Uber Technologies, Inc. v. Frank M. O'connell, in His Official Capacity as Revenue Commissioner of the State of Georgia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 1, 2025
DocketA25A0144
StatusPublished

This text of Uber Technologies, Inc. v. Frank M. O'connell, in His Official Capacity as Revenue Commissioner of the State of Georgia (Uber Technologies, Inc. v. Frank M. O'connell, in His Official Capacity as Revenue Commissioner of the State of Georgia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Uber Technologies, Inc. v. Frank M. O'connell, in His Official Capacity as Revenue Commissioner of the State of Georgia, (Ga. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., HODGES and PIPKIN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

May 1, 2025

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A25A0144. UBER TECHNOLOGIES, INC. v. O’CONNELL, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS REVENUE COMMISSIONER OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA.

HODGES, Judge.

Uber Technologies, Inc. appeals from a superior court order affirming the

Georgia Tax Tribunal’s ruling that Uber is liable for approximately $9 million in sales

tax it failed to collect between 2012 and 2015 (the “audit period”). Uber argues that

it is an online marketplace that does not furnish taxable transportation services, and

the trial court erred in applying a “headquarters operators” amendment in a taxicab

regulation to find that Uber was required during the audit period to collect sales tax

from its independent drivers and remit that tax to the Georgia Department of

Revenue. Uber further argues that requiring it to collect sales tax discriminatorily shifts the sales tax collection obligation in violation of the federal Internet Tax

Freedom Act (“ITFA”). Because we conclude that the applicable statutory scheme

required Uber to collect sales tax for the time period at issue here, we affirm the

superior court’s order.

1. Facts. The underlying facts are not disputed. Uber began doing business in

Georgia in July 2012. Uber is a technology company operating mobile application-

based platforms that utilize proprietary algorithms to connect consumers seeking

transportation services (“riders”) with independent transportation service providers

(“drivers”). The Uber apps are designed, maintained, and operated by employees at

Uber’s San Francisco, California, headquarters. During the audit period, Uber

maintained an Atlanta office where employees typically worked on operations teams

that oversaw the marketplace. Uber also maintained a “Partner Support Center” —

a technical support center where workers helped drivers create accounts, update

insurance information, and return lost rider items — in Georgia.

The apps connect riders and drivers via an online marketplace; information is

sent through the cloud and servers outside the state of Georgia. To provide riders with

accurate information concerning nearby Uber drivers, the Uber app collects and stores

2 GPS points from drivers’ devices “every couple of seconds.” Riders and drivers

download the Uber apps for free, but drivers pay Uber a fee for its services, which

include connecting drivers through lead generation, enabling drivers to receive and

fulfill rider requests for transportation services, acting as a collection agent on behalf

of the drivers, and providing related support services. Both riders and drivers enter

into agreements with Uber and its affiliates to use the Uber apps. The driver’s

agreement includes various requirements, the violation of which could result in denial

of access to the app. Some drivers in Georgia have been deactivated by Uber for failing

to abide by Uber’s policies.

Riders use the Uber app to see local driver availability and select from several

transportation options with estimated prices. Once a rider chooses an option, the

driver associated with the transportation option, based on proximity to the rider, is

offered the ride and can accept or decline the ride. Uber does not provide riders with

specific drivers or assign drivers to specific riders. In addition, Uber does not set

schedules for drivers, require any given or minimum amount of drive time, or control

how drivers provide transportation. Uber provides ride request information only when

drivers are logged on to the driver app; if a driver accepts a ride request, then the

3 driver sees the pickup location of the rider and the rider sees the location of the driver

through the GPS functionality of the Uber apps. Until July 1, 2015, drivers’ vehicles

were not required to display any particular signage identifying the ride share network

service as Uber.

Riders pay drivers a base fare for transportation services calculated using the

riders’ location and type of transportation service requested, plus a variable amount

based on the distance traveled and the time of the trip. During the audit period, Uber

“would have originally collected the money on behalf of the driver” by charging the

rider’s credit card at the end of the ride, then the monies would have flowed to an

Uber subsidiary which would have remitted payment to the driver minus the service

fee owed by the driver. The service fee paid by a driver is calculated as a percentage

of the fare the rider paid the driver and fluctuates depending on the market location

and type of transportation offered.

2. Procedural posture. The dispute at issue in this case began in 2018, when the

Compliance Division of the Georgia Department of Revenue (the “Department”)

sent Uber an “Official Assessment and Demand for Payment” for approximately

$22,000,000 in unpaid sales tax and penalties during the audit period: July 23, 2012

4 through June 30, 2015. Uber admits that it did not collect sales tax from riders in

Georgia during the audit period, claiming it relied on drivers to collect any sales tax

owed. Nonetheless, Uber timely protested the assessment, asserting it was not

required to collect sales tax.1 The Department denied the protest, and Uber appealed

to the Georgia Tax Tribunal.

In May 2022, the Tax Tribunal upheld the assessment, ruling that Uber was

responsible for collecting sales tax from its independent drivers under a regulation

entitled “Taxicabs,” Ga. Comp. R. & Regs., r. 560-12-2-84 (the “Taxicab

Regulation”),2 as Uber’s app-based business model functioned in the same way as a

traditional taxicab headquarters. Thereafter, the Tax Tribunal entered a final order,

setting the amount of the assessment at $8,926,728.44.

Uber sought judicial review of that order in the superior court under OCGA §

50-13A-17. The superior court subsequently issued an order denying Uber’s petition

1 Certain Uber subsidiaries are required by law to collect sales tax in Iowa, New York State, New York City, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Juneau, Alaska. 2 The superior court refers to the regulation as the “HQ Regulation” while Uber, the Revenue Commissioner, and Metro Atlanta Chamber in its amicus curiae brief refer to the regulation as the “Taxicab Regulation.” 5 for judicial review and affirming the order of the Tax Tribunal. We granted Uber’s

application for discretionary appeal, and this appeal followed.

3. Statutory scheme and standards of review. In 2012, the General Assembly

created the Georgia Tax Tribunal to be “an independent specialized agency separate

and apart from the Department of Revenue to resolve disputes between the

department and taxpayers in an efficient and cost-effective manner.” OCGA §

50-13A-2, enacted by Ga. L. 2012, p. 318, § 15. A party may appeal a final decision of

the Tax Tribunal to the Superior Court of Fulton County. OCGA § 50-13A-17 (a), (b).

When reviewing an appeal from the Tax Tribunal, the superior court defers to the

tribunal’s factual findings and “shall not substitute its judgment for that of the

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Uber Technologies, Inc. v. Frank M. O'connell, in His Official Capacity as Revenue Commissioner of the State of Georgia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uber-technologies-inc-v-frank-m-oconnell-in-his-official-capacity-as-gactapp-2025.