Kms Financial Services, Inc. v. City Of Seattle

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 24, 2020
Docket78946-5
StatusPublished

This text of Kms Financial Services, Inc. v. City Of Seattle (Kms Financial Services, Inc. v. City Of Seattle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kms Financial Services, Inc. v. City Of Seattle, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

CITY OF SEATTLE a municipal ) No. 78946-5-I corporation, ) Respondent, ) ) DIVISION ONE v. ) KMS FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC., ) PUBLISHED OPINION a Washington corporation, ) ) Appellant. ) FILED: February 24, 2020 __________________________________________________________________________________)

MANN, A.C.J. — This is a taxation case. The sole issue is whether the city of

Seattle (City) used an unlawful method to calculate business and occupation (B&O)

taxes owed by KMS Financial Services, Inc., between January 2012 and March 2016

(the audit period).

The Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution requires state and local

taxes be ‘fairly apportioned” so that the tax is imposed only on the portion of income

reasonably attributed to the taxpayer’s instate activities. Washington law imposes a

similar limitation on local government taxes. To comply with these requirements, the

City’s B&O tax utilizes a two-factor apportionment method to calculate taxable revenue

for service related businesses. One of those factors, the “payroll factor,” compares the No. 78946-5-1/2

amount of compensation the taxpayer pays in Seattle to the compensation it pays

outside the City. As a result, the more a taxpayer pays for work performed outside the

City, the less its income is apportioned to the City—which means a lower B&O tax.

KMS is headquartered in Seattle, but generates most of its income through the

sale of securities by registered representatives located outside the City. In calculating

the payroll factor for its B&O tax, KMS included the compensation paid to its registered

representatives. During an audit, Seattle determined that KMS’s registered

representatives were not “employees” and therefore did not consider their income in

determining the payroll factor. The result roughly tripled KMS’s B&O tax liability.

KMS sought review in the King County Superior Court. After cross-motions for

summary judgment, the superior court granted the City’s motion and dismissed KMS’s

challenge. We agree with KMS that the City’s B&O tax, as applied to KMS, is not fairly

apportioned and is unconstitutional. In order to avoid unconstitutionality, the City should

have instead treated KMS’s registered representatives as employees which would have

resulted in a valid, fairly apportioned tax. We vacate the trial court’s order and remand

for the trial court to grant KMS’s motion for summary judgment.

A. KMS and Registered Representatives

The parties stipulated to the undisputed, material facts.1 KMS is a Washington

corporation, headquartered in Seattle. KMS engages in the securities, insurance, and

investment advisory business. KMS is a broker-dealer under the Securities Exchange

Act of 1934 (1934 Act), and is registered with the Securities & Exchange Commission

1 See also KMS Financial Services, Inc. v. City of Seattle, 135 Wn. App. 489, 493-95, 146 P.3d 1195 (2006) (explaining further KMS’s use of registered representatives).

2 No. 78946-5-1/3

(SEC), the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and the state securities

regulators of all 50 states.

Under federal securities laws, a broker-dealers acts primarily through “registered

representatives.” Registered representatives are individuals, often referred to as

stockbrokers or account executives, who provide a variety of investment related

services. Under the 1934 Act, all individuals in the business of assisting others with

securities trades are required to be registered representatives of a registered broker

dealer. KMS does not, except through its registered representatives, generate

investment advice, make securities recommendations, or solicit the sale of securities or

other financial products.

As a broker-dealer, KMS must supervise its registered representatives, oversee

their licensing status, and require them to comply with industry rules and standards of

conduct and procedures set out in its policy manual.

For federal income tax purposes, broker-dealers typically structure their

operation so that the registered representatives are either deemed employees (Form W

2), or independent contractors (Form 1099). A broker-dealer’s control and supervisory

obligations under the 1934 Act and by FINRA with respect to the broker-dealer’s

registered representatives are identical regardless of whether the registered

representatives are deemed independent contractors or employees for federal income

tax purposes.

The National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) Notice 86-65 provides

that:

Irrespective of an individual’s location or compensation arrangements, all associated persons are considered to be employees of the firm with which

3 No. 78946-5-1/4

they are registered for purposes of compliance with NASD rules governing the conduct of registered persons and the supervisory responsibilities of the member. The fact that an associated person conducts business at a separate location or is compensated as an independent contractor does not alter the obligations of the individual and the firm to comply fully with all applicable regulatory requirements. [2]

A SEC letter dated June 18, 1982, addresses the status of registered

representatives as employees of their associated broker-dealer. The letter addressed

whether independent contractors are subject to the 1934 Act. “The critical question is

whether a so-called independent contractor’s activities are subject to control by a

broker-dealer within the scope of Section 3(a)(B) of the Act.” The letter explains that an

independent contractor can be subject to the control of an employer under agency law.

“It has been a long-standing policy of the Commission that independent contractors

whose selling activities were controlled by their broker-dealer employers could be

characterized as employees for the purposes of the Act.”

KMS’s revenue, through the sale of securities, is generated by approximately 350 ,1

registered representatives operating throughout the United States. By contract, KMS

classifies its registered representatives as independent contractors. During the relevant

period, KMS employed approximately 50 W-2 employees, most of whom worked in its

Seattle headquarters. The registered representatives cultivate customers, process the

opening of client accounts, provide investment advice, make securities

recommendations, enter orders, and receive checks. The KMS W-2 employees handle

administrative functions. KMS’s W-2 employees do not provide or generate investment

advice, make securities recommendations, or solicit the sale of securities and other

financial products.

2 NASD was the predecessor to FINRA. Notice 86-65 continues to be in full force and effect.

4 No. 78946-5-1/5

A typical sale of securities involves: the client tells the registered representative

to purchase or sell a security; the registered representative enters the client’s order with

KMS’s primary clearing firm, Pershing LLC (Pershing); Pershing executes the trade and

records it in the client’s account; the client writes a check to KMS or to Pershing to pay

for the transaction; the registered representative forwards the check to KMS, and a

trade report is generated in KMS’s office; after settlement of the trade (usually within

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Kms Financial Services, Inc. v. City Of Seattle, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kms-financial-services-inc-v-city-of-seattle-washctapp-2020.