Current corporate income tax developments.
Author | Boucher, Karen J. |
Position | Part 1 |
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
* Two state courts affirmed that the U.S. Supreme Court's physical-presence requirement in Quill applies only to sales and use taxes.
* Kentucky legislation corrected a prior drafting error, thus disallowing certain related-party intangible expenses.
* Several cases involved the effect of DRDs, NOLs and intercompany expenses on the state tax base.
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This two-part article discusses a myriad of recent state tax activity in the corporate income tax area. Part I addresses nexus, tax base, IRC Sec. 338(h)(10) transactions and allocable/apportionable income.
During 2006, numerous state statutes were added, deleted or modified; court cases were decided; regulations were proposed, issued and modified; and bulletins and rulings were issued, released and withdrawn. This two-part article focuses on some of the more interesting items in the following corporate income tax areas: nexus; Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Sec. 338(h)(10) transactions; tax base; allocable/apportionable income; filing methods/unitary groups; and administration. It also includes several other significant state tax developments. The first four areas are covered in Part I below; the remaining areas will be covered in Part II, in the April 2007 issue.
Nexus
* Alabama
The Department of Revenue (DOR) amended Rule 810-27-1-4-.19 to delete classification of deliveries into the state via taxpayer-owned trucks as an "unprotected" activity for purposes of P.L. 86-272.
An Alabama circuit court affirmed that an out-of-state railcar leasing company was not doing business or deriving income from in-state sources merely based on lessee use of railcars in the state. The court agreed that the company generally derived income from lease transactions in Illinois, noting that that is where the leases were executed, the fixed lease payments were made and (with Texas exceptions) the railcars were retrieved and returned. (1)
* Indiana
In a situation involving back-to-back purchases and sales of natural gas to in-state customers, the DOR ruled (2) that nexus is created if the taxpayer has title to the natural gas for a moment in time (flash title) in Indiana.
In another situation, the DOR ruled (3) that an out-of-state parent company that used its wholly owned manufacturing subsidiary to drop-ship sales of products to third-party purchasers in numerous states (including Indiana) established substantial nexus for adjusted-gross-income (AGI) tax purposes. The parent exercised control over and directed the disposition of the subsidiary's in-state inventory, leading to a deemed substance-over-form "agency relationship" with the subsidiary.
In another drop-shipment situation, the DOR similarly held (4) that an out-of-state steel components manufacturer had nexus with the state for AGI tax purposes, because it was deemed to hold inventory within the state by controlling products that were drop-shipped to its Indiana customers through an in-state manufacturing affiliate. Despite the fact that the affiliate retained title to the goods for nearly the entire time between their manufacture and ultimate delivery (save for the out-of-state manufacturer's "instantaneous title" on customer acceptance), the out-of-state manufacturer controlled the physical goods while they were located in Indiana.
In a different finding, the DOR ruled (5) that a national retailer's subsidiary that functioned as a Federally chartered private-label credit card bank for the retailer had nexus for the financial institutions tax, even though it lacked an in-state physical presence, as the underlying facts showed that it had economic nexus with the state. Under the facts, the bank solicited business in Indiana either through its parent, its own advertising or a combination of the two.
* Iowa
A DOR Policy Letter (6) addressed whether corporation income tax nexus would exist under various scenarios involving software and application service providers. The mere grant of a right to use the developer's software does not, by itself, create Iowa corporation income tax nexus; however, sending an employee into the state to install and/or train the user (or any physical presence in the state by an employee of the software developer) does create nexus.
* Kentucky
The Board of Tax Appeals held (7) that, for the years at issue, a nonresident corporation will not have nexus solely due to its investment in a passthrough entity doing business in the state.
HB 557, Laws 2006, expanded the definition of "doing business" in the state to include deriving income (directly or indirectly) from a single-member limited liability company that is doing business in the state and is disregarded as a separate entity for Federal income tax purposes.
The DOR issued amended rule 16:240, related to the nexus standard for corporations and partnerships.
* Massachusetts
The Appellate Tax Board (ATB) ruled (8) that a nonresident corporate partner in a tiered partnership was deemed to be conducting business in the state by virtue of Massachusetts activities undertaken by the lowest-tiered entity, which owned and operated an m-state hotel.
* New Jersey
In a case involving a trademark subsidiary, the state supreme court affirmed (9) that the U.S. Supreme Court's physical-presence ruling in Quill (10) applies only to sales and use taxes; thus, physical presence is not required for income tax purposes.
* New Mexico
Subsequent to the state supreme court's Dec. 29, 2005 opinion in Kmart Corp., (11) the court of appeals released a "corrected" version of its original 2001 opinion in the same case on March 13, 2006, that leaves the court of appeals' holding generally intact. (12)
Following the state supreme court's decision in Kmart Corp., a hearing officer held (13) that an intangible trademark holding--company subsidiary did have sufficient state corporate income/ franchise tax nexus.
* Oklahoma
The DOR amended Rule 710:50-17-3 to reflect policy that now includes deliveries into the state via taxpayer-owned trucks as a protected activity under P.L. 86-272.
* Pennsylvania
The DOR ruled (14) that out-of-state corporations that performed all daily management functions and operations outside the state have both state corporate net income and capital stock franchise tax nexus, because their corporate officers were "doing business" on behalf of the company when they performed high-level management functions for the company and its affiliates from an affiliate's building located in the state.
In another situation, the DOR ruled (15) that two out-of-state companies providing...
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