California insurance company DRD provision ruled unconstitutional.

AuthorMadden, David
PositionDividends-received deduction

In a widely anticipated decision, a court of appeal ruled that California's dividends-received deduction (DRD) for dividends received from insurance companies is unconstitutional, became it discriminates against interstate commerce in violation of the Commerce Clause (Ceridian Corp., 102 Cal. Rptr. 2d 611 (Ct. App. 2000)). The court ruled further that a taxpayer may claim a refund of taxes paid under the unconstitutional taxing scheme. Although this ruling is applicable only to dividends received from insurance companies, it supports the widely held view that California's standard DRD provision (which contains similar language) is also unconstitutional. Both provisions limit the DRD based on the extent to which a payor's income is subject to California tax.

The insurance company DRD places two limits on the deduction that a California taxpayer receiving dividends from an insurance company can take (Cal. Rev. & Tax. Code [sections] 24410). The first restriction (which the Franchise Tax Board (FTB) conceded as unconstitutional) allows a deduction only if the dividend recipient is commercially domiciled in California. This provision has no counterpart under the non-insurance-company DRD statute.

The second restriction limits the deduction to the portion of the dividend distribution that an insurance company pays out of its California-source income, which the company determines by measuring its property, payroll and sales attributable to California. Under this provision, the more California property, payroll and sales attributable to an insurance company, the greater the dividend recipient's DRD. The court found that this limit discriminates against interstate commerce, because it encourages California taxpayers to invest in insurance companies based on their level of activity in California. The FTB argued that the provision was not discriminatory; but it was designed to avoid double taxation of income earned by and subsequently distributed to California taxpayers. However, the court rejected this argument, explaining that, while the...

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