Example. "A" owns and operates an aluminum siding company with 50% of the business derived from retail sales and 50% from construction contracts. "A" enters into a construction contract with "B" whereby he is to install 1,000 square feet of aluminum siding on "B's" house. "A" purchases the 1,000 square feet of aluminum siding at $3 per square foot and he correctly pays $180 sales tax on the $3,000 purchase price because he anticipates that he will be the ultimate consumer of the siding. Before the contract is performed, "A" decides to sell at retail the aluminum siding at $5 per square foot to "C". At the time of sale "A" properly collects $300 sales tax from "C" who purchases the aluminum siding for $5,000. In reporting the $300 tax which he has collected from "C", "A" is permitted to claim a credit of $180 for the sales tax which he had previously paid on this item.
Example. Adopt the facts from the example in subsection (b), except that "A" purchased the aluminum siding in January, 1966 and sold same to "C" in January 1974. Since more than 3 years have elapsed from the original purchase, "A" may not claim a credit on his return for the first quarter of 1974.
Example. Use the same facts as above except that "A" resells the aluminum siding at $2 per square foot. The sale price would be $2,000 and the tax collected would be $120. Since "A" wishes to claim a credit of $180, his credit would exceed the total amount due the Commonwealth for the quarter by $60 (assuming this was his only transaction in the period). The maximum credit "A" may claim is $120. "A" must wait until the following quarter to claim the $60 excess against his remittance for that quarter. In other words, the credit may not reduce amount remitted below zero.
61 Pa. Code § 58.11
The provisions of this §58.11 amended under section 270 of the Tax Reform Code of 1971 (P. L. 6, No. 2) (72 P. S. § 7270).
This section cited in 61 Pa. Code § 58.13 (relating to carpeting and other floor coverings).