Kms Financial Services, Inc. v. City Of Seattle ( 2020 )


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  •                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    CITY OF SEATTLE a municipal                                                      )    No. 78946-5-I
    corporation,                                                                     )
    Respondent,                             )
    )    DIVISION ONE
    v.
    )
    KMS FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.,                                                    )    PUBLISHED OPINION
    a Washington corporation,                                                        )
    )
    Appellant.                              )    FILED: February 24, 2020
    __________________________________________________________________________________)
    MANN, A.C.J.              —     This is a taxation case. The sole issue is whether the city of
    Seattle (City) used an unlawful method to calculate business and occupation (B&O)
    taxes owed by KMS Financial Services, Inc., between January 2012 and March 2016
    (the audit period).
    The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution requires state and local
    taxes be ‘fairly apportioned” so that the tax is imposed only on the portion of income
    reasonably attributed to the taxpayer’s instate activities. Washington law imposes a
    similar limitation on local government taxes. To comply with these requirements, the
    City’s B&O tax utilizes a two-factor apportionment method to calculate taxable revenue
    for service related businesses. One of those factors, the “payroll factor,” compares the
    No. 78946-5-1/2
    amount of compensation the taxpayer pays in Seattle to the compensation it pays
    outside the City. As a result, the more a taxpayer pays for work performed outside the
    City, the less its income is apportioned to the City—which means a lower B&O tax.
    KMS is headquartered in Seattle, but generates most of its income through the
    sale of securities by registered representatives located outside the City. In calculating
    the payroll factor for its B&O tax, KMS included the compensation paid to its registered
    representatives. During an audit, Seattle determined that KMS’s registered
    representatives were not “employees” and therefore did not consider their income in
    determining the payroll factor. The result roughly tripled KMS’s B&O tax liability.
    KMS sought review in the King County Superior Court. After cross-motions for
    summary judgment, the superior court granted the City’s motion and dismissed KMS’s
    challenge. We agree with KMS that the City’s B&O tax, as applied to KMS, is not fairly
    apportioned and is unconstitutional. In order to avoid unconstitutionality, the City should
    have instead treated KMS’s registered representatives as employees which would have
    resulted in a valid, fairly apportioned tax. We vacate the trial court’s order and remand
    for the trial court to grant KMS’s motion for summary judgment.
    A. KMS and Registered Representatives
    The parties stipulated to the undisputed, material facts.1 KMS is a Washington
    corporation, headquartered in Seattle. KMS engages in the securities, insurance, and
    investment advisory business. KMS is a broker-dealer under the Securities Exchange
    Act of 1934 (1934 Act), and is registered with the Securities & Exchange Commission
    1   See also KMS Financial Services, Inc. v. City of Seattle, 
    135 Wash. App. 489
    , 493-95, 
    146 P.3d 1195
    (2006) (explaining further KMS’s use of registered representatives).
    2
    No. 78946-5-1/3
    (SEC), the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and the state securities
    regulators of all 50 states.
    Under federal securities laws, a broker-dealers acts primarily through “registered
    representatives.” Registered representatives are individuals, often referred to as
    stockbrokers or account executives, who provide a variety of investment related
    services. Under the 1934 Act, all individuals in the business of assisting others with
    securities trades are required to be registered representatives of a registered broker
    dealer. KMS does not, except through its registered representatives, generate
    investment advice, make securities recommendations, or solicit the sale of securities or
    other financial products.
    As a broker-dealer, KMS must supervise its registered representatives, oversee
    their licensing status, and require them to comply with industry rules and standards of
    conduct and procedures set out in its policy manual.
    For federal income tax purposes, broker-dealers typically structure their
    operation so that the registered representatives are either deemed employees (Form W
    2), or independent contractors (Form 1099). A broker-dealer’s control and supervisory
    obligations under the 1934 Act and by FINRA with respect to the broker-dealer’s
    registered representatives are identical regardless of whether the registered
    representatives are deemed independent contractors or employees for federal income
    tax purposes.
    The National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) Notice 86-65 provides
    that:
    Irrespective of an individual’s location or compensation arrangements, all
    associated persons are considered to be employees of the firm with which
    3
    No. 78946-5-1/4
    they are registered for purposes of compliance with NASD rules governing
    the conduct of registered persons and the supervisory responsibilities of
    the member. The fact that an associated person conducts business at a
    separate location or is compensated as an independent contractor does
    not alter the obligations of the individual and the firm to comply fully with
    all applicable regulatory requirements. [2]
    A SEC letter dated June 18, 1982, addresses the status of registered
    representatives as employees of their associated broker-dealer. The letter addressed
    whether independent contractors are subject to the 1934 Act. “The critical question is
    whether a so-called independent contractor’s activities are subject to control by a
    broker-dealer within the scope of Section 3(a)(B) of the Act.” The letter explains that an
    independent contractor can be subject to the control of an employer under agency law.
    “It has been a long-standing policy of the Commission that independent contractors
    whose selling activities were controlled by their broker-dealer employers could be
    characterized as employees for the purposes of the Act.”
    KMS’s revenue, through the sale of securities, is generated by approximately 350
    ,1
    registered representatives operating throughout the United States. By contract, KMS
    classifies its registered representatives as independent contractors. During the relevant
    period, KMS employed approximately 50 W-2 employees, most of whom worked in its
    Seattle headquarters. The registered representatives cultivate customers, process the
    opening of client accounts, provide investment advice, make securities
    recommendations, enter orders, and receive checks. The KMS W-2 employees handle
    administrative functions. KMS’s W-2 employees do not provide or generate investment
    advice, make securities recommendations, or solicit the sale of securities and other
    financial products.
    2   NASD was the predecessor to FINRA. Notice 86-65 continues to be in full force and effect.
    4
    No. 78946-5-1/5
    A typical sale of securities involves: the client tells the registered representative
    to purchase or sell a security; the registered representative enters the client’s order with
    KMS’s primary clearing firm, Pershing LLC (Pershing); Pershing executes the trade and
    records it in the client’s account; the client writes a check to KMS or to Pershing to pay
    for the transaction; the registered representative forwards the check to KMS, and a
    trade report is generated in KMS’s office; after settlement of the trade (usually within
    three days), KMS receives a commission from Pershing and then pays the registered
    representative a commission based on its contract with the registered representative;
    KMS pays the registered representative between 85 and 90 percent of the commission
    from Pershing, depending on its contract with the registered representative who
    generated the order.
    During the audit period, KMS paid its W-2 employees between approximately
    $2.6 million and $4 million annually, almost all of which (approximately 95 percent) went
    to Seattle-based employees. For that same period, KMS paid its registered
    representatives between approximately $70 million and $79 million, the vast majority of
    (around 85%) which went to representatives working outside of Seattle.
    B. Seattle’s B&O Tax
    Seattle imposes a B&O tax on all persons engaging in business activity within the
    City. Seattle imposes B&O tax on KMS’s ‘gross profits” under the “service and other”
    activity classification rate. SMC 5.45.050(F); see KMS Financial Services, Inc. v. City of
    Seattle (KMS I), 
    135 Wash. App. 489
    , 496, 
    146 P.3d 1195
    (2006). When a business
    earns income both inside and outside of Seattle, the portion of that business’s income
    attributable to Seattle must be determined. Beginning in 2008, all Washington cities
    5
    No. 78946-5-116
    with a gross receipts B&O tax were required to apportion service business income using
    a two-factor apportionment formula that averages a service income factor and a payroll
    factor. Seattle adopted the two-factor apportionment in SMC 5.48.081(F). The service
    income factor and payroll factors are reflected as a fraction. The fractions are added
    together and then divided by two. The resulting number is then multiplied by the
    taxpayer’s total taxable income, without regard to its source, to derive the amount of
    income that can be allocated to the taxpayer’s Seattle activities. SMC 5.48.081.
    The parties do not dispute the method KMS used to calculate its service factor.
    The only dispute is the calculation of the payroll factor. Under the Seattle Municipal
    Code, the payroll factor is described as:
    1. The payroll factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is the total
    amount paid for compensation in the city during the tax period by the
    taxpayer and the denominator of which is the total compensation paid
    everywhere during the tax period. Compensation is paid in the city if:
    a. The individual or employee is primarily assigned within the city;
    b. The individual is not primarily assigned to any place of business for the
    tax period and the employee performs fifty percent (50%) or more of his or
    her service for the tax period in the city; or
    c. The individual is not primarily assigned to any place of business for the
    tax period, the individual does not perform fifty percent (50%) or more of
    his or her service in any city, and the employee resides in the city.
    SMC 5.45.081(F)(1).
    C. 2016 Audit
    During the January 2012 through March 2016 audit period, KMS included the
    compensation it paid to its registered representatives when calculating the payroll
    factor. Because most of the compensation paid by KMS is in the form of commissions
    paid to its registered representatives, and most of the registered representatives work
    6
    No. 78946-5-1/7
    outside the City, the payroll factor calculated by KMS was between 14% and 20%. After
    averaging this payroll factor with the undisputed service income factor, KMA calculated,
    reported, and paid $187,998.34 in Seattle B&O tax during the audit period.
    During the audit, the City took the position that compensation paid to registered
    representatives should be excluded from both the numerator and denominator in
    calculating the payroll factor. According to the City, compensation paid to KMS’s
    registered representatives should have been excluded because they were not
    “employees.” Because nearly all of KMS’s W-2 employees work in Seattle, exclusion of
    the commissions paid to the registered representatives increased the payroll factor by
    almost 100%. By excluding compensation paid to the registered representatives, the
    average of KMS’s service income and payroll factors roughly tripled, thereby tripling the
    amount of tax calculated due.
    As a result of the audit, the City assessed KMS with additional $460,972 of B&O
    tax, $20,501.78 of interest, and $23,048.64 in penalties, for a total of $504,532.22.
    KMS timely paid the additional assessment and then filed a complaint for a
    refund of taxes paid in the King County Superior Court. Both parties moved for
    summary judgment. KMS argued that all registered representatives of broker-dealer
    are deemed to be employees for securities law purposes because of the broker-dealer’s
    control and supervisory obligations. The City argued that the registered representative
    are independent contractors, not employees, and therefore are not supposed to be
    counted in the payroll factor.
    The superior courtgranted the City’s motion for summary judgment and denied
    KMS’s motion for summary judgment. KMS appeals.
    7
    No. 78946-5-1/8
    Because this case was resolved below on cross-motions for summary judgment,
    our review is de novo. Cmty. Telecable of Seattle, Inc. v. City of Seattle, Dep’t of
    Executive Admin, 
    164 Wash. 2d 35
    , 41, 
    186 P.3d 1032
    (2008). “Likewise, the proper
    construction of a city taxation ordinance is a legal question that is reviewed de novo on
    appeal, but the ‘burden is on the taxpayer to prove that a tax paid by him or her is
    incorrect.” Avanade, Inc. v. City of Seattle, 
    151 Wash. App. 290
    , 297, 
    211 P.3d 476
    (2009) (quoting Ford Motor Co. v. City of Seattle, Exec. Servs. Dep’t, 
    160 Wash. 2d 32
    , 41,
    
    156 P.3d 185
    (2007)). The reviewing court “gives considerable deference to the
    construction of” the challenged ordinance “by those officials charged with its
    enforcement.” Ford Motor 
    Co., 160 Wash. 2d at 42
    (citing Gen. Motors Corn. v. City of
    Seattle, 
    107 Wash. App. 42
    , 57, 
    25 P.3d 1022
    (2001)).
    A.
    As we explained in KMS I: “Federal and state constitutional law limit a
    jurisdiction’s power to tax activities occurring outside its boundaries. Because KMS’s
    registered representatives operated in Seattle, in other Washington state locations, and
    in locations outside Washington state, the City’s tax must meet both state and federal
    constitutional requirements.” KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 503
    .
    “The federal constitution’s commerce clause—preserving to Congress the
    authority to regulate interstate commerce—may, by negative implication, render a local
    tax regulation unconstitutional if the regulation has the effect of burdening interstate
    commerce with the risk of multiple taxation.” 
    Avanade, 151 Wash. App. at 301
    . To
    determine whether a tax violates the commerce clause, the United States Supreme
    8
    No. 78946-5-1/9
    Court has set out a four-factor test. “First, the tax must apply to an activity with
    ‘substantial nexus’ to the taxing state. Second, it must be ‘fairly apportioned.’ Third, it
    must not discriminate against interstate commerce. And fourth, it must be fairly related
    to services or benefits provided by the state.” KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 504
    (citing
    Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v. Brady, 
    430 U.S. 274
    , 
    97 S. Ct. 1076
    , 
    51 L. Ed. 2d 326
    (1977)).
    The second factor, fair apportionment, is at issue here. “A gross receipts tax is
    ‘simply a variety of tax on income, which [is] required to be apportioned to reflect the
    location of the various interstate activities by which it was earned.” KMS I, l35Wn.
    App. at 504 (quoting Ok. Tax Comm’n v. Jefferson Lines, Inc., 
    514 U.S. 175
    , 190, 
    115 S. Ct. 1331
    , 
    131 L. Ed. 2d 261
    (1995). Aswe explained in KMS I:
    The Constitution does not require a single apportionment formula.
    Rather, “a tax is fairly apportioned [if] it is internally and externally
    consistent.” 
    Goldberg, 488 U.S. at 261
    . Internal consistency requires a
    tax to be “structured so that if every State were to impose an identical tax,
    no multiple taxation would result.” 
    Goldberg, 488 U.S. at 261
    . “The
    external consistency test asks whether the State has taxed only that
    portion of the revenues from the interstate activity which reasonably
    reflects the in-state component of the activity being taxed.”
    KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 504
    (quoting Goldberg v. Sweet, 
    488 U.S. 252
    , 261-62, 109 S.
    Ct. 582, 
    102 L. Ed. 2d 607
    (1989)). The tax must actually reflect a reasonable sense of
    how income is generated. KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 505
    .
    In KMS I, we reviewed a similar effort by the City to impose a B&O tax on KMS.
    At that point in time, KMS had approximately 300 registered representatives working in
    approximately 210 business locations in nine western states, including Washington.
    KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 494
    . During the period January 1999 through March 2003, the
    City assessed the B&O tax on all commissions received in the KMS Seattle office, no
    9
    No. 78946-5-1110
    matter where the registered representative who generated the commission was based.
    The City maintained that because the Seattle office was KMS’s sole office, KMS was
    not entitled to apportionment under the City’s tax code. KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 494
    .
    We held that “attributing the entire proceeds of KMS’s registered representatives
    to KMS’s Seattle office because that is KMS’s sole office violates the external
    consistency requirement of federal commerce clause jurisprudence.” KMS I, 135 Wn.
    App. at 509. Adopting the rationale of a Pennsylvania court, we reasoned that this was
    so because taxing the entire gross proceeds of an out-of-city transaction, based solely
    on the fact that the transaction occurred in a state in which the taxpayer did not have an
    office, resulted in a tax that “was ‘out of all appropriate proportion to’ and had no
    ‘rational relationship’ with” the taxpayer’s business activities within Seattle. KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 506-08
    (quoting Northwood Constr. Co. v. Twp. of Upper Moreland, 
    579 Pa. 463
    , 486, 
    856 A.2d 789
    (2004)).
    Similar to federal law, Washington imposes a three-part test on a city’s power to
    tax: (1) the relevant taxable event must be identified; (2) the taxable event must occur   -
    within the municipality’s territorial limits; and (3) there must be a minimum connection
    between the municipality and the transaction it seeks to tax. KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 510
    (citing Dravo Corp. v. City of Tacoma, 
    80 Wash. 2d 590
    , 594-95, 
    496 P.2d 504
    (1972)).
    With respect to the application of state law to the City’s imposition of its B&O tax
    on KMS based solely on its office being in Seattle, in KMS I, we concluded:
    that the City cannot tax income generated by securities transactions within
    Washington state but outside Seattle city limits when the incident of
    taxation is the privilege of doing business in the City. Whether or not KMS
    maintains an “office” as defined by the City’s tax ordinance is not a
    10
    No. 78946-5-Ill 1
    determining factor in the state Jaw test of the limits of a municipality’s
    taxing power. The City must fairly apportion KMS’s gross receipts based
    on where the income-generating activity occurred. The assessment did
    not fairly apportion KMS’s gross receipts.
    KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 512
    .
    B.
    KMS first argues that the City’s B&O tax is unconstitutional as applied because it
    was not fairly apportioned. This is so, KMS contends, because the City ignored that
    most of KMS’s taxable income is generated by registered representatives that work out
    of the city and state. We agree.
    An “as applied” constitutional challenge to statute is “characterized by a party’s
    allegation that application of the statute in the specific context of the party’s actions or
    intended actions is unconstitutional.” City of Redmond v. Moore, 
    151 Wash. 2d 664
    , 668-
    69, 
    91 P.3d 875
    (2004). This does not totally invalidate that statute, only its future
    application in a similar context. ~I.
    A tax assessed on gross income, such as the City’s B&O tax, must be fairly
    apportioned to reflect “the location of the various interstate activities by which it was
    earned.” KMS 
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 504
    . In order to insure compliance with this mandate,
    in 2008 (after KMS I), the legislature enacted RCW 35.102.130, requiring all
    Washington cities with a B&O tax to use a two-factor apportionment formula based on
    service income and payroll. Wedbush Sec., Inc. v. City of Seattle, 
    189 Wash. App. 360
    ,
    364, 
    358 P.3d 422
    (2015). The City incorporated the requirements of RCW 35.102.130
    in SMC5.45.081. 
    Wedbush, 189 Wash. App. at 364
    , n.3. Under RCW35.102.130(3)(a)
    and SMC 5.45.081 (F)(1), the payroll factor takes into account the location of the of the
    employees and individuals that generate the income.
    11
    No. 78946-5-1112
    The City’s payroll factor does this by comparing the compensation paid to
    individuals and employees “in the city” to compensation paid to individuals ‘paid
    everywhere.” SMC 5.45.081(F)(1). Compensation is defined to include “commissions
    paid to individuals for personal services that are or would be included in the
    individual’s gross income under the federal Internal Revenue Code.” SMC
    5.45.081 (G)(2). In reporting its B&O tax liability, KMS included the commissions paid to
    its registered representatives in the payroll factor because most of KMS’s taxable
    income was generated through the sale of securities and services by the registered
    representatives   .~
    The City’s argument that compensation paid to KMS’s registered representatives
    must be excluded from the payroll factor because they are classified as independent
    contractors instead of employees necessarily fails. Whether a taxpayer does business
    through independent contractors or employees is “without constitutional significance.”
    Scripto Inc. v Carson, 
    362 U.S. 207
    , 211-12, 80S. Ct. 619,4 L. Ed. 2d 660 (1960).
    Moreover, the point of fair apportionment is to ensure that a city only taxes income
    attributable and proportional to a taxpayer’s income-generating activity in the city. KMS
    
    I, 135 Wash. App. at 506-09
    , 512; 
    Avanade, 151 Wash. App. at 304
    . It does not matter
    whether income is generated by independent contractors or employees working outside
    the city. Either way, they are not working ~i the city; the city has no claim to a “fair
    share” of the income they generate.
    ~ It is undisputed that KMS’s registered representatives must report commissions as gross
    income in their individual federal tax returns. See Watson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2007-146 (U.S.
    Tax Ct. 2007), aff’d, 277 Fed. App’x 450 (5th Cir. 2008).
    12
    No. 78946-5-1113
    While the law has changed, the City’s argument here suffers the same defect it
    did in KMS I. The City again ignores where KMS’s registered agents work and generate
    income in calculating the payroll factor. In calculating the payroll factor Seattle allocates
    more than 95% of KMS’s compensation to the city because this is where KMS’s W-2
    employees work. In essence, the City attributes most of KMS’s income to the work of
    approximately 50 employees based in the city when it is undisputed that the bulk of
    KMS’s income comes from the work of the 300-plus registered representatives based
    outside the city.
    Because the City failed to consider where and how KMS generated its income,
    the tax is not externally consistent as applied to KMS. Therefore, the B&O tax is not
    fairly apportioned to KMS. Because the tax is not fairly apportioned, it is
    unconstitutional as applied to KMS.
    C.
    As a matter of constitutional avoidance, if a statute is susceptible to more than
    one interpretation, courts should construe it “to avoid constitutional doubt.” Utter v.
    Bldg. Indus. Ass’n of Wash., 
    182 Wash. 2d 398
    , 434-35, 
    341 P.3d 953
    (2015). KMS
    argues that the Seattle Municipal Code provides a safety net: that if the allocation and
    apportionment provisions of the B&O tax do not fairly represent the extent of the
    taxpayer’s business activity, the City may employ another method to allocate the
    taxpayer’s income and thereby avoid a constitutional violation. We agree.
    In RCW 35.102.130, the Legislature specifically provided at catchall to the
    apportionment formula. When Seattle adopted the RCW in SMC 5.45.08, it also
    adopted this relevant portion:
    13
    No. 78946-5-1/14
    If the allocation and apportionment provisions of this subsection do not
    fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer’s business activity in the city or
    cities in which the taxpayer does business, the taxpayer may petition for or
    the tax administrators may jointly require, in respect to all or any part of
    the taxpayer’s business activity, that one of the following methods be used
    jointly by the cities to allocate or apportion gross income, if reasonable:
    (i) Separate accounting;
    (ii) The use of a single factor;
    (iii) The inclusion of one or more additional factors that will fairly
    represent the taxpayer’s business activity in the city; or
    (iv) The employment of any other method to effectuate an equitable
    allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer’s income.
    RCW 35.1 02.130(3)(c); SMC 5.45.081 (F)(3).
    Here, when KMS challenged the City’s tax apportionment, KMS argued that
    “Seattle’s B&O tax can be fairly apportioned by including compensation paid to KMS’s
    registered representatives in calculating the compensation factor of Seattle’s
    apportionment formula, as KMS did when preparing and filing its Seattle taxes.”4
    KMS has provided for an additional method by which the City could have
    apportioned the tax so that the tax would fairly represent KMS’s activity in the city. As
    discussed above, the City’s application was not fairly apportioned to KMS and did not
    fairly represent how KMS conducts its business in Seattle. The catchall created by the
    Legislature gives the City authority to use a different method to apportion the tax without
    adhering to the two-factor formula in a way that is fair. Because the Legislature
    provided a catchall in the RCW, the City should have employed a different method to
    reach a fairly apportioned tax.
    ~ The City does not claim that KMS did not challenge the apportionment and provide an additional
    method of calculating the B&O tax.
    14
    No. 78946-5-1115
    D.
    KMS argues that a plain language reading of SMC allows for the City to consider
    the registered representatives as employees for an alternative apportionment
    calculation. We agree.
    The relevant definition of the code are:
    3. “Individual” means any individual who, under the usual common law rules
    applicable in determining the employer-employee relationship, has the status of
    an employee of that taxpayer.
    SMC 5.45.081(G).
    The common law ‘right to control” test for determining whether a worker is an
    employee or an independent contractor is derived from the common law of torts.
    Anfinson v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., 
    159 Wash. App. 35
    , 53, 
    244 P.3d 32
    , 41
    (2010), aWd, 
    174 Wash. 2d 851
    , 
    281 P.3d 289
    (2012). The right to control another’s
    conduct is often the most decisive factor in determining if an agency relationship exists.
    Masseyv. Tube Art Display, Inc., l5Wn. App. 782, 787, 
    551 P.2d 1387
    (1976). For tort
    purposes, the principle does not need to show complete control, rather, substantial
    evidence of control is sufficient. 
    Massey, 15 Wash. App. at 787
    .~
    Hôre, it is undisputed that both the SEC and FINRA consider a broker-dealer’s
    registered representatives to be its employees because they are, by law, subject to the
    broker-dealer’s control—even if they are classified as independent contractors.
    Additionally, KMS’s registered representatives fall within the definition of
    individual under SMC 5.45.081 (G). An individual is considered an employee under the
    ~ The city cites to Seattle Rule 5-039, which distinguishes employees from persons engaging in
    business. The rule provides a list of factors to determine if a person is an employee. The rule also states
    that “while no one factor definitely determines employee status, the most important consideration is the
    employers right to control the employee.”
    15
    No. 78946-5-1/16
    common law rules if the employer exercises control over the individual. Under federal
    law, ‘as a broker-dealer, KMS must supervise its registered representatives, oversee
    their licensing status, and require them to comply with industry rules and standards of
    conduct and procedures set out in its policy manual.” Therefore, the City could logically
    consider the registered representatives to be employees for an alternative
    apportionment calculation of the B&O tax.
    We conclude that the City’s interpretation of its payroll factor as applied to KMS
    fails to fairly apportion the City’s B&O tax and is unconstitutional as applied to KMS.
    The constitutional defect can be avoided, however, by applying the interpretation
    offered by KMS and including its registered representatives in the payroll factor for
    calculating its B&O obligation.
    We vacate the order granting summary judgment to the City and remand with
    instruction for the trial court to grant KMS’s motion for summary judgment.
    4/
    WE CONCUR:
    z_     ~/
    /
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