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Friday, November 25, 2022
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Comments (4)
Ohio’s bid to grab NASCAR taxes crashes at Supreme Court
By J.D. Davidson
The Center Square
https://www.thecentersquare.com/
The Ohio Supreme Court put the brakes on the state’s Board of Tax Appeals’ decision to collect more than a half-million dollars in taxes from NASCAR for broadcasting the organization's races in the state.
The court said this week the state could not collect taxes from the Florida-based auto racing group’s broadcast, licensing, media and sponsorship revenue in the state. The ruling was unanimous, except for the licensing money, which drew a dissent from three justices.
As previously reported by The Center Square, the state believed NASCAR owed taxes on races broadcast to Ohioans, saying the money the company received from broadcast partners is from intellectual property and subject to the tax. All told, the state said NASCAR owed $549,520 in unpaid taxes, interest and penalties.
The Ohio Tax Commissioner’s office audited NASCAR – a Florida-based company – for the period of time between July 1, 2005, to Dec. 31, 2010. The office found NASCAR's broadcast receipts, media revenues, license fees and sponsor fees were subject to the tax. The Ohio Board of Tax Appeals agreed, pushing NASCAR’s appeal to the Supreme Court.
NASCAR believes it should be taxed only on its events that take place in Ohio.
The racing organization appealed to the Supreme Court and gained an ally in the Ohio Chamber of Commerce, which filed a brief that said the state’s attempted use of the CAT tax was unfair and unpredictable.
The chamber argued the tax decision violated the U.S. Constitution’s Interstate Commerce Clause.
In its ruling, the court said none of contracts tied payments to use NASCAR property specifically in Ohio. The ruling dropped NASCAR’s revenue that could be taxed from $186 million over the time period to less than $500,000.
“Intellectual property receipts may be sitused to Ohio only in so much as – or to the extent that – they are ‘based on’ the right to use the property in this state,” the court said. “But nothing in the contracts before us shows any causal connection between any of the receipts and the right to use NASCAR’s intellectual property in Ohio.”
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Jim. 11 years CA state government and 31 public and private companies. The 2017 tax cuts end December 31, 2025. I forsee marginal Federal rates going up. Fire up the spreadsheet.
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David A. Mayer
11/26/2022 6:04:00 PM
Spoken like a true retired government employee Oscar! I consider it a burden filing taxes in my own state and especially my own city, where they count all my income earned everywhere and their ten page form requires notarizing in three places.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Jim Thompson
11/25/2022 5:28:00 PM
Professional athletes like musicians and entertainers have tax liabilities in all taxing states plus some cities where income is earned or sourced.The federal law does not address this. Each state may count "duty days" differently. The duty day convention elvoved in the early 1990s as an acceptable practice among most states. It is not as onerous as it may seem. There are offsetting state credits which vary. State taxes are generally insignificant compared to Federal taxes. I did two tax season gigs in 2007 and 2008, all professional athletes for a "boutique" business management firm. A player not on injured reserve status is taxed even if they are on the bench the entire game. It is a specialized tax accounting practice. My client firm was recognized in their industry as the gold standard in the music and entertainment industry. The key was allocating the W2 income correctly. 1099 income such as royalties, etc. was sourced to the tax domicile state. Most athletes are domiciled in non taxing states and cities. It was typical to see an NBA player file in 18 states plus 4 cities. It was a career challenge. The usual tax implications were no different. Just larger numbers. Ohio erred in its assessment of nexus. A waste of state resources in my opinion. Imagine applying their theory to every broadcast or streaming video. Ohio should focus on it's low ranking of tax friendliness. For all taxpayers especially the workers.
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David A. Mayer
11/25/2022 2:32:00 PM
This seems consistent with the tax burden of professional ball players. States tax professional ball players pro rata on the time the ball players are on the field in their states, which is, of course, a matter of public record. Professional ball players have some of the most onerous tax return burdens that exist--they file in every state in which they play to the extent they play in that state. Had the Board of Tax Appeals prevailed, it would have caused huge problems for ball players, including an unwillingness to play in Ohio.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Jim Thompson
11/25/2022 9:12:00 AM
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