Letter Rulings

that was easy

Everyone is looking for the easy button. One click. The answer appears. AI is helping that perception or expectation increase.

Many projects I do around the house. Others expect it to be easy. It never is. At the end of the project I often say, "that was easy."

In the state tax world, clients may come to you with bad facts or facts that when you apply the law produces an unfavorable or unfair result. They already got a bad answer from the state. However, they want to know if there is another way. Another argument. Another position. A sliver of hope or option that you could possibly squeeze through to get to the other side and receive a favorable result.

That favorable result could possibly be obtained if you find someone within the department of revenue, the legal division, appeals, or taxpayer advocate office that has discretion and authority to reach a different conclusion when clearly, the facts and the law when technically applied, produce an unfavorable result.

When situations like the above arise, some clients understand what they are asking you to do and are willing to pay for you to "try." Other clients may not understand what they are asking and expect there to be an "easy button" or just call the state and see what happens. That is not how a "more favorable" result will be achieved.

Now, in some cases, I do have contacts within certain state Departments of Revenue (taxation) that do offer great assistance in reaching positive resolutions in a short timeframe. However, those cases don't generally include the combination of "bad facts" and law that contradicts. Often, those cases include good facts and good law, but the taxpayer simply misapplied the law to their facts.

If you are following.

"Good facts" are facts that if the taxpayer followed the law, they would have received a reasonable result.

"Bad facts" are facts that if the taxpayer follows the law, they will not get a positive or reasonable result. Thus, we plead for mercy or discretion by a state for a fair and reasonable exception to the law as 'it is written' based on the unfair result despite the taxpayer's bad facts or misinformed guidance or reliance, etc.

QUICK QUESTION

We have all approached someone at different times and said, "we have a quick question," when we don't really know the complexity of the issue or question we are asking. Thus, we hope and expect to get an "easy" or quick response.

Other times, we ask someone a question that we know is complex and has a narrow margin of victory, yet we still expect to get an "easy" or quick response. Hmmmm.........something is wrong here.

is the law changing or simply the interpretation of the law?

Interpretation of the law determines whether there is any retroactive changes to the law being made.

If retroactively changing the law, it may be unconstitutional.

If the interpretation is simply incorrect, then no change in the law is being suggested, the interpretation is only being corrected (changed).

However, then the interpretation could be considered to being changed retroactively.

Does it matter if the law is changed or the interpretation is changed?

The answer likely depends on who is making the change.

The issues:

  • What is the law?

  • What is the correct interpretation of the law?

  • What is the basis of that interpretation?

  • Will the courts agree?

State tax laws are challenged because either the state has made an assessment and believes additional tax is due based on the state's interpretation of the law.

But what if the law is vague or ambiguous, open to interpretation?

What if the company has a different interpretation of the law?

Who wins?

Deference. What is it?

Judicial deference is the idea that under some circumstances, a court should defer to a state agency's interpretation of a statute or regulation rather than the court imposing its own interpretation.

Recently the U.S. Supreme court ruled in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo which overturned the Chevron doctrine. The Chevron doctrine gave deference to the state agency's interpretation.

From a state perspective, several states did not follow the Chevron doctrine. Some states even have anti-deference statutes.

Georgia codified antideference in 2021 specifically for tax matters providing that all quesitons of law to be decided by a court or the Georgia Tax Tribunal are to be made "without any deference to any determination or interpretation, writen or unwritten, that may have been made on the matter."

Tennessee amended its statutes effective April 2022 providing that when interpreting a state statute or rule, a court should not give deference to a state agency's interpretation and should interpret the statute "de novo."

CONCLUSION

Interpretation matters.

Public knowledge of the state's interpretation is necessary if we are to have any level of certainty and compliance.

Public knowledge of the state's interpretation allows companies to make determinations as to whether they agree with that interpretation and either accept it or challenge it.

Retroactively changing the law or the interpretation of the law can have adverse effects on not only the taxpayer involved, but the taxpayer community at large.

Ambiguity in a law creates confusion, different interpretations, risk, opportunity and ultimately, most likely, litigation.

Stay sharp. Be safe.

Don't let state taxes play the villain in your business story

Our lives are like a book. A story. A journey. Each day is a new page, a new paragraph, a new sentence, a new word. There are chapters to our lives. There is a preface, a foreword, an introduction. There are many plot lines, unexpected twists and turns. Sometimes we are the hero, sometimes we are the villian. Sometimes we know exactly what to write and other times, we just stare at the blank page. Too many options, not enough options. Do we rewrite the story? Do we turn the page? Is it time to start a new chapter or do we keep going down the same road. When good times happen, we want it to last forever. When bad things happen, we can't wait to turn the page or move into the next chapter. Sometimes we cause change and sometimes change is forced upon us. We grow, we age, we hopefully learn. We adapt, we improvise and hopefully overcome. We learn what we like, what we don't like. Our personal and professional lives intertwined. Working to focus, to achieve, to realize goals and dreams while balancing time with families and friends. Obsession leads to great things, when obsession is focused on the right things without sacrificing the most important things (which aren't things).

I'm not quite sure why I started with that intro, but hopefully it means something to you.

As business owners, business and/or tax professionals, our work takes up a lot of our time, our lives. Thus, business is personal and should be taken seriously. It is how we support ourselves and our families. It is a big part of our story. They often say that what you do is not who you are. That what you do doesn't define you. I don't think that's necessarily true. It is often difficult to separate what you do from who you are. We all take on the identity of what we do or atleast for some part of the day. Or maybe we take on an alter ego. Regardless, we have our bios that tell people some of who we are, but not the whole picture.

Right about now, you are probably asking, "how does any of this relate to state taxes?" Well, as I have done in many of my blog posts over the last decade, I will attempt to bring this back to state taxes.

Companies have a story. They have a lifecycle. They start out with an idea, a vision, a dream, a goal. Then they get capital and make investments. They pick a location, buy or build a facility, hire people, start selling, start shipping, in one state, in multiple states. Then they grow - hire more, build more, sell more. Maybe they create new legal entities, new ownership structures. Maybe they start selling different products and services. Maybe they build new facilities and hire more employees in multiple states. Maybe the entities sell to each other. Maybe the entities start selling to customers in foreign countries. Maybe they create foreign entities that sell into the U.S. Maybe they acquire another entity or they are acquired by another entity. Maybe the owners simply sell their ownership interest and move on to begin another venture.

All of the above changes, stages, activities create different state and local tax issues, risks and opportunities. Some companies plan ahead before making a decision or taking action, but often the action happens before the state tax impact is taken into consideration. This results in potential tax exposure or liabilities that arise and can grow if they are not discovered or investigated. Sometimes planning ahead could have eliminated any exposure and perhaps even created tax savings or refund opportunites. Some state tax issues related to the above are:

  • knowing when to file returns in a state (i.e., having a taxable presence or nexus)

  • knowing when to collect sales tax on the company's sales (sales taxability study)

  • identifying tax credits and incentives related to building/investing in a specific state, county or city

  • identifying any sales tax exemptions related to the company's purchases

  • knowing how each type of legal entity is taxed from a state income tax perspective

  • knowing the state tax impact of integrating new companies, merging companies or selling interests in a partnership or S corporation

Each stage of a company's business tells a story. Is filled with various facts, plots and challenges. State taxes play a key role and impact every chapter, every page, and perhaps every sentence. State taxes can be the hero or the villain.

Being proactive is always better than being reactive or playing the "wait and see game."

when state tax laws change, tax pros & taxpayers respond like my cats

Like several parts of the country, this week we got abnormally cold temperatures and about 6 to 7 inches of snow in Nashville. We live on a hill on 16 acres. We don't normally get this much snow and definitely not this cold (zero or negative temps). Oh, did I mention we live on a hill.

So, when this level of 'winter' occurs, we basically don't go anywhere and just wait for it to melt. I do a little shoveling where I can. Actually, I did shovel my road on my hill so I could attempt to get out if I wanted to. Most people would have just played the waiting game. Not me. (Let's attempt to hurt my back for the sake of a clean road.)

My family calls this week - "snow week." A time where work pauses and my wife gets to play games, do art, and fun stuff with our daughters. In other words, a time where everyone is trapped at home.

While I continue to work from home as if nothing has happened.

THE CATS

We have three outdoor cats that we gathered up and put in our heated garage to protect them from the extreme cold. When I go in the garage every morning, one cat is content and just wants to be left alone, one cat is a little confused, but then immediately starts to eat and seems relaxed, and the last cat follows me around, wanting petted non-stop, looking like he wants to jump on my head (he's the anxious one). He keeps acting like he wants out of the garage. Our garage doors are glass. He will sit at our garage doors and just look outside and whine.

Sidenote - when he is outside and winter comes (starts to get colder), he will often come to our windows or doors and look in - like he wants to be inside. In other words, you can't make him happy. He always wants the opposite of what he has (sound familiar?). He thinks he wants out of the garage so he can play in the snow and cold, but he would immediately want back in.

Why do I share all of this in a newsletter about state taxes?

Well, I think life has a lot of great analogies for state taxes (or it's just because that's my profession).

JANUARY IS "SNOW MONTH" FOR THE TAX PROFESSION

We are in the middle of January and it is the calm before the storm for most tax practitioners. In the state and local tax (SALT) profession, there really isn't any off-season. It's busy season year-round. With that said, we do experience "higher call-volumes" during tax 'busy season.'

In addition to tax 'busy season' getting ready to kick-off, state government legislative season or sessions will be starting soon. Governors and others are already making their proposals or ideas known. Every year, states change their tax laws via these sessions. These changes can be unique to the state or they can be related to conforming or not conforming with federal tax legislation. These changes are in addition to the daily non-legislative changes that occur due to new interpretations of current law, court decisions, private letter rulings, audit adjustments related to grey areas of tax law that taxpayers did not expect to be interpreted in a certain way.

Some state tax policy organizations that are great resources for monitoring law changes or being involved in impacting policy changes are:

The Tax Foundation published an article about State Tax Changes taking effect January 1, 2024.

COST has a lot of great resources that only members can obtain, but they also provide some great FREE resources such as their Policy Position Statements, Amicus Briefs, other studies and reports, etc.

The MTC has a number of uniformity working groups that you can participate in or attend that can be enlightening.

WHEN STATE TAX LAWS CHANGE, TAX PROS AND TAXPAYERS RESPOND LIKE MY CATS

Just like my cats, tax pros and taxpayers respond differently to tax law changes and this time of year.

Some tax pros and taxpayers will greet tax law changes like its no big deal, not realizing the impact or the reason why they should care.

Some tax pros and taxpayers will understand what is going on and be cautious and take a 'wait and see' approach, calmly waiting for guidance so they can make informed decisions and move on.

Some tax pros and taxpayers will be anxious, will want guidance immediately, even if the tax law change has just been proposed and not enacted. They will pace and want to know what to do (even if the law change never happens).

Regardless of what cat you feel most like, this is an annual, recurring event where state tax law changes can feel like an 'avalanche' of snow.

An effective state tax pro, daily monitors state tax law changes in addition to the annual state legislative sessions.

A state tax pro looks for risks and opportunities to taxpayers.

A state tax pro provides technical and cost-effective practical guidance. Identifying the grey areas. Explaining the issues and options. Providing navigation. A compass. A roadmap. Direction.

In the context of thinking of state tax law changes as snow, a state tax pro provides a 'shovel' or 'snow plow.'

CONCLUSION

Regardless of how you feel about state tax law changes or snow, winter comes every year. I hope you don't get trapped at home for too long when winter comes. I also hope you find your shovel or snow plow to move forward when the avalanche of state tax law changes occur.

Here's to spring.

the BIGGEST STATE TAX ISSUE companies face today

The first question a kid asks before starting to play a game that it has never played before is - what are the rules?

Seems like a simple question and one that should be easily answered.

Over the holidays, my family played games. We didn't have to ask about the rules for games we had played several times before, because the rules hadn't changed. For some of the games we hadn't played in a while, we needed to read the instructions to refresh our memory of the rules, but again, the rules hadn't changed. For games we had never played before, we had to ask - what are the rules? But once we learned them, we could play the game and even WIN the game.

Let me ask you this?

Do you know the state tax rules? Income tax rules? Sales tax rules?

Are the rules different depending on the state?

Once you know the rules for that state, do they ever change?

If you stop doing business in a state and then re-enter the state to do business in a later year, will the rules still be the same? Will you simply need a refresh or will you have to learn all new rules?

State taxes is like playing a game where the rules keep changing during the game. The rules don't stay the same year after year, and they may not even be clear when you start the game.

BIGGEST ISSUE

At this time of year, many firms will release reports on the top issues of 2023 and/or what they think the top issues of 2024 will be. However, I think the BIGGEST ISSUE is the lack of clarity and ability to rely on state tax statutes, regulations, court decisions and rulings. In other words, the BIGGEST ISSUE is simply the ability to know how much tax to pay, and how to avoid interest and penalties.

The 'greyness' or lack of clarity and certainty create confusion (and yes, opportunity), but in a world where companies simply need to walk before they run (i.e., comply), knowing the baseline can be the most important line.

Not only are there many 'grey issues' when it comes to multistate income tax and sales tax, there are many issues where there is simply 'discretionary authority.' Again this can be positive, but when a company needs to make decisions and take positions on tax returns, it can be frustrating. The lack of clarity and certainty creates risk and unintended consequences.

BRIGHT LINE TESTS

Bright line tests or straight forward thresholds for nexus, taxability, etc. are great in most cases. However, then the argument becomes about the bright line and how it is arbritary or should be changed. Bright line tests quickly create winners and losers.

Greyness or discretionary authority provides opportunities for each player to determine on their own if they are a winner or loser (atleast until the referee throws a flag).

PRIVATE LETTER RULINGS

When in doubt, file a private letter ruling. Get certainty. Correct??

Well, it's not that simple. An effective private letter ruling can provide certainty and help a company avoid additional tax, interest and penalties. An ineffective private letter ruling can be a waste of time. What do I mean?

Many taxpayers choose NOT to do a private letter ruling because of the following concerns:

  • Taxpayers must disclose their identify before obtaining an answer from the state.

  • Facts may not be accurate, or disputed later, making the answer invalid.

  • Ruling may be revoked at any time.

  • Timing of the proposed and prospective transaction with obtaining an answer from the state.

  • Rulings are binding unless the facts are not accurate.

  • Unsure as to how deep of an analysis of the law the corporation is required to provide.

  • The length of time to obtain a ruling.

  • Consequently, there is even uncertainty in the process of attempting to obtain certainty.

AMENDED RETURNS

Sometimes the best way to gain certainty is to simply pay the additional tax (or tax that you disagree with) and then file a refund claim (amended return) to challenge the state's position.

I don't love this option since the taxpayer has to pay the tax first, but it does eliminate risk and makes the state declare their position. However, if the state's position is contrary to the taxpayer's, then the taxpayer won't love this option. But this option does avoid interest and penalties.

TAKING THE POSITION QUIETLY

Some taxpayers may choose to simply do their own research, document their position, identify the appropriate levels of assurance and then take the position on the tax return and wait. Wait to see if the state ever comes calling (audits or sends a notice). If the state does send a notice or audits the taxpayer, then the taxpayer will have to challenge the state and make its case. If the taxpayer loses, then they may have to pay additional tax, interest and penalties. So this option can cost more.

CONCLUSION

Uncertainty is not going anywhere. The rules keep changing and will continue to change. Therefore, each company or taxpayer must make informed decisions, exercise good judgment, receive wise counsel and document their positions. Then they must decide and take appropriate action based on all of the facts and applicable authority. That appropriate action may be different in each situation, but the key is for taxpayers to do the analysis and make the best decision they can so they "know how much tax to pay and avoid interest and penalties."

conduct state tax "year-end" planning early, often & always

This is a Public Service announcement. Revealing a secret from the state and local tax underground. A secret that makes it difficult for companies to do business. To stay in compliance. To avoid compounding tax liabilities and interest and penalties.

What is this secret?

Wait for it . . . . . . . .

State taxes are a "moving target."

A "moving target" is defined as:

  • something that moves while someone is trying to hit it

  • something that is always changing

Some state tax rules don't change. Some state tax rules change at a certain time or in a certain tax year based on federal or state legislation. Some state tax rules change every year. Some state tax rules change suddenly based on a court case or ruling. Some state tax rules change without you knowing it based on a state's internal policy decision or change in interpretation of a statute or regulation.

  • So how does a company plan?

  • Conduct year-end planning?

  • Conduct beginning of the year planning?

  • Plan for acquisitions, mergers, divestitures?

Companies must stay on top of income tax laws on a tax year by tax year basis. Meaning, income tax laws are generally static for a specific tax year, but can change from year to year. Thus, tax pros should not follow "SALY" (same as last year) when preparing returns. This can lead to "IAP" (interest and penalties). With that said, there are situations when court case decisions or rulings happen that may have retroactive impact and create amended return / refund opportunities or may simply alter prospective returns.

In regards to sales tax, there are static rules but the interpretation of some of those static rules can change and are definitely not the same in every state. Sales tax rules and tax rates can change at different times of the year due to court cases, rulings and state legislation. Unlike income tax, sales tax periods are generally monthly, quarterly or annual

It's the lack of uniformity among state tax laws that creates risks and opportunities.

Some state income tax laws that may differ from state to state are:

  • Economic Nexus (creating a taxable presence)

  • Sales sourcing of sales of tangible property and services

  • Requiring throwback of sales

  • Allowing or requiring combined reporting

  • Allowing a pass-through entity (PTE) to make a PTE tax election (i.e., $10,000 SALT-CAP work around)

  • If PL 86-272 protection applies

  • Conformity to federal international tax considerations (i.e., GILTI, FDII, deemed dividends, ECI, etc.)

  • Treatment of bonus depreciation

  • Treatment of disregarded entities (i.e., single-member LLCs or Q-Subs)

Some sales tax laws that may differ from state to state are related to the following:

  • Sourcing of sales of services (including multiple points of use)

  • Sourcing of sales to/from non-US countries

  • Sales of software, SaaS, and other computer services

  • Sales of information services or data processing

  • Sales of services

  • Sales by construction contractors

  • Treatment of sellers in drop shipment transactions

  • Allowable or acceptable forms of exemption certificates

  • Treatment of leases (lessors and lessees)

  • Width and breadth of manufacturing exemption

  • Occasional sale or casual sale exemption when selling assets or business

  • Treatment of repairs and maintenance (labor and parts)

  • Treatment of research and development activities

  • Sales to governmental and non-profit entities

I could keep going, but I think you get the point.

So what is a company supposed to do?

Depending on what stage your business is (i.e., start-up, emerging, growth, mature), I recommend you inquire of your tax professional about the state tax impacts of your business. You may only have one or a few states to deal with right now. Some of you may have 20 or more states to consider. The key is to get on top of it now. To know what you don't know so you can make informed decisions. To stop problems from growing out of control and implement proper procedures and tax decisions. Be proactive. Don't let blind spots create a compound effect of problems.

Conduct year-end state tax planning, early, often and always.

QUOTES

  • "In all affairs, it's a healthy thing now and then to hang a question mark on the things you have long taken for granted." - Bertrand Russell

  • "Bureacracy is the art of making the possible impossible." - Javier Pascual Salcedo

  • "Knowledge is the beginning of practice; doing is the completion of knowing." - Wang Yangming