(a) Definitions. The following words and terms, when used in this section, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. (1) Employee--A person providing services for another for consideration where the employer has the right to control and direct the employee in the material details of how the work is to be performed, both under the contract of employment and in fact. The term also includes personnel provided by a temporary help service, as defined in paragraph (10) of this subsection. (2) Employer--In determining which of several persons is the employer of an individual, factors which will be considered include: (A) who exercises direct control over the details of how the work is performed by the employee; (B) who pays the employee's salary; (C) who withholds applicable federal taxes from the employee's salary;
(D) who provides employment-related benefits such as health insurance, eligibility to participate in a retirement plan, sick leave, vacation, etc., to the employee; and (E) who has the right to terminate the employment of the individual employee. (3) Garbage or other solid waste--Waste; refuse; sludge from a waste treatment plant, a water supply treatment plant, or an air pollution control facility; and other discarded material, including solid, liquid, semisolid, or contained gaseous material, resulting from residential, industrial, municipal, commercial, mining, and agricultural operations, and resulting from community and institutional activities. The term does not include any of the following: (A) solid or dissolved material in domestic sewage; or solid or dissolved material in irrigation return flows; or industrial discharges subject to regulation by permit issued pursuant to the Texas Water Code, Chapter
26; (B) waste materials which result from activities associated with the exploration, development, or production of oil, gas, geothermal resources, or any other substance or material regulated by the Railroad Commission of Texas pursuant to Natural Resources Code, §91.101; (C) any waste which requires specific licensing under Health and Safety Code, Chapter 401, and the rules adopted by the Texas Board of Health under that law, which for the purposes of this rule shall be referred to as radioactive waste; (D) hazardous waste, as identified or listed as a hazardous waste by the administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency or by other appropriate federal or state agency; or (E) industrial solid waste, as that term is defined in Health and Safety Code, Chapter 361, with the exception of industrial solid waste which meets the definition of garbage or municipal solid waste.
(4) Landscaping--The activity of arranging and modifying areas of land, natural scenery and other areas, such as indoor or outdoor patios, for aesthetic effect, considering the use to which the land is to be put. The term includes adding, removing, or arranging natural forms, features, and plantings, including vegetation, and other features to fulfill aesthetic requirements. It includes the application of soil, soil additives, and amendments to prepare or maintain the planting area. Some examples are garden planting or maintenance, arborist services, ornamental bush or shrub planting, tree planting or removal, tree surgery, pruning or spraying, and lawn sodding. The term does not include the addition of sprinkler systems, retaining walls, ponds, pools, or fences, or other construction activities or services provided by landscape designers or landscape architects such as consultation, research, preparation of general or specific design or detail plans, studies,
specifications, or supervision, or any other professional services or functions within the definition of the practice of engineering or architecture. Landscaping services performed by landscape designers or landscape architects are taxable. (5) Lawn and yard maintenance--Mowing, trimming, fertilizing, watering and any other treatment or service which may be performed on private or commercial yards or lawns. It also includes maintenance of trees and plants whether inside or outside a building. The term does not include clearing land for buildings, power line rights-of-way, pipeline rights-of-way, or maintenance on land belonging to a governmental entity when the service is required by the governmental entity. (6) Property management company--A person who, for consideration, operates and manages all the activities at a property held by the owner for purposes of rental, such as: an office building, mall or other retail or office complex, an
apartment complex, duplex, or home. In the context of this rule, the responsibilities of a property management company must include, but are not limited to, securing tenants, hiring and supervising employees for operation or upkeep of the property, receiving and applying revenues, and incurring and paying expenses derived from the operation of the property as directed by the owner. The term does not include a person performing taxable services at a manufacturing facility or at a property held by the owner for purposes other than rental. (7) Residential or nonresidential building or grounds cleaning, janitorial, or custodial services--The activities of keeping the inside and outside premises of a building clean, orderly, and functional, including performing minor adjustments, maintenance, or repairs. Examples include, but are not limited to: window washing; floor, wall, and ceiling cleaning; collection of waste on the premises, whether from inside a building or on
the grounds; chimney or duct cleaning; lighting maintenance, such as bulb and fuse replacement; the cleaning, disinfecting, and restocking of restrooms or lounge areas; cleaning or washing sidewalks, parking garages, or parking lots; and pool cleaning and maintenance. The term does not include activities such as painting; wallpapering; or performing significant repairs; nor domestic services such as those of a baby-sitter, maid or cook employed by a private household to provide domestic services for the benefit of the household. (8) Structural pest control services--Activities performed for the purpose of identifying, preventing, controlling, or eliminating, by use of chemical or mechanical means, infestation of any of the following: (A) insects, spiders, mites, ticks, ants, bees, and other related pests, wood infesting organisms, rodents, weeds, nuisance birds, or any other obnoxious or undesirable animals which may infest households, railroad
cars, ships, docks, trucks, airplanes or other structures or their contents; (B) pests or diseases of trees, shrubs or other plantings in a park or adjacent to a residence, business establishment, industrial plant, institutional building, or street; and (C) the term "structural pest control services" includes related activities, such as inspection or evaluation concerning the nature or extent of an infestation; reports; or performance of services to control pest or insect infestation. (9) Surveying of real property--Activities performed to determine or confirm the boundaries of real property, or to determine or confirm the location of structures or other improvements in relation to the boundaries of the property by the use of relevant elements of law, research, measurement, analysis, computation, mapping and land description. Examples include, but are not limited to, boundary recovery, residential surveying, lot surveying,
title surveying, as-built title surveying, and right-of-way surveying. The term does not include activities performed after taxable surveying has been completed to search the surveyed area for items of archaeological or historic significance. (10) Temporary help service--An individual, company, or corporation covered by Industry Group 7363, Group 736, Major Group 73 of the Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1989, and includes an individual, company, or corporation that supplies personnel on a temporary basis to supplement a customer's existing work force. In the context of this section, such temporary personnel must perform a service that is normally performed by the customer's own employees; the customer must provide all supplies and equipment necessary; and the temporary personnel must be under the direct or general supervision of the customer to whom the help is furnished. (b) Responsibilities of persons providing real
property services on both residential and nonresidential real property. With the exception of terms defined by subsection (a)(6) and (10) of this section, persons providing services defined in subsection (a) of this section are performing real property services. Persons performing real property services must obtain a tax permit and collect and remit sales or use taxes on all charges for real property services. (c) Resale certificates. (1) A properly completed resale certificate may be used to purchase tangible personal property tax free if the care, custody, and control of the property is transferred to the customer as part of the real property service. For example, a taxpayer purchases paper products to be left at the customer's premises when providing janitorial services, or garbage dumpsters to leave on the customer's premises as a part of the garbage collection service. Taxpayer may purchase the paper products and dumpsters tax
free by issuing a resale certificate. Tax is due on the total amount charged Cont'd... |