Rent-A-Center Inc v. Department of Revenue

CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedMay 12, 2014
DocketTC-MD 111031D
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rent-A-Center Inc v. Department of Revenue (Rent-A-Center Inc v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rent-A-Center Inc v. Department of Revenue, (Or. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE OREGON TAX COURT MAGISTRATE DIVISION Income Tax

RENT-A-CENTER, INC & ) SUBSIDIARIES, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) TC-MD 111031D ) v. ) ) DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE, ) State of Oregon, ) ) Defendant. ) FINAL DECISION

The court entered its Decision in the above-entitled matter on April 23, 2014. The court

did not receive a request for an award of costs and disbursements (TCR-MD 19) within 14 days

after its Decision was entered. The court’s Final Decision incorporates its Decision without

change.

Plaintiffs appeal Defendant’s Notice of Deficiency Assessment, dated June 29, 2011,

concluding that for tax year 2003: (1) Plaintiffs’ wholly owned subsidiary, ColorTyme, Inc.

(ColorTyme), had nexus with Oregon; (2) ColorTyme and Legacy Insurance Co., Ltd. (Legacy)

are part of the unitary group, Rent-A-Center, Inc. (RAC), and must be included in RAC’s 2003

Oregon Corporation Excise Tax Return; and (3) the statute of limitations for the 2003 tax year

had not expired at the time Defendant issued its Notice of Deficiency to Plaintiffs, allowing

Defendant to include ColorTyme’s income and factors (sales, property and payroll) in the

income and factors of the RAC unitary group.1

///

1 By the Complaint, filed on September 26, 2011, Plaintiffs appealed tax years 2002 and 2003. (Ptfs’ Compl at 2.) Plaintiff’s attorney, Hollis L. Hyans, stated at trial that “[a]ll 2002 has been resolved”; therefore, tax year 2002 is no longer at issue in this appeal.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 111031D 1 A trial was held in the Oregon Tax Courtroom, Salem, Oregon, on August 12, 2013.

Carol Vogt Lavine, Attorney at Law, and Hollis L. Hyans, Attorney at Law, appeared on behalf

of Plaintiffs. Hugh L. Tollack II (Tollack), Certified Public Accountant, Director of Tax Audits,

Research and Planning, Rent-A-Center, Inc., and Professor Richard Pomp (Pomp), Alva P.

Loiselle Professor of Law, University of Connecticut Law School, and adjunct Professor of Law,

LL.M. Program in Taxation, New York University Law School, testified on behalf of Plaintiffs.

The parties’ Stipulated Exhibits 1 through 32, Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 1 through 8,

Defendant’s Exhibits A through RR, and Defendant’s Rebuttal Evidence WW and XX were

received without objection.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Tollack briefly reviewed the RAC organizational structure and recited RAC’s corporate

history, testifying that in 1995, RAC, known as Renter’s Choice, “went public” and by the end of

1998, RAC grew from 300 stores to 2,100 stores. (See Ptfs’ Ex 1.) Currently RAC is “the

largest rent-to-own operator in North America[.]” (Def’s Ex QQ at 63.) Tollack testified that

RAC acquired ColorTyme in 1996. He testified that ColorTyme stores were “rebranded as

Renter’s Choice” and the entity focused its business “on its franchise operations and from that

point forward did not own or operate any stores.” (See Stip Ex 25 at 7.) ColorTyme’s Notes to

Consolidated Financial Statements for years ending December 31, 2003 and 2002 stated:

“The Company’s primary source of revenue is the sale of rental equipment to its franchisees, who, in turn, offer the equipment to the general public for rent or purchase under a rental-purchase program. The balance of the Company’s revenue is generated from royalties, based on the franchisee’s gross revenues, and from the franchise fees, which consist of fees earned from the sale of franchises. At December 31, 2003, there were 329 franchised ColorTyme rental centers operating in 40 states. All but 12 of the ColorTyme rental centers use ColorTyme’s tradenames, service marks, trademarks, logos, emblems and indicia of origin. These 12 stores use the Rent-A-Center name.”

(Id. (emphasis omitted).) There were seven ColorTyme stores operating in Oregon in 2003.

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 111031D 2 (Stip Ex 5 at 1.) Tollack testified that the RAC blue, yellow, and red branded stores “[had a]

different color scheme[]” from the ColorTyme light green and earth tone branded stores.

A. Nexus

Tollack concluded that ColorTyme’s “activities in Oregon * * * do not create nexus and

are insufficient to allow Oregon jurisdiction to tax Colortyme.” 2 (Stip Ex 5 at 1.) Tollack

testified that ColorTyme did not “own or rent any real or tangible personal property in Oregon in

2003[.]” (See id.) He testified that “ColorTyme received orders from its franchisees [for rental

merchandise]” at its headquarters in Texas and “the vendors drop shipped the [ordered

merchandise] directly to the franchise locations.” (See id. at 2.) Tollack testified that two

ColorTyme employees visited Oregon “for portions of four days each [in 2003.]” (See id. at 1

(stating “portions of 8 days in 2003”); see also Def’s Ex BB at 1, 9 (expense reports for Curt

Scollard and Steven Arendt).) Tollack testified that ColorTyme’s franchisees used point-of-sale

software from the same vendor, High Touch, which supplied RAC’s software. (See Stip Ex 5 at

1.) He differentiated the two systems, stating that the type of software used by ColorTyme was

“very simple and much less expensive” than RAC’s customized version; according to Tollock,

ColorTyme’s software was “off the shelf just like you would buy QuickBooks off the shelf.”

(See id.) Tollack testified that RAC contracted with High Touch to make “millions and millions

of dollars of modifications and customizations to [the software] * * *. Nobody else anywhere in

the world [] use[d] the same software that we use[d].” (See Stip Ex 28 at 1.) Tollack stated that

the standard franchise agreements “require any disputes to be resolved under Texas law.” (Stip

Ex 5 at 2.)

2 ColorTyme filed a separate Oregon corporate excise tax return for tax year 2003. (Stip Ex 3.)

FINAL DECISION TC-MD 111031D 3 B. Unitary

Tollack noted that ColorTyme and Legacy “did not engage in business activities that

constitute a unitary business with their affiliates in the federal consolidated [RAC] group during

[] tax year[] * * * 2003.” (Stip Ex 5 at 2.) At trial, Tollack testified that even though Legacy

and RAC shared a few directors and board members, those individuals did not participate in the

management of Legacy operations. (See id.) He testified that all day-to-day operations were run

by “AON Bermuda, which was engaged separately[,]” and did not include “any officer, director

or employee of Rent-A-Center * * * [.]” (See id.) Defendant noted that the RAC President

Mitchell E. Fadel was formerly President and Chief Operating Officer of ColorTyme, Inc.

(Def’s Ex PP at 1; Stip Ex 32.) Defendant noted that at the time Steven Arendt was

ColorTyme’s Chief Executive Officer he was granted 18,750 options to purchase RAC’s

common stock over a four year vesting period and the options expired 10 years from the date of

grant. (Def’s Ex WW at 1.)

Tollack testified that ColorTyme franchisees were competitors with RAC and therefore,

RAC did not have “access to information about the performance of ColorTyme’s franchisees’

stores[.]” (See Stip Ex 5 at 2.) Without detailed financial information, RAC’s “involvement

with the day-to day operations of Colortyme’s business planning * * * [was limited to] oversight

as an investor[.]” (See id.) Tollack testified that the RAC 10-K Annual Report’s use of the

pronouns, “we,” “us” and “our,” was overly inclusive when describing the “management team,”

stating that the RAC “management team” did not “direct[] and coordinate[] purchasing, financial

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Rent-A-Center Inc v. Department of Revenue, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rent-a-center-inc-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-2014.