EMC Corporation v. Glenn Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts of the State of Texas And Ken Paxton, Attorney General of the State of Texas ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                        ACCEPTED
    03-15-00113-CV
    5110259
    THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    4/30/2015 6:02:54 PM
    JEFFREY D. KYLE
    CLERK
    No. 03-15-00113-CV
    __________________________________________________________________
    FILED IN
    In the Court of Appeals      3rd COURT OF APPEALS
    For the Third Judicial District     AUSTIN, TEXAS
    4/30/2015 6:02:54 PM
    Austin, Texas
    JEFFREY D. KYLE
    __________________________________________________________________
    Clerk
    EMC CORPORATION
    Appellant,
    v.
    GLENN HEGAR, COMPTROLLER OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS OF
    THE STATE OF TEXAS, AND KEN PAXTON, ATTORNEY
    GENERAL OF THE STATE OF TEXAS
    Appellees.
    __________________________________________________________________
    ON APPEAL FROM THE 353RD DISTRICT COURT, TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS
    TRIAL COURT CAUSE NO. D-1-GN-14-000851
    __________________________________________________________________
    APPELLANT’S BRIEF
    __________________________________________________________________
    RYAN LAW FIRM, LLP
    Doug Sigel
    Texas Bar No. 18347650
    Doug.Sigel@RyanLawLLP.com
    Ryan Cotter
    Texas Bar No. 24075969
    Ryan.Cotter@RyanLawLLP.com
    100 Congress Avenue, Suite 950
    Austin, Texas 78701
    April 30, 2015                          Attorneys for Appellant
    ORAL ARGUMENT IS REQUESTED
    Identity of the Parties and Counsel
    Appellant
    EMC Corporation
    Counsel for Appellant
    Doug Sigel
    Ryan Cotter
    Ryan Law Firm, LLP
    100 Congress Avenue, Suite 950
    Austin, Texas 78701
    512.459.6600 Telephone
    512.459.6601 Facsimile
    Doug.Sigel@RyanLawLLP.com
    Ryan.Cotter@RyanLawLLP.com
    Appellees
    Glenn Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts of the State of Texas
    Ken Paxton, Attorney General of the State of Texas
    Counsel for Appellees
    Rance Craft
    Assistant Solicitor General
    Charles K. Eldred
    Assistant Attorney General
    Office of the Attorney General
    P.O. Box 12548 (MC 059)
    Austin, Texas 78711-2548
    512.936.2872 Telephone
    512.474.2697 Facsimile
    rance.craft@texasattorneygeneral.gov
    charles.eldred@texasattorneygeneral.gov
    Appellant’s Brief – Page i
    Table of Contents
    Identity of the Parties and Counsel ....................................................................................... i
    Table of Contents................................................................................................................. ii
    Table of Authorities ............................................................................................................ iii
    Appendix ............................................................................................................................ vi
    Statement of the Case .......................................................................................................... 1
    Statement Regarding Oral Argument .................................................................................. 1
    Issues Presented ................................................................................................................... 1
    Statement of Facts ............................................................................................................... 2
    Summary of the Argument .................................................................................................. 4
    Standards of Review ............................................................................................................ 6
    Argument ............................................................................................................................. 7
    Appellant is entitled to compute its franchise tax using the Multistate
    Tax Compact apportionment formula. ....................................................................... 7
    The plain language of Texas Tax Code §§ 141.001 and
    171.106(a) is unambiguous. ................................................................................ 9
    The Legislature did not impliedly repeal the Multistate Tax
    Compact when it enacted the revised franchise tax. ......................................... 10
    Texas cannot unilaterally repeal selected provisions of the Multistate
    Tax Compact because it is a binding interstate compact. ........................................ 11
    Texas may not unilaterally modify the terms of a contract. ............................. 12
    The Multistate Tax Compact is a valid and binding interstate
    compact. ............................................................................................................ 13
    Texas did not withdraw from the Multistate Tax Compact. ............................. 14
    The Multistate Tax Compact election applies because the Texas
    franchise tax is an income tax. ................................................................................. 15
    The Michigan Supreme Court, in an identical case, held that
    taxpayer was entitled to use the Multistate Tax Compact’s three-
    factor apportionment formula. .......................................................................... 16
    The Georgia Tax Tribunal held that the Texas Franchise Tax is
    an income tax. ................................................................................................... 18
    Disallowing taxpayers an election under the Multistate Tax Compact
    violates the United States and Texas Constitutions. ................................................ 20
    Conclusion ......................................................................................................................... 22
    Certificate of Compliance .................................................................................................. 23
    Appellant’s Brief – Page ii
    Certificate of Service ......................................................................................................... 23
    Table of Authorities
    CASES
    Appraisal Review Bd. v. Spencer Square Ltd.,
    
    252 S.W.3d 842
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2008, no pet.) .......................7
    Combs v. Health Care Serv. Corp,
    
    401 S.W.3d 623
    (Tex. 2013) ...........................................................................8
    Combs v. Roark Amusement & Vending, L.P.,
    
    422 S.W.3d 632
    (Tex. 2013) .......................................................................7, 8
    Dodd v. State,
    
    650 S.W.2d 129
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1983, no writ) ...............10
    H. Alan Rosenberg v. Comm'r,
    No. 1414626 (GA Nov. 25, 2014) .......................................................... 19, 20
    Hans Rees’ Sons, Inc. v. North Carolina ex rel. Maxwell,
    
    283 U.S. 123
    (1931).......................................................................................20
    Hess v. Port Auth. Trans-Hudson Corp.,
    
    513 U.S. 30
    (1994).........................................................................................12
    Houston Indep. Sch. Dist. v. S.W. Bell Tel. Co.,
    
    376 S.W.2d 375
    (Tex. App.—Austin, 1964),
    rev’d on other grounds by 
    397 S.W.2d 419
    (Tex. 1965) ..............................10
    In re E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Co.,
    
    92 S.W.3d 517
    (Tex. 2002) .............................................................................6
    In re Office of the Attorney Gen.,
    
    422 S.W.3d 623
    (Tex. 2013) ...........................................................................8
    In re VanDeWater,
    
    966 S.W.2d 730
    (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1998) (orig. proceeding) ............8
    Appellant’s Brief – Page iii
    Int’l Serv. Ins. Co. v. Jackson,
    
    335 S.W.2d 420
    (Tex. App.—Austin, 1960, writ ref’d n.r.e.) ......................11
    Int'l Bus. Machines Corp. v. Dep't of Treasury,
    
    852 N.W.2d 865
    (2014) .......................................................................... 16, 
    17 Jones v
    . Williams,
    
    45 S.W.2d 130
    (Tex. 1931) .............................................................................9
    Maverick v. Ruiz,
    
    897 S.W.2d 843
    (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1995, no writ).............................9
    Mid South Telecomm. Co. v. Best,
    
    184 S.W.3d 386
    (Tex. App—Austin 2006, no pet.) ........................................6
    Norfolk & W. Ry. Co. v. Missouri State Tax Comm’n,
    
    390 U.S. 317
    (1968).......................................................................................21
    State ex rel. Dyer v. Sims,
    
    341 U.S. 22
    (1951).........................................................................................13
    Tex. Adjutant Gen.’s Office v. Ngakoue,
    
    408 S.W.3d 350
    (Tex. 2013) ...........................................................................8
    TGS-NoPec Geophysical Co. v. Combs,
    
    340 S.W.3d 432
    (Tex. 2011) ...........................................................................8
    TracFone Wireless, Inc. v. Comm’n on State Emergency Commc’ns,
    
    397 S.W.3d 173
    (Tex. 2013) ...........................................................................8
    U.S. Steel Corp. v. Multistate Tax Comm’n,
    
    434 U.S. 452
    (1978)................................................................................ 13, 14
    Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
    
    164 S.W.3d 656
    (Tex. 2005) ...........................................................................
    6 Walker v
    . Packer,
    
    827 S.W.2d 833
    (Tex. 1992) ...........................................................................7
    Appellant’s Brief – Page iv
    STATUTES
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001 ................................................................................. passim
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. II, ¶ 4 ..................................................................6, 15
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. II, ¶ 6 ......................................................................16
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. III, ¶ 1 ........................................................... 4, 9, 10
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. IV .................................................................. 7, 9, 21
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. X ............................................................................14
    Tex. Tax Code § 171.106(a) ............................................................................ passim
    U.S. Const. art. I, § 8................................................................................................21
    U.S. Const. art. I, § 10..........................................................................................5, 14
    OTHER
    Frederick L. Zimmermann & Mitchell Wendell,
    The Law and Use of Interstate Compacts, The Council of
    State Governments, January 1976 ...........................................................11, 12
    Appellant’s Brief – Page v
    Appendix
    1.        Final Judgment
    2.        Tex. Tax Code § 141.001 (Vernon 2002).
    3.        Tex. Tax Code § 171.106 (Vernon 2002).
    4.        Tex. Tax Code § 112.151 (Vernon 2002).
    5.        Tex. Const. art. I, §16.
    6.        U.S. Const. art. I, § 10.
    7.        Int'l Bus. Machines Corp. v. Dep't of Treasury, 
    852 N.W.2d 865
    (2014).
    8.        H. Alan Rosenberg v. Douglas J. Macginnittie, Commissioner, Georgia
    Department of Revenue, No. 1414626 (GA Nov. 25, 2014).
    Appellant’s Brief – Page vi
    Statement of the Case
    Nature of underlying case:    Franchise tax refund suit under Chapters 112, 141,
    and 171 of the Texas Tax Code.
    Trial court:                  The 353rd Judicial District Court of Travis County,
    Texas, specially assigned to the Honorable Darlene
    Byrne
    Course of Proceedings:        Both Parties filed cross-motions for summary
    judgment.
    Disposition:                  The trial court denied Appellant’s motion for
    summary judgment and granted Appellees’ cross-
    motion for summary judgment on February 18, 2015.
    Clerk’s Record (CR) 1172; Appendix, Tab 1.
    Statement Regarding Oral Argument
    EMC Corporation (“EMC”) requests oral argument. The underlying dispute
    involves proper application of the Multistate Tax Compact to the revised Texas
    Franchise Tax. Oral argument would aid the Court’s determination of this case.
    Issues Presented
    The central question in this case is whether, under Chapters 141 and 171 of
    the Texas Tax Code, Appellant is entitled to apportion margin using the Multistate
    Tax Compact apportionment formula, adopted and codified by Texas, for report
    years 2010 through 2012. To resolve this question, the following issues are
    presented:
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 1
    1.    Whether the enactment of Section 171.106(a), containing the Texas
    apportionment formula, constitutes an implied repeal of the codification of the
    Multistate Tax Compact in Sections 141.001, arts. III, IV.
    2.    Whether the Multistate Tax Compact is a binding compact on all party
    states, including Texas, which may not be unilaterally altered by Texas.
    3.    Whether the Texas Franchise Tax is an “income tax” as defined by
    and within the scope of the Multistate Tax Compact.
    4.    Whether disallowing Appellant’s election to use the Multistate Tax
    Compact apportionment formula violates the United States and Texas
    Constitutions.
    Statement of Facts
    The material facts regarding EMC’s business done in Texas are not in
    dispute. EMC is a Massachusetts-based corporation authorized to conduct
    business in Texas. (CR 4.) EMC sells information technology hardware and cloud
    storage solutions to customers nationwide, including customers in Texas. (CR
    715.) EMC only engages in retail and wholesale activities in Texas. (Id.) During
    the periods at issue, EMC engaged in a multistate, unitary business and determined
    that a portion of its United States income was subject to Texas franchise tax. (CR
    716.)
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 2
    EMC timely filed its franchise tax reports for report years 2010 through
    2012. (CR 721-1045.) During the relevant report years, EMC paid the following
    amounts in franchise tax:
    $2,959,318.74 for 2010 Report Year
    $4,982,013.01 for 2011 Report Year
    $5,666,394.62 for 2012 Report Year
    (CR 717.)
    In its original reports, EMC apportioned its margin using the single-factor
    apportionment formula in Tex. Tax Code § 171.106(a). (CR 716.) After learning
    of the Multistate Tax Compact’s three-factor apportionment formula election,
    adopted and codified as Chapter 141 of the Texas Tax Code, EMC amended and
    timely filed franchise tax reports and refund claims for report years 2010, 2011,
    and 2012 using the three-factor formula. (CR 717.)
    The Comptroller audited EMC for these report years and denied EMC’s
    refund claims. (CR 718.) The Comptroller issued his final decision upholding the
    denial of EMC’s refund claims on January 27, 2014. (Id.) EMC’s motion for
    rehearing was also denied, after which EMC filed this refund suit in Travis County
    District Court on March 20, 2014. (Id.)
    The issues in this case were decided by cross-motions for summary
    judgment at the trial court with the Honorable Darlene Byrne presiding. The trial
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 3
    court issued its final judgment on February 18, 2015, denying EMC’s motion for
    summary judgment and granting the Comptroller’s cross-motion for summary
    judgment based on the conclusion that EMC was not entitled to apportion its
    franchise tax using the Multistate Tax Compact’s three-factor apportionment
    formula. (CR 1172; Tab 1.)
    Summary of the Argument
    EMC properly amended its franchise tax reports electing to compute the tax
    using the Multistate Tax Compact apportionment formula for 2010 through 2012
    report years. (CR 717-718.) Texas became a party to the Multistate Tax Compact
    when it adopted it in 1967 and subsequently codified it in full as Tex. Tax Code
    § 141.001 in 1982. As a party to the Multistate Tax Compact, Texas agreed to be
    bound by all of its terms, including the provision permitting taxpayers, such as
    EMC, the election to apportion their tax base using either the Multistate Tax
    Compact formula or an alternative state formula. Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art.
    III, ¶ 1. The Texas legislature has not withdrawn from or repealed any part of the
    Multistate Tax Compact since it was adopted and codified.
    In 2006, the Texas legislature enacted the franchise tax as Chapter 171 of the
    Texas Tax Code to replace the existing earned surplus tax. The revised franchise
    tax included a single-factor apportionment formula, which differs from the
    Multistate Tax Compact’s three-factor formula. The Texas legislature did not
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 4
    expressly repeal any part of the Multistate Tax Compact when it enacted the
    revised franchise tax in 2006.
    As a matter of statutory construction, the Multistate Tax Compact election
    and formula remain in effect because they do not irreconcilably conflict with the
    Texas formula. If a taxpayer elects to use the Multistate Tax Compact formula, the
    taxpayer apportions franchise tax using the Multistate Tax Compact formula; if the
    taxpayer does not elect to use the Multistate Tax Compact formula, it apportions its
    franchise tax using the Texas formula. The plain language of Sections 141.001 and
    171.106(a) is unambiguous and the Texas legislature has not expressly repealed
    any part of the Multistate Tax Compact. Both statutes remain good law.
    Further, the Multistate Tax Compact is a valid and binding interstate
    compact, and Texas is prohibited from unilaterally altering its terms without first
    withdrawing from the Multistate Tax Compact. The Contracts Clause, Art. I, § 10,
    of the United States Constitution protects interstate compacts such as the Multistate
    Tax Compact. Under the Contracts Clause, states may not enact any law that
    impairs the obligation of contracts. The Appellees’ position mandating application
    of the formula in Section 171.106(a) impairs Texas’ contractual obligation to
    permit taxpayers an election to apportion franchise tax using the Multistate Tax
    Compact formula.
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 5
    The Multistate Tax Compact applies to all “income taxes,” which is broadly
    defined to include tax on “an amount arrived at by deducting expenses from gross
    income, one or more forms of which expenses are not specifically and directly
    related to particular transactions.” Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. II, ¶ 4. The
    Texas franchise tax is an income tax under the Multistate Tax Compact because its
    computation allows for the deduction of expenses that are not specifically and
    directly related to particular transactions (e.g. compensation) from gross income
    reported on the taxpayer’s federal income tax return. The Multistate Tax Compact
    definition of income tax is broader than the common definition, and the Texas
    franchise tax fits squarely within it.
    Standards of Review
    This Court reviews a trial court’s summary judgment de novo. Valence
    Operating Co. v. Dorsett, 
    164 S.W.3d 656
    , 661 (Tex. 2005). When both parties
    move for summary judgment and the trial court grants one motion and denies the
    other, this Court must review the summary judgment evidence presented by both
    parties, determine all questions of law presented, and render the judgment the trial
    court should have rendered. Mid South Telecomm. Co. v. Best, 
    184 S.W.3d 386
    ,
    389-90 Tex. App—Austin 2006, no pet.).
    Statutory construction is a question of law on which the trial court’s views
    are not entitled to deference. In re E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., 92 S.W.3d
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 6
    517, 522 (Tex. 2002); see also Walker v. Packer, 
    827 S.W.2d 833
    , 840 (Tex. 1992)
    (trial court’s reasoning is not entitled to deference because it has no discretion in
    deciding what the law is or its proper application). Further, a de novo review is
    generally “conducted as if there had been no trial in the first instance.” Appraisal
    Review Bd. v. Spencer Square Ltd., 
    252 S.W.3d 842
    , 845 (Tex. App.—Houston
    [14th Dist.] 2008, no pet.).
    Argument
    This Court should reverse the trial court’s judgment denying Appellant’s
    motion for summary judgment granting Appellees’ cross-motion for summary
    judgment, and render judgment in favor of Appellant that it properly apportioned
    its Texas franchise tax pursuant to the Multistate Tax Compact for report years
    2010 through 2012.
    Appellant is entitled to compute its franchise tax using the Multistate
    Tax Compact apportionment formula.
    As a matter of statutory construction, Texas taxpayers are entitled to elect to
    use the Multistate Tax Compact formula provided in Section 141.001, Art. IV, to
    compute their franchise tax, and the apportionment formula provided in Section
    171.106(a) is the alternative to the Multistate Tax Compact formula.
    The primary objective in interpreting a statute is to ascertain the legislature’s
    intent. Combs v. Roark Amusement & Vending, L.P., 
    422 S.W.3d 632
    , 635 (Tex.
    2013). Ordinarily, the truest manifestation of what lawmakers intended is what
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 7
    they enacted. 
    Id. Statutes must
    be viewed as a whole and read “contextually,
    giving effect to every word, clause, and sentence.” Tex. Adjutant Gen.’s Office v.
    Ngakoue, 
    408 S.W.3d 350
    , 354 (Tex. 2013) (citations omitted) (quoting In re
    Office of the Attorney Gen., 
    422 S.W.3d 623
    , 629 (Tex. 2013)). If a statute is
    unambiguous, the court must adopt the interpretation supported by the plain
    language, unless such an interpretation would lead to absurd results. TGS-NoPec
    Geophysical Co. v. Combs, 
    340 S.W.3d 432
    , 439 (Tex. 2011). In addition, the
    Texas Supreme Court held that “we read unambiguous statutes as they are written,
    not as they make the most policy sense.” Combs v. Health Care Serv. Corp, 
    401 S.W.3d 623
    , 629 (Tex. 2013).
    In a similar vein, “[t]ax policy gap-filling–specifically, deciding who is
    taxed–is best left to legislators, not courts or agencies.” TracFone Wireless, Inc. v.
    Comm’n on State Emergency Commc’ns, 
    397 S.W.3d 173
    , 176 (Tex. 2013). Any
    ambiguity in the Tax Code regarding the scope of taxation must be resolved in
    favor of taxpayers. 
    Id. at 182.
    When two statutes address the same subject, they should be read together
    and harmonized with each other, regardless of whether they refer to one another.
    See In re VanDeWater, 
    966 S.W.2d 730
    , 732-34 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1998)
    (orig. proceeding). Courts must harmonize apparent conflicts between different
    portions of statutes, if practicable, and must favor a construction that renders each
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 8
    word operative. Maverick v. Ruiz, 
    897 S.W.2d 843
    , 846 (Tex. App.—San Antonio
    1995, no writ); see also Jones v. Williams, 
    45 S.W.2d 130
    , 137 (Tex. 1931).
    The plain language of Texas Tax Code §§ 141.001 and 171.106(a) is
    unambiguous.
    Sections 141.001 and 171.106(a) are unambiguous and both stand separately
    as equally enforceable alternative methods of apportionment. Section 141.001,
    Art. III, ¶ 1, provides that the taxpayer “may elect to apportion and allocate his
    income in the manner provided by the laws of such states and subdivisions without
    reference to this compact, or may elect to apportion or allocate in accordance with
    Article IV.” Thus, a taxpayer may elect to apportion its franchise tax using the
    Multistate Tax Compact formula or forgo the Multistate Tax Compact election and
    apportion its franchise tax using the Texas formula.
    There is no overriding mandate in Section 171.106(a) that taxpayers must
    use the Texas formula instead of the Multistate Tax Compact formula. Section
    171.106 makes no mention of the Multistate Tax Compact or any of its provisions.
    Accordingly, the only way in which Sections 171.106 and 141.001 compete or
    conflict is that they contain different formulas. However, the fact that two statutes
    apparently conflict or compete does not mean an apparent conflict is always
    irreconcilable. See 
    Maverick, 897 S.W.2d at 846
    .
    Rather, permitting taxpayers the option of making an election under Section
    141.001 to apportion using the Multistate Tax Compact formula shows that Section
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 9
    171.106(a) is the alternative method of apportionment. This interpretation
    harmonizes the apparent conflict because a taxpayer that does not elect to use the
    Multistate Tax Compact formula effectively elects to use the Texas formula. In
    other words, both provisions provide equally enforceable alternative calculation
    methods depending on the election the taxpayer makes.
    The Legislature did not impliedly repeal the Multistate Tax Compact
    when it enacted the revised franchise tax.
    The only argument to support the Comptroller’s claim that Section
    171.106(a) provides a mandatory and exclusive apportionment formula in Texas is
    that the Texas legislature impliedly repealed the permissive election contained in
    Section 141.001, Art. III, ¶ 1.
    Courts are hesitant to find implied repeal when two statutes can reasonably
    be given effect. Houston Indep. Sch. Dist. v. S.W. Bell Tel. Co., 
    376 S.W.2d 375
    ,
    380 (Tex. App.—Austin, 1964), rev’d on other grounds by, 
    397 S.W.2d 419
    , 420-
    421 (Tex. 1965). “[I]t may be presumed that laws are passed with deliberation,
    and with full knowledge of existing ones on the subject.” 
    Id. The presumption
    disfavoring implied repeal where express terms are not used is based on the
    probability that the legislature would have used express language clearly indicating
    the intent to repeal an existing statute. 
    Id. Courts only
    find implied repeal when two statutes at issue are “directly and
    irreconcilably in conflict.” Dodd v. State, 
    650 S.W.2d 129
    , 130 (Tex. App.—
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 10
    Houston [14th Dist.] 1983, no writ). “[T]he court will endeavor to harmonize and
    reconcile the various provisions and if both acts can stand together, the rule is to let
    them stand. The implication must be clear, necessary, irresistible, and free from
    reasonable doubt.” Int’l Serv. Ins. Co. v. Jackson, 
    335 S.W.2d 420
    , 424 (Tex.
    App.—Austin, 1960, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
    The enactment of Section 171.106 did not repeal the Multistate Tax
    Compact or any provision thereof. First, Section 171.106 makes no reference to
    Section 141.001 or any provision in chapter 141. Second, Section 171.106(a)’s use
    of the phrase “Except as provided by this section” is not a clear indication of the
    legislature’s implication and is far from reasonable doubt. In addition, Sections
    141.001 and 171.106 can be harmonized to reconcile the various provisions and
    stand together. This Court should construe the two statutes in favor of the taxpayer
    and conclude that Section 171.106(a) did not impliedly repeal Section 141.001.
    Texas cannot unilaterally repeal selected provisions of the Multistate
    Tax Compact because it is a binding interstate compact.
    The “interstate compact is the most binding legal instrument to provide
    formal cooperation between the States.” Frederick L. Zimmermann & Mitchell
    Wendell, The Law and Use of Interstate Compacts, The Council of State
    Governments, at ix, January 1976. Thus, the Multistate Tax Compact is a binding
    legal instrument on the State of Texas.
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 11
    Not only is the Multistate Tax Compact a statute, it is also a binding
    contract:
    Interstate compacts are not only statutes; they also are contracts. This
    means that the substantive law of contracts is applicable to them. This
    is certainly true of the vast body of case law and of the general
    characteristics of contracts which are recognized throughout the
    common law world.
    
    Id. at 2.
    In any event, it should be noted that the compact itself has the force of
    statute and, in case of conflict, its provisions would supersede any general statutes
    relating to contracts. 
    Id. at 3.
    Texas is a signing compact member of and party to
    the Multistate Tax Compact. (CR 668.) The Multistate Tax Compact is an
    interstate compact that is not only law, but is also a contract that cannot be
    amended, modified, or otherwise altered without consent of all parties. Hess v.
    Port Auth. Trans-Hudson Corp., 
    513 U.S. 30
    , 42 (1994). “If it has been enacted by
    statute, legislative alteration or repeal is necessary.” Zimmermann & 
    Wendell, supra, at 3
    .
    Texas may not unilaterally modify the terms of a contract.
    EMC properly elected the Multistate Tax Compact’s three-factor
    apportionment formula because Texas is contractually obligated to offer taxpayers
    the election.
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 12
    Signing compact members of the Multistate Tax Compact, such as the state
    of Texas, are contractually obligated to offer taxpayers the option to use the three-
    factor apportionment formula. “It requires no elaborate argument to reject the
    suggestion that an agreement solemnly entered into between States by those who
    alone have political authority to speak for a State can be unilaterally nullified, or
    given final meaning by an organ of one of the contracting States.” State ex rel.
    Dyer v. Sims, 
    341 U.S. 22
    , 28 (1951). Members may not unilaterally ignore or
    repeal specific portions of the Multistate Tax Compact without first withdrawing
    from the Multistate Tax Compact. Texas has neither withdrawn from the
    Multistate Tax Compact nor repealed its enacting legislation in Section 141.001.
    The Multistate Tax Compact is a valid and binding interstate
    compact.
    In U.S. Steel Corp. v. Multistate Tax Commission, the U.S. Supreme Court
    stated:
    The Multistate Tax Compact was entered into by a number of States
    for the stated purposes of (1) facilitating proper determination of state
    and local tax liability of multistate taxpayers; (2) promoting
    uniformity and compatibility in state tax systems; (3) facilitating
    taxpayer convenience and compliance in the filing of tax returns and
    in other phases of tax administration; and (4) avoiding duplicative
    taxation.
    U.S. Steel Corp. v. Multistate Tax Comm’n, 
    434 U.S. 452
    , 452 (1978).
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 13
    Further, the Supreme Court held that the Multistate Tax Compact was valid despite
    the lack of Congressional consent. 
    Id. at 469-71.
    Consent is not required unless
    the compact is subject to the Supremacy Clause.
    The Multistate Tax Compact is an interstate compact protected by the
    Contracts Clause, Art. I, § 10, of the United States Constitution. The Contracts
    Clause states that “[n]o state shall . . . pass any . . . law impairing the obligation of
    contracts.” The Comptroller’s interpretation and application of chapter 171 of the
    Tax Code impairs Texas’s contractual obligation to allow taxpayers the three-
    factor apportionment formula election under the Multistate Tax Compact. Texas
    must abide by the terms of the Multistate Tax Compact and allow taxpayers the
    option of apportioning income under the Multistate Tax Compact. Because Texas
    is contractually and legally obligated to offer taxpayers the three-factor
    apportionment formula election under the Multistate Tax Compact, EMC properly
    made that election on its amended franchise tax return.
    Texas did not withdraw from the Multistate Tax Compact.
    The Multistate Tax Compact specifies the only way in which Texas could
    withdraw:
    Any party State may withdraw from this compact by enacting a statute
    repealing the same. No withdrawal shall affect any liability already
    incurred by or chargeable to a party State prior to the time of such
    withdrawal.
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. X.
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 14
    No such statute repealing the Multistate Tax Compact was enacted by
    the Texas Legislature.
    The Multistate Tax Compact election applies because the Texas
    franchise tax is an income tax.
    The Multistate Tax Compact defines an “income tax” as “a tax imposed on
    or measured by net income including any tax imposed on or measured by an
    amount arrived at by deducting expenses from gross income, one or more forms of
    which expenses are not specifically and directly related to particular transactions.”
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. II, ¶ 4.
    In 2006, the Texas Legislature enacted the franchise tax and replaced the
    earned surplus tax. To determine tax liability under the Texas franchise tax, each
    taxpayer multiplies their total revenue less the greater of four deductions ($1
    million, cost of goods sold, compensation, or 30% of total revenue) by their Texas
    apportionment factor. The Texas apportionment factor is a “fraction, the
    numerator of which is the taxable entity’s gross receipts from business done in this
    state . . . and the denominator of which is the taxable entity’s gross receipts from
    its entire business.” Tex. Tax Code § 171.106(a).
    The Texas franchise tax is an income tax as defined in Article II, ¶ 4,
    because, as demonstrated above, its computation allows for the subtraction of
    many indirect expenses or overhead—i.e., expenses that are not specifically and
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 15
    directly related to particular transactions—from gross income reported on the
    taxpayer’s federal return.
    Further, “gross receipts tax” is defined by the Multistate Tax Compact as
    “[a] tax, other than a sales tax, which is imposed on or measured by the gross
    volume of business, in terms of gross receipts or in other terms, and in the
    determination of which no deduction is allowed which would constitute the tax an
    income tax.” Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. II, ¶ 6.
    The Michigan Supreme Court, in an identical case, held that
    taxpayer was entitled to use the Multistate Tax Compact’s three-
    factor apportionment formula.
    Other jurisdictions provide helpful guidance on this topic. In a 2014 case,
    the Michigan Supreme Court examined the issue of whether a taxpayer (IBM)
    could elect to use the three-factor apportionment formula under the Multistate Tax
    Compact for its taxes or whether it was required to use the sales-factor
    apportionment under the Michigan Business Tax Act (“BTA”). Int'l Bus.
    Machines Corp. v. Dep't of Treasury, 
    852 N.W.2d 865
    , 868 (2014). It found that
    IBM was “entitled to use the Compact’s apportionment formula for its 2008
    Michigan taxes1 and that the Court of Appeals erred by holding otherwise on the
    1
    The IBM court determined that the apportionment formula was applicable to both components
    of the taxpayer’s BTA tax base: business income and modified gross receipts. While the latter
    was not technically an “income tax” in name, the court held that modified gross receipts fit
    within the broad definition of “income tax” under the Compact by taxing a variation of net
    income. 
    Id. at 880.
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 16
    basis of its erroneous conclusion that the Legislature had repealed the Compact’s
    election provision by implication when it enacted the BTA.” 
    Id. Michigan joined
    the Multistate Tax Compact in 1970. 
    Id. at 870.
    In 1976,
    the Michigan Legislature replaced a corporate income tax with a single business
    tax. 
    Id. “The Legislature,
    however, did not expressly repeal the Compact.” 
    Id. In 2008,
    the Michigan Legislature enacted the BTA, which imposed two main taxes:
    “the business income tax and the modified gross receipts tax.” 
    Id. In so
    doing, the
    Michigan Legislature expressly repealed the single business tax that had been in
    effect since 1976, “but again did not expressly repeal the Compact.” 
    Id. The Michigan
    Supreme Court summarized the treatment of the Compact by noting that
    “[t]hroughout the evolution of our state’s method of business taxation, the
    Compact has remained in effect.” 
    Id. at 871.
    The Texas Legislature’s treatment of
    the Compact has been identical: each time the franchise tax was changed or
    amended, the Compact stayed in place in the Tax Code and was not amended.
    The Michigan Supreme Court next examined whether the “Legislature
    repealed the Compact’s election provision by implication when it enacted the
    BTA.” 
    Id. The Court
    noted that “repeals by implication are disfavored” and there
    is a presumption that if the Legislature intended to repeal a statute, it would have
    done so explicitly. 
    Id. Thus, repeal
    by implication can occur by the enactment of a
    subsequent inconsistent act or of an act that occupies the entire field. However,
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 17
    there must be clear legislative intent. This was not clear legislative intent by the
    Michigan Legislature.
    Further, there is a higher level of scrutiny than usual because implicit repeal
    is disfavored (plain meaning of one of the provisions is not enough). The BTA
    required use of sales-factor for apportionment—this was mandatory. The Court
    refused to interpret the requirement in a vacuum because it was not the only tax
    law pertaining to income apportionment. Michigan business tax law has always
    required use of a particular apportionment formula.
    Finally, statutes must be read in pari materia. The election cannot have
    been a dead letter when enacted. Looking at the election as forward-looking—as
    contemplating the enactment of a mandatory apportionment formula—is the only
    way to give it meaning when enacted.
    The Michigan Legislature expressly repealed inconsistent provisions as the
    business taxes changed. In addition, the Legislature retroactively banned use of
    the election on May 25, 2011, beginning January 1, 2011. It could have
    retroactively repealed the election beginning on an earlier date. The express repeal
    indicates there was no implicit repeal earlier. The above-described situation in
    Michigan is directly analogous to the issue before this Court.
    The Georgia Tax Tribunal held that the Texas Franchise Tax is an
    income tax.
    Although a Texas court has not yet addressed this issue, at least one other
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 18
    jurisdiction has construed the Texas franchise as an “income tax,” to which the
    Multistate Tax Compact election is applicable. In a November 25, 2014 decision
    by the Georgia Tax Tribunal, examining “the plain language of the statute, the
    policy underlying its enactment, the applicable rules of statutory construction, and
    the substantial weight of judicial, administrative and financial authority both in
    Georgia and other jurisdictions,” it held that the “Texas Franchise Tax is indeed a
    tax ‘measured on or with respect to income.’” H. Alan Rosenberg v. Douglas J.
    Macginnittie, Commissioner, Georgia Department of Revenue, No. 1414626 (GA
    Nov. 25, 2014). The Georgia Tax Tribunal concluded:
    [T]he Texas Franchise Tax is a tax based on or measured by “income”
    or “gross income” whether one uses (i) the broad and ordinary
    definition of “income” or (ii) one of the technical definitions of “gross
    income” in conducting the analysis.
    First, the concept of “total revenue” that serves as the initial basis for
    computing the Texas Franchise Tax base is based on or measured by
    “income” or “gross income,” as those terms are broadly defined,
    because “total revenue” is computed by adding up all of the specified
    line items of “income” used in computing a pass-through entity’s
    federal income tax base. . . .
    Alternatively, the Texas Franchise Tax is also based on or measured
    by “income” when focusing on the “taxable margin.” The first option
    for computing the “taxable margin” is simply to take 70 percent of the
    “total revenue” base that is comprised of items form the entity’s
    federal income tax base. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.101(a)(1).
    Using this method, a taxpayer’s “taxable margin” would still be on or
    measured by “income,” because it is comprised exclusively of the
    items used to compute the taxpayer’s “income” on a federal return,
    before deductions. Alternatively, taxpayers may elect to compute
    their “taxable margin” by deducting the “cost of goods sold” from
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 19
    their “total revenue.” See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.101(a)(1). . . .
    [T]his method of computation of the Texas Franchise Tax is also one
    that is on or measured by “income” because [the reporting entity]’s
    tax base beg[ins] with the taxpayer’s “total revenue” – which, as
    described above, is based on “income” or “gross income” – and then
    was further computed using a deduction for “cost of goods sold.” . . .
    The Texas Franchise Tax is thus on or measured by “income,”
    whether the focus is on the “total revenue” base or the “taxable
    margin” base.
    
    Id. at 23-24
    (emphasis added).
    The reasoning used by the Georgia Tax Tribunal is apt and should be applied
    by this Court. It follows that, because the Texas Franchise Tax is an income tax,
    the Multistate Tax Compact election applies and EMC properly sought refunds for
    Report Years 2010, 2011, and 2012.
    Disallowing taxpayers an election under the Multistate Tax Compact
    violates the United States and Texas Constitutions.
    Requiring EMC to use the single-factor apportionment formula in
    Section 171.006(a) violates the Due Process, Commerce, and Contract Clauses of
    the United States Constitution and violates the Equal and Uniform Clause of the
    Texas Constitution.
    State apportionment formulas violate the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution when they attribute to the state “a
    percentage of income out of all appropriate proportion to the business transacted
    by [a taxpayer] in that state.” Hans Rees’ Sons, Inc. v. North Carolina ex rel.
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 20
    Maxwell, 
    283 U.S. 123
    , 135 (1931). Further, state apportionment formulas that
    lead to a “grossly distorted result” violate the Commerce Clause, Art. I, § 8, of the
    U.S. Constitution because such formulas burden interstate commerce. Norfolk &
    W. Ry. Co. v. Missouri State Tax Comm’n, 
    390 U.S. 317
    , 329 (1968).
    The Comptroller’s single-factor apportionment formula, as applied to EMC,
    violates both the Due Process and Commerce Clauses because it attributes to Texas
    a percentage of income that is disproportionate to the business EMC transacts in
    Texas and leads to a grossly distorted result. EMC initially calculated its tax
    base—i.e. net income or margin—prior to apportionment by deducting
    compensation from total revenue. (CR 716.) EMC apportioned its margin to
    Texas using the single-factor apportionment formula in Section 171.106(a). (Id.)
    After EMC learned of the Multistate Tax Compact’s three-factor apportionment
    formula, it amended its returns for 2010 through 2012 report years. (CR 717.) The
    Multistate Tax Compact formula apportions margin based on property, payroll, and
    sales factors. Tex. Tax Code § 141.001, Art. IV. EMC elected to apply the
    Multistate Tax Compact formula because it apportions income based on the
    average ratio of Texas property, payroll, and sales to everywhere property, payroll
    and sales. For the 2010 through 2012 report years, EMC’s apportionment factor
    using the Multistate Tax Compact formula was less than five percent. (CR 717-
    718.) The Texas apportionment formula for the same report years ranged from six
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 21
    to eight percent. (Id.) The result of applying Texas’ single-factor apportionment
    formula nearly doubled EMC’s franchise tax liability and is grossly
    disproportionate representation of its business done in Texas.
    EMC was entitled to elect to use the Multistate Tax Compact’s three-factor
    apportionment formula in its amended franchise tax returns. Denying EMC the
    Multistate Tax Compact election and requiring EMC to use the single-factor
    formula is an unconstitutional burden on interstate commerce.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth above, EMC respectfully asks this Court to reverse
    the district court’s judgment and render judgment that EMC properly elected to
    apportion its franchise tax under the Multistate Tax Compact.
    Respectfully submitted,
    /s/ Doug Sigel
    Doug Sigel
    Texas Bar No. 18347650
    Doug.Sigel@RyanLawLLP.com
    Ryan Cotter
    Texas Bar No. 24075969
    Ryan.Cotter@RyanLawLLP.com
    RYAN LAW FIRM, LLP
    100 Congress Avenue, Suite 950
    Austin, Texas 78701
    Telephone: (512) 459-6600
    Facsimile: (512) 459-6601
    Attorneys for Appellant
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 22
    Certificate of Compliance
    This computer-generated document created in Microsoft Word complies
    with the typeface requirements of Tex. R. App. P. 9.4(e) because it has been
    prepared in a conventional typeface no smaller than 14-point for text and 12-point
    for footnotes. This document also complies with the word-count limitations of
    Tex. R. App. P. 9.4(i), if applicable, because it contains 4344 words, excluding any
    parts exempted by Tex. R. App. P. 9.4(i)(1). In making this certificate of
    compliance, I am relying on the word count provided by the software used to
    prepare the document.
    /s/ Doug Sigel
    Doug Sigel
    Certificate of Service
    I certify that a copy of the foregoing Appellant’s Brief was served on
    Appellees, Glenn Hegar and Ken Paxton, through counsel of record, Rance Craft and
    Charles Eldred, Office of the Attorney General, P.O. Box 12548 (MC 59), Austin,
    Texas, 78711-2548, rance.craft@texasattorneygeneral.gov,
    charles.eldred@texasattorneygeneral.gov, by electronic service through
    eFile.TXCourts.gov on April 30, 2015.
    /s/ Doug Sigel
    Doug Sigel
    Appellant’s Brief – Page 23
    Tab 1
    Final Judgment
    DC            BK15051 PG1221
    Cause No. D-1-GN-14-000851
    EMC CORPORATION,                              §         IN THE DISTRICT COURT
    §
    Plaintiff,                              §
    §
    V.                                            §
    §         TRAVIS COUNTY, TEXAS
    GLENN HEGAR, COMPTROLLER OF                   §
    PUBLIC ACCOUNTS OF THE STATE OF               §
    TEXAS, AND KEN PAXTON, ATTORNEY               §
    GENERAL OF THE STATE OF TEXAS                 §
    §         353RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    Defendants.                             §
    FINAL JUDGMENT
    On February 18, 2015, the cross motions for summary judgment of Plaintiff and
    Defendants came on for consideration, and the Court having considered the pleadings,
    including the motions, evidence, and argument of counsel, finds that Defendants, Glenn
    Hegar, Comptroller of Public Accounts of the State of Texas, and Ken Paxton, Attorney
    General of the State of Texas', motion should be granted and that the Plaintiff, EMC
    Corporation's motion should be denied.
    All relief requested by the parties and not specifically granted herein is denied.
    This judgment finally disposes of all parties and all claims and is appealable.
    Signed this /   ~ay of                         2015.
    1172
    Tab 2
    Tex. Tax Code § 141.001
    (Vernon 2002)
    Tax Code § 141.001
    CHAPTER 141. MULTISTATE TAX COMPACT
    § 141.001. Adoption of Multistate Tax Compact
    The Multistate Tax Compact is adopted and entered into with all jurisdictions legally
    adopting it to read as follows:
    MULTISTATE TAX COMPACT
    ARTICLE I. PURPOSES
    The purposes of this compact are to:
    1. Facilitate proper determination of state and local tax liability of multistate taxpayers,
    including the equitable apportionment of tax bases and settlement of apportionment
    disputes.
    2. Promote uniformity or compatibility in significant components of tax systems.
    3. Facilitate taxpayer convenience and compliance in the filing of tax returns and in other
    phases of tax administration.
    4. Avoid duplicative taxation.
    ARTICLE II. DEFINITIONS
    As used in this compact:
    1. “State” means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia, the
    Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or possession of the United States.
    2. “Subdivision” means any governmental unit or special district of a state.
    3. “Taxpayer” means any corporation, partnership, firm, association, governmental unit
    or agency or person acting as a business entity in more than one state.
    4. “Income tax” means a tax imposed on or measured by net income including any tax
    imposed on or measured by an amount arrived at by deducting expenses from gross
    income, one or more forms of which expenses are not specifically and directly related to
    particular transactions.
    5. “Capital stock tax” means a tax measured in any way by the capital of a corporation
    considered in its entirety.
    6. “Gross receipts tax” means a tax, other than a sales tax, which is imposed on or
    measured by the gross volume of business, in terms of gross receipts or in other terms,
    and in the determination of which no deduction is allowed which would constitute the tax
    an income tax.
    7. “Sales tax” means a tax imposed with respect to the transfer for a consideration of
    ownership, possession or custody of tangible personal property or the rendering of
    services measured by the price of the tangible personal property transferred or services
    rendered and which is required by state or local law to be separately stated from the sales
    price by the seller, or which is customarily separately stated from the sales price, but does
    not include a tax imposed exclusively on the sale of a specifically identified commodity
    or article or class of commodities or articles.
    8. “Use tax” means a nonrecurring tax, other than a sales tax, which (a) is imposed on or
    with respect to the exercise or enjoyment of any right or power over tangible personal
    property incident to the ownership, possession or custody of that property or the leasing
    of that property from another including any consumption, keeping, retention, or other use
    of tangible personal property and (b) is complementary to a sales tax.
    9. “Tax” means an income tax, capital stock tax, gross receipts tax, sales tax, use tax, and
    any other tax which has a multistate impact, except that the provisions of Articles III, IV
    and V of this compact shall apply only to the taxes specifically designated therein and the
    provisions of Article IX of this compact shall apply only in respect to determinations
    pursuant to Article IV.
    ARTICLE III. ELEMENTS OF INCOME TAX LAWS
    Taxpayer Option, State and Local Taxes
    1. Any taxpayer subject to an income tax whose income is subject to apportionment and
    allocation for tax purposes pursuant to the laws of a party state or pursuant to the laws of
    subdivisions in two or more party states may elect to apportion and allocate his income in
    the manner provided by the laws of such state or by the laws of such states and
    subdivisions without reference to this compact, or may elect to apportion and allocate in
    accordance with Article IV. This election for any tax year may be made in all party states
    or subdivisions thereof or in any one or more of the party states or subdivisions thereof
    without reference to the election made in the others. For the purposes of this paragraph,
    taxes imposed by subdivisions shall be considered separately from state taxes and the
    apportionment and allocation also may be applied to the entire tax base. In no instance
    wherein Article IV is employed for all subdivisions of a state may the sum of all
    apportionments and allocations to subdivisions within a state be greater than the
    apportionment and allocation that would be assignable to that state if the apportionment
    or allocation were being made with respect to a state income tax.
    Taxpayer Option, Short Form
    2. Each party state or any subdivision thereof which imposes an income tax shall provide
    by law that any taxpayer required to file a return, whose only activities within the taxing
    jurisdiction consist of sales and do not include owning or renting real estate or tangible
    personal property, and whose dollar volume of gross sales made during the tax year
    within the state or subdivision, as the case may be, is not in excess of $100,000 may elect
    to report and pay any tax due on the basis of a percentage of such volume, and shall adopt
    rates which shall produce a tax which reasonably approximates the tax otherwise due.
    The Multistate Tax Commission, not more than once in five years, may adjust the
    $100,000 figure in order to reflect such changes as may occur in the real value of the
    dollar, and such adjusted figure, upon adoption by the commission, shall replace the
    $100,000 figure specifically provided herein. Each party state and subdivision thereof
    may make the same election available to taxpayers additional to those specified in this
    paragraph.
    Coverage
    3. Nothing in this article relates to the reporting or payment of any tax other than an
    income tax.
    ARTICLE IV. DIVISION OF INCOME
    1. As used in this article, unless the context otherwise requires:
    (a) “Business income” means income arising from transactions and activity in the
    regular course of the taxpayer’s trade or business and includes income from tangible and
    intangible property if the acquisition, management, and disposition of the property
    constitute integral parts of the taxpayer’s regular trade or business operations.
    (b) “Commercial domicile” means the principal place from which the trade or business
    of the taxpayer is directed or managed.
    (c) “Compensation” means wages, salaries, commissions and any other form of
    remuneration paid to employees for personal services.
    (d) “Financial organization” means any bank, trust company, savings bank, industrial
    bank, land bank, safe deposit company, private banker, savings and loan association,
    credit union, cooperative bank, small loan company, sales finance company, investment
    company, or any type of insurance company.
    (e) “Nonbusiness income” means all income other than business income.
    (f) “Public utility” means any business entity (1) which owns or operates any plant,
    equipment, property, franchise, or license for the transmission of communications,
    transportation of goods or persons, except by pipe line, or the production, transmission,
    sale, delivery, or furnishing of electricity, water or steam; and (2) whose rates of charges
    for goods or services have been established or approved by a federal, state or local
    government or governmental agency.
    (g) “Sales” means all gross receipts of the taxpayer not allocated under paragraphs of
    this article.
    (h) “State” means any state of the United States, the District of Columbia, the
    Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any territory or possession of the United States, and any
    foreign country or political subdivision thereof.
    (i) “This state” means the state in which the relevant tax return is filed or, in the case of
    application of this article to the apportionment and allocation of income for local tax
    purposes, the subdivision or local taxing district in which the relevant tax return is filed.
    2. Any taxpayer having income from business activity which is taxable both within and
    without this state, other than activity as a financial organization or public utility or the
    rendering of purely personal services by an individual, shall allocate and apportion his net
    income as provided in this article. If a taxpayer has income from business activity as a
    public utility but derives the greater percentage of his income from activities subject to
    this article, the taxpayer may elect to allocate and apportion his entire net income as
    provided in this article.
    3. For purposes of allocation and apportionment of income under this article, a taxpayer
    is taxable in another state if (1) in that state he is subject to a net income tax, a franchise
    tax measured by net income, a franchise tax for the privilege of doing business, or a
    corporate stock tax, or (2) that state has jurisdiction to subject the taxpayer to a net
    income tax regardless of whether, in fact, the state does or does not.
    4. Rents and royalties from real or tangible personal property, capital gains, interest,
    dividends or patent or copyright royalties, to the extent that they constitute nonbusiness
    income, shall be allocated as provided in paragraphs 5 through 8 of this article.
    5. (a) Net rents and royalties from real property located in this state are allocable to this
    state.
    (b) Net rents and royalties from tangible personal property are allocable to this state: (1)
    if and to the extent that the property is utilized in this state, or (2) in their entirety if the
    taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in this state and the taxpayer is not organized under
    the laws of or taxable in the state in which the property is utilized.
    (c) The extent of utilization of tangible personal property in a state is determined by
    multiplying the rents and royalties by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of
    days of physical location of the property in the state during the rental or royalty period in
    the taxable year and the denominator of which is the number of days of physical location
    of the property everywhere during all rental or royalty periods in the taxable year. If the
    physical location of the property during the rental or royalty period is unknown or
    unascertainable by the taxpayer, tangible personal property is utilized in the state in
    which the property was located at the time the rental or royalty payer obtained
    possession.
    6. (a) Capital gains and losses from sales of real property located in this state are
    allocable to this state.
    (b) Capital gains and losses from sales of tangible personal property are allocable to this
    state if (1) the property had a situs in this state at the time of the sale, or (2) the
    taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in this state and the taxpayer is not taxable in the state
    in which the property had a situs.
    (c) Capital gains and losses from sales of intangible personal property are allocable to
    this state if the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in this state.
    7. Interest and dividends are allocable to this state if the taxpayer’s commercial domicile
    is in this state.
    8. (a) Patent and copyright royalties are allocable to this state: (1) if and to the extent that
    the patent or copyright is utilized by the payer in this state, or (2) if and to the extent that
    the patent or copyright is utilized by the payer in a state in which the taxpayer is not
    taxable and the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is in this state.
    (b) A patent is utilized in a state to the extent that it is employed in production,
    fabrication, manufacturing, or other processing in the state or to the extent that a
    patented product is produced in the state. If the basis of receipts from patent royalties
    does not permit allocation to states or if the accounting procedures do not reflect states
    of utilization, the patent is utilized in the state in which the taxpayer’s commercial
    domicile is located.
    (c) A copyright is utilized in a state to the extent that printing or other publication
    originates in the state. If the basis of receipts from copyright royalties does not permit
    allocation to states or if the accounting procedures do not reflect states of utilization, the
    copyright is utilized in the state in which the taxpayer’s commercial domicile is located.
    9. All business income shall be apportioned to this state by multiplying the income by a
    fraction, the numerator of which is the property factor plus the payroll factor plus the
    sales factor, and the denominator of which is three.
    10. The property factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is the average value of the
    taxpayer’s real and tangible personal property owned or rented and used in this state
    during the tax period and the denominator of which is the average value of all the
    taxpayer’s real and tangible personal property owned or rented and used during the tax
    period.
    11. Property owned by the taxpayer is valued at its original cost. Property rented by the
    taxpayer is valued at eight times the net annual rental rate. Net annual rental rate is the
    annual rental rate paid by the taxpayer less any annual rental rate received by the
    taxpayer from subrentals.
    12. The average value of property shall be determined by averaging the values at the
    beginning and ending of the tax period but the tax administrator may require the
    averaging of monthly values during the tax period if reasonably required to reflect
    properly the average value of the taxpayer’s property.
    13. The payroll factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is the total amount paid in this
    state during the tax period by the taxpayer for compensation and the denominator of
    which is the total compensation paid everywhere during the tax period.
    14. Compensation is paid in this state if:
    (a) the individual’s service is performed entirely within the state;
    (b) the individual’s service is performed both within and without the state, but the
    service performed without the state is incidental to the individual’s service within the
    state; or
    (c) some of the service is performed in the state and (1) the base of operations or, if there
    is no base of operations, the place from which the service is directed or controlled is in
    the state, or (2) the base of operations or the place from which the service is directed or
    controlled is not in any state in which some part of the service is performed, but the
    individual’s residence is in this state.
    15. The sales factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is the total sales of the taxpayer
    in this state during the tax period, and the denominator of which is the total sales of the
    taxpayer everywhere during the tax period.
    16. Sales of tangible personal property are in this state if:
    (a) the property is delivered or shipped to a purchaser, other than the United States
    government, within this state regardless of the f. o. b. point or other conditions of the
    sale; or
    (b) the property is shipped from an office, store, warehouse, factory, or other place of
    storage in this state and (1) the purchaser is the United States government or (2) the
    taxpayer is not taxable in the state of the purchaser.
    17. Sales, other than sales of tangible personal property, are in this state if:
    (a) the income-producing activity is performed in this state; or
    (b) the income-producing activity is performed both in and outside this state and a
    greater proportion of the income-producing activity is performed in this state than in any
    other state, based on costs of performance.
    18. If the allocation and apportionment provisions of this article do not fairly represent
    the extent of the taxpayer’s business activity in this state, the taxpayer may petition for or
    the tax administrator may require, in respect to all or any part of the taxpayer’s business
    activity, if reasonable:
    (a) separate accounting;
    (b) the exclusion of any one or more of the factors;
    (c) the inclusion of one or more additional factors which will fairly represent the
    taxpayer’s business activity in this state; or
    (d) the employment of any other method to effectuate an equitable allocation and
    apportionment of the taxpayer’s income.
    ARTICLE V. ELEMENTS OF SALES AND USE TAX LAWS
    Tax Credit
    1. Each purchaser liable for a use tax on tangible personal property shall be entitled to
    full credit for the combined amount or amounts of legally imposed sales or use taxes paid
    by him with respect to the same property to another state and any subdivision thereof.
    The credit shall be applied first against the amount of any use tax due the state, and any
    unused portion of the credit shall then be applied against the amount of any use tax due a
    subdivision.
    Exemption Certificates, Vendors May Rely
    2. Whenever a vendor receives and accepts in good faith from a purchaser a resale or
    other exemption certificate or other written evidence of exemption authorized by the
    appropriate state or subdivision taxing authority, the vendor shall be relieved of liability
    for a sales or use tax with respect to the transaction.
    ARTICLE VI. THE COMMISSION
    Organization and Management
    1. (a) The Multistate Tax Commission is hereby established. It shall be composed of one
    “member” from each party state who shall be the head of the state agency charged with
    the administration of the types of taxes to which this compact applies. If there is more
    than one such agency the state shall provide by law for the selection of the commission
    member from the heads of the relevant agencies. State law may provide that a member of
    the commission be represented by an alternate but only if there is on file with the
    commission written notification of the designation and identity of the alternate. The
    attorney general of each party state or his designee, or other counsel if the laws of the
    party state specifically provide, shall be entitled to attend the meetings of the
    commission, but shall not vote. Such attorneys general, designees, or other counsel shall
    receive all notices of meetings required under paragraph 1(e) of this article.
    (b) Each party state shall provide by law for the selection of representatives from its
    subdivisions affected by this compact to consult with the commission member from that
    state.
    (c) Each member shall be entitled to one vote. The commission shall not act unless a
    majority of the members are present, and no action shall be binding unless approved by a
    majority of the total number of members.
    (d) The commission shall adopt an official seal to be used as it may provide.
    (e) The commission shall hold an annual meeting and such other regular meetings as its
    bylaws may provide and such special meetings as its executive committee may
    determine. The commission bylaws shall specify the dates of the annual and any other
    regular meetings, and shall provide for the giving of notice of annual, regular and special
    meetings. Notices of special meetings shall include the reasons therefor and an agenda of
    the items to be considered.
    (f) The commission shall elect annually, from among its members, a chairman, a
    vice-chairman and a treasurer. The commission shall appoint an executive director who
    shall serve at its pleasure, and it shall fix his duties and compensation. The executive
    director shall be secretary of the commission. The commission shall make provision for
    the bonding of such of its officers and employees as it may deem appropriate.
    (g) Irrespective of the civil service, personnel or other merit system laws of any party
    state, the executive director shall appoint or discharge such personnel as may be
    necessary for the performance of the functions of the commission and shall fix their
    duties and compensation. The commission bylaws shall provide for personnel policies
    and programs.
    (h) The commission may borrow, accept or contract for the services of personnel from
    any state, the United States, or any other governmental entity.
    (i) The commission may accept for any of its purposes and functions any and all
    donations and grants of money, equipment, supplies, materials and services, conditional
    or otherwise, from any governmental entity, and may utilize and dispose of the same.
    (j) The commission may establish one or more offices for the transacting of its business.
    (k) The commission shall adopt bylaws for the conduct of its business. The commission
    shall publish its bylaws in convenient form, and shall file a copy of the bylaws and any
    amendments thereto with the appropriate agency or officer in each of the party states.
    (l) The commission annually shall make to the governor and legislature of each party
    state a report covering its activities for the preceding year. Any donation or grant
    accepted by the commission or services borrowed shall be reported in the annual report
    of the commission, and shall include the nature, amount and conditions, if any, of the
    donation, gift, grant or services borrowed and the identity of the donor or lender. The
    commission may make additional reports as it may deem desirable.
    Committees
    2. (a) To assist in the conduct of its business when the full commission is not meeting, the
    commission shall have an executive committee of seven members, including the
    chairman, vice-chairman, treasurer and four other members elected annually by the
    commission. The executive committee, subject to the provisions of this compact and
    consistent with the policies of the commission, shall function as provided in the bylaws
    of the commission.
    (b) The commission may establish advisory and technical committees, membership on
    which may include private persons and public officials, in furthering any of its activities.
    Such committees may consider any matter of concern to the commission, including
    problems of special interest to any party state and problems dealing with particular types
    of taxes.
    (c) The commission may establish such additional committees as its bylaws may
    provide.
    Powers
    3. In addition to powers conferred elsewhere in this compact, the commission shall have
    power to:
    (a) Study state and local tax systems and particular types of state and local taxes.
    (b) Develop and recommend proposals for an increase in uniformity or compatibility of
    state and local tax laws with a view toward encouraging the simplification and
    improvement of state and local tax law and administration.
    (c) Compile and publish information as in its judgment would assist the party states in
    implementation of the compact and taxpayers in complying with state and local tax laws.
    (d) Do all things necessary and incidental to the administration of its functions pursuant
    to this compact.
    Finance
    4. (a) The commission shall submit to the governor or designated officer or officers of
    each party state a budget of its estimated expenditures for such period as may be required
    by the laws of that state for presentation to the legislature thereof.
    (b) Each of the commission’s budgets of estimated expenditures shall contain specific
    recommendations of the amounts to be appropriated by each of the party states. The total
    amount of appropriations requested under any such budget shall be apportioned among
    the party states as follows: one-tenth in equal shares; and the remainder in proportion to
    the amount of revenue collected by each party state and its subdivisions from income
    taxes, capital stock taxes, gross receipts taxes, sales and use taxes. In determining such
    amounts, the commission shall employ such available public sources of information as,
    in its judgment, present the most equitable and accurate comparisons among the party
    states. Each of the commission’s budgets of estimated expenditures and requests for
    appropriations shall indicate the sources used in obtaining information employed in
    applying the formula contained in this paragraph.
    (c) The commission shall not pledge the credit of any party state. The commission may
    meet any of its obligations in whole or in part with funds available to it under paragraph
    1(i) of this article: provided that the commission takes specific action setting aside such
    funds prior to incurring any obligation to be met in whole or in part in such manner.
    Except where the commission makes use of funds available to it under paragraph 1(i),
    the commission shall not incur any obligation prior to the allotment of funds by the party
    states adequate to meet the same.
    (d) The commission shall keep accurate accounts of all receipts and disbursements. The
    receipts and disbursements of the commission shall be subject to the audit and
    accounting procedures established under its bylaws. All receipts and disbursements of
    funds handled by the commission shall be audited yearly by a certified or licensed public
    accountant and the report of the audit shall be included in and become part of the annual
    report of the commission.
    (e) The accounts of the commission shall be open at any reasonable time for inspection
    by duly constituted officers of the party states and by any persons authorized by the
    commission.
    (f) Nothing contained in this article shall be construed to prevent commission
    compliance with laws relating to audit or inspection of accounts by or on behalf of any
    government contributing to the support of the commission.
    ARTICLE VII. UNIFORM REGULATIONS AND FORMS
    1. Whenever any two or more party states, or subdivisions of party states, have uniform
    or similar provisions of law relating to an income tax, capital stock tax, gross receipts tax,
    sales or use tax, the commission may adopt uniform regulations for any phase of the
    administration of such law, including assertion of jurisdiction to tax, or prescribing
    uniform tax forms. The commission may also act with respect to the provisions of Article
    IV of this compact.
    2. Prior to the adoption of any regulation, the commission shall:
    (a) As provided in its bylaws, hold at least one public hearing on due notice to all
    affected party states and subdivisions thereof and to all taxpayers and other persons who
    have made timely request of the commission for advance notice of its regulation-making
    proceedings.
    (b) Afford all affected party states and subdivisions and interested persons an
    opportunity to submit relevant written data and views, which shall be considered fully by
    the commission.
    3. The commission shall submit any regulations adopted by it to the appropriate officials
    of all party states and subdivisions to which they might apply. Each such state and
    subdivision shall consider any such regulation for adoption in accordance with its own
    laws and procedures.
    ARTICLE VIII. INTERSTATE AUDITS
    1. This article shall be in force only in those party states that specifically provide therefor
    by statute.
    2. Any party state or subdivision thereof desiring to make or participate in an audit of any
    accounts, books, papers, records or other documents may request the commission to
    perform the audit on its behalf. In responding to the request, the commission shall have
    access to and may examine, at any reasonable time, such accounts, books, papers,
    records, and other documents and any relevant property or stock of merchandise. The
    commission may enter into agreements with party states or their subdivisions for
    assistance in performance of the audit. The commission shall make charges, to be paid by
    the state or local government or governments for which it performs the service, for any
    audits performed by it in order to reimburse itself for the actual costs incurred in making
    the audit.
    3. The commission may require the attendance of any person within the state where it is
    conducting an audit or part thereof at a time and place fixed by it within such state for the
    purpose of giving testimony with respect to any account, book, paper, document, other
    record, property or stock of merchandise being examined in connection with the audit. If
    the person is not within the jurisdiction, he may be required to attend for such purpose at
    any time and place fixed by the commission within the state of which he is a resident:
    provided that such state has adopted this article.
    4. The commission may apply to any court having power to issue compulsory process for
    orders in aid of its powers and responsibilities pursuant to this article and any and all such
    courts shall have jurisdiction to issue such orders. Failure of any person to obey any such
    order shall be punishable as contempt of the issuing court. If the party or subject matter
    on account of which the commission seeks an order is within the jurisdiction of the court
    to which application is made, such application may be to a court in the state or
    subdivision on behalf of which the audit is being made or a court in the state in which the
    object of the order being sought is situated. The provisions of this paragraph apply only
    to courts in a state that has adopted this article.
    5. The commission may decline to perform any audit requested if it finds that its available
    personnel or other resources are insufficient for the purpose or that, in the terms
    requested, the audit is impracticable of satisfactory performance. If the commission, on
    the basis of its experience, has reason to believe that an audit of a particular taxpayer,
    either at a particular time or on a particular schedule, would be of interest to a number of
    party states or their subdivisions, it may offer to make the audit or audits, the offer to be
    contingent on sufficient participation therein as determined by the commission.
    6. Information obtained by any audit pursuant to this article shall be confidential and
    available only for tax purposes to party states, their subdivisions or the United States.
    Availability of information shall be in accordance with the laws of the states or
    subdivisions on whose account the commission performs the audit, and only through the
    appropriate agencies or officers of such states or subdivisions. Nothing in this article shall
    be construed to require any taxpayer to keep records for any period not otherwise
    required by law.
    7. Other arrangements made or authorized pursuant to law for cooperative audit by or on
    behalf of the party states or any of their subdivisions are not superseded or invalidated by
    this article.
    8. In no event shall the commission make any charge against a taxpayer for an audit.
    9. As used in this article, “tax,” in addition to the meaning ascribed to it in Article II,
    means any tax or license fee imposed in whole or in part for revenue purposes.
    ARTICLE IX. ARBITRATION
    1. Whenever the commission finds a need for settling disputes concerning
    apportionments and allocations by arbitration, it may adopt a regulation placing this
    article in effect, notwithstanding the provisions of Article VII.
    2. The commission shall select and maintain an arbitration panel composed of officers
    and employees of state and local governments and private persons who shall be
    knowledgeable and experienced in matters of tax law and administration.
    3. Whenever a taxpayer who has elected to employ Article IV, or whenever the laws of
    the party state or subdivision thereof are substantially identical with the relevant
    provisions of Article IV, the taxpayer, by written notice to the commission and to each
    party state or subdivision thereof that would be affected, may secure arbitration of an
    apportionment or allocation, if he is dissatisfied with the final administrative
    determination of the tax agency of the state or subdivision with respect thereto on the
    ground that it would subject him to double or multiple taxation by two or more party
    states or subdivisions thereof. Each party state and subdivision thereof hereby consents to
    the arbitration as provided herein, and agrees to be bound thereby.
    4. The arbitration board shall be composed of one person selected by the taxpayer, one by
    the agency or agencies involved, and one member of the commission’s arbitration panel.
    If the agencies involved are unable to agree on the person to be selected by them, such
    person shall be selected by lot from the total membership of the arbitration panel. The
    two persons selected for the board in the manner provided by the foregoing provisions of
    this paragraph shall jointly select the third member of the board. If they are unable to
    agree on the selection, the third member shall be selected by lot from among the total
    membership of the arbitration panel. No member of a board selected by lot shall be
    qualified to serve if he is an officer or employee or is otherwise affiliated with any party
    to the arbitration proceeding. Residence within the jurisdiction of a party to the
    arbitration proceeding shall not constitute affiliation within the meaning of this
    paragraph.
    5. The board may sit in any state or subdivision party to the proceeding, in the state of the
    taxpayer’s incorporation, residence or domicile, in any state where the taxpayer does
    business, or in any place that it finds most appropriate for gaining access to evidence
    relevant to the matter before it.
    6. The board shall give due notice of the times and places of its hearings. The parties
    shall be entitled to be heard, to present evidence, and to examine and cross-examine
    witnesses. The board shall act by majority vote.
    7. The board shall have power to administer oaths, take testimony, subpoena and require
    the attendance of witnesses and the production of accounts, books, papers, records, and
    other documents, and issue commissions to take testimony. Subpoenas may be signed by
    any member of the board. In case of failure to obey a subpoena, and upon application by
    the board, any judge of a court of competent jurisdiction of the state in which the board is
    sitting or in which the person to whom the subpoena is directed may be found may make
    an order requiring compliance with the subpoena, and the court may punish failure to
    obey the order as a contempt. The provisions of this paragraph apply only in states that
    have adopted this article.
    8. Unless the parties otherwise agree the expenses and other costs of the arbitration shall
    be assessed and allocated among the parties by the board in such manner as it may
    determine. The commission shall fix a schedule of compensation for members of
    arbitration boards and of other allowable expenses and costs. No officer or employee of a
    state or local government who serves as a member of a board shall be entitled to
    compensation therefor unless he is required on account of his service to forego the
    regular compensation attaching to his public employment, but any such board member
    shall be entitled to expenses.
    9. The board shall determine the disputed apportionment or allocation and any matters
    necessary thereto. The determinations of the board shall be final for purposes of making
    the apportionment or allocation, but for no other purpose.
    10. The board shall file with the commission and with each tax agency represented in the
    proceeding: the determination of the board; the board’s written statement of its reasons
    therefor; the record of the board’s proceedings; and any other documents required by the
    arbitration rules of the commission to be filed.
    11. The commission shall publish the determinations of boards together with the
    statements of the reasons therefor.
    12. The commission shall adopt and publish rules of procedure and practice and shall file
    a copy of such rules and of any amendment thereto with the appropriate agency or officer
    in each of the party states.
    13. Nothing contained herein shall prevent at any time a written compromise of any
    matter or matters in dispute, if otherwise lawful, by the parties to the arbitration
    proceeding.
    ARTICLE X. ENTRY INTO FORCE AND WITHDRAWAL
    1. This compact shall enter into force when enacted into law by any seven states.
    Thereafter, this compact shall become effective as to any other state upon its enactment
    thereof. The commission shall arrange for notification of all party states whenever there
    is a new enactment of the compact.
    2. Any party state may withdraw from this compact by enacting a statute repealing the
    same. No withdrawal shall affect any liability already incurred by or chargeable to a party
    state prior to the time of such withdrawal.
    3. No proceeding commenced before an arbitration board prior to the withdrawal of a
    state and to which the withdrawing state or any subdivision thereof is a party shall be
    discontinued or terminated by the withdrawal, nor shall the board thereby lose
    jurisdiction over any of the parties to the proceeding necessary to make a binding
    determination therein.
    ARTICLE XI. EFFECT ON OTHER LAWS AND JURISDICTION
    Nothing in this compact shall be construed to:
    (a) Affect the power of any state or subdivision thereof to fix rates of taxation, except that
    a party state shall be obligated to implement Article III 2 of this compact.
    (b) Apply to any tax or fixed fee imposed for the registration of a motor vehicle or any
    tax on motor fuel, other than a sales tax; provided that the definition of “tax” in Article
    VIII 9 may apply for the purposes of that article and the commission’s powers of study
    and recommendation pursuant to Article VI 3 may apply.
    (c) Withdraw or limit the jurisdiction of any state or local court or administrative officer
    or body with respect to any person, corporation or other entity or subject matter, except to
    the extent that such jurisdiction is expressly conferred by or pursuant to this compact
    upon another agency or body.
    (d) Supersede or limit the jurisdiction of any court of the United States.
    ARTICLE XII. CONSTRUCTION AND SEVERABILITY
    This compact shall be liberally construed so as to effectuate the purposes thereof. The
    provisions of this compact shall be severable and if any phrase, clause, sentence or
    provision of this compact is declared to be contrary to the constitution of any state or of
    the United States or the applicability thereof to any government, agency, person or
    circumstance is held invalid, the validity of the remainder of this compact and the
    applicability thereof to any government, agency, person or circumstance shall not be
    affected thereby. If this compact shall be held contrary to the constitution of any state
    participating therein, the compact shall remain in full force and effect as to the remaining
    party states and in full force and effect as to the state affected as to all severable matters.
    Tab 3
    Tex. Tax Code § 171.106
    (Vernon 2002)
    Tax Code § 171.106
    CHAPTER 171. FRANCHISE TAX
    § 171.106. Apportionment of Taxable Capital and Taxable Earned Surplus to This State
    (a) Except as provided by Subsections (c) and (d), a corporation’s taxable capital is
    apportioned to this state to determine the amount of the tax imposed under Section
    171.002(b)(1) by multiplying the corporation’s taxable capital by a fraction, the
    numerator of which is the corporation’s gross receipts from business done in this state, as
    determined under Section 171.103, and the denominator of which is the corporation’s
    gross receipts from its entire business, as determined under Section 171.105.
    (b) Except as provided by Subsections (c) and (d), a corporation’s taxable earned surplus
    is apportioned to this state to determine the amount of tax imposed under Section
    171.002(b)(2) by multiplying the taxable earned surplus by a fraction, the numerator of
    which is the corporation’s gross receipts from business done in this state, as determined
    under Section 171.1032, and the denominator of which is the corporation’s gross receipts
    from its entire business, as determined under Section 171.1051.
    (c) A corporation’s taxable capital or earned surplus that is derived, directly or indirectly,
    from the sale of management, distribution, or administration services to or on behalf of a
    regulated investment company, including a corporation that includes trustees or sponsors
    of employee benefit plans that have accounts in a regulated investment company, is
    apportioned to this state to determine the amount of the tax imposed under Section
    171.002 by multiplying the corporation’s total taxable capital or earned surplus from the
    sale of services to or on behalf of a regulated investment company by a fraction, the
    numerator of which is the average of the sum of shares owned at the beginning of the
    year and the sum of shares owned at the end of the year by the investment company
    shareholders who are commercially domiciled in this state or, if the shareholders are
    individuals, are residents of this state, and the denominator of which is the average of the
    sum of shares owned at the beginning of the year and the sum of shares owned at the end
    of the year by all investment company shareholders. The corporation shall make a
    separate computation to allocate taxable capital and earned surplus. In this subsection,
    “regulated investment company” has the meaning assigned by Section 851(a), Internal
    Revenue Code.
    (d) A corporation’s taxable capital or taxable earned surplus that is derived, directly or
    indirectly, from the sale of management, administration, or investment services to an
    employee retirement plan is apportioned to this state to determine the amount of the tax
    imposed under Section 171.002 by multiplying the corporation’s total taxable capital or
    earned surplus from the sale of services to an employee retirement plan company by a
    fraction, the numerator of which is the average of the sum of beneficiaries domiciled in
    Texas at the beginning of the year and the sum of beneficiaries domiciled in Texas at the
    end of the year, and the denominator of which is the average of the sum of all
    beneficiaries at the beginning of the year and the sum of all beneficiaries at the end of the
    year. The corporation shall make a separate computation to apportion taxable capital and
    earned surplus. In this section, “employee retirement plan” means a plan or other
    arrangement that is qualified under Section 401(a), Internal Revenue Code, or satisfies
    the requirements of Section 403, Internal Revenue Code, or a government plan described
    in Section 414(d), Internal Revenue Code. The term does not include an individual
    retirement account or individual retirement annuity within the meaning of Section 408,
    Internal Revenue Code.
    (e) On or before January 1, 1998, each entity registered with the State Securities Board
    under The Securities Act (Article 581, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes) that provides
    management, administration, or investment services to an employee retirement plan, must
    file a report with the comptroller containing such information as the comptroller deems
    necessary in order to determine the fiscal impact of Subsection (d). The State Securities
    Board and the Securities Commissioner shall cooperate with the comptroller in obtaining
    the information. The Securities Commissioner shall impose the penalties provided in The
    Securities Act (Article 581-1 et seq., Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes) against any entity
    that the comptroller certifies is delinquent in the filing of the report required by this
    section.
    (f) On or before September 1, 1998, the comptroller shall issue a report which evaluates
    the statewide fiscal impact of Subsection (d). If the comptroller determines that
    implementing Subsection (d) will not have a negative fiscal impact on this state,
    Subsection (d) shall be effective for reports or returns originally due on or after January
    1, 1999. If the comptroller determines that there will be a negative fiscal impact, that
    subsection shall not be implemented.
    (g) If this Act and another Act of the 75th Legislature, Regular Session, 1997, make the
    same substantive change from the current law but differ in text, this Act prevails
    regardless of the relative dates of enactment.
    (h) A banking corporation shall exclude from the numerator of the bank’s apportionment
    factor interest earned on federal funds and interest earned on securities sold under an
    agreement to repurchase that are held in this state in a correspondent bank that is
    domiciled in this state. In this subsection, “correspondent” has the meaning assigned by
    12 C.F.R. Section 206.2(c).
    Tab 4
    Tex. Tax Code § 112.151
    (Vernon 2002)
    Tax Code § 112.151
    CHAPTER 112. TAXPAYERS’ SUITS
    § 112.151. Suit for Refund
    (a) A person may sue the comptroller to recover an amount of tax, penalty, or interest that
    has been the subject of a tax refund claim if the person has:
    (1) filed a tax refund claim under Section 111.104 of this code;
    (2) filed, as provided by Section 111.105 of this code, a motion for rehearing that has
    been denied by the comptroller; and
    (3) paid any additional tax found due in a jeopardy or deficiency determination that
    applies to the tax liability period covered in the tax refund claim.
    (b) The suit must be brought against both the comptroller and the attorney general and
    must be filed in a district court.
    (c) The suit must be filed before the expiration of 30 days after the issue date of the
    denial of the motion for rehearing or it is barred.
    (d) The amount of the refund sought must be set out in the original petition. A copy of the
    motion for rehearing filed under Section 111.105 of this code must be attached to the
    original petition filed with the court and to the copies of the original petition served on
    the comptroller and the attorney general.
    (e) A person may not intervene in the suit.
    (f) Repealed by Acts 1997, 75th Leg., ch. 1423, § 19.128, eff. Sept. 1, 1997.
    Tab 5
    Tex. Const. art. I, §16
    Texas Const. Art. 1, § 16
    Sec. 16. No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, retroactive law, or any law impairing the
    obligation of contracts, shall be made.
    Tab 6
    U.S. Const. art. I, § 10
    U.S.C.A. Const. Art. I § 10, cl. 1
    No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque
    and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin
    a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law
    impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility
    Tab 7
    Int'l Bus. Machines Corp. v. Dep't of
    Treasury, 
    852 N.W.2d 865
    (2014)
    
    496 Mich. 642
                      calculate using Compact’s three-factor
    Supreme Court of Michigan.            apportionment test.
    INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
    MACHINES CORP.                    Judgment of the Court of Appeals
    v.                          reversed; remanded to Court of Claims.
    DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY.
    Zahra, J., filed concurring opinion.
    Docket No. 146440. | July 14, 2014.
    McCormack, J., filed dissenting opinion
    in which Young, C.J., and Kelly, J.,
    concurred.
    Synopsis
    Background: Corporate taxpayer that
    did business in multiple states filed        Attorneys and Law Firms
    complaint challenging decision of
    Department of Treasury rejected              **867 Miller, Canfield, Paddock and
    taxpayer’s election of three-factor          Stone, PLC, Lansing (by Clifford W.
    apportionment formula under Multistate       Taylor and Gregory A. Nowak), and
    Tax Compact for calculating business         Silverstein & Pomerantz LLP (by Amy
    income and requiring taxpayer to             L. Silverstein, Edwin P. Antolin, and
    apportion its income using sales-factor      Johanna W. Roberts, pro hac vice) for
    formula under Business Tax Act (BTA).        IBM Corporation.
    The     Court    of  Claims     granted
    Department’s motion for summary              Bill Schuette, Attorney General, Aaron
    disposition based on determination that      D. Lindstrom, Solicitor General, and
    BTA repealed Compact by implication.         Michael R. Bell, Assistant Attorney
    Taxpayer appealed, and the Court of          General, for the Department of Treasury.
    Appeals, 
    2012 WL 6913772
    , affirmed.
    Taxpayer’s application for leave to          **868 Honigman Miller Schwartz and
    appeal was granted.                          Cohn LLP, Detroit (by Lynn A. Gandhi)
    for the Council on State Taxation.
    Honigman Miller Schwartz and Cohn
    Holdings: The Supreme Court, Viviano,        LLP, Detroit (by Lynn A. Gandhi) and
    J., held that:                               Morrison & Foerster LLP (by Craig B.
    Fields and Mitchell A. Newark, pro hac
    [1]                                          vice) for Lorillard Tobacco Company.
    enactment of BTA did not repeal
    Compact by implication, and
    Joe Huddleston, Shirley K. Sicilian, and
    [2]
    modified gross receipts tax fell within   Sheldon H. Laskin, pro hac vice, for the
    scope of Compact’s definition of             Multistate Tax Commission.
    “income tax” that taxpayer could
    Jeffrey B. Litwak, pro hac vice.
    Richard L. Masters, pro hac vice, for the
    Interstate Commission for Juveniles and       Accordingly, we reverse the Court of
    the      Association     of      Compact      Appeals judgment in favor of the
    Administrators of the Interstate Compact      Department, reverse the Court of Claims
    on the Placement of Children.                 order granting summary disposition in
    favor of the Department, and remand to
    BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH.                      the Court of Claims for entry of an order
    granting summary disposition in favor of
    Opinion                                       IBM.
    VIVIANO, J.
    *644 In this case, we must determine             I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    whether plaintiff International Business
    Machines Corporation (IBM) could elect        IBM is a corporation based in New York
    to use the three-factor apportionment         that provides information technology
    *645 formula under the Multistate Tax         products and services worldwide. In
    Compact1 (the Compact) for its 2008           December 2009, IBM filed its Michigan
    Michigan taxes, or whether it was             Business Tax annual return for the 2008
    required to use the sales-factor              tax year. Line 10 of IBM’s return, the
    apportionment formula under the               “Apportionment Calculation” line, read
    Michigan Business Tax Act (BTA).2 The         “SEE ATTACHED ELECTION.” IBM
    Department       of    Treasury     (the      filed a separate *646 statement along
    Department) rejected IBM’s attempt to         with its return, entitled “Election to use
    use the Compact’s apportionment               MTC Three Factor Apportionment,”
    formula and, instead, required IBM to         indicating that it elected to apportion its
    apportion its income using the BTA’s          business income tax base and modified
    sales-factor formula.                         gross receipts tax base using the
    three-factor    apportionment      formula
    We conclude that IBM was entitled to          provided in the Compact. Under these
    use     the     Compact’s      three-factor   calculations, IBM sought a refund of
    apportionment formula for its 2008            $5,955,218. The Department disagreed.
    Michigan taxes and that the Court of          It determined that IBM could not elect to
    Appeals erred by holding otherwise on         use the Compact’s formula and that IBM
    the basis of its erroneous conclusion that    was entitled to a refund of only
    the Legislature had repealed the              $1,253,609 when calculated under the
    Compact’s election provision by               BTA’s       sales-factor    apportionment
    implication when it enacted the BTA. We       formula.
    further hold that IBM could use the
    Compact’s apportionment formula for           IBM filed a complaint in the Court of
    that portion of its tax base subject to the   Claims, challenging the Department’s
    modified gross receipts tax of the BTA.       decision. Thereafter, IBM moved for
    summary disposition under MCR                            apportionment formula
    2.116(C)(10), and the Department moved                   provided        in     the
    for summary disposition under MCR                        Multistate Tax Compact,
    2.116(I)(2). After a hearing on the                      MCL         205.581,    in
    motions, the Court of **869 Claims                       calculating its 2008 tax
    denied summary disposition to IBM and                    liability to the State of
    granted summary disposition in favor of                  Michigan, or whether it
    the Department. The Court of Claims                      was required to use the
    determined that the BTA mandated the                     apportionment formula
    use of the sales-factor apportionment                    provided        in     the
    formula.                                                 Michigan Business Tax
    Act, MCL 208.1101 et
    In an unpublished opinion, the Court of                  seq.; (2) whether § 301
    Appeals affirmed the Court of Claims                     of       the     Michigan
    order granting summary disposition in                    Business Tax Act, MCL
    favor of the Department.3 The Court of                   208.1301, repealed by
    Appeals first determined that there was a                implication Article III(1)
    facial conflict between the BTA and the                  of the Multistate Tax
    Compact insofar as the BTA mandates                      Compact; (3) whether
    use of the sales-factor formula while the                the     Multistate    Tax
    Compact permits taxpayers to elect to                    Compact constitutes a
    use a three-factor apportionment                         contract that cannot be
    formula.4 On the basis of this conflict, the             unilaterally altered or
    Court of Appeals concluded that the                      amended by a member
    Legislature had repealed the Compact’s                   state; and (4) whether
    election provision by implication *647                   the     modified     gross
    when it enacted the BTA.5 The Court of                   receipts tax component
    Appeals then stated that it did not need to              of       the     Michigan
    decide whether the modified gross                        Business       Tax     Act
    receipts tax was an “income tax” under                   constitutes an income
    the Compact subject to the Compact’s                     tax under the Multistate
    apportionment formula in light of its                    Tax Compact.[7]
    conclusion that the Compact’s election
    provision had been repealed by
    implication.6
    IBM sought leave to appeal in this Court.            II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We granted IBM’s application and asked         [1] [2]
    the parties to address                               We review de novo a Court of
    Claims decision on a motion for
    (1) whether the plaintiff             summary disposition.8 We also review de
    could elect to use the                novo issues of statutory interpretation.9
    expressly amended the ITA to the extent
    necessary to implement the SBTA and
    expressly repealed provisions of the ITA
    that would conflict with the SBTA.17 The
    *648 III. HISTORY OF BUSINESS                Legislature, however, did not expressly
    TAXATION IN MICHIGAN                      repeal the Compact.18
    Because we believe it important to our
    analysis in this case, we begin with a        The SBTA remained in effect until 2008,
    discussion of the history of business         when the Legislature enacted the BTA,
    taxation in Michigan. Michigan’s              which is at issue in this case.19
    taxation of business income or activity       Representing another shift in business
    began in 1953, when the Legislature           taxation, the BTA imposed two main
    enacted a business activities tax that        taxes: the business income tax and the
    taxed the adjusted receipts of a              modified gross receipts tax.20 In enacting
    taxpayer.10 This tax remained **870 in        the BTA, the Legislature expressly
    effect until Michigan adopted its first       repealed the SBTA, but again did not
    corporate income tax as part of the           expressly     repeal    the     Compact.21
    Income Tax Act of 1967 (ITA).11 Against       However, the BTA was short-lived.
    the backdrop of the ITA, Michigan             Effective January 1, 2012, Michigan
    joined the Multistate Tax Compact in          returned to a corporate income tax.22 At
    1970 when the Legislature enacted MCL         **871 the same time, the *650
    205.581.12 The Compact “symbolized the        Legislature stayed true to its past practice
    recognition that, as applied to multistate    of repealing conflicting tax acts and
    businesses,    traditional    state     tax   expressly repealed the BTA.23
    administration was inefficient and costly
    to both State and taxpayer.”13 Thus, the      Throughout the evolution of our state’s
    goals of the Compact include facilitating     method of business taxation, the
    and promoting equitable and uniform           Compact has remained in effect. Another
    taxation of multistate taxpayers.14 To this   constant throughout this history is that
    end, the *649 Compact operates in             the Legislature has always required a
    conjunction with Michigan’s tax acts,         multistate taxpayer with business income
    containing several provisions designed to     or activity both within and without the
    ensure uniform taxation of multistate         state to apportion its tax base.24 This
    taxpayers.                                    process,      known      as     formulary
    apportionment, has allowed Michigan to
    In 1976, the Legislature replaced the         tax the portion of a taxpayer’s multistate
    corporate income tax with a single            business carried on in Michigan without
    business tax.15 Unlike its predecessor, the   violating the Due Process Clause of the
    Single Business Tax Act (SBTA) taxed          United States Constitution.25 We now
    business activity, not income, and            address whether a multistate taxpayer
    operated as “a form of value added tax.”16    retained the privilege of electing the
    In enacting the SBTA, the Legislature         apportionment method provided by the
    Compact for the 2008 tax year.                  be allowed “only when the inconsistency
    and repugnancy are plain and
    unavoidable.”31 We will “construe
    statutes, claimed to be in conflict,
    harmoniously” to find “any other
    IV. WHETHER IBM COULD ELECT                     reasonable *652 construction” than a
    TO USE THE COMPACT’S                       repeal by implication.32 Only when we
    APPORTIONMENT FORMULA                         determine that two statutes “are so
    FOR ITS 2008 TAXES                       incompatible that both cannot stand” will
    To determine whether IBM could elect to         we find a repeal by implication.33
    use     the    Compact’s      three-factor      [8] [9]
    apportionment formula to calculate its                In attempting to find a harmonious
    2008 Michigan taxes, we must decide if          construction of the statutes, we “will
    the Legislature repealed the Compact’s          regard all statutes upon the same general
    election provision by implication when it       subject-matter as part of one system....”34
    enacted the BTA.26                              Further, “[s]tatutes in pari materia,
    although in apparent conflict, should, so
    far as reasonably possible, be construed
    in harmony with each other, so as to give
    force and effect to each....”35 This Court
    *651 A. LEGAL PRINCIPLES                  has stated:
    [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
    We begin our analysis “with
    the axiom that repeals by implication are          It is a well-established rule that in the
    disfavored.”27 We will presume, “in most           construction of a particular statute, or
    circumstances, that if the Legislature had         in the interpretation of its provisions,
    intended to repeal a statute or statutory          all statutes relating to the same subject,
    provision, it would have done so                   or having the same general purpose,
    explicitly.”28 Nevertheless, “[w]hen the           should be read in connection with it, as
    intention of the legislature is clear, repeal      together constituting one law, although
    by implication may be accomplished by              they were enacted at different times,
    the enactment of a subsequent act                  and contain no reference to one
    inconsistent with a former act” or “by the         another. The endeavor should be made,
    occupancy of the entire field by a                 by tracing the history of legislation on
    subsequent        enactment.”29        **872       the subject, to ascertain the uniform
    However, “where the intent of the                  and consistent purpose of the
    Legislature is claimed to be unclear, it is        legislature, or to discover how the
    our duty to proceed on the assumption              policy of the legislature with reference
    that the Legislature desired both statutes         to the subject-matter has been changed
    to continue in effect unless it manifestly         or modified from time to time. In other
    appears that such view is not reasonably           words, in determining the meaning of a
    plausible.”30 Repeals by implication will          particular statute, resort may be had to
    the established policy of the legislature      to apportion and allocate in accordance
    as disclosed by a general course of            with article IV.... [39]
    legislation. With this purpose in view      This provision allows a taxpayer subject
    therefore it is proper to consider, not     to an income tax to elect to use a party
    only acts passed at *653 the same           state’s apportionment formula or the
    session of the legislature, but also acts   Compact’s three-factor apportionment
    passed at prior and subsequent              formula.
    sessions.[36]
    In this case, the Compact’s election          *654 However, the Department rejected
    provision and § 301 of the BTA share the      IBM’s attempts to apportion its income
    common purpose of setting forth the           through the Compact’s apportionment
    methods of apportionment of a                 formula. Instead, it required IBM to
    taxpayer’s multistate business income;        apportion its BTA tax base consistently
    therefore, we must construe them              with the BTA and its sales-factor
    together as statutes in pari materia.37       formula. Section 301 of the BTA reads as
    follows:
    (1) Except as otherwise provided in
    this act, each tax base established
    B. APPLICATION                       under this act shall be apportioned in
    [10]                                            accordance with this chapter.
    With the history of Michigan business
    taxation and applicable legal principles in     (2) Each tax base of a taxpayer whose
    mind, we turn to the specific statutes at       business activities are confined solely
    issue. IBM sought to apportion its **873        to this state shall be allocated to this
    BTA tax base using the Compact’s                state. Each tax base of a taxpayer
    three-factor apportionment formula.38 In        whose business activities are subject to
    so doing, IBM relied on the Compact’s           tax both within and outside of this state
    election provision, which reads in              shall be apportioned to this state by
    pertinent part:                                 multiplying each tax base by the sales
    factor calculated under section 303.[40]
    (1) Any taxpayer subject to an income      We recognize that the language of the
    tax whose income is subject to             BTA is mandatory in nature.41 Under the
    apportionment and allocation for tax       statute, a taxpayer’s BTA tax base must
    purposes pursuant to the laws of a         be apportioned through the BTA’s
    party state or pursuant to the laws of     sales-factor apportionment formula.42 The
    subdivisions in 2 or more party states     Department argues that this mandatory
    may elect to apportion and allocate his    language precludes the use of any other
    income in the manner provided by the       apportionment formula and, reading it in
    laws of such state or by the laws of       isolation, we would agree. However, as
    such states and subdivisions without       stated previously, § 301 of the BTA is
    reference to this compact, or may elect
    not the only provision of Michigan’s tax       using    the    terms     “may     elect,”
    laws pertaining to the apportionment of        contemplates a divergence between a
    business       income—the        Compact’s     party state’s mandated apportionment
    election provision shares the same             formula and the Compact’s own
    purpose. Therefore, we cannot interpret §      formula—either at the time of the
    301 of the BTA in a vacuum.43 Rather,          Compact’s adoption by a party state or at
    we must *655 consider it along with the        some point in the future.47 Otherwise,
    Compact “by tracing the history of             there would be no point in giving
    legislation on the subject, to ascertain the   taxpayers an election between the two. In
    uniform and consistent purpose of the          fact, reading the Compact’s election
    legislature.”44                                provision    as    forward-looking—i.e.,
    contemplating the future enactment of a
    The BTA is not the first Michigan              state income tax with a mandatory
    business tax act to contain a mandatory        apportionment formula different from the
    apportionment formula. All our past            Compact’s apportionment formula—is
    business tax acts mandated that a              the only way to give meaning to the
    taxpayer with **874 income or activity         provision when it was enacted in
    that was taxable within and without the        Michigan.48 Viewed in this light, the
    state allocate and apportion its tax base      BTA’s      mandatory       apportionment
    consistently with each respective act.45       language may plausibly be read as
    These acts further mandated that the tax       compatible with the Compact’s election
    base be apportioned through a specific         provision.
    apportionment formula.46 The mandatory
    apportionment language of the BTA is           Moreover, our review of the statutes in
    nearly identical to the language of its        pari materia indicates a uniform and
    predecessors.                                  consistent purpose of the Legislature for
    the Compact’s election provision to
    The Department argues that the                 operate alongside Michigan’s tax acts.49
    Legislature repealed the Compact’s             Just as it did *657 when it enacted the
    election provision when it enacted *656        ITA,50 the Legislature, **875 in enacting
    the BTA because § 301 of the BTA is the        the BTA, had full knowledge of the
    first tax provision with apportionment         Compact and its provisions.51 Even with
    language directly in conflict with the         such knowledge on both occasions, the
    Compact’s election provision. The              Legislature left the Compact’s election
    import of this argument is that the            provision intact. By contrast, the
    Compact’s election provision was a dead        Legislature expressly repealed or
    letter when it was enacted because both        amended      other    inconsistent   acts
    the ITA and the election provision             regarding the taxation of businesses.52
    required use of the same three-factor          Had the Legislature believed that the
    apportionment formula. However, the            Compact’s election provision no longer
    Department’s argument overlooks that           had a place in Michigan’s tax system or
    the Compact’s election provision, by           conflicted with the purpose of the BTA,
    it could have taken the necessary action     Compact’s election provision by adding
    to eliminate the election provision.         the following language:
    Because the Legislature gave no clear
    indication that it intended to repeal the       [E]xcept that beginning January 1,
    Compact’s election provision, we                2011 any taxpayer subject to the
    proceed under the assumption that the           Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA
    Legislature intended for both to remain         36, MCL 208.1101 to 208.1601, or the
    in effect.53 After reading the statutes in      income tax act of 1967, 
    1967 PA 281
    ,
    pari materia, we conclude that a                MCL 206.1 to 206.697, shall, for
    reasonable construction exists other than       purposes of that act, apportion and
    a repeal by implication.54 Under Article        allocate in accordance with the
    III(1) of the Compact, the Legislature          provisions *659 of that act and shall
    provided a multistate taxpayer with a           not apportion or allocate in accordance
    choice between the apportionment                with article IV.[[[57]
    method contained in the Compact or the       There is no dispute that the Legislature
    apportionment method required by             specifically intended to retroactively
    Michigan’s tax laws. If a taxpayer elects    repeal the Compact’s election provision
    to apportion its income through the          for taxpayers subject to the BTA
    Compact, Article IV(9) mandates that the     beginning January 1, 2011. The
    *658 taxpayer do so using a three-factor     Legislature      could    have—but      did
    apportionment formula. Alternatively, if     not—extend this retroactive repeal to the
    the taxpayer does not make the Compact       start date of the BTA. In addressing this
    election, then the taxpayer must use the     legislation, the dissent suggests that “the
    apportionment formula set forth in           2011 Legislature may have simply been
    Michigan’s governing tax laws. In this       acting expressly to confirm what the
    case, IBM’s tax base arose under the         2007 Legislature believed it had already
    BTA. Had it not elected to use the           done implicitly.”58 We would agree with
    Compact’s apportionment formula, IBM         that conclusion if the Legislature had
    would have been required to apportion its    retroactively repealed the Compact’s
    tax base consistently with the mandatory     election provision beginning January 1,
    language of the BTA-i.e., through the        2008, the effective date of the BTA.
    BTA’s       sales-factor   apportionment     However, by only repealing the
    formula. Thus, we believe the BTA and
    55                                  Compact’s election provision starting
    the Compact are compatible and can be        January 1, 2011, the Legislature created a
    read as a harmonious whole.                  window in which it did not expressly
    preclude use of the Compact’s election
    Subsequent action by the Legislature         provision for BTA taxpayers. Further, we
    indicates that it did not impliedly repeal   believe that the express repeal of the
    the Compact’s election provision when it     Compact’s election provision effective
    enacted the BTA.56 On May 25, 2011, the      January 1, 2011, is evidence that the
    **876 Legislature expressly amended the      Legislature had not impliedly repealed
    the provision when it enacted the BTA.59       Rather, by using the applicable canons of
    Therefore, a review of the 2011                construction and faithfully applying our
    amendments supports our conclusion that        precedents in this area, we have arrived
    the Compact’s election provision               at a reasonable construction that
    remained in effect for the 2008 tax year.      harmonizes the BTA and the Compact.64
    The dissent agrees that “every attempt”
    must be made to construe the BTA and
    the Compact harmoniously. But, in the
    C. RESPONSE TO THE DISSENT                  end, the dissent fails to heed this call.
    [11]
    The dissent’s analysis has a             Instead, because of its rigid focus on the
    tantalizing simplicity to it. It homes in on   mandatory language of the BTA—to the
    the plain language and mandatory *660          exclusion of the language and history of
    nature of the BTA’s apportionment              the Compact, and its place in Michigan’s
    provision. However, the dissent spends         taxation scheme—the dissent’s analysis
    very little time considering the language      is at odds with our longstanding
    of the Compact, its history, or the history    implied-repeal jurisprudence.
    of business taxation in Michigan. While
    this approach may be proper in
    construing the BTA in a typical case, it is
    incomplete when we are faced with the                 D. CONCLUSION AS TO THE
    question of implied repeal. Under such                ISSUE OF IMPLIED REPEAL
    circumstances, that the dissent has
    [12]
    arrived at the better or even the best              In sum, because we are able to
    interpretation of the BTA does not end the     harmonize the BTA and the Compact’s
    inquiry. Rather, because there is a            election provision, we conclude that the
    presumption against implied repeals,60 it      statutes are not “ ‘so incompatible that
    is our task to determine if there is any       both cannot stand.’ ”65 We believe that
    other reasonable construction that would       our interpretation allows the Compact’s
    harmonize the two statutes and avoid a         election provision to serve its purpose of
    repeal by implication.61                       providing uniformity to multistate
    taxpayers in light of Michigan’s
    Repeals by implication are rare, and           enactment of an apportionment formula
    properly so, given that we will presume        different from the Compact’s formula.
    under most circumstances that “if the          Any conflict apparent from a first
    Legislature **877 had intended to repeal       reading of these statutes is reconcilable
    a statute or statutory provision, it would     when the statutes are read in pari
    have done so explicitly.”62 They are even      materia.66 Therefore, the Department has
    more unlikely in the realm of our state’s      failed to overcome *662 the presumption
    taxation laws.63 This certainly creates a      against     repeals    by      implication.
    very *661 high bar, but we disagree with       Accordingly, the Court of Appeals erred
    the dissent that we have made it absolute.     by holding that the Legislature repealed
    the Compact’s election provision by                  measured by net income
    implication when it enacted the BTA.                 including       any   tax
    Instead, we hold that the Compact’s                  imposed on or measured
    election provision was available to IBM              by an amount arrived at
    for the 2008 tax year.67                             by deducting expenses
    from gross income, 1 or
    more forms of which
    expenses        are  not
    specifically and directly
    **878 V. WHETHER THE                             related to particular
    MODIFIED GROSS RECEIPTS TAX                          transactions.[69]
    IS AN INCOME TAX UNDER THE
    COMPACT
    Under the Compact’s broad definition, a
    [13]
    Having determined that IBM could        tax is an income tax if the tax measures
    elect to use the Compact’s apportionment    net income by subtracting expenses from
    formula for the 2008 tax year, we must      gross income, with at least one of the
    next consider whether IBM could             expense deductions not being specifically
    apportion its entire BTA tax base through   and directly related to a particular
    the Compact’s apportionment formula.        transaction.70
    IBM’s 2008 BTA tax base contained two
    components: the business income tax         “Modified gross receipts tax” is not
    base and the modified gross receipts tax    defined by the BTA, but MCL
    (MGRT) base. The parties quarrel over       208.1203(2) states, “[The MGRT] levied
    whether both components may be              and imposed under this section is upon
    apportioned under the Compact. The          the privilege of *664 doing business and
    Compact election is available to “[a]ny     not upon income or property.” Although
    taxpayer subject to an income tax.”68       this statement indicates that the MGRT is
    While it is undisputed that the business    not a tax upon income under the BTA,
    income tax is an income tax, the            we must still determine whether the
    Department argues that the *663 MGRT        MGRT fits under the broad definition of
    is not an income tax, but rather a gross    “income tax” under the Compact.
    receipts tax not subject to the Compact’s
    election provision. Therefore, we must      The MGRT base is “a taxpayer’s gross
    determine whether the MGRT is an            receipts ... less purchases from other
    income tax under the Compact and, thus,     **879 firms....”71 The BTA defines
    apportionable under the Compact’s           “gross receipts” as
    three-factor apportionment formula.
    [14]
    The Compact defines “income tax” as       the entire amount received by the
    follows:                                      taxpayer as determined by using the
    taxpayer’s method of accounting used
    [A] tax imposed on or                for federal income tax purposes, less
    any amount deducted as bad debt for         independent contractors.76 Once gross
    federal income tax purposes that            receipts is reduced by any applicable
    corresponds to items of gross receipts      deductions, the taxpayer arrives at its
    ..., from any activity whether in           MGRT base, which is then subject to the
    intrastate, interstate, or foreign          MGRT at a rate of .80 percent after
    commerce carried on for direct or           allocation or apportionment to this state.77
    indirect gain, benefit, or advantage to
    the taxpayer or to others.... [72]          Having examined how a taxpayer’s
    Not only is the gross receipts amount          MGRT base is calculated, we now turn to
    reduced by numerous exclusions, it is          the question whether the MGRT fits
    also subject to a deduction for the            within the Compact’s definition of
    “amount deducted as bad debt for federal       “income tax.” For the MGRT to be an
    income tax purposes that corresponds to        income tax under the Compact, a tax
    items of gross receipts included in the        must measure net income by starting
    modified gross receipts tax base.”73 This      with gross income and subtracting
    total—the entire amount received by the        expenses, with at least one of the expense
    taxpayer from any activity minus the           deductions not specifically and directly
    bad-debt deduction and the numerous            related to a particular transaction.78 The
    exclusions under MCL 208.1111—is the           Compact and the BTA do not define
    gross receipts base from which the             “gross income.” Therefore, we look
    MGRT liability originates.                     elsewhere to determine what normally
    constitutes gross income. The Internal
    After the taxpayer determines its gross        Revenue Code defines “gross income” as
    receipts through the above calculation,        “all income from whatever source
    the taxpayer then reduces the gross            derived” and includes a nonexclusive list
    receipts base by “purchases from other         of items that includes things such as
    firms.”74 The “purchases from other            “gross income derived *666 from
    firms” deductions include, among other         business” and “gains derived from
    things, “inventory acquired during *665        dealings in property.”79 **880 26 C.F.R.
    the tax year, including freight, shipping,     § 1.61–1 provides that “[g]ross income
    delivery, or engineering charges included      includes income realized in any form,
    in the original contract price”; “assets ...   whether in money, property, or services.”
    acquired during the tax year of a type         26 C.F.R. § 1.61–3 further provides that
    that are, or under the internal revenue        gross income for manufacturing,
    code will become, eligible for                 merchandising, or mining businesses is
    depreciation, amortization, or accelerated     “the total sales, less the cost of goods
    capital cost recovery for federal income       sold, plus any income from investments
    tax purposes”; and materials and supplies      and from incidental or outside operations
    to the extent not included in inventory or     or sources.” Moreover, Black’s Law
    depreciable property.75 There are also         Dictionary states that gross income
    deductions for compensation paid in            means “[t]otal income from all sources
    certain industries and for payments to         before deductions, exemptions, or other
    tax reductions.”80                             the taxpayer as determined from any
    gainful activity minus inventory and
    These definitions of gross income are          certain other deductions that are expenses
    similar to the definition of gross receipts    not specifically and directly related to a
    under the BTA—the entire amount                particular transaction. Therefore, IBM
    received by the taxpayer as determined         could elect to use the Compact’s
    from any gainful activity. Like gross          apportionment formula for that portion of
    income under the Internal Revenue Code,        its tax base subject to the MGRT for the
    gross receipts are subject to myriad           2008 tax year.85
    exclusions and deductions. Notably,
    gross receipts are subject to a reduction
    for the purchase of inventory during the
    tax year, including freight, shipping,
    delivery, or engineering charges included                VI. CONCLUSION
    in the original contract price. This is        We conclude that Court of Appeals erred
    similar to the IRS’s definition of “gross      by holding that the BTA repealed the
    income”          for         manufacturing,    Compact’s election provision by
    merchandising,            or        mining     implication. Therefore, IBM could elect
    businesses—total sales less the cost of        to    use     **881      the Compact’s
    goods sold.81 In addition, several of these    apportionment formula during the 2008
    exclusions or deductions are not               tax *668 year. We further hold that IBM
    specifically and directly related to           could use the Compact’s apportionment
    particular transactions.82 Depreciable         formula to apportion its MGRT base
    *667 assets can be assets used over a          under the BTA. Accordingly, we reverse
    certain number of years and, thus, not         the Court of Appeals’ judgment in favor
    related to a single transaction.83 Materials   of the Department, reverse the Court of
    and supplies purchased during a tax year       Claims’ order granting summary
    can be used at any time for the operation      disposition in favor of the Department,
    of a business and for any amount of            and remand to the Court of Claims for
    transactions. Finally, the purchase of         entry of an order granting summary
    inventory, which includes such things as       disposition in favor of IBM.
    goods held for resale or raw materials,
    some of which can stay in a taxpayer’s
    warehouse for an indeterminate amount
    of time, can be an expense not
    specifically or directly related to a          CAVANAGH and MARKMAN, JJ.,
    particular transaction.84                      concurred with VIVIANO, J.
    We hold that the MGRT fits within the          ZAHRA, J. (concurring).
    broad definition of “income tax” under
    the Compact by taxing a variation of net       I agree with the lead opinion’s holding
    income—the entire amount received by           that IBM was entitled to use the
    Compact’s         elective    three-factor     shall be deemed a reference to the
    apportionment and allocation formula for       re-enacted provision.
    its 2008 Michigan taxes. I also agree          Pursuant to this provision, we must
    with both the lead opinion and the             construe the Compact as though it had
    dissenting opinion that the tax bases at       not been impliedly repealed.2
    issue here are “income taxes” within the     That said, the BTA’s exclusive
    meaning of the Compact. Whether the          apportionment method remains in
    Legislature repealed the Compact’s           conflict with the election provision of the
    election provision by implication when it    Compact. This conflict, in my view, is
    enacted the BTA is a very close question.    easily resolved because the Legislature in
    I would not reach that question because      2011 also expressly supplemented the
    the Legislature made clear that taxpayers    Compact. This new provision is not “the
    are entitled to use the Compact’s election   same as those of prior laws” and is a
    provision for the 2008, 2009, and 2010       “new enactment,” which expressly
    tax years.                                   provides that a taxpayer could elect to
    apportion its income under article IV of
    Assuming that the Legislature impliedly      the Compact
    repealed    the    Compact’s      election
    provision in 2008 by enacting the BTA,                except that beginning
    IBM could nonetheless avail itself of the             January 1, 2011 any
    Compact’s election provision for tax                  taxpayer subject to the
    years 2008 through 2010 because the                   Michigan business tax
    Legislature, in 2011, clearly intended to             act, 
    2007 PA 36
    , MCL
    provide multistate taxpayers the benefit              208.1101 to 208.1601,
    of the Compact’s election provision for               or the income tax act of
    these tax years. Specifically, on May 25,             1967, 
    1967 PA 281
    ,
    2011, the Legislature necessarily                     MCL 206.1 to 206.697,
    re-enacted all the provisions of the                  shall, for purposes of
    Compact, and ordered that act to take                 that act, apportion and
    immediate effect.1 MCL 8.3u provides                  allocate in accordance
    that                                                  with the provisions of
    that act and shall not
    apportion or allocate in
    *669 [t]he provisions of any law or                 accordance with article
    statute which is re-enacted, amended                IV.[3]
    or revised, so far as they are the same
    as those of prior laws, shall be           **882 There can be no dispute given this
    construed as a continuation of such        language that the Legislature specifically
    laws and not as new enactments. If any     intended to retroactively repeal the
    provision of a law is repealed and in      Compact’s election provision beginning
    substance re-enacted, a reference in       January 1, 2011. Further, I conclude that
    any other law to the repealed provision    this language contemplates that any
    taxpayer could avail itself of the           Dissenting Opinion by McCORMACK,
    Compact’s election provision for tax         J.
    years 2008 through 2010. This is because
    the Legislature, either under the *670
    original enactment of the Compact4           McCORMACK, J. (dissenting).
    (assuming the Legislature did not repeal
    the Compact’s election provision by          I respectfully dissent because I conclude
    implication when it enacted the BTA) or      that the Michigan Business Tax Act
    under the above re-enactment and             (BTA), MCL 208.1101 et seq., requires
    supplementation of the Compact5              taxpayers to apportion their multistate
    (assuming the Legislature repealed the       income in accordance with the BTA’s
    Compact’s election provision by              sales-only apportionment formula and
    implication when it enacted the BTA),        without resort to the Multistate Tax
    chose to commence its express repeal of      Compact’s election provision. I reach
    the Compact’s election provision on          this result because the Legislature’s *671
    January 1, 2011, even though the conflict    command—“each tax base established
    between the BTA and the Compact had          under this act shall be apportioned in
    existed from the 2008 tax year. Simply       accordance with this chapter,” MCL
    put, the contrapositive of the Compact’s     208.1301(1) (emphasis added)—is plain,
    supplemental provision must mean that        unambiguous, and permits only one
    before January 1, 2011, a taxpayer could,    interpretation. Further, there is no
    “for purposes of that act [the ITA or the    constitutional barrier that prevents the
    BTA], apportion and allocate in              Legislature from making the Compact’s
    accordance with the provisions of [the       alternative election provision unavailable
    ITA or the BTA] and [may] apportion or       to taxpayers. I would affirm the judgment
    allocate in accordance with article IV” of   of the Court of Appeals.
    the Compact. This is, in my opinion, the
    most reasonable understanding of this
    legislation.
    I. AN IRRECONCILABLE
    In sum, the Legislature in 2011 created a         CONFLICT OF STATUTES
    window in which it intended the
    Compact’s election provision to apply. In    The threshold issue is, at its core, one of
    this case, IBM sought to “apportion and      statutory interpretation. When the
    allocate” its taxes under the BTA well       language of a statute is unambiguous, we
    before January 1, 2011, and therefore        give effect to its plain meaning. Ter Beek
    may apportion or allocate its taxes in       v. City of Wyoming, 
    495 Mich. 1
    , 8, 846
    accordance with article IV of the            N.W.2d 531 (2014). It is hard to imagine
    Compact. For this reason, I concur in the    a more unambiguous command than the
    result reached in the lead opinion.          mandatory directive found in § 301 of the
    BTA: “Except as otherwise provided in
    this act, each tax base established under
    this act shall be apportioned in                results: either taxes established under the
    accordance with this chapter.” MCL              BTA need not be apportioned “in
    208.1301(1). There is no “otherwise             accordance with this chapter,” as § 301
    provided” exception in the BTA that             demands, or taxpayers may not elect to
    would aid IBM in its **883 attempt to           use the Compact formula to apportion tax
    avoid     the    statute’s    sales-only        bases established under the BTA. While I
    apportionment requirement. And, within          agree with the lead opinion that statutes
    Chapter 208 of the Michigan Compiled            that appear to be conflict should be read
    Laws, it is the BTA alone that provides         together and reconciled, if reasonably
    the formula by which taxpayers are to           possible, Rathbun v. State of Michigan,
    apportion their multistate income. See          
    284 Mich. 521
    , 544, 
    280 N.W. 35
    (1938),
    MCL 208.1301(2); MCL 208.1303(1).               I disagree that this is a case where
    Neither     the   Compact     nor     its       reconciliation is possible. The differing
    apportionment provisions are referred to        opinions offered *673 by this Court here
    anywhere in the BTA.                            make the underlying conflict undeniably
    plain. The Compact and the BTA are
    I share the lead opinion’s view that we         irreconcilably      in     conflict;     one
    must make every attempt “to construe            statute—either the Compact or the
    statutes, claimed to be in conflict,            BTA—must prevail over the other. And
    harmoniously[.]” Wayne Co. Prosecutor           neither alternative is easily dismissed.
    v. Dep’t of Corrections, 
    451 Mich. 569
    ,         Traditional rules of construction lead me
    577, 
    548 N.W.2d 900
    (1996).1 When               to resolve the conflict in favor of the later
    later enacted legislation irreconcilably        enacted and more specific legislation.
    *672 conflicts with a prior act, however,       See Kalamazoo v. KTS Indus., Inc., 263
    “the last expression of the legislative will    Mich.App. 23, 38–39, 
    687 N.W.2d 319
    must control.” Jackson v. Mich.                 (2004) (resolving a direct conflict
    Corrections Comm., 
    313 Mich. 352
    , 356,          between two statutes in favor of the
    
    21 N.W.2d 159
    (1946).                           subsequently enacted legislation).
    Section 301(1) of the BTA directs that          The lead opinion agrees that the plain
    taxes established under the BTA be              language of § 301 is mandatory. But it
    apportioned “in accordance with this            asserts that § 301 can nevertheless be
    chapter.” “[T]his chapter” requires             interpreted as permitting taxpayers to
    taxpayers      to   use     a      sales-only   make the Compact election. I do not see
    apportionment formula. The Compact,
    2
    how this interpretation of the BTA is
    however, provides that “[a]ny taxpayer          reasonable. If a taxpayer can elect an
    subject to an income tax [3] ... may elect to   alternative apportionment formula, then §
    apportion” its income in accordance with        301 is **884 in no sense mandatory.
    the          Compact’s           three-factor   Quite the opposite: § 301’s mandatory
    apportionment formula. MCL 205.581,             apportionment “in accordance with this
    Art. III(1). Reading these provisions side      chapter”     becomes     optional.    By
    by side, I see two, and only two, possible      interpreting § 301 as permitting
    taxpayers to make the Compact election,       relying on the fact that the Legislature
    the lead opinion has not, as it claims,       has expressly repealed and amended tax
    settled on a harmonious construction of       statutes in the past, simply states that
    the BTA and the Compact. Rather, it has       “[h]ad the Legislature believed that the
    resolved the conflict in favor of the         Compact’s election provision no longer
    Compact, the earlier enacted statute. But     had a place in Michigan’s tax system ...,
    our precedent is clear: when an               it could have taken the necessary action
    irreconcilable conflict exists, as in this    to eliminate the election provision.” Ante
    case, the later enacted legislation           at 875. Because it did not, the lead
    controls. 
    Jackson, 313 Mich. at 356
    , 21       opinion      “proceed[s]      under    the
    N.W.2d 159; see also Washtenaw Co.            assumption that the Legislature intended
    Rd. Comm’rs v. Pub. Serv. Comm., 349          for [the Compact’s election provision] to
    Mich. 663, 680, 
    85 N.W.2d 134
    (1957).         remain in effect.” Ante at 875. This, of
    Because I am not convinced that the two       course, simply assumes the lead
    statutes can be read harmoniously, I          opinion’s conclusion that there was no
    believe that, for tax years 2008 through      repeal. Yes, repeals by implication are
    2010, the enactment of the BTA                disfavored, and that the Legislature
    impliedly repealed the Compact’s              knows how to effect an express repeal is
    election provision.                           irrefutable. But by demanding that the
    Legislature     take    “the     necessary
    The lead opinion tries to give some effect    action”—i.e., expressly amend or repeal
    to § 301 by stating that a taxpayer “must     the Compact—the lead opinion has
    use the apportionment formula set forth       elevated the presumption against implied
    in” the BTA if it does not make the *674      repeals into an absolute bar.
    Compact election. Ante at 875. This
    construction does not make § 301’s            Having failed to adequately explain why
    mandatory directive “mandatory” at all.       the statutory language itself permits the
    When a taxpayer is given a choice as to       result it reaches, the lead opinion anchors
    whether they will apportion their income      its analysis in a historical overview of
    in accordance with the BTA’s sales-only       business taxation in Michigan. While
    formula, the number of alternative            informative, I find this approach
    options—a single one, or more—is              ultimately unpersuasive. The lead
    irrelevant. As long as an alternative         opinion argues that because the Compact
    option exists, the taxpayer may, not must,    was enacted at a time when Michigan
    use the apportionment formula set forth       law applied the same three-factor
    in the BTA. And once the lead opinion’s       apportionment *675 formula as that
    “mandatory” construction is revealed to       provided in the Compact, the Legislature,
    be anything but that, I do not believe that   in enacting it, must have anticipated the
    the lead opinion has persuasively             future enactment of a tax act requiring a
    explained why the BTA did not impliedly       different apportionment formula and
    amend or repeal the Compact’s election        intended for the Compact to prevail
    provision. Rather, the lead opinion,          should a conflict arise. But even
    assuming that the lead opinion is correct,     throws light on doubtful language, and
    that interpretation reads into the Compact     for future cases it has authority.”); Frey
    a policy choice by the 1970 Legislature        v. Michie, 
    68 Mich. 323
    , 327, 36 N.W.
    that the 2008 Legislature was free to          184 (1888) (“It is unnecessary to say
    disagree with, either by enacting an           more than that a *676 legislative
    income tax with a different, mandatory         interpretation of old laws has no judicial
    apportionment formula, as it did in 2008,      force. Whether right or wrong must be
    or by repealing the election provision         determined by the statutes themselves.”).
    outright, as it did in 2011. See Studier v.    The question we must answer in this case
    Mich. Pub. Sch. Employees’ Retirement          concerns what the Legislature intended
    Bd., 
    472 Mich. 642
    , 661, 698 N.W.2d            when it enacted the BTA-not what it
    350 (2005) (“[A] fundamental principle         intended when it enacted the Compact
    of the jurisprudence **885 of both the         forty years earlier or amended it three
    United States and this state is that one       years later. While in answering this
    legislature cannot bind the power of a         question the 2011 amendment may be
    successive legislature.”).                     considered “with some care, so far as it
    throws light on doubtful language,”
    The lead opinion underscores its error by      
    Baxter, 57 Mich. at 132
    , 
    23 N.W. 711
    ,
    attaching particular significance to 2011      that light does not shine on the lead
    PA 40, which expressly amended the             opinion’s argument.
    Compact to make the election
    unavailable to BTA taxpayers beginning         In my view the BTA made the Compact
    January 1, 2011. The effect of this            election unavailable. Because the statutes
    amendment on tax years 2011 and                are irreconcilably in conflict, the latter,
    beyond is plain to see, but whether the        as the more specific and later enacted
    amendment lends force to IBM’s position        statute, must be given effect over the
    in this dispute is not. In enacting this       former. For this reason, I disagree with
    amendment, the 2011 Legislature may            the lead opinion that the BTA’s
    have simply been acting expressly to           mandatory directive can be interpreted so
    confirm what the 2007 Legislature              as to allow BTA taxpayers to make the
    believed it had already done implicitly.       Compact election instead. As a result, I
    And even if the 2011 Legislature was           find it necessary to address IBM’s
    expressing its view that the BTA did not,      argument that the Legislature was not
    in fact, repeal the election provision, this   constitutionally permitted to make the
    Court is not bound by the prior                BTA’s sales-only apportionment formula
    Legislature’s construction of the earlier      exclusive and mandatory without first
    enactment. See Baxter v. Robertson, 57         repealing the Compact in its entirety.
    Mich. 127, 132, 
    23 N.W. 711
    (1885)
    (“Legislative construction of past
    legislation has no judicial force except
    for the future. But it is always entitled to
    be considered with some care, so far as it
    II. THE LEGISLATURE WAS NOT                   carry the supreme force of federal law,
    BARRED FROM UNILATERALLY                      IBM believes that the Legislature could
    AMENDING THE COMPACT                      not impose an exclusive apportionment
    formula because the Compact supersedes
    IBM asks this Court to invoke the              conflicting state law in any event. This is
    authority of “compact law” and hold that       contrary to our well-established rule that
    the Legislature, even had it intended to       a statute can be amended, repealed, or
    alter the Compact’s election provision         superseded, in whole or in *678 part,
    when it enacted the BTA, was prohibited        expressly or impliedly, by a subsequently
    from doing so.4 I would decline that           enacted statute. LeRoux v. Secretary of
    invitation.                                    State, 
    465 Mich. 594
    , 615, 
    640 N.W.2d 849
    (2002) (“Absent the creation of
    *677 The United States Constitution            contract rights, the later Legislature is
    provides that “[n]o State shall, without       free to amend or repeal existing statutory
    the **886 Consent of Congress ... enter        provisions.”). The essence of IBM’s
    into any Agreement of Compact with             argument is that because a compact is an
    another State[.]” U.S. Const., art. I, § 10,   agreement between Michigan and the
    cl. 3. As the Supreme Court explained in       other member states, it is not like any
    U.S. Steel Corp. v. Multistate Tax             other state law subject to traditional
    Comm., 
    434 U.S. 452
    , 
    98 S. Ct. 799
    , 54          principles of statutory construction, but
    L.Ed.2d 682 (1978), the clause is not to       rather it has some greater force and
    be read strictly, but only as requiring        authority. As a result, any variation from
    congressional consent for compacts that        the Compact’s terms is strictly
    tend to increase the political power of the    prohibited. In support of this proposition,
    states in a way that “may encroach upon        IBM cites as persuasive authority
    or interfere with the just supremacy of        McComb v. Wambaugh, 
    934 F.2d 474
    ,
    the United States.” 
    Id. at 471,
    98 S. Ct.       479 
    (C.A.3, 1991), and CT Hellmuth &
    799 (quotation marks and citation              Assoc., Inc. v. Washington Metro. Area
    omitted). Those compacts that receive          Transit Auth., 
    414 F. Supp. 408
    , 409
    congressional authorization and fall           (D.Md., 1976). Neither case, in my view,
    within the scope of the Compact Clause         supports such a rule.
    are treated as federal law. Cuyler v.
    Adams, 
    449 U.S. 433
    , 440, 101 S.Ct.            In McComb, the plaintiff, as guardian ad
    703, 
    66 L. Ed. 2d 641
    (1981). Compacts           litem for a minor child, brought a suit
    without       congressional       approval,    against the city of Philadelphia and its
    however, are not transformed into federal      employees under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The
    law; thus their construction is a matter of    suit sought damages for injuries the child
    state statutory law.                           suffered as a result of parental abuse.
    Before he was injured the child was
    Notwithstanding the fact that the              under the protective custody of a
    Multistate Tax Compact, as a compact           Virginia court. The Virginia court
    without congressional approval, does not       ordered that the child be returned to his
    parental home in Philadelphia, where the     authority for the above emphasized
    abuse occurred. Plaintiff argued that the    rule—that         compacts         without
    Virginia court order, in conjunction with    congressional approval cannot be
    the Interstate Compact for Placement of      unilaterally amended and must take
    Children (ICPC), a compact to which          precedent     over     conflicting    state
    Pennsylvania and Virginia are parties        law—and I have found none. Moreover,
    that had not been congressionally            the unsupported statement contradicts the
    approved, extended the jurisdiction of the   one that precedes it. Either the compact
    Virginia court into Pennsylvania and         must be construed as state law or it must
    thereby imposed a legal duty on the          be construed as something with greater
    Philadelphia social workers. The United      authority than state law, but the McComb
    States Court of Appeals for the Third        court said both. Finally, this statement
    Circuit rejected this argument, ultimately   was dictum, because the court did not
    concluding that the ICPC did not apply       identify any potential conflict between
    when a child is returned by the *679         the ICPC and Pennsylvania law and the
    sending state to a natural parent residing   court ultimately determined that the
    in another state. McComb, 934 F.2d at        ICPC did not apply. 
    Id. at 482.
    482.
    In CT Hellmuth, the plaintiff sought to
    IBM cites the Third Circuit’s discussion     compel disclosure of documents under
    of the scope of the ICPC for its argument    Maryland law. The defendant, an
    here:                                        interstate agency formed by an interstate
    compact between Maryland, Virginia,
    Because Congressional consent was          and the District of Columbia, argued that
    neither given nor required, the [ICPC]     its status as an interstate agency
    does not express federal law.              exempted it from the Maryland law. In
    Consequently, this Compact must be         granting the defendant’s motion for
    construed as state law....                 summary judgment, the court remarked
    that
    Nevertheless,       uniformity      of
    interpretation is important in the           *680 when enacted, a compact
    construction of a Compact because in         constitutes not only law, but a contract
    some contexts it is **887 a contract         which may not be amended, modified,
    between the participating states.            or otherwise altered without the
    Having entered into a contract, a            consent of all parties. It, therefore,
    participant state may not unilaterally       appears settled that one party may not
    change its terms. A Compact also takes       enact legislation which would impose
    precedence over statutory law in             burdens upon the compact absent the
    member states. [McComb, 934 F.2d at          concurrence of the other signatories.
    479 (citations omitted; emphasis             [CT 
    Hellmuth, 414 F. Supp. at 409
    .]
    added).]
    CT Hellmuth and the cases it relied upon,
    The McComb court did not cite any
    however,      involved    congressionally         *681 III. UNILATERAL
    approved compacts, which, as explained,       AMENDMENT OF MCL 205.581,
    supersede subsequent state law by virtue      ART. III(2) DOES NOT VIOLATE
    of the Supremacy Clause. Cuyler, 449            THE STATE OR FEDERAL
    U.S. at 440, 
    101 S. Ct. 703
    .                       CONTRACTS CLAUSE
    IBM’s claim that the Compact trumps the      In evaluating whether § 301 of the BTA
    BTA simply because of its status as a        unconstitutionally impairs a contract, the
    compact relies on the faulty premise that    threshold question is whether the
    the distinction between compacts that        Compact did, in fact, create a contractual
    have congressional approval and those        relationship in the first instance. I do not
    that do not is unimportant, and that all     believe **888 that it did. Two factors
    compacts are immune to unilateral            weigh heavily in this conclusion. First,
    modification by their member states          the member states’ courses of conduct
    because “[a] Compact ... takes               indicate that there is no contractual
    precedence over statutory law in member      obligation to strictly adhere to Articles
    states.” 
    McComb, 934 F.2d at 479
    . This       III and IV of the Compact. Second, the
    assumes too much. Any immunity, if it        Compact is silent regarding a member
    exists, is a result of a compact’s dual      state’s authority to enact exclusive
    nature as both state law and a contract      apportionment formulas that differ from
    among its member states. See Green v.        the Compact’s formula.
    Biddle, 21 U.S. (8 Wheat.) 1, 5 L.Ed 547
    (1823) (recognizing that an interstate       Starting with the obvious: taxpayers like
    compact can be a contract). As a result      IBM were not parties to the Compact. To
    the Legislature is free to amend or repeal   the extent that the Compact can be
    an existing statutory provision as long as   viewed as a contract, it is an agreement
    it does not impair a contractual             between its member states, not between
    obligation. 
    LeRoux, 465 Mich. at 615
    ,        taxpayers and the states.5 The Compact
    
    640 N.W.2d 849
    ; see U.S. Const., art. I,     member states’ courses of performance
    § 10, cl. 1; Const. 1963, art. 1, § 10. In   are critical to understanding the nature of
    other words, the Legislature is prohibited   the agreement. As the Supreme Court
    from unilaterally amending the Compact       recently explained, a party’s course of
    only if that amendment impairs               performance is “highly significant”
    contractual obligations created by the       evidence of the party’s understanding of
    Compact itself. When viewed as a matter      the Compact’s terms. Tarrant Regional
    of contract law, I believe that it was       Water Dist. v. Herrmann, 569 U.S. ––––,
    within the Legislature’s power to require    
    133 S. Ct. 2120
    , 2135, 
    186 L. Ed. 2d 153
    BTA taxpayers to apportion their             (2013) (citation and quotation marks
    multistate income solely in accordance       omitted).6 Here, it is plain that the
    with § 301.                                  member states did not view *682 strict
    adherence to Articles III and IV as a
    binding contractual obligation, as
    Compact members have deviated from             N.W.2d 350. While it is true that the
    the Compact’s election provision and           Compact **889 does not expressly allow
    apportionment formula without objection        Michigan to adopt a different
    from other members. Arkansas, for              apportionment formula, neither does the
    example, has retained the Compact’s            Compact surrender the state’s right to do
    election provision but changed the             so. When the state’s sovereign power of
    Compact formula to place additional            taxation is implicated, as it is here, any
    emphasis on the sales factor. Ark Code         uncertainty should be resolved in favor
    26–5–101, Art. IV(9). Nondeviating             of concluding that the state did not cede
    members have not pursued actions               that power. See Tarrant, 133 S.Ct at
    against those states that have deviated,       2132 (recognizing that states “do not
    and no member state has intervened on          easily cede their sovereign powers”).
    IBM’s behalf in this case. Further, the        Admittedly, any sovereignty concerns are
    Multistate     Tax     Commission—the          abated by the fact that a member state
    organization charged with administering        may withdraw from the Compact,
    the Compact—has urged us to reject             unilaterally and without repercussion, at
    IBM’s rigid interpretation of the              any time. MCL 205.581, Art X(2). But
    Compact. These facts weigh heavily in          this withdrawal provision is equally
    favor of rejecting IBM’s argument that         strong evidence that the member states
    the Compact creates a binding                  did not intend to be contractually bound,
    contractual obligation on its member           as it demonstrates the member states’
    states to refrain from amending the            desire to retain control over their
    election provision.7                           sovereignty with respect to taxation.
    Moreover, if continued participation in
    Deference to principles of state               the Compact is, essentially, completely
    sovereignty leads me to the same               voluntary, I fail to see how its terms can
    conclusion. As this Court explained in         be construed as creating binding
    
    Studier, 472 Mich. at 661
    , 698 N.W.2d          contractual obligations, especially in
    350, there is a “strong presumption that       light of the presumption against such an
    statutes do not create contractual rights.”    interpretation. 
    Studier, 472 Mich. at 661
    ,
    This presumption is grounded in the            
    698 N.W.2d 350
    .8
    principle that “surrenders of legislative
    power are subject to strict limitations that
    have developed in order to protect the
    sovereign     prerogatives      of     state
    governments.” 
    Id. IBM has
    not overcome                   IV. CONCLUSION
    this presumption here. The Compact’s           I would affirm the judgment of the Court
    silence on the effect of a member state’s      of Appeals because the Legislature
    ability    to    elect     an     exclusive    expressly provided that taxes *684
    apportionment formula indicates that           established under the BTA “shall be in
    Michigan did not contract away its right       accordance with” the BTA’s sales-only
    to do exactly *683 that. 
    Id. at 662,
    698       apportionment      formula.    Allowing
    taxpayers to apportion their multistate                        YOUNG, C.J., and KELLY,                             J.,
    income in accordance with the                                  concurred with McCORMACK, J.
    Compact’s       formula     violates this
    unambiguous directive. And because the
    state was not contractually obligated to                       Parallel Citations
    allow taxpayers to make the Compact
    election, the BTA does not offend the                          
    852 N.W.2d 865
    state or federal constitutions.
    Footnotes
    1      MCL 205.581 et seq.
    2      MCL 208.1101 et seq.
    3      IBM v. Dep’t of Treasury, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued November 20,
    2012 (Docket No. 306618), 
    2012 WL 6913772
    .
    4      
    Id. at 3.
    5      
    Id. at 3–4.
    It also determined that the Compact was not a binding contract.
    6      
    Id. at 5.
    Judge RIORDAN concurred in all respects except regarding the issue of repeal by implication. He
    determined that the panel did not need to conclude that the BTA had impliedly repealed the Compact
    because MCL 208.1309 allowed the taxpayer to petition for another apportionment formula. He concluded
    that the plain language of the BTA required IBM to apportion its income tax consistently with the BTA.
    7      IBM v. Dep’t of Treasury, 
    494 Mich. 874
    , 
    832 N.W.2d 388
    (2013).
    8      Malpass v. Dep’t of Treasury, 
    494 Mich. 237
    , 245, 
    833 N.W.2d 272
    (2013).
    9      
    Id. 10 See
    1953 PA 150
    . See also Armco Steel Corp. v. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    359 Mich. 430
    , 444, 
    102 N.W.2d 552
           (1960) (“This tax is part of a general scheme of State taxation of business activities in Michigan. It is a tax
    on Michigan activities measured, in amount, by adjusted receipts derived from or attributable to Michigan
    sources....”).
    11     See MCL 206.61, as enacted by 
    1967 PA 281
    . The stated purpose of the ITA was “to meet deficiencies in
    state funds by providing for the imposition, levy, computation, collection, assessment, and enforcement by
    lien and otherwise of taxes on or measured by net income activities....” Title, 
    1967 PA 281
    .
    12     
    1969 PA 343
    . Section 1 of 
    1969 PA 343
    , codified under MCL 205.581, includes the mandatory provisions
    of the Compact that must be enacted for a state to become a member. See US Steel Corp. v. Multistate
    Tax Comm., 
    434 U.S. 452
    , 455–456, 
    98 S. Ct. 799
    , 
    54 L. Ed. 2d 682
    (1978).
    13     U.S. Steel 
    Corp., 434 U.S. at 456
    , 
    98 S. Ct. 799
    .
    14   See MCL 205.581, Art. I (“The purposes of this compact are to: (1) Facilitate proper determination of state
    and local tax liability of multistate taxpayers, including the equitable apportionment on tax bases and
    settlement of apportionment disputes[,] (2) Promote uniformity or compatibility in significant components of
    tax systems[,] (3) Facilitate taxpayer convenience and compliance in the filing of tax returns and in other
    phases of tax administration[,] and (4) Avoid duplicative taxation.”).
    15   See MCL 208.1 et seq., as enacted by 
    1975 PA 228
    .
    16   Trinova Corp. v. Dep’t of Treasury, 
    433 Mich. 141
    , 149, 
    445 N.W.2d 428
    (1989).
    17   See 
    1975 PA 233
    .
    18   See id.
    19   
    2007 PA 36
    ; MCL 208.1101 et seq.
    20   See MCL 208.1201; MCL 208.1203.
    21   Enacting section 1 of 
    2006 PA 325
    provides: “The single business tax act, 
    1975 PA 228
    , MCL 208.1 to
    208.145, is repealed effective for tax years that begin after December 31, 2007.”
    22   See 
    2011 PA 38
    .
    23   See 
    2011 PA 39
    , which reads in part:
    Enacting section 1. The Michigan business tax act, 
    2007 PA 36
    , MCL 208.1101 to 208.1601, is
    repealed effective on the date that the secretary of state receives a written notice from the department
    of treasury that the last certificated credit or any carryforward from that certificated credit has been
    claimed.
    Enacting section 2. This amendatory act does not take effect unless House Bill No. 4361 of the 96th
    Legislature is enacted into law.
    24   See MCL 205.553, as amended by 
    1954 PA 17
    ; 1970 CL 206.115; 1979 CL 208.41; MCL 208.1301.
    25   
    Malpass, 494 Mich. at 245
    –246, 
    833 N.W.2d 272
    .
    26   This is the principal argument offered by the Department in disallowing use of the Compact’s
    apportionment formula. In the alternative, the Department argues the Compact can be harmonized with the
    BTA by reading the Compact’s election provision and apportionment formula into MCL 208.1309. We
    address this argument in note 55 of this opinion.
    27   Wayne Co. Pros. v. Dep’t of Corrections, 
    451 Mich. 569
    , 576, 
    548 N.W.2d 900
    (1996). The implied repeal
    doctrine has “remained stable over approximately four centuries of common law in the United Kingdom and
    then here in the United States.” Markham, The Supreme Court’s New Implied Repeal Doctrine: Expanding
    Judicial Power to Rewrite Legislation under the Ballooning Conception of “Plain Repugnancy,” 45 Gonz L.
    Rev 437, 464 (2010). Lord Edward Coke recognized the implied repeal doctrine as far back as 1614. See
    
    id., p. 456–458
    (discussing Lord Coke’s seminal case on the implied repeal doctrine—Doctor Foster’s
    Case, 77 Eng Rep 1222 (KB, 1614)).
    28   Wayne Co. 
    Pros., 451 Mich. at 576
    , 
    548 N.W.2d 900
    .
    29   Washtenaw Co. Rd. Comm’rs v. Pub. Serv. Comm., 
    349 Mich. 663
    , 680, 
    85 N.W.2d 134
    (1957).
    30   Wayne Co. 
    Pros., 451 Mich. at 577
    , 
    548 N.W.2d 900
    .
    31   Tillotson v. Saginaw, 
    94 Mich. 240
    , 244–245, 
    54 N.W. 162
    (1892).
    32   Wayne Co. 
    Pros., 451 Mich. at 576
    –577, 
    548 N.W.2d 900
    (emphasis added; citations and quotation marks
    omitted).
    33   Valentine v. Redford Twp. Supervisor, 
    371 Mich. 138
    , 144, 
    123 N.W.2d 227
    (1963). As with any issue of
    statutory interpretation, our goal “is to give effect to the Legislature’s intent, focusing first on the statute’s
    plain language.” 
    Malpass, 494 Mich. at 247
    –248, 
    833 N.W.2d 272
    (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    34   Rathbun v. Michigan, 
    284 Mich. 521
    , 544, 
    280 N.W. 35
    (1938) (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    35   
    Id. (citation and
    quotation marks omitted).
    36   
    Id. at 543–544,
    280 N.W. 35 
    (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    37   
    Id. at 543,
    280 N.W. 35 
    (“Statutes in pari materia are those ... which have a common purpose....”).
    38   MCL 205.581, Art. IV(9) (“All business income shall be apportioned to this state by multiplying the income
    by a fraction, the numerator of which is the property factor plus the payroll factor plus the sales factor, and
    the denominator of which is 3.”).
    39   MCL 205.581, Art. III(1).
    40   MCL 208.1301.
    41   See Fradco v. Dep’t of Treasury, 
    495 Mich. 1
    04, 114, 
    845 N.W.2d 81
    (2014) (“The Legislature’s use of the
    word ‘shall’ ... indicates a mandatory and imperative directive.”).
    42   MCL 208.1301(1).
    43   See also People v. Stephan, 241 Mich.App. 482, 497, 
    616 N.W.2d 188
    (2000) (recognizing that interpreting
    the unambiguous language of two conflicting statutes does not end the analysis because “courts do not
    construe individual statutes in a vacuum” but rather construe statutes together under the doctrine of in pari
    materia ).
    44   
    Rathbun, 284 Mich. at 543
    –544, 
    280 N.W. 35
    (stating further that courts “ ‘will regard all statutes upon the
    same general subject matter as part of one system’ ”) (citation omitted).
    45   See MCL 205.552, as amended by 
    1954 PA 17
    (providing that “[t]he adjusted receipts of a taxpayer
    derived from or attributable to Michigan sources shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of
    section 3 of this act”); 1970 CL 206.103 (providing that “[a]ny taxpayer having income from business
    activity which is taxable both within and without this state ... shall allocate and apportion his net income as
    provided in this act”); 1979 CL 208.41 (providing that “[a] taxpayer whose business activities are taxable
    both within and without this state, shall apportion his tax base as provided in this chapter”).
    46   See MCL 205.553(b), as amended by 
    1954 PA 17
    (requiring that a taxpayer with adjusted receipts
    attributable to activity within and without Michigan apportion the receipts consistent with a three-factor
    formula); 1970 CL 206.115 (requiring that “[a]ll business income ... shall be apportioned to this state”
    through the standard three-factor apportionment formula); 1979 CL 208.45 (requiring that “[a]ll of the tax
    base ... shall be apportioned to this state” through the three-factor apportionment formula). In 1991, the
    Legislature began to phase out the SBTA’s equally weighted, three-factor apportionment formula, requiring
    a progressively more sales-factor-focused apportionment formula. See MCL 208.45, as amended by 
    1991 PA 77
    . However, the new apportionment formula was still mandatory.
    47   MCL 205.581, Art. III(1). See also Black’s Law Dictionary (9th ed) (defining an “election” as “[t]he exercise
    of a choice; esp., the act of choosing from several possible rights or remedies in a way that precludes the
    use of other rights or remedies”).
    48   See Moore v. Fennville Pub. Schs. Bd. of Ed., 223 Mich.App. 196, 201, 
    566 N.W.2d 31
    (1997) (“It is the
    duty of the courts to interpret statutes so as to render no provision meaningless.”).
    49   
    Rathbun, 284 Mich. at 543
    –544, 
    280 N.W. 35
    .
    50   Although the ITA’s apportionment method is largely consistent with the Compact’s apportionment method,
    caselaw during the period in which both were in effect reflects some potential for inconsistency. See
    Consumers Power Co. v. Dep’t of Treasury, 235 Mich.App. 380, 386 n. 6, 
    597 N.W.2d 274
    (1999)
    (discussing definitional differences between the ITA and the Compact); Chocola v. Dep’t of Treasury, 132
    Mich.App. 820, 831, 
    348 N.W.2d 290
    (1984); Donovan Const. Co. v. Dep’t of Treasury, 126 Mich.App. 11,
    
    337 N.W.2d 297
    (1983).
    51   In re Reynolds Estate, 
    274 Mich. 354
    , 362, 
    264 N.W. 399
    (1936) ( “The Legislature, in passing [a new act],
    is presumed to have done so with a full knowledge of existing statutes.”).
    52   See notes 21 and 23 of this opinion.
    53   See Wayne Co. 
    Pros., 451 Mich. at 577
    , 
    548 N.W.2d 900
    .
    54   
    Id. at 576–577,
    548 N.W.2d 900
    .
    55   Despite the above framework, the Department argues that if the BTA and the Compact can be harmonized,
    it is only through MCL 208.1309(1), which allows a taxpayer to petition to use another apportionment
    method. We disagree. The Department’s “harmonization” would actually be an abrogation of the election
    provision. Section 309 requires that a taxpayer petition the Department for another apportionment method
    and prove that the BTA’s apportionment provision does not fairly represent the taxpayer’s business activity
    in the state. Thus, the Department’s interpretation takes the choice out of the taxpayer’s hands and is
    inconsistent with the plain language of the Compact. Therefore, we decline to accept the Department’s
    proposed harmonization.
    56   See Baxter v. Robertson, 
    57 Mich. 127
    , 132, 
    23 N.W. 711
    (1885) ( “Legislative construction of past
    legislation ... is always entitled to be considered with some care, so far as it throws light on doubtful
    language....”).
    57   
    2011 PA 40
    (emphasis added).
    58   Post at 885.
    59   See 1A Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction (7th ed), § 23:11, p. 485 (“[T]he later express repeal of a
    particular statute may be some indication that the legislature did not previously intend to repeal the statute
    by implication.”).
    60   See Jackson v. Mich. Corrections Comm., 
    313 Mich. 352
    , 356, 
    21 N.W.2d 159
    (1946).
    61   Wayne Co. 
    Pros., 451 Mich. at 576
    –577, 
    548 N.W.2d 900
    (emphasis added). See also 
    Rathbun, 284 Mich. at 544
    –545, 
    280 N.W. 35
    (If we “can by any fair, strict, or liberal construction find for the two provisions a
    reasonable field of operation, without destroying their evident intent and meaning, preserving the force of
    both, and construing them together in harmony with the whole course of legislation upon the subject, it is
    [our] duty to do so.”) (emphasis added).
    62   Wayne Co. 
    Pros., 451 Mich. at 576
    , 
    548 N.W.2d 900
    . See also Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Epstein, 
    516 U.S. 367
    , 381, 
    116 S. Ct. 873
    , 
    134 L. Ed. 2d 6
    (1996) (“The rarity with which we have discovered implied
    repeals is due to the relatively stringent standard for such findings, namely, that there be an ‘irreconcilable
    conflict’ between the two federal statutes at issue.”).
    63   1A Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction (7th ed), § 23:10, p. 484, citing Sylk v. United States, 
    331 F. Supp. 661
    , 665 (E.D.Pa., 1971) (“On subjects to which the legislature pays continuous, close attention,
    such as internal revenue laws, the presumption against implied repeal may have greater force.”).
    64   Contrary to the dissent’s suggestion, the question is not whether the 2008 Legislature could disregard a
    policy choice by the 1970 Legislature—obviously it could—but instead what action it must take to make its
    intentions clear in the absence of express repealing language in the statute.
    65   
    Valentine, 371 Mich. at 144
    , 
    123 N.W.2d 227
    (citation omitted).
    66   The Department also cannot show that the Legislature intended to occupy the entire field covered by the
    Compact when it enacted the BTA to establish a repeal by implication. Washtenaw Co. Rd. 
    Comm’rs., 349 Mich. at 680
    , 
    85 N.W.2d 134
    . The BTA and the Compact, while having some overlapping provisions,
    occupy two different fields. The BTA is a stand-alone tax act that governs the taxation of businesses. The
    Compact acts as an overlay to Michigan’s taxation system. It is specifically designed to leave the member
    states with “complete control over all legislation and administrative action affecting the rate of tax, the
    composition of the tax base ..., and the means and methods of determining tax liability and collecting any
    taxes determined to be due.” U.S. Steel 
    Corp., 434 U.S. at 457
    , 
    98 S. Ct. 799
    .
    67   Because we are able to harmonize the statutes and conclude that no repeal by implication occurred, we
    decline to discuss whether the Compact is binding and, thus, whether the Legislature even could repeal the
    Compact by implication. That inquiry involves constitutional issues, which we will not reach because they
    are unnecessary to resolve the case. See Booth Newspapers, Inc. v. Univ. of Mich. Bd. of Regents, 
    444 Mich. 211
    , 234, 
    507 N.W.2d 422
    (1993) (“In addition, there exists a general presumption by this Court that
    we will not reach constitutional issues that are not necessary to resolve a case.”).
    68   MCL 205.581, Art. III(1).
    69   MCL 205.581, Art. II(4). The Compact also defines “gross receipts tax” in Art. II(6) as follows:
    [A] tax, other than a sales tax, which is imposed on or measured by the gross volume of business, in
    terms of gross receipts or in other terms, and in the determination of which no deduction is allowed
    which would constitute the tax an income tax.
    70   We need not put a definitive label on the MGRT, a task with which commentators have struggled. See,
    e.g., McIntyre & Pomp, A Policy Analysis of Michigan’s Mislabeled Gross Receipts Tax, 53 Wayne L.Rev
    1283 (2007) (concluding that the MGRT is akin to a sales-subtraction value added tax but that it is not a
    transactional tax); Gandhi, Computing the Tax Base: The Michigan Business Tax, 53 Wayne L.Rev 1369
    (2007) (concluding that the MGRT is a reverse-build of Michigan’s now-repealed Single Business Tax);
    Grob & Roberts, The Michigan Business Tax Replaces the State’s Much–Vilified SBT, 17–Oct J Multistate
    Tax’n & Incentives 8 (2007) (concluding that the MGRT is something between a gross receipts tax and a
    gross margin tax). Instead, we are only tasked with determining whether the MGRT qualifies as an income
    tax under the Compact.
    71   MCL 208.1203(3).
    72   MCL 208.1111(1).
    73   
    Id. 74 MCL
    208.1203(3).
    75   MCL 208.1113(6)(a) through (c). “Inventory” is defined as “[t]he stock of goods held for resale in the regular
    course of trade of a retail or wholesale business” and “[f]inished goods, goods in process, and raw
    materials of a manufacturing business purchased from another person.” MCL 208.1111(4)(a) and (b).
    76   MCL 208.1113(6)(d) through (g).
    77   MCL 208.1203(1).
    78   MCL 205.581, Art. II(4).
    79   26 U.S.C. § 61.
    80   Black’s Law Dictionary (9th ed), p. 831.
    81   “Cost of goods sold” is determined by a taxpayer’s inventory. See 33A Am Jur 2d, Federal Taxation, §
    6500 (“A taxpayer must use inventories to determine the cost of goods sold if the production, purchase, or
    sale of merchandise is an income-producing factor.”). See also Thor Power Tool Co. v. Comm’r of Internal
    Revenue, 
    439 U.S. 522
    , 530 n. 9, 
    99 S. Ct. 773
    , 
    58 L. Ed. 2d 785
    (1979); Hygienic Prods. Co. v. Comm’r of
    Internal Revenue, 
    111 F.2d 330
    , 331 (C.A.6, 1940).
    82   While the Compact does not define the phrase “not specifically and directly related to particular
    transactions,” the use of the words “specifically,” “directly,” and “particular” connotes a close relation to an
    individual transaction. See Random House Webster’s College Dictionary (2001). That is, the tax cannot be
    a tax focusing on specific transactions, i.e., a transactional tax.
    83   See 26 U.S.C. §§ 167, 168.
    84   MCL 208.1111(4)(a), (b).
    85   Our holding is limited to the determination that the MGRT is included within the Compact definition of
    “income tax.” As noted earlier in note 70, we do not need to reach the issue whether the MGRT, generally,
    is an income tax.
    1    
    2011 PA 40
    .
    2    See also 1A Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction (7th ed.), Repeal and Reenactment, § 23:29.
    3    
    2011 PA 40
    .
    4    
    1969 PA 343
    .
    5   
    2011 PA 40
    .
    1   The lead opinion implies that if the Compact is found to irreconcilably conflict with the BTA, the Compact,
    as the earlier enacted statute, will necessarily have been repealed by implication. Our caselaw does not
    demand such a result. See Metro. Life Ins. Co. v. Stoll, 
    276 Mich. 637
    , 641, 
    268 N.W. 763
    (1936) (“It is the
    rule that where two laws in pari materia are in irreconcilable conflict, the one last enacted will control or be
    regarded as an exception to or qualification of the prior statute.”) In any event, regardless of whether the
    BTA impliedly repealed the Compact beginning January 1, 2008, the issue remains the same—whether the
    Compact election was available for tax years 2008 through 2010.
    2   Taxpayers may petition the Treasury to use an alternative apportionment method if the apportionment
    provisions of the BTA “do not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business activity in this state[.]”
    MCL 208.1309(1).
    3   I agree with the lead opinion that the tax bases at issue here are “income taxes” within the meaning of the
    Compact. MCL 205.581, Art. II(4).
    4   To the extent that IBM is separately arguing that the Compact is a binding contract among its member
    states and that unilateral amendment of the Compact offends the Contract Clause, that argument is
    discussed later in this opinion.
    The California First District Court of Appeal recently decided this very issue in Gillette Co. v. Franchise
    Tax Bd., 
    209 Cal. App. 4th 938
    , 
    147 Cal. Rptr. 3d 603
    (2012), review granted and opinion superseded sub
    nom Gillette v. Franchise Tax Bd., 
    151 Cal. Rptr. 3d 106
    , 
    291 P.3d 327
    (2013). The Gillette Court held that
    “under established compact law, the [Multistate Tax] Compact superseded subsequent conflicting state
    law ... [and] the federal and state Constitutions prohibit states from passing laws that impair the
    obligations of contracts.” 
    Gillette, 147 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 615
    . For the reasons stated herein, I believe that
    Gillette was wrongly decided.
    5   While the Treasury has not made the argument in its brief on appeal, it is not entirely clear to me why IBM
    has standing to enforce the Compact as a contract, given that IBM is neither a party to the Compact nor is
    it clear that they were intended as a third-party beneficiary. See Schmalfeldt v. North Pointe Ins. Co., 
    469 Mich. 422
    , 
    670 N.W.2d 651
    (2003); MCL 600.1405. In any event, because I conclude that no such
    contractual relationship was formed, I find it unnecessary to address this issue sua sponte.
    6   Michigan law recognizes a similar principle. See Klapp v. United Ins. Group Agency, Inc., 
    468 Mich. 459
    ,
    478–479, 
    663 N.W.2d 447
    (2003).
    7   It bears emphasizing that Compact members have not only refrained from bringing legal action against one
    another for deviating from Articles III and IV, they have endorsed the Commissioner’s interpretation of the
    Compact: in the Gillette litigation, all of the member states jointly filed an amicus brief urging the Supreme
    Court of California to reject the lower court’s construction of the Compact as a binding contract.
    8   In arguing that unilateral amendment of the Compact would offend the state and federal constitutions, IBM
    cites Green, 
    21 U.S. 1
    , in which the Supreme Court analyzed an interstate compact under the Contract
    Clause, U.S. Const., art. I, § 10, cl. 1. While I conclude that the Compact did not create a contractual
    obligation that precluded Michigan from unilaterally amending its election provision, it is important to note
    that the Supreme Court has since retreated from the “any deviation” standard it applied in Green. See US
    Trust Co. v. New Jersey, 
    431 U.S. 1
    , 21, 
    97 S. Ct. 1505
    , 
    52 L. Ed. 2d 92
    (1977). Because IBM does not
    engage these post-Green developments, it has failed to explain how a constitutional violation arises under
    a modern analysis.
    Tab 8
    H. Alan Rosenberg v. Douglas J.
    Macginnittie, Commissioner, Georgia
    Department of Revenue, No. 1414626
    (GA Nov. 25, 2014)
    FILED
    BEFORE THE GEORGIA TAX TRIBUNAL                       GA. TAX TRIBUNAl.
    STATE OF GEORGIA
    NOV 25 2014
    H. ALAN ROSENBERG,
    -$~
    Yvonne Bouras
    Petitioner,                                               Tax Tribunal Administrator
    v.                                                  TAX TRIBUNAL DOCKET
    NO.: TAX-IIT-1414626
    DOUGLAS J. MACGINNITTIE,
    Commissioner, Georgia Department of
    Revenue,
    Respondent.
    DECISION
    2014-15 Ga. Tax Tribunal, November 25,2014
    I.      INTRODUCTION
    This case presents the important question of whether a Georgia taxpayer who receives
    pass-through income from an entity that was taxed in Texas under Sections 171.0001 .. 171.909 of
    the Texas Tax Code (the "Texas Franchise Tax") is entitled to utilize the relief provisions of
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) in computing that taxpayer's taxable Georgia income because the
    Texas Franchise Tax is a tax "on or measured by income."
    As discussed below, the plain language of the statute, the policy underlying its enactment,
    the applicable rules of statutory construction, and the substantial weight of judicial,
    administrative and financial authority both in Georgia and other jurisdictions lead ineluctably to
    the conclusion that the Texas Franchise Tax is indeed a tax "measured on or with respect to
    income" for purposes of O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C).            Petitioner H. Alan Rosenberg
    ("Petitioner" or the "Taxpayer") is therefore entitled to the benefit of these relief provisions.
    1079
    Accordingly, the Petitioner's Motion for Summary Judgment on this issue in this case ts
    GRANTED and Respondent's Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED.
    II.     FINDINGS OF FACT
    The parties have entered into a stipulation of facts pursuant to Ga. Comp. R. & Regs.
    616-1-3-.18 as adopted in Standing Order dated June 1, 2013, and the facts are not in dispute.
    A.     Petitioner's ownership interests in multi-tiered partnerships.
    Petitioner, H. Alan Rosenberg, was a resident of the state of Georgia during 2008 and
    filed a Georgia income tax return for that tax year. During 2008, Petitioner was the owner of
    membership interests in NDC Leasing, LLC ("NDC Leasing"), a limited liability company
    organized under Georgia law that is treated as a partnership for federal and Georgia income tax
    purposes.   During 2008, Petitioner was also the owner of membership interests in National
    Distributing Company, Inc. ("National Distributing"), a corporation organized under Georgia
    law that is treated as an S Corporation for federal and Georgia income tax purposes.
    NDC Leasing and National Distributing, through their direct and indirect ownership of
    various partnerships, LLCs, and other pass-through entities, are wholesalers and distributors of
    alcoholic beverages. As a requirement of conducting that business, they (or the entities in which
    they hold interests) possess licenses to distribute and/or sell alcohol in a number of states,
    including but not limited to Georgia and Texas.
    During 2008, in addition to other sources of income, Petitioner reported pass-through
    income as a result of his interests in NDC Leasing and National Distributing.
    During 2008, NDC Leasing and National Distributing owned interests in NDC Partners,
    LLC ("NDC Partners"). During 2008, NDC Partners was in turn the owner of membership
    interests in Republic National Distributing Company, LLC ("RNDC"), which operated in Texas
    2
    1080
    during 2008.      RNDC was the reporting entity on a 2009 Texas Franchise Tax Report that
    included RNDC and a number of its affiliates.                 The accounting period for the 2009 Texas
    Franchise Tax Report filed by RNDC was based on the 2008 calendar year.
    In determining its "taxable margin" for purposes of computing the Texas Franchise Tax,
    RNDC used the "cost of goods sold" deduction provided for in Tex. Tax Code Ann.
    § 171.101(a)(l)(B)(ii)(a).
    B.      Petitioner's original Georgia individual income tax return.
    On his 'original 2008 Georgia income tax return, in addition to other sources of income,
    Petitioner included his distributive shares of the income of NDC Leasing and National
    Distributing. Therefore, through his indirect interests in RNDC, Petitioner reported an amount to
    Georgia (greater than one dollar) during 2008 that was subject to Texas Franchise Tax. 1
    With the distributive shares of income from NDC Leasing and National Distributing
    included in his Georgia income, Petitioner's originally-reported 2008 Georgia taxable net income
    was $1,317,585, and Petitioner reported total Georgia income tax liability of $78,795 for tax year
    2008.
    On his original 2008 income tax return, Petitioner did not make any adjustments related
    to the payment of Texas Franchise Tax by RNDC.
    Petitioner did not file a tax return or pay personal income taxes to Texas during 2008 or
    any other year.
    1
    The parties have stipulated that at least one dollar of income from RNDC indirectly flowed through to Petitioner
    through his direct interests in National Distributing and NDC Leasing. The parties have so far been unable to agree
    on the exact amount due to the complex nature of the tiered partnership ownership structure and the resulting
    complex calculations. It is not necessary to resolve the amount of the refund that is due in order to resolve whether
    the Taxpayer is entitled to summary judgment on the legal issue in this case, which is the subject of this motion.
    3
    1081
    C.      Petitioner's request for ruling and the Department of Revenue's response.
    On May 1, 2012, NDC Leasing and National Distributing filed a request with the Georgia
    Department of Revenue (the "Department") for a letter ruling concerning the application of
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(1) to the Texas Franchise Tax. In a letter dated July 13, 2012, the
    Department denied the ruling request, stating in part that because Georgia does not consider the
    Texas Franchise Tax to be an "income tax," individuals cannot subtract pass-through amounts
    that were taxed by Texas.
    D.      Petitioner's amended 2008 Georgia income tax return (claim for refund).
    In an amended return dated September 12, 2012, Petitioner changed his Georgia taxable
    net income from $1,317,585 to $857,302 and claimed a total tax refund in the amount of
    $41,293, plus statutory interest. The adjustments that Petitioner claimed pursuant to O.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27(d)(1) yielded a refund claim in the amount of$27,617 for tax year 2008. A portion of
    the adjustments under O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(1) derived from the franchise taxes paid by RNDC
    to Texas. The remainder of those adjustments derived from taxes paid by RNDC to the District
    of Columbia.
    The income tax credits that Petitioner claimed on his amended 2008 Georgia income tax
    return yielded a refund claim in the amount of $13,676 for tax year 2008. Those income tax
    credits stemmed from an amended Georgia income tax return filed by National Distributing to
    claim Georgia jobs tax credits that National Distributing did not claim on its original Georgia
    income tax return for the 2008 year?
    In a letter dated September 12, 2013, the Department denied Petitioner's claim for refund.
    2
    The Petitioner has not sought summary judgment with respect to either (i) the District of Columbia adjustment or
    (ii) the Georgia income tax credits that were claimed. These amounts are still at issue and the parties continue to
    negotiate as to possible resolution of these issues.
    4
    1082
    E.     Petitioner's case in the Tax Tribunal.
    In response to the bepartment's denial of Petitioner's claim for refund, Petitioner filed
    his Petition in this matter with the Tribunal on October 17, 2013. Under the Amended Consent
    Scheduling Order entered in this case, Petitioner filed Petitioner's Motion for Summary
    Judgment, ("Petitioner's Summary Judgment Motion"), Petitioner's Statement of Theory of
    Relief and Joint Stipulation of Facts ("Joint Stipulation"), Brief in Support of Motion for
    Summary Judgment ("Petitioner's Summary Judgment Brief'), and Petitioner's Motion for Oral
    Argument on June 27, 2104, moving for partial summary judgment on the issue for decision now
    before us.   In response, Respondent filed Respondent's Motion for Summary Judgment
    ("Respondent's Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment"), Brief in Support of Respondent's
    Cross-Motion    for   Summary       Judgment   ("Respondent's    Summary      Judgment   Brief'),
    Respondent's Theory of Recovery, and Respondent's Motion for Oral Argument. In response,
    Petitioner filed his Reply Brief ("Petitioner's Reply Brief') on August 15, 2014.
    Oral argument on Petitioner's Motion for Summary Judgment and Respondent's Cross-
    Motion for Summary Judgment was held on October 3, 2014. In response to requests from the
    Tribunal, Petitioner submitted supplemental information electronically on October 16, 2014.
    III.      CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
    A.     Jurisdiction and venue.
    The parties have stipulated that the Tribunal has jurisdiction over this appeal from the
    Department's denial of a claim for refund of income taxes pursuant to O.C.G.A. §§ 48-2-35(a)(4)
    and 50-13A-9(a) and that venue is proper before the Tribunal pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 48-2-
    35(a)(4).
    5
    1083
    B.     Standard of review on summarv judgment.
    The standards governing summary judgment are well established. To prevail at summary
    judgment under O.C.G.A. § 9-11-56, the moving party must demonstrate that there is no genuine
    issue of material fact as to each element of its claim and that the undisputed facts, viewed in the
    light most favorable to the nonmoving party, warrant judgment as a matter of law. O.C.G.A.
    § 9-11-56(c); Lau's Corp .. Inc. v. Haskins, 
    261 Ga. 491
    (1991). Proceedings before the Tribunal
    are de novo in nature, and the evidence on the issues in a hearing before the Tribunal is not
    limited to the evidence presented to or considered by the Department prior to the Department's
    decision. O.C.G.A. § 50-BA-14; see Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 616-1-3-.11 as adopted in Standing
    Order dated June 1, 2013.
    C.     Flow-through entity taxation.
    In approaching the issue in this case it is important to understand the context in which the
    Georgia General Assembly enacted the legislation which is at issue. This case must therefore be
    understood in the broader context oftaxation of flow-through entities in a multi-state context.
    The taxation of partnerships, S corporations and other forms of "flow-through" entities
    on a multistate basis has long been a complex and unsettled area. See,        ~.    American Bar
    Association Subcommittee on State Taxation of S Corporations, Report of the Subcommittee on
    State Taxation of S Corporations: Model S Corporation Income Tax Act and Commentary, 42
    The Tax Lawyer 1001 (1989); Multistate Tax Commission, The Multistate Tax Commission
    "Working Draft" of a Proposed Model Rule for a Partnership Composite Tax Return Applicable
    to Multijurisdictional Partnerships, 3 State Tax Notes 810 (1992); Carolyn Joy Lee, Bruce P. Ely
    and Dennis Rimkunas, State Taxation of Partnerships and LLCs and their Members. Journal of
    Multistate Taxation and Incentives, Volume 19, Number 10, February 2010. The issues that
    6
    1084
    arise when multiple states seek to tax the income of business enterprises conducted through flow-
    through entities are particularly complex. 3
    A flow-through entity is best understood as an entity that is not taxed as a corporation.
    Under Subchapter C of the Internal Revenue Code, an entity taxed as a corporation (a "C
    corporation") is taxed on its income as a separate entity, separate and distinct from its owners. It
    is subject to double taxation first on its earnings at the entity level (currently taxed up to a
    maximum rate of 39.6 percent for federal income tax purposes plus applicable state income
    taxes) and then a second time again to the shareholders (currently up to a maximum rate of 39.6
    percent for individuals plus applicable state income taxes) when distributed to them.                             See
    generally, Corporations, Internal Revenue Service, http://www.irs.gov/Businesses/Small-
    Businesses-&-Self-Employed/Corporations.
    By contrast with the C corporation double-tax paradigm, a flow-through entity computes
    taxable income derived by the enterprise at the entity level, but does not itself pay tax on that
    mcome.      Rather, it is the entity's owners who pay the tax. As a consequence, such earnings are
    taxed only once- to the flow-through entity's owners.
    The most frequently seen forms of flow-through entities are entities taxed as partnerships,
    corporations which have elected S corporation status, and single member LLCs which are
    3
    Over the last twenty-five years, these issues have assumed ever greater importance for taxpayers and state tax
    authorities as a result of the proliferation of additional forms of flow-through entities, including Subchapter "S"
    corporations, limited liability companies ("LLCs"), limited liability partnerships ("LLPs"), limited liability limited
    partnerships ("LLLPs"), qualified Subchapter S subsidiaries ("QSSSs"), single member limited liability companies
    that are disregarded for income tax purposes ("SMLLCs") and, most recently, so called "series" limited liability
    companies. Indeed, since the adoption ofthe federal "check-the-box regulations" and the rise of the limited liability
    company as a preferred form of business entity, the number of business enterprises organized as flow-through
    entities for tax purposes continues to increase while the number of entities taxed as traditional "C" corporations is
    declining steadily. Looking at the federal statistics in this area is enlightening. See Staff of the Joint Committee on
    Taxation, Selected Issues Relating to Choice of Business Entity (July 27, 2012),
    https://www.jct.gov/publications.html?func=startdown&id=4478.
    7
    1085
    disregarded for federal income tax purposes. 4                 Such entities are all generally referred to as
    "flow-through" entities for federal income tax purposes although each has a distinct tax regime. 5
    D.       Flow-through tax treatment for state tax purposes.
    The analysis becomes more complex as we move to the taxation of such entities by the
    several states.
    It is quite possible and quite common for two different states to tax the same income. As
    the Maryland Court of Appeals recently noted in Maryland State Comptroller of the Treasury v.
    Wynne, et ux., 
    431 Md. 147
    , 155 (2013), cert. granted, 
    134 S. Ct. 2660
    (2014),
    A state may tax the income of its residents, regardless of where that income is earned. A
    state may also tax a nonresident on income earned within the state. Both of these
    propositions are consistent with the Due Process Cause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
    Oklahoma Tax Comm's v Chickasaw Nation, 515 U.S. 450,462-63 & n.ll (1995); New
    York ex rel. Cohn v. Graves, 300 U.S, 312-13 (1937). However, they raise the possibility
    of what might be termed "double taxation" when both the state of the taxpayer's
    residence and the state where the income was generated tax the same income.
    To ameliorate this harsh result, many states allow credits or adjustments to the
    computation of their income to ameliorate the resulting double-tax.                        As to individuals, for
    4
    Under the check-the-box regulations, a non-corporate entity with at least two members is classified as a
    partnership unless it elects to be taxed as an association taxable as a corporation. Treas. Reg. §§ 301.7701-2(c)(l),
    301.7701-3(a), 301.7701-3(b)(l)(i). An S corporation is a domestic corporation which satisfies the requirements of
    I.R.C. § 1361 and as to which its shareholders have made the election required by I.R.C. § 1362 on Form 2553.
    Finally, under the check-the-box regulations, a single member non-corporate business entity (most frequently a
    limited liability company) is disregarded for tax purposes and treated as an extension of its owner for all income tax
    purposes unless the entity elects to be classified as an association. Treas. Reg. §§ 301.7701-2(c)(2), 301.7701-3(a),
    301.7701-3(b)(l)(ii).
    5
    Entities taxed as partnerships are taxed under Subchapter K of the Internal Revenue Code while Subchapter S
    corporations are cleverly so named because they are taxed under Subchapter S. It is often said that partnerships and
    S corporations are taxed alike, but, like all generalizations, this one is misleading as there are extremely significant
    differences in the tax rules that apply to these two types of entities. For income tax purposes, disregarded entities
    are just that (except for employment tax purposes), but they are generally not disregarded for non-income tax
    purposes, e.g., sales and use taxes.
    There are a number of other more exotic forms of flow-through or quasi flow-through entities including Regulated
    Investment Companies ("RICs"), I.R.C. § 852, Real Estate Investment Trusts ("REITs"), I.R.C. §857, Real Estate
    Mortgage Investment Conduits ("REMICs"), I.R.C. § 860A, Qualified REIT Subsidiaries ("QRSs"), I.R.C. § 856,
    Qualified Subchapter S Subsidiaries, ("QSSSs"), I.R.C. § 1361(b)(3)(A), and so called "Series LLCs" (Prop. Treas.
    Reg.§§ 301.6011-6,301.6071-2, 301.7701-1(a)(S)). Each ofthese has its own separate tax regime and none is at
    issue in this case.
    8
    1086
    instance, Georgia provides a credit for taxes paid m foreign states on the same income.
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-28. 6
    So for state income tax purposes, flow-through tax treatment works well when the entity,
    its owners, and all income earned are located within one taxing jurisdiction.                                 In such
    circumstances, there is only one sovereign and only one tax imposed. But when a flow-through
    entity has business activities, income and owners located in multiple states, the complexities of
    compliance and the potential for owners of the entity to pay tax on the same income in multiple
    jurisdictions mounts quickly.           O.C.G.A § 48-7-30(b); Form IT-711, Instructions to Georgia
    Partnership Tax Return.
    A related, but slightly different issue arises when an entity that is recognized as a flow-
    through in one state engages in business in a state which does not recognize flow-through
    treatment.     While it is true that as a broad working generalization and subject to various
    exceptions, most states follow the federal classification of an entity for tax purposes, 7 some states
    treat flow-through entities as separate taxpayers and impose various entity level taxes on such
    flow-through entities. 8       These include Texas and Tennessee (neither of which imposes an
    individual income tax) as well as a number of other jurisdictions. See Ely Chart.
    6
    The degree to which one state is constitutionally required to give credits for taxes on multistate income has long
    been a subject of scholarly debate. The decision of the Maryland Court of Appeals on this issue in ~ has
    generated great interest and is currently pending before the United States Supreme Court on writ of certiorari. See
    Comptroller of the Treasury of Maryland v. Wynne, 
    134 S. Ct. 2600
    (2014).
    7
    Thus, for example, if an entity organized as a limited liability company in Georgia is taxed as a partnership for
    federal income tax purposes, Georgia will likewise tax the entity as a partnership for Georgia income tax purposes.
    O.C.G.A § 14-11-1104.
    8
    In the area of state taxation of limited liability companies and limited liability partnerships, for many years, Bruce
    Ely and his cohorts have performed an invaluable service by annually publishing updated charts summarizing the
    State Tax Treatment of Limited Liability Companies and Limited Liability Partnerships. These charts summarize
    federaVstate conformity/non-conformity on tax treatment of LLCs and LLPs as well as identifying other state taxes
    and fees that may apply. ~Bruce P. Ely, Christopher R. Grissom, William T. Thistle II, and J. Sims Rhyne, An
    Update of the State Tax Treatment of LLCs and LLPs. State Tax Notes (February 3, 2014), cited as "Ely Chart"
    elsewhere in this decision.
    9
    1087
    ---   ---------
    E.      The adjustment to taxable income provided under O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d}(ll(C).
    The Georgia General Assembly enacted O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) to address just this
    latter issue.   The language of this adjustment provision, which is at the core of this case,
    provides:
    A Georgia individual resident who is a partner in a partnership, who is a member
    of a limited liability company taxed as a partnership, or who is a single member of
    a limited liability company which is disregarded for federal income tax purposes
    may make an adjustment to federal adjusted gross income for the entity's income
    taxed in another state which imposes on the entity a tax on or measured by
    income.
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) (emphasis added).
    Under this relief provision, Georgia taxpayers will not be subjected to double taxation
    with respect to income from flow-through entities where such income is subject to taxation in
    another state because that state chooses to tax such income directly at the entity, rather than the
    owner, level. This provision permits the affected Georgia taxpayer to make an "adjustment" to
    the taxpayer's Federal Adjusted Gross Income in computing the taxpayer's Georgia taxable
    income for income flowing out to that taxpayer from a flow through entity that has also been
    subject to tax "on or measured by income" in another state. 9
    Many states, such as Georgia, impose additional requirements to recognize flow-through treatment for S
    corporations. ~ O.C.G.A § 48-27(d)(2).
    9
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) utilizes an "adjustment" mechanism to avoid double taxation at the state level on the
    same income. This is the same approach adopted by the legislature in O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(B) with respect to
    S corporations which are recognized as S corporations for tax purposes in Georgia but not in another state.
    This adjustment approach is not the only possible solution to address the issue of taxation of the same income by
    two states, however. Alternatively, the legislature could have adopted a credit mechanism similar to that contained
    at O.C.G.A. § 48-7-28, which is how the issue is addressed for individuals. In the analogous area of double taxation
    of the same income by both the US and a foreign nation, the Internal Revenue Code adopts the "credit" approach to
    addressing the issue in the Foreign Tax Credit provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, I.R.C. §§ 901-906,
    http://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc856.html.
    Each system ("adjustment" vs. "credit") has weaknesses, strengths and computational complexities arising from
    attempting to harmonize what, are by definition, different tax systems.
    10
    1088
    Respondent has acknowledged that the provisions of O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) apply
    to Georgia taxpayers who own interests in entities which conduct business in Tennessee through
    flow-through entities because Tennessee imposes its excise tax on flow-through entities that
    provide limited liability, such as LLCs, LLPs, and S corporations, at the rate of 6.5 percent of net
    income. Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2007(a). The question presented in this case is whether the
    Texas Franchise Tax is a tax "on or measured by income" that should receive similar treatment.
    The parties have stipulated that Petitioner was a resident of the state of Georgia during
    2008 and filed a Georgia income tax return for that tax year. On that 2008 return, in addition to
    other sources of income, Petitioner reported pass-through income as a result of his interests in
    NDC Leasing and National Distributing. In turn, NDC Leasing and National Distributing (an
    LLC and an S corporation, respectively) owned indirect membership interests in RNDC, an LLC
    that operated in Texas during 2008 and paid Texas Franchise Taxes for that year. Therefore, the
    parties agree in this case that, through his indirect interests in RNDC, Petitioner reported an
    amount to Georgia (greater than one dollar) during 2008 that was subject to Texas Franchise
    Tax.
    Because it is undisputed Petitioner received pass-through income from an entity that was
    taxed in Texas, if the Texas Franchise Tax on those entities is a tax "on or measured by income"
    the Petitioner in entitled to an adjustment from his federal adjusted gross income under O.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C). The Petitioner's position is that the Texas Franchise Tax is indeed such a
    tax.
    Respondent's position is that the Texas Franchise Tax is not a "tax on or measured by
    income." Respondent argues that the Texas Franchise Tax is instead a privilege tax or a gross-
    receipts tax and operates in a fundamentally different manner than an income tax. Because under
    11
    1089
    Respondent's analysis, the Texas Franchise Tax is not an income tax or measured by income as
    determined by long accepted principles, it cannot serve as a basis for an adjustment pursuant to
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l).
    To resolve this question, it is first necessary to define the meaning of "income" for
    purposes ofthe phrase "on or measured by income" contained in O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C).
    F.     Georgia law imposes income tax on an individual's "Georgia taxable net income.:'
    which is an individual's "federal adjusted gross income" as adjusted.
    In defining an individual's "Georgia taxable net income," O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(a)
    provides that it consists of the individual's "federal adjusted gross income, as defined in the
    United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986," subject to a number of prescribed adjustments.
    Those adjustments include, inter alia, a deduction for either the individual's itemized
    nonbusiness deductions or a standard deduction; an exclusion for certain amounts of retirement
    income; and a number of other specified deductions and additions involving specified types of
    income (e.g., deductions for certain military or disability income). See generally O.C.G.A. § 48-
    7-27(a)-(b).
    The adjustment provision at issue in this case-O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C)-cannot be
    interpreted in isolation, but instead must be considered in connection with all of the related
    adjustment provisions and related terms of art that appear throughout the Georgia Tax Code (and
    especially in Code Sections 48-7-21 and 48-7-27).      See,~.   Tew v. State, 
    320 Ga. App. 127
    , 130
    (2013) ("[A] statute must be construed in relation to other statutes of which it is a part, and all
    statutes relating to the same subject matter, briefly called statutes in pari materia ....").
    It is crucial that, like O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C), other statutory adjustment provisions
    located throughout O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27 also include numerous explicit references to terms of
    12
    1090
    art-including "gross income," "taxable income," "net income," and "income taxes." 10
    Similarly, the statute which provides for the computation of a corporation's "Georgia taxable net
    income" also includes a number of adjustment provisions which use terms of art involving the
    word "income." See generally O.C.G.A. § 48-7-21.U
    10
    These provisions include, but are not limited to:
    • A provision stating, in describing the amount of retirement income that an individual may exclude, that
    "[e]arned income in excess of $4,000.00, including but not limited to net business income earned by an
    individual from any trade or business ... shall not be regarded as retirement income." (O.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    27(a)(5)(E)) (emphasis added);
    • A provision stating: "The commissioner shall by regulation provide that ... penalty and interest may be
    waived or reduced for any taxpayer whose estimated tax payments and tax withholdings are less than 70
    percent of such taxpayer's Georgia income tax liability if the commissioner determines that such
    underpayment or deficiency is due to an increase in net taxable income attributable directly to amendments
    to this paragraph .... " (O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(a)(5)(G)) (emphasis added);
    • A provision stating that "[s]ocial security benefits and tier 1 railroad retirement benefits, to the extent
    included infederal taxable income," may be subtracted. (O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(a)(7)) (emphasis added);
    • A provision stating that there shall be added to "taxable income" any "[d]ividend or interest income, to the
    extent that the dividend or interest income is not included in gross income for federal income tax
    purposes," on obligations of any state except Georgia or its subdivisions. (O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(b)(l)(A))
    (emphasis added);
    • A provision stating that there shall be added to "taxable income" any "[i]nterest or dividends on obligations
    of the United States" or its subdivisions "which by the laws of the United States are exempt from federal
    income taxes but not from state income taxes." (O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(b)(l)(B)) (emphasis added); and
    • A provision stating that "[t]here shall be added to taxable income any income taxes imposed by any tax
    jurisdiction except the State of Georgia to the extent deducted in determining federal taxable income."
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(b)(3) (emphasis added).
    11
    These provisions include, but are not limited to:
    • A provision stating, "When interest income is derived from obligations of any state or political subdivision
    except this state and political subdivisions of this state, the interest income shall be added to taxable income
    to the extent that the interest income is not included in gross income for federal income tax purposes."
    (O.C.G.A. § 48-7-21(b)(l)(A)) (emphasis added);
    • "There shall be subtracted from taxable income interest or dividends on obligations of the United States ...
    to the extent such interest or dividends are includable in gross income for federal income tax purposes but
    exempt from state income taxes under the laws of the United States." (O.C.G.A. § 48-7-2l(b)(l)(B))
    (emphasis added);
    • "There shall be added to taxable income any taxes on, or measured by, net income or net profits paid or
    accrued within the taxable year imposed by the authority of the United States or ... by any state except the
    State of Georgia . . . to the extent such taxes are deducted in determining federal taxable income."
    (O.C.G.A. § 48-7-21(b)(2)) (emphasis added); and
    • "No portion of any deductions or losses which occurred in a year in which the taxpayer was not subject to
    taxation in this state including, but not limited to, net operating losses may be deducted in any tax year.
    When the federal adjusted gross income or net income of a corporation includes such deductions or losses,
    an adjustment deleting them shall be made under rules established by the commissioner." O.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    2l(b)(3) (emphasis added).
    13
    1091
    In contrast to the other adjustment provisions in O.C.G.A. §§ 48-7-21 and 48-7-27 which
    turn on the application of terms of art including "net income," "taxable income," "federal taxable
    income," or "income taxes," O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(1)(C) provides an adjustment to an
    individual whenever the individual receives pass-through income that has been subject to tax "on
    or measured by income." Therefore, to interpret the "on or measured by income" language that
    is at the core of this case, it is essential not only to look to the statutory and historical definitions
    of "income," but also to interpret the phrase in harmony with the related terms of art that appear
    throughout the Georgia Tax Code.
    As the Georgia Court of Appeals explained in the context of interpreting the meaning of
    the phrase "income tax" in Chilivis v. Int'l Bus. Mach. Corp., 
    142 Ga. App. 160
    , 161 (1977), the
    state's General Assembly "must be assumed to have understood the technical meaning" of those
    numerous terms of art when it enacted the various adjustment provisions. So one must approach
    the statute mindful of both this rule and the rule that a statute must be construed "in pari
    materia" to harmonize all of its parts, "whenever possible."
    G.      The Texas Franchise Tax as a tax "on or measured by income."
    1. "Income" for tax purposes means all sources of gain, generally without regard to
    expenses or other deductions.
    Whether the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax "on or measured by income" for purposes of
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) depends on the fundamental question of what "income" means
    under the statute. Neither the Georgia Tax Code nor the Internal Revenue Code specifically
    defines the term "income." Courts and scholars have long struggled to define the term. For
    example, writing in the Connecticut Law Review regarding the proper income tax treatment of
    gifts, one scholar wrote:
    14
    1092
    Determining the constitutional meaning of income is difficult since the
    [Sixteenth] Amendment nowhere defines the term. The current debate on the
    proper method of constitutional analysis has not focused on the Sixteenth
    Amendment, nor has the Supreme Court examined the issue recently. The Court's
    earlier pronouncements, which began in the 1920's, interpreted the term very
    strictly, limiting it to its plain or ordinary meaning, whatever that may be. 12
    One of the seminal authorities on this issue is the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in
    Eisner v. Macomber, 
    252 U.S. 189
    (1920). Seeking to define "income" for purposes of the
    Sixteenth Amendment, after examining dictionary definitions and the intent of the amendment,
    the Court concluded: "Income may be defined as the gain derived from capital, from labor, or
    from both combined . . . ." 
    Id. at 207
    (quoting Doyle v. Mitchell Bros., 24 
    7 U.S. 179
    , 18 5
    (1918)). The Court added that the gain must be realized (i.e., "separated" from the capital), and
    recited the Sixteenth Amendment's language that such realized gain is income, "from whatever
    source [it is] derived." 
    Id. at 207
    . Notably, the U.S. Supreme Court in Macomber did not define
    "income" with reference to any expenses or deductions.
    While Georgia courts have rarely considered the meaning of the term "income," the
    Georgia Court of Appeals used a definition nearly identical to the broad definition contained in
    Macomber in its 1936 decision in Brandon v. State Revenue Comm'n, 
    186 S.E. 872
    (Ga. Ct.
    App. 1936). There, the court examined the nature of an income tax and defined "income" as
    follows:
    Whatever may be the strict or technical meaning of income, for tax purposes the
    term means an actual gain or an actual increase in wealth, and does not include a
    mere unrealized increase in value. Accordingly, as a subject of taxation, income
    is the gain derived from capital or labor, or both combined ....
    
    Id. at 873;
    see also City of Fitzgerald v. Newcomer, 
    162 Ga. App. 646
    , 648 (1982) (noting as
    part of interpreting a contract: "It is undoubtedly true that 'profits' and 'income' are sometimes
    \
    12
    Marjorie Kornhauser, The Constitutional Meaning of Income and the Income Taxation of Gifts, 
    25 Conn. L
    . Rev.
    1, 2 (1992).
    15
    1093
    used as synonymous terms; but, strictly speaking, 'income' means that which comes in or is
    received from any business, or investment of capital, without reference to the outgoing
    expenditures . ...")(emphasis added).
    More recently, the New Jersey Supreme Court also relied on Macomber to determine
    whether a federal "windfall profits tax" was a tax measured by income for purposes of that
    state's adjustment provision. See Amerada Hess Corp. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 
    526 A.2d 1029
    ,
    1042-44 (N.J. 1987), affd., 
    490 U.S. 66
    (1989). That court concluded that the federal tax was a
    tax on income:
    Under ordinary dictionary definitions of "income," i.e., all that comes in without
    regard to expenditures, the windfall profit clearly constitutes "income." The
    windfall profit also meets a more restrictive definition, i.e., gross receipts less
    costs of goods sold.
    ld. at 1042 (emphasis added). Black's Law Dictionary similarly defines the term "income" to
    mean "the money or other form of payments that one receives, usually periodically, from
    employment, business, investments, royalties, gifts, and the like"-again making no reference to
    any expenses or deductions. Black's Law Dictionary (9th ed. 2009).
    Based on the consistent interpretations of the term "income" over the years in Macomber,
    Brandon, and Amerada Hess, and the similar definition in Black's Law Dictionary, for tax
    purposes, the term "income" means all amounts that come in, without regard to expenditures.
    While the Internal Revenue Code does not itself define the term "income," it equates
    "income" with "gross income" by defining "gross income" to mean ''all income from whatever
    source derived, including (but not limited to) the following items:
    (1)   compensation for services ... ;
    (2)   gross income derived from business;
    (3)   gains derived from dealings in property;
    16
    1094
    (4)      interest;
    (5)     rents;
    (6)      royalties;
    (7)      dividends;
    (8)      alimony and separate maintenance payments;
    (9)     annuities;
    (1 0)   income from life insurance ... contracts;
    (11)    pensions;
    (12)    income from discharge of indebtedness;
    (13)    distributive share of partnership income;
    ( 14)   income in respect of a decedent; and
    (15)    income from an interest in an estate or trust."
    26 U.S.C. § 61(a) (emphasis added). Under Georgia law, the Internal Revenue Code's definition
    of "gross income"-as an aggregate of "all income" with no reference to any deduction for
    expenditures-is adopted for Georgia tax purposes. See Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 560-7-6-.02(1)
    ("Any term used in these Regulations has the same meaning as when used in a comparable
    context in the laws of the United States or Regulations of the Internal Revenue Service, relating
    to Federal income taxes, unless a different meaning is clearly required or the term is specifically
    defined in the Georgia Code or Regulations.").
    While "income" is generally used interchangeably with "gross income" to refer to all
    sources of gain or receipts without regard for expenses or other deductions, in specific contexts
    the term "gross income" has been given a more limited definition which requires a deduction for
    the "cost of goods sold."          Most notably, Treasury Regulation 1.61-3(a) states that for a
    17
    1095
    manufacturing, merchandising, or mining business, 13 "gross income" means "the total sales, less
    the cost of goods sold, plus any income from investments and from incidental or outside
    operations or sources."           This IRS regulation has been applied on multiple occasions in
    determining the "gross income" of businesses governed by that provision.                 See,~.    Sullenger v.
    C.I.R .. 
    11 T.C. 1076
    , 1077 (1948) ("[T]he Commissioner has always recognized, as indeed he
    must to stay within the Constitution, that the cost of goods sold must be deducted from gross
    receipts in order to arrive at gross income."); Kazhukauskas v. C.I.R., T.C. Memo. 2012-191,
    
    2012 WL 2848694
    , at *9 (2012) ("Thus, cost of goods sold is an offset to gross receipts for
    purposes of computing gross income, and deductions are subtracted from gross income in
    arriving at taxable income."); Beamer v. Franchise Tax Bd., 
    563 P.2d 238
    (Cal. 1977) (holding
    that Texas gas and oil production taxes were not taxes on "gross income" because they did not
    include any deduction for expenses). And the Amerada Hess case specifically noted both an
    "ordinary dictionary" definition of income and the "more restrictive" definition of income --"i.e.,
    gross receipts less costs of goods sold." Amerada 
    Hess, 526 A.2d at 1042
    .
    So there is extensive support for the proposition that the term "gross income" is
    synonymous with "income" and includes all sources of income without regard for expenses or
    other deductions. There is also authority that "gross income" necessarily includes a deduction
    for the "cost of goods sold."              Indeed, the Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission in Delco
    Electronics noted the split of authority on just this issue.                   It did not resolve the question,
    however, because it was able to reach a decision on the deductibility of the tax in that case (the
    Michigan Single Business Tax) without reaching a conclusion as to the scope of the phrase •
    "gross income." Delco Elecs. Corp. v. Wis. Dep't of Revenue, No. 95-I-112, 
    1997 WL 331967
    ,
    13
    RNDC operates a merchandising business in which it distributes alcohol.
    18
    1096
    at *10 (Wis. Tax. App. Comm'n, June 16, 1997) ("We do not believe it is necessary here to
    define the outer limits of 'gross income,' because the issue can be resolved on other grounds.").
    As in Delco Electronics, it is not necessary to determine the precise meaning of "income"
    in order to reach a resolution in this case. It will be seen that even under the narrower definition
    of "income" (providing for the cost of goods sold deduction) the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax
    "on or measured by income." That is to say, the Texas Franchise Tax is "on or measured by
    income" under either the broad definitions of "income" and "gross income" discussed above or
    the more restrictive definition of "gross income" found in the Treasury Regulation and other
    authorities.
    2. The Texas Franchise Tax is based on the same items of "income" used in
    computing the Federal income tax base.
    During 2008, Texas imposed its entity-level franchise tax on the "taxable margin" of each
    "taxable entity" doing business in Texas. Tex. Tax Code Ann. §§ 171.001(a), 171.002(a)-(b).
    The term "taxable entity" was defined to include, inter alia, "a partnership, limited liability
    partnership, corporation, banking corporation, savings and loan association, [and a] limited
    liability company . . . . " Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.0002(a).         The Texas Comptroller has
    explicitly ruled that S corporations and LLCs are subject to the Texas Franchise Tax, and the
    parties have stipulated in this case that RNDC-an LLC that was doing business in Texas in
    2008-reported and paid Texas Franchise Tax for that year. See Texas Policy Letter Ruling No.
    200609761L (Sept. 6, 2006).
    Because the Texas Franchise Tax is imposed on a taxable entity's "taxable margin," the
    Taxpayer must show that the "taxable margin" base is one that is "on or measured by income"
    for purposes ofO.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C). As will be seen, it is-because a business's "total
    19
    1097
    revenue" and "taxable margin" for Texas Franchise Tax purposes are comprised of the same
    items that are used in determining "gross income" for federal and Georgia income tax purposes.
    The starting point for determining the amount of the taxable margin is to compute the
    taxpayer's "total revenue from its entire business." Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.101(a). For
    taxable entities treated as partnerships for federal income tax purposes (such as NDC Leasing),
    Tex. Tax Code Ann.§ 171.101l(c)(2) and the Instructions to the Texas Franchise Tax Report
    state that "total revenue" is computed by
    a.          Adding:
    i.      The amount reported as income on line 1c of IRS Form 1065 (for gross
    receipts or sales less "returns and allowances");
    u.       The amount reported as income on line 6a of Schedule K of Form 1065
    (dividend income);
    iii.      The amount reported as income on line 5 of Schedule K of Form 1065
    (interest income);
    iv.       The amounts reported as income from line 3a of Schedule K of Form 1065
    and line 17 of Form 8825 (rental income);
    v.       The amount reported as income on line 7 of Schedule K of Form 1065
    (royalty income);
    v1.       The amounts reported as income on line 6 of Form 1065 and lines 8, 9a, and
    I
    10 of Schedule K of Form 1065 (net gains or losses attributable to capital
    assets or other sales of business property);
    vn.       The amounts reported as income on lines 4 and 7 of Form 1065, line 11 of
    Schedule K of Form 1065 (to the extent not already included), and the amount
    20
    1098
    from line 11, plus line 2 or line 45 of Form 1040, Schedule F (other income or
    loss); and
    viii.      Any "total revenue" reported by a lower-tier entity as includable in the taxable
    entity's total revenue under the tiered partnership election under Tex. Tax
    Code Ann.§ 171.1015(b); and then
    b.           Subtracting from that total:
    1.      The amount reported on line 12 of Form 1065 (bad debt expensed for federal
    income tax purposes);
    u.       Foreign royalties and foreign dividends, to the extent included m gross
    revenue;
    iii.      Net distributive income from a taxable entity treated as a partnership or as an
    S corporation for federal income tax purposes (to avoid double Texas taxation
    of the revenue of those entities);
    tv.      Allowable deductions from IRS Form 1120, Schedule C, to the extent related
    to dividend income included in total revenue;
    v.       Items of income attributable to an entity that is disregarded for federal income
    tax purposes (again, to avoid double Texas taxation of the revenue of those
    entities);
    VI.       Dividends and interest from federal obligations; and
    vu.        "Other deductions" to the extent that they were included in the taxpayer's
    21
    1099
    gross revenue. See Exhibit A, at 10-13 (Instructions to 2009 Texas Franchise
    Tax Report); see also Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.1011 (c)(2). 14
    For all types of entities, Section 171.101(a)(l) of the Texas Tax Code then defines the "taxable
    margin" for taxable entities as the lesser of (A) 70 percent of the taxable entity's "total revenue";
    or (B) "total revenue" less cost of goods sold; or (C) "total revenue" less compensation. 15
    The starting point for computing the Texas Franchise Tax is thus the sum of essentially
    every relevant item of business "income" that is included in the definition of "gross income" for
    federal income tax purposes. A comparison of (i) the line items of "income" included in the
    computation of "total revenue" for Texas Franchise Tax purposes with (ii) the line items shown
    on the tax forms for computing the federal gross income of a partnership or an S corporation
    reveals that the Texas "total revenue" and federal gross income bases are essentially identical.
    Compare Tex. Tax Code Ann. §§ 171.101l(c)(l) with 171.101l(c)(2). When one reviews the
    relevant federal tax returns filed by NDC Leasing, National Distributing, NDC Partners, and
    RNDC, and RNDC's Amended Texas Franchise Tax Report it can be seen that the "total
    revenue" for each partnership or S corporation under the Texas Franchise Tax is computed by
    adding the line items of "income" that were included on the relevant partnership or S corporation
    return that was filed for federal income tax purposes.
    3. Whichever alternative definition of "income" is used, the Texas Franchise Tax is
    a tax "on or measured by income."
    14
    The computation of "total revenue" for corporations treated as S corporations for federal income tax purposes
    (such as National Distributing) similarly tracks the line items from the entity's federal return (Form 1120S). See
    Instructions to 2009 Texas Franchise Tax Report; see also Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.1011(c)(l).
    15
    RNDC determined its taxable margin using the "cost of goods sold" deduction provided for in Tex. Tax Code
    Ann. § 171.101(a)(1)(B)(ii)(a). Both "cost of goods sold" and "compensation" are computed under the Texas Tax
    Code in a manner that is substantially similar to the federal deduction afforded to such items. See Tex. Tax Code
    Ann.§§ 171.1012, 171.1013.
    22
    1100
    So the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax based on or measured by "income" or "gross income"
    whether one uses (i) the broad and ordinary definition of "income" or (ii) one of the technical
    definitions of "gross income" in conducting the analysis.
    First, the concept of "total revenue" that serves as the initial basis for computing the
    Texas Franchise Tax base is based on or measured by "income" or "gross income," as those
    terms are broadly defined, because "total revenue" is computed by adding up all of the specified
    line items of "income" used in computing a pass-through entity's federal income tax base. By
    using all of the specific and relevant line items from a pass-through entity's federal income tax
    return to compute "total revenue," it is tautological to conclude that "total revenue" under the
    Texas Franchise Tax is on or measured by "income."
    Alternatively, the Texas Franchise Tax is also based on or measured by "income" when
    focusing on the "taxable margin." The first option for computing the "taxable margin" is simply
    to take 70 percent of the "total revenue" base that is comprised of items from the entity's federal
    income tax base. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.101(a)(l). Using this method, a taxpayer's
    "taxable margin" would still be on or measured by "income," because it is comprised exclusively
    of the items used to compute the taxpayer's "income" on a federal return, before deductions.
    Alternatively, taxpayers may elect to compute their "taxable margin" by deducting the "cost of
    goods sold" from their "total revenue." See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 171.101(a)(l). This second
    option is how RNDC-a merchandiser- in fact computed its taxable margin for purposes of
    reporting its Texas Franchise Tax. So this method of computation of the Texas Franchise Tax is
    also one that is on or measured by "income" because RNDC's tax base began with the taxpayer's
    "total revenue"-- which, as described above, is based on 'income" or "gross income"-- and then
    was further computed using a deduction for "cost of goods sold." This method of calculation is
    23
    1101
    in accord with the more restrictive definition of "gross income" that applies for federal income
    tax purposes to a merchandising business (such as RNDC). See Treas. Reg.§ 1.61-3(a).
    The Texas Franchise Tax is thus on or measured by "income," whether the focus is on the
    "total revenue" base or the "taxable margin" base. Because Petitioner received pass-through
    income that was subject to Texas Franchise Tax, it then follows that Petitioner is entitled to an
    adjustment for the "portion of the income on which such tax was actually paid." See O.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27(d)(l)(D) (noting that in "multi-tiered situations, the adjustment for such individual
    shall be determined by allocating such income between the shareholders, partners, or members at
    each tier based upon their profit/loss percentage").
    H.     The conclusion that Petitioner qualifies for the benefits ofO.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    27(d)(l)(c) is consistent with the policy underlying this statute.
    The conclusion that the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax "on or measured by income" finds
    strong support in the policy underlying O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l), which-according to the
    Georgia Court of Appeals in a case involving the taxation of an S corporation's pass-through
    income-is to allow shareholders or members of a pass-through entity "to avoid the double
    taxation that would otherwise occur if the shareholder paid taxes on any portion of his passed-
    through income on which the corporation had already paid income taxes . . . at the corporate
    level." Graham v. Hanna, 
    297 Ga. App. 542
    , 545-46 (2009).             This policy underlying the
    adjustment provisions in O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l) strongly supports Petitioner's contention that
    he is entitled to the Section 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) adjustment for the portion of his distributive shares
    of income on which RNDC already paid Texas Franchise Tax.
    I.     The adjustment under O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) for taxes "on or measured by
    income" is not limited to taxes that are "on or measured by net income."
    Respondent counters that the Texas Franchise Tax does not qualify for purposes of
    24
    1102
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) because it is not a "net income" tax. The Department denied
    Petitioner's request for a letter ruling with respect to O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) on the basis
    that the term "income" in that provision ought to be construed as "net income." This was the
    basis for denying Petitioner's refund claim and continues to be the basis urged before this
    Tribunal. B\lt to so construe the statutory language imposes a restriction that is simply not
    contained in the statute.
    1. In contrast to "income" and "gross income," for tax purposes, "net income" is
    always defined to include the deduction of expenses.
    Unlike the terms "income" and "gross income"-which are not directly defined in the
    Georgia Tax Code-an individual's "net income" is specifically defined by reference to the
    individual's "federal adjusted gross income" less certain deductions and subject to certain
    addition adjustments. See O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27; see also Ga. Dep't of Revenue v. Ga. Chemistry
    Council, Inc., 
    270 Ga. App. 615
    , 617 (2004) (recognizing that an individual taxpayer's "net
    income" is the individual's "federal adjusted gross income, less deductions") (citing O.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27(a)).   The Georgia statutory definition of "net income" comports with a standard
    dictionary definition, as Black's defines "net income" as "the profit of a business arrived at by
    deducting operating expenses and taxes from gross receipts." Black's Law Dictionary (9th ed.
    2009). Thus, whereas "income" and "gross income" are often used interchangeably, "net
    income" has a specified technical meaning that is different from "income" or "gross income."
    Yet despite the differences among those terms, the Department denied Petitioner's request for a
    letter ruling with respect to O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) on the basis that the term "income" in
    that provision ought to be construed as "net income."
    In addition to violating various rules of statutory construction (discussed below), the
    Department's position on this issue contradicts the Georgia Court of Appeals' direction in I.B.M.
    25
    1103
    that terms of art used in the tax code must be given their proper technical construction. In that
    case, the Department argued that a taxpayer should have added back to its taxable income all
    "franchise, excise, and privilege taxes paid in other states which were measured by income"
    under a statute which required the add-back of all "income taxes" imposed by other states.
    
    I.B.M., 142 Ga. App. at 160
    (interpreting the predecessor version of current O.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    27(b)(3)). But the Court of Appeals rejected the Department's contention that "income tax"
    means "any tax, the amount of which is determined by income," instead holding that "income
    tax" is a "term of art" which refers to "taxes on income and does not include taxes on subjects
    other than income, although measured by income." 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Therefore, based on
    the Court of Appeals' decision in I.B.M., "income tax" is a term of art which applies only to
    taxes "on income"-a set of taxes that is narrower than the set of taxes that are "measured by
    income," and which includes many taxes labeled as "franchise, excise, and privilege taxes" by
    other states.   See id.; see also Amerada 
    Hess, 526 A.2d at 1044
    ("State taxes that are
    denominated franchise or excise taxes are often measured by income."). The Texas Franchise
    Tax is just such a tax -- a tax that is labeled a "franchise tax" but which is "on or measured by
    income".
    2. Interpreting O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) to add the term "net" income is
    inconsistent with well-settled rules of statutory construction.
    The Department denied the Petitioner's ruling request reasoning that the adjustment in
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) was intended to apply only to taxes on or measured by net income.
    Such an interpretation contravenes at least four well settled rules of statutory construction.
    First, interpreting O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(1)(C) to apply only to pass-through income that
    was taxed in another state which imposes a tax "on or measured by net income" violates the rule
    of construction that statutes are to be interpreted "according to the natural and most obvious
    26
    1104
    import of the language, without resorting to subtle and forced constructions." Graham v. Hanna,
    
    297 Ga. App. 542
    , 545 (2009).         To interpret "income" to mean "net income"--despite the
    Georgia Tax Code's frequent use of both of these terms of art-would be to impose a "forced
    construction" on the plain language of the statute, in conflict with the "natural and most obvious"
    definition of "income."
    Second, to interpret the statute as applying only to a tax "on or measured by net income"
    violates the rule that "a statute must be construed in relation to other statutes of which it is a part,
    and all statutes relating to the same subject-matter, briefly called statutes in pari materia, [must
    be] construed together, and harmonized whenever possible." Tew v. State, 
    320 Ga. App. 127
    ,
    130 (2013). To interpret the adjustment for "taxes on or measured by income" in O.C.G.A. § 48-
    7-27(d)(l)(C) to apply only to taxes "on or measured by net income" fails to harmonize the
    different terms of art used in the specific income tax adjustment provisions provided by the
    General Assembly, including but not limited to Code Sections 48-7-21, 48-7-23, 48-7-24, 48-7-
    27, and 48-7-28.      Stated a bit differently, to read the word "net" into O.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    27(d)(l)(C) is to ignore the General Assembly's provision for numerous adjustments in Sections
    48-7-21 and 48-7-27 which turn on the nature of the tax to which the taxpayer has been
    subjected.
    Third, to accept Respondent's position on this issue would violate the rule that requires
    statutes to be interpreted to "avoid a construction that makes some language mere surplusage."
    Singletary v. State, 
    310 Ga. App. 570
    , 572 (20 11 ). That conclusion is unavoidable, because an
    interpretation concluding that the adjustment for "taxes on or measured by income" in O.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) applies only to taxes "on or measured by net income" renders the use of the
    term "net" in Code Sections 48-7-21(b)(2), 48-7-28, and other sections of the Code "mere
    27
    1105
    surplusage," because two different terms of art would be interpreted as having the same meaning.
    Contrast O.C.G.A. § 48-7-2l(b)(2)) with O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) (emphasis added); see
    also O.C.G.A. § 48-7-28 ("A resident individual who has an established business in another state
    ... may deduct from the tax due upon the entire net income of the resident individual the tax
    paid upon the net income of the business ... in another state when the business ... is in a state
    that levies a tax upon net income.") (emphasis added).
    Finally, interpreting O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) so that it only applies with respect to
    pass-through income taxed in another state which imposes on the entity a tax "on or measured by
    net income" violates the rule which requires a presumption that all statutes are "enacted with full
    knowledge of existing law." 
    Singletary, 310 Ga. App. at 572
    .          To interpret Section 48-7-
    27(d)(l)(C) to apply only to taxes on or measured by "net income" fails to acknowledge or give
    effect to the numerous specific statutory adjustment provisions applicable to taxes on "net
    income"-such as Sections 48-7-21(b)(2) and 48-7-28-that existed prior to the codification of
    Section 48-7-27(d)(1)(C).    See 2006 Ga. Laws Act 619, H.B. 1160 (Ga. Reg. Sess. 2006)
    (codifying Sections 48-7-27(d)(l)(C)-(D)).
    3. Respondent's arguments that it is unreasonable not to construe O.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    27(d)(l)(C) to limit it to taxes imposed on net income are not persuasive.
    (a)    Use of the term "adjusted gross income" elsewhere in the statute does not
    establish that O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) is meant to apply to "net
    income" when applied to an entity.
    It is well settled that a statute should not be construed in a manner that leads to "an
    unreasonable result unintended by the legislature." Haugen v. Henry Cnty., 
    277 Ga. 743
    , 745
    (2004). Respondent argues it would be "unreasonable" to construe "on or measured by income"
    as it is written, because the phrase "is preceded twice by references to the taxpayer's 'federal
    adjusted gross income' .... " The Respondent asserts that the phrase "on or measured by
    28
    1106
    income" must therefore have been intended to be modified by "federal adjusted gross income,"
    which uses a "net income base."
    This argument overlooks the fact that "adjusted gross income" is a defined term that is
    defined specifically in reference to the computation of an individual's taxable income and
    therefore would not have been used to describe the measure of an entity's income. See O.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27(a) ("Georgia taxable net income of an individual shall be the taxpayer's federal
    adjusted gross income, as defined in the [IRC] of 1986," subject to specified adjustments)
    (emphasis added); I.R.C. § 62(a) ("For purposes of this subtitle ... the term 'adjusted gross
    income' means, in the case of an individual, gross income minus the following deductions ... ")
    (emphasis added). Since "adjusted gross income" only applies to the income of an individual, it
    would be incorrect to construe "adjusted gross income" as used in Section 48-7-27(d)(1)(C) as
    modifYing the phrase "on or measured by income" when used in reference to the income of a
    pass-through entity. Therefore, it is more reasonable to construe "on or measured by income"
    according to its ordinary meaning and not seek to impose a "forced construction" on the statute.
    See,~.   
    I.B.M., 142 Ga. App. at 160
    (stating that the legislature is assumed to have understood
    the technical meaning of its chosen language and holding that "the statute shall be construed in
    accordance with the accepted legal definition" of that language).
    (b)    Use of the term "income tax" in O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(b)(3) does not
    require that O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) also be construed to be limited
    to "income taxes."
    Respondent argues that it is necessary to add the concept of "net" income to O.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) in order to "harmonize" this provision with the other provisions ofO.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27, particularly subsection (b)(3).    But this argument begs the question of why the
    legislature would have used the phrase "on or measured by income" if it intended for the
    29
    1107
    adjustment to apply only to "income taxes"-a different term of art used elsewhere in the Code.
    We must assume that the General Assembly intended something different from "on or measured
    by net income" by not using that phrase. Dep't of Human Res. v. Clay, 
    247 Ga. App. 392
    , 396
    (2000), disapproved on other grounds. Ga. Dep't of Transp. v. Heller, 
    285 Ga. 262
    (2009)
    ("[A]ny decision to depart from the federal language must have been made for a reason. The
    question thus becomes, 'Why did the legislature elect to make the state statute different from the
    federal statute?' The answer cannot be ... [b]ecause it wanted the meaning to be identical.").
    (c)    It is reasonable to apply O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C)'s adjustment
    provision as written, even if some of the taxes "measured by income"
    under that provision are not "income taxes" pursuant to the add-back
    adjustment in O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(b)(3).
    Respondent also argues that the phrase "on or measured by income" in O.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    27(d)(l)(C) must be interpreted to apply only to taxes "on or measured by net income," because
    to hold otherwise might result in a "double benefit" to taxpayers who are permitted the (d)(l)(C)
    adjustment but who are not required to make the Section 48-7-27(b)(3) add-back. Respondent
    argues the add-back provision in subsection (b)(3) of Section 48-7-27 is the "mirror image" of
    subsection (d)(l).   According to the Department, the two must therefore be interpreted in
    identical fashion.
    Respondent's argument ignores the fact that in 2006 the General Assembly enacted
    subsection (d)(l) to provide "additional adjustments" for taxpayers who would otherwise be
    subject to double taxation. See 2006 Ga. Laws Act 619, H.B. 1160; see also Graham v. 
    Hanna 297 Ga. App. at 546
    . It must be presumed that the legislature's choice of language that is
    different from the language in the then existing add-back provision was intended to have
    different consequences.   See,~.    Dep't of Human Res. v. 
    Clay, 247 Ga. App. at 396
    ("[A]ny
    decision to depart from [prior] language must have been made for a reason.") If the legislature
    30
    1108
    had intended for the (d)(l)(C) adjustment to apply only when the add-back applies, it could have
    said so with a cross reference, or it would at least have used the same language in both
    provisions.
    Second, Respondent argues that the legislature could not have intended that a taxpayer be
    entitled to the (d)(l)(C) adjustment because the Texas Franchise Tax is "measured by income"
    while also permitting the Texas Franchise Tax to be subject to the "add-back" provision in
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(b)(3)). The difficulty with this argument is this Tribunal has not been asked
    to decide, and specifically is not deciding, whether the Texas Franchise Tax is an "income tax"
    for purposes of the O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(b)(3) add-back. That is an entirely different issue for
    another day. So any argument based on this point is purely conjectural.
    Third, even assuming for purposes of argument that the Texas Franchise Tax is indeed an
    add-back for purposes of O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(b)(3), the resulting "double benefit" with which
    Respondent is concerned is slight when compared with the potential "double taxation" that the
    statute was designed to resolve. That difference is the natural consequence of the different
    language in those provisions: Section 48-7-27(b)(3) requires the addition of "any income taxes"
    imposed by other taxing jurisdictions (to the extent deducted from federal taxable income), while
    Section 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) permits the subtraction of the portion of any "income" taxed in another
    state, so long as that tax was "on or measured by income." Thus, while the add-back statute
    requires the addition of the income tax liability in the other jurisdiction, O.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    27(d)(l)(C) permits a subtraction adjustment for the entire income base that was subject to tax in
    the other state-an adjustment that is typically substantially larger than the mere add-back of
    taxes paid. 16 For example, as applied to this Taxpayer, the Georgia tax impact of the add-back (if
    16
    Note the same would be true even when a net income base is at issue.
    31
    1109
    applicable) would be approximately $640, while the amount of the Taxpayer's claim for refund
    that is attributable to the Texas Franchise Tax is in excess of $20,000. 17
    Therefore, even assuming it is required, there is nothing "unreasonable" about the
    potential that a taxpayer may receive the (d)(l)(C) adjustment but will not be required to make
    the (much smaller) add-back adjustment for the same taxes. This distortion must be contrasted
    with the results that occur if the statute is to be interpreted so as to interpret O.C.G.A. § 48-7-
    27(d)(l)(C) in a manner that undercuts the legislature's intent, just so that it is co-extensive with
    a different statutory provision that uses different language, would certainly be the type of
    "unreasonable result unintended by the legislature" that the rules of statutory construction forbid.
    (d)      The differences between the Georgia and Texas tax bases do not make the
    application of O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) to the Texas Franchise Tax
    unreasonable.
    Respondent's argument that the difference between the Georgia and Texas tax bases
    requires the conclusion that the Texas Franchise Tax is not "on or measured with respect to
    income" simply does not withstand analysis. All states that impose a tax based on or measured
    by income (or on net income for that matter) impose a tax on a base that ultimately differs-
    sometimes substantially-from the "federal taxable income" base because of each state's
    specific addition and subtraction adjustments.             It is not only taxes which are measured by
    "income" that might generate the need to perform certain modifications in order to compute the
    adjustment under O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) properly. Substantial differences might also arise
    in the computation of a tax based on net income such that similar modifications are necessary to
    17
    The Taxpayer computed the approximate Georgia tax impact of the add-back provision with respect to the Texas
    Franchise Tax by taking the following steps: (1) determining the Texas Franchise Tax paid by RNDC for the 2008
    tax year-$904,285.00; (2) multiplying that amount by the Taxpayer's distributive share percentage of RNDC's
    income for that year (1.179960646%) to determine the amount that would be required to be added to the Taxpayer's
    adjusted gross income; and (3) multiplying the amount of the add-back by the Georgia tax rate of 6 percent.
    32
    1110
    compute the Georgia adjustment. 18 Under this argument, no tax would qualify under O.C.G.A.
    § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) unless the tax bases were substantially identical.
    Instead of focusing on the differences between two states' tax bases as evidence of why
    O.C.G.A § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) should be interpreted more narrowly than the plain language
    indicates, the rules of statutory construction and common sense suggest a much simpler
    conclusion: that the legislature passed the law with the intention of preventing double taxation,
    and that it drafted the statute to apply to a broad set of taxes in order to maximize the adjustment
    provision's impact. By focusing on the statute's remedial intent, it is much more reasonable to
    conclude that the statute should be applied as written. The Department can, if it chooses to do
    so, exercise its regulatory authority to provide guidance regarding such base modifications, so
    that taxpayers only receive an adjustment "for the portion of the income on which such tax was
    actually paid" by the pass-through entity. See O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(D). The Department
    has the authority and ability to promulgate regulations and/or provide other guidance to explain
    how taxpayers should compute such adjustments.                   See, Q.&, O.C.G.A. § 48-2-12.             So the
    adjustment to all taxes "on or measured by income" does not yield any "unreasonable results"
    18
    For example, a partnership that is subject to tax in Tennessee and which receives dividends from an SO-percent-
    owned corporation can take a dividends-received deduction for Tennessee excise tax purposes; however, that
    dividend income is included in the partnership's (and, ultimately, partner's) federal taxable income, and would
    therefore show up in the partner's tax base for purposes of computing the Georgia adjustment under Section 48-7-
    27(d){l)(C). To compute the "portion of income on which such [Tennessee] tax was actually paid," the partner
    would have to-among other modifications-eliminate the dividend from the Tennessee tax base. Under the
    Department's view, does that substantial modification affect whether the Tennessee tax was "measured by income"
    for purposes of the adjustment? It should not. Such modifications are an inevitable consequence of the legislature's
    decision to provide an adjustment for taxes "measured by income." There are numerous other examples of
    adjustments that can cause significant differences between federal taxable income and a state tax base-including a
    state net income tax base-such as bonus depreciation (see. e.g., Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-4-2006(b)(l)) and related-
    party intangible expense add-backs (see. e.g., Ala. Code§ 40-18-35(b)(l)).
    33
    1111
    under O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C). And note again that Respondent is well equipped with the
    tools available to address such issues if they do in fact arise. 19
    The application of the O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) adjustment to all taxes "on or
    measured by income" does not lead to any unreasonable results. Rather, those differences are
    the natural consequence of the legislature's decision to extend the remedial adjustment to all
    taxes on or measured by "income," rather than limiting it only to those taxes on or measured by
    "net income." It is much more reasonable to conclude that such differences (to the extent they
    are perceived as problematic) should be resolved by applying the straightforward and ordinary
    meaning of the statute and permitting taxpayers to take the adjustments, but then requiring all
    necessary modification adjustments to the tax base (pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(D)),
    rather than to undermine the legislative intent by interpreting the remedial statute more narrowly
    than the legislature provided. See Ins. Dep't of Ga. v. St. Paul Fire & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    253 Ga. App. 551
    , 554 (2002) ("[U]ncertainties or ambiguities in remedial statutes should be resolved in favor
    of a liberal interpretation .... ").
    J.       Other states that have considered the issue have concluded that the Texas franchise
    tax is either a tax "on or measured by income" or an "income tax."
    1.       A number of states have concluded that the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax "on
    or measured by income" or an "income tax."
    19
    Indeed, a major reason the Department's administrative position in this case is not entitled to any deference is
    that the Department has done nothing to explicate the application or operation of this statute which, while simple on
    its face, quickly becomes extremely complex in application once one begins to attempt to mesh the calculations of
    very different state tax systems to calculate the adjustment. Yet it appears the Department has only addressed the
    application of O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) twice-as to taxes imposed by Tennessee and Texas-and each time
    only in conclusory answers to "frequently asked questions" posted on the Department's website. There are other
    jurisdictions that have entity level taxes on flow-through entities, at least one of which is an issue in this case. See
    Ely Chart. And, as noted, the calculations under this statute are susceptible to being computed in a number of
    alternative ways. And yet there appears to be no published guidance from the Department on any of these issues.
    So Respondent's argument that the Department's position on the issue in this case should be given deference rings
    hollow.
    34
    1112
    When we look to other states, we see that a number of state taxing authorities have
    determined that the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax "on or measured by income" or even gone
    further and concluded it is an "income tax." Indeed, there do not appear to be any authorities
    that have considered the precise issue in this case that have determined that the Texas Franchise
    Tax is not a tax "on or measured by income."
    First, in a letter of findings, the Indiana Department of State Revenue (the "Indiana
    Department") determined that the Texas Franchise Tax qualifies as a tax "based on or measured
    by income." Ind. Dep't of State Rev. Letter of Findings No. 02-20120562 (Apr. 24, 2013). To
    determine Indiana adjusted gross income, Indiana requires taxpayers to add to federal adjusted
    gross income "an amount equal to any deduction or deductions allowed by [the Internal Revenue
    Code] for taxes based on or measured by income and levied at the state level by any state of the
    United States." Ind. Code § 6-3-1-3.5(b) (emphasis added). The Indiana Department determined
    that taxpayers are required to add back taxes paid pursuant to the Texas Franchise Tax because
    the tax "starts with and is based on the entity's income as reported on the federal income tax."
    Ind. Dep't of State Rev. Letter of Findings No. 02-20120562. Accordingly, the Indiana
    Department concluded: "[i]t is apparent from the face of the law that the [Texas Franchise Tax
    is] 'based on or measured by income."' 
    Id. Second, the
    Missouri Department of Revenue (the "Missouri Department") issued a letter
    ruling determining that the Texas Franchise Tax is an "income tax" under Missouri law. Mo.
    Private Letter Rul. No. LR 5309 (Dec. 12, 2008).         To reach its conclusion, the Missouri
    Department extended to the Texas Franchise Tax the reasoning of Herschend v. Director of
    Revenue, 
    896 S.W.2d 458
    (Mo. 1995). Herschend established that, in order to qualify as an
    "income tax" under Missouri law (and thus provide a credit against Missouri income tax),
    35
    1113
    another state's tax must satisfy two criteria. The tax must be (i) "based on federal taxable
    income" and (ii) must "pay compensation for benefits, such as roads, police, and fire protection,"
    rather than tax the privilege of doing business in the state. Mo. Private Letter Rul. No. LR 5309.
    According to the Missouri Department, the Texas Franchise Tax is "based solely on various
    types of income reported on the federal income tax return" and "is a compensatory tax that
    operates as an income tax." 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Therefore, according to the
    Missouri Department, the tax meets both criteria of Herschend and qualifies as an income tax.
    Third, the Kansas Department of Revenue concluded that "the revised Texas franchise
    tax is based on income and is therefore in the nature of an income tax," at least as long as the
    cost of goods sold or compensation deduction methodologies are used. Kan. Op. Letter No. 0-
    20009-005; Kan. Op. Letter No. 0-2008-004 (Sept. 2, 2008). The Kansas Department of
    Revenue made its determination despite the fact that Texas itself describes the Texas Franchise
    Tax as a privilege tax, rather than an income tax. See also Ind. Dep't of State Rev. Letter of
    Findings No. 02-20120562 ("The Texas tax is designated as a 'margin tax' or 'franchise tax' but
    merely labeling the tax as such does not change the nature of the tax.").
    Finally, the California Franchise Tax Board has determined that the Texas Franchise Tax,
    when computed using the cost-of-goods method, "qualifies as an income tax." Cal. FTB
    Technical Advice Memo. No. 2011-03 (Apr. 13, 2011)?0 When determining if taxes paid to
    another state by a pass-through entity create a credit against California income taxes, California
    law distinguishes between gross income taxes (which are eligible for the credit) and gross
    receipts taxes (which are not). Using the cost-of-goods method to calculate the base of the Texas
    20
    The California Franchise Tax Board recently withdrew the guidance provided in Technical Advice Memorandum
    No. 2011-03, stating that it will be issuing "additional guidance." See Cal. FTB Technical Advice Memo. No. 2014-
    01 (Jan. 28, 2014). There is no indication that the FTB intends to change its view regarding the Texas Franchise
    Tax. Given that Memorandum No. 2011-03 also addressed the old "Michigan Business Tax," it would appear likely
    that the withdrawal is to provide updated guidance regarding the new Michigan tax regime.
    36
    1114
    Franchise Tax excludes all "return on capital"; therefore, the Franchise Tax Board determined
    that a taxpayer electing the cost-of-goods deduction under the Texas Franchise Tax is entitled to
    the credit because the tax for such taxpayers is "on or measured by income." 
    Id. 21 K.
         Those authorities that have concluded that the Texas Franchise Tax is not a tax on
    "net income" are not persuasive.
    Though no state has determined that the current version of the Texas Franchise Tax is not
    a tax "on or measured by income," some state departments of revenue have determined that
    individuals cannot take a credit or adjustment with respect to the Texas Franchise Tax. In every
    such case, however, state law required the departments to examine specifically whether the
    Texas Franchise Tax is a tax on net income. See Mass. DOR Directive No. 08-7 (Dec. 18, 2008)
    ("The [Texas franchise tax is] based on or derived directly from gross receipts and [is] not
    imposed on net income.") (emphasis added); Va. Pub. Doc. Rul. No. 08-169 (Sept. 11, 2008)
    ("[I]t is my conclusion that the Texas Business Margin Tax is not a tax based on, measured by,
    or computed with reference to net income.") (emphasis added); Minn. Rev. Notice No. 08-08
    (July 21, 2008) ("It is the department's position that the Texas business margin tax is not a tax
    based on net income.") (emphasis added). In each case the department of revenue found that,
    because the Texas Franchise Tax does not allow for sufficient deductions for business expenses,
    it is not a tax on net income.
    Because O.C.G.A § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C) does not limit its inquiry to taxes "on or measured
    by net income" the reasoning of these decisions is not persuasive. Every state authority that has
    21
    At least two states have gone even further than these four states, concluding that the Texas Franchise Tax is not
    only on or measured by "income," but that it is actually measured by "net income." See S.C. Rev. Rul. No. 09-10
    (July 17, 2009) (listing the Texas franchise tax as nondeductible from South Carolina taxable income because it is a
    tax "measured by net income"); Wise. Dept. Rev. Tax Bulletin No. 156 (Apr. I, 2008) ("[T]he Texas margin tax
    qualif{ies] for the credit for net income tax paid to another state .... ").
    37
    1115
    considered whether the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax "on or measured by income" (but not
    specifically a net income tax) has answered that question affirmatively.
    L.        The Financial Accounting Standards Board has also concluded that the Texas
    Franchise Tax is a tax "on or measured by income."
    State departments of revenue are not the only authorities that have decided that the Texas
    Franchise Tax as one "on or measured by income." The Financial Accounting Standards Board
    ("F ASB") has similarly concluded that the Texas Franchise Tax should be treated as an income
    tax for purposes ofFASB Interpretation Number 48.22 FASB, Minutes of the August 2, 2006
    Meeting on Potential FSP: Texas Franchise Tax. ("The staff received technical inquiries from
    constituents requesting the staffs opinion on whether the Texas Franchise Tax was an income
    tax that should be accounted for under Statement 109.                     After discussing the issue with
    constituents, the staff concluded that the Texas Franchise Tax is an income tax because the tax is
    based on a measure of income.") (emphasis added). This determination under FASB
    Interpretation Number 48 is important, because with respect to every "income tax" to which the
    standard applies, it governs the recognition of deferred tax liabilities and assets for the future tax
    consequences of events that have been recognized in an entity's financial statements or tax
    returns.
    Not surprisingly, each of the nation's four maJor accounting firms has also issued
    guidance advising its clients that the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax that is "on or measured by
    income" and is therefore subject to FIN 48. 23
    22
    FASB Interpretation Number 48, commonly known as "FIN 48," is entitled "Accounting for Uncertainty in
    Income Taxes" and interprets FASB Statement 109 (ASC 740), "Accounting for Income Taxes." See FASB, FASB
    Interpretation Number 48, No. 281-B (2006).
    23
    See:
    •    Guide to Accounting for Income Taxes, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, § 1.2.2.4 (2013),
    http://www.pwc.com/us/en/cfodirect/publications/accounting-guides/guide-to-accounting-for-income-
    taxes-2013-edition.jhtml ("As discussed in Section TX 1.2.1, we believe that a tax based on income has a
    38
    1116
    M.       The authorities cited by Respondent to support the conclusion that the Texas
    Franchise Tax is not "on or measured by income" are not persuasive.
    To support his position that the Texas Franchise Tax is not a tax "on or measured by
    income," but is instead a privilege tax or a gross~receipts tax that operates in a fundamentally
    different manner than an income tax, Respondent relies principally on In re Nestle USA, Inc.,
    Relator, 
    387 S.W.3d 610
    (Tex. 2012) and Ardire v. Tracy. 
    674 N.E.2d 1155
    , 1156 (Ohio 1997).
    On close examination it can be seen that these cases are inapposite.
    1.      In re Nestle USA, Inc., Relator.
    In Nestle, the petitioner challenged the constitutionality of the Texas Franchise Tax on
    the grounds that it bore no reasonable relationship to its object, which is the privilege of doing
    business in Texas, and therefore violates the Texas Constitution's mandate that "[t]axation shall
    be equal and uniform" (Tex. Const. art. VIII, § 1(a)), the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal
    tax base that consists of income less deductible expenses. Because the margin tax has a base that possesses
    this characteristic, along with other characteristics of a tax based on income, the margin tax should be
    accounted for under ASC 740."); see also 
    id., § 1.2.1
    ("In general, practice has been that a 'tax based on
    income' would even apply to tax regimes in which revenues or receipts are reduced by only one category of
    expense.");
    •   A Roadmap to Accounting for Income Taxes, Deloitte & Touche LLP, § 2.05 (2011),
    http://www .deloitte.com/viewI en_US/us/Services/audit-enterprise-risk-services/Financial-Statement-
    Internal-Control-Audit/Accounting-Standards-
    Communications/e9e4e4b44f5be210VgnVCM300000lc56fOOaRCRD.htm ("[T]he scope of ASC 740 is
    limited to 'taxes based on income,' where income is determined after revenues and gains are reduced by
    some amount of expenses and losses."); see also !Q.,, §§ 2.13-2.15 (explaining that the Texas franchise tax
    "is determined by applying a tax rate to a base that takes both revenues and expenses into account;
    therefore, the new tax is considered an 'income tax.' . . . Therefore, the [Texas] margin tax has
    characteristics of an income tax and should be accounted for as such in accordance with ASC 740.");
    •   Financial Reporting Developments: Income Taxes, Ernst & Young LLP, § 5.6.4. (Sept. 2013),
    http://www.ey.com/Publication/vwLUAssetsAL/Financial
    ReportingDevelopments_BB 1150_Income Taxes_19September20 13/$FILE/FinancialReportingDevelopme
    nts_BB1150_IncomeTaxes_19September2013.pdf ("We believe the Revised Tax, while based on an
    entity's margins (as discussed above), is nonetheless, a tax based substantially on income, and as such is
    subject to the provisions of ASC 740."); and
    •   Accounting for Income Taxes, KPMG LLP, § 9.122 (June 2012) ("Because the tax base on which the
    Texas margin tax is computed is derived from an income-based measure, the margin tax is considered to be
    an income tax for financial reporting purposes and, therefore, the provisions of ASC Topic 740 regarding
    the recognition of deferred taxes apply to the Texas margin tax.").
    39
    1117
    Protection and Due Process guarantees (U.S. Const. amend. XIV & 1) and the U.S.
    Constitution's Commerce Clause (U.S. Const. art. I, § 8). After a lengthy discussion of the
    Texas Franchise Tax (cited by both Respondent and Petitioner as supporting their respective
    positions), the Texas Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the statute as a privilege tax.
    From the Texas Supreme Court's statement that the Texas Franchise Tax is a privilege tax,
    Respondent then jumps to the conclusion that because the Texas Franchise Tax is a privilege tax,
    it is not an income tax, and, therefore, because it is not an income tax, it cannot be a tax "on or
    measured by income." Respondent urges that because the Texas Franchise Tax is a "privilege"
    tax, the Texas tax "is not an income tax, but rather a gross receipts or a privilege tax."
    There are multiple difficulties with Respondent's logic.
    First, it is well-established that how a tax is labeled is not dispositive of a tax's measure.
    See,~.     Complete Auto Transit. Inc. v. Brady, 
    430 U.S. 274
    (1977) (rejecting formalistic rules
    which would determine the constitutionality of a tax based on its nomenclature, and instead
    looking to the tax's substance); Amerada Hess Corp. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 
    526 A.2d 1029
    ,
    1044 (N.J. 1987), affd., 
    490 U.S. 66
    (1989) ("State taxes that are denominated franchise or
    excise taxes are often measured by income."); MacFarlane v. Utah State Tax Comm'n, 
    134 P.3d 1116
    , 1119-20 (Utah 2006) ("The Tax Commission's focus on the labels of the taxes as
    franchise, excise, or income taxes ... is misplaced."); Beamer v. Franchise Tax Bd., 
    563 P.2d 238
    , 242 (Cal. 1977) ("In ascertaining whether the Texas taxes are on or measured by income ...
    our task is to determine their true nature and not to be guided by labels.").24 Indeed, even the
    Tennessee Excise Tax, Tenn. Code Ann. Section 67-4-2007, et seq. which Respondent agrees
    24
    The most famous statement regarding the irrelevance of the "label" in defining the measure of a tax was recited by
    the U.S. Supreme Court in Trinova: "A tax on sleeping measured by the number of pairs of shoes you have in your
    closet is a tax on shoes." Trinova Corp. v. Mich. Dep't of Treas., 
    498 U.S. 358
    , 374 (1991) (citing Jenkins, State
    Taxation oflnterstate Commerce, 27 U. Tenn. L. Rev. 239,242 (1960)). Thus, a tax may be "measured by income,"
    regardless ofthe label used to describe it.
    40
    1118
    qualifies for the adjustment under O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(7)(C) is formally categorized as an
    excise, rather than income, tax.
    Second, and more importantly, Respondent makes his logical jump without analyzing the
    relevant terms and without discussing any of the features that would distinguish a "gross receipts
    tax" or a "privilege tax" from a tax "measured by income," and without discussing or attempting
    to identify what a privilege tax is "measured by." Indeed, as Petitioner correctly notes, there is
    much in the Texas Supreme Court's opinion which is supportive of Petitioner's contentions in
    this case. 25
    And finally, as noted above, the issue in this case is not whether the Texas Franchise Tax is
    an "income tax." The issue is whether the Texas Franchise Tax is a tax "on or measured by
    income." There is no dispute that the Texas Franchise Tax is an atypical tax. But even if
    Respondent is correct, and even if the Texas Franchise Tax is not an income tax, the Texas
    26
    Supreme Court's discussion in Nestle simply does not address the issue in this case.
    2.      Ardire v. Tracy.
    The other case on which Respondent relies heavily is Ardire v. Tracy. 
    674 N.E.2d 1155
    ,
    1156 (Ohio 1997). In that case the Supreme Court of Ohio held that the Michigan Single
    25
    Among other things, the Texas Supreme Court noted that "total revenue" for purposes of computing the Texas
    Franchise Tax "is income reported to the federal IRS with various deductions, limitations, and exceptions." 
    Nestle, 387 S.W.3d at 615-16
    (emphasis added); see also 
    Nestle, 387 S.W.3d at 614
    ("In 1991, the Legislature shifted the
    primary basis of the franchise tax profoundly, from capital to 'net taxable earned surplus'-i.e., income."); 
    id. at 615-16
    ("The current franchise tax is the product of further legislative restructuring in 2006 .... The tax is still
    based primarily on revenue .... [and] [t]otal revenue is income reported to the federal IRS ...."); 
    id. at 621
    ("Over
    the years, the Legislature increased the number of exemptions, added adjustments and deductions, and shifted the
    basis ofthe tax from capital to income.") (emphasis added).
    26
    While the Supreme Court of Texas in Nestle noted that the Texas Franchise Tax uses an income base, in a
    separate case, it avoided the specific question of whether the Texas Franchise Tax is an "income tax." See In re
    Allcat Claims Serv., LP. 
    356 S.W.3d 455
    (Tex. 2011). The court noted, however, the legislature's express
    declaration that the Texas Franchise Tax "is not an income tax." See 
    id. at 463.
    That issue is important because, as
    explained in Allcat, under the Texas Constitution, an individual income tax, unlike a privilege tax, requires approval
    by the voters in a statewide referendum.
    41
    1119
    Business Tax ("Michigan Single Business Tax") was not "on or measured by income" for
    purposes of the Ohio credit for taxes "on or measured by income."
    There are several reasons why Ardire is not persuasive, however. First and foremost, the
    Ardire case dealt with the now repealed Michigan Single Business Tax. The Michigan Single
    Business Tax was a unique tax with many peculiarities. It had unusual overtones of, and was
    actually described as, a value added tax. It was roundly criticized in many circles as creating a
    hostile business environment.        See,~.     James R. Hines Jr., Michigan's Flirtation with the Single
    Business Tax, University of Michigan Ross School of Business (December 2002),
    http://www.bus.umich.edu/otpr/WP2003-1paper.pdf; see also What is the Single Business Tax?,
    Michigan Department of the Treasury,                http://www.michigan.gov/taxes/0,1607.7-238-43533-
    154440--,00.html (last visited Nov. 13, 2014). Respondent has not shown whether or how the
    Michigan Single Business Tax is at all like the Texas Franchise Tax, however, so it is difficult to
    evaluate whether a holding involving the Michigan Single Business tax has any relevance to this
    case. 27
    Moreover, the analysis in Ardire appears to be flawed by the court's conflation of the
    phrase "on or measured by income" with the phrase "on or measured by net income." In
    particular, the Ohio court concluded that the Michigan Single Business Tax was not "measured
    by income" by relying exclusively on the Michigan court's analysis in Gillette Co. v. Dep't of
    Treasury, 
    497 N.W.2d 595
    (Mich. Ct. App. 1993), without recognizing that the Michigan court
    had only considered whether the SBT was on or measured by "net" income. See 
    Ardire, 674 N.E.2d at 1158-59
    (reciting Gillette's conclusion that the SBT was not "measured by net
    27
    At oral argument, Petitioner and Respondent both agreed that the Michigan Single Business Tax was such an
    unusual tax that it would be an example of a tax that would not trigger the application of the adjustment provision of
    O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C).
    42
    1120
    income" and then concluding for Ohio purposes: "Therefore, the Michigan appellate courts have
    clearly determined that the SBT is neither a tax on income nor a tax measured by income.").
    Indeed, a careful reading of Ardire suggests that the Ohio court either did not appreciate
    the distinction or did not care to draw it given the highly unusual nature of the Michigan Tax.
    See 
    Ardire, 674 N.E.2d at 1158-59
    (reaching its holding in reliance on Gillette's holding with
    respect to "net income" and then string-citing a "number of authorities throughout this country
    [which] agree with the view that Michigan's SBT is neither a tax on income nor a tax measured
    by income," but proceeding instead to cite, in part, authorities that turned on whether the
    Michigan Single Business Tax was "on or measured by net income").
    IV.      SUMMARY
    There may well be state taxes that sufficiently diverge from an income base such that
    they would not be eligible for adjustment under O.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C).      See,~.      First
    Chicago NBD Cow. v. Dep't of State Revenue, 708 N.E.2d 631,635 (Ind. Tax Ct. 1999) (stating
    that "[n]ot every tax that is measured by income subtracts costs of production ... [but] no tax
    that is measured by income adds costs of production.") (emphasis in original).       Indeed, the
    parties both agree that such would have been the case with the now repealed Michigan Single
    Business Tax. But while the drawing of the line may be difficult in some instances in the future,
    it is unnecessary to explore those boundaries here because the answer is clear.
    V.       CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, for the reasons discussed above, this Tribunal finds that the Texas Franchise
    Tax is a tax that is "on or measured by income" for purposes ofO.C.G.A. § 48-7-27(d)(l)(C).
    43
    1121
    Therefore, Petitioner's Motion for Summary Judgment must be GRANTED and Respondent's
    Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment DENIED.
    SO ORDERED, this 25"' day ofNovemb7' 2014.     . .·   ~
    ·          ~.ikDROT,JR.
    CHIEF JUDGE
    GEORGIA TAX TRIBUNAL
    H. ALAN ROSENBERG,
    PETITIONER
    MARY T. BENTON, CLARK R. CALHOUN,
    ATTORNEYS FOR PETITIONER, H. ALAN
    ROSENBERG
    SAMUEL S. OLENS, Attorney General, W. WRIGHT
    BANKS, JR., Deputy Attorney General, WARREN R.
    CALVERT, Senior Assistant Attorney General, ALEX F.
    SPONSELLER, Senior Assistant Attorney General
    ATTORNEYS FOR RESPONDENT, DOUGLAS J.
    MACGINNITIE, Commissioner, Georgia Department of
    Revenue
    44
    1122
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-15-00113-CV

Filed Date: 4/30/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021

Authorities (51)

david-f-mccomb-as-guardian-ad-litem-for-khemsu-walton-a-minor-child-v , 934 F.2d 474 ( 1991 )

Hygienic Products Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 111 F.2d 330 ( 1940 )

Armco Steel Corp. v. Department of Revenue , 359 Mich. 430 ( 1960 )

Beamer v. Franchise Tax Board , 19 Cal. 3d 467 ( 1977 )

Lau's Corp., Inc. v. Haskins , 261 Ga. 491 ( 1991 )

C. T. Hellmuth & Associates, Inc. v. Washington ... , 414 F. Supp. 408 ( 1976 )

Schmalfeldt v. North Pointe Insurance , 469 Mich. 422 ( 2003 )

LeRoux v. Secretary of State , 465 Mich. 594 ( 2002 )

Valentine v. Redford Township Supervisor , 371 Mich. 138 ( 1963 )

Washtenaw County Road Commissioners v. Public Service ... , 349 Mich. 663 ( 1957 )

Wayne County Prosecutor v. Department of Corrections , 451 Mich. 569 ( 1996 )

Booth Newspapers, Inc v. University of Michigan Board of ... , 444 Mich. 211 ( 1993 )

Trinova Corp. v. Department of Treasury , 433 Mich. 141 ( 1989 )

In Re Estate of Reynolds , 274 Mich. 354 ( 1936 )

Consumers Power Co. v. Department of Treasury , 235 Mich. App. 380 ( 1999 )

Donovan Construction Co. v. Department of Treasury , 126 Mich. App. 11 ( 1983 )

Gillette Co. v. Department of Treasury , 198 Mich. App. 303 ( 1993 )

Jackson v. Corrections Commission , 313 Mich. 352 ( 1946 )

Rathbun v. State of Michigan , 284 Mich. 521 ( 1938 )

Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Stoll , 276 Mich. 637 ( 1936 )

View All Authorities »