N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 20, § 534.7
(5) The term captive finance company means a company that meets all of the following conditions:
(6) The term recourse means that all bad debts are transferred back to the retail-vendor or such bad debts are charged against the retail-vendor's reserve account established for that purpose.
(b) Allowance of refund or credit.
(2) A vendor will be considered the vendor of the tangible personal property or services giving rise to the bad debt even though the property or services are sold by a leased department or concession (as described in section 526.10(f) of this Title), provided all the following conditions are met:
(4) Receivables transferred to a captive finance company by its retail-vendor (as such terms are defined in subdivision [a] of this section) will not be treated as debts assigned to a third party provided the following conditions are met:
(ii) annually (for a period determined from June 1st to May 31st of each year) not more than 10 percent of the receivables of the retail-vendor are incurred by account obligors upon purchases from any vendor other than the retail-vendor or a leased department or concession of the retail-vendor which meets the conditions of paragraph (2) of this subdivision.
Though a retail-vendor is not denied eligibility for the refund or credit with respect to debts determined to be uncollectible with respect to its receivables financed by a captive finance company if no more than 10 percent of its receivables (whether or not financed by the captive finance company) are derived from sales of any vendor other than the retail-vendor or a leased department or concession of such retail-vendor which meets the conditions of paragraph (2) of this subdivision, there is no refund or credit allowable to such retail-vendor with respect to any receivables derived from sales of such other vendors.
(c) Computation of refund or credit.
(2) Where the debt determined to be uncollectible and charged off by a vendor is comprised in part of nontaxable charges (such as interest, service and finance charges, charges for purchases delivered out-of-state by the vendor, or charges otherwise exempt or excluded from the State and local sales and use taxes) and in part of charges subject to the New York sales and use taxes, a refund or credit may be claimed only with respect to the proportionate amount of the New York sales and use taxes attributable to the amount of the unpaid taxable charges remaining in such debt and only to the extent that the tax was remitted to the Department of Taxation and Finance. Such proportionate amount may be computed by determining:
(4) Though interest, service and finance charges may be considered in the computation of the bad debt refund or credit, since payments are first applied to the oldest charges in an account, later accruing interest, service and finance charges upon inactive accounts generally do not affect the amount of such refund or credit. Example 1: Example 2: Example 3: Example 4: Summary of Charges Example 5:
Example 1:
The following is an analysis of an account that was written off as a bad debt.
| Charges to account | Payments made | |
|---|---|---|
| Feb. Sale price | $250 | 4 at $25 each (March – June) |
| Feb. Sales tax | 20 | Total $100 |
| July – Dec. service charge for late payment | 30 | |
| Total | $300 |
As of the date the account was charged off on the vendor's books as uncollectible, the balance due was $200. This balance was determined by adding together the sale price, sales tax and service charge for a total of $300 and deducting payments of $100. Only that portion of the $200 bad debt that represents amounts on which the vendor collected and remitted sales tax to the department is included in the computation of the bad debt credit or refund. Therefore the composition of this $200 must be ascertained.
However, since paragraph (3) of this subdivision requires that payments received on account be applied first to the oldest charges in the account, before the composition of the $200 bad debt can be determined, a computation must be made wherein the customer's payments are so applied. In this example, in applying the payments to the oldest charges in the account, the entire $100 is absorbed by the first charge to the account (i.e., the February sale of $250 and the sales tax on that amount of $20, or a total of $270). Subtracting the $100 in payments from the $270 in charges leaves a partial bad debt of $170. Since the $270 was composed of the sale price and the sales tax, the $170 partial bad debt consists of these items as well, and in the same proportion. The composition of this $170 may be computed as follows:
| Sale price | 250 × 170 = $157.41 | Proportionate sale price |
| Total sales price and tax | 270 | |
| Sales tax | 20 × 170 = $ 12.59 | Proportionate sales tax |
| Total sales price and tax | 270 |
Once the payments on account have been applied to the oldest charges in the account and any proportionate amount of bad debt subject to refund or credit has been ascertained, the balance of the outstanding charges to the account are reviewed to determine their taxable or nontaxable status. In this example, only one charge to the account remains unaccounted for - the $30 service charge for December. Since sales tax is not imposed on this type of charge (and should not have been collected), no refund or credit is available with respect to it.
| Proportionate sale price | $157.41 |
| Proportionate sales tax | 12.59 |
| Service charges | 30.00 |
| Total | $200.00 |
Thus, the bad debt refund or credit for sales tax is $12.59.
Example 2:
Assume the same facts as in Example 1, except that the bad debt write-off occurred after $250 had been paid on account. The uncollected balance of the account is $50 ($300 minus $250). As in Example 1, the $250 in payments is applied to the oldest charges in the account (i.e., $270) leaving a partial bad debt of $20. The composition of this $20 would be computed as follows:
| Sale price | 250 × 20 = $18.52 | Proportionate sale price |
| Total sale price and tax | 270 | |
| Sales tax | 20 × 20 = $ 1.48 | Proportionate sales tax |
| Total sale price and tax | 270 |
The account's remaining unpaid balance of $50 due is composed of:
| Proportionate sale price | $18.52 |
| Proportionate sales tax | 1.48 |
| Service charges | 30.00 |
| Total | $50.00 |
Thus, the bad debt refund or credit for sales tax would be $1.48. Again, no refund or credit is available with respect to the $30 in service charges, since late payment service charges are not subject to sales or use tax. If the customer had paid at least $270, no bad debt refund or credit for sales tax would be allowed the vendor.
Example 3:
The following is an analysis of an account that became a bad debt:
| Charges to account | Payments made | |
|---|---|---|
| Jan. Sale price (exempt) | $200 | 4 at $60 each |
| Jan.–June: Finance charges | 15 | Total $240 |
| July: Sale price | 100 | |
| Sales tax at 8% | 8 | |
| July–Sept.: Finance charges | 5 | |
| Total | $328 |
As of the date the account was written off on the vendor's books as uncollectible, the balance due was $88 ($328 minus $240). The $240 paid is applied first to the oldest charges in the account. This $240 is sufficient to cover the entire $200 exempt sale in January and the finance charges of $15 for the period January through June. Since the total of these two amounts is $215, there remains $25 ($240 minus $215) to be applied to the next oldest account charges, which is the July sales price of $100 and the related $8 in sales tax ($108). Subtracting the remaining $25 in payments from the $108 leaves a partial bad debt for sales tax computation purposes of $83. Since the $108 was composed of the sale price of $100 and the sales tax of $8, the $83 partial bad debt consists of these items, in the same proportion. The composition of this $83 may be computed as follows:
| Sale price | 100 × 83 = $76.85 | Proportionate sales price |
| Total sale price and tax | 108 | |
| Sales tax | 8 × 83 = $ 6.15 | Proportionate sales tax |
| Total sale price and tax | 108 |
| The composition of the unpaid balance due is: | |
| Proportionate sale price | $76.85 |
| Proportionate sales tax | 6.15 |
| Finance charges (July–Sept.) | 5.00 |
| Total | $88.00 |
Thus, the bad debt refund or credit for sales tax would be $6.15.
Example 4:
Between January and October a building supply company delivered materials to a contractor at several construction sites in different localities and billed the contractor's account. The contractor's account with the vendor is later determined to be uncollectible and charged off on the vendor's books.
| Month | Amount of sale | Delivery charges | Tax amount | Juris | Tax rate | (Payments) | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan. | $10,000 | $ 250 | $ 615 | City X | 6% | $ | $10,865 |
| Feb. | 5,000 | 5,865 | |||||
| March | 15,000 | 300 | 612 | County A | 4% | 2,500 | 19,277 |
| April | 7,000 | 12,277 | |||||
| May | 25,000 | 100 | County B | Exempt | 5,000 | 32,377 | |
| June | 25,000 | 7,377 | |||||
| July | 10,000 | 200 | 714 | County B | 7% | 5,000 | 13,291 |
| Aug. | 10,000 | 300 | 618 | City X | 6% | 5,000 | 19,209 |
| Sept. | 5,000 | 200 | County C | 4% | 10,000 | 14,409 | |
| Oct. | 10,000 | County A | Exempt | 5,000 | 19,409 | ||
| $85,000 | $1,150 | $2,759 | $69,500 |
Summary of Charges
| Month | Total charges | Cumulative charges |
|---|---|---|
| Jan. | $10,865 | $10,865 |
| March | 15,912 | 26,777 |
| May | 25,100 | 51,877 |
| July | 10,914 | 62,791 |
| Aug. | 10,918 | 73,709 |
| Sept. | 5,200 | 78,909 |
| Oct. | 10,000 | 88,909 |
The $69,500 paid is applied first to the oldest charges in the account. This $69,500 is sufficient to cover the charges to the account through July, of $62,791. Consequently, there are $6,709 in payments to be applied to the charges to the account for August of $10,918 ($10,000 + $300 + $618).
Subtracting the $6,709 from the $10,918 leaves a partial bad debt of $4,209 for the August charges. Since the August charges of $10,918 were composed of the sale price ($10,000), the delivery charges ($300) and sales tax ($618), the partial bad debt of $4,209 for august is composed of these items, in the same proportion. The composition of this $4,209 may be computed as follows:
| Sale price and delivery | 10,300 × 4,209 = $3,970.75 |
| Total sale price, delivery and tax | 10,918 |
| Sales tax | 618 × 4,209 = 238.25 |
| Total sale price, delivery and tax | 10,918 |
The account's total unpaid balance due of $19,409 is composed of:
| Proportionate amount of sale (including delivery) for August | $3,970.75 |
| Proportionate amount of sales tax on sale for August | 238.25 |
| Amount of sale for September | 5,000.00 |
| Sales tax on September sale | 200.00 |
| Amount of exempt sale for October | 10,000.00 |
| Total | $19,409.00 |
Thus, the bad debt refund or credit is the total of the uncollected portion of the tax on the August sale of $238.25 and the uncollected tax on the September sale of $200.00, or $438.25.
Example 5:
Assume the same facts as in Example 4, except that instead of the August sale of $10,000 to City X at the six percent tax rate, the supplier delivered materials to four jobs sites in August, as follows:
| State and Local Tax | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delivery | |||||
| Jurisdiction | Rate | Materials | Charges | Tax | Total |
| County A | 5% | $ 832 | $ 40 | $ 43.60 | $ 915.60 |
| County B | 7% | 5,000 | 120 | 358.40 | 5,478.40 |
| City X | 6% | 3,500 | 100 | 216.00 | 3,816.00 |
| County B | 7% | 668 | 40 | Exempt | 708.00 |
| Total | $10,000 | $300 | $618.00 | $10,918.00 |
In Example 4 it was determined that there was a partial bad debt for August of $4,209. The portion of this bad debt attributable to uncollected sales tax in August for each of the jurisdictions for which tax was remitted to the department may be determined as follows:
| Partial Bad Debt | Uncollected Sales Tax | |
|---|---|---|
| County A tax | 43.60 × 4,209 = | $ 16.81 |
| Total sale price, delivery and tax | 10,918 | |
| County B tax | 358.40 × 4,209 = | 138.17 |
| Total sale price, delivery and tax | 10,918 | |
| City X tax | 216 × 4,209 = | 83.27 |
| Total sale price, delivery and tax | 10,918 | |
| 238.25 |
(5) Other methods of calculation of the refund or credit, not inconsistent with the principles herein expressed, fairly and equitably apportioning taxable and nontaxable elements of a bad debt and computing the amount of sales tax imposed and remitted in respect of such taxable charges remaining unpaid on such debt, may, subject to the approval of the Department of Taxation and Finance, be used to compute such refund or credit where the volume and character of the uncollectible accounts is of such a magnitude as to warrant use of alternative computations.
(d) Procedures.
(4) A schedule of the computation of the State and local taxes for which refund or credit is sought must be attached to the return upon which such credit is taken, or the application for refund.
(e) Subsequent collection.
(2) In determining the amount of subsequent collections upon a debt determined to be uncollectible, for which refund or credit of sales tax was previously allowed attributable to tax, such collection should be allocated to taxable charges, nontaxable charges and taxes in the same manner as regular payments to such account.
(f) Interest.
Credits or refunds of tax attributable to bad debts will be made without interest.
Tax Law, §§ 1132(e), 1139(e)
(a) Definitions.
The following definitions apply for the purpose of determining entitlement and computation of the refunds and credits authorized in this section only.