BILL ANALYSIS
REVISED
SENATE REVENUE & TAXATION COMMITTEE
Senator Lois Wolk, Chair
AB 2078 - Calderon
Amended: June 24, 2010
Hearing: July 1, 2010 Fiscal: Yes
SUMMARY: Enacts Three Changes to Increase Collection of
the Use Tax on Purchases Made from Out-of-State
Retailers
EXISTING LAW (United States Constitution) grants the
power to Congress to "regulate Commerce with foreign
nations, and among the several states, and with the Indian
Tribes;" a provision widely known as the Commerce Clause
(Article I, Section 8). If Congress fails to regulate
interstate commerce wholly or in part, the United States
Supreme Court has asserted consistently that the
Constitution still precludes states from doing so, known as
the "dormant" or "negative" Commerce Clause. Additionally,
the 14th amendment states that no state may "deprive a
person of life, liberty, or property without due process of
law."
Under the foundational Complete Auto Transit v. Brady,
430 U.S. 274, 97 S.Ct. 1076 (1977), states may tax
interstate business without violating either the Commerce
or Due Process clauses; however, the taxpayer must have
nexus, the tax must be fairly apportioned and
non-discriminatory, and a fair relationship between the tax
and the services provided must exist. The Court clearly
stated that its holding applied to income taxes, franchise
taxes, and sales taxes.
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The Court subsequently refined its view of nexus for
purposes of sales and use taxes in Quill Corp. v. North
Dakota, 504 U.S. 278 (1992). The Court held that
compelling out-of-state retailers to collect and remit
sales and use taxes did not violate the Due Process Clause,
but such a requirement did violate the Commerce Clause.
The Court found that North Dakota's statute compelling a
vendor who advertises three times in a single year or makes
three phone calls soliciting sales in the state to collect
sales and use taxes unduly burdens interstate commerce.
Since Quill, states have been legally barred from forcing
retailers that lack physical presence in a state from
collecting the use tax
EXISTING STATE LAW requires every retailer "engaged in
business in this state" that sells tangible personal
property to collect the appropriate tax from the purchase
and remit the amount to the Board of Equalization (BOE),
known as the sales tax. Unless the person pays the sales
tax to the retailer, he or she is liable for the use tax,
which is imposed on anyone consuming tangible personal
property purchased from a retailer. The use tax is the
same rate as the sales tax, and must be remitted on or
before the last day of the month following the quarterly
period in which the person made the purchase. Under
Quill, when a California resident purchases tangible
personal property from a retailer that lacks physical
presence in the state, he or she must remit the use tax
due.
EXISTING STATE LAW defines "retailer engaging in
business in this state" as:
Any retailer maintaining, occupying, or using, an
office, place of distribution, sales or sample room,
warehouse or storage place, or other place of
business, regardless of whether the retailer utilizes
the above on a temporary or permanent basis, directly
or indirectly, or through a subsidiary or affiliate.
Any retailer having any representative, agent,
salesperson, canvasser, independent contractor, or
solicitor operating in the state under the authority
of the retailer or its subsidiary for the purposes of
delivering, installing, assembling, or the taking of
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orders for any tangible personal property.
Derives rental income from leases within the state.
THIS BILL requires the same retailers to provide a
readily visible notification on its retail internet website
or retail catalogue that tax is imposed on the storage,
use, or other consumption in this state of the tangible
personal property purchased from the retailer that is not
exempt, and is required to be paid by the purchaser.
THIS BILL enacts a rebuttable presumption that a
retailer has nexus in the state if it is part of a commonly
controlled group which has a member that is a retailer
doing business in the state. The retailer may rebut the
presumption by showing evidence that the California-based
part of the corporate umbrella did not satisfy the
definition of "retailer engaging in business in the state"
above. The measure references federal law's definition
for "commonly controlled group," which is determined using
an ownership standard, rather than state law's delineation
of a "unitary group," which aggregates firms into groups
based on the measure of control a taxpayer has over a
subsidiary or affiliate.
FISCAL EFFECT:
BOE states that because it is unclear whether
out-of-state firms would comply with the bill, or whether
taxpayers would voluntarily report more use tax to BOE, AB
2078 has possible revenue increases which cannot be
calculated with any certainty.
COMMENTS:
A. Purpose of the Bill
The author provided the following statement:
"According to the California Board of Equalization,
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over $1 billion in state and local revenue is lost
each year from unreported use tax associated with
out-of-state internet and mail order sales. AB 2078
seeks to close this sales and use tax collection gap
by requiring specified retailers to provide notice to
California consumers that they (consumers) are
responsible for paying use tax on certain purchases in
an effort to improve the collection of these taxes in
the state."
B. Call Me Ishmael
Since Quill, states have sought ways to compel
retailers that lack brick and mortar establishments to
collect sales tax on tangible personal property sold into
the state. Pursuing retailers makes sense because of
scale: retailers can collect and remit the obligation from
many taxpayers, whereas deploying auditors to pursue
consumers who do not send BOE the use tax is rarely a
cost-effective use of audit resources unless the amounts
purchased are considerable. The Use Tax line on
California's income tax form resulted in paltry amounts
that only once exceeded $10 million since enacted, when BOE
estimates that compelling retailers currently hiding behind
Quill would result in approximately $1 billion in revenue.
Having these retailers collect and remit the tax will end
the current competitive advantage these firms enjoy over
retailers with physical presence in the state that must
collect and remit the sales tax. This obligation results
in a tax law-driven distortion with a statewide average
rate of 9.2%.
Herman Melville's Captain Ahab pursued Moby Dick until
his death; states have tried to capture its white whale,
Washington-based Amazon.com, with similar fervor. The firm
has annual revenue upwards of $20 billion, net income of
approximately $300 million and market capitalization
upwards of $50 billion, but collects and remits no sales
and use taxes to California despite its estimated billions
of sales into California, manufacture of its kindle
products in California through a subsidiary, and
advertisment through California-based third party sellers
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and internet affiliates. According to the New York Times,
founder Jeff Bezos tried initially forming the firm on an
Indian Reservation in San Francisco in an attempt to avoid
taxation, and that the firm only collects and remits taxes
in five states. The firm recently warned investors that
having to collect sales and use taxes could decrease future
sales.
AB 2078 represents the most recent attempt to cajole
more tax revenue from consumers making internet sales from
firms such as Amazon by making such firms that do not
collect and remit to the state post a visibly noticeable
reminder of the purchaser's tax obligations. While those
parts of the measure would apply to Amazon, insofar as the
requirements do not violate the United States Constitution
(See Comment D), it is unclear whether the attributional
nexus part of the measure would apply to Amazon unless the
firm includes retailers doing business in the state within
its commonly controlled group.
C. New and Improved
The June 24th amendments to AB 2078 reinsert
provisions that enact a rebuttable presumption that a
retailer that does not currently have physical presence in
the state, and therefore does not have nexus and need not
collect and remit the use tax, does have presence if a
member of its commonly controlled group is a retailer
engaged in business in the state. The amendments delete
the provision that compels out-of-state retailers to report
to BOE regarding customers who purchase tangible personal
property from them. This provision doesn't rely on any
specific legal theory, and without knowing the constituent
parts of a specific firm's commonly controlled group, it is
difficult to discern which firms this part of the bill will
affect, if any. Additionally, as an exception to the Quill
rule of physical nexus, Courts may rule this part of the
bill violates the U.S. Constitution. The measure also uses
the federal definition for "commonly controlled group"
instead of California's required grouping based on whether
firms are unitary, or controlled by other firms, and uses a
rebuttable presumption instead of directly assigning nexus
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if a firm meets the conditions set forth in the bill.
D. Reach Out and Touch Someone
California cannot directly compel firms that lack
physical presence to collect and remit the sales and use
tax without violating the United States Constitution.
While AB 2078 is a significantly less ambitious attempt
than those the Legislature has approved and other states
have enacted, opponents argue that the measure in its
current form is similarly constitutionally lacking and
unenforceable because the state cannot compel firms that
lack physical presence to post a notice on its website.
E. I Don't Know Why You Say Goodbye I Say Hello
Recent amendments to AB 2078 reinsert provisions that
enact a rebuttable presumption that a retailer has nexus in
the state if it is part of a commonly controlled group
which has a member that is a retailer doing business in the
state, which were deleted by the Assembly Revenue and
Taxation Committee. If the Senate approves the measure in
its current form, the Assembly may not concur with
amendments it specifically deleted.
F Sharpening the Harpoon
The Legislature and other states have tried the
following approaches to compel retailers that lack physical
presence in the state to collect and remit sales and use
taxes:
New York created a presumption that a
retailer solicits sales in the state if an
in-state affiliate is compensated for referring
customers directly or indirectly to the retailer,
stating that "attributional nexus" exists. The
New York Supreme Court upheld this approach, and
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other states have followed, but Amazon has ended
affiliate relationships in those states save New
York. The Legislature approved an attributional
nexus measure in California (SBx3 17, Ducheny,
2009); however, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
vetoed the measure.
Colorado requires non-collecting
retailers to notify customers that sales and use
taxes are due on certain purchases, and that the
consumer must file a sales and use tax return.
Failure to provide notice results in a $5
penalty. Non-collecting retailers must also send
consumers an annual notice showing the total
amount of purchases made during the prior
calendar year and inform the consumer of the
obligation to file returns, sent separately by
first-class mail with the marking: "Important Tax
Document Enclosed." Non-collecting retailers
must also file these annual statements with the
Department of Revenue or incur penalties.
Colorado's legislation also compelled
non-collecting retailers to collect and remit the
sales and use tax if it is part of a controlled
group of corporations with a component member
that is a retailer with physical presence in the
state. This version of AB 2078 contains a
similar provision.
This issue is also under consideration this year in
the Budget Conference Committee, as Senate Budget
Subcommittee #5 acted to incorporate the current version of
AB 2078 as part of its Budget.
Support and Opposition
Support:California State Association of Counties,
California Labor Federation
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Oppose: Direct Marketing Association; Software Finance
and Tax Executive Council; California Chamber of Commerce;
Performance Marketing Association, Inc.; California
Taxpayers' Association; Coastal Cardiology; HR Jungle;
TechAmerica, Billy Fire LLC, Cashbaq, Commission Junction,
Fuller/Sound/CSS Music/D.A.W.N., Ebates, Internet Alliance,
Ken.Rockwell.com, Newsblaze, Ogletree's, Inc.,
Overstock.com, Palm Desert Chamber of Commerce,
Savings.com, Shaaf Partnercentric
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Consultant: Colin Grinnell