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TWIST - This Week in State Tax

01.16.2024 | Duration: 2:10

Summary of state tax developments in Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Michigan.

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Weekly TWIST recap

Welcome to TWIST for the week of January 16, 2024 featuring Sarah McGahan from KPMG’s Washington National Tax state and local tax practice. 

Today we are covering corporate income tax developments in Detroit and Pennsylvania, and a property tax decision from a Connecticut superior court. 

Recently, a City of Detroit income tax dispute came before the Michigan Court of Appeals for the third time. In sum, the appeals court reversed the Tax Tribunal (and its own prior conclusion) and held that a passive holding company formed to hold an investment had nexus with the City of Detroit. The appeals court also rejected the Tribunal’s conclusion that even if there was nexus, the taxpayer nevertheless had no income apportioned to Detroit because each of the numerators of the three-factor apportionment formula was zero. In the court’s view, an alternative apportionment method should be utilized, and the case was remanded for further non-summary-disposition proceedings to address determine the appropriate method.

In Corporation Tax Bulletin 2024-01, the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue addressed the new sourcing rules that first applied for tax years beginning on or after December 31, 2022. Under prior law, specific sourcing rules applied to receipts from sales of services and receipts from sales of tangible personal property. All other receipts were sourced under the statutory income producing activity test. In 2022, legislation was enacted that adopted comprehensive customer-based sourcing rules for a number of “other” types of receipts. The eight-page bulletin provides guidance and examples for each category of receipts enumerated in the statute.

Finally, a Connecticut Superior Court concluded that a solar power company was not entitled to a property tax exemption for certain personal property used to generate solar electricity The court, looking to the sales tax law, held that the taxpayer was not entitled to the exemption because the generation of electricity is not manufacturing for sales tax or property tax purposes.  

Connecticut

Connecticut:  Solar Equipment Not Entitled to Manufacturing Property Tax Exemption

A Connecticut Superior Court recently addressed whether a solar power company was entitled to a property tax exemption for certain personal property used to generate solar electricity. Under Connecticut law, machinery and equipment used in manufacturing facilities is exempt from personal property taxes. “Machinery and equipment” is defined as tangible personal property which is installed in a manufacturing facility ... and the predominant use of which is for manufacturing, processing or fabricating. Manufacturing means the “activity of converting or conditioning tangible personal property by changing the form, composition, quality or character of the property for ultimate sale at retail or use in the manufacturing of a product to be ultimately sold at retail.” In a 1992 Connecticut case, the state supreme court held that the generation of electricity is not manufacturing within the meaning of the sales and use tax act. The legislature subsequently unified the definition of “manufacturing” for sales and property tax purposes. The court, noting that the legislature is presumed to be aware of interpretations under the sales and use tax act, held that the taxpayer was not entitled to the exemption because the generation of electricity is not manufacturing for sales tax or property tax purposes.  Please contact Cheryl Ladyzhets with questions on McHenry Solar LLC v. Town of Hampton.  

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania: Guidance Issued on Sourcing “Other” Sales

In a recently issued bulletin, the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue addresses the sourcing rules that first apply for tax years beginning on or after December 31, 2022. Under prior law, specific sourcing rules applied to receipts from sales of services and receipts from sales of tangible personal property. All other receipts were sourced under the statutory income producing activity test. In 2022, legislation (House Bill 1342) was enacted that adopted comprehensive customer-based sourcing rules for a number of “other” types of receipts, including gross receipts from the lease or license of intangible property; gross receipts from sales of intangibles; gross receipts from the sale, redemption, maturity or exchange of securities held by a taxpayer primarily for sale to customers; gross receipts related to certain types of lending activities involving real property and tangible personal property; gross receipts received from interest, fees and penalties from credit card holders; and gross receipts received from interest not otherwise addressed in the revised law. Gross receipts received from intangible property not specifically addressed by statute are excluded from the numerator and the denominator of the sales factor. The eight-page bulletin defines key terms used in the statute and provides guidance and examples for each category of receipts enumerated in the statute. Please contact Mark Achord with questions on Corporation Tax Bulletin 2024-01.  

Michigan

Michigan: Holding Company Has City of Detroit Income Tax Nexus

Recently, a City of Detroit income tax dispute came before the Michigan Court of Appeals for the third time. In sum, the Court of Appeals reversed the Tax Tribunal (and its own prior conclusion) and held that a passive holding company formed to hold an investment had City of Detroit Income Tax (CDIT) nexus.  The facts are as follows. After a Detroit- based private equity firm identified an investment opportunity in a Canadian company, the firm formed a fund to invest in the Canadian entity. The corporate taxpayer at issue, Apex, was subsequently created to hold the fund’s portion of the investment in the Canadian company.  Although Apex possessed a Detroit mailing address, it did not have any employees, owned no real or personal property, provided no services, and sold no goods, either in Detroit or elsewhere. However, Apex’s officers and directors were all employees of the private equity firm based in Detroit.  In 2012, Apex sold its interest in the Canadian company. The taxpayer paid CDIT on the gain from the sale, but the City later assessed additional tax. At that point Apex argued that it did not have nexus with the City and filed refund claims for all taxes paid. The matter eventually came before the Michigan Tax Tribunal; the Tribunal concluded that Apex was not subject to CDIT.  The Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed, and the City appealed to the Michigan Supreme Court. Then came Wayfair. In light of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision, the Michigan’s high court vacated the appeals court’s previous opinion and remanded the case back to the Court of Appeals with further remanded it to the Tribunal for reconsideration in light of Wayfair, although the tax periods at issue in the case pre-dated the Wayfair decision. Both parties filed supplemental briefs addressing Wayfair, and both parties filed competing motions for partial summary disposition. The Tribunal (once again) found that Apex was not subject to Detroit income tax because it lacked substantial nexus. This appeal followed.

The appeals court first addressed the Tribunal’s conclusion that the taxpayer did not have substantial nexus with Detroit. The court found that Apex's officers and agents, who were employees of a private equity firm located in the city, took many actions on behalf of Apex in conjunction with the stock sale. In the court’s view, these actions were sufficient to show that there was a nexus between Apex and Detroit. Further, Apex availed itself of the substantial privilege of carrying on business in the City. Recognizing that it had previously reached a different conclusion, the appeals court explained that it had applied the incorrect standard of review and had erroneously deferred to certain of the Tribunal’s rulings in its original holding.  The appeals court next addressed the Tribunal’s conclusion that even if there was nexus, the taxpayer nevertheless had no income apportioned to Detroit because each of the numerators of the three-factor apportionment formula was zero. The Tribunal had also determined that an alternative apportionment method was not applicable because of the very minimal presence and activities conducted by Apex’s agents in Detroit.  This conclusion, the court determined, appeared at odds with the fact that all of Apex’s business and its only presence was in the City of Detroit. The court concluded that because Apex's business did not involve the sale of goods and services, an alternative apportionment must be used. Ultimately, what type of method should be applied could not be determined on summary disposition and therefore the court remanded the case for further non-summary-disposition proceedings to address the alternative apportionment question. Please contact Dan De Jong with questions on Apex Laboratories Intl. Inc. v. City of Detroit. 

Meet our podcast team

Image of Sarah McGahan
Sarah McGahan
Managing Director, State & Local Tax, KPMG US

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