State & Local Tax Bulletin (November 2004)
California Franchise, Income and
Sales and Use Tax Developments
By Jeffrey M. Vesely,
a tax partner in
the San Francisco office of Pillsbury Winthrop
Shaw Pittman LLP.
This outline formed the basis of Mr. Vesely's
presentation at the Council of State Taxation (COST)
2004 Fall Audit Session held on October 27-29, 2004 in
St. Petersburg, Florida.
If you have or can obtain the
Acrobat Reader,
or have an Acrobat-enabled web browser,
you may wish to
download or view our
November 2004
State & Local Tax Bulletin (a 190K pdf file),
containing a printed version
of this outline and also available via ftp at:
ftp.pmstax.com/state/bull0411.pdf.
This bulletin concerning state
and local tax
matters is part of the
Tax
Page, a World Wide Web demonstration project, no
portion of which is intended and cannot
be construed as legal or tax advice.
Comments
are welcome
on the design or content of this material.
- Deductibility of
Dividends/Expense Attribution
- Farmer Bros. v. FTB, 108
Cal. App. 4th 976 (2003), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 124
S. Ct. 1411 (2004)
- California Court of Appeal held California
Revenue and Taxation Code (RTC) § 24402 unconstitutional
under the Commerce Clause. RTC § 24402 allows a
dividend received deduction for dividends from noninsurance
companies. Similar to RTC § 24410 which was previously
held to be unconstitutional in Ceridian, the deduction
under RTC § 24402 is limited by the payor's presence in
California as determined by its apportionment factors. The Court
held that such a limitation violated the Commerce Clause.
- A full dividends received deduction was allowed by the Court
subject to the ownership limitations contained in RTC §
24402(b).
- California Supreme Court denied review. The United States
Supreme Court denied the Franchise Tax Board's (FTB) petition
for a writ of certiorari on February 23, 2004.
- FTB Policy Regarding Post-Farmer Bros.
- For years ended prior to December 1, 1999,
taxpayers will be allowed a full dividends received deduction
subject to the ownership limitations contained in RTC §
24402(b). The expense attribution provisions of RTC §
24425 will be applied.
- For water's edge
taxpayers, a full dividends received
deduction will be allowed under
RTC § 24402 rather than a 75
percent deduction under RTC
§ 24411. Further, no foreign
investment interest offset will be
applied. Rather, the expense
attribution provisions of RTC
§ 24425 will be
applied.
- For years ending on or after December 1, 1999, no deduction
will be allowed under RTC § 24402. The FTB will attempt
to identify all taxpayers who have claimed a deduction under RTC
§ 24402 and will disallow that deduction.
- For water's edge
taxpayers, the 75 percent dividends
received deduction will be
allowed.
- Ceridian Corporation v. FTB, 85 Cal.
App. 4th 875 (2000)
- Court of Appeal held that RTC § 24410,
which allowed a dividend received deduction for dividends
received from an insurance company, was unconstitutional under
the Commerce Clause of the U. S. Constitution. RTC §
24410 allowed a deduction only where the payee was
commercially domiciled in California. Under RTC § 24410,
the deduction was further limited by the payor's presence in
California as determined by its apportionment factors. The Court
held both restrictions violated the Commerce Clause since they
favored domestic (California) corporations over their foreign
competitors.
- Case also raises the retroactive versus prospective remedy
issue. While Ceridian was allowed a full deduction and
accordingly obtained its refund, the Court left open the remedy
with respect to other taxpayers.
- FTB Policy Regarding Post-Ceridian.
- For years ended prior to December 1, 1997,
taxpayers will be allowed a full deduction for insurance company
dividends. However, the expense attribution provisions of RTC
§ 24425 will be applied.
- For years ending on or after December 1, 1997, no deduction
will be allowed for insurance company dividends. The FTB will
attempt to identify all taxpayers who have claimed a deduction
under RTC § 24410 and will disallow that
deduction.
- Assembly Bill No. 263
- On September 29, 2004, legislation was enacted
which would reverse FTB's policy statement.
- For years ending on
or after December 1, 1997 and
beginning before January 1, 2004,
taxpayers may elect to claim an 80
percent dividends received deduction
and no expense attribution would be
allowed.
- Taxpayers
must make a retroactive
irrevocable election.
- At least 80 percent of
each class of stock of the
insurance company must be
owned.
- Election would apply
only to taxable years during
the election period for which
the statute of limitations is
open or if the statute has
closed for any taxable year,
to taxable years for which a
final tax determination has
not been made because of a
dispute over the dividends
received deduction or the
expenses related to that
deduction.
- Elections made by filing
amended returns which must
be filed within 180 days
following the effective date
of the legislation.
- For years beginning on or after
January 1, 2003, a dividends
received deduction (percentage not
yet inserted) would be allowed. No
restriction on the use of expense
attribution.
- Deduction
would be equal to 80% of the
qualified dividends (
increases to 85% in
2008).
- Dividend deduction may
be reduced if insurance
company overcapitalized
("anti-stuffing").
- Deductions disallowed to
non-insurer for specified
expenses paid or incurred to
the insurer if the amount paid
would constitute income to
the insurer if the insurer were
subject to California
franchise tax.
- Certain transfers of
property to insurers in an
exchange described in
various IRC provisions and
which would otherwise result
in non-recognition of gain
will be deemed taxable
events.
- American General Realty Investment Corp.,
Inc. Case No. 156726 (SBE, June 25, 2003)
- In a summary decision, the State Board of
Equalization (SBE) concluded that the FTB properly disallowed
under RTC § 24425, a portion of the interest expenses
incurred by the taxpayer's unitary financial and real estate
subsidiaries on the theory that the interest expenses were indirectly
traceable to insurance company dividends which were deductible
under Ceridian.
- Case pending in San Francisco Superior Court (No. CGC
03425690).
- Mercury General Corporation, Case No.
145450 (SBE, June 25, 2003)
- In a letter decision similar to American
General, the SBE affirmed the FTB's disallowance of the
deduction of administrative expenses and interest expenses under
RTC § 24425 on the theory that the expenses were indirectly
traceable to insurance company dividends which were deductible
under Ceridian.
- Petition for rehearing pending.
- Beneficial California, Inc., Case No.
203445
- Case involves the issue whether any portion of the
taxpayer's interest expense should be disallowed under RTC
§ 24425. The taxpayer contends that no interest expense
should be disallowed since the FTB has not shown the requisite
connection between the interest expense and the insurance
company which paid the deductible dividends in question.
- Case awaits oral argument before the SBE.
- Anti-Tax Shelter Legislation
- Senate Bill No. 614 and Assembly Bill
No. 1601
- New anti-tax shelter legislation enacted in October
2003, generally effective January 1, 2004, but may apply to certain
transactions entered into prior to that date.
- Generally conforms to existing federal law regarding tax
shelter registration, list maintenance and disclosure of reportable
transactions.
- Provides for various penalties in connection with the use of tax
shelters, including enhanced penalties for noneconomic substance
transaction understatements (up to 40%) and reportable transaction
understatements (up to 30%).
- Also provides for penalties aimed at tax shelter promoters,
advisers and return preparers.
- Extends the statute of limitations to eight years for proposed
deficiency assessments relating to abusive tax avoidance
transactions.
- Directs the FTB to identify and publish California "listed
transactions," pursuant to which the FTB issued Chief Counsel
Announcement 2003-1 on December 31, 2003 identifying certain
REIT and RIC transactions as listed transactions for California
purposes.
- Provides for a "voluntary compliance initiative" (VCI) for the
period January 1, 2004 through April 15, 2004 during which
eligible taxpayers voluntarily may pay all tax and interest due as a
result of their use of tax shelter for taxable years beginning before
2003 to avoid tax shelter penalties.
- In excess of $1.2 billion was collected by the FTB under
VCI.
- Apportionment Formula
- Sales Factor
- Gross receipts from treasury function activities.
Numerous suits for refund pending. One court of appeal and two
trial court decisions in favor of exclusion of gross receipts from the
sales factor. One trial court decision in favor of inclusion of gross
receipts.
- General Motors Corporation v. FTB,
120 Cal. App. 4th 114 (2004).
- Court of Appeal
concluded that gross receipts from
treasury function activities are not to
be included in the sales factor.
- Case also involves issues
relating to use of research credits by
a unitary group and the deductibility
of withholding taxes on
intercompany dividends, royalties
and interest.
- The Court
concluded that the credits can
only be used by the member
of the unitary group which
generated the credit, not the
entire group.
- With respect to the
deductibility of withholding
taxes, the Court concluded
such taxes were on income
and thus
nondeductible.
- Petition for Review filed with
the California Supreme
Court.
- Microsoft Corporation v. FTB, San Francisco
Superior Court No. CGC-01-400444 (September 9,
2003).
- Trial court held that
gross proceeds from the sale of
marketable securities must be
included in the sales factor.
- Trial court also held that the
FTB did not prove that inclusion of
the proceeds in the sales factor
would be distortive under RTC
§ 25137.
- Case pending in the Court of
Appeal.
- Toys R Us, Inc. v. FTB, Sacramento Superior
Court No. 01 AS 04316 (August 21, 2003).
- Trial court
concluded that the term "gross
receipts" in RTC §§
25120 and 25134 does not include
the return of capital from the
taxpayer's investment in short-term
paper and thus only the interest
earned from those investments is
includible in the sales factor.
- In dicta, the court held that if the
return of capital was included in the
sales factor, RTC § 25137
would apply.
- Case pending in the Court of
Appeal.
- Limited Stores, Inc. v. FTB, Alameda Superior
Court No. C-837723 (April 11, 2003).
- Trial court
concluded that the return of principal
must be excluded from the gross
receipts generated by the taxpayer's
sale of short-term financial
investments and thus from the sales
factor.
- In dicta, court held that the
inclusion of gross receipts would be
distortive.
- Case pending in the Court of
Appeal.
- Montgomery Ward and Co., Inc., Case No.
133828 (SBE, October 3, 2002)
- In a summary
decision, the SBE held that inclusion
of the return of capital portion of the
taxpayer's sales of various financial
investments resulted in a distortion
of the formula and thus those
receipts were to be excluded.
- Case pending in San Diego
Superior Court (No. GIC
802767).
- Colgate-Palmolive Co., Case No. 152028 (SBE,
November 12, 2002)
- In a summary
decision, the SBE concluded that the
taxpayer's gross receipts from its
investment activity were not
includible in the sales factor due to
the fact the taxpayer failed to prove
that it engaged in any income
producing activities. The taxpayer
employed independent contractors to
perform the vast majority of the
investment activities, while its own
personnel performed de minimis
investment activity. Under
Regulation 25136(b), the work
performed by independent
contractors is not an income
producing activity.
- Case pending in Sacramento
Superior Court
(No. 03AS00707).
- Polaroid Corporation, Case No. 62415 (SBE,
May 28, 2003)
- In a summary
decision, the SBE concluded that the
inclusion of gross proceeds from
sales of securities prior to maturity
was distortive and thus not
includable.
- Case also involved the question
whether proceeds from the
Kodak patent infringement
litigation should be included
in the sales factor. The SBE
concluded that the entire
proceeds were to be included
in the denominator and a
portion thereof, based on the
taxpayer's California sales
factor, was to be included in
the numerator.
- The SBE
granted the taxpayer's
petition for rehearing to
reconsider this
issue.
- FTB Legal Ruling 2003-3
- On December 4, 2003, the FTB issued a legal
ruling to address the issue when income-producing activity exists
with respect to a business income dividend so that the dividend is
includible in the sales factor.
- The FTB concluded that a dividend payee that participates in
the management and operations of the dividend payor is engaged
in income-producing activity with respect to the dividend so that
the dividend is includible in the payee's sales factor.
- Departure from the FTB's position set forth in its Multistate
Audit Technique Manual Section 7562.
- May become quite relevant in post-Ceridian and post-
Farmer Bros. years where the FTB is disallowing
deductions for RTC § 24410 and RTC § 24402
dividends.
- Property Factor
- Quick & Reilly, Inc., Case No.
202953 (SBE, March 9, 2004)
- The SBE concluded that margin loans that were
applied for at offices in California are includible in the numerator
of the property factor of a financial corporation under Regulation
25137-4.1.
- Proposed Regulations 25130 and 25137 (b)(1)
- Proposed amendments to government-owned
property factor regulation.
- Amendments reflect to some extent FTB Legal Ruling 97-
2.
- Distortion
- Weyerhauser Company, Case Nos.
104355 and 246164
- Case involves distortion issues pertaining to the
taxpayer's timber activities in the State of Washington vis-à-vis its
activities in California.
- Other issues include the proper inclusion of gross receipts
from the taxpayer's treasury function in the sales factor, the
inclusion of a proper value for government-owned property in the
property factor and various MIC issues.
- Case being briefed. Oral argument scheduled for late 2004 or
early 2005.
- Manufacturers Investment Tax Credit
- Save Mart Supermarkets,
2002-SBE-002 (SBE, February 6, 2002)
- On February 6, 2002, the SBE issued a rare formal
opinion in the first manufacturers' investment tax credit (MIC) case
to reach the Board. This was the first in a series of taxpayer
victories in MIC cases in 2002 and 2003.
- The case involved the issue of whether Save Mart was a
qualified taxpayer with respect to its bakery and meat processing
activities.
- Both activities are described in Division D of the
SIC Manual.
- The Franchise Tax Board (FTB) argued that Save Mart was
not a qualified taxpayer because "its primary activity" was retail
(not manufacturing) and therefore should be assigned SIC Code
5411. As SIC Code 5411 is not in the manufacturing section of the
SIC Manual, Save Mart did not meet the statutory requirement.
- Save Mart argued that it was a qualified taxpayer under the
plain meaning of the statute and that the FTB's "qualified taxpayer"
regulation (23649-3) was invalid because it imposed restrictions
not contemplated by the MIC statute. Under that regulation, the
FTB required that the taxpayer be classified or assigned a
manufacturing SIC Code while the statute only requires that the
taxpayer's activities be "described in" the manufacturing section of
the SIC Manual.
- Save Mart further argued that even if Regulation 23649-3 was
somehow valid, Save Mart was a qualified taxpayer because it
satisfied the three requirements under Regulation
23649-3(b)(1)(B), the "separate establishment" test.
- The SBE agreed with Save Mart and overturned the FTB's
qualified taxpayer regulation (23649-3).
- The SBE specifically held that the MIC statute should be
liberally construed in favor of taxpayers in order to effectuate the
purposes of the legislation, i.e., to encourage manufacturing in the
State.
- On September 3, 2003, the California Legislative Counsel
issued an opinion that concluded that the SBE did not have the
authority in Save Mart to declare an FTB regulation
invalid. The opinion is not binding.
- Jon and Rita Minnis and Milpitas Materials
Company, 2002-SBE-003 (SBE, June 20,
2002)
- In the second MIC case to reach the SBE, the SBE
concluded in another formal opinion, that a cement mixer truck,
comprised of a truck chassis and mixer barrel, constituted a single
integrated piece of manufacturing equipment and thus the entire
truck was qualified property for purposes of the MIC.
- The SBE rejected the FTB's attempt to bifurcate the truck into
two componentsmanufacturing (mixing drum) which
qualified for the MIC and transportation (chassis) which did
not.
- The SBE refused to follow FTB Legal Ruling 2001-
4.
- Bronco Wine Company, 2002-SBE-006
(SBE, September 12, 2002)
- The SBE again ruled against the FTB in the third
MIC case to be heard.
- The SBE concluded that wine tanks which had a capacity of
215,000 gallons were qualified property for purposes of the MIC.
The SBE relied on the fact that the tanks could be moved and
placed in productive use without damaging the property during the
move.
- The FTB had taken the position that smaller wine tanks
qualified as tangible personal property but that the larger wine
tanks were "inherently permanent structures" under Whiteco
Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner, 65 T.C. 664
(1975).
- California Steel Industries, Inc., 2003-
SBE-001-A (SBE, July 9, 2003)
- In an Opinion on Petition for Rehearing by the
new Board, the SBE once again rejected the FTB's position.
- The SBE held that payments made to third party contractors
that are directly allocable to qualified property and are capitalized,
constitute qualified property for purposes of the MIC.
- Baxter Healthcare Corporation, Case No.
140712 (SBE, May 28, 2003)
- In a summary decision, the SBE confirmed its
decision in California Steel regarding the capitalized labor
issue.
- The SBE also held that payments made to in-house engineers
which are directly allocable to qualified property and are
capitalized, constitute qualified property for purposes of the
MIC.
- The SBE also concluded that certain facilities were special
purpose buildings and foundations and thus qualified property.
- The SBE held that the heating, ventilating and air conditioning
systems installed in clean rooms was not qualified
property.
- Lienau, Case Nos. 156798, 156810,
156814 and 156808 (SBE, July 9, 2003)
- In another taxpayer victory, the SBE held in a
summary decision that the gain realized by a California S
corporation, passed through to its shareholders, on the receipt of
insurance proceeds for equipment losses and deferred under IRC
§ 1033 was chargeable to the capital account and thus
constituted qualified costs for purposes of the MIC.
- LSI Logic, Inc. and Cypress
Semiconductor Corporation, Case Nos. 142330 and
173287 (SBE, August 7, 2003)
- In a controversial summary decision, the SBE
voted 2-1 to grant refund claims under RTC § 6902.2.
Under that statute, a taxpayer may claim a sales tax refund in lieu
of the MIC. The in-lieu credit cannot be claimed any earlier than
the MIC could have been claimed and the amount of the in-lieu
credit cannot be in excess of the amount of the MIC that could
have been claimed by the taxpayer.
- In these cases, the taxpayers used research and development
credits to eliminate their franchise tax liability. They did not claim
MIC credits, although they would have been entitled to do so. The
taxpayers thus claimed the in-lieu credit under RTC §
6902.2 in the amount of the MIC they otherwise could have
claimed.
- The SBE rejected its staff's arguments that the Legislature did
not intend to allow taxpayers to claim both the R&D credit and the
MIC in-lieu refund because such could essentially make the MIC a
refundable credit.
- On September 29, 2003, Senate Bill No. 1064 was signed into
law overturning on a prospective basis the LSI and
Cypress decisions. SB 1064 permits any taxpayer that had
filed a MIC in-lieu claim under RTC § 6902.2 on or before
the date of the LSI and Cypress decisions (August
7, 2003) to obtain that refund.
- MIC Repealed
- The MIC was repealed by its own terms and
ceased to be operative as of January 1, 2004.
- Various bills were introduced to revive the MIC but none
passed.
- MIC credits for years prior to 2004 and which have not yet
been used, may be carried forward until fully
utilized.
- Business v. Nonbusiness Income
- Jim Beam Brands Co. v.
FTB, San Francisco Superior Court No. CGC-02-
408203 (June 28, 2004).
- Trial court concluded that the gain from the sale of
a unitary subsidiary was business income under the functional
test.
- The court declined to follow the cessation of line of business
or partial liquidation exception theories.
- Case pending in the Court of Appeal.
- Water's Edge Election
- Amdahl Corporation v. FTB,
120 Cal. App. 4th 459 (2004)
- California Court of Appeal concluded that for
purposes of calculating the Subpart F inclusion ratio under the
water's edge combined report, dividends from lower-tier controlled
foreign corporations should be excluded and not taken into account
under RTC § 25106. In addition, the Court concluded that
California has adopted the previously taxed income provisions of
IRC § 959.
- The Court also concluded that refunds of UK Advance
Corporation Tax payments are dividends under California law and
thus subject to elimination under RTC § 25106.
- In the only portion of the opinion in which the Court agreed
with the FTB, the Court concluded that California's water's edge
method of reporting does not facially discriminate against foreign
commerce. The court distinguished the Kraft v. Iowa
decision on the basis of the "footnote 23" argument which has been
accepted by some other states.
- FTB has filed a petition for review with the California
Supreme Court.
- Yamaha Motor Corporation, Case No.
89002467500 (SBE, November 28, 2001)
- Taxpayer made intercompany sales of inventory
during a year in which it filed on a worldwide basis and eliminated
the gains. Taxpayer then elected water's edge the next year. The
inventory was sold to third parties outside of the group. On a
petition for rehearing by the FTB, the SBE reversed its earlier
decision. In a summary decision, the SBE concluded that the gains
should be included in income at the taxpayer's apportionment
percentage for the worldwide year which was lower than the
taxpayer's apportionment percentage in the year of sale to the third
parties. The SBE also concluded that the income should be
prorated over a five-year period, beginning with the first water's
edge year, consistent with FTB Notice 89-601.
- Alps Electric (USA), Inc. and Canon
U.S.A., Inc., Case Nos. 55001 and 55446 (SBE,
January 13, 2003)
- In a summary decision by the new Board which is
at odds with Yamaha, the SBE concluded that the taxpayer
was required to use the elimination and carryover basis approach
with respect to inventory sold in intercompany transactions in
years prior to the making of a water's edge election. The later sale
of the inventory to third parties occurred after the water's edge
election. The gain was included in income at the taxpayer's
apportionment percentage for the water's edge year. No proration
of the gain was allowed.
- Mitsubishi Electric America, Inc., Case
No. 207902 (SBE, February 18, 2004)
- The SBE concluded that domestic subsidiaries of a
Japanese parent should have used the elimination and basis transfer
or carryover basis, method of accounting for inventory items they
had acquired by intercompany purchases from their parent and its
foreign affiliates in pre-water's edge years, in determining their
basis in inventory.
- Pacific Telesis Group, Inc. v. FTB, SFSC
No. 319008 (2003)
- While not a water's edge election case, the case
involved deferral/elimination issues similar to those raised in
Yamaha and Alps.
- California trial court concluded that a parent corporation of a
unitary group was not entitled to a refund of corporation franchise
taxes paid by one of its subsidiaries on gains realized by a sister
subsidiary on equipment sales.
- Case is pending in the Court of Appeal.
- Baxter Healthcare Corporation, Case No.
150881 (SBE, August 1, 2002)
- In a summary decision, the SBE concluded that
Treasury Regulation
1.954-2(b)(1) excluded from Subpart F income for California
water's edge purposes, the dividend paid by one foreign subsidiary
to another foreign subsidiary.
- The SBE agreed with the taxpayer that IRC § 959(b)
was incorporated into California law through the operation of
Treasury Regulation 1.954-2(b)(1).
- FTB Notice 2004-2 (May 3, 2004)
- On May 3, 2004, FTB issued a notice regarding
the implementation of new water's edge election
statute.
- Mark-To-Market
- The McGraw-Hill Companies,
Inc. v. FTB, San Francisco Superior Court No.
CGC 03424737
- Case involves the issue whether for 1993 and
1994 the taxpayer should be permitted, for California purposes, to
use the mark-to-market method of accounting for accounts
receivable and customer paper where it was required to do so
under IRC § 475. The applicability of FTB Legal Ruling
95-6 is in issue.
- Cross motions for summary judgment have been filed.
Hearing scheduled for November 5, 2004.
- Legislation
- Assembly Bill No. 263
- See I. B. 4. above.
- Senate Bill No. 1100
- New amnesty provisions enacted for corporation
income and franchise taxes, personal income taxes and sales and
use taxes.
- Amnesty period February 1, 2005 and March 31,
2005 during a time frame ending no later than June 30, 2005.
- Applies to taxes that were due in tax reporting periods
beginning before January 1, 2003.
- Only penalties are waived.
- "Yacht loophole"
- Establishes a rebuttable presumption that any
vehicle, vessel or aircraft brought into California within 12 months
of purchase was intended to be used in California and is subject to
use tax.
- Under prior law, the time period was 90 days.
- Provision is effective October 7, 2004 and sunsets on July 1,
2006.
- Assembly Bill No. 1297
- Vetoed by Governor Schwarzenegger.
- Would have nullified insurance policies to indemnify investors
against taxes, penalties and other charges related to abusive tax
shelters.
- Proposed Legislation
- On April 27, 2004, Treasurer Phil Angelides'
called for repeal of "unjustified corporate loopholes."
- Restrict S Corporation use.
- Eliminate various agricultural sales tax exemptions.
- Eliminate ability to have different IRC § 338 election
treatment under California law.
- Angelides also calling for annual review of credits, deductions,
etc., in budget process.
- Finally, Angelides would require FTB study of water's edge
election and require FTB to report on whether law should be
changed.
- Miscellaneous
- "Total Recall"
- On October 7, 2003, California
Governor Gray Davis (D) was recalled
("terminated") and replaced by Arnold
Schwarzenegger (R). The impact on California tax
policies still remains to be seen.
- The Director of the Department of Finance which is a
governor appointed position changed. This in turn altered the
make-up of the 3-member FTB.
- Carole Migden, who is the Chairwoman of the
SBE and thus also on the FTB, is running for State Senator. If
elected in November, this will open up slots on both the FTB and
SBE.
- Franchise Tax Board v. Gilbert P. Hyatt,
538 U.S. 488 (2003)
- The U. S. Supreme Court affirmed a Nevada
Supreme Court decision that Nevada courts had properly exercised
jurisdiction over intentional tort claims brought against the FTB,
for alleged abuses occurring during a personal income tax
(residency) audit, by a former California resident, who was a
Nevada resident at the time of the audit.
- Geneva Towers Limited Partnership v. City
and County of San Francisco, 29 Cal. 4th 769
(2003)
- In a case with potentially far reaching
ramifications, the California Supreme Court reversed the Court of
Appeal and concluded that where a taxing authority fails to act on
a claim for refund within six months, the claimant may deem the
claim denied and file a suit for refund at any time prior to the
mailing of a notice of action on the claim.
- The Court of Appeal had held that there was a four-year statute
of limitations to file the action which began to run six months after
the claim was filed.
- FTB Notice 2004-3
- Discussion draft of new proposed Regulation
25106.5-11.
- Proposed Regulation deals with key corporation elections and
combined reports.
- FTB Notice 2004-5
- On August 6, 2004, the FTB announced that
accuracy related penalties may be asserted against taxpayers that
file California franchise tax original returns inconsistent with the
standard allocation and apportionment provisions of RTC
§§ 25120-25136 and has not obtained prior approval
from the FTB.
- Applicable to returns with a due date, determined
without extensions, after October 14, 2004.
- For returns with a due date before October 15, 2004, a
statement attached to the return that adequately discloses that the
taxpayer's return is inconsistent with the standard allocation and
apportionment rules, or that the taxpayer has relied on RTC
§ 25137 will be considered adequate
disclosure.
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