glider kit webinar presentation
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
GLIDER KITS: FEDERAL AND STATE
REGULATORY CONCERNSPresenters:
Kyle TreadwayDealer Principal, Kenworth Sales Co. Immediate Past Chair ATD Board of Line Representatives(801) [email protected]
Bradley T. MillerDouglas GreenhausLegal and Regulatory AffairsNADA/[email protected]
Moderator:
Douglas GreenhausDirector, Environment, Health and Safety NADA/[email protected]
What We Will Cover:
• Intro to webinar and presenters
• Glider kits: past history and the current market environment
• Federal and state regulatory concerns
• FET issues
Disclaimers• Nothing in this webinar is intended to be legal
advice. Please consult your attorney, accountant, or other professional advisor.
• NADA/ATD does not provide tax advice and nothing in this webinar is intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of (i) avoiding penalties that may be imposed under the Internal Revenue Code or (ii) promoting, marketing, or recommending to another party any transaction or matter addressed herein.
Poll #1
The following best describes me:
Dealer/ Dealership EmployeeAccountantAttorneyOther
Poll #2
Lines I represent (choose all that apply):
FordFreightlinerHinoInternationalIsuzuKenworthMackPeterbiltUDVolvoWestern Star
Glider Kits - Historically
• Wrecked vehicle• Salvageable components• Economic motivator = chassis cost• Insurance-carrier support
Glider Kits - Today
• Motivators– Reduce acquisition costs– Reduce operational costs– Avoid operational complexities– Circumvent engine mandates– Reduce weight– Reduce downtime
Glider Kits - Today
• Carrier-sourced components– Wrecked chassis– Existing fleet unit– Purchased unit/components
• Dealer-sourced components– Custom spec’d for intended use and year– Core exchange– Stocked
Glider Market
• Strategy shift • Finite window of opportunity• Franchised dealer role = kits +
– Assembler– Retailer– Procurer
Federal DOT Issues
• Federal safety certification: Is the vehicle newly manufactured?
• NHTSA regulates Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards
• “Manufacturers” must register with NHTSA, comply with applicable safety standards, and certify as such
NHTSA Glider Kit Exemption• 49 CFR 571.7(e) : Combining new and
used components. When a new cab is used in the assembly of a truck, the truck will be considered newly manufactured ….. unless the engine, transmission, and drive axle(s) (as a minimum) of the assembled vehicle are not new, and at least two of these components were taken from the same vehicle.
Purpose of NHTSA Glider Kit Exemption
• To accommodate major repairs to existing vehicles. Allows “repairer” to comply with standards applicable to “repaired” versus newly manufactured vehicle. Also avoids manufacturer I.D. and certification requirements.
• No exemption prior to 1975.
If Exemption is NOT Met, Must:
• Identify as a “manufacturer” with NHTSA: 49 C.F.R. Part 566
• Build vehicles to comply with currently applicable FMVSS: 49 C.F.R. Part 571
• Certify completed vehicles: 49 C.F.R. Part 567
Further Guidance
Extensive NHTSA information on manufacturer requirements include a Guide entitled: Requirements for Manufacturers Of Motor Vehicles and Motor Vehicle Equipment. Available on www.NHTSA.gov.
Related DOT IssuesFinal Stage Manufacturing:
Certification but often may rely on pass-through
Alteration: Changes to completed vehicles with other than readily attachable components; requires alteration certification
Modification: After first sale; maintain compliance but no certification
Emissions Compliance
• EPA and CARB certify medium- and heavy-duty engines and engine families, not trucks and tractors (yet).
• Unlike with light-duty where entire vehicle certified for emissions compliance
Emissions Compliance (continued)
• Installation of used or remanufactured engines in vehicle rebuilt with glider kit
• Subject to tampering prohibitions, but not engine-switching policy
• Engine/emission controls must meet standards in effect and applicable when first built
Emissions Compliance (continued)
• Caution: Ensure rebuilders apply applicable software updates!
• Engines subject to low-NOx rebuild program arising out of engine
• Settlement must have required software upgrades. Applies to engines originally manufactured prior to December 31, 1998 .
State Law Issues
• Include: Licensing, Titling, Registration, Taxes, CARB compliance
• Check with appropriate state authorities. ATAEs and state motor carrier associations may also be helpful.
State Law Issues (continued)• Marketing of completed vehicles versus
sale or use of kits to rebuild • State law may require (or prohibit):
– Manufacturer registration/licensing – Completed vehicles to be sold as “new”
and only by franchised dealers– Proper titling/registration: For example,
use of glider kit VIN/MY from MSO/MCO as the VIN/MY for completed vehicle
Federal Excise Tax12% tax on the
“first retail sale” of a
taxable body, chassis,
or tractor
NADA/ATD FET Guide
FET General Rule – Used Articles
• Once an article has been involved in a prior transaction that either triggered FET or was exempt from FET, any subsequent sale or use of that article will not trigger tax.
• However, this general rule does not necessarily apply when a previously used article is subsequently modified
Two Main Exceptions
• The “Six-Month” Rule – Generally applies to parts or accessories
installed within six months of sale– We will not be discussing today
• The “Further Manufacturing” Rule– At issue in the “Glider Kit” context
Further Manufacturing Rule
• When significant modifications or repairs are made to an item, the improved or changed item is treated as “new” for FET purposes.
• The new item is once again subject to tax upon its “first retail sale” (if, as modified, it satisfies the basic requirements).
“Manufacturing”
• "Manufacturer“ -- a person who produces a taxable article from scrap, salvage, or junk material, as well as from new or raw material, (1) by processing, manipulating, or changing the form of an article, or (2) by combining or assembling two or more articles.
• Use of a Glider Kit is an act of manufacture, and subject to tax
What is Further Manufacturing?• IRS has identified three types of
modifications that constitute “further manufacturing”: – Modifications to a chassis, body, or tractor
that change the transportation function of a vehicle
– Modifications that restore a wrecked vehicle into a usable vehicle, and
– Modifications that extend a vehicle’s useful life
Does the 75-Percent Rule Apply?
• Must answer two questions to determine:– Was the item taxable prior to the
modifications?– Would the modified item, if new, be taxable?
• If the answers to these are YES – then apply the 75-percent rule– Note: If modified article would be taxable if new, and
was not taxable prior to modification, the 75% rule would not apply – further manufactured.
75-Percent Rule – A “Safe Harbor”
• Under the 75-percent rule, an article is NOT “further manufactured” if the cost of the modifications to the used article (including repairs) does not exceed 75 percent of the retail price of a comparable new article
• This is a “safe harbor” from the “further manufacturing” rule
75-Percent Rule Applied to Each Article
• 75-percent rule should be applied separately to each article (i.e., a tractor or a truck, trailer, or semitrailer body; or a truck, trailer, or semitrailer chassis) as opposed to applying the rule to the complete vehicle comprised of both a body and a chassis.
“Donor” Vehicle Required
• The taxpayer can't avail the use of the 75-percent rule if there is no existing "article" to repair or modify.
• If no donor, modifier would be considered a manufacturer and be liable for the tax on the completed unit.
75-Percent Rule Calculation
Is A < 75% of B?
A = “cost” of the modifications to the article
B = “retail price” of a comparable new article
Problem is:• What is “cost?” • What is “retail price?”
What is “Cost?”• There is little guidance as to how to
calculate the “cost” of the modifications– Customer owns the article – it is likely the
full cost charged by the modifier to the customer.
– If modifier owns the article being modified, “cost” could: • Include charges based on an arm’s-length
transaction (a profit percentage)? OR • Be based purely on modifier’s internal cost?
(including a percentage of overhead costs).
What is “Retail Price?”• Does not include FET• Is it retail price or taxable price?
– IRS has not yet addressed • ATD FET guide:
– “the IRS likely would look to whether the modifications to the taxable parts of the tractor, body, or chassis exceed 75 percent of the taxable price of a comparable new tractor, body, or chassis.”
The Tax and Who Pays It• FET- 12 percent of the sale price of the
modified item - not based on the cost of the modifications.– However, if end-user has its used article modified
into a taxable article - may deduct from the taxable sale price the value of a taxable item’s components if:• (1) “such component is furnished by the first user of
such article,” and (2) “such component has been used before such furnishing.” (IRC §4052(b)(3))
– “Value” = component’s “fair market value”• Cannot deduct installation costs
The Tax and Who Pays It (continued)
• Who pays the tax?• If customer furnishes the item to be further manufactured and retains
title to the item, the customer, not the modifier, may be responsible for paying FET to the IRS. – However, if the modifier discards the chassis, body, or tractor to
which the customer holds title, the IRS likely will determine that the modifier, not the customer, is liable for the FET.
• If a modifier purchases a used article and then modifies it for the modifier’s own use or for resale, then the modifier would be liable for the FET.– In addition, because the modifier would be treated as the
manufacturer of the modified vehicle, a taxable sale by the modifier generally would likely be subject to the “presumed markup percentage.”
Further Manufacturing Flow Chart
Questions?
1:00 to 2:30 pm, Wednesday, July 25
Help!
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