
4788reasons stated below, this portion of GameStop's argument is not
4798persuasive.
479950. In defense of the Rule, the Department states that the
4810real controversy in this matter arises from a dispute over the
4821meaning of the terms "taken in trade" and "trade-in," which
4831appear both in the Rule and in the statutes implemented by the
4843Rule. The Department states that the Rule does not preclude
4853credit for a "series of trades," if they constitute a "bona
4864fide" trade-in transaction. According to the Department,
4871GameStop's analysis is focused on the definition of "series,"
4880but does not adequately address the definition of "trade" or
"4890trade-in."
489151. Dictionary definitions of the term "trade-in" refer to
4900merchandise accepted as payment or part payment for another item
4910of merchandise. Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary
4917(1985) defines the term "trade-in" to mean "an item of
4927merchandise (as an automobile or refrigerator) taken as payment
4936or part payment for a purchase." The American Heritage
4945Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition (1992) defines
4954the "trade-in" as: "merchandise accepted as partial payment for
4963a new purchase; a transaction involving such merchandise." The
4972Department points to these standard definitions and observes
4980that the term "trade-in" does not include intangible "credits"
4989arising from earlier sales transactions which are "separate or
4998independent" from the purchase .
500352. The Department's position is that unless the new item
5013to be purchased is identified at the time the used item is
5025turned in for an EdgeCard credit, nothing has been "traded"
5035under the ordinary meaning of "trade-in." Therefore, purchases
5043made with EdgeCard credits would not fall under the plain and
5054ordinary meaning of a "trade-in" because the credits did not
5064arise from an exchange involving an identified purchase.
507253. The Department's view of "trade-in" is unduly
5080restrictive, adding a requirement of simultaneity that is not
5089present in the dictionary definitions. The definitions cited by
5098the Department place no temporal restrictions on the
5106transactions. The definition in Webster's Ninth New Collegiate
5114Dictionary provides that a trade-in is "an item of merchandise
5124taken as payment or part payment for a purchase." The
5134definition does not require that the purchase occur
5142simultaneously with the taking of the item in payment. 8 / Nothing
5154in the dictionary definition of "trade-in" necessarily excludes
5162the EdgeCard credit.
516554. The relevant definition of the term "sale" is found at
5176Section 212.02(15)(a), Florida Statutes: "Any transfer of title
5184or possession, or both... of tangible personal property for a
5194consideration." The Department contends that the tender of used
5203items for EdgeCard credit does not constitute part of a future
"5214sale" because possession of the item to be purchased with the
5225EdgeCard credit does not transfer to the customer at the time of
5237tender. According to the Department, EdgeCard credits cannot be
5246part of any future sale unless there is an identification of the
5258item to be acquired in trade, at the time that the trade-in is
"5271allowed and taken."
527455. For example, if a customer delivered used games to
5284GameStop for EdgeCard credits, and then a year later decided to
5295purchase a new game using those credits, these transactions
5304would not constitute a "trade-in" or an item "taken in trade"
5315within the "normal and customary" understanding of those
5323phrases. The item eventually purchased might be a new release
5333that did not even exist at the time the used games were tendered
5346to GameStop. The customer might never make a subsequent
5355purchase, meaning there would never be a "trade-in" at all. The
5366acquisition of EdgeCard credits, and the purchase of merchandise
5375a year later, would be "separate or independent transactions," 9 /
5386not trade-ins, because the future sale was not identified at the
5397time the trade-in was taken. The Department argues that the
5407pertinent statutes impose this restriction by allowing
5414deductions only for items "taken in trade" or constituting a
"5424trade-in." The Rule merely implements and clarifies this
5432statutory scheme.
543456. The Department goes on to argue that the Rule does not
5446preclude a "series of trades" from constituting a trade-in. If
5456the new or used item to be purchased with the "series of trades"
5469is identified, then each item returned to GameStop for credit
5479during the series of transactions may be treated as a bona fide
5491trade-in. Under the Rule, there can still be a series of
5502trades, but there must be an individually identifiable sales
5511transaction to which each such trade-in was tendered and is to
5522be applied. The Department states that if GameStop would modify
5532its system to match used videos and games returned to GameStop
5543with identified new items to be purchased with the EdgeCard
5553credits, as in a lay-away plan, then the "series of trades"
5564would be treated by the Department as a bona fide trade-in under
5576the Rule.
557857. The Department's argument is not persuasive. It
5586begins with the flawed assumption that the definition of "trade-
5596in" requires that the exchange of a used for a new item occur
5609simultaneously. As noted in Conclusion of Law 52, supra , this
5619assumption is not supported by the very dictionary definitions
5628cited by the Department.
563258. The Department claims that the EdgeCard credits cannot
5641be part of a future "sale" because the customer does not take
5653possession of the new item at the time he obtains the credit.
5665This claim is based solely on the "allowed and taken at the time
5678of sale" language in Section 212.02(16), without reference to
5687the "series of trades" language of Section 212.09 that expands
5697the temporal reach of the trade-in process.
570459. First, the Department first asserts a problem: no
5713trade-in can occur because possession of the item to be
5723purchased with the EdgeCard credit does not transfer to the
5733customer at the time the credit is obtained. Next, the
5743Department proposes a solution that does not address the
5752asserted problem. Even if the customer identifies the specific
5761item to be acquired in trade, he still has not taken possession
5773of the item. Despite having identified the new or used item he
5785intends to purchase, the customer may never take possession of
5795the item and may never use the EdgeCard credits at all. The
5807manufacturer may cease production of the identified item before
5816the customer is able to purchase it using his EdgeCard credits.
582760. By entering the EdgeCard program and accumulating
5835credits, the customer has made a commitment to purchase some new
5846item from GameStop in the future. He may not use the credits
5858anywhere other than at a GameStop store or the GameStop website.
5869The Department has failed to explain the significance of forcing
5879this customer to identify the particular item he intends to
5889purchase from GameStop, aside from the irrelevant observation
5897that the transaction would then more closely resemble a layaway
5907plan. 10 / The Department's position is supported only by a strict
5919reading of Section 212.02(16), Florida Statutes, in isolation.
5927Like the Rule itself, the Department's argument affords no
5936significance to Section 212.09, Florida Statutes.
594261. The Department disputes GameStop's contention that the
5950Rule renders inoperative the "series of trades" language of
5959Section 212.09, Florida Statutes. The Department contends that
5967the Rule permits a series of trades to be used as a trade-in
5980towards a purchase of one or more items of tangible personal
5991property, but only when the trade-in articles are tendered
6000toward the purchase of an identifiable item of tangible personal
6010property. If the used articles are not tendered toward any
6020particular, identifiable item, then they are being sold for
6029credits, not traded-in. EdgeCard credits themselves are not
"6037merchandise" and therefore could not be turned in to constitute
6047a "trade-in" within the plain and ordinary meaning of the term.
605862. The Department again fails to explain the legal or
6068practical significance of identifying the item of tangible
6076personal property to be purchased. According to the
6084Department's own theory, no "trade-in" can occur absent the
6093transfer of possession of the new item; the trade-in must be
"6104allowed and taken at the time of sale." However, the customer
6115does not take possession of a new item by merely identifying it,
6127meaning that the Department's proposed solution does not solve
6136the Department's problem. The Department's position that the
6144customer has "sold" his used items for credits might be more
6155persuasive if those credits had value anywhere besides
6163GameStop. 11 / The EdgeCard commits the customer to use the
6174credits for the used items to purchase an article of tangible
6185personal property at GameStop. The Department gives no
6193persuasive reason for requiring the extra step of identifying
6202the particular item of tangible personal property prior to
6211purchase.
621263. The Department considers the EdgeCard to be a type of
6223cash equivalent, analogous to a gift card. Florida
6231Administrative Code Rule Section 12A-1.089 treats the purchase
6239of a gift card as non-taxable, with the subsequent use of the
6251gift card being fully taxable. It is the Department's position
6261that the EdgeCard as currently used by GameStop is a gift card
6273to be treated under the gift card rule, rather than a means for
6286recording a series of bona fide trade-ins.
629364. The Department notes the following "close
6300similarities" between the EdgeCard and a traditional gift card:
6309neither has an expiration date; neither is replaced if lost;
6319each can only be used to purchase in-store merchandise; neither
6329has a redeemable cash value; and each is reported for three
6340years by GameStop as a customer liability.
634765. The Department fails to note a significant
6355dissimilarity between the EdgeCard and the traditional gift
6363card: the credits on the EdgeCard are obtained not through cash
6374purchases but through the return of used items. It is safe to
6386assume that as to most if not all of these used items, the
6399original purchaser paid sales tax when he bought the item.
6409Though neither party discussed the issue, as a matter of common
6420sense it appears that some part of the justification for
6430allowing the sales tax exemption on trade-ins is that in most
6441cases the customer has already paid tax on the item traded in.
6453Unlike the traditional gift card, with the EdgeCard there is a
6464sense that taxing a credit derived from the return of a used
6476item might constitute double taxation.
648166. The Department contends that these disagreements over
6489what constitutes a bona fide "trade-in" and what constitutes a
"6499gift card" concern the validity of the Department's application
6508of the Rule to a particular set of facts, not the validity of
6521the Rule itself. The Department states that "nothing in the
6531Rule creates a presumption that EdgeCard transactions constitute
"6539trade-ins" or that they do not. Likewise, nothing in the Rule
6550creates a presumption whether the EdgeCard is a gift card or
6561not. There are no examples in the Rule as to what constitutes a
6574bona-fide trade-in and what does not. There are no examples in
6585the Rule as to what constitutes a gift card and what does not.
6598Therefore, the Rule does not appear to prejudice [GameStop] in
6608any way when asserting its various legal arguments in any future
6619assessment challenge [pursuant to Section 72.011, Florida
6626Statutes.]" Whether any particular transaction is a "trade-in"
6634or a "separate or independent sale" is a question of fact to be
6647determined in the assessment challenge.
665267. The Department's position is that the Rule does not
6662create any presumptions as to which transactions are to be
6672considered "separate or independent sales." The Rule merely
6680states that the determination of whether the transactions are
"6689separate or independent sales" must be made. Thus, the Rule
6699imposes no additional burden beyond what is already in the
6709statutory requirement that there must be a bona fide "trade-in."
671968. The Department's defense of the "at the time of sale"
6730language of the Rule is not persuasive. The Department's
6739reliance on its narrow interpretation of the dictionary
6747definition of "trade-in" would at least be logical if it took
6758the position that the EdgeCard program is untenable under the
6768Rule and the implemented statutes: only merchandise exchanged
6776for merchandise at the time of sale can constitute a trade-in;
6787credits can never constitute a trade-in; therefore, the entire
6796concept of the EdgeCard fails to meet the criteria for an
6807exemption from sales tax.
681169. However, the Department understands that the only way
6820to save the Rule is to reconcile "at the time of sale" with "a
6834series of trades." In the attempt to effect this
6843reconciliation, the Department has amended the "merchandise for
6851merchandise" requirement and pronounced that the Rule is
6859satisfied by "merchandise for the promise of specific,
6867identified merchandise." If the GameStop customer has
6874identified the specific item of merchandise to which he intends
6884to apply his EdgeCard credits, he may engage in a series of
6896trade-ins prior to making the actual purchase of the new item.
690770. As set forth at length above, the Department's
"6916identify the merchandise" scheme does not even satisfy its own
6926objections to the EdgeCard system. Further, from the customer's
6935viewpoint, nothing in the language of the Rule would permit a
6946taxpayer to infer that he might lessen his sales tax liability
6957by identifying the specific item he intends to purchase at some
6968time in the future with his accumulated EdgeCard credits. An
6978agency's interpretation of its own rule is entitled to great
6988deference. Citizens of the State of Florida v. Wilson , 568 So.
69992d 1267, 1271 (Fla. 1990). However, such deference is not
7009required where the agency's interpretation is clearly erroneous.
7017Miles v. Florida A&M University , 813 So. 2d 242, 245 (Fla. 1st
7029DCA 2002).
703171. In this instance, the Department is not interpreting
7040the Rule so much as adding criteria that are not discoverable in
7052the Rule's text. When the Department "interprets" its Rule to
7062mean something other than what the plain language of the rule
7073states, it acts in an arbitrary fashion. 12 Such deviation from
7084the text of the Rule violates a foundational principle behind
7094the Administrative Procedure Act, that "an agency cannot change
7103its standards at the personal whim of a bureaucrat." Courts v.
7114Agency for Health Care Administration , 965 So. 2d 154, 159 (Fla.
71251st DCA 2007). 13 /
713072. The Department ignores the contradiction that makes
7138compliance impossible for a taxpayer in GameStop's position:
7146that the statutory term "a series of trades" cannot have any
7157independent meaning if the "series of trades" can only be
7167performed "at the time of sale." GameStop has offered a
7177reasonable reading of the statutes that harmonizes the
7185provisions of Section 212.02(16), Florida Statutes, with those
7193of Section 212.09, Florida Statutes. The Department's reading
7201of the statutes has resulted in a Rule that, if limited to its
7214plain language, effectively negates Section 212.09, Florida
7221Statutes.
722273. The Department's defense of the "separate or
7230independent sale" language of the Rule is adequate. The
7239Department interprets this language as a way of explaining the
7249statutory terms "taken in trade" and "trade-in," by offering an
7259example of what is not a trade-in. Stripped to its essentials,
7270the sentence in question states, "A sale is not a trade-in."
7281This language is not necessarily illuminating or even helpful.
7290It is very nearly tautological. However, standing alone, it is
7300not in conflict with the statutes implemented by the Rule. 14 /
731274. For the reasons explained above, it is concluded that
7322the Rule contravenes, modifies and enlarges upon the
7330Department's statutory authority. In particular, the Rule
7337modifies and contravenes the provisions of Section 212.09,
7345Florida Statutes.
734775. The Department has acted arbitrarily in "interpreting"
7355the Rule in a way that is at odds with the Rule's plain language
7369as regards the "identify the merchandise" requirement. However,
7377absent the Department's arbitrary insertion of a nonexistent
7385provision, it cannot be concluded that the Rule itself is
7395arbitrary or capricious.
7398ORDER
7399Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions
7408of Law set forth herein, it is
7415ORDERED that Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A1.074(1) &
7423(2) constitutes an invalid exercise of delegated legislative
7431authority within the meaning of Section 120.52(8)(c), Florida
7439Statutes.
7440DONE AND ORDERED this 4th day of May, 2010, in Tallahassee,
7451Leon County, Florida.
7454S
7455LAWRENCE P. STEVENSON
7458Administrative Law Judge
7461Division of Administrative Hearings
7465The DeSoto Building
74681230 Apalachee Parkway
7471Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
7474(850) 488-9675
7476Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
7480www.doah.state.fl.us
7481Filed with the Clerk of the
7487Division of Administrative Hearings
7491this 4th day of May, 2010.
7497ENDNOTES
74981 / Subsection (3) of Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A-1.074
7508provides:
7509(3) When title or possession of tangible
7516personal property is transferred for a
7522consideration other than cash, the property
7528transferred is taxable at its full retail
7535value. See Section 212.02(16), F.S. For
7541example, a lumber dealer who trades some
7548lumber for real property must collect tax
7555from the former owner of the real property.
7563If he fails to do so, he is liable for
7573payment of the tax himself under Section
7580212.07(2), F.S.
7582Subsection (3) was not challenged by GameStop and is not at
7593issue in this proceeding.
75972 / Subsection (3) of Section 212.09, Florida Statutes,
7606establishes an exception for a non-dealer in the sales of
7616aircraft, boats, mobile homes, or vehicles. It is not relevant
7626to this proceeding. Throughout this Recommended Order,
7633citations to "Section 212.09" will be understood to reference
7642only subsections (1) and (2) of that statute.
76503 / Florida Administrative Code Rule 12A-1.089 provides, in
7659relevant part:
7661The sale of a gift certificate is not
7669taxable. When the owner of a gift
7676certificate redeems it for tangible personal
7682property, or a part thereof, the transaction
7689is taxable as a sale. For example, if the
7698owner of a gift certificate valued at $25
7706purchases a $15 pair of shoes, tax of 90
7715cents must be collected by the dealer and
7723remitted to the Department of Revenue....
77294 / Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House
7738Dictionary (2010).
77405 / Merriam-Webster On-Line Dictionary (2010), found at
7748www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary.
77496 / GameStop further observes that the Department has adopted an
7760entirely separate rule that implements Section 212.02(16) with
7768respect to those trade-ins that are immediately applied to the
7778purchase of a new item. Fla. Admin. Code R. 12A-1.018(2), the
7789text of which is set forth at Conclusion of Law 36, supra .
7802GameStop notes that by grafting onto the Rule the phrase "at the
7814time of sale" and adding the "separate or independent"
7823exception, the Department has not only eliminated the additional
7832tax exemption required by Section 212.09, but also adopted a
7842rule that merely duplicates the effect of Florida Administrative
7851Code Rule 12A-1.018(2).
78547 / The Department observes that the "series of trades" language
7865of Section 212.09 dates back to the original enactment of the
7876Florida Revenue Act in 1949. Section 9, Chapter 26319, Laws of
7887Florida 1949. The "at the time of sale" language in Section
7898212.02(16) was enacted later, in 1965. (The Department provided
7907no citation to support this statement, which was unchallenged by
7917GameStop. The statutory history of Section 212.02 indicates
7925that it was amended three times in 1965: Sections 1-3, Chapter
793665-329; Section 5, Chapter 65-371, and Section 2, Chapter 65-
7946420, Laws of Florida.) The Department argues that any conflict
7956between the two statutes should be resolved by finding the most
7967recent revision controlling. However, GameStop correctly
7973observes that the principle cited by the Department applies only
7983where two statutes are so unavoidably in conflict that there is
7994no reasonable interpretation that gives them both meaning.
8002Jordan v. Food Lion, Inc. , 670 So. 2d 138, 140 (Fla. 1st DCA
80151996). In this case, GameStop has proposed a reasonable
8024construction of Sections 212.02(16) and 212.09 that gives
8032harmonious meaning to both statutes.
80378 / The Department's subsequent analysis appears to acknowledge
8046this lack of definitional support by making reference to the
"8056normal and customary understanding" or the "common and ordinary
8065meaning" of the term "trade-in." The Department is undoubtedly
8074correct that it is more common than not for a trade-in to occur
8087at the same time as the purchase. However, the Rule and the
8099Department's defense thereof fail when they insist that the
8108trade-in must occur in this way. Section 212.09, Florida
8117Statutes, clearly contemplates "a series of trades" occurring
8125over time, and the dictionary definitions of "trade-in" do not
8135contradict the statute.
81389 / This is the Department's language, derived from the Rule's
"8149separate or independent sale" language. The Department
8156considers each transaction in the accumulation of credits on an
8166EdgeCard to constitute a "separate or independent sale" rather
8175than a "series of trades" leading to a tax credit for the trade-
8188in.
818910 / "Irrelevant" because the Department can point to no current
8200statute or rule defining "layaway plan" that would provide a
8210principled distinction supporting the Department's insistence
8216that the item to be purchased be identified at the time the
8228EdgeCard credits are obtained.
823211 / Though the stipulated facts did not perfectly explain the
8243program, it appears that the EdgeCard is identified to the
8253particular customer, and only that customer may use the credits
8263on that card. The Department's "sale for credits" argument
8272would clearly have more force if the EdgeCards were fungible and
8283a secondary market for them were to develop.
829112 / It is understood that agency rules are often so complex as to
8305defeat ready interpretation by a layperson, and that highly
8314technical terms may carry meaning beyond their plain language.
8323However, in this instance, the Department's proffered
8330interpretation is entirely dehors the Rule.
833613 / This conclusion should not be read as indicating that the
8348Department lacks the statutory authority to adopt a rule
8357expressly requiring the customer involved in a "series of
8366trades" to identify the specific item he intends to purchase
8376from the merchant. That issue is not before this tribunal. The
8387conclusion is simply that it is arbitrary for the Department to
8398cite the present Rule as grounds for imposing such a
8408requirement, where the language of the Rule says no such thing.
841914 / This conclusion should not be read as an endorsement of the
8432Department's position that the accumulation of EdgeCard credits
8440constitutes a series of "separate or independent sales." The
8449uses to which the Department might put the "separate or
8459independent sale" language in an assessment challenge brought by
8468GameStop is not at issue in this rule challenge proceeding. The
8479Rule is not invalidated by the Department's possibly erroneous
8488interpretation of it.
8491COPIES FURNISHED :
8494Martha Harrell Chumbler, Esquire
8498Matthew Bernier, Esquire
8501Carlton Fields, P.A.
8504215 South Monroe Street, Suite 500
8510Post Office Drawer 190
8514Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0190
8517Jeffrey M. Dikman, Esquire
8521Office of the Attorney General
8526The Capitol, Plaza 01
8530Tallahassee, Florida 32399
8533Marshall Stranburg, General Counsel
8537Department of Revenue
8540The Carlton Building, Room 204
8545501 South Calhoun Street
8549Post Office Box 6668
8553Tallahassee, Florida 32314-6668
8556Lisa Echeverri, Executive Director
8560Department of Revenue
8563The Carlton Building, Room 204
8568501 South Calhoun Street
8572Tallahassee, Florida 32314-6668
8575Scott Boyd, Executive Director and
8580General Counsel
8582Joint Administrative Procedure Committee
8586120 Holland Building
8589Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1300
8592NOTICE OF RIGHT TO JUDICIAL REVIEW
8598A party who is adversely affected by this Final Order is
8609entitled to judicial review pursuant to Section 120.68, Florida
8618Statutes. Review proceedings are governed by the Florida Rules
8627of Appellate Procedure. Such proceedings are commenced by
8635filing the original Notice of Appeal with the agency clerk of
8646the Division of Administrative Hearings and a copy, accompanied
8655by filing fees prescribed by law, with the District Court of
8666Appeal, First District, or with the District Court of Appeal in
8677the Appellate District where the party resides. The notice of
8687appeal must be filed within 30 days of rendition of the order to
8700be reviewed.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 03/04/2011
- Proceedings: Transmittal letter from Claudia Llado forwarding one-volume Transcript, which was returned from the First District Court of Appeal to the agency.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/06/2010
- Proceedings: Respondent's First Request for Admissions Concerning Attorney Fee Claim with Interlocking Discovery filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/19/2010
- Proceedings: BY ORDER OF THE COURT: Appellee's motion for appellant attorney's fees filed on September 7, 2010, is provisionally granted, the case is remanded to the Administrative Law Judge to assess the amount filed. (DOAH CASE NO. 10-10477FC ESTABLISHED)
- PDF:
- Date: 09/17/2010
- Proceedings: Index, Record, and Certificate of Record sent to the First District Court of Appeal.
- PDF:
- Date: 09/09/2010
- Proceedings: Supplemental Index (of the Record) sent to the parties of record filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/02/2010
- Proceedings: Notice of Appeal filed and Certified copy sent to the First District Court of Appeal this date.
- Date: 02/24/2010
- Proceedings: Transcript of Proceedings filed.
- Date: 02/15/2010
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/11/2010
- Proceedings: Department's Amended Response to Petitioner's Motion for Summary Final Order (Based on Affidavit and Stipulated Facts and with Correction of Scrivener's Error) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/10/2010
- Proceedings: Department's Notice of Filing Amended Affidavit of French Brown [correction scrivener's error] ; Notice of Indentical Scrivener's Error in the Department's Response to Petitioner's Motion for Summary Final Order .
- PDF:
- Date: 02/08/2010
- Proceedings: Department's Response to Petitioner's Motion for Summary Final Order (Based on Stipulated Facts and Affidavit Testimony) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 02/08/2010
- Proceedings: Department's Notice of Filing Affidavit of Frence Brown in Support of the Department's Response to Petitioner's Motion for Summary Final Order .
- PDF:
- Date: 01/14/2010
- Proceedings: Department's Supplement to Its Request for Mandatory Judicial Notice or Official Recognition of Dictionary Definitions filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 01/11/2010
- Proceedings: Department's Request for Mandatory Judicial Notice or Offical Recognition of Dictionary Definitions filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 12/04/2009
- Proceedings: Amended Petition to Determine the Invalidity of an Existing Rule filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/06/2009
- Proceedings: Respondent's Amended Notice of Corporate Deposition (of Gamestop, Inc.) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/06/2009
- Proceedings: Notice of Withdrawing Department's Motion to Limit Testimony and Evidence at Final Hearing (based upon mootness) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/06/2009
- Proceedings: Amended Notice of Hearing (hearing set for February 15, 2010; 9:00 a.m.; Tallahassee, FL; amended as to Date and Time).
- PDF:
- Date: 11/04/2009
- Proceedings: Department of Revenue's Response to Petitioner's Motion to Quash Deposition, Notice, and Department's Motion to Limit Testimony and Evidence at Final Hearing filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/04/2009
- Proceedings: Opposition to Department of Revenue's Motion to Continue November 19, 2009, Final Hearing; Opposition to Motion for Permission to Conduct Telephonic Depositions; Motion to Quash Respondent's Notice of Corporation Deposition filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 11/02/2009
- Proceedings: Respondent's Notice of Corporate Deposition (of Gamestop, Inc.) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/30/2009
- Proceedings: Department of Revenue's Motion to Continue November 19, 2009 Final Hearing; Motion for Permission to Conduct Telephonic Depositions filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/29/2009
- Proceedings: Notice of Appearance Request to be Added to Division's Mailing List (of J. Dikman) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 10/26/2009
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing (hearing set for November 19, 2009: 9:00a.m.; Tallahassee, FL).
Case Information
- Judge:
- LAWRENCE P. STEVENSON
- Date Filed:
- 10/20/2009
- Date Assignment:
- 10/20/2009
- Last Docket Entry:
- 03/04/2011
- Location:
- Tallahassee, Florida
- District:
- Northern
- Agency:
- Department of Revenue
- Suffix:
- RX
Counsels
-
Matthew Bernier, Esquire
Address of Record -
Martha Harrell Chumbler, Esquire
Address of Record -
Jeffrey M. Dikman, Esquire
Address of Record