Business groups urge US Supreme Court to take up NC sales tax dispute | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the Carolina Journal. The author of this post is CJ Staff.

    Groups representing manufacturers, small businesses, and more than 500 large corporations hope the U.S. Supreme Court will take the case of a sales tax dispute from North Carolina. The nation's highest court will make its decision about accepting or rejecting the case no earlier than mid-May.

    The National Association of Manufacturers, National Federation of Independent Business, and the Council on State Taxation are the latest groups to file friend-of-the-court briefs in the case titled Quad Graphics v. N.C. Department of Revenue.

    Quad Graphics, a Wisconsin-based company, is challenging state revenue officials' 2018 assessment of more than $3 million in sales tax and penalties for transactions with customers operating in North Carolina. The company argues that the sales between 2009 and 2011 took place outside North Carolina and are not subject to this state's sales tax.

    The N.C. Supreme Court disagreed. Justices ruled 6-1 in December that the Revenue Department had authority to assess tax on Quad Graphics' transactions with customers in the Tar Heel State.

    "Although sales taxes are passed through to purchasers, businesses bear the administrative costs of computing, collecting, and remitting them," according to the brief from NAM and NFIB's Small Business Legal Center. "Businesses also pay the back taxes, interest, and penalties when they fail to anticipate changes in the complex details of over 10,000 taxing jurisdictions' laws. Businesses thus sometimes rationally attempt to limit the number of jurisdictions to which they must remit sales taxes to reduce their compliance costs and minimize their legal risks."

    "One way that businesses have limited their sales-tax-remittance obligations for decades is to ensure that title to the goods they ship passes inside their State rather than inside the purchaser's State," the brief continued. "Under this Court's decision in McLeod v. J.E. Dilworth Co., ... the Commerce Clause forbids States from levying a sales tax on sales consummated outside of their boundaries."

    "But in the decision below, the North Carolina Supreme Court took it upon itself to declare Dilworth inconsistent with this Court's later decisions. The NAM and NFIB Legal Center write to explain why the North Carolina Supreme Court's decision defies this Court's precedent, upsets businesses' settled expectations, and will harm businesses if allowed to go unreviewed."

    The Council on State Taxation represents hundreds of "major corporations engaged in interstate and international business." COST submitted a separate brief along with University of Connecticut law school professor Richard Pomp, author of a textbook on "State and Local Taxation."

    The N.C. Supreme Court "inappropriately dismantled" the 1944 Dilworth precedent, according to the COST brief.

    "According to the North Carolina Supreme Court, the Commerce Clause no longer requires that a sale occur within the State as a condition to applying its sales tax," the brief argued. "This [U.S. Supreme] Court is asked to determine whether North Carolina can ignore the longstanding Dilworth precedent, which this Court has never overruled - but to the contrary, has endorsed - and uphold a sales tax assessment even though no sale occurred in North Carolina."

    The brief also cited a 1989 precedent involving state courts' overreach. "This case also provides the Court an opportunity to reinforce its warning under Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/American Express, Inc., ... that federal and state courts must respect this Court's holdings and it is not their place to overrule a case like Dilworth."

    The American College of Tax Counsel, a group representing tax lawyers, and the N.C. Chamber Legal Institute filed earlier friend-of-the-court briefs in the case. Both briefs supported Quad Graphics' position.

    The company filed its petition with the nation's highest court on March 14. Court rules required a response from the N.C. Revenue Department by April 17, but N.C. Solicitor General Ryan Park secured a one-month extension.

    Once the Revenue Department submits its legal arguments by May 17, the U.S. Supreme Court will consider the case in a conference and decide whether to take it.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




Tillis Applauds VA Decision to Pause Electronic Health Record System Carolina Journal, Statewide, Editorials, Government, Op-Ed & Politics, State and Federal DPI report shows progress in learning loss recovery


HbAD0

Latest State and Federal

The Missouri Senate approved a constitutional amendment to ban non-U.S. citizens from voting and also ban ranked-choice voting.
Police in the nation’s capital are not stopping illegal aliens who are driving around without license plates, according to a new report.
House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan (R-OH) is looking into whether GoFundMe and Eventbrite cooperated with federal law enforcement during their investigation into the financial transactions of supporters of former President Donald Trump.
Far-left Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) was mocked online late on Monday after video of her yelling at pro-Palestinian activists went viral.
Daily Wire Editor Emeritus Ben Shapiro, along with hosts Matt Walsh, Andrew Klavan, and company co-founder Jeremy Boreing discussed the state of the 2024 presidential election before President Joe Biden gave his State of the Union address on Thursday.
Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said this week that the criminal trials against former President Donald Trump should happen before the upcoming elections.

HbAD1

Vice President Kamala Harris ignored recommendations while attorney general of California to investigate an alleged pyramid scheme at a company linked to her husband, according to documents obtained by The New York Post.
'The entire value add of Hunter Biden to our business was his family name and his access to his father, Vice President Joe Biden'
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced on Tuesday that he has selected Nicole Shanahan to be his vice presidential running mate as he continues to run as an Independent after dropping out of the Democratic Party’s presidential primary late last year.
The campaign for former President Donald Trump released a statement Saturday afternoon condemning the White House’s declaration of Easter Sunday as “Transgender Day of Visibility.”
On Tuesday, another Republican announced that he plans to retire early from the House, a decision that would further diminish a narrow GOP majority in the lower chamber.

HbAD2

"President Trump is moved by the invitation to join NYPD Officer Jonathan Diller’s family... "

HbAD3

 
Back to Top