Tax Lawyer's Blog

Pappas on Taxation

Tax  Lawyer's  Blog header image 2

Supreme Court Refuses to Hear “Physical Presence Test” Case: Harbinger of Things to Come?

June 26th, 2009 · 4 Comments

The United States Supreme Court has refused to hear a case brought by Capital One Bank against the state of Massachusetts disputing the imposition against it of a credit card and banking services tax totalling nearly $2 million.

Here’s  Glenn Shapiro of TaxNews.Com:

The US Supreme Court stated in a decision issued on June 21 that it would not hear an appeal by Capital One Bank against a Massachusetts revenue authority decision to tax the company based on the amount of business it conducted in the state, regardless of the fact that the company had no ‘physical presence.’

Capital One had attempted to argued that because it didn’t have a physical presence in the state, it was entitled to dispute a $1.76m tax bill for providing credit card services and an additional $159,000 charge for the provision of banking services within the state’s borders. However, the Massachusetts Supreme Court found that the company nevertheless had a “substantial nexus” in the state, and that this could be used as the basis for taxation.

“By issuing credit cards with the ‘Capital One’ logo to Massachusetts customers, the Capital banks essentially were guaranteeing payment to merchants of the amounts charged by those customers, if approved,” said the US Supreme Court.

“The Capital banks bore the risk of a cardholder’s non-payment. In the event of such non-payment, the Capital banks worked with collection agencies and Massachusetts attorneys to collect delinquent accounts, which included the filing of civil actions on behalf of the Capital banks in Massachusetts courts,” the decision said.

Toys R US subsidiary Geoffrey, Inc., was also challenging the tax law.

We have recently written about the aggressive attempts of state governments to recover lost revenue by expanding their taxing authority to businesses that do not have a physical presence within their borders. (See E-Commerce Sales Tax Unworkable Critics Charge and State Governments Are On the Prowl For New Sources of Revenue: Watch Out for New Internet Sales Tax Law.)

This case might very well signal the beginning of the end of the physical presence test which would open the door for states to tax internet businesses that are not physically located within their borders.

And that, my friends, is going to be earth-shattering.

Shapiro reported further that, 

The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) said that the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the Capital One case was “disappointing” and part of a “disturbing trend” by state taxing authorities and legislatures to impose taxes on out-of-state businesses based on in-state marketing activities “without providing clarity or certainty as to whether and to what extent operations will create a tax liability in various states.”

“Without a bright-line test, investment will be discouraged, litigation costs will rise, and compliance burdens for institutions will increase,” SIFMA cautioned.

Tags: Court Cases · State Taxes

4 responses so far ↓

Leave a Comment