MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This bankruptcy appeal presents a question of law which has yet to be addressed by the First Circuit and has split the other federal circuit courts of appeals: which party bears the ultimate burden of proof when a tax claim is asserted in the context of a bankruptcy proceeding?
I. BACKGROUND
Thinking Machines Corporation (“Thinking Machines”) appeals the decision of the Bankruptcy Court awarding the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department (the “Department”) a pre-petition tax claim on a tax base of $2,158,042.27.
See In Re Thinking Machines Corp.,
*428 Thinking Machines is a Massachusetts corporation engaged in the manufacture, sale, and servicing of computers. Between 1988 and 1991, it sold computer products and services to a number of government laboratories located in New Mexico pursuant to contracts referred to as “Maintenance Agreements.” These agreements called for Thinking Machines to provide full-service maintenance and support for its computers, including 1) hardware support (i.e., provision and installation of replacement parts, as well as repair of existing parts), 2) software licensing and support (i.e., debugging, provision of upgrades), and 3) an on-site applications engineer to troubleshoot and help customers get their own applications running in the Thinking Machines environment.
In May of 1992, the Department conducted an audit of Thinking Machines for the period of January 1, 1988 through March 31, 1992, and issued an assessment for outstanding “gross receipts” taxes, see N.M.Stat.Ann. § 7-9-4(A), interest, and penalties on a tax base of $3,259,291.00. On August 17, 1994, Thinking Machines filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition, and on September 21, 1994, the Department filed a proof of claim pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 504 for the amount of the assessment.
Thinking Machines filed a timely objection to the Department’s claim on November 27, 1995, arguing that the Maintenance Agreements predominantly involved sales of tangible personal property to organizations possessing certain nontaxable transaction certificates, and were therefore exempt from New Mexico’s gross receipts tax.
See
N.M.Stat.Ann. § 7-9-60. The Department, in contrast, contends that the sale of services was predominant throughout the Maintenance Agreements, thus rendering these Agreements fully taxable. Under New Mexico law, the “predominant ingredient” test is used to determine whether an activity constitutes the provision of a service or a sale of tangible property for purposes of the gross receipts tax.
See EG & G, Inc. v. Director, Revenue Division Taxation and Revenue Dep’t,
After an evidentiary hearing, the Bankruptcy Court overruled Thinking Machines’ objection to the Department’s tax claim. The Bankruptcy Court held that Thinking Machines 1) had the ultimate burden of proving that the Department’s tax assessment was incorrect, 2) failed to satisfy its burden of proving that the revenues generated from its Maintenance Agreements were derived predominantly from sales of tangible property, and 3) failed to introduce adequate evidence of the proper allocation of out-of-state service costs. Relying upon one of the allocation models submitted by the Department, the Bankruptcy Court awarded the Department a pre-petition tax claim on a tax base of $2,158,042.27.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Burden of Proof
The Bankruptcy Court’s ruling that, even in bankruptcy, the ultimate burden of proof rests with the taxpayer to disprove the validity of a tax claim, is a legal conclusion that this Court must review de novo.
See
Fed. R.Bankr.P. 8013;
In Re Winthrop,
Outside of the bankruptcy forum, “[i]t is settled law that taxpayers bear the burden of proving that a tax deficiency assessment is erroneous.”
Delaney v. Commissioner,
Subject to certain exceptions, the United States Bankruptcy Code confers jurisdiction upon the bankruptcy courts to “determine the amount or legality of any tax” assessed against the debtor. 11 U.S.C. § 505. The Bankruptcy Code and the Federal Bankruptcy Rules of Procedure are silent, however, with respect to the proper allocation of the ultimate burden of proof
*429
when a tax claim is asserted in bankruptcy,
see In re MacFarlane,
As this case involves the determination of a state tax claim, this Court must look to state law “[ujnless some federal interest requires a different result.”
Butner v. United States,
Courts of appeals on both sides of this issue have acknowledged that the Bankruptcy Code provides no express rules of decision for the determination of tax claims.
See MacFarlane,
This Court finds
MacFarlane
and
Fidelity
unpersuasive. By its express terms, the Bankruptcy Code does not treat taxing authorities the same as other claimants.
See
11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(8) (affording priority to state and federal tax claims); 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1) (tax-related debts may not be discharged in bankruptcy);
see also
15
Collier on Bankruptcy
HTX5.03[5] (15th ed. 1996) (“Despite the egalitarian appeal of [the] position [expressed in
MacFarlane],
it overlooks the frequent disparate treatment of the government as tax-creditor found in the Bankruptcy Code regarding such matters as the priority and dischargeability of claims.”); Frances R. Hill,
Toward a Theory of Bankruptcy Tax: A Statutory Coordination Approach,
50 Tax Law. 103, 162 (1996) (“In the absence of a provision in the Bankruptcy Code, it is far from clear that formal equality is a principle of fairness in disputes among creditors.”). Although certain provisions in the Bankruptcy Code do indeed modify the rights of taxing authorities in order to foster the objective of equality of distribution among creditors, “in those instances in which Congress has decided that the administration of the Bankruptcy Code requires alteration in the substantive rights of the parties, it has not hesitated to make such intentions clear.”
Landbank,
This Court’s interpretation of the Bankruptcy Code is further reinforced by the “background presumption that federal law generally will not interfere with [the] administration of state taxes.”
National Private Truck Council, Inc. v. Oklahoma Tax Comm’n,
For the foregoing reasons, this Court affirms the Bankruptcy Court’s ruling that the burden of proof rests with the taxpayer, Thinking Machines.
B. The Application of the “Predominant Ingredient” Standard
New Mexico uses the “predominant ingredient” test to determine whether an activity constitutes the provision of a service or a sale of tangible property for purposes of the gross receipts tax.
See EG & G,
Thinking Machines first asserts that the Bankruptcy Court committed clear error by disregarding the “uncontroverted” testimony of its vice president of finance, Robert LaBossiere (“LaBossiere”). On the stand, LaBossiere stated that he believed the provision of replacement hardware constituted eighty to ninety percent of Thinking Machines’ total costs under the Agreements.
See
Joint Appendix (“App.”) at 125. As the Bankruptcy Court noted in its ruling, however, Thinking Machines “never offered any documentation that would have substantiated such a conclusion.”
Thinking Machines,
Thinking Machines did attempt to substantiate its cost figures indirectly, but to no avail. First, LaBossiere stated that such a cost breakdown is the “standard” in the industry, but the Bankruptcy Court ruled that he was not qualified to testify as an expert. Second, Thinking Machines submitted documentation showing how it priced items provided under the Maintenance Agreements, but the Bankruptcy Court was unpersuaded that the pricing information accurately reflected actual costs. Third, Thinking Machines produced its replacement parts log for two of its customers to establish the sheer quantity of parts it supplied under the Maintenance Agreements. The Bankruptcy Court concluded, however, that even if the logs were accurate, they failed to indicate the costs of these parts to the debtor.
See Thinking Machines,
Thinking Machines complains that the Bankruptcy Court applied the “predominant ingredient” test too constrictively and expected it to produce minutia (i.e., the precise material costs for the hardware). As the Department points out, however, the Bankruptcy Court did not expect minutia, but rather something other than the sweeping generalizations about costs expressed in terms of ranges in the industry. In arguing that the Bankruptcy Court should have looked no further than the relative inputs of software, hardware, and applications consulting services that comprise the Maintenance Agreements, Thinking Machines misses the point entirely. Under the Agreements, Thinking Machines did not simply furnish replacement hardware and software; it also 1) conducted repairs on existing parts; 2) installed the replacement hardware and software; and 3) helped customers determine when replacements or upgrades were necessary. The precise breakdown of Thinking-Machines’ labor and material costs is therefore very much relevant to the question of whether the Maintenance Agreements are predominantly sales of tangible property or services. 11 Accordingly, this Court affirms the Bankruptcy Court’s rulings that 1) Thinking Machines failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the Maintenance Agreements predominantly involved sales of tangible property, and 2) that the Maintenance Agreements are therefore taxable as sales of services.
C. Allocation of Out-of-State Services
Given the Bankruptcy Court’s determination that the Maintenance Agreements predominantly involved sales of services, all of the proceeds from these agreements— including those attributable to the “less than predominant” sales of tangible property — are subject to New Mexico’s gross receipts tax,
see EG & G,
Determining which sales of services qualify for this out-of-state exemption is by no means a simple proposition. GR-90 at 3(K):3 states that:
When a prime contractor performs services both within and without New Mexico, cost accounting records which reasonably allocate all costs to the location of the performance of the service shall be used to determine the amount of services performed in New Mexico. If adequate cost accounting records are not kept for the allocation of costs to specific locations, the receipts from performing such services *434 shall be prorated based on the percentage of service actually performed within New Mexico. The percentage shall be calculated by dividing the time spent ... performing such services in New Mexico by the total contract time spent performing services everywhere. 12
Here, the Bankruptcy Court relied upon one of the models submitted by the Department in its post-trial reply brief (“Exhibit D”) to calculate the percentage of services provided under the Maintenance Agreements that were performed outside of New Mexico. This Court holds that the Bankruptcy Court’s adoption of this model was clearly erroneous. As set forth below, Exhibit D is premised upon assumptions which are incompatible with the Bankruptcy Court’s prior conclusion that costs attributable to sales of services predominated the Maintenance Agreements.
Exhibits C and D of the Department’s post-trial reply brief and page two of Trial Exhibit 7 (“Exhibit 7”) are all models — albeit ones with different assumptions — submitted to the Bankruptcy Court by the Department’s auditor, Michael Giles, on how to allocate out-of-state service costs. Exhibit 7 was the model that Giles explained to the Bankruptcy Court while testifying, and Exhibit D is the model actually adopted by the Bankruptcy Court. All three of these models are attached hereto as appendices, as is Trial Exhibit 10 mentioned herein.
Column A in these models represents the total revenues earned by Thinking Machines under the Maintenance Agreements, as derived from the yearly audits of the company.
Column B reflects the “total costs” under the Maintenance Agreements. 13 In Exhibit D, the total costs are derived by taking the total revenues from the yearly audits, and dividing them by the yearly “mark-up” figures submitted by Thinking Machines in Exhibit 10. 14
Column C constitutes the payroll costs for the applications engineers that Thinking Machines furnished to its customers under the Maintenance Agreements. It is undisputed that the services furnished by these applications engineers were performed in New Mexico, and thus qualify as “in-state service costs.” Column D “grosses” up these New Mexico payroll costs by 30% to reflect additional costs such as employment taxes, FICA, worker’s compensation, health insurance, travel expenses, and other employee benefits.
Column E, entitled “Other Costs,” represents all of the costs incurred by Thinking Machines under the Agreement except for
*435
the payroll costs for the New Mexico engineers. (Column B minus Column D). It is undisputed that all of these “other costs” were actually incurred in Massachusetts, where Thinking Machines’ headquarters are located. At the Bankruptcy Court hearing, auditor Giles testified that due to the failure of Thinking Machines to produce any records breaking down its labor and materials costs, he had no reliable way to calculate what percentage of these “other costs” related to sales of tangible goods
(e.g.,
the provision of new hardware) and what percentage constituted out-of-state service costs
(e.g.,
hardware repair services), so he arbitrarily picked a 50-50 split between the two. App. at 42. In Exhibit 7, Column F reflects this 50-50 breakdown of “other costs” (Column E times 50%). In its ruling, the Bankruptcy Court “conclude[d] that the 50-50 split [of ‘other costs’] is appropriate.”
Thinking Machines,
Nevertheless, the Bankruptcy Court then proceeded to adopt Exhibit D, which instead allocates only 15% of “other costs” to out-of-state service costs (Column F), 15 and even more importantly, only 35% of the total costs under the Maintenance Agreements to service costs (Column G divided by Column B). 16 This 35% ratio of service costs to total costs directly contradicts the Bankruptcy Court’s prior (and proper) ruling that costs relating to sales of services predominate the Maintenance Agreements. Due to the failure of Thinking Machines to submit adequate cost accounting records, it was necessary, for the Bankruptcy Court to approximate when determining what percentage of “other costs” in Column E constitute service costs. But it was clearly erroneous for the Bankruptcy Court to select a percentage which belies the proposition that the Maintenance Agreements involved predominantly sales of services.
In its post-trial reply brief containing Exhibit D, the Department explains that it selected the 15% allocation figure for out-of-state service costs because it falls between 10 and 20%, which was the range given by LaBossiere as standard for the industry. The Department goes on to note, however, that Exhibit D “do[es] not purport to be helpful in determining whether the maintenance agreements constitute predominately the sale of tangibles or services.” App. at 392. In fact, this argument only reinforces Exhibit D’s central flaw: it effectively permits the Department to have its cake and eat it too. Recognizing that the tax burden will be highest when 1) costs relating to sales of services predominate the Agreements, but 2) of the costs incurred out of state, as few as possible are deemed costs relating to sales of services, see supra note 12, the Department rejects LaBossiere’s testimony regarding the breakdown between services and tangible goods when determining which predominates the Agreements, but then, in Exhibit D, wholeheartedly embraces his “unsubstantiated” statements for the purpose of calculating what percentage of the total costs incurred . out of state are fairly attributable to sales of services. The Department neglects to mention that if LaBossiere’s assertion — that 85% of the costs incurred in Massachusetts (i.e., “other costs”) relate to sales of tangible goods — is taken as true, it necessarily follows that 65% of total costs (in New Mexico and Massachusetts) relate to sales of tangible goods, thereby rendering the Maintenance Agreements exempt from the gross receipts tax. 17
*436 In contrast, the 50% allocation figure for out-of-state service costs used in Exhibit 7 yields a ratio of total service costs to total costs of 72.9%, 18 a result consistent with the Bankruptcy Court’s conclusion that costs relating to sales of services predominate the Maintenance Agreements. Nevertheless, on remand, the Bankruptcy Court is under no obligation to adopt Exhibit 7; this Court merely notes that it is but one example of an acceptable allocation model. 19 In light of the shortage of objective evidence in the record with respect to Thinking Machines’ costs, the Bankruptcy Court has a broad range of discretion in selecting the allocation and markup percentages to be used, provided that the model selected is compatible with the Bankruptcy Court’s conclusion that sales of services predominate the Maintenance Agreements.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the ruling of the Bankruptcy Court is AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED in part. The Bankruptcy Court properly ruled that the burden of proof rests with the taxpayer to disprove the validity of the Department’s claim. The Bankruptcy Court’s conclusion that Thinking Machines failed to satisfy this burden was not clearly erroneous. The allocation model used by the Bankruptcy Court to approximate what percentage of services were performed out-of-state, however, was incompatible with the Bankruptcy Court’s holding that the Maintenance Agreements predominantly involved sales of services, and is therefore clearly erroneous. Accordingly, this ease is hereby REMANDED to the Bankruptcy Court for a recalculation of the appropriate tax base in a manner consistent with this opinion.
SO ORDERED.
APPENDIX
(adopted by the Bankruptcy Court)
Submitted with the Department’s Post-Trial Reply Brief
COMPUTATION OF RECEIPTS FROM THE PERFORMANCE OF SERVICES, INCLUDING SOFTWARE SERVICES, IN NEW MEXICO BY CALCULATING ESTIMATED PERCENTAGES OF THE COST OF SERVICES PERFORMED IN NEW MEXICO AND OUTSIDE OF NEW MEXICO. THE COST OF IN-STATE SERVICES PERFORMED BASED ONLY UPON INSTATE PAYROLL OF ENGINEERS GROSSED UP 30%(SEE NOTE # 1) FOR PAYROLL BURDEN THAT WOULD BE EXPENSED IN THE COST OF REVENUE.
SOURCES: EXHIBIT NUMBER 10, AUDIT WORKPAPERS, DATABASE RUN OF NM PAYROLL AND TRIAL TRANSCRIPT.
AUTHORITY:REGULATION GR 3(K):3, SECTION 7-1-10 NMSA 1978, REGULATION TA 10:1.
*437 MARKUP PERCENTAGES ARE FROM! EXHIBIT NUMBER 10: 1988 IS 100%
1989 IS 22%
1990 IS 12%
1991 IS -6%
1992 IS -10%
[[Image here]]
NOTE # 1: THE 20% PROPOSED BY THINKING MACHINES IS REJECTED, SINCE THINKING MACHINES DOES NOT ACCOUNT FOR NON-NEW MEXICO EMPLOYEES WHO OCCASIONALLY WORKED IN NEW MEXICO.
NOTE # 2: ASSUMPTION THAT 85% OF OTHER COSTS(COLUMN E) IS OVERHEAD EXPENSES RELATING TO HARDWARE. SEE TRANSCRIPT PAGE 80.
(described during the testimony of the Department’s auditor, Michael Giles)
COMPUTATION OF RECEIPTS FROM THE PERFORMANCE OF SERVICES, INCLUDING SOFTWARE SERVICES, IN NEW MEXICO BY CALCULATING ESTIMATED PERCENTAGES OF THE COST OF SERVICES PERFORMED IN NEW MEXICO AND OUTSIDE OF NEW MEXICO. THE COST OF IN-STATE SERVICES PERFORMED BASED ONLY UPON INSTATE PAYROLL OF ENGINEERS GROSSED UP 30% FOR PAYROLL BURDEN THAT WOULD BE EXPENSED IN THE COST OF REVENUE
SOURCES: DISCLOSURE STATEMENT, AUDIT WORKPAPERS, DATABASE RUN OF NM PAYROLL
AUTHORITY:REGULATION GR 3(K):3, SECTION 7-1-10 NMSA 1978, REGULATION TA 10:1
COMPUTATION OF MARKUP FACTOR BASED UPON THE 1995 FORCASTED INCOME STATEMENT IN THE DISCLOSURE STATEMENT FOR THE FIRST AMENDED JOINT PLAN OF REORGANIZATION:
SOFTWARE & SERVICE REVENUE $17,058.000
SOFTWARE & SERVICE COST $8.466,000
REVENUE DIVIDED BY COST = 2.014883= MARKUP FACTOR
*438 YEAR 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 TOTAL SOFTWARE & MAINT. REV. PER AUDIT $69,230.00 $521,662.00 $1,068,713.00 $1,309,925.00 $289,761.00 $3,259,291.00 B TOTAL SERVICE COST (A/MARKUP) $34,359.32 $258,904.36 $530,409.46 $650,124.60 $143,810.34 $1,617,608.08 NEW MEXICO PAYROLL FOR ENGINEERS $0.00 $79,084.68 $195,220.90 $224,798.57 $71,360.70 $570,464.85 NEW MEXICO SERVICE COST (C*130%) $0.00 $102,810.08 $253,787.17 $292,238.14 $92,768.91 $741,604.30 OUT OF STATE SERVICE & MATERIALS (B-D) $34,359.32 $156,094.28 $276,622.29 $357,886.46 $51,041.43 $876,003.78 YEAR 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 TOTAL OUT OF STATE SERVICE COSTS (E*50%) $17,179.66 $78,047.14 $138,311.15 $178,943.23 $25,520.71 $438,001.89 G TOTAL SERV. COSTS (D + F) $17,179.66 $180,857.22 $392,098.32 $471,181.37 $118,289.62 $1,179,606.19 H INSTATE SERVICE PERCT. (D/G) 0.0000% 56.8460% 64.7254% 62.0224% 78.4252% OUT OF STATE SERVICE PERCT. (F/G) 100.0000% 43.1540% 35.2746% 37.9776% 21.5748% J INSTATE REVENUE (H*A) $0.00 $296,543.98 $691,728.76 $812,446.92 $227,245.64 $2,027,965.30
NOTE: ATTRIBUTED 50% OF COSTS IN COLUMN F TO MATERIALS AND 50% TO SERVICES BECAUSE OF INABILITY TO QUANTIFY AN AMOUNT FOR EITHER COMPONENT NOR A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THEM.
Exhibit C
Submitted with the Department’s Post-Trial Reply Brief
COMPUTATION OF RECEIPTS FROM THE PERFORMANCE OF SERVICES, INCLUDING SOFTWARE SERVICES, IN NEW MEXICO BY CALCULATING ESTIMATED PERCENTAGES OF THE COST OF SERVICES PERFORMED IN NEW MEXICO AND OUTSIDE OF NEW MEXICO. THE COST OF IN-STATE SERVICES PERFORMED BASED ONLY UPON INSTATE PAYROLL OF ENGINEERS GROSSED UP 30%(SEE NOTE # 1) FOR PAYROLL BURDEN THAT WOULD BE EXPENSED IN THE COST OF REVENUE.
SOURCES: DISCLOSURE STATEMENT, AUDIT WORKPAPERS, DATABASE RUN OF NM PAYROLL AND TRIAL TRANSCRIPT.
AUTHORITY:REGULATION GR 3(K):3, SECTION 7-1-10 NMSA 1978, REGULATION TA 10:1.
COMPUTATION OF MARKUP PERCENTAGE BASED UPON THE 1995 FORCASTED INCOME STATEMENT IN THE DISCLOSURE STATEMENT FOR THE FIRST AMENDED JOINT PLAN OF REORGANIZATION:
SOFTWARE & SERVICE REVENUE $17,058,000
SOFTWARE & SERVICE COST $8,466,000
COST DIVIDED BY REVENUE = 0.496307= MARKUP PERCENTAGE
*439 [[Image here]]
NOTE # 1: THE 20% PROPOSED BY THINKING MACHINES IS REJECTED, SINCE THINKING MACHINES DOES NOT ACCOUNT FOR NON-NEW MEXICO EMPLOYEES WHO OCCASIONALLY WORKED IN NEW MEXICO.
NOTE # 2: ASSUMPTION THAT 85% OF OTHER COSTS(COLUMN E) IS OVERHEAD EXPENSES RELATING TO HARDWARE. SEE TRANSCRIPT PAGE 80.
Trial Exhibit 10
1988-92 Service Margins
1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
Service Revenue 1,836 4,886 7,727 9,209 11,103
Service Costs 0 3,813 6,820 9,797 12,194
Gross Margin 1,836 1,073 907 (588) (1,091)
Margin % 100% 22% 12% -10%
Notes
. It is undisputed that this Court has jurisdiction to hear this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 158(a), 158(c)(1).
. It is necessary to briefly clarify what is meant by the term "ultimate” burden of proof in the bankruptcy context. Prepetition claims are asserted by means of a proof of claim.
See
11 U.S.C. § 501. A properly filed proof of claim is prima facie evidence of the validity and amount of the claim. See 11 U.S.C. § 502(a); Fed. R.Bankr.P. 3001(f). "The interposition of an objection [by the debtor] does not deprive the proof of claim of presumptive validity unless the objection is supported by substantial evidence.”
In Re Hemingway Transp., Inc.,
In this case, Judge Hillman simply mentioned these prima facie standards, and then moved right into a discussion of which party bears the ultimate burden of proof when a tax claim is asserted in bankruptcy. As a result, the Department argues that 1) the Bankruptcy Court properly decided that the ultimate burden of proof rests with the taxpayer, or 2) in the alternative, this Court should affirm because Thinking Machines never even rebutted the prima facie validity of the Department's claim by producing substantial evidence. As this Court agrees with Judge Hillman’s analysis that the ultimate burden lies with the taxpayer, it is not necessary to address the Department’s second argument.
. The Supreme Court recently declined an opportunity to resolve this conflict by denying certiorari in
MacFarlane,
- U.S. -,
. In
Hemingway,
the First Circuit stated that once the debtor meets its initial burden under Fed.R.Bankr.P. 3001(f) of producing substantial evidence, "the ultimate risk of nonpersuasion as to the allowability of the claim resides with the party asserting the claim."
Hemingway,
. Some of the courts placing the burden of proof upon the taxing authority have simply stated, without any further analysis, that under Fed. R.Bank.P. 3001(f), the ultimate burden of proof always rests with the claimant.
See Fullmer,
. Other sections of the Bankruptcy Code and Federal Bankruptcy Rules of Procedure indicate that when Congress wishes to assign the burden of proof to a particular party, it does so expressly. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 362(g), 364(d)(2), 547(g), and 1129(d); Fed.R.Bankr.P. 4003(c), 4005.
. The
MacFarlane
decision is, moreover, internally inconsistent. The court first restates the holding of
Fidelity
that the Bankruptcy Code requires equal treatment of claims filed by government and private claimants, but then affirms the district court's conclusion that “since tax claims already receive a statutory priority over other creditor’s claims,” placing the burden of proof on the taxpayer would grant the taxing-authority "a double benefit not authorized by statute [or the case law].”
MacFarlane,
As recognized by the Bankruptcy Court below, to the extent that the Bankruptcy Code’s priority scheme is at all relevant to the question of which party bears the burden of proof, the priority status afforded to the taxing authority only reinforces the rule that the burden of proof rests with the taxpayer.
Thinking Machines,
. In
Premo,
the Bankruptcy Court noted that although it is true that the taxpayer is generally more likely to have access to the relevant information, "[tjhere is usually no reason to presume that another creditor, or even a bankruptcy trustee, has greater access to the debtor's documents than does [the taxing authority]."
Premo,
.
See
Brief for the States of Arizona, Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Wisconsin, and New Mexico as Amici-Curiae in Support of Petitioner at 13-14,
California Franchise Tax Bd. v. MacFarlane,
- U.S. -,
The bankruptcy court in
Premo
also considered this possibility, but concluded that there was little risk that taxpayers would allow themselves to fall into bankruptcy to obtain a more favorable burden of proof.
Premo,
. LaBossicrc’s testimony was also internally inconsistent. He first testified that costs relating to replacement hardware constituted 80 to 90% of the total out-of-state costs incurred under the Maintenance Agreements, App. at 86, and only later stated that this 80-90% figure also applied to Thinking Machines' overall costs, App. at 125. As it is undisputed that the only costs actually incurred by Thinking Machines in New Mexico were costs relating to the provision of services by the on-site applications engineers, it is mathematically impossible for both of these statements to be accurate.
. This is not to suggest that all labor costs relate to the provision of services. The labor involved in building new hardware, for example, would constitute an input to the cost of producing tangible property. In contrast, the labor involved in repairing an existing part, or installing a new part, would constitute an input to the provision of services. Nevertheless, without breaking down the inputs in this manner, it is impossible to discern with any degree of accuracy what percentage of costs incurred under the Maintenance Agreements related to sales of tangible property.
In further support of its argument that the Bankruptcy Court applied the predominant ingredient test too restrictively, Thinking Machines refers to a sentence in Judge Hillman’s ruling noting that Thinking Machines failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the replacement hardware parts constituted 80-90% of the costs under the Maintenance Agreements.
See Thinking Machines,
. The following hypothetical illustrates the ramifications of these provisions. Assume that a Court concludes that of the $1,000 in costs incurred under an Agreement, $800 were attributable to sales of services, while $200 were attributable to sales of tangible property. Under the predominant ingredient test, the entire $1,000 is subject to the gross receipts tax.
If the Court were to find, however, that 30% of the service costs incurred under the Agreement were attributable to out-of-state sales of services, then only $700 of the revenues would be taxable in New Mexico. Note that it is only services performed out of state that influence this percentage; the percentage of costs relating to sales of tangible goods that are incurred out of state is irrelevant. At the same time, however, in applying the percentage (i.e. multiplying it by the total contract proceeds), the sales of tangible property are affected.
Thus, the tax burden will be highest when 1) costs relating to sales of services predominate the Agreement, but 2) of the costs incurred out of state, as few as possible are deemed to be costs relating to the provision of services.
. In all three models, Column B and Column G are both labeled "Total Service Costs.” After reviewing the testimony of auditor Giles, it is clear to this Court that Column B actually reflects "Total Costs” under the Agreements, while Column G reflects "Total Service Costs.”
.The fact that Exhibit D relies upon mark-up figures derived from Trial Exhibit 10, entitled "1988-92 Service Margins,” is further evidence of the internal contradictions contained in the Bankruptcy Court's analysis. In its opinion, the Bankruptcy Court stated:
[T]he Debtor entered into evidence a document entitled "1988-92 Service Margins.”... I cannot accord this document great weight. I do not know who prepared the document, I do not know its purpose and I do not know upon what documents it is based.
Thinking Machines,
. The
end
of the Bankruptcy Court's opinion does state, without any explanation, that the 15% allocation for out-of-state service costs in Exhibit D "is a fair resolution of the controversy presented in this section.”
Thinking Machines,
. The ratio of total service costs (Column G) to total costs (Column B) under Exhibit D is $1,094, 957.71/$3,097,293.74 = 35.352%.
. The Department also attempts to justify the 15% allocation for out-of-state service costs used in Exhibit D by noting that some of these "other costs" incurred in Massachusetts are actually overhead expenses that are fairly attributable to services performed in New Mexico.
See
GR-90 at 3(F):65;
United States v. New Mexico,
. The ratio of total service costs (Column G) to total costs (Column B) under Exhibit 7 is $1,179, 606.19/$1,617,608.08 = 72.92%.
. This Court notes that Exhibit 7 uses different mark-up percentages than Exhibit D.
