Income Tax

Louisiana Suspends & Extends Amnesty Program

The Louisiana Department of Revenue announced this week that the state's Amnesty program will be suspended through Monday, November 30 and will resume on Tuesday, December 1. The program will then run until December 31, 2015, which accounts for designated and legal holidays.

During the amnesty period, individual and business taxpayers are offered a fresh start to bring their delinquent tax accounts up to date by clearing unpaid tax bills and filing overdue state tax returns.

Amnesty will be granted for eligible taxes to qualified taxpayers who apply during the amnesty period and who agree to settle their accounts with the state by paying 100 percent of delinquent taxes, 83 percent of the remaining interest and 67 percent of the remaining penalties due. Once approved, the Secretary of Revenue will waive the remaining 17 percent interest and 33 percent penalties.

The goal for the 2015 Tax Amnesty Program is $73 million, net of administrative costs and funds retained by LDR as self-generated revenue.

The 2015 Tax Amnesty Program is the third and final effort permitted by the Louisiana Tax Delinquency Amnesty Act of 2013. After the conclusion of the 2015 amnesty period, there will be no new amnesty program offered by the Department of Revenue until at least 2025.

Go here for more details.

why do states enact bad tax policy?

David Brunori, Deputy Publisher at Tax Analysts, recently wrote an article entitled, "More Than a Surrender When It Comes To Taxing Business." You can see his LinkedIn post with comments here. The article discusses how states let politics, and even taxpayers cause them to enact bad tax policy. 

I am a taxpayer advocate fighting the daily struggle for clarity, but this week I find myself feeling sympathetic to the states and their challenge of collecting revenue (I know, strange right). We operate in a grey and political world with many influences and interpretations. Sometimes taxpayers are right. Sometimes the states are right. The challenge is knowing the difference.

I agree that states (and the federal government) do not make wise fiscal decisions which leads to misuse of funds and the request for more. States have "created their own mess" in regards to tax cuts and other incentives for job creation. My point is, after doing this profession for 20+ years, I think we (as tax professionals) can get used to doing what we do and fighting for taxpayers, and we don't pause to see the perception from the other side. The people we deal with in the DORs are people operating within an extremely challenging bureaucracy (run by politics, bad policies) and face challenges of perhaps bad training, and the lack of resources (people and money). Bottom line, we need to work together to find reasonable and practical solutions. We don't need to talk "at" each other. We need to talk "with" each other.

I am for fair, reasonable and constitutional tax policy. Unfortunately, that isn't what we usually get. We get ambiguity open to interpretation, and law that favors in-state taxpayers.

What do you think causes states to enact bad tax policy?

the unconstitutional tax 'witch hunt'

Based on the recent Wynne case, many corporations, practitioners and states are wondering what other taxes are not 'internally consistent.' The internal consistency test comes from the Complete Auto Transit v. Brady U.S. Supreme Court case. The internal consistency test says that a tax must be structured so that if, hypothetically, each state imposed an identical tax, no multiple taxation would result. 

Questions raised by the U.S. Supreme Court in the majority opinion of the Wynne case along with the dissenting opinions, revolve around determining what is enough to declare a tax unconstitutional. Some say double taxation is not enough, you must have inherent discrimination and double taxation. Others say the tax must be facially discriminatory against interstate commerce. Others simply want to apply a 'common sense' approach. 

Regardless of the approach, the case has increased discussion and awareness of the possibility of other state tax and credit schemes being unconstitutional. Some corporations may choose to proactively review tax and credit schemes to challenge. Some states may voluntarily admit their tax regimes are unconstitutional. Almost feels like a 'witch hunt.' 

As a taxpayer advocate, I agree that states should not have unconstitutional taxes. However, I am concerned that states are under attack and lack the resources to adequately defend themselves.  I want states to be able to obtain the revenue they need in a constitutional fashion, and the basis on which a tax is determined to be unconstitutional is a complex matter. One that generally involves lawyers, the courts and even the U.S. Supreme Court.

As a taxpayer advocate, I fight for taxpayers to obtain clarity to determine what tax positions they should take. That clarity sometimes remains out of reach. Today, I find myself feeling sympathetic to state legislatures and departments of revenue as they struggle to create clarity. We live in a state tax world of 'grey' which leaves everything open to some level of interpretation and scrutiny. Taxpayers feel like they are continually fighting an uphill battle against unfair and unclear rules and regulations. States feel like taxpayers are taking advantage of unclear rules and regulations and lack the resources (people and money) to adequately fight back. Bottom line, we need to work together (states, corporations, tax practitioners) to find solutions that are a 'win-win' for all parties involved. 

are you using ambiguity to your advantage?

If you are following state income tax developments to any degree, then you are aware of the ambiguity in state tax law that is leading to strange outcomes in court cases, new legislation by state legislatures, policies and procedures by departments of revenue, and even positions taken by taxpayers. Recent developments in tax reform, economic nexus, market-based sourcing, Multistate Tax Commission three-factor apportionment election cases, alternative apportionment, combined reporting, transfer pricing, OECD (Organization of Economic Co-Operation and Development) BEPS (Base Erosion and Profit Shifting), and tax haven legislation are creating risks and opportunities for corporate taxpayers.

Ambiguity, in general, creates challenges in the form of complicated laws (changing daily), vague statute of limitations, unreasonable audit positions, and computer generated notices. Ambiguity is allowing states to re-interpret current law so they can obtain different results without actually changing their law. States are also enacting new legislation retroactively to avoid payouts of large tax refunds. 

An example of ambiguity causing controversy is the recent Texas Margin tax case (Hallmark Mktg Co. v. Hegar, Tex., No. 14-1075, 10/9/15). The issue in the case surrounded the Texas regulation that requires “only the net gain” to be included in the apportionment factor (denominator). The state’s position was that the regulation requires both ‘net gain’ and ‘net loss’ to be included in the apportionment factor. Consequently, the state's position is that the regulation is ambiguous. The taxpayer's position is that the regulation only requires net gain. Hence, the taxpayer holds that the regulation is not ambiguous and not open to interpretation. The Texas Court of Appeals held that Texas’ interpretation of regulation was ‘reasonable’ (November 2014). Taxpayers are concerned the ruling “creates uncertainty about whether numerous sections of Texas' franchise tax regulations can be reinterpreted  by the Comptroller under the guise of ambiguity.” The Texas Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments on December 9, 2015. 

The Texas case is only one example. I could discuss many more and may do so in future blog posts. 

The question we  should be asking is - can current law be interpreted more than one way? The law you are analyzing for your company at this very moment - is it ambiguous or is it clear? Will the state you are dealing with reinterpret the law under audit or litigation? 

Regardless of the answers, ambiguity requires action. Ambiguity requires corporations and taxpayers to be proactive and find solutions and reduce risk. Corporations need tools to determine whether a trend (i.e., court case, ruling, etc.) is a risk or opportunity. Even more than planning, corporations need to be able to determine what position they "should" take. What is reasonable? What is "more likely than not"? Compliance, controversy and provision requirements demand companies to answer these questions. How do you answer these questions? What tools do you use? Who do you talk to? 

We must eliminate ambiguity or use it to our advantage.

STATE OF STATE: COMING TO CHICAGO!

I will be co-presenting a complimentary (free) Bloomberg BNA lunch-n-learn presentation with Diane Tinney in Chicago on November 11, 2015 from 11:30 am to 2:00 pm.  

We will have an interactive discussion about the latest state income tax developments, advances in technology solutions driving change, and how you can make a positive impact on state income tax management in your organization.

If you will be in the Chicago area on November 11th, I would love the opportunity to meet you, and talk about your state income tax experiences as corporate tax executives or accounting/law firm tax professionals. I will be talking about how recent developments continue to create a complex and uncertain environment that makes it difficult to comply, plan, and obtain a fair result. I will also share some recent comments from an auditor that left me dumbfounded and even more determined to fight for fairness.

If you are planning to attend, I would love it if you sent me an e-mail regarding an issue or concern that you would like me to discuss. This would make our meeting even more valuable.

If you are unable to attend, I would still love it if you sent me an e-mail regarding an issue or concern that you have had. If we discuss it during our meeting, I will get back to you with our thoughts and conclusions.

I hope to see you there.

Fight the good-fight.

To register, go here.

the game we love/hate; and a little test

Imagine playing a game against an opponent who also makes all of the rules. An opponent that constantly changes the rules as the game is in-progress. Now imagine there are 50+ opponents. 

That is the multistate tax profession. That is what multistate corporations deal with every day.

Let's work together to fight bad audit policies and procedures, the lack of independent tribunals, and the computerized notices that cause us to surrender. 

When we feel trapped in a box or against the wall, let's fight for direction, freedom and resolution.

knowledge test

Did you know that 7 states require corporations to file separate entity income tax returns?

Did you know that 10 states allow corporations to file separate entity income tax returns or to elect to file consolidated returns?

Did you know that 1 state requires corporations to file a nexus consolidated return?

Did you know that 14 states (plus DC) require corporations to file a combined return or allow taxpayers to elect to file a combined return?

Did you know that 12 states require corporations to file a combined return or allow taxpayers to elect to file a combined return or consolidated return?

TEST:

Can you categorize the states into the above categories?

Which states are not included in the above categories?