Industries

Helping clients meet their business challenges begins with an in-depth understanding of the industries in which they work. That’s why KPMG LLP established its industry-driven structure. In fact, KPMG LLP was the first of the Big Four firms to organize itself along the same industry lines as clients.

How We Work

We bring together passionate problem-solvers, innovative technologies, and full-service capabilities to create opportunity with every insight.

Learn more

Careers & Culture

What is culture? Culture is how we do things around here. It is the combination of a predominant mindset, actions (both big and small) that we all commit to every day, and the underlying processes, programs and systems supporting how work gets done.

Learn more

TWIST - This Week in State Tax

12.04.2023 | Duration: 3:09

Summary of state tax developments in Illinois, Minnesota, and Washington State.

Listen now
Backward 10s Play Pause Forward 10s
0:00
00:00

Weekly TWIST recap

Welcome to TWIST for the week of December 4, 2023, featuring Sarah McGahan from the KPMG Washington National Tax state and local tax practice.

Today we are covering a corporate income tax case from the Minnesota Supreme Court, a recently filed constitutional challenge to Illinois Retailer’s Occupation Tax laws as applied to remote sellers and in-state sellers, and guidance in Washington State on the sales tax and B&O tax obligations of self-published authors who sell books though marketplaces.

The Minnesota Supreme Court recently reviewed a dispute between the Commissioner of the Department of Revenue and a taxpayer over whether gain from the sale of a business’ goodwill was apportionable business income or nonbusiness income that was allocated. The case involved two issues- the first being whether the Department was required to adhere to an earlier tax court decision addressing the substantive issue. The Department did not appeal the earlier decision but had internally decided— without notice to the public—not to follow it. The Minnesota Supreme Court declined to rule as to whether the Department was required to follow a tax court decision that it had not appealed. Rather, the court determined that, as the state’s highest court, it was not bound by a tax court decision and therefore it addressed the second issue, which was the treatment of the gain. After determining that the statutory language was ambiguous, the court relied on legislative history to conclude that the gain apportionable business income.

A remote retailer of pet medications has filed a case with the Illinois Tax Tribunal challenging Illinois’ Leveling the Playing Field Act that requires remote retailers to collect and remit both state and local Retailer’s Occupation Tax (ROT) based on the destination of its products sold.  Currently, in-state retailers are required to collect and remit both state and local ROT based on the origin of the retailers’ products sold.  The taxpayer alleges that the Act violates the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution because it “imposes a costly, objectively overly burdensome and time-consuming requirement upon remote retailers that is not imposed on in-state retailers.”  The taxpayer also asserts the law violates the Illinois Constitution’s Uniformity Clause due to disparate treatment it receives versus similar retailers with a “minimal physical presence in Illinois.”

Finally, the Washington State Department of Revenue has recently issued guidance on its website addressing the tax consequences when self-publishing authors use marketplace facilitators for distribution and book sales. While the guidance is specific to self-published authors, it may be applicable to other types of sales.  Notably, the guidance confirms that the portion of the purchase price of a book sold through a marketplace that Is retained by the marketplace facilitator is included in the seller’s B&O tax base and the author must collect sales tax unless the marketplace certifies that it is collecting and remitting.

Illinois

Illinois: Challenge Filed to “Leveling the Playing Field” Act

A remote seller of pet medications has filed a petition with the Illinois Tax Tribunal challenging Illinois’ Leveling the Playing Field Act (Act), which requires retailers without an Illinois physical presence to collect state and local Retailer’s Occupation Tax (ROT) based on the destination of the products sold. In contrast, in-state retailers are required to collect both state and local ROT on an origin sourcing basis. The taxpayer notes there can be seven different ways that ROT and use tax can apply to a transaction, depending on slightly different facts. The taxpayer was audited for compliance with Illinois ROT laws and was assessed over $1 million in additional tax, interest, and penalties. In challenging the assessment, the taxpayer alleges that Act discriminates against interstate commerce by requiring destination-based sourcing on sales by remote retailers and origin-based sourcing on sales by similarly situated retailers with an Illinois presence. In the taxpayer’s view, destination-based sourcing requires compliance with significantly more local taxing rates and jurisdictions, which places greater burdens on remote retailers, as opposed to in-state retailers who enjoy the benefit of complying with one or significantly fewer local tax jurisdictions under the origin-based sourcing rules. The taxpayer also cites to Wayfair and alleges that the Act violates the Commerce Clause by imposing undue burdens (e.g., reporting to the state on ROT collected in over 900 local jurisdictions) on remote retailers that are not imposed on retailers with a slight physical presence in the state. 

In Count II of the petition, the taxpayer argues that the Act also violates the Uniformity Clause of the Illinois Constitution, which provides that a tax must be “uniform as to the class upon which it operates.” To pass muster, a tax classification must be based on real and substantial differences between taxpayers and bear a rational relationship to the object of the legislation or public policy. Because similarly situated taxpayers are treated “vastly differently for tax purposes” under the Act, and there is no articulate policy justification for this treatment, the taxpayer argues that Uniformity Clause is implicated. Please stay tuned to TWIST for updates as PetMeds Express, Inc. v. Illinois Dep’t of Revenue progresses.

Minnesota

Minnesota: Gain from Sale of Goodwill was Apportionable Business Income

The Minnesota Supreme Court recently reviewed a dispute between the Commissioner of the Department of Revenue and a taxpayer over whether gain from the sale of goodwill was apportionable business income or nonbusiness income that was allocated.  The taxpayer was an S corporation that did business in Minnesota and Wisconsin and was owned in part by a Minnesota nonresident. Following the sale of the S-corporation to another business, the taxpayer and its nonresident partial owner filed Minnesota tax returns characterizing the gain on the sale of goodwill as income that was not subject to apportionment.  This approach was taken after consultation with advisors and was supported by a 2006 Minnesota Tax Court decision, Nadler. The tax court in Nadler determined that income generated by the sale of goodwill constituted “nonbusiness income” that was subject to allocation. However, unbeknownst to the taxpayer and its advisors, the Department of Revenue did not acquiesce to the Nadler decision and did not publicly share this position until it issued a notice in 2017.  Upon audit, the Department treated the taxpayer’s gain as apportionable. The matter eventually went the tax court where the Commissioner prevailed. This appeal followed.

The first issue before the court was whether the Department was required to adhere to the Nadler decision with respect to the taxpayer’s audit and assessment. The court noted that it was “troubled by the Commissioner’s conduct that this case has brought to light.” Specifically, the Department had declined to appeal the Nadler decision, but had internally decided— without notice to the public—not to follow it. Nevertheless, the court noted that as the state’s highest court, it was not bound by a tax court decision and therefore did not need to decide whether the Commissioner was bound by Nadler to decide the appeal. The court next turned to the substantive issue, which was one of statutory construction. The taxpayer argued that the gain on the sale of its goodwill was allocated under Minn. Stat. § 290.17, subd. 2(c). The Commissioner, however, asserted that the taxpayer’s income was subject to apportionment because it was business income derived from a unitary asset, which was apportioned under another subdivision of Minn. Stat. § 290.17.  After reviewing the statutes, the court determined the language of the statute was ambiguous and therefore it was appropriate to look to legislative history to determine the legislature’s intent. After doing so, the court concluded that the Commissioner’s interpretation of the statute was more reasonable.  The legislative history reflected the intent to overrule a decision setting forth a functional test and put in place a purely constitutional distinction between business and nonbusiness income. The income at issue, which was derived from a unitary asset, did not constitute nonbusiness income and was therefore subject to apportionment. Two justices dissented on the basis that the Commissioner should be bound by a decision that it did not appeal unless it provided public notice of its disagreement with such decision. Please contact Caroline Balfour with questions on Cities Management, Inc. v. Commissioner of Revenue.

Washington State

Washington State: Tax Implications of Selling Self-Published Books through Marketplaces

The Washington State Department of Revenue has recently issued guidance on its website addressing the tax consequences when self-publishing authors use marketplace facilitators for book sales and distribution. While the guidance is specific to sales by self-published authors, it may be applicable to other types of sales.  The guidance notes that there are two common methods that marketplaces use to distribute self-published books. In the first, the facilitators sell the author's book under a distribution arrangement whereby the author does not receive an advance and is responsible for preparing the book for sale. The marketplace facilitator typically charges a fee for each book sold. In this instance, the author must report retailing B&O tax on the full selling price of book sales made to Washington consumers and cannot deduct any fees they paid to the marketplace facilitator. For example, if an author sells a book for $10, and the marketplace facilitator keeps a $3 service fee, the author must report the $10 selling price. The guidance notes that some marketplace facilitators call the amount paid to the authors a “royalty payment.” In the Department’s view, this payment is the author's portion of the book sales and these payments do not qualify for the royalties B&O tax classification. With respect to sales and use tax collection, the author does not need to collect sales tax on sales they made through a marketplace facilitator if they received confirmation from the marketplace that the facilitator will collect sales tax. The author may claim a “Gross Sales Tax Collected by Facilitator” deduction under the retail sales tax classification.  If the author does not get confirmation from the facilitator, the author needs to collect and submit retail sales tax on book sales to Washington consumers. In the second type of common distribution method, the author grants the facilitator the right to print and sell the book. In this case, the author pays royalties B&O tax on the gross income received from the facilitator. Please stay tuned to TWIST for more marketplace facilitator guidance.

Meet our podcast team

Image of Sarah McGahan
Sarah McGahan
Managing Director, State & Local Tax, KPMG US

Discover more podcast episodes in this series

Sign up for tax topics of interest

Receive timely, topic-specific content on tax topics that interest you.

Thank you

Thank you for subscribing to receive our tax insights.

Sign up for tax topics of interest

Choose one or more tax topics that you are interested in and you will receive invitations to attend TaxWatch Webcasts on those topics to earn CPE credit. You will also receive timely, topic-specific content in the form of newsletters, podcasts, articles, alerts, and other thought leadership.

Choose one or more tax topics that you are interested in:

By submitting, you agree that KPMG LLP may process any personal information you provide pursuant to KPMG LLP's Privacy Statement.

An error occurred. Please contact customer support.

Thank you!

Thank you for contacting KPMG. We will respond to you as soon as possible.

Contact KPMG

Use this form to submit general inquiries to KPMG. We will respond to you as soon as possible.

By submitting, you agree that KPMG LLP may process any personal information you provide pursuant to KPMG LLP's Privacy Statement.

An error occurred. Please contact customer support.

Job seekers

Visit our careers section or search our jobs database.

Submit RFP

Use the RFP submission form to detail the services KPMG can help assist you with.

Office locations

International hotline

You can confidentially report concerns to the KPMG International hotline

Press contacts

Do you need to speak with our Press Office? Here's how to get in touch.

Headline