Cities Management, Inc., Relator, vs. Commissioner of Revenue, Respondent.
A23-0222
STATE OF MINNESOTA IN SUPREME COURT
November 22, 2023
Moore, III, J. Dissenting, Anderson, J., Hudson, C.J. Took no part, Procaccini, J.
Tax Court. Filed: November 22, 2023.
Masha M. Yevzelman, Jennifer R. Pusch, Fredrikson & Byron, P.A., Minneapolis, Minnesota, for relator.
Keith Ellison, Attorney General, Jennifer A. Kitchak, Assistant Attorney General, Saint Paul, Minnesota, for respondent.
Benjamin A. Wagner, Kathleen E. Pfutzenreuter, Wagner Tax Law, Minneapolis, Minnesota, for amici curiae Minnesota Society of Certified Public Accountants and Minnesota Chamber of Commerce.
SYLLABUS
Under
Affirmed.
OPINION
MOORE, III, Justice.
This case concerns the authority of the Commissioner of Revenue to apportion the income of a nonresident under
FACTS
The facts here are undisputed. CMI is a Minnesota S corporation2 that manages community associations in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Until 2015, CMI was owned in part by a nonresident named Kim Carlson. That year, Carlson and her cо-owner sold their stock ownership interests in CMI to an unrelated third party. The purchaser requested that the two owners agree to make an election under
The Minnesota state tax treatment of this type of income is governed by
In advising Carlson and CMI about the tax impact of the proposed terms of the sale, the public accounting firm relied on the tax court‘s interpretation of section 290.17 in Nadler v. Commissioner of Revenue, No. 7736 R, 2006 WL 1084260 (Minn. T.C. Apr. 21, 2006). In Nadler, the tax court determined that income generated by the sale of goodwill constituted “nonbusiness income” that was subject to allocation under subdivision 2(c) of section 290.17. Nadler, 2006 WL 1084260, at *7-8. Nadler was not appealed to our court following the tax court‘s decision. Bаsed on Nadler, the public accounting firm advised Carlson and CMI that gain on the portion of sale proceeds considered CMI‘s goodwill would be taxed under
Carlson and her co-owner agreed to make a federal section 338(h)(10) election as part of the sale, and CMI was purchased in September 2015 for $8,763,041. In preparing CMI‘s 2015 Minnesota tax return, CMI‘s accountants again followed and relied on Nadler, characterizing the gain on the sale of CMI‘s goodwill as income “not derived from the conduct of a trade or business,”
Unbeknownst to Carlson, CMI, or their accountants, the Department of Revenue had internally taken the position that it “d[id] not acquiesce” to the tax court‘s decision in Nadler. Minn. Dep‘t of Revenue, Technical Advice Memorandum (May 4, 2007). As early as 2007, the Department was circulating non-public internal technical advice memoranda and other documents in which it informed auditors that the Department would not follow the tax court‘s reasoning in Nadler. The Commissioner did not make the Department‘s disagreement with the tax court‘s decision public until July 2017, when Revenue Notice 17-02 was issued. This notice “advise[d] non-resident individuals that the department does not administer the income allocation provisions in [section 290.17] using the Minnesota Tax Court‘s reasoning in Nadler v. Commissioner, No. 7736 R, 2006 WL 1084260 (Minn. Tax Ct.).” Minn. Dep‘t of Revenue Noticе No. 17-02 (July 3, 2017).
In September 2018, following an audit of CMI‘s income tax return, the Commissioner determined that CMI had applied the incorrect allocation rule in section 290.17 to income from the sale. Under the Commissioner‘s view of the statute, that income was business income subject to apportionment and thus should not have been assigned under subdivision 2(c). Based on the audit, the Commissioner assessed CMI $433,017 in nonresident withholding tax,
In summary, CMI and the Commissioner reached different tax assessments because of a dispute about whether the gain from the sale of CMI‘s goodwill was nonbusiness income. If the sale income was nonbusiness income, a specific allocation formula for that portion of CMI‘s yearly income would apply under subdivision 2(c) of section 290.17. All other income frоm CMI‘s business would then be apportioned under subdivision 3 of section 290.17 using a different apportionment formula. If the sale income was business income, however, the sale income plus all other business income would be apportioned under subdivision 3. CMI allocated the sale income under subdivision 2(c) and apportioned the remainder of CMI‘s yearly income under subdivision 3, while the Commissioner apportioned the entirety of CMI‘s yearly income under subdivision 3.
CMI appealed the Commissioner‘s assessment administratively. The Commissioner affirmed the assessment but removed the substantial understatement penalty. Specifically, the Commissioner noted that CMI “reasonably relied on Nadler and the Department had issued no written guidance until 2017 (Revenue Notice 17-02) disputing the Nadler decision.” Because “CMI appeared to act in good faith and had a reasonable cause for their position,” the Commissioner determined that abatement of the penalty was warranted. See
CMI appealed the Commissioner‘s determination to the tax court, which affirmed the assessment on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. Cities Mgmt., Inc. v. Comm‘r of Revenue, No. 9484-R, 2022 WL 17825925, at *1 (Minn. T.C. Dec. 20, 2022). Relying on our analysis of the unitary business principle in YAM Special Holdings, Inc. v. Commissioner of Revenue, 947 N.W.2d 438 (Minn. 2020), the tax court determined that CMI‘s income from the sale of its goodwill was business income of a unitary business. Cities Mgmt., 2022 WL 17825925, at *7. Because the gain generated from the transaction was “business income of a unitary business,” the tax court determined that “Minnesota may tax that income through аpportionment.” Id.
The tax court found unavailing CMI‘s argument that the Commissioner was bound by the Nadler decision, noting that intervening tax court cases had cast doubt on Nadler‘s applicability to cases involving the unitary business principle and that CMI‘s case was resolved instead by YAM Special Holdings, 947 N.W.2d at 438. Cities Mgmt., 2022 WL 17825925, at *9. The tax court also rejected CMI‘s argument that the Commissioner was collaterally estopped from relitigating the legal issues in Nadler. Cities Mgmt., 2022 WL 17825925, at *9-10. CMI now appeals the tax court‘s decision to this court.
ANALYSIS
“We review a tax court‘s order granting summary judgment to determine whether the tax court ‘erred in applying the law and whether any material facts are disputed.‘” Billion v. Comm‘r of Revenue, 827 N.W.2d 773, 777 (Minn. 2013) (quoting Sanchez v. Comm‘r of Revenue, 770 N.W.2d 523, 525 (Minn. 2009)). The material facts here are undisputed. Therefore, “the only question before us is whether the tax court correctly applied Minnesota law.” Id. “We review the tax court‘s conclusions
I.
We begin with CMI‘s argument that the Commissioner was bound by the tax court‘s interpretation of section 290.17 in Nadler v. Commissioner of Revenue, No. 7736 R, 2006 WL 1084260 (Minn. T.C. Apr. 21, 2006). Citing the tax court‘s jurisdictional statute,
The tax court‘s jurisdictional statute describes the authority of the tax court, in relevant part, as follows:
Except for an appeal to the supreme court or any other appeal allowed under this subdivision, the Tax Court shall be the sole, exclusive, and final authority for the hearing and determination of all questions of law and fact arising under the tax laws of the state, as defined in this subdivision, in those cases that have been appealed to the Tax Court and in any case that has been transferred by the district court to the Tax Court.
The Commissioner, however, argues that this language does not demonstrate legislative intent to make tax court decisions binding in subsequent cases but simply gives the tax court authority to decide each case before it completely. See In re McCannel, 301 N.W.2d 910, 920 (Minn. 1980) (“The language designating the tax court as the ‘sole, exclusive, and final authority’ for all issues raised in a particular case suggests that the legislature intended the tax court to have the power to decide each case completely.“). Accordingly, the Commissioner argues that while he was required to respect the tax court‘s interpretation of section 290.17 in Nadler for resolving that particular appeal, section 271.01, subdivision 5, does not mandate that he follow Nadler with respect to CMI‘s audit and assessment.
We are troubled by the Commissioner‘s conduct that this case has brought to light. Rather than appealing the tax court‘s interpretation of tax law with which the Department disagreed, the Commissioner decided internally—apparently without notice to the public—that the Department would “not acquiesce” to the tax court‘s interpretation of the law. We fear that such actions do little to inspire the trust and confidence of taxpayers in Minnesota‘s tax system. See Mauer v. Comm‘r of Revenue, 829 N.W.2d 59, 76 n.2 (Minn. 2013) (“For taxpayers to have trust and confidence that Minnesota‘s tax system is fairly and equitably applied to all, it is vitally important that taxpayers be able to understand the Department‘s [position] . . . . Such an understanding is important so that taxpayers can adjust their expectations, intentions, and actions accordingly.“). Still, we need not decide whether, as a matter of law, the Commissioner
CMI‘s requested remedy—that the Commissioner‘s assessment be treated as invalid—is not possible based simply on a legal conclusion that the Commissioner was bound by the tax court‘s interpretation of section 290.17 in Nadler. Whether the Commissioner‘s assessment is valid depends on our interpretation of section 290.17. Even if the Commissioner was perhaps bound by Nadler and should have followed that interpretation of section 290.17, we are not bound by the tax court‘s statutory interpretation in Nadler or any other case when determining whether the Commissioner‘s assessment was proper. Kmart Corp. v. County of Stearns, 710 N.W.2d 761, 770 (Minn. 2006) (“And, of course, decisions of the tax court have no binding effect on this court when we are ultimately called on to interpret a statute.“). Accordingly, we decline to announce a bright-line rule about the binding nature of unappealed tax court decisions.8
II.
We turn next to whether the tax court correctly determined that the gain on the sale of CMI‘s goodwill was subject to apportionment under subdivision 3 of
“On questions of statutory interpretation, our objective is to effectuate the Legislature‘s intent.” Hibbing Taconite Co. v. Comm‘r of Revenue, 958 N.W.2d 325, 329 (Minn. 2021). “The plain language of the statute is our best guide to the Legislature‘s intent.” Rodriguez v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 931 N.W.2d 632, 634 (Minn. 2019). “The plain
We begin with the text of section 290.17. Subdivision 1 dictates the scope of the statute‘s allocation rules. These rules do not apply to “[t]he income of resident individuals.”
Subdivision 2 provides rules for assigning various types of “income of a taxpayer subject to the allocation rules that is not derived from the conduсt of a trade or business.”
Gain on the sale of goodwill or income from a covenant not to compete that is connected with a business operating all or partially in Minnesota is allocated to this state to the extent that the income from the business in the year preceding the year of sale was assignable to Minnesota under subdivision 3.
Subdivision 3 provides a general rule of apportioning trade or business income: “All income of a trade or business is subject to apportionment except nonbusiness income.”
Subdivision 4 codifies the constitutional “unitary business principle.” The subdivision defines “unitary business” to mean “business activities or operations which result in a flow of value between them.”
Nonbusiness income is income of the trade or business that cannot be apportioned by this state because of the United States Constitution or the Constitution of the state of Minnesota and includes income that cannot constitutionally be apportioned to this state because it is derived from a capital transaction that solely serves an investment function.
With this statutory framework in mind, we start with what is undisputed. The parties agree that the income of CMI attributable to Carlson falls within the scope of the allocation rules in section 290.17 because Carlson is a nonresident shareholder of CMI, a Minnesota S corporation. See
The parties’ dispute boils down to which provision of section 290.17 governs the taxation of CMI‘s income. CMI contеnds that the allocation rules in subdivision 2 govern because the gain on the sale of CMI‘s goodwill is income that is “not derived from the conduct of a trade or business.”
The parties disagree on the meaning of the statement in subdivision 3 that “[a]ll income of a trade or business is subject to apportionment except nonbusiness income.”
CMI disputes this interpretation, arguing that the words “subject to apportionment” in subdivision 3 connote a permissive meaning.
CMI is correct that “subject to“—particularly whеn it is used as an adjective or adverb—often means something less certain than “must.” See Subject, Black‘s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining the adjective form of “subject” to mean “[d]ependent on or exposed to (some contingency); esp. being under discretionary authority“). But “subject to” can also have a more mandatory meaning. See Concise Oxford English Dictionary 1435 (11th ed. rev. 2009) (defining the adjective form of “subject” to mean “dependent or conditional on” but also “under the control or authority of“). Although the first meaning bolsters CMI‘s interpretation, this second meaning of “subject to” would support the Commissioner‘s interpretation.
But CMI argues that we must adopt its interpretation of subdivision 3 in section 290.17 because the Commissioner‘s interpretation would render language in subdivision 2 superfluous. Under the Commissioner‘s interpretation, subdivision 2 and its allocatiоn rules are invoked only when the income at issue falls within the definition of “nonbusiness income.” CMI contends that this interpretation means that there would be no need for the directive in subdivision 2 that “[t]he income of a taxpayer subject to the allocation rules that is not derived from the conduct of a trade or business must be assigned in accordance with [this subdivision].”
But we are unconvinced by this argument. CMI essentially asks us to interpret the statute in a way to exempt goodwill from the unitary business principle in subdivisiоn 4. This provision states that “the entire income of [a] unitary business is subject to apportionment.”
We acknowledge that section 290.17 is not a model of statutory clarity. Both parties’ interpretations are supported by the statutory language, yet neither interpretation harmonizes all of the statute‘s provisions. Because the Legislature‘s intent is not clearly ascertainable from the language of the statute, we conclude that the treatment of gain on the sale of goodwill under section 290.17 is ambiguous. Accordingly, we turn to other interpretive tools to determine the Legislature‘s intent related
One such tool that we may use when a statute is ambiguous is contemporaneous legislative history,
After the omnibus tax bill was introduced in the Minnesota House of Representatives, it was referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, where the bill‘s author described the provisions amending section 290.17 as “a response to the Firstar-Hercules decisions.” Hearing on H.F. 2420, H. Comm. Ways and Means, 81st Leg., Apr. 27, 1999 (audio tape) (comments of Rep. Abrams, house author of the bill). Firstar and Hercules were companion cases we decided in 1998 that addressed issues much like the one before us now: whether income subject to taxation under section 290.17 was apportionable business income. Firstar Corp. v. Comm‘r of Revenue, 575 N.W.2d 835, 836 (Minn. 1998); Hercules Inc. v. Comm‘r of Revenue, 575 N.W.2d 111, 112-13 (Minn. 1998). In both cases, the tax court had affirmed the Commissioner‘s determination that the taxpayer‘s income was subject to apportionment, and in both cases, we reversed. Id. at 836; Hercules, 575 N.W.2d at 113.
The income at issue in Firstar was the capital gain that a bank holding company had realized from the sale of office property in Wisconsin. 575 N.W.2d at 836. In interpreting sеction 290.17, we noted that the Legislature had amended the statute in 1987 to remove any definition of “business income.” 575 N.W.2d at 838. Still, we concluded that “the fact that
In short, in both cases, we adopted more exacting standards for income to constitute apportionable business income under section 290.17 than what the Commissioner and tax court had used to evaluate the income of multistate businesses. That the 1999 amendment modifying the statute‘s definition of nonbusiness income was introduced as a response to these decisions suggests that the Legislature intended to change our interpretation of the divide between business and nonbusiness income in section 290.17.
But CMI argues that the functional test articulated in Firstar remains intact, citing a proposed amendment to subdivision 3 of section 290.17, which the Legislature rejected in favor of the 1999 amendment. The language that CMI identifies was included in the Minnesota Senate‘s omnibus tax bill and would have amended subdivision 3, in part, as follows:
All income of a unitary business is subject to apportionment except nonbusiness income. Income derived from carrying on a trade or a unitary business must be assigned to this state if the trade or unitary business is conducted wholly within this state, assigned outside this state if conducted wholly without this state and apportioned between this state and other states and countries under this subdivision if conducted partly within and partly without this state.
S.F. 1276, art. 2, § 9, 81st Minn. Leg. 1999; see also 2 Journal of the Senate 2078-79 (81st Minn. Leg. Apr. 30, 1999) (amending H.F. 2420 so as to replace its language with the language in S.F. 1276).
CMI contends that the Legislature, by rejecting this language, did not overrule the Firstar transactional test because the Legislature left intact the language that the Firstar test described—the directives that “income of a taxpayer subject to the allocation rules that is not derived from the conduct of a trade or business must be assigned,”
But CMI ascribes too much meaning to the Legislature‘s decision to adopt the language of the house bill rather than the senate‘s proposed amendment. At the conference committee formed to resolve the differences between the two omnibus bills, legislators acknowledged that both bills had the same goal: to expand the State‘s ability to tax multistate businesses’ income through apportionment. The conference committee‘s discussion of the bill makes clear that the amendment to section 290.17 was intended to fix a perceived problem with our decisions in Firstar and Hercules—that because of our interpretation of business and nonbusiness income in those cases, out-of-state taxpayers were paying less income tax and Minnesota-domiciled taxpayers were paying more. Hearing on H.F. 2420 Conf. Comm., 81st Leg., May
Therefore, CMI‘s income, which derives from a unitary asset, does not constitute “nonbusiness income” under
See
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the tax court.
Affirmed.
PROCACCINI, J., not having been a member of this court at the time of submission, took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
DISSENT
ANDERSON, Justice (dissenting).
As a legal matter, this appeal concerns the issue of whether a nonresident‘s income is subject to apportionment under
The court accurately sets out the undisputed facts here. Based on the tax court‘s holding in Nadler v. Commissioner of Revenue, No. 7736 R, 2006 WL 1084260 (Minn. T.C. Apr. 21, 2006), the majority shareholder, Kim Carlson, along with the co-owner of Cities Management, Inc. (CMI) agreed to sell the business on certain terms and also relied on Nadler in characterizing income from the sale of the business in preparing and filing the 2015 tax return.
But what is perhaps most troubling about this conduct is the Commissioner‘s lack of transparency. For more than 10 years after the Nadler opinion was issued, the Commissioner did not make public the Department of Revenue‘s position on the interpretation of section 290.17. Public notice of the Commissioner‘s disagreement was not provided until July 2017 when the Department issued Revenue Notice 17-02. In this revenue notice, the Commissioner publicly advised taxpayers for the first time that “the department does not administer the income allocation provisions in [section 290.17] using the Minnesota Tax Court‘s reasoning in Nadler v. Commissioner.” Minn. Dep‘t of Revenue Notice No. 17-02 (July 3, 2017).
This revenue notice was, of course, no use to CMI; the business was sold and the 2015 tax return was filed relying on Nadler before the Commissioner issued the revenue notice. The Department itself acknowledged the basic unfairness of this situation when CMI administratively appealed the audit. In removing the substantial understatement penalty initially assessed against CMI, the Department noted that CMI “reasonably relied on Nadler and the Dеpartment had issued no written guidance until 2017 (Revenue Notice 17-02) disputing the Nadler decision.”
On appeal to our court, CMI argues that the Commissioner should be bound by tax court decisions that are not appealed, including Nadler, in subsequent audits and assessments. The Commissioner disagrees, arguing that tax court decisions are final and binding in particular cases but that these decisions are not precedential. In other words, the Commissioner contends that tax court opinions cannot be “binding” on parties in subsequent cases because tax court opinions are not binding on the tax court itself.
That issue need not be resolved here.1 Given the outrageous conduct of the Commissioner, I would instead announce an equitable rule that the Commissioner is bound by tax court decisions that are not appealed unless the Department of Revenue provides public notice of its disagreement with the tax court opinion.2 It is vital
Applying this equitable rule to the circumstances before us, it is clear that the Commissioner is bound by the tаx court‘s interpretation of section 290.17 in Nadler. The tax court issued its opinion for Nadler in 2006, and although the Commissioner disagreed with the tax court‘s interpretation of section 290.17, no appeal was taken. The Commissioner did not give public notice of disagreement with Nadler until 2017, when Revenue Notice 17-02 was issued. CMI filed the tax return underlying this appeal in 2016—before the Commissioner gave public notice. I conclude that the Commissioner is bound by the Nadler interpretation of section 290.17 for the purposes of this appeal. There is no dispute that CMI accurately applied the Nadler interpretation when it concluded that gain on the sale of goodwill was subject to taxation under
HUDSON, Chief Justice (dissenting).
I join in the dissent of Justice Anderson.
