British Land (Maryland), Inc. v. Tax Appeals Tribunal

647 N.E.2d 1280, 85 N.Y.2d 139, 623 N.Y.S.2d 772, 1995 N.Y. LEXIS 137
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 647 N.E.2d 1280 (British Land (Maryland), Inc. v. Tax Appeals Tribunal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
British Land (Maryland), Inc. v. Tax Appeals Tribunal, 647 N.E.2d 1280, 85 N.Y.2d 139, 623 N.Y.S.2d 772, 1995 N.Y. LEXIS 137 (N.Y. 1995).

Opinion

*143 OPINION OF THE COURT

Levine, J.

The issue on this appeal is whether the State violated the Due Process and Commerce Clauses of the United States Constitution by assessing a corporation franchise tax (see, Tax Law art 9-A) on about 64% of petitioner’s gain from its sale of commercial real property in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1984.

According to the essentially uncontested evidence and as found by the State Tax Appeals Tribunal, petitioner was incorporated in Delaware in May 1973. Petitioner was an indirect, six times removed subsidiary of British Land Company Pic., an international real estate investment company based in London. British Land Company owned and operated commercial real estate through subsidiary corporations in various parts of the world. A primary goal of petitioner was to purchase property that would appreciate in value.

Shortly after its incorporation, petitioner purchased for some $4.8 million all the capital stock of a Maryland corporation which owned the subject real property here, a 27-story office building in downtown Baltimore. The building was encumbered by a $6.6 million deed of trust. The stock purchase was financed by a $4.7 million loan from a commercial bank, guaranteed by British Land Company, and by a $115,-000 loan from a local Baltimore bank. W.C. Pinkard & Co. (Pinkard), a Baltimore real estate management firm, was retained to operate the building.

In 1980, pursuant to a decision by John Weston Smith, a vice-president of petitioner, the fee interest in the land of the Baltimore office building property was acquired. The strategy for the acquisition was developed by Pinkard and the purchase was actually made in the name of another British Land Company indirect subsidiary.

Some time after the fee of the Baltimore property had been acquired and the building fully rented, petitioner and British Land Company determined that there was a weakening in the *144 Baltimore office rental market and that the property should be sold. The sale was eventually effected in March of 1984, as a sale of stock of newly formed subsidiaries to which the interests in the building and fee were transferred. Between the acquisition of the Baltimore property in 1973 and its sale in 1984, petitioner suffered operational losses on the property necessitating loans from other subsidiaries of British Land Company. Interest on the loans was accumulated rather than paid.

In 1982, petitioner first entered the real estate market in this State by acquiring an office building at 90 Broad Street in New York City for $27.6 million. Petitioner initially structured the transaction as a purchase of the capital stock of the corporate title holder of the fee to the land and building. The acquisition was financed by a bank loan of $40 million to cover the purchase price and any deficit and the costs of improvements. The loan was taken by British Land Company and guaranteed by petitioner, secured by a mortgage on the property. The guarantee by its terms was unenforceable against petitioner’s Baltimore property, the sale of which had already been decided upon.

Petitioner appointed a New York City real estate management firm to act as its agent for rentals at the 90 Broad Street office building. Beginning in 1984, petitioner’s vice-president Smith occupied office space at the New York City building, from which he managed petitioner’s affairs and also the United States properties of other British Land Company subsidiaries.

The State Department of Taxation and Finance issued notices of deficiency for the 1984 taxable year requiring petitioner to pay State corporation franchise taxes on a portion of the approximately $13 million capital gain on the sale of the Baltimore property, as determined by the statutory formula for allocation of the New York income of multistate corporate businesses operating in New York (Tax Law § 210 [3]). Essentially, the New York statutory formula determines the appropriate New York percentage share of total corporate net income by averaging the New York fractions of total tangible property, payroll and gross receipts, factoring in twice the New York fraction of total gross receipts (see, Tax Law § 210 [3] [a] [4]). The fact that the 1984 average value of petitioner’s 90 Broad Street New York City property was about three times the average value of its Baltimore property contributed *145 significantly to a final allocation of petitioner’s income to New York of 64%. Thus, petitioner was charged with over $8.3 million of New York income on its $13 million gain from the sale of the Baltimore property, resulting in a total tax of some $978,000.

On administrative appeal to the State Tax Appeals Tribunal, the assessment was upheld. The Tribunal found that, during the 1984 taxable year, petitioner was conducting a unitary business with respect to its New York and Maryland properties. It based that determination on the existence of petitioner’s functional integration, centralization of management and economies of scale, as shown by the following factors: (1) a flow of value to both properties which was not at arm’s length, in that petitioner financed the acquisitions of both by loans and guarantees, without additional fees or other consideration charged against the properties; (2) centralization of management in the person of petitioner’s vice-president Smith who made the major strategic business decisions regarding the properties and oversaw the performance of the separate management firms in conducting the day-to-day operations of the two properties; and (3) petitioner’s engagement in the same line of business at its New York and Baltimore properties, the investment in commercial rental real estate. The Tribunal further concluded that petitioner had failed to sustain its burden of demonstrating that the allocation formula applied to determine the New York portion of the gain from the sale of the Baltimore property resulted in extraterritorial income being taxed.

On review, the Appellate Division confirmed the determination and dismissed the petition (202 AD2d 867). The Court held that there was substantial evidence to support the Tax Appeals Tribunal’s finding that petitioner’s New York City and Baltimore operations were a unitary business. It also held that petitioner had failed to satisfy its heavy burden of showing that the application of the statutory apportionment formula resulted in taxing extraterritorial values. The Court concluded that petitioner’s only evidence in support of that claim was the gross disproportionality of the apportionment results in comparison to petitioner’s New York income as shown in a separate geographic accounting, and that such evidence was insufficient as a matter of law. This appeal is now before us as of right because of the substantial constitutional questions at issue.

*146 I.

The Due Process and Commerce Clauses of the United States Constitution prevent a State from taxing income of a nondomiciliary corporation arising out of extraterritorial activities unless there is a "minimal connection” or "nexus” between the outside activities and the taxing State, and a "rational relationship between the income attributed to the State and the intrastate values of the enterprise” (Mobil Oil Corp.

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Bluebook (online)
647 N.E.2d 1280, 85 N.Y.2d 139, 623 N.Y.S.2d 772, 1995 N.Y. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/british-land-maryland-inc-v-tax-appeals-tribunal-ny-1995.