Mais conteúdo relacionado Semelhante a U.S. Supreme Court Holds Hearing in South Dakota v. Wayfair (20) U.S. Supreme Court Holds Hearing in South Dakota v. Wayfair1. 1
© 2018 Grant Thornton International Ltd. All rights reserved.
State & Local Tax Alert
U.S. Supreme Court Holds Hearing in South Dakota v. Wayfair
On April 17, 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court considered oral arguments in South Dakota v. Wayfair, a
case that may have groundbreaking implications with respect to sales and use tax nexus
standards.1
Last year, the South Dakota Supreme Court unanimously affirmed a circuit court’s
decision that a law requiring certain remote sellers that do not have a physical presence in South
Dakota to collect sales tax on sales made in the state is unconstitutional.2
In affirming the circuit
court, the South Dakota Supreme Court agreed that the law violates the physical presence
requirement for sales and use taxes under Quill v. North Dakota3
and its application of the
Commerce Clause. The U.S. Supreme Court decided to consider the case and recently heard oral
arguments. Mark Arrigo, Matthew Melinson, Jamie Yesnowitz and Jeremy Jester from Grant
Thornton LLP attended the hearing and provide their observations in this Alert.
Background
Under the contested legislation, certain remote sellers that sell tangible personal property,
products transferred electronically, or services for delivery into South Dakota are subject to the
state’s provisions governing the retail sales and service tax and uniform municipal non-ad valorem
tax, and are required to remit sales tax as if they had a physical presence in the state.4
Remote
sellers are subject to these provisions if they meet one of two thresholds in either the previous
calendar year or the current calendar year:
• The seller’s gross revenue from the sale of tangible personal property, any product
transferred electronically, or services delivered into South Dakota exceeds $100,000; or
• The seller sold tangible personal property, any product transferred electronically, or
services for delivery into South Dakota in 200 or more separate transactions.5
The legislation explains that it is intended to directly challenge Quill and provides expedited court
procedures for litigating this matter. Although the legislation was scheduled to take effect on May
1, 2016, it was enjoined prior to its effective date. A circuit court granted the remote sellers’ motion
for summary judgment, holding that the legislation “fails as a matter of law to satisfy the physical
presence requirement that remains applicable to state sales and use taxes under Quill and its
1
U.S. Supreme Court, No. 17-494.
2
901 N.W.2d 754 (S.D. 2017), cert. granted, 199 L. Ed. 2d 602 (2018). For a discussion of this case, see GT SALT
Alert: South Dakota Supreme Court Holds Law Challenging Quill’s Physical Presence Requirement Is
Unconstitutional.
3
504 U.S. 298 (1992).
4
S.D. CODIFIED LAWS §§ 10-64-1 to 10-64-9, as enacted by S.B. 106, Laws 2016. For a discussion of this
legislation, see GT SALT Alert: South Dakota Enacts Legislation Challenging Quill’s Physical Presence
Requirement.
5
S.D. CODIFIED LAWS § 10-64-2.
RELEASE DATE
April 20, 2018
STATES
All
ISSUE/TOPIC
Sales and Use Tax
CONTACTS
Mark Arrigo
Atlanta
T 678.515.2320
E mark.arrigo@us.gt.com
Matthew Melinson
Philadelphia
T 215.376.6050
E matthew.melinson@us.gt.com
Jeremy Jester
Metro DC - Arlington
T 703.847.7505
E jeremy.jester@us.gt.com
Jamie C. Yesnowitz
Washington, DC
T 202.521.1504
E jamie.yesnowitz@us.gt.com
Chuck Jones
Chicago
T 312.602.8517
E chuck.jones@us.gt.com
Lori Stolly
Cincinnati
T 513.345.4540
E lori.stolly@us.gt.com
Priya D. Nair
Washington, DC
T 202.521.1546
E priya.nair@us.gt.com
GT.COM/SALT
2. 2
© 2018 Grant Thornton International Ltd. All rights reserved.
application of the Commerce Clause.”6
The legislation provides that any appeal goes directly to the South
Dakota Supreme Court and must “be heard as expeditiously as possible.”7
Based on the U.S. Supreme Court’s holdings in Bellas Hess8
and Quill, the South Dakota Supreme Court held that
the contested law, S.B. 106, could not impose an obligation on the sellers to collect and remit sales tax because
none of them had a physical presence in the state. The South Dakota Supreme Court did not find a “distinction
between the collection obligations invalidated in Quill and those imposed by Senate Bill 106, and [held] that the
circuit court correctly applied the law when it granted Sellers’ motion for summary judgment.”
Before the South Dakota Supreme Court, the state argued that the U.S. Supreme Court should reconsider Bellas
Hess and Quill because changes in circumstances and technology have made these decisions outdated. The
South Dakota Supreme Court acknowledged that Justice Kennedy, in his concurrence in Direct Marketing
Association (DMA),9
recognized many of the state’s arguments supporting reconsideration of these cases. In
affirming the circuit court, the South Dakota Supreme Court explained that “[h]owever persuasive the State’s
arguments on the merits of revisiting the issue, Quill has not been overruled.” The South Dakota Supreme Court
was required to follow Quill because it “remains the controlling precedent on the issue of Commerce Clause
limitations on interstate collection of sales and use taxes.” On January 12, 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed
to consider this case.10
Preliminary Observations of Hearing
On April 17, 2018, several representatives from Grant Thornton LLP attended the South Dakota v. Wayfair
hearing at the U.S. Supreme Court. We provide our preliminary observations on a hearing that reflected
potentially deep divisions between the Justices’ views on these issues.
South Dakota’s “One Sale” Position
South Dakota’s attorney general, and the U.S. deputy solicitor general who argued on behalf of South Dakota,
claimed that merely having one sale in a jurisdiction would be enough to require a business to collect and remit
sales tax in a jurisdiction that does not have a threshold-based nexus standard at issue in this case. This
argument effectively endorsed overturning Quill to allow any state to impose sales tax collection and remittance
responsibilities without any types of transactional or sales thresholds, going well beyond the thresholds
established by the South Dakota statute in question.
Justice Sotomayor’s Early Challenge to South Dakota
Within the first minute of the argument, Justice Sotomayor strongly criticized South Dakota’s attorney general’s
position on a number of fronts, noting that the impact of the physical presence standard on state revenues was
not caused by Quill itself, but by the fact that states did not have an adequate mechanism to collect tax from
consumers. Leaning on the Quill precedent, she raised numerous complicating issues, including the potential for
6
No. 32CIV16-000092 (S.D. 6th Cir. Ct.), order granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment, March 6, 2017.
7
S.D. CODIFIED LAWS § 10-64-5.
8
National Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Department of Revenue, 386 U.S. 753 (1967).
9
Direct Marketing Ass’n v. Brohl, 135 S. Ct. 1124 (2015) (Kennedy, J., concurring).
10
199 L. Ed. 2d 602 (2018).
3. 3
© 2018 Grant Thornton International Ltd. All rights reserved.
retroactive application of a new sales tax nexus standard, the uncertain threshold at which sales tax nexus
should arise, the line of case law that should be used to determine whether the sales tax nexus obligation is
constitutional, and numerous compliance difficulties, burdens and costs to small businesses that would have to
follow the new standards.
Justice Alito’s Options, and Potential Congressional Intervention
During South Dakota’s time for argument, Justice Alito gave South Dakota’s attorney general the option of
eliminating Quill and allowing the states significant flexibility in the area of sales and use tax nexus (option A), or
the option of having Congress act in this area (option B). The attorney general chose option A, basing that choice
on Congressional failure to address the issue for 26 years. That led to Justice Kagan noting that Congress
consciously chose not to address this issue, and by doing so, implying that Congress had addressed the issue by
not adopting legislation and leaving it to the states to decide. In fact, throughout the hearing, there were
numerous references to Congressional intervention and why that has not happened to date. Several of the
Justices seemed hesitant to encourage Congress to act in this area given the length of time in which it could
have crafted legislation, as well as viewing such task as beyond what the Justices are empowered to do.
Chief Justice Roberts’ Comments on Economic Impact
In many oral arguments, the Justices and the parties engage in very technical discussions involving construction
of statutes and legal precedents. This oral argument was exceptional in that much of the argument revolved
around the practical effect of Quill, including the economic impact on the states. For example, at the end of the
South Dakota attorney general’s argument, Chief Justice Roberts alluded to the perception that states were
figuring a way to resolve the revenue problem despite the presence of Quill, and that as a result, Quill could be
preserved. The South Dakota attorney general did not agree with that assessment, claiming that the expansion
of e-commerce would have a $100 billion negative impact to the states over the next ten years with a physical
presence rule in place.
Justices Ginsburg and Gorsuch Team Up
In many cases before the Supreme Court, decisions are reached along ideological lines, with conservative and
liberal Justices pitched on opposite sides. While the policy implications of the Quill rule were in full display here,
it was interesting to see that the traditional ideological split may not apply here. Particularly striking was Justices
Ginsburg and Gorsuch appearing to side with South Dakota. During Wayfair’s argument, Justice Ginsburg
emphasized that in her view, a policy that required all who exploited a state’s market should be subject to that
market’s tax, and such policy would be considered “equalizing” rather than “discriminating.” Wayfair’s counsel
responded that requiring such a blanket rule would be problematic in no small part because of the number of
sales tax jurisdictions that exist. Justice Gorsuch noted that Justice Ginsburg’s question had not been answered,
in that the Supreme Court wanted to know why they should favor a particular business model over others.
Justice Gorsuch did not appear to find satisfaction in Wayfair’s counsel’s response, which referenced the fact that
most Internet retailers do collect and remit sales tax due to their move to increase their physical presence.
Justice Kagan’s Recognition of Unintended Consequences of Overturning Quill
4. 4
© 2018 Grant Thornton International Ltd. All rights reserved.
During Wayfair’s argument, an interesting exchange occurred where Justice Kagan noted the irony in an
overturn of Quill possibly resulting in large Internet marketplace providers performing sales tax compliance
functions for small retailers for a fee, resulting in a benefit for these providers that historically had tried to
maintain the Quill physical presence standard. Wayfair’s counsel responded by saying that a number of the
functions needed to comply with sales tax collection and remittance responsibilities, including hard-copy
exemption certificates and audit defense services cannot be performed by software, whether provided by large
marketplace providers or anyone else.
Justice Breyer’s Need for More Information
Justice Breyer notably claimed that both briefs made valid points, at one point exclaiming that after reading the
briefs, he thought both sides were absolutely right, yet he knew that both sides could not actually be absolutely
right. He appeared to genuinely struggle with the case, ultimately believing he did not have enough actionable
information to affirmatively rule on the case, and asking questions designed to elicit more information that
could help him make a decision.
Justice Kennedy, Almost as Silent as Justice Thomas
Justice Kennedy, who inspired the legislation that spurred this litigation through his desire to see a challenge to
Quill reflected in his concurrence in the Colorado DMA litigation involving notice and reporting provisions in lieu
of sales tax collection and remittance, only raised one brief issue throughout the hearing.11
His relative silence
was somewhat notable given his seemingly solid support to revisit and potentially overturn Quill under the right
set of circumstances. Less surprisingly, Justice Thomas did not break from his preference to remain silent at
hearings. His disdain for the dormant Commerce Clause, an implication that state legislation which discriminates
against interstate commerce is unconstitutional, makes it particularly unlikely that he would find against a state
effort to regulate commerce through the imposition of a sales tax collection and remittance obligation.
Notice and Reporting Provisions: Not so Burdensome?
Wayfair’s counsel noted that the Colorado notice and reporting provisions endorsed in DMA were not overly
burdensome to businesses, a curious point to make given that these provisions are considered to be
voluminous, may cause privacy issues given the amount of data required to be shared with state tax authorities,
and often force affected businesses to collect and remit sales tax in states that have adopted these provisions. In
addition, Wayfair’s counsel stated that “all of the players that are involved in this issue” were inclined to support
Congressional legislation.
Commentary
In 2016, South Dakota became the first state to enact legislation that directly challenges Quill’s physical presence
requirement. In Quill, the U.S. Supreme Court held that, for Commerce Clause nexus purposes, out-of-state
11
For a discussion of Colorado’s notice and reporting requirements, see GT SALT Alert: Colorado Enforcement of Remote
Seller Notice and Reporting Requirements Commences.
5. 5
© 2018 Grant Thornton International Ltd. All rights reserved.
retailers must have a physical presence in a state before a state can require the retailer to collect sales tax. Due to
the rapid expansion of the Internet since Quill was decided in 1992, the way that consumers purchase items has
changed tremendously. As a result, sales tax revenues are substantially declining because tax is not collected on
many purchases through the Internet. Other states have followed South Dakota’s lead and now have laws or
regulations that challenge Quill’s physical presence requirement. As a result, this case is being closely followed
by the state tax community, retailers and consumers.
Based on prior knowledge of the Justices’ opinions and the lines of questioning pursued by the Justices at the
hearing, we believe that Justices Sotomayor, Alito and Roberts are most likely to support Wayfair, while Justices
Thomas, Ginsburg, Gorsuch and Kennedy are most likely to support South Dakota. Justices Kagan and Breyer
look to be “on the fence,” raising the possibility that they, and possibly other Justices, may want a more
complete record in the lower courts before proceeding.
While at first blush, the count would appear to favor the state given four Justices that seem poised to abandon
Quill, we note that several paths remain for the Quill rule to survive. In cases where the Justices do not feel they
have enough information to decide a matter, relying on stare decisis as well as decisions rendered by lower
courts is often the safest way to proceed. This would be good news for Wayfair, given that reliance on stare
decisis would uphold Quill, and the South Dakota decisions on this case all favored Wayfair. In addition, there is a
distinct possibility that a majority decision may not be possible given the litany of positions that may be taken
by the Justices, in which case the judgment of the South Dakota Supreme Court in favor of Wayfair could stand.
As a potential example, four Justices might want to keep Quill based on stare decisis, counterbalancing the four
Justices that likely want to get rid of Quill. If the ninth Justice wants to return the case to the lower courts for
further development of the record without opining on Quill itself, Quill would stand. Finally, the U.S. Supreme
Court conceivably could decide on an extremely narrow basis that the South Dakota statute is valid while
providing that the ruling only applies to the facts at issue, without completely disturbing the Quill standard.
Based on all of these potential options, it is becoming increasingly likely that the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision,
expected in June, will reflect a deeply divided body with several concurring and dissenting opinions possible, if
not likely.
_____________________________________________________________________
This content supports Grant Thornton LLP’s marketing of professional services and is not written tax advice
directed at the particular facts and circumstances of any person. If you are interested in the topics presented
herein, we encourage you to contact us or an independent tax professional to discuss their potential application
to your particular situation. Nothing herein shall be construed as imposing a limitation on any person from
disclosing the tax treatment or tax structure of any matter addressed herein. To the extent this content may be
considered to contain written tax advice, any written advice contained in, forwarded with or attached to this
content is not intended by Grant Thornton LLP to be used, and cannot be used, by any person for the purpose of
avoiding penalties that may be imposed under the Internal Revenue Code.
The information contained herein is general in nature and is based on authorities that are subject to change. It is
not, and should not be construed as, accounting, legal or tax advice provided by Grant Thornton LLP to the
reader. This material may not be applicable to, or suitable for, the reader’s specific circumstances or needs and
6. 6
© 2018 Grant Thornton International Ltd. All rights reserved.
may require consideration of tax and nontax factors not described herein. Contact Grant Thornton LLP or other
tax professionals prior to taking any action based upon this information. Changes in tax laws or other factors
could affect, on a prospective or retroactive basis, the information contained herein; Grant Thornton LLP
assumes no obligation to inform the reader of any such changes. All references to “Section,” “Sec.,” or “§” refer to
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.