On February 7, 2022, the Ohio Court of Appeals upheld the constitutionality of a statute providing that, during the duration of a stay-at-home order issued by the Governor related to the COVID-19 pandemic, and for thirty days after its end, any day on which an employee works from home because of the order shall be
Income Tax
Nexus, apportionment, market-based sourcing, voluntary disclosures... no single business can stay on top of all the state-by-state legislation and regulatory guidance changing SALT income tax strategies today.
That’s why Eversheds Sutherland has a multistate team of attorneys dedicated to knowing the latest — and using it to your advantage...Read More
California Office of Tax Appeals shuts down refund claim related to 338(h)(10) election
The California Office of Tax Appeals (OTA) recently sustained the Franchise Tax Board’s (FTB) income tax treatment of an IRC 338(h)(10) election. In return for all the outstanding stock in the target S-Corporation taxpayer, third-party buyers paid an initial (fixed) purchase price and agreed to make deferred contingent earnout payments totaling up to $50 million…
That aged well: Storage of tobacco during aging process not “use” for Virginia property factor purposes
In Virginia Department of Taxation v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., the Virginia Supreme Court ruled that the taxpayer was entitled to a corporate income tax refund because leaf tobacco stored in the taxpayer’s Virginia warehouse was not “used” by the taxpayer for purposes of inclusion in its Virginia property factor.
The taxpayer stored leaf…
Idaho Governor Little signs rate reductions and income tax rebate bill into law
On February 4, Idaho Governor Little signed into law HB 436, which will decrease individual and corporate income tax rates. HB 436 was passed and signed into law in just over 20 days after being introduced. Specifically, the legislation lowers the corporate income tax rate from 6.5% to 6% and consolidates the personal income…
Washington finds B&O tax applies to transfer pricing payments
The Washington Administrative Review and Hearings Division (the Division) of the Department of Revenue held that payments between affiliated entities could not be deducted from “gross income” subject to the business and occupation tax (B&O Tax). Each of the taxpayers, three affiliated entities falling under the same parent company umbrella with each providing investment management…
Breaking domicile is hard to do: Arkansas OHA holds couple did not abandon Arkansas domicile
In a decision dated January 18, 2022, the Arkansas Office of Hearings and Appeals (OHA) held that a married couple remained domiciled in and residents of Arkansas for individual income tax purposes for the 2013 through 2018 tax years, rejecting the couple’s assertion that they had abandoned their Arkansas domicile by relocating to another state.…
Virginia Department of Taxation approves BPOL tax payroll apportionment
On August 24, 2021 (released November 2021), the Virginia Department of Taxation (the Department) concluded that a provider of professional and information technology services was entitled to payroll apportionment of gross receipts for a local Business, Professional and Occupational License Tax (BPOL Tax) refund claim. Virginia localities may impose a BPOL Tax on the gross…
Washington state refund claim enters no fly zone
The Washington Court of Appeals recently issued a divided (2-1) decision in a case involving Washington’s “benefits received” test for apportioning service income. The Court ruled that the “benefit” of an airplane design firm’s services were received in Washington, where the taxpayer’s direct customer, Boeing, manufactured the airplanes incorporating the taxpayer’s airplane designs, rather than…
Eco-friendly but not so taxpayer friendly: Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission finds automaker’s sale of environmental credits generates apportionable income
The Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission sided with the Department of Revenue, ruling that American Honda Motor Co.’s sale of environmental credits generated apportionable income for corporate income and franchise tax purposes. American Honda bought vehicles from related companies and resold them to car dealerships and other retailers in the U.S.
When American Honda sold its…
Hell (and tax residency) hath no fury: DC Court of Appeals upholds tax evasion conviction in residency dispute
In a personal income tax residency decision that involves a fair amount of schadenfreude, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals affirmed a criminal tax evasion conviction of a District domiciliary and denied a motion to suppress documents obtained through extensive summonses issued by the Office of Tax and Revenue.
For background, the taxpayer filed…



