Louisiana Administrative Code
Title 61 - REVENUE AND TAXATION
Part I - Taxes Collected and Administered by the Secretary of Revenue
Chapter 43 - Sales and Use Tax
Section I-4371 - Sales Tax Refund for Tangible Personal Property Destroyed in a Natural Disaster
Universal Citation: LA Admin Code I-4371
Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. Under certain circumstances, a refund is allowed for state sales or use tax paid on tangible personal property that has been destroyed in a natural disaster. The conditions and requirements are as follows.
1. The property destroyed must be classified
as tangible personal property at the time of destruction rather than being
classified as real or immovable property. For purposes of determination of the
classification of such property, reference and guidance shall be to the rules
of the Louisiana Civil Code. In Louisiana, property is classified as either
movable or immovable rather than as personal or real. Under Louisiana law a
corporeal movable is equivalent to tangible personal property at common law,
and an immovable is equivalent to real property. Generally speaking a house or
a building and all central heating or cooling systems, lighting fixtures,
lavatories, etc., that are actually connected with or attached to the house or
building by the owner are immovable by their nature. Such items as clothing,
drugs, food, recreation equipment, appliances not permanently attached to a
house or building where the removal thereof would not damage the movable or
immovable, etc., would be classified as tangible personal property or movable
property, and the sales tax paid on these items would be eligible to be
refunded. Automobiles, trucks, motorcycles, boats, boat trailers, and other
vehicles will not be considered tangible personal property used in or about a
person's home, apartment, or homestead. The sales tax paid on these items is
not eligible to be refunded under this statute.
2. Such property destroyed must be a part of
and used in or about a person's home, apartment or homestead, on which
Louisiana sales tax has been paid by the owner of the property destroyed in an
area subsequently determined by the president of the United States to warrant
assistance by the federal government. Therefore, it is necessary that
individuals suffer the loss, since
R.S.
47:315.1 does not apply to partnerships or
corporations. Further, it does not apply to business losses, even by
individuals, since the law limits the losses to property that is part of and
used in or about a person's home, apartment or homestead. Also, the area where
the natural disaster occurred must be designated as an area warranting
assistance by the federal government in order to qualify under this
Section.
3. The claimant suffering
the loss of the tangible personal property must be the owner of such property
that purchased and paid the Louisiana sales tax on such property. Any refund
claim filed shall be made in accordance with the rules and regulations
prescribed by the secretary. Accordingly, any refund claim shall be filed on or
before the end of the third calendar year following the year in which the
property was destroyed, and the refund claim shall be limited to the tax paid
on such tangible personal property destroyed for which no reimbursement was
received by insurance or otherwise.
4. A refund claim packet can be obtained from
the secretary, and when the claimant properly executes the required forms and
prepares a sworn statement attesting to the facts, a refund will be
processed.
AUTHORITY NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with R.S. 47:315.1. and R.S. 47:1511.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Louisiana may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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