Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,759,108 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Current corporate income tax developments (Part II): this two-part article discusses a myriad of recent state tax activity in the corporate income tax area. Part II addresses apportionment, unitary groups/filing methods, administration and other significant issues.


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

* Two California Supreme Court decisions address whether the entire gross proceeds of certain treasury activities should be included in the sales factor.

* A lawsuit has been filed in New Jersey challenging the Constitutionality of the throw-out rule.

* Texas legislation modified the state's franchise tax to provide a margins tax.

**********

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cases were decided; regulations were proposed, issued and modified; and bulletins and rulings were issued, released and withdrawn. Part I of this article, in the March 2007 issue, focused on nexus, Internal Revenue Code The Internal Revenue Code is the body of law that codifies all federal tax laws, including income, estate, gift, excise, alcohol, tobacco, and employment taxes. These laws constitute title 26 of the U.S. Code (26 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq.  (IRC (Internet Relay Chat) Computer conferencing on the Internet. There are hundreds of IRC channels on numerous subjects that are hosted on IRC servers around the world. After joining a channel, your messages are broadcast to everyone listening to that channel. ) Sec. 338(h)(10) transactions, allocable/apportionable income and tax base. Part II, below, covers some of the more important developments in apportionment The process by which legislative seats are distributed among units entitled to representation; determination of the number of representatives that a state, county, or other subdivision may send to a legislative body. The U.S.  formulas, unitary groups/filing methods, administration and other significant corporate state tax issues.

Apportionment

A multistate mul·ti·state  
adj.
Of, relating to, or involving several states: a multistate environmental campaign. 
 corporation's business income is apportioned ap·por·tion  
tr.v. ap·por·tioned, ap·por·tion·ing, ap·por·tions
To divide and assign according to a plan; allot: "The tendency persists to apportion blame as suits the circumstances" 
 among the states using an apportionment percentage for each state having jurisdiction to tax the corporation. To determine the apportionment percentage, a ratio is established for each of the factors included in the state's formula. Each ratio is calculated by comparing the corporation's level of a specific activity in the state to the total corporation activity of that type everywhere; the ratios are then summed, weighted (if required) and averaged to determine the corporation's apportionment percentage for the state. The apportionment percentage is then multiplied by total corporation business income.

While apportionment formulas vary, many states use a three-factor formula that includes sales, payroll and property. Because use of a higher-weighted sales factor generally provides tax relief for in-state corporations, most states accord more weight to the sales factor than to the other factors. Changes in the apportionment formula may also be used to provide relief or tax benefits to specific industries or to reflect properly the operations of a particular industry. Recent apportionment developments are summarized below.

Increased Weighting of Sales Factor

* Indiana

Among other provisions, HB 1001, Laws 2006, provided for a transition to a single-factor formula for tax years beginning after 2010. The sales factor will be weighted at 60% for 2007; 70% for 2008; 80% for 2009; 90% for 2010; and 100% starting in 2011.

* Pennsylvania

HB 859, Laws 2006, increased the corporate income tax sales-factor weighting from 60% to 70%.

* South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
 

For tax years beginning after 2006, HB 4874, Laws 2006, provided a single-sales-factor apportionment for taxpayers whose principal business in the state is manufacturing or any form of collecting, buying, assembling or processing goods and materials within the state, or selling, distributing or dealing in tangible personal property within the state. Qualifying taxpayers can take advantage of any resulting tax savings on a phased-in basis for tax years 2007-2010, relative to their tax liabilities owed under the previous standard four-factor double-weighted sales-factor apportionment formula.

Apportionment Factors

* Alabama

An administrative law judge administrative law judge n. a professional hearing officer who works for the government to preside over hearings and appeals involving governmental agencies. They are generally experienced in the particular subject matter of the agency involved or of several agencies.  (ALJ ALJ Administrative Law Judge
ALJ Association for Legal Justice (Northern Ireland) 
) ruled (52) that an interstate pipeline company could include in its payroll factor compensation paid to a parent for personnel that performed operational and administrative functions for the company. The ALJ explained that the "payroll factor" statute does not require that compensation be paid to direct employees and can include amounts paid for "loaned" nonemployees that perform the same services as direct employees, because both contribute to income production.

In another ruling, an ALJ held (53) that a truck manufacturer had to source to Alabama (i.e., include in the numerator numerator

the upper part of a fraction.


numerator relationship
see additive genetic relationship.


numerator Epidemiology The upper part of a fraction
 of the sales factor) sales from trucks/parts that were ultimately delivered to customers in the state, even though initial physical delivery and tide passage occurred at its out-of-state facility, when third-party carriers retrieved the products on behalf of the Alabama customers.

* California

The most significant apportionment developments during 2006 were the California Supreme Court's decisions addressing whether the entire gross proceeds generated by certain treasury activities should be included in the sales factor. The state supreme court affirmed (54) the court of appeal to hold that the entire gross proceeds received by Microsoft Corp. on redemption of marketable securities Marketable Securities

Very liquid securities that can be converted into cash quickly at a reasonable price.

Notes:
Marketable securities are very liquid as they tend to have maturities less than one year, and the rate at which these securities can be bought or sold has
 at maturity constituted "gross receipts the total of the receipts, before they are diminished by any deduction, as for expenses; - distinguished from net profits.
- Bouvier.

See under Gross,

a. os>

See also: Gross Receipt
" under (1) the state's definitional provisions, (2) the legislative history behind the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA UDITPA Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (US) ) and (3) prior decisions of the State Board of Equalization In communications, techniques used to reduce distortion and compensate for signal loss (attenuation) over long distances.  (SBE SBE - Microsoft Office Small Business Edition ). However, the court held that "in this instance" the Franchise Tax Board (FTB FTB Franchise Tax Board (California; they collect income and sales tax)
FTB Family Tax Benefit (Australian welfare assistance)
FTB First Time Buyer (housing) 
) met its burden of proving by "clear and convincing evidence clear and convincing evidence n. evidence that proves a matter by the "preponderance of evidence" required in civil cases and beyond the "reasonable doubt" needed to convict in a criminal case. (See: beyond a reasonable doubt) " that the standard apportionment formula did not fairly represent the extent of Microsoft's business activity in California. Under the facts, Microsoft's income from marketable securities constituted 2% of total income and 73% of gross receipts.

Similarly, in General Motors Corp., (55) the state supreme court affirmed in part and reversed in part a court of appeal decision, remanding the case for further proceedings consistent with its Microsoft decision. Specifically, the state supreme court held that a repurchase agreement Repurchase agreement

An agreement with a commitment by the seller (dealer) to buy a security back from the purchaser (customer) at a specified price at a designated future date.
 is more closely analogous to a secured loan than a sale for UDITPA purposes; thus, only the interest received under the agreement should be treated as a gross receipt. With regard to marketable securities held until maturity, the court stated that the conclusion in Microsoft applied equally to the marketable securities held to maturity by General Motors. Because neither the trial court nor the appeals court had occasion to address the FTB's alternative apportionment-formula arguments, the state supreme court remanded the case for further proceedings, to allow the FTB to make this case. The court of appeal then remanded the case to the trial court for examination of the distortion issue. With respect to the application of the research credit issue in General Motors, the court held that only the taxpaying corporation that performed the research is entitled to the credit.

The state supreme court declined to review two other "gross versus net sales Net Sales

The amount a seller receives from the buyer after costs associated with the sale are deducted.

Notes:
This amount is calculated by subtracting the following items from gross sales: merchandise returned for credit, allowances for damaged or missing goods, freight
 factor" cases (Toys "R" Us Toys "R" Us (currently typeset as ToYsЯuS in the logo) is a toy store chain based in the United States, Canada, Australia,The Netherlands, South Africa, Hong Kong and the United Kingdom. , Inc., (56) and The Limited Stores, Inc. (57)) that it had previously accepted and put on hold, sending them back to the courts of appeal with instructions to vacate To annul, set aside, or render void; to surrender possession or occupancy.

The term vacate has two common usages in the law. With respect to real property, to vacate the premises means to give up possession of the property and leave the area totally devoid of contents.
 their prior decisions and reconsider in light of the court's recent rulings in Microsoft and General Motors.

In response to the Microsoft and General Motors decisions, FTB Notice 2006-3 (58) provides accuracy-related penalty protection for a taxpayer that reports in its sales factor only the interest income and net gains (and not gross receipts) from "the redemption of marketable securities as part of its treasury function."

In other sales-factor developments, the FTB issued two legal rulings. In the first, (59) it explained how to calculate the apportionment formula for taxpayers that generate both taxable and exempt nonbusiness non·busi·ness  
adj.
1. Unrelated to business or industry.

2. Unrelated to one's own business or employment.
 income, excluding activities that give rise to income not included in the tax base from the apportionment formula. In the second, (60) the FTB explained how to assign receipts derived from sales of other than tangible personal property when a taxpayer-member of a combined reporting group pays another group member to perform activities related to the sale. The FTB stated:

[d]ue to the effects of combined reporting when the contractor and the subcontractor One who takes a portion of a contract from the principal contractor or from another subcontractor.

When an individual or a company is involved in a large-scale project, a contractor is often hired to see that the work is done.
 are in a unitary relationship and are members of the same combined reporting group, the activities of the subcontractor in performance of the contract will be considered income-producing activities directly engaged in by the contractor for purposes of the sales factor in order to more accurately assign the receipt to the place where the services were performed. (Emphasis in original.)

The FTB also proposed regulations section 25137-14, providing detailed rules on the apportionment of income earned by mutual fund service providers. In general, the proposed regulation addresses the types of services performed by these businesses and offers rules on the corresponding sales-factor assignment of receipts derived from these services. The proposed regulation adopts a shareholder-location sales factor, under which the sales factor is assigned using a ratio of shares owned by shareholders in California to shares owned by shareholders located everywhere.

* Idaho

Amended Income Tax Rule 35.01. 550 provides exceptions to the general rule that income-producing activity for purposes of the sales factor generally does not include transactions and activities performed on behalf of the taxpayer. The amendments provide that income-producing activity includes transactions and activities performed on behalf of a taxpayer when (1) the taxpayer sells its product exclusively through independent contractors A person who contracts to do work for another person according to his or her own processes and methods; the contractor is not subject to another's control except for what is specified in a mutually binding agreement for a specific job. ; (2) the independent contractors can work only for the taxpayer; or (3) excluding the transactions and activities of the independent contractors would lead to an unreasonable result. The amendments also provide that only the direct costs paid by the taxpayer are considered.

* Indiana

The DOR Dor or Dora, Canaanite seaport, ancient Palestine (modern Israel), N of Caesarea Palestinae. It was never a Jewish city but rather a Phoenician outpost. It was rebuilt by the Romans; still visible are the ruins of a temple and a theater.  ruled that an in-state insurance company selling policies nationwide must source the receipts to Indiana for adjusted-gross-income-tax purposes based on its ratio of time spent performing such services in Indiana relative to everywhere. (61)

The DOR also ruled (62) that an out-of-state manufacturer was required to source to Indiana the sales of goods shipped from its out-of-state location to Indiana through customer-arranged common carrier, because the state adheres to the destination rule under statute, regardless of the ruling in Miller Brewing Co. (63)

* Kentucky

The DOR issued amended rules (64) addressing activities that result in the assignment of gross receipts to the state for purposes of the apportionment-formula sales factor; how to calculate the payroll and property factors; and apportionment and allocation for financial organizations and loan companies.

* Louisiana

The DOR clarified (65) that goods, merchandise or property imported from outside the U.S. and received in a Louisiana foreign-trade zone are deemed received outside of the state and are excluded from the numerator of the revenue ratio.

* Maryland

Amended Reg. Sec. 03.04.03.08(B) provides that the items in both the numerator and denominator of each factor must be adjusted by the applicable statutory addition and subtraction subtraction, fundamental operation of arithmetic; the inverse of addition. If a and b are real numbers (see number), then the number ab is that number (called the difference) which when added to b (the subtractor) equals  adjustments.

* Massachusetts

The Appellate Tax Board (ATB ATB Antibiotic
ATB All The Best
ATB Ability to Benefit
ATB André Tanneberger (musician)
ATB Across the Board
ATB Active Time Battle (roleplaying game)
ATB All Terrain Bike
ATB Alberta Treasury Branches
) held (66) that electricity is not tangible personal property for purposes of computing the sales factor. Based on this decision, the DOR explained (67) that receipts from the sale of electricity will be sourced as "other than sales of tangible personal property," and that this apportionment method will be applied to all tax years within the statute Encompassed by, or included under, the provisions and scope of a particular law.

In the U.S. legal system, a person who is charged with violating a statute must have committed actions that are specifically addressed in the law.
 of limitations (SOL) for assessment or abatement A reduction, a decrease, or a diminution. The suspension or cessation, in whole or in part, of a continuing charge, such as rent.

With respect to estates, an abatement is a proportional diminution or reduction of the monetary legacies, a disposition of property by will, when
.

In another development, the DOR amended Reg. 830 CMR CMR Crude mortality rate, see there  63.38.7, regarding the sales-factor calculation for mutual fund sales corporations, to address the assignment of mutual fund sales to Massachusetts in related-party transactions Related-Party Transaction

A business deal or arrangement between two parties who are joined by a special relationship prior to the deal. For example, a business transaction between a major shareholder and the corporation, such as a contract for the shareholder's company to perform
.

* Michigan

The Department of Treasury (DOT) provided guidance and standardized standardized

pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures.


standardized morbidity rate
see morbidity rate.

standardized mortality rate
see mortality rate.
 its policy on the application of the "costs of performance" method as it pertains to the single-business-tax (SBT SBT Symplastin bleeding time ) sales factor. (68) This guidance applies to the provision of services, the sale of intangible and real property and the rental of property.

* New Hampshire New Hampshire, one of the New England states of the NE United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts (S), Vermont, with the Connecticut R. forming the boundary (W), the Canadian province of Quebec (NW), and Maine and a short strip of the Atlantic Ocean (E).  

The DOR readopted, with numerous amendments, rules that clarify definitions, apportionment and sales-factor sourcing as they relate to services for purposes of the state business-profits tax. (69)

* New Jersey

Amended rule NJAC NJAC New Jersey Administrative Code
NJAC National Joint Action Committee (Trinidad and Tobago political party)
NJAC National Joint Advisory Committee (United Kingdom) 
 18:7-8.11 clarified that, if a trademark licensee is authorized to sell a trademarked product both in and outside the state, the licensor is considered to be using the product in New Jersey for apportionment purposes based on the same ratio as the licensee's instate in·state  
tr.v. in·stat·ed, in·stat·ing, in·states
To establish in office; install.
 revenue relative to revenue from all sources.

In another development, an out-of-state company filed a lawsuit against the Division of Taxation, claiming that the sales-factor throw-out rule is unconstitutional. (70)

* Oregon

The state tax court awarded a full refund for insurance excise taxes excise taxes, governmental levies on specific goods produced and consumed inside a country. They differ from tariffs, which usually apply only to foreign-made goods, and from sales taxes, which typically apply to all commodities other than those specifically exempted.  paid by an out-of-state insurance company, because income attributed to the state under the standard formula was "out of all appropriate proportion" to the business it transacted in Oregon, and neither the DOR nor the court had statutory authority to apply a discretionary alternative apportionment method to "insurance companies." (71)

* Pennsylvania

The state supreme court affirmed (72) that a subsidiary without employees could not impute impute v. 1) to attach to a person responsibility (and therefore financial liability) for acts or injuries to another, because of a particular relationship, such as mother to child, guardian to ward, employer to employee, or business associates.  a payroll factor based on the use of affiliated-company employees or independent contractors, for either corporate franchise or net income tax purposes. The subsidiary had paid for the imputed Attributed vicariously.

In the legal sense, the term imputed is used to describe an action, fact, or quality, the knowledge of which is charged to an individual based upon the actions of another for whom the individual is responsible rather than on the individual's
 services using intercompany accounts, booking these costs as payroll expenses.

* Texas

Amended Rules 34 TAC 1. TAC - Translator Assembler-Compiler. For Philco 2000.
2. TAC - Terminal Access Controller.
 3.549 and 34 TAC 3.557 provide that, for reports due after April 20, 2006, receipts from the servicing of loans secured by real property are apportioned to the location of the real property that secures the loan being serviced. Membership or enrollment fees paid for access to benefits are receipts from the sale of an intangible asset Intangible Asset

An asset that is not physical in nature.

Notes:
Examples are things like copyrights, patents, intellectual property, and goodwill. These are the opposite of tangible assets.
 and are apportioned to the payer's legal domicile domicile (dŏm`əsīl'), one's legal residence. This may or may not be the place where one actually resides at any one time. The domicile is the permanent home to which one is presumed to have the intention of returning whenever the purpose .

* Virginia

The DOT explained (73) that, for corporate income tax purposes, capital gain from the sale of stock earned by an out-of-state-headquartered affiliate included in an in-state combined corporate income tax return should be sourced to Virginia for sales-factor purposes, because the affiliate's income-producing activity resulting in the capital gain occurred in the state based on costs of performance.

In another development, the DOT ruled (74) that a perishable per·ish·a·ble  
adj.
Subject to decay, spoilage, or destruction.

n.
Something, especially foodstuff, subject to decay or spoilage. Often used in the plural.
 food-products manufacturer had to source sales ultimately shipped to out-of-state wholesaler distribution hubs or unrelated distribution centers to Virginia, because they were held at in-state refrigerated re·frig·er·ate  
tr.v. re·frig·er·at·ed, re·frig·er·at·ing, re·frig·er·ates
1. To cool or chill (a substance).

2. To preserve (food) by chilling.
 loading docks rented by the purchasers for two to three days prior to their ultimate transportation outside the state.

* Wisconsin

The DOR adopted apportionment provisions for financial institutions, broker-dealers, investment advisers, investment companies and underwriters for tax years beginning in 2006. (75)

In another development, the state tax appeals commission held (76) that the sale of telephone directory advertising constitutes the sale of a service, rather than the sale of tangible personal property, because its purchasers are the advertising customers, not the directory recipients.

Filing Methods

* Alabama

An ALJ held that a subsidiary serving as the central internal lender for AT&T Corp. and its subsidiaries did not qualify as a financial institution subject to the financial institution excise tax Excise Tax

1. An indirect tax charged on the sale of a particular good.

2. A penalty tax applied to ineligible transactions in retirement accounts. This penalty is assessed by and paid to the IRS.

Notes:
1.
, because it was not in competition with the business of national banks. Accordingly, because the lending subsidiary was part of AT&T'S Alabama affiliated group for the years at issue, it had to be included in the state consolidated corporate income tax return. (77)

* Arizona

A DOR hearing officer ruled (78) that a taxpayer was required to include four subsidiaries (a holding company, financing company, trademark company and real estate investment trust (REIT REIT

See: Real Estate Investment Trust


REIT

See real estate investment trust (REIT).
)) in its combined corporate income tax return, because the group was under common ownership and common management; had reconciled accounting systems; and exhibited substantial interdependence, integration and ties at its basic operational levels. In addition, the company could not claim a deduction for dividends received from the REIT, because such intercompany transactions Intercompany transaction

Transaction carried out between two units of the same corporation.
 had to be eliminated on the state combined income tax return.

* California

SB 663, Laws 2006, clarified that a controlled foreign corporation Controlled foreign corporation (CFC)

A foreign corporation whose voting stock is more than 50% owned by US stockholders, each of whom owns at least 10% of the voting power.
 that is a California taxpayer or has effectively connected income (income earned in the U.S.) must include subpart F Subpart F

Special category of foreign-source "unearned" income that is currently taxed by the IRS whether or not it is remitted to the US
 income in its water's-edge income base. (79)

In another development, the SBE ruled (80) that a company filing state corporate franchise/income tax returns could not include insurance company subsidiaries in a state combined report, despite claims that their exclusion resulted in distortion of noninsurance-company income attributable to California sources.

* Georgia

The DOR adopted amended Rule 560-7-3-.13 on the filing of consolidated returns.

* Idaho

Although the taxpayers filed income tax returns on a water's-edge basis, the state tax commission ruled (81) that the election was barred, because the taxpayer had not filed water's-edge election Form 14, Idaho's Water's Edge and Consent Form.

In another decision, the state tax commission determined that for an insurance company to be excluded from a unitary combined group, it must pay a premiums tax to the state. (82)

* Indiana

The DOR ruled (83) that a retailer was required to file a combined adjusted-gross-income tax return with its two wholly owned royalty and management subsidiaries, to better reflect its Indiana-source income.

The DOR similarly ruled (84) that a group of affiliate banks and credit card companies that were deemed to be operating as one interdependent unitary business was required to file a combined financial institutions tax return.

The DOR also required (85) a company to file a combined return with various affiliates that sold similar products or operated as procurement companies, to more fairly reflect the overall income earned in the state by the unitary business.

In the legislative area, HB 1001, Laws 2006, required a corporation that files combined income tax returns to petition the DOR within 30 days after the end of the taxpayer's tax year for permission to discontinue filing combined returns.

* Kentucky

The court of appeals reversed the trial court to hold (86) that 2000 legislation retroactively ret·ro·ac·tive  
adj.
Influencing or applying to a period prior to enactment: a retroactive pay increase.



[French rétroactif, from Latin
 prohibiting refund claims based on unitary return filings for years prior to 1996 exceeded Constitutional limits and violated the taxpayers' due process rights. Accordingly, the previous summary judgment in the DOR's favor was reversed, and the case was remanded to determine whether, on its merits, the taxpayers were entitled to their pending refund claims. Unitary filing was formally prohibited in the state in 1996.

In another development, the DOR issued amended rules addressing the consolidated return election. (87)

* Michigan

The DOT explained (88) its new policy that, beginning in 2006, requires requests to file a consolidated or combined return to be received prior to the date set for filing the SBT (or the extended due date) by the proposed consolidated or combined group's parent.

* Minnesota

The state supreme court reversed (89) a tax court decision to hold that a multinational firm did not have to include its 99% distributive dis·trib·u·tive  
adj.
1.
a. Of, relating to, or involving distribution.

b. Serving to distribute.

2.
 share of net income and apportionment factors from its French-organized and operating partnership (MPF MPF

mitosis-promoting factor.
) in determining its in-state unitary taxable income Under the federal tax law, gross income reduced by adjustments and allowable deductions. It is the income against which tax rates are applied to compute an individual or entity's tax liability. The essence of taxable income is the accrual of some gain, profit, or benefit to a taxpayer. . When the MPF's shareholders subsequently invoked the Federal "check-the-box" regulations to treat the MPF as a partnership, it did not alter that entity's foreign nationality.

* Mississippi

A state chancery court The Chancery Court of York is an ecclesiastical court for the Province of York of the Church of England.

The presiding officer, the Official Principal and Auditor, has been the same person as the Dean of the Arches since the nineteenth century .
 held (90) that the state consolidated return provisions, requiring that each member of an affiliated group carry on all of its business activities solely in the state to be eligible to file on a combined basis, violated the Commerce Clause.

* New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 

An ALJ found (91) that a distribution company successfully demonstrated arm's-length intercompany pricing with its parent and, thus, was not required to file a combined report for Article 9-A state franchise tax purposes.

* Oregon

State rules were amended (92) to provide that taxpayers in a unitary group In mathematics, the unitary group of degree n, denoted U(n), is the group of n×n unitary matrices, with the group operation that of matrix multiplication. The unitary group is a subgroup of the general linear group GL(n, C).  including both financial organizations and nonfinancial corporations must file a single unitary combined return.

* Vermont

The Department of Taxes adopted regulations section 1.5862(d), addressing unitary combined reporting requirements, effective for tax years beginning after 2005.

* Virginia

The DOT consolidated the income of a parent with three of its out-of-state trademark and/or intercompany-loan management subsidiaries; the facts showed that the subsidiaries lacked economic substance and the various intragroup transactions were not at arm's length arm's length adj. the description of an agreement made by two parties freely and independently of each other, and without some special relationship, such as being a relative, having another deal on the side or one party having complete control of the other. . (93)

Flowthrough Entities

* Alabama

For tax years beginning after 2004, HB 31, Laws 2006, generally conformed state law to the Federal income tax rules for taxation of trusts, estates and their beneficiaries, and conformed state law to the Federal tax classification of business trusts.

* California

Twice during 2006, the San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden  county superior court held that the annual limited liability company (LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
) fee is unconstitutional. In Northwest Energetic, it held (94) that the fee was unconstitutional when applied to an LLC that had registered to do business in the state, but had never actually commenced any activities there. In Ventas Finance I, (95) the court went further, and held that the fee cannot be reformed to add an apportionment mechanism. Following the Northwest Energetic decision, the FTB provided guidance on filing related protective refund claims for the LLC fee. (96) Both cases have been appealed. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
, the FTB is required to enforce the statute until the appellate court A court having jurisdiction to review decisions of a trial-level or other lower court.

An unsuccessful party in a lawsuit must file an appeal with an appellate court in order to have the decision reviewed.
 issues a final determination that it is unconstitutional. LLCs that have paid such fees may file protective refund claims for any years open under the SOL.

In another development, the FTB announced (97) that each series within a Delaware series LLC A Series LLC is a special form of a Limited liability company that provides extra protection for personal assets comprised of multiple business entities.

Many form an LLC in order to protect personal assets from a legal claim relating to their real estate investment or
 is a separate business entity for franchise tax purposes.

* Connecticut

For tax years beginning after 2005, SB 638, Laws 2006, eliminated the optional group income tax returns that partnerships, S corporations, trusts or estates or other passthrough entities previously were allowed to file on behalf of their nonresident non·res·i·dent  
adj.
1. Not living in a particular place: nonresident students who commute to classes.

2.
 individual owners. The new law requires all such businesses to pay income taxes at the highest marginal rate (currently, 5%) on each nonresident member's share of income from the business, if the income is at least $1,000. The new law also clarifies that S corporations, LLCs, limited liability partnerships and limited partnerships are subject to the $250 business entity tax, whether they are formed under the laws of Connecticut or another jurisdiction.

* Idaho

New Income Tax Rule 35.01.01.050 clarified that LLCs and members will be treated according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 their Federal classification and that the income tax administrative rules apply in accordance with that classification, even though the LLC and member may not be specifically mentioned in a rule.

* Kentucky

Effective for tax years beginning after 2005, HB 403, Laws 2006, provided that a disregarded entity doing business in the state can be included in its parent's return; S corporations can be included in a state consolidated return; and Kentucky income tax credits from lower-tiered passthrough entities can flow through to the ultimate individual owners.

In another legislative development, HB 1, Laws 2006, replaced the alternative minimum calculation with a new limited liability entity tax that will be imposed on corporations and limited liability passthrough entities (except those entities specifically exempted), effective for tax years beginning after 2006.

In the regulatory area, the DOR issued amended rules addressing the election to pay a member's, partner's or shareholder's proportionate share of a passthrough entity's tax liability and the passthrough entity income tax calculation. (98)

In an August 22, 2006 letter to the Kentucky Society of Certified Public Accountants Certified Public Accountant (CPA)

An accountant who has met certain standards, including experience, age, and licensing, and passed exams in a particular state.
, (99) the DOR explained that withholding from nonresident individuals is allowed only for nonresident individual partners in a general partnership for calendar years ending Dec. 31, 2005 or Dec. 31, 2006. Additionally, recently enacted HB 1 eliminates entity-level income taxation on passthrough entities and restores provisions that require nonresident withholding from individual partners, members and shareholders for tax years beginning after 2006.

* Maryland

SB 319, Laws 2006, clarified that for tax years beginning after 2005, business trusts not taxed as corporations for state purposes are taxed as passthrough entities and subject to the passthrough entity (PTE PTE

The ISO 4217 currency code for the Portugese Escudo.
) tax. The business trust will pay the PTE tax based on the share of income distributed to the beneficiary of the business trust that is a nonresident or nonresident entity.

* Massachusetts

An LLC that purchased all of the assets of a manufacturing corporation as a successor-in-interest was required to reapply Re`ap`ply´   

v. t. & i. 1. To apply again.

reapply vivolver a presentarse, hacer or presentar una nueva solicitud

 for "manufacturing corporation" classification with the DOR, as the LLC was a successor to and distinct entity from the original corporation, with a different Federal identification number. (100)

* New York

Amended 20 NYCRR NYCRR New York Codes Rules and Regulations
NYCRR New York Connecting Railroad
 section 1-2.6 and Parts 3 and 4 provide guidance on the computation of tax under Article 9-A for corporations that are partners in partnerships or members of LLCs treated as partnerships under Article 9-A.

* North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
 

SB 1741, Laws 2006, provided that, for tax years beginning after 2006, the corporate franchise tax will be imposed on LLCs that elect to be taxed as C corporations for Federal income tax purposes.

* Pennsylvania

SB 300, Laws 2006, generally granted automatic S corporation state tax treatment for corporations that elect S status for Federal income tax purposes beginning in 2006.

* Tennessee

The DOR ruled (101) that, when computing a corporation's excise tax base, the portion of income or loss that has been passed through to the taxpayer, but reported on the Tennessee excise tax return of a second-tier limited partnership, should be deducted from (or added to, in the case of a loss) the taxpayer's Federal taxable income or loss before the net operating loss operating loss

The excess of operating expenses over revenue. As with operating income, operating losses exclude revenues and expenses from operations that are not considered a regular part of the business. Also called deficit. Compare operating income.
 and special deductions.

Administration

Tax Shelters tax shelter: see tax exemption.  

* California

The FTB announced (102) that it will follow the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  tax-shelter-settlement initiative as outlined in IRS Ann. 2005-80, (103) effectively creating the California Tax Shelter Resolution Initiative to run alongside the Federal initiative. The FTB also released a list of frequently asked questions and answers on the state's tax-shelter-resolution initiative, which can be found on the FTB's webpage. (104)

* Louisiana

The DOR explained (105) that, because the state's income tax policy "piggy-backs" that of the IRS, tax shelters that are listed and deemed abusive by the Service will be considered abusive for Louisiana income tax purposes.

* Massachusetts

The DOR explained (106) the enactment of new penalty provisions applicable to taxpayers, return preparers and promoters of abusive tax shelters Abusive tax shelter

A limited partnership that the IRS judges to be claiming tax deductions illegally.


abusive tax shelter

A tax shelter in which an improper interpretation of the law is used to produce tax benefits that are
 and the manner of their enforcement.

* New York

The Department of Taxation and Finance adopted rule 20 NYCRR Part 2500.1, providing a definition of a New York reportable transaction and the disclosure requirements for participating in one.

* North Carolina

During 2006, the DOR undertook a settlement initiative that ended Dec. 15, 2006 and was directed at certain transactions that created tax benefits, deductions or losses that the DOR considered eligible. The settlement agreement required taxpayers to (1) waive all rights to appeal or refund of any amounts paid pursuant to the initiative, except for refunds due as the result of Federal changes or mathematical or computational errors; and (2) unwind Unwind

1. The closure of an investment position.

2. The reconciliation of an error previously unseen by a brokerage house.

Notes:
1. Sometimes referred to as closing out a position.
 transactions or dissolve entities involved in "eligible transactions" and "ineligible transactions" (if any) or adjust methodology for filing as prescribed by the DOR for all future years.

* Utah

SB 139, Laws 2006, required taxpayers and material advisers to disclose a reportable transaction, allowed the tax commission to identify state-specific listed transactions and, in addition to other penalties, imposed a 10% penalty on tax underpayments attributable to reportable transactions.

Further, taxpayers are required to attach a disclosure statement for any listed transactions from 2004, 2005 and 2006, to their 2007 Utah income tax returns.

* West Virginia West Virginia, E central state of the United States. It is bordered by Pennsylvania and Maryland (N), Virginia (E and S), and Kentucky and, across the Ohio R., Ohio (W). Facts and Figures


Area, 24,181 sq mi (62,629 sq km). Pop.
 

HB 4630, Laws 2006, required disclosure of certain tax shelters; imposed penalties for participating in or promoting abusive tax-shelter transactions and failing to report listed transactions; and increased the SOL on assessments for failure to disclose a listed transaction. Emergency Rule 110 C.S.R. 10J provides guidance on the disclosure and regulation of tax shelters created to avoid paying state income taxes.

SOLs

* California

The SBE clarified that the extended state SOL on a refund claim after a Federal Revenue Agent Report is limited to the Federal adjustment items. (107)

* Massachusetts

Amended rule 830 CMR 62C.30.1 explains how taxpayers must report and adjust state tax due after a change in Federal taxable income, tax credits or taxable estate Taxable Estate

The total value of a deceased person's assets that are subject to taxation - minus liabilities and minus the prescribed tax-deductible portion of assets left behind by the deceased.
.

* North Carolina

The DOR explained (108) that, for purposes of tolling the state's general three-year SOL for assessments and refunds, the extension due date is used, rather than the original due date.

In another development, HB 1892, Laws 2006, reduced from two years to six months the period within which a taxpayer is required to report its Federal taxable income changes determined by the Federal government.

* Ohio

The tax commissioner ruled (109) that when a taxpayer has a Federal change made to its taxable income as a result of a transfer-pricing adjustment, it may file an application for refund (and an amended state return) with the state generally no later than one year after the adjustment has been agreed to or finally determined for Federal income tax purposes, even if this timeframe is beyond the state's general three-year SOL.

* Virginia

SB 583, Laws 2006, extended from 90 days to one year the period within which taxpayers must file an amended return Amended Return

A return filed in order to make corrections to a tax return from a previous year. It can be used to correct errors and claim a more advantageous filing.

Notes:
An amended return is filed using Form 1040X.
 when the IRS changes the taxpayer's Federal taxable income or the taxpayer files an amended Federal return.

Other

* Georgia

The state court of appeals ruled that a taxpayer that was ineligible for state corporate income tax refunds Tax refund

Money back from the government when too much tax has been paid or withheld from a salary.
, due to filing the claims beyond the applicable three-year SOL, could not alternatively refile for the same refunds using a state extension statute reserved for amended Federal returns. (110) Specifically, the court explained that the state's extension for filing an amended state corporate income tax return applies only to returns filed within 180 days of a final Federal determination; it does not apply to situations, as in this case, in which the amended Federal return was based on the company's choice to amend, rather than as a result of an IRS review and examination process.

* Maryland

SB 484, Laws 2006, increased to seven months the period for which the comptroller may extend the time for a corporation to file an income tax return; it applies to tax years after 2005.

* Massachusetts

TIR TIR International Road Transport [French Transports Internationaux Routiers]  06-21 (111) permits an automatic six-month extension to file a tax return, without the need for application, for certain taxpayers. This TIR does not apply to financial institutions, insurance companies, utility companies, urban redevelopment companies or any other corporation required to file Form 355-7004 Misc., Application for Extension of Time to File Certain Massachusetts or Foreign Corporate Excise Returns, to request an extension of time to file a tax return.

In another development, HB 4169, Laws 2006, contained numerous state tax law changes, including new penalties for taxpayers and preparers that fail to disclose "inconsistent positions" with respect to returns filed in other states, or positions resulting in understatements if there is no substantial authority for the treatment.

* Michigan

Legislation enacted in 2006 provided taxpayer-friendly administrative procedural changes that include (1) the right to an informal conference on a credit audit or refund denial; (2) requiring the DOT to notify taxpayers of refunds owed that have been identified on audit and their right to an appeal; (3) allowing taxpayers to convert assessment appeals into refund claims during informal conference; (4) allowing taxpayers to appeal disputed issues if the DOT does not issue an order and determination within 180 days after notice to begin an informal conference; (5) an increased 60-day period to request an informal conference after receipt of a notice of intent to assess; and (6) reliance on DOT bulletins and letter rulings issued after Sept. 30, 2006, until formally revoked. (112)

* Montana

The state supreme court ruled that the public does not have the right to Federally protected information contained on state corporation tax returns. (113)

* Virginia

The DOT provided new administrative appeal guidelines (114) for tax assessments; the guidelines will be formally adopted by the DOT as a regulation.

* Wisconsin

In a case involving whether a company was engaged in a unitary business with a partnership in which it owned a 50% interest, the tax appeals commission held (115) that the DOR could obtain a copy of the company's consolidated Federal income tax return for the tax year at issue as part of discovery.

Miscellaneous

Tax Rates

* Connecticut

Among other provisions, H 5845, Laws 2006, eliminated the 2007 15% corporate surcharge An overcharge or additional cost.

A surcharge is an added liability imposed on something that is already due, such as a tax on tax. It also refers to the penalty a court can impose on a fiduciary for breaching a duty.
 that otherwise would have applied to all corporations that pay more than the $250 minimum tax.

* New Jersey

A 4706, Laws 2006, imposed a 4% surcharge on the corporate business tax for periods ending after June 30, 2006 and before July 1, 2009. Starting with calendar-year 2006, the new law also increased the minimum tax from $500 to $2,000, depending on New Jersey gross receipts.

* West Virginia

SB 2005, Laws 2006, reduced the corporate tax rate from 9% to 8.75% for tax years beginning after 2006.

Other

* California

A state superior court dismissed (116) a suit challenging the validity of the additional 50% amnesty penalty imposed on taxpayers that failed or declined to participate in the state's two-month 2005 amnesty program. The court agreed with the FTB that the case was not ripe for judicial decision, because the tax years at issue were still in protest status, and there is no amnesty penalty to contest until the protested assessment is sustained and a final deficiency assessment made.

* Michigan

Through an initiative petition that was immune from veto by the governor, the state legislature A state legislature may refer to a legislative branch or body of a political subdivision in a federal system.

The following legislatures exist in the following political subdivisions:
 voted to repeal the SBT at the end of 2007. (117)

* Ohio

The U.S. Supreme Court held (118) that state and municipal taxpayers lacked standing to challenge the validity of Ohio's franchise tax investment credit. Subsequently, the Court let stand the decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit, (119) holding that an Ohio personal property tax exemption tax exemption, immunity from the requirement of paying taxes. Federal, state, and usually local law provide exemption from taxation for a wide variety of organizations, usually not-for-profit, such as churches, colleges, universities, health care providers, various  was Constitutional.

The DOT issued a number of rules on the new commercial activities tax. (120)

* Texas

HB 3, Laws 2006, modified the franchise tax (previously based on capital or earned surplus Earned surplus

See: Retained earnings


earned surplus

See retained earnings.
) to provide a tax based on taxable margin (the margins tax), applicable to reports originally due after 2007. An entity's margin is computed by subtracting from total revenue either cost of goods sold Cost of goods sold

The total cost of buying raw materials, and paying for all the factors that go into producing finished goods.


cost of goods sold 
 or compensation, at the taxpayer's election. The resulting margin cannot be greater than 70% of total revenue. Taxpayers with 80% common ownership and a unitary relationship will report on a consolidated water's-edge basis. The tax base is apportioned using a single gross-receipts factor. The tax rate is 1%; businesses classified as "wholesale or retail" are taxed at 0.5%. (121)

For more information about this article, contact Ms. Boucher at kboucher@deloitte.com

(52) Plantation Pipe Line Co. v. AL Dep't of Rev. (DOR), AL DOR, Admin. Law Div., Dkt. No. CORP. 05-948 (5/23/06).

(53) Paccar, Inc. v. AL DOR, AL DOR, Admin. Law Div., Dkt. No. CORP. 04-715 (1/11/06).

(54) Microsoft Corp. v. CA FTB, 39 Cal.4th 750 (2006).

(55) General Motors Corp. v. CA FTB, 39 Cal.4th 773 (2006), rev'g and rem'g CA Ct. App., 2d Dis. (6/30/04).

(56) Toys "R" Us, Inc. v. CA FTB, No. S143422 (transferred after hold 11/15/06).

(57) The Limited Stores, Inc. v. CA FTB, No. S136922 (transferred after hold 11/15/06).

(58) CA FTB, Notice No. 2006-3 (9/28/06).

(59) CA FTB, Legal Ruling No. 2006-01 (4/28/06).

(60) CA FTB, Legal Ruling No. 2006-02 (5/3/06).

(61) IN DOR, Rev. Rul. No. 2006-02IT (2/22/06).

(62) IN DOR, Ltr. of Finding No. 01-0358 (8/23/06).

(63) Miller Brewing Co. v. IN DOR, 831 NE2d 859 (IN Tax Ct. 2005).

(64) 103 KAR 16:270, 16:090, 16:290 and 16:150 (effective 8/7/06).

(65) LA DOLL, Rev. Rul. No. 06-018 (11/3/06).

(66) EUA EUA Examination under anesthesia, see there  Ocean State Corp. v. Comm'r, MA ATB, Dkt. Nos. C258405-406, C258424-425, C258882-883, C259158-159, C259653 and C262566-568 (4/24/06).

(67) MA Taxpayer Info. Rel. (TIR) No. 06-9 (6/12/06).

(68) Internal Policy Directive (IPD IPD Institut für Programmstrukturen und Datenorganisation
IPD Investment Property Databank (UK)
IPD Integrated Product Development
IPD Intellectual Property Department
IPD Invasive Pneumococcal Disease
IPD Implicit Price Deflator
) 2006-8, MI DOT (9/29/06).

(69) NH DOR, Amended Rev 301, 302, 303.01 and 303.02 (effective 8/25/06).

(70) General Engines Co., Inc. v. Div. of Tax'n, NJ Tax Ct. (lawsuit filed 12/8/06).

(71) Stonebridge Life Insurance Co. v. Dep't OR Tax Court, TC No. 4705 (2/22/06).

(72) UPS Worldwide Forwarding, Inc. v. Comm'th, 890 A2d 368 (PA 2005).

(73) VA Pub. Doc. No. 06-130 (10/25/06).

(74) VA Pub. Doc. No. 06-86 (8/30/06).

(75) WI DOR, Tax 2.49 and 2.495 (effective 7/1/06).

(76) Ameritech Publishing Ameritech Publishing, Inc. was formed in 1984 during the Bell System Divestiture. It combined the former directory operations of Illinois Bell, Indiana Bell, Michigan Bell, Ohio Bell and Wisconsin Telephone. , Inc. v. WI DOR, WI Tax App. Comm See comms. ., Dict. No. 01-I-227(P) (8/22/06).

(77) AT&T Corp. v. DOR, AL DOR, Admin. Law Div., Dkt. No. CORP. 05-403 (6/30/06).

(78) AZ DOR, Hearing Officer Case No. 200600035-C (9/15/06).

(79) The new law is operative for tax years starting after 2005, except that for taxpayers that made a water's-edge election prior to 2006, the provisions do not apply until the end of the current election period.

(80) Appeal of Argonaut Group, Inc., CA SBE, Case No. 287738 (6/28/06).

(81) ID State Tax Comm. Ruling Nos. 18901 and 18902 (5/26/06).

(82) ID State Tax Comm. Ruling No. 18612 (9/29/05).

(83) IN DOR, Ltr. of Finding No. 05-0512 (9/13/06).

(84) IN DOR, Ltr. of Finding No. 02-0278 (6/1/06).

(85) IN DOR, Ltrs. of Finding Nos. 05-0318 and 05-0319 (11/1/06).

(86) Johnson Controls Johnson Controls, Inc. (NYSE: JCI) is a United States company, based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, specializing in the design, manufacturing, and installation of automotive systems, automotive batteries (Optima[1] based in Denver, Colorado) and climate control systems. , Inc., v. KY Rev. Dep't, KY Ct. App., Case No. 2004-CA-001566-MR (5/5/06).

(87) 103 KAR 16:200 (effective 8/7/06).

(88) IPD 2006-3, MI DOT (5/8/06).

(89) Manpower, Inc. v. Comm'r, MN S.Ct., A06-468 (12/7/06).

(90) AT&T Corp. v. State Tax Comm'n, MS Chancery Ct., Hinds Cty, No. G-2000-31 S/2 (5/26/06).

(91) In the Matter of Hallmark Marketing Corp., NY Div. of Tax App., No. 819956 (1/26/06).

(92) OR DOR, amended OAR 150-314.280-(N) and 150-317.710(5)(b) (effective 7/31/06).

(93) VA Pub. Doc. No. 06-52 (4/28/06).

(94) Northwest Energetic Services, LLC v. CA FTB, CA Super. Ct., San Fran., No. CGC-05-437721 (4/13/06); for a discussion, see Dickerson, Hayes and Thomas, Tax Clinic, "California Superior Rules LLC 'Fee' Unconstitutional," 38 The Tax Adviser 144 (March 2007).

(95) Ventas Finance I, LLC v. CA FTB, CA Super. Ct., San Fran., No. CGC-05-44000I (11/7/06).

(96) This guidance can be found at www.ftb.ca.gov/forms/misc/3556.html.

(97) See CA FTB, "Ask the Advocate," March/April 2006 Tax News.

(98) A103 KAR 15:020 (effective 9/1/06); 103 KAR 16:210 (effective 8/7/06).

(99) The letter can be found at http://reveune.ky.gov/NR/rdonlyres/ EEADE03A_49A8-429A-96C0-89A9B8B8B11C/0/KSCPAletter82206.pdf.

(100) MA DOR, Ltr. Ruling No. 06-6 (4/24/06).

(101) TN DOR, Ltr. Ruling No. 06-06 (3/14/06).

(102) CA FTB, Notice No. 2006-1 (1/11/06). This initiative ended on March 31, 2007.

(103) Ann. 2005-80, IRB IRB

See: Industrial Revenue Bond
 2005-46, 967.

(104) See www.ftb.ca.gov/law/Tax_shelter/faqs.html.

(105) LA DOR, Rev. Ruling No. 06-009 (6/29/06).

(106) MA TIR No. 06-5 (4/13/06).

(107) In the Matter of ICI (language) ICI - An extensible, interpretated language by Tim Long with syntax similar to C. ICI adds high-level garbage-collected associative data structures, exception handling, sets, regular expressions, and dynamic arrays.  Americas, Inc., Cal. SBE, Case No. 312753 (11/20/06).

(108) NC DOLL, Directive No. CD-06-1 (10/25/06).

(109) Opin. of the Tax Comm'r No. 06-0001, OH Dept. of Tax'n (4/20/06).

(110) Graham v. McKesson Information Solutions, LLC, GA Ct. App., Case Nos. A06A033 and A06A0334 (5/12/06).

(111) MA TIR No. 06-21 (12/7/06).

(112) HB 5356, 5357, 5358, 5359, 5360, 5361, 5362 and 4244 (signed by the governor 2/3/06).

(113) Elliott v. Montana DOR, Mont., Case No. 05-336 (10/24/06).

(114) VA Pub. Doc. No. 06-140 (11/29/06).

(115) Louis Dreyfus Petroleum Products Corp. v. DOR, WI Tax App. Comm., Dkt. No. 03-I-132(P) (6/15/06).

(116) General Electric Co. v. CA FTB, Cal. Super. Ct., San Fran., No. 449157 (8/30/06).

(117) Journal No. 73, MI Senate, and Journal No. 71, MI House of Representatives (8/9/06).

(118) DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Curio cu·ri·o  
n. pl. cu·ri·os
A curious or unusual object of art or piece of bric-a-brac.



[Short for curiosity.
, S.Ct., 5/15/06.

(119) Cuno v. DaimlerChrysler Corp, 6th Cir., 10/19/04, cert (Computer Emergency Response Team) A group of people in an organization who coordinate their response to breaches of security or other computer emergencies such as breakdowns and disasters. . den.

(120) The commercial activities tax is a gross receipts tax A gross receipts tax, sometimes referred to as a gross excise tax, is a tax on the total gross revenues of a company, regardless of their source. It is similar to a sales tax, but it is levied on the seller of goods or services rather than the consumer.  and, thus, is beyond the scope of this article; for a discussion, see Tapia, Tax Clinic, "Beware Ohio's CAT," 37 The Tax Adviser 460 (August 2006).

(121) For more details, see Brookner and Brown, State and Local Taxes, "Sweeping Texas Franchise Tax Changes: The Margins Tax," 37 The Tax Adviser 550 (September 2006).
COPYRIGHT 2007 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:State & Local Taxes
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Date:Apr 1, 2007
Words:6530
Previous Article:Treatment of capitalized costs of intangible assets (Part I): This two-part article examines cost recovery of intangible asset expenditures. Part I...
Next Article:The funding dilemma: retirement or college?(Personal Financial Planning)



Related Articles
Strategies to minimize state and local taxes.
Current corporate income tax developments.(part 2)
Use of 80/20 companies. (State & Local Taxes).
Current corporate income tax developments.(part 2)
Current corporate income tax developments.(part 2)
NY administrative ruling addresses numerous apportionment issues.
Current corporate income tax developments.(part 2)
Amicus curiae brief on behalf of Tax Executive Institute, Inc. in support of plaintiffs-appellants.(California)
Amicus curiae letter in General Motors Corp. v. Franchise Tax Board: August 31, 2004.
Current corporate income tax developments.(part 2)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles