CIT Financial Services Consumer Discount Co. v. Director, Division of Taxation

4 N.J. Tax 568
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 N.J. Tax 568 (CIT Financial Services Consumer Discount Co. v. Director, Division of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CIT Financial Services Consumer Discount Co. v. Director, Division of Taxation, 4 N.J. Tax 568 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

CRABTREE, J.T.C.

Plaintiff seeks review of defendant’s determination that plaintiff is subject to the New Jersey Corporation Income Tax [571]*571Act, N.J.S.A. 54:10E-1 et seq., for the calendar years 1976 and 1977. The determination is based upon income attributable to loans made by plaintiff to New Jersey residents. Plaintiff claims that the determination and any tax assessed pursuant thereto violate the Due Process and Commerce Clauses of the United States Constitution as plaintiff is engaged solely in interstate commerce with no contacts with the State of New Jersey.

The facts are fully stipulated pursuant to R. 8:8.....1(b).

Plaintiff is a Pennsylvania corporation with 23 offices, all located in that state. Plaintiff files its Pennsylvania corporate business tax return on a calendar year basis. It filed its 1976 and 1977 returns on or before June 30 of the following year.

Plaintiff’s sole activity is the making of consumer loans up to $5,000, payable up to 60 months, real estate loans and the purchase of installment contracts. Its income is derived exclusively from the financing charges attributable to its loans. While most of plaintiff’s loans are made to Pennsylvania residents, some loans are made to New Jersey residents. All loans made to New Jersey borrowers are effected through plaintiff’s Morrisville, Pennsylvania office. Plaintiff acquired that office on October 1,1976 from Guardian Loan Corporation, an unrelated corporation. Records reflecting the total loans outstanding to New Jersey residents do not exist for 1976. The estimated outstanding principal balance of loans to New Jersey borrowers at the end of 1977 was $600,348.

Plaintiff makes only consumer loans to New Jersey residents. It purchases no installment contracts from New Jersey residents or businesses located in this State, nor does it make real estate loans to residents of this State.

A prospective borrower, including a prospective New Jersey borrower, communicates with plaintiff’s Morrisville office either personally or by telephone. An application is prepared in that office. A credit check follows and, if the loan is approved, the applicant personally visits plaintiff’s Morrisville office to execute the loan documents and related papers. A check for the [572]*572loan proceeds is delivered to the customer at the Morrisville office and most loan payments, which are made monthly, are mailed to that location. Occasionally New Jersey residents will make payments at a New Jersey branch of CIT Financial Services, Inc., a sister corporation organized in Delaware and qualified to do business in New Jersey. Payments made at that branch are processed through the computer system of plaintiff’s parent corporation, CIT Financial Corporation. The computer is located in Miami, Florida.

If a monthly payment is not received within ten days after its due date, a written notice is mailed to the debtor from plaintiff’s Morrisville office. If payment is not forthcoming, additional mailings and telephone calls are made from that office. If delinquency continues, a representative of plaintiff will occasionally visit the debtor at the latter’s residence. Such visits to New Jersey default borrowers occur about twice monthly. If the borrower continues in default the account is referred to an Irvington, New Jersey, law firm for legal action. There were no New Jersey collection suits in 1976. Plaintiff instituted approximately 10-12 collection suits in New Jersey in 1977. Most of those actions involved delinquent accounts of less than $1,000 and the most frequent outcome was garnishment of the debtor’s salaries paid by New Jersey employers.

Plaintiff’s Morrisville office was staffed by six employees: a branch manager, an assistant manager, two customer service representatives and two service assistants. The managers were involved in supervision, training and other personnel functions as well as loan approval and business development. Customer service representatives were entrusted with loan processing, handling of past due accounts and collections. The service assistants performed essentially clerical functions.

Plaintiff communicates with customers by mail or by telephone from its Morrisville office or in person at that office. Plaintiff’s employees enter New Jersey only for the collection of delinquent accounts.

[573]*573None of plaintiff’s property is used by its personnel in pursuing collection efforts in New Jersey. However, plaintiff’s employees are reimbursed for travel expenses on a mileage basis.

Although many loans to New Jersey residents are unsecured, plaintiff sometimes requires a New Jersey customer to grant a security interest in consumer goods, household effects or automobiles. In this connection, Form UCC-1 Financing Statements are filed with New Jersey recording offices and, in the case of automobiles, with Division of Motor Vehicles in Trenton. All such filings are accomplished by mail from plaintiff’s Morrisville office.

Plaintiff has never taken a wage assignment as security for a loan to a New Jersey resident, nor has it ever made a loan in New Jersey secured by real estate or mobile homes.

If plaintiff is regarded as an independent legal entity, it is not qualified to do business in New Jersey, nor does it maintain bank accounts, offices or a mailing address in this State. If plaintiff is viewed as a separate legal entity, it has no officers, employees, agents or representatives whose offices are located in New Jersey (except for its collection attorneys), nor does it own or lease any real or tangible personal property here. Plaintiff is not listed in any New Jersey telephone directory. It has no billboards in this State.

For the years in issue, plaintiff paid Pennsylvania capital stock-loans-corporate net income taxes assessed against all plaintiff’s capital stock, loans and net income. The income sought to be taxed by New Jersey in this case is a portion of the same income previously taxed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

Plaintiff is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CIT Financial Corporation, a Delaware corporation qualified to do business in New York and Puerto Rico. The parent corporation owns several subsidiaries which conduct business at over 800 locations in the United States, including New Jersey. The parent provides funds for loans made by some of its subsidiaries, including plaintiff. CIT Financial Services Corporation, a West Virginia [574]*574corporation qualified to do business in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and CIT Financial Services, Inc., a Delaware corporation qualified to do business in New Jersey, are also subsidiaries of the parent corporation.

Plaintiff’s Morrisville, Pennsylvania, office has a computer terminal which is connected to the computer service of the parent corporation. Payments on plaintiff’s loans made at other offices of plaintiff’s sister corporations are noted on this terminal and payments made to the Morrisville office on behalf of sister corporations are also processed through this terminal. In addition, plaintiff’s Morrisville office can communicate with offices of its sister corporations, including New Jersey offices of CIT Financial Services Corporation, through its terminal. For example, the Morrisville office can send messages to the Area Supervisor at a New Jersey office of CIT Financial Services Corporation or request information from a New Jersey office of CIT Financial Services, Inc. regarding a former customer.

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Related

Estate of Ehringer v. Director, Division of Taxation
24 N.J. Tax 599 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2009)
Chemical Realty Corp. v. Taxation Division Director
5 N.J. Tax 581 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.J. Tax 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cit-financial-services-consumer-discount-co-v-director-division-of-njtaxct-1982.