Colorado: Bakery Qualified for Manufacturing Exemption
The Colorado Department of Revenue recently issued a Private Letter Ruling (PLR) concluding that an operator of retail grocery stores was entitled to a manufacturing exemption for purchases of equipment used in the stores’ bakeries. Each store’s bakery production facilities were segregated within a portion of the store that was physically inaccessible to customers. Daily, each bakery produced, from raw ingredients, thousands of units of freshly baked products, including muffins, croissants, rolls, bagels, bread, cookies, danishes, cakes, mini-cakes, pound cakes, and pies. Substantial industrial baking equipment was required to satisfy its largescale production needs. Under Colorado law, a state level sales tax exemption applies to purchases of machinery or machine tools, or parts thereof, in excess of $500 to be used in Colorado directly and predominantly in manufacturing tangible personal property, for sale or profit. “Machinery” means any apparatus consisting of interrelated parts used to produce an article of tangible personal property. “Manufacturing” means the operation of producing a new product, article, substance, or commodity different from and having a distinctive name, character, or use from the raw or prepared materials. Finally, the machinery must be used directly in manufacturing, which is deemed to begin at the point at which raw material is moved from plant inventory on a contiguous plant site and to end at a point at which manufacturing has altered the raw material to its completed form.
The Department concluded that the bakeries were engaged in manufacturing. The taxpayer used both raw and prepared ingredients, the use of which resulted in new products that were different from the raw and prepared ingredients. Further, the machinery at issue and its adjuncts were used directly in this operation of producing these new products. Finally, the machinery was used directly in manufacturing. As required under the statute, the building space, the machinery, and the other fixtures dedicated to the operation of producing constituted a contiguous plant site. Notably, the bakeries were segregated areas within the store where this manufacturing operation takes place. This space, and the equipment therein, was employed exclusively for largescale production of goods, which the Department concluded made these bakeries “plants” within the common meaning of that term. The Department noted at the end of the ruling that it had assumed, per the taxpayer’s request, that the purchase of the machinery would have qualified for the federal investment tax credit, and that each piece of equipment was purchased new for a price in excess of $500. The Department also confirmed that its ruling applied to state level and state administered local sales and use taxes only; there might be a different result in home rule jurisdictions. Please contact Steve Metz with questions on PLR 23-08.