Captive finance subsidiary is not financial organization.

AuthorAmitay, Sharlene E.
PositionIllinois taxation

The issue of whether a corporation qualifies as a financial organization under Illinois law is an important one. Illinois taxpayers engaged in a unitary business must file a combined report for all members of the unitary group (regardless of nexus), with all members being subject to the same apportionment formula. Financial organizations, on the other hand, are subject to a special apportionment formula and, therefore, cannot be included in a unitary group with nonfinancial organizations. Accordingly, Illinois taxpayers often seek to treat affiliated entities that do not have nexus in Illinois as financial organizations to exclude these entities from an Illinois unitary combined report.

In a recent case, the Illinois Circuit Court for Cook County was forced to interpret the boundaries of Illinois's financial organization statute. In Automatic Data Processing (ADP) & Affiliates v. Dep't of Rev., No. 96 L 50918 (Dec. 23, 1998), the court held that a taxpayer's four wholly owned subsidiaries were not financial organizations for Illinois tax purposes and, thus, could not be excluded from the taxpayer's unitary combined report. The primary issue was whether the subsidiaries qualified as investment companies, one of the categories of entities that qualifies as financial organizations for Illinois tax purposes.

Background

The taxpayer in ADP formed four wholly owned asset management subsidiaries. These subsidiaries performed a variety of functions, such as extending intercompany loans to the taxpayer and licensing intangible assets to the taxpayer and its affiliates. (Such arrangements are typical among large corporate organizations, as they allow for centralization of functions and creation of economies of scale.) The taxpayer sought to classify the subsidiaries as financial organizations for Illinois tax purposes on the grounds that they qualified as investment companies. (Investment companies are included in the definition of a financial organization; however, the statute contains no guidance as to the definition of an investment company.)

The court concluded that the term "investment company" includes only regulated investment companies. The court's narrow decision was based on the fact that all of the other types...

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