Texas Administrative Code
Title 34 - PUBLIC FINANCE
Part 1 - COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Chapter 3 - TAX ADMINISTRATION
Subchapter W - AMUSEMENT MACHINE REGULATION AND TAX
Section 3.602 - Licenses and Certificates, Renewals and Due Dates, Occupation Tax Permits and Exemptions
Universal Citation: 34 TX Admin Code § 3.602
Current through Reg. 49, No. 52; December 27, 2024
(a) Definitions. The following words and terms, when used in this section, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Coin-operated amusement machine--Any kind
of machine or device operated by or with a coin or other United States
currency, metal slug, token, electronic card, or check, that vends or dispenses
music or is operated for skill or pleasure. The term does not include an
amusement machine designed exclusively for children under 12 years of
age.
(2) General business license
holder--A person who may engage in the business of manufacturing, owning,
buying, selling, renting, leasing, trading, maintaining, transporting, or
exhibiting in Texas, or storing a coin-operated amusement machine.
(3) Import license holder--A person who may
engage in the business of importing, transporting, owning, buying, repairing,
selling, or delivering a coin-operated amusement machine for sale or delivery
in this state.
(4) Person--An
individual, association, trustee, receiver, partnership, corporation, or other
organization or legal entity, or a manager, agent, servant, or employee of an
individual, association, trustee, receiver, partnership, corporation, or other
organization or legal entity.
(5)
Registration certificate holder--A person who is exempt from the licensing and
recordkeeping requirements in Occupations Code, Chapter 2153 (Coin-Operated
Machines) but who may not exhibit a coin-operated amusement machine unless the
machine is registered annually with the comptroller.
(6) Repair license holder--A person who may
engage in the business of maintaining, transporting, or storing a coin-operated
amusement machine.
(7) Tax
permit--The decal issued by the comptroller to an owner of a coin-operated
amusement machine evidencing the payment of the occupation tax.
(b) Licenses and registration certificates.
(1) Annual general business,
import, and/or repair license fees, and registration certificate fees. Annual
license and registration certificate fees for a general business license
holder, import license holder, repair license holder, and a registration
certificate holder are payable in advance and cannot be prorated. The annual
fees are as follows:
(A) for a general
business license applicant with 50 or fewer machines, the fee is
$200;
(B) for a general business
license applicant with 51 to 200 machines, the fee is $400;
(C) for a general business license applicant
with over 200 machines, the fee is $500;
(D) for an import license applicant, the fee
is $500;
(E) for a repair license
applicant, the fee is $50; and
(F)
for a registration certificate applicant, the fee is $150.
(2) Age requirement for issuance of a license
or registration certificate. No individual shall be issued a license or
registration certificate by the comptroller for the operation of coin-operated
amusement machines unless at the time the license or certificate is issued the
applicant is 18 years of age or older.
(3) Information requirement for issuance of a
license or registration certificate. An applicant for a license or registration
certificate must provide all information required on the comptroller's
application before a license or registration certificate will be issued or
renewed.
(4) General business
license and registration certificate notification requirement. A general
business license holder must notify the comptroller in writing within 10 days
of any change in ownership of a coin-operated amusement machine. A registration
certificate holder must notify the comptroller in writing of any change in
ownership of a coin-operated amusement machine and each time the location of a
machine is changed within 10 days of the change.
(5) Occasional sale exemption for
registration certificate holder. A registration certificate holder may make two
sales of coin-operated amusement machines during any 12-month period without
being required to obtain a general business or import license, if the
certificate holder does not hold out as engaging (or does not habitually
engage) in the business of selling coin-operated amusement machines. Before the
third sale of a coin-operated amusement machine in a 12-month period by a
registration certificate holder not previously in the business of selling,
leasing, or renting coin-operated amusement machines, a general business or
import license must be obtained. The transfer of title or possession of more
than one machine in a single transaction will constitute one sale.
(c) Annual general business, import, and repair license renewals.
(1)
License renewal applications are due November 30. License renewal applications
will not be considered complete for processing unless the tax due and the
license fee are remitted. Complete license renewal applications filed after the
due date may result in the renewal license being issued after December 31, the
expiration date of the existing license. In such a case a person may not
operate coin-operated amusement machines after the expiration date until the
renewal license is issued. A person who operates coin-operated amusement
machines without a license or with an expired license is guilty of a Class A
misdemeanor.
(2) An applicant who
properly completes the license renewal application and remits all fees and
taxes with it by the due date may continue to exhibit or display coin-operated
amusement machines after the expiration date if the applicant's license renewal
has not been issued unless the applicant is notified by the comptroller prior
to the license expiration date of a problem with the license renewal.
(3) The annual license fee must be submitted
with a license renewal application. License fees may not be prorated.
(4) Late-filed application for license
renewal. If an application for renewal of an unexpired license is postmarked
December 1 - December 31, the applicant must remit a late fee of $50 in
addition to the annual license fee listed in subsection (b)(1) of this
section.
(5) Application for
renewal of an expired license.
(A) A license
holder may renew an expired license if it has not been expired for more than 90
days by paying to the comptroller a fee that is 1-1/2 times the amount of the
annual license fee listed in subsection (b)(1) of this section.
(B) A license holder may renew an expired
license if it has been expired for more than 90 days but less than two years by
paying to the comptroller a fee that is two times the amount of the annual
license fee listed in subsection (b)(1) of this section.
(C) A person whose license has been expired
for two years or more may not renew their license and must comply with the
requirements and procedures for obtaining a new license under subsection (b) of
this section. In addition to other penalties allowed by law, each person whose
license has been expired for two years or more and who has been engaged in
business as a general business license holder, import license holder, or repair
license holder must remit to the comptroller an amount equal to two times the
amount of the annual license fee listed in subsection (b)(1) of this section
for each year that the person engaged in business with an expired
license.
(d) Annual registration certificate renewals.
(1)
Registration certificate renewal applications are due November 30. Registration
certificate renewal applications will not be processed unless the tax due and
the registration fee are remitted. Registration certificate renewal
applications filed after the due date may result in the renewal registration
certificate being issued after December 31, the expiration date of the existing
registration certificate. In such a case, a person may not exhibit or display
coin-operated amusement machines after the expiration date until the renewal
certificate is issued. A person who exhibits or displays coin-operated
amusement machines without a registration certificate or with an expired
registration certificate is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
(2) An applicant who properly completes the
registration certificate renewal application and remits all fees and taxes with
it by the due date may continue to exhibit or display coin-operated amusement
machines after the expiration date even if the registration certificate renewal
has not been issued, unless the applicant is notified by the comptroller prior
to the registration certificate expiration date of a problem with the
registration certificate renewal.
(3) Registration certificate fees may not be
prorated and the registration fee must be submitted with the registration
certificate renewal application.
(4) Late-filed application for registration
certificate renewal. If an application for renewal of an unexpired registration
certificate is postmarked December 1 - December 31, the applicant must remit a
late fee of $50 in addition to the annual registration certificate fee listed
in subsection (b)(1) of this section.
(5) Application for renewal of an expired
registration certificate.
(A) A registration
certificate holder may renew an expired registration if it has not been expired
for more than 90 days by paying to the comptroller a fee that is 1-1/2 times
the amount of the annual registration fee listed in subsection (b)(1)(F) of
this section.
(B) A registration
certificate holder may renew an expired registration if it has been expired for
more than 90 days but less than two years by paying to the comptroller a fee
that is two times the amount of the annual registration fee listed in
subsection (b)(1)(F) of this section.
(C) A person whose registration has been
expired for two years or more may not renew their registration and must comply
with the requirements and procedures for obtaining a new registration
certificate under subsection (b) of this section. In addition to other
penalties allowed by law, each person whose registration has been expired for
two years or more and who has been engaged in business as a registration
certificate holder must remit to the comptroller an amount equal to two times
the amount of the annual registration fee listed in subsection (b)(1) of this
section for each year that the person engaged in business with an expired
registration.
(e) Occupation tax permits.
(1) Occupation tax. Each coin-operated
amusement machine that an owner exhibits, displays, or permits to be exhibited
or displayed in this state is subject to an annual occupation tax. With the
exception of annual renewals, the occupation tax is due at the time the owner
exhibits or displays the machine, or permits the machine to be exhibited or
displayed, in this state. The occupation tax for annual renewals for each
machine exhibited or displayed or permitted to be exhibited or displayed in
this state is due November 30 of each year. The purchase of a tax permit is
payment of the occupation tax.
(2)
Tax rate. The tax rate is $60 per year. When a coin-operated amusement machine
is first exhibited or displayed or permitted to be exhibited or displayed in
this state, the occupation tax for the calendar year is prorated as follows:
(A) for a tax permit issued January 1 to
March 31, the amount of tax is $60;
(B) for a tax permit issued April 1 to June
30, the amount of tax is $45;
(C)
for a tax permit issued July 1 to September 30, the amount of tax is $30;
and
(D) for a tax permit issued
October 1 to December 31, the amount of tax is $15.
(3) Replacement of lost, stolen, or destroyed
valid occupation tax permits. The comptroller shall provide a duplicate tax
permit if a valid tax permit has been lost, stolen, or destroyed. The fee for
each duplicate tax permit is $5.00. If a valid tax permit is lost, stolen, or
destroyed, a written statement must be submitted explaining the circumstances
by which the tax permit was lost, stolen, or destroyed, and must include the
number of the lost, stolen, or destroyed tax permit before a replacement tax
permit can be issued. A tax permit for which a duplicate permit has been issued
is void.
(4) Assignment of tax
permits. Each coin-operated amusement machine exhibited or displayed in Texas
for music, skill, or pleasure shall be registered with the comptroller by make,
model, and serial number. A tax permit issued by the comptroller shall be
affixed to each registered machine. Each coin-operated amusement machine shall
have a serial number, and the name and telephone number of the owner of each
machine must be clearly visible on the outside surface of the machine. If a
coin-operated machine is not manufactured with a serial number, a license
holder or registration certificate holder shall assign a serial number to the
machine and either stamp or engrave the assigned number on the machine cabinet.
If all these requirements have been met, a tax permit may be assigned to a
purchaser by submitting written notice, as described in subsection (b)(4) of
this section, to the comptroller within 10 days of the transfer of title or
possession of a coin-operated amusement machine.
(5) Attachment of tax permits. Tax permits
shall be conspicuously affixed to any permanent surface of the coin-operated
amusement machine to make the tax permit visible for inspection without
movement of the machine. Tax permits shall be securely and completely affixed
to the coin-operated amusement machine so they cannot be removed without
continued application of steam and water. Tax permits shall be completely
affixed to a permanent surface of the coin-operated amusement machine by use of
the adhesive exposed on the back of the tax permit following complete removal
of the protective backing. It is unlawful to enclose any tax permit in a
plastic cover, or on a removable cover made of plastic, metal, or any other
material, or to in any way affix the tax permit in a less than permanent manner
so the tax permit can be removed or moved from one machine to another without
the destruction of the tax permit resulting as a consequence of such removal.
Tax permits shall not be affixed by the use of tape. Tax permits are not
transferrable from one person to another or from one machine to another, and
cannot be affixed to a machine that has not been registered with the
comptroller.
(6) Invalid tax
permits.
(A) Any tax permit not properly
displayed as described in paragraph (5) of this subsection is invalid. Any tax
permit not affixed to a permanent surface of a coin-operated amusement machine
as described in paragraph (5) of this subsection by use of the adhesive backing
on the permit is invalid. Any tax permit removed from a coin-operated amusement
machine is invalid.
(B) The
comptroller will not issue a duplicate tax permit to replace a tax permit that
is invalid. A new tax permit must be purchased to replace an invalid tax
permit.
(C) The comptroller may
assess a penalty of not less than $50 or more than $2,000 against an owner who
permits a coin-operated amusement machine under the owner's control to be
operated, exhibited, or displayed in this state without a valid tax permit or
against a person who exhibits or displays a coin-operated amusement machine in
this state without a valid tax permit. The comptroller may assess a penalty for
each day a violation occurs.
(7) Issuance of extra tax permits. The
comptroller will issue tax permits only for coin-operated amusement machines
that are exhibited or displayed on location. The owner shall not stockpile
permits or attach tax permits to unregistered machines.
(f) Exemptions.
(1) Establishing an exemption. In order to
establish that an organization is exempt from the license requirements pursuant
to Occupations Code, §
2153.005 (Exempt
Corporations and Associations), the organization must do the following:
(A) submit a written statement to the
comptroller explaining in detail the nature of the activities conducted or to
be conducted, a copy of the articles of incorporation if the organization is a
corporation, a copy of the bylaws, a copy of any applicable trust agreement or
a copy of its constitution, and a copy of any letter granting exemption from
the Internal Revenue Service; and
(B) furnish any additional information
requested by the comptroller including, but not limited to, documentation
showing all services performed by the organization and all income, assets, and
liabilities of the organization.
(2) Written notice. After a review of the
material, the comptroller will inform the organization in writing if it
qualifies for an exemption.
(3)
Private ownership exemption. An individual who owns a coin-operated amusement
machine for personal use in the individual's private residence is not required
to obtain a license or pay a tax under this section.
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