Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiffs challenge Tax Law § 1101 (b) (8) (vi) (the Internet tax), alleging that it is unconstitutional on its face because it violates the Commerce Clause by subjecting online retailers, without a physical presence in the state, to New York sales and compensating use taxes. They also maintain that the Internet tax violates the Due Process Clause by creating an irrational, irrebuttable presumption of solicitation of business within the state. We reject plaintiffs’ facial challenges.
Plaintiff Amazon.com, LLC is a limited liability company formed in Delaware; Amazon Services LLC is a limited liability company formed in Nevada (collectively Amazon). Its principal corporate offices are located in the State of Washington. Amazon is strictly an online retailer—selling its merchandise solely through the Internet—and represents that it does not maintain any offices or property in New York.
Amazon offers an “Associates Program” through which third parties agree to place links on their own websites that, when clicked, direct users to Amazon’s website. The Associates are compensated on a commission basis. They receive a percentage of the revenue from sales generated when a customer clicks on the Associate’s link and completes a purchase from the Amazon site. The operating agreement governing this arrangement states that the Associates are independent contractors and that there is no employment relationship between the parties. Thousands of entities enrolled in the Associates Program have provided a New York address in connection with their applications.
Plaintiff Overstock.com is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Utah. Overstock likewise sells its merchandise solely through the Internet and does not maintain any office, employees or property in New York. Similar to Amazon, Overstock had an “Affiliates” program through which third parties would place links for Overstock.com on their own websites.
In April 2008, the legislature amended the Tax Law to include the subparagraph at issue here. In connection with the statutory definition of “vendor,” the Internet tax provides that
“a person making sales of tangible personal property or services taxable under this article (‘seller’) shall be presumed to be soliciting business through an independent contractor or other representative ifthe seller enters into an agreement with a resident of this state under which the resident, for a commission or other consideration, directly or indirectly refers potential customers, whether by a link on an internet website or otherwise, to the seller, if the cumulative gross receipts from sales by the seller to customers in the state who are referred to the seller by all residents with this type of an agreement with the seller is in excess of ten thousand dollars during the preceding four quarterly periods” (Tax Law § 1101 [b] [8] [vi]).
The statutory presumption, however, can “be rebutted by proof that the resident with whom the seller has an agreement did not engage in any solicitation in the state on behalf of the seller that would satisfy the nexus requirement of the United States constitution during the four quarterly periods in question” (Tax Law § 1101 [b] [8] [vi]).
Shortly after the legislation was enacted, the Department of Taxation and Finance (DTF) issued a memorandum to provide taxpayer guidance on the recent amendment. The document clarified that advertising alone would not invoke the statutory presumption, but further observed that, for purposes of this statute, the placement of a link to the seller’s website where the resident was compensated on the basis of completed sales deriving from that link would not be considered mere advertising (see NY St Dept of Taxation & Fin Mem No. TSB-M-08[3]S). The memorandum also explained that the statutory presumption could be rebutted through proof that the residents’ only activity in New York on behalf of the seller was to provide a link to the seller’s website and that the residents did not engage in any in-state solicitation directed toward potential New York customers (see NY St Dept of Taxation & Fin Mem No. TSB-M-08[3]S).
The following month, DTF issued a second memorandum, further detailing how sellers could rebut the statutory presumption. The presumption would be deemed successfully rebutted if the seller satisfied two conditions: (1) if the parties’ contract prohibited the resident representative from engaging in any solicitation activities in New York State on behalf of the seller, and (2) if each resident representative submitted an annual, signed certification stating that the resident had not engaged in any of the proscribed solicitation (see NY St Dept of Taxation & Fin Mem No. TSB-M-08[3.1]S).
The Appellate Division affirmed the portions of the orders that dismissed the facial challenges under the Commerce and Due Process Clauses and declared the statute constitutional on its face (
II
Having elected to forgo their as-applied challenges, plaintiffs now confront the substantial hurdle of demonstrating that the Internet tax is unconstitutional on its face. It is well settled that facial constitutional challenges are disfavored. “Legislative enactments enjoy a strong presumption of constitutionality . . . [and] parties challenging a duly enacted statute face the initial burden of demonstrating the statute’s invalidity ‘beyond a reasonable doubt.’ Moreover, courts must avoid, if possible, interpreting a presumptively valid statute in a way that will needlessly render it unconstitutional” (LaValle v Hayden,
There is some dispute as to the appropriate standard for evaluating a facial challenge under the Commerce Clause— whether we must determine that there is “no set of circumstances” under which the statute would be valid (see Matter of Moran Towing Corp. v Urbach,
The dormant Commerce Clause has been interpreted to prohibit states from imposing an undue tax burden on interstate commerce (see Matter of Orvis Co. v Tax Appeals Trib. of State of N.Y.,
In National Bellas Hess, Inc. v Department of Revenue of Ill. (
The Supreme Court confronted a similar issue involving a mail-order business in Quill Corp. v North Dakota (
Subsequent to Quill, we further explained that, although an in-state physical presence is necessary, it “need not be substantial. Rather, it must be demonstrably more than a ‘slightest presence’ ” (Orvis,
There are clearly parallels between a mail-order business and an online retailer—both are able to conduct their operations without maintaining a physical presence in a particular state. Indeed, physical presence is not typically associated with the Internet in that many websites are designed to reach a national or even a global audience from a single server whose location is of minimal import. However, through this statute, the legislature has attached significance to the physical presence of a resident website owner. The decision to do so recognizes that, even in the Internet world, many websites are geared toward predominantly local audiences—including, for instance, radio stations, religious institutions and schools—such that the physical presence of the website owner becomes relevant to Commerce Clause analysis. Indeed, the Appellate Division record in this case contains examples of such websites urging their local constituents to support them by making purchases through their Amazon links. Essentially, through these types of affiliation agreements, a vendor is deemed to have established an in-state sales force.
Viewed in this manner the statute plainly satisfies the substantial nexus requirement. Active, in-state solicitation that produces a significant amount of revenue qualifies as “demonstrably more than a ‘slightest presence’ ” under Orvis. Although it is not a dispositive factor, it also merits notice that vendors are not required to pay these taxes out-of-pocket. Rather, they are collecting taxes that are unquestionably due, which are exceedingly difficult to collect from the individual purchasers themselves, and as to which there is no risk of multiple taxation.
Ill
As explained in Quill, although Due Process and Commerce Clause challenges are “closely related,” each provision “pose[s] distinct limits on the taxing powers of the States” (
Plaintiffs argue that the Internet tax violates due process because the statutory presumption is irrational and essentially irrebuttable. In order for the presumption to be constitutionally valid, there must be “a rational connection between the facts proven and the fact presumed, and ... a fair opportunity for the opposing party to make [a] defense” (Matter of Casse v New York State Racing & Wagering Bd.,
Here, the fact proved is that the resident is compensated for referrals that result in purchases. The fact presumed is that at least some of those residents will actively solicit other New Yorkers in order to increase their referrals and, consequently,
The presumption would appear decidedly less rational if it were applied to those who receive some types of “other consideration”—i.e., those whose compensation is unrelated to actual sales. It is difficult to distinguish that arrangement from traditional advertising. Nonetheless, plaintiffs have chosen to limit our review to a facial challenge, and the fact that plaintiffs can posit a potential constitutional infirmity does not require the statute’s invalidation on its face. This is particularly true where, as here, the agency charged with enforcing the statute has expressly acknowledged that mere advertising is beyond the scope of the provision.
Plaintiffs also claim that the presumption is irrebuttable because it will be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to prove that none of their New York affiliates is soliciting customers on the retailers’ behalf. However, as noted above, DTP has set forth a method (contractual prohibition and annual certification) through which the retailers will be deemed to have rebutted the presumption. Obtaining the necessary information may impose a burden on the retailers, but inconvenience does not render the presumption irrebuttable. In addition, while not determinative, it is notable that the presumption sensibly places the burden on the retailers to provide information about the activities of their own affiliates—information that DTP would have significant difficulty uncovering on its own (see Lavine v Milne,
In sum, plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate that the statute is facially unconstitutional under either the Commerce or the Due Process Clause.
Accordingly, in both cases, the judgment appealed from and the order of the Appellate Division brought up for review should be affirmed, with costs.
Notes
. Overstock suspended its Affiliates program (for those who provided a New York address) shortly after the enactment of the Internet tax at issue here.
. The presumption only applies in the first instance to a company that has sold at least $10,000 in products or services as the result of such referrals.
Dissenting Opinion
The rules that govern this case are laid down in a series of United States Supreme Court decisions and are not in dispute. Under the Commerce Clause, a state may require an out-of-state retailer to collect use tax from in-state purchasers only if the retailer has a physical presence within the state (National Bellas Hess, Inc. v Department of Revenue of Ill.,
Our task here is to decide whether certain New York-based websites—Overstock’s “Affiliates” and Amazon’s “Associates”—are the equivalent of sales agents, soliciting business for Overstock and Amazon, or are only media in which Overstock and Amazon advertise their products. I think they are the latter.
The Overstock and Amazon links that appear on websites owned by New York proprietors serve essentially the same function as advertising that a more traditional out-of-state retailer might place in local newspapers. The websites are not soliciting customers for Overstock and Amazon in the fashion of a local sales agent. Of course the website owners solicit business for themselves; they encourage people to visit their websites, just as a newspaper owner would seek to boost circulation. But there is no basis for inferring that they are actively soliciting for the out-of-state retailers.
It does not make sense to envision a website owner trying to persuade members of the public, as a sales agent would, that Overstock and Amazon are high quality merchants that the public should want to do business with: persuasion of that sort
The statute at issue here tries to turn advertising media into an in-state sales force through a presumption. The statute says that a seller “shall be presumed to be soliciting business through an independent contractor or other representative” if it enters an agreement under which a New York resident “for a commission or other consideration, directly or indirectly refers potential customers, whether by a link on an internet website or otherwise” (Tax Law § 1101 [b] [8] [vi]). But of course a statutory presumption cannot by itself permit a state to do what the United States Constitution forbids. To presume that every website that has an agreement under which it carries an Overstock or Amazon link is a sales agent for Overstock or Amazon would be to nullify the rule that advertising in in-state media is not the equivalent of physical presence.
Read literally, the statute would reach essentially all Internet advertising that links to a seller’s website: it includes any agreement for referral of customers, by a link or otherwise, “for a commission or other consideration.” Since this literal reading would unquestionably render the statute unconstitutional, the Department of Taxation and Finance has adopted a narrowing construction, largely ignoring the words “or other consideration,” and applying the presumption only where the website receives a commission or similar compensation—i.e., where “the consideration for placing the link on the Web site is based on the volume of completed sales generated by the link” (NY St Dept of Taxation & Fin Mem No. TSB-M-08[3]S at 2). The narrowing construction, in my view, does not save the statute.
It was no doubt true before the Internet existed that advertising was usually sold for a flat fee, while sales agents usually
A number of tests have been stated for deciding the validity of a statutory presumption. In People v Leyva (
I do not think it necessary to decide here what test should apply to a presumption enacted by a state for the purpose of expanding its own power over interstate transactions (though I would think it should be a relatively demanding one); whatever the test is, this statute fails. To infer, from an agreement to put a link on a website and to compensate the website owner in proportion to the resulting sales, that the website owner is actively soliciting business for the seller “is so strained as not to have a reasonable relation to the circumstances of life as we know them” (Tot v United States,
I would therefore hold that the statute challenged in this litigation is invalid under the Commerce Clause.
Judges Graffeo, Read and Pigott concur with Chief Judge Lippman; Judge Smith dissents in an opinion; Judge Rivera taking no part.
In each case: Judgment appealed from and order of the Appellate Division brought up for review affirmed, with costs.
