(1) Fabrication labor is a part of the sales price of tangible personal property and subject to the tax, whether or not the charge therefor is separately stated. For the purpose of this regulation, fabrication means the production of an article from a material or materials by giving such material or materials a new form, quality or property, and includes the cutting, carving, dressing, shaping, bending or further processing a stock or custom made article of tangible personal property into an article for a specific or general use.(2) Charges for labor in installing, applying, remodeling or repairing tangible personal property sold, when billed separately to the consumer, are not considered a part of the sales price of the article sold. Unless such labor is separately stated on the consumer's invoice, the total charge shall be subject to the tax.(3) Charges for labor in repairing and restoring an article of tangible personal property to its original form, when billed separately from materials used, are not subject to the tax, provided the same article is returned to the customer.Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. R. 560-12-2-.88
Ga. L. 1937-38, Extra Sess., p. 77, et seq., as amended (Ga. Code Ann., Secs. 92-8405, 8406, 8409, 8427); Ga. L. 1951, pp. 360, 385 (Ga. Code Ann., Sec. 92-3438a).
Original Rule entitled "Labor" was filed on November 26, 1968; effective December 15, 1968.