Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 21, November 5, 2024
Section 3.2.1.27 - PROPERTYA.Bills, notes, etc.: Tangible personal property does not include bills, notes, checks, drafts, bills of exchange, certificates of deposit, letters of credit, or any negotiable instrument. Coins, stamps, and documents which have a historic value or market value in excess of their face value are tangible personal property.B.Sale of license to use software is sale of property: (1) The definition of property includes licenses. The sale of a license to use software constitutes a sale of property and comes within the definition of gross receipts.(2) The transaction constitutes a sale of a license to use the software program when a computer software company sells an already-developed software program where:(a) no extraordinary services are performed in order to furnish the program;(b) the buyer pays a fixed amount for the license to use the program and use is generally limited to a specific computer; and(c) the buyer may not resell to any other person a license to use the program and may not transfer the software package itself to any other person.C.Granting the right to hunt is the sale of a license to use: For purposes of this section, granting by a landowner to another, a right to access and hunt within the boundaries of the landowner's real property is a license to use the real property. A license is a form of property as defined in Subsection J of Section 7-9-3 NMSA 1978 and the receipts from the sale of a license are subject to the gross receipts tax. The following are four types of hunting-related transactions, that when sold, may include the sale of a license: (1) the sale of a hunting package that includes permission to hunt on private land;(2) the sale of an authorization to hunt on private land granted by the New Mexico department of game and fish;(3) the granting of permission or access to enter onto the private land to hunt; or(4) the sale of a license/permit issued by the state to hunt on public land.D. Receipts from selling a hunting package are subject to gross receipts tax to the extent that the individual components of the package are not deductible or exempt from the gross receipts tax pursuant to the Gross Receipts and Compensating Tax Act. A person that sells a hunting package that consists of taxable and nontaxable components must reasonably allocate the receipts based on the value of the individual components. For purposes of this section, a "hunting package" may include the following components:(3) delivery and transportation services;(5) license to use the property;(6) carcass of the hunted animal; or(7) other services or tangible personal property included in the package.E.Example: X owns a ranch in New Mexico and sells guided hunting packages. Included in the price for the hunt X guarantees that the hunter will retrieve an animal, lodging at the ranch, meals, experienced hunting guide, retrieval, caping, delivery to local meat processor and taxidermist. Not included in the price are expenses associated with alcohol consumption, meat processing, taxidermy services or gratuities for guides. X receipts from the sale of this type of hunting package includes receipts from providing services, the sale of tangible personal property (meals), the sale of the carcass (possibly livestock) and from granting a license to use the land within the ranch boundaries. X must determine a reasonable method of allocating their receipts between components that are subject to gross receipts tax and those that are exempt from gross receipts tax (sale of livestock).N.M. Admin. Code § 3.2.1.27
12/5/69, 3/9/72, 3/20/74, 7/26/76, 6/18/79, 4/7/82, 5/4/84, 4/2/86, 11/26/90, 9/17/91, 11/15/96; 3.2.1.27 NMAC - Rn, 3 NMAC 2.1.27, 4/30/01; A, 8/15/12, Adopted by New Mexico Register, Volume XXXII, Issue 19, October 13, 2021, eff. 10/13/2021