Ferrellgas Partners, L.P. v. Director, Division of Taxation

CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedDecember 10, 2018
Docket007051-2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ferrellgas Partners, L.P. v. Director, Division of Taxation (Ferrellgas Partners, L.P. 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
Ferrellgas Partners, L.P. v. Director, Division of Taxation, (N.J. Super. Ct. 2018).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS

TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY

Mala Sundar R.J. Hughes Justice Complex JUDGE P.O. Box 975 25 Market Street Trenton, New Jersey 08625 Telephone (609) 815-2922 TeleFax: (609) 376-3018 taxcourttrenton2@judiciary.state.nj.us December 7, 2018 Kyle O. Sollie, Esq. Jonathan E. Maddison, Esq. Reed Smith L.L.P.

Michael J. Duffy, Esq. Deputy Attorney General

Re: Ferrellgas Partners, L.P. v. Director, Division of Taxation Docket No. 007051-2014 Dear Counsel:

This opinion decides each party’s partial summary judgment motion in the above-captioned

matter. Plaintiff contends that N.J.S.A. 54A:8-6(b)(2) (the “Challenged Statute”), which requires

any partnership having New Jersey source income to pay a per-partner fee of $150 (capped at

$250,000) when filing its information return, violates the Dormant Commerce Clause (“DCC”)

because it is a flat tax, and that defendant’s regulations apportioning the same, while valid, are

unworkable as applied to plaintiff.

Defendant claims that the levy is a fee to defray governmental costs of reviewing and

processing information returns of partnerships, and thus must be upheld unless the levy amount is

proven to egregiously exceed costs. Alternatively, defendant argues, the Challenged Statute does

not violate the DCC, especially since its regulations provide an apportionment for non-resident,

no-physical nexus partners.

* The court is unpersuaded that any levy, whether a fee or a tax, is automatically or per se

unconstitutional under the DCC solely because it is a flat amount and the payor of the levy is

involved in interstate commerce. Rather, the court must examine the nature of the interstate

commerce claimed to be negatively treated by New Jersey, the nature of the activity that the State

law is regulating or expensing, and whether the regulated activity or expensing by the State law

discriminates against the identified interstate commerce.

As explained below, the court finds that pursuant to the plain language and legislative

history of the Challenged Statute, the partnership filing fee (hereinafter “PFF”) is imposed as costs

for the governmental activity of processing/reviewing returns of partnerships and their partners

filed in New Jersey so as to track their New Jersey source income. This is a purely intrastate

activity. As such, the Challenged Statute does not implicate the DCC, and is not susceptible to

being invalidated under the DCC simply because plaintiff is presumably involved in interstate

commerce -- its investment activity in partnerships. Thus, defendant’s partial summary judgment

motion is granted in this aspect only.

Plaintiff is also not entitled to partial summary judgment because (1) the Challenged Statute

is not facially discriminatory: all partnerships or entities treated as such, must pay the PFF

regardless of the location of the partnership or partner, or the nature of the partnerships’ business,

provided the entity earns New Jersey sourced income; and (2) plaintiff has not provided even a

prima facie showing that the PFF, in practical effect, discriminates against interstate commerce,

i.e., its investment activity. Merely relying on the computation of an identical amount multiplied

by 50 States under the hypothetical formulation of the internal consistency test does not satisfy

plaintiff’s burden of initially proving a disparate impact of the PFF upon interstate commerce.

That defendant promulgated regulations apportioning the fee based solely on the lack of physical

2 nexus of a nonresident partner does not require a conclusion that the Challenged Statute violates

the DCC. Indeed, the regulations are an invalid exercise since they exceed the scope of the

Challenged Statute by apportioning the fee.

Finally, both parties are not entitled to partial summary judgment if the PFF was viewed

as having an incidental but not disparate impact on plaintiff’s investment activity, and the court

were to engage in a cost-benefit analysis for purposes of the DCC to determine if the PFF

excessively burdens interstate commerce. Plaintiff has not proven excessive burden, and

defendant has not proven the PFF is not excessive.

BACKGROUND

(I) The Challenged Statute and Regulations

Under the Gross Income Tax (“GIT”) Act, an entity classified as a partnership for federal

income tax purposes is required to file an informational return showing all items of income and

loss if the entity has “a resident owner” or has “any income derived from New Jersey sources.”

N.J.S.A. 54A:8-6(b)(1). The return must include the “name and address of each partner, member,

or other owner of an interest in the entity however designated.” Ibid. A copy of the informational

return must be provided to each partner or owner. N.J.S.A. 54A:8-6(b)(3).

In 2002, New Jersey enacted the Business Tax Reform Act (“BTRA”), L. 2002, c. 40, to

attempt a cure to the “core problems” of large and multi-national corporations earning billions in

New Jersey source income but paying only a minimum tax. Statement to A. 2501 51 (June 6,

2002). This was to be accomplished by, among others, “establish[ing] a revenue stream that

captures enforcement and processing costs that New Jersey incurs from processing the vast

3 network of limited liability companies and partnerships.” Id. at 52.1 See also Assembly Budget

Comm. Statement to A. 2501 1 (June 27, 2002) (the BTRA was “intended to reform New Jersey’s

system of taxation of corporations and other business entities,” thus, among others, “affects the

tracking of the income of business organizations, like partnerships, that do not themselves pay

taxes but that distribute income to their owners, the eventual taxpayers.”).

To this end, the BTRA proposed several amendments to the Corporation Business Tax

(“CBT”) Act and the GIT Act. One proposal was to impose a filing fee under the GIT Act upon

partnerships, including entities classified as a partnership under the federal income tax statute such

as limited liabilities companies (“LLCs”), at $150 per owner, capped at $250,000. A. 2501 (June

6, 2002). It was subsequently amended to “[c]larify that the partnership fees apply only to

partnerships that derive income from New Jersey.” See Assembly Budget Comm. Statement to A.

2501 13; A. 2501 (June 28, 2002).

The “per-owner processing fee,” was imposed “on the owners of pass-through entities,”

which “are not subject to tax themselves, but ‘pass-through’ their income to their owners . . . who

are subject [to tax] in their separate capacities.” Assembly Budget Comm. Statement to A. 2501

7. “For pass-through entities that have income from New Jersey sources and more than two

members, the bill establishes an annual $150 per owner filing fee, capped at $250,000 per entity

annually.” Ibid. “One of the key objectives” of the BTRA “was to reach pass-through business

entities that profited economically from their presence in New Jersey, yet paid nothing in taxes to

the State,” and that the “processing fee was intended to compensate the State for the large volume

1 The other two measures were the closure of “loopholes” that allowed an artificial reduction of income, thus, payment of little to no CBT, and to impose an alternative minimum assessment. However, small businesses were provided additional incentives by reducing the tax rate, and expanding certain credits. Statement to A. 2501 51-52.

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