If it seems like there has been a lull in the debate
regarding whether ecommerce vendors should be required to collect sales and use
tax, this month has seen a series of developments that demonstrate the conflict
continues apace.
On February 6, 2013, New York’s highest court
heard oral arguments by attorneys for Amazon.com, Overstock.com, and the state
Department of Taxation and Finance in the Internet retailers’ respective constitutional
challenges to the New York affiliate nexus law enacted in 2008. (The cases are
captioned Amazon.com v. New York State
Department of Taxation and Finance, Court of Appeals Case
No.APL-2012-00045, and Overstock.com v.
New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Court of Appeals Case No. APL-2012-0001.) Recall that, under the New York law, an
out-of-state retailer is presumed to be soliciting sales through
representatives in the state if it enters into a contract with a New York
resident for the placement of a link on the resident’s website that refers
internet users to the out-of-state retailer’s website, pays the New York
resident compensation based on sales to customers completed through the link,
and makes a minimum $10,000 in such sales to New York customers. See N.Y.Tax Law § 1101(b)(8)(vi).
A retailer with an in-state
representative that solicits sales is required under New York law to collect
and remit use tax on sales to New York customers. The state prevailed before the trial court and
intermediate appellate court finding that the law was not unconstitutional on
its face. According to reports, the Justices on the Court of Appeals appeared somewhat receptive to Amazon’s
arguments that (1) the law violates the Due Process Clause because the
presumption cannot be effectively rebutted and (2) the law violates the Quill “physical presence” standard of
nexus. That said, the state has the advantage of
having prevailed below. Decisions by a
state high court are usually issued several months after argument, and we will
continue to monitor the case.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
February 2013: An Eventful Month In The Debate Regarding Use Tax Collection By Internet Retailers
Labels:
Affiliate Nexus,
Amazon.com,
Commerce Clause,
due process,
Florida,
Hawaii,
Illinois,
Indiana,
ITFA,
Kansas,
Maine,
Marketplace Fairness Act,
Michigan,
Minnesota,
Mississippi,
New York,
Overstock.com,
PMA,
Quill
Friday, February 15, 2013
Traps for the Unwary: Taxation of Digital Products
Recently, I presented at a webinar hosted by Strafford Publishing on the subject of sales and use tax on digital products and services. It almost goes without saying that the interstate sale of digital products—whether books or software—is complicated,
if for no other reason than it requires analyzing the sales and use tax consequences of such transactions based upon forty-five states’ (and the District of Columbia’s) sales tax laws, which were adopted long before the advent
of the digital age. For example, the starting point for sales tax analysis in most states is whether the transaction involves the sale of “tangible personal property.” Is a digital product such as a digital book that is downloaded by the customer tangible personal property?
The states do not provide for uniform treatment of the taxability of digital products from state to state, nor are all digital products taxed similarly within a given state. Colorado, for example, taxes digital books and music, but does not tax digital software. Twenty-five states tax digital books, music and videos, while thirty states tax prewritten software.
What makes analysis in this field even trickier are the different methods of delivery of digital products and the various pricing plans under which such products are sold. For example, under one delivery method, the seller provides the buyer an electronic access code to permit the buyer to download the digital product at the buyer’s convenience. For a sale such as this, in addition to analyzing whether the underlying product is taxable, the seller must also determine whether the sale of the access code is taxable at the time of such sale. The SSUTA, of which there are 24 member states, treats the sale of a “digital code” that entitles the purchaser to download a taxable digital product as a taxable transaction. See Section 332(G). But not every state, of course, is a member of the SSUTA and non-member states do not always follow this principle. For instance, the non-member states of Texas, New York, and Illinois treat the sale of such access codes as tantamount to selling a gift card. These states treat the sale of a gift card or access code as the sale of an intangible. It is only when the gift card is redeemed that a taxable sale of tangible personal property has occurred. See, for example, Ill. General Information Letter ST 10-0052-GIL (June 4, 2010).
The states do not provide for uniform treatment of the taxability of digital products from state to state, nor are all digital products taxed similarly within a given state. Colorado, for example, taxes digital books and music, but does not tax digital software. Twenty-five states tax digital books, music and videos, while thirty states tax prewritten software.
What makes analysis in this field even trickier are the different methods of delivery of digital products and the various pricing plans under which such products are sold. For example, under one delivery method, the seller provides the buyer an electronic access code to permit the buyer to download the digital product at the buyer’s convenience. For a sale such as this, in addition to analyzing whether the underlying product is taxable, the seller must also determine whether the sale of the access code is taxable at the time of such sale. The SSUTA, of which there are 24 member states, treats the sale of a “digital code” that entitles the purchaser to download a taxable digital product as a taxable transaction. See Section 332(G). But not every state, of course, is a member of the SSUTA and non-member states do not always follow this principle. For instance, the non-member states of Texas, New York, and Illinois treat the sale of such access codes as tantamount to selling a gift card. These states treat the sale of a gift card or access code as the sale of an intangible. It is only when the gift card is redeemed that a taxable sale of tangible personal property has occurred. See, for example, Ill. General Information Letter ST 10-0052-GIL (June 4, 2010).
Friday, December 7, 2012
Florida Introduces Affiliate Nexus Legislation
For the sixth year in a row,
Florida legislators introduced a bill
that (like many states before it)
would create a rebuttable presumption that any out-of-state Internet retailer
or mail order seller which enters into an agreement with a Florida resident (an
“affiliate”) for paid referrals is subject to the State’s sales and use
tax. Referrals which subject
out-of-state sellers to Florida tax are broadly defined and can be via “a link
on an Internet website, an in-person oral presentation, telemarketing, or
otherwise.” Out-of-state sellers who
have cumulative gross receipts of $10,000 or less from the referrals would not be
subject to Florida tax. As in several other
states, the bill would allow sellers to rebut the presumption that they are
subject to tax by submitting evidence that the affiliates “did not engage in
any activity within [Florida] which was significantly associated with the
dealer’s ability to establish or maintain the dealer’s market…during the 12
months immediately before the rebuttable presumption arose.”
As we have written previously,
in response to a challenge by Amazon.com to a similar law enacted in 2008 in
New York, a New York State appeals court held that the law was not
unconstitutional on its face because it allows a retailer to rebut the
presumption of solicitation. The court
remanded the case to the lower court to determine whether the law violated the
Constitution’s Commerce and Due Process Clauses as applied to Amazon.com. In the meantime, as similar affiliate nexus
laws have been passed in a handful of other states, many retailers have
terminated their affiliate relationships.
Also, last spring, in a case argued by George Isaacson and Matt Schaefer
of Brann & Isaacson, an Illinois court found that Illinois’ affiliate nexus
law, which does not allow an affected retailer to rebut the statute’s
conclusive determination that having affiliates in the state creates nexus,
violates the Commerce Clause as well as the Internet Tax Freedom Act.
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Data Breaches: Some Lessons
Some of our readers may have read about recent high profile data breaches, such as the one involving credit card information taken from many Barnes & Noble retail stores. Or they may have heard of the huge class action law suits against Sony which resulted from its handling of a 2011 incident involving hackers into the Sony Playstation network. In that case, the hackers accessed personal information including names, addresses, user names, passwords, and other personal information from about 77 million user accounts. And they may have read about the breach involving TD Bank, in which TD Bank misplaced in March 2012 computer back-up tapes containing personal information for 267,000 customers, but did not inform the affected customers and pertinent state authorities until seven months later, in October. Each of these instances brings to light some apparent misconceptions regarding the handling of data breaches.
Myth 1: There is no law that requires action in the event of a data breach.
Fact 1: There is no federal law (aside from laws regarding specialized industries such as banking and health care) that requires a response. However, 46 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands require certain actions be taken in the event of a data breach regarding personal information, and each of these laws is different.
Myth 2: My company only needs to comply with the data breach laws of the states in which my company has an office or other physical presence.
Fact 2: A company is subject to the data breach laws of not only the states in which it has a physical presence but also the states in which it has customers.
Myth 3: I need only look at one state’s laws if there has been a data breach.
Myth 1: There is no law that requires action in the event of a data breach.
Fact 1: There is no federal law (aside from laws regarding specialized industries such as banking and health care) that requires a response. However, 46 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands require certain actions be taken in the event of a data breach regarding personal information, and each of these laws is different.
Myth 2: My company only needs to comply with the data breach laws of the states in which my company has an office or other physical presence.
Fact 2: A company is subject to the data breach laws of not only the states in which it has a physical presence but also the states in which it has customers.
Myth 3: I need only look at one state’s laws if there has been a data breach.
Friday, November 2, 2012
Tennessee Ruling Provides Another Wrinkle for Cloud Computing Services
A recent ruling by the Tennessee Department of Revenue (Ruling #12-11) illustrates some of the anomalies and pitfalls in properly taxing cloud computing services. The request for ruling concerned a service that provided Tennessee users access to software maintained on remote servers located outside of Tennessee. This is otherwise known as an SaaS service. In addition, the charge for the service permitted users access to certain databases, including certain reference materials such as dictionaries and encyclopedias. It would appear that the users did not download the references to their computers.
One of the anomalies in the ruling is that the Department stated that the SaaS portion of the service was not taxable, but access to the databases was taxable because the Department deemed the access to include the right to license and use digital books. As of January 1, 2009, the right to license and use digital books is taxable pursuant to an amendment to the Tennessee sales and use tax statute adopting the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement (“SSUTA”).
The Department’s basis for this distinction in taxability appears to be that access to software is not taxable because “title, possession, and control” of the software always resides outside of Tennessee. On the other hand, the taxability of digital books is predicated on the following underscored clause from Tenn. Code Ann § 67-6-233(a), which provides for the taxation of digital books when there has been the “retail sale, lease, licensing, or use of specified digital products transferred to or accessed by subscribers or consumers in this state.” (emphasis added). Section 67-6-231(a), providing for the taxation of software, includes only “software transferred by tangible storage media or delivered electronically,” but does not include access to the software. The difference between the two statutory provisions is subtle. On the one hand, digital books are taxable if the consumer in Tennessee has “access” to the books, without being required to download them. On the other hand, computer software is not taxable, even if the consumer has access to the software, so long as the consumer does not download the software to his or her computer in Tennessee.
One of the anomalies in the ruling is that the Department stated that the SaaS portion of the service was not taxable, but access to the databases was taxable because the Department deemed the access to include the right to license and use digital books. As of January 1, 2009, the right to license and use digital books is taxable pursuant to an amendment to the Tennessee sales and use tax statute adopting the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement (“SSUTA”).
The Department’s basis for this distinction in taxability appears to be that access to software is not taxable because “title, possession, and control” of the software always resides outside of Tennessee. On the other hand, the taxability of digital books is predicated on the following underscored clause from Tenn. Code Ann § 67-6-233(a), which provides for the taxation of digital books when there has been the “retail sale, lease, licensing, or use of specified digital products transferred to or accessed by subscribers or consumers in this state.” (emphasis added). Section 67-6-231(a), providing for the taxation of software, includes only “software transferred by tangible storage media or delivered electronically,” but does not include access to the software. The difference between the two statutory provisions is subtle. On the one hand, digital books are taxable if the consumer in Tennessee has “access” to the books, without being required to download them. On the other hand, computer software is not taxable, even if the consumer has access to the software, so long as the consumer does not download the software to his or her computer in Tennessee.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
One Month Left to File under Maine’s Use Tax Compliance Program
At the root of debate about whether Internet retailers and other direct marketers should be required to collect state sales and use taxes is the well worn complaint by state revenue departments that consumers (the folks who actually owe the tax under nearly every state’s laws) just do not self-report and pay use tax if left to their own devices. Consequently, the states’ argument goes, states should be entitled to shift the burdens of tax collection onto remote sellers (no matter how onerous), rather than requiring the state to pursue measures to promote reporting, or to boost collection. There are ways, however, for a state to educate consumers about their obligations to pay the use tax.
For example, now through November 30, taxpayers who have unreported use tax liability due to the State of Maine may remit tax under the 2012 Maine Use Tax Compliance Program. The Program, enacted by the State’s Legislature last spring, seeks to “encourage payment of previously unreported use tax and to improve compliance with the State’s use tax laws.”
The Program covers periods from January 1, 2006 through December 31, 2011. Taxpayers must report all taxable purchases for which tax has not been remitted for the entire six year period. But, taxpayers only must remit tax for the three years with the greatest amount of unreported tax due. No tax is due for the three years with the lowest amount of tax reported and all interest and penalties are waived for the entire six year period. Taxpayers who timely file returns under the Program are “absolved from further liability for unreported and unassessed use tax incurred prior to January 1, 2012, and [are] also absolved from liability for criminal prosecution and civil penalties related to those taxes for those years.”
For example, now through November 30, taxpayers who have unreported use tax liability due to the State of Maine may remit tax under the 2012 Maine Use Tax Compliance Program. The Program, enacted by the State’s Legislature last spring, seeks to “encourage payment of previously unreported use tax and to improve compliance with the State’s use tax laws.”
The Program covers periods from January 1, 2006 through December 31, 2011. Taxpayers must report all taxable purchases for which tax has not been remitted for the entire six year period. But, taxpayers only must remit tax for the three years with the greatest amount of unreported tax due. No tax is due for the three years with the lowest amount of tax reported and all interest and penalties are waived for the entire six year period. Taxpayers who timely file returns under the Program are “absolved from further liability for unreported and unassessed use tax incurred prior to January 1, 2012, and [are] also absolved from liability for criminal prosecution and civil penalties related to those taxes for those years.”
Friday, September 14, 2012
California Affiliate Nexus Law Goes Into Effect
We have written frequently
about the California affiliate nexus statute, AB 155, which was adopted in June
2011, but was temporarily repealed in September 2011, pending Congressional
action on a bill rejecting the Quill physical presence test. Since Congress has not enacted such a law,
AB155 is set to go into effect tomorrow.
The California Board of Equalization (“BOE”) undertook a lengthy rulemaking process over the past year to flesh out the requirements of the law. Much of this effort is reflected in the BOE’s newly amended version of California Regulation 1684. Here are some of the key points:
The California Board of Equalization (“BOE”) undertook a lengthy rulemaking process over the past year to flesh out the requirements of the law. Much of this effort is reflected in the BOE’s newly amended version of California Regulation 1684. Here are some of the key points:
- The law provides that an affiliate relationship will create nexus only if the payment to the affiliate is based upon a completed sale of tangible personal property; i.e., a commission-based arrangement. Thus, pay-per-click payment arrangements with affiliates do not create nexus.
- The statute, and Regulation 1684 which interprets the statute, provides that if the arrangement with the affiliate is for the purchase of advertisements to be delivered on the Internet, the retailer will not be deemed to have nexus if the affiliate does not directly or indirectly solicit customers in California through the use of flyers, newsletters, telephone calls, email, blogs, social networking sites, or other means of direct or indirect solicitation specifically targeted at potential customers in California. Thus, if a retailer places content on the website of a California affiliate that provides information regarding the retailer’s products and the affiliate links to the retailer’s website, so long as the affiliate does not make any solicitations on behalf of the retailer that specifically target CA residents, the retailer should not have nexus under the California statute.
- Regulation 1684 provides for a safe harbor if (1) the agreement between the retailer and affiliate provides for a prohibition of California solicitation activities on behalf of the retailer, such as distributing flyers or coupons or sending emails; (2) the retailer obtains certificates annually from the California-based affiliates that it has not engaged in any such prohibited solicited activities; and (3) the retailer accepts such certificates in good faith.
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