By Daniel J. Flynn on 5.13.09 @ 6:08AM
They might be about to reach into the "Live Free or Die" state of
New Hampshire.
Hard times breed harebrained schemes. This is especially true,
whether one speaks of individuals, businesses, or governments,
when it comes to money. As the economy continues to shrink,
elected officials continue to devise ever more imaginative
rackets to siphon money from the shrinking economy.
Washington, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty proposes a $51-a-year
"streetlight user fee." A state legislator in Oregon, home to
such macro microbrews as Rogues Ales and Widmer, wants to tag a
$50 tax on every full barrel of beer produced in, or imported to,
his state. Empire State assemblyman Felix Ortiz, perhaps the
nation’s most prolific author of vice taxes, has a litany of
bills before the New York state legislature imposing a $10 tax on
visitors to strip clubs, a 25¢-cent tax on bottles of beer and
wine, and a fatso tax on soda, sweets, and video games.
The tax schemes leave observers amazed both at the ingenuity
behind them and at the idiocy in their counterproductive,
killing-the-goose-that-lays-the-golden-egg mentality that
primarily targets commerce. The money grab that beats all others
in its outside-the-box thinking is the demand by Massachusetts
that out-of-state stores collect sales taxes for the Bay State.
Last week, Massachusetts' Supreme Judicial Court heard arguments
in Town Fair Tire v. Massachusetts. In the
coming months, the Supreme Judicial Court will decide the issue
at hand: whether Massachusetts has the right to force businesses
in New Hampshire to collect Bay State sales taxes when selling
items to Massachusetts residents. Given the recent vote in the
Massachusetts House of Representatives to increase sales taxes by
25 percent, the impulse to dam the flood of Massachusetts
shoppers into sales-tax-free New Hampshire grows stronger among
Bay State officials perpetually frustrated with potential tax
dollars flowing north across the border.
Town Fair Tire v. Massachusetts revolves around a tax
bill presented to three New Hampshire Town Fair Tire (TFT) stores
by the Massachusetts Department of Revenue. The bill stems from a
Massachusetts audit of the New Hampshire stores covering the
period of October 2000 to April 2003. The Bay State estimated
that it lost revenue justly owed to it due to more than 300
border-crossing shoppers, and demanded that TFT -- which has
numerous stores in Massachusetts as well -- pony up $108,947 in
taxes, interest, and penalties.
TFT's invoices revealed customers listing Massachusetts
addresses. "Based upon the evidence, and in the absence of
evidence to the contrary, the [Tax] Board inferred that the
vehicles owned or operated by Massachusetts residents also bore
Massachusetts registration plates ('license plates') and
certificates of inspection ('inspection stickers'), which
provided additional evidence to TFT of the intended place of use
of the tires," the state's appellate tax board judged.
Massachusetts assumed that the addresses on the invoices were
connected to cars with Massachusetts plates and inspection
stickers, the presumed sight of which should have prompted tire
technicians to alert clerks to assess a 5 percent tax upon the
sale. But New Hampshire sales clerks don't even collect sales
taxes for their own state's government. Could their southern
neighbors really have expected them to collect sales taxes for
Massachusetts?
Massachusetts' appellate tax board ruled that TFT’s stores just
over the New Hampshire border should have collected sales taxes
for Massachusetts because "TFT benefitted from the many services
provided by the Commonwealth, including fire and police
protection, road maintenance and other municipal services by
virtue of its retail operations in the Commonwealth." But the
"retail operations" that benefitted from such services collect
and remit Massachusetts sales taxes. The case is about the
practices of three Town Fair Tire stores in New Hampshire, not
the twenty-five TFT locations in Massachusetts.
The "use tax" law Massachusetts cites is more than forty years
old and has never been interpreted in this manner before. The
onus has been on Massachusetts taxpayers, rather than
out-of-state merchants, to remit the "use" tax. New Hampshire
vendors, then, could not have foreseen the new interpretation of
this old law. This is doubly the case given that the tires
purchased in the Granite State would not be "used" in the Bay
State (if at all) until after the transaction. Aside from all
this, there is the Orwellian description of a tax collected at
the point of sale as a "use tax." One can call a tax collected
during a trade of money for goods a "use" tax. But it's still a
sales tax.
Whatever one calls it, the cross-jurisdictional tax blatantly
violates the U.S. Constitution. Through its commerce clause, that
document ensured a massive free-trade zone that has for more than
two centuries prevented interstate trade wars of the sort that
Massachusetts has launched. Massachusetts, in a greedy grab for
more dollars, has imperiled a key component of American
prosperity.
New Hampshire has responded through a bill that forbids its
businesses to share customer information with other states. The
state senate passed it unanimously, a house committee unanimously
referred the bill to the larger body for consideration next week,
and the governor supports the measure. "I am greatly disturbed
that Massachusetts has ordered a retail store in New Hampshire to
collect and remit an out-of-state use tax on certain
over-the-counter sales at the store's New Hampshire locations,"
New Hampshire Governor John Lynch explains. "We should not allow
Massachusetts to turn New Hampshire businesses into tax agents
for Massachusetts."
If the case seems too preposterous to pass legal muster, consider
that the muster it must pass is that of the Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court. The same body that five years ago divined a right
to gay marriage in the oldest constitution in the world now
considers whether to read the commerce clause out of the U.S.
Constitution. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court's
willingness to do the former suggests that it is quite capable of
doing the latter.
topics:
Taxes