R865. Tax Commission, Auditing.
R865-6F.
Franchise Tax.
R865-6F-32.
Taxation of Financial Institutions Pursuant to Utah Code Ann. Sections
59-7-302 through 59-7-321.
(1) Definitions.
(a) "Billing address" means the
location indicated in the books and records of the taxpayer on the first day of
the taxable year, or on the later date in the taxable year when the customer
relationship began, where any notice, statement or bill relating to a
customer's account is mailed.
(b) "Borrower or credit card holder
located in this state" means:
(i) a borrower, other than a credit card
holder, that is engaged in a trade or business that maintains its commercial
domicile in this state; or
(ii) a borrower that is not engaged in a trade or business, or a credit card holder, whose billing address is in this state.
(c) "Commercial domicile" means:
(i) the place from which the trade or
business is principally managed and directed; or
(ii) if a taxpayer is organized under the laws of a foreign country, or of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or possession of the United States, that taxpayer's commercial domicile shall be deemed for the purposes of this rule to be the state of the United States or the District of Columbia from which that taxpayer's trade or business in the United States is principally managed and directed. It shall be presumed, subject to rebuttal, that the location from which the taxpayer's trade or business is principally managed and directed is the state of the United States or the District of Columbia to which the greatest number of employees are regularly connected or out of which they are working, irrespective of where the services of those employees are performed, as of the last day of the taxable year.
(d) "Compensation" means wages,
salaries, commissions, and any other form of remuneration paid to employees for
personal services that are included in the employee's gross income under the
federal Internal Revenue Code. In
the case of employees not subject to the federal Internal Revenue Code, the
determination of whether payments constitute gross income under the federal
Internal Revenue Code shall be made as though those employees were subject to
the federal Internal Revenue Code.
(e) "Credit card" means a credit,
travel, or entertainment card.
(f) "Credit card issuer's
reimbursement fee" means the fee a taxpayer receives from a merchant's
bank because one of the persons to whom the taxpayer has issued a credit card
has charged merchandise or services to the credit card.
(g) "Employee" means, with
respect to a particular taxpayer, any individual who, under the usual common
law rules applicable in determining the employer-employee relationship, has the
status of an employee of that taxpayer.
(h) "Financial institution"
means:
(i) any corporation or other business entity registered under state law as a bank holding company or registered under the Federal Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended, or registered as a savings and loan holding company under the Federal National Housing Act, as amended;
(ii) a national bank organized and existing
as a national bank association pursuant to the provisions of the National Bank
Act, 12 U.S.C. Sections21 et seq.;
(iii) a savings association or federal
savings bank as defined in the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. Section
1813(b)(1);
(iv) any bank, industrial loan corporation,
or thrift institution incorporated or organized under the laws of any state;
(v) any corporation organized under the
provisions of 12 U.S.C. Sections611 through 631.
(vi) any agency or branch of a foreign
depository as defined in 12 U.S.C. Section3101;
(vii) a production credit association
organized under the Federal Farm Credit Act of 1933, all of whose stock held by
the Federal Production Credit Corporation has been retired;
(viii) any corporation whose voting stock is
more than 50 percent owned, directly or indirectly, by any person or business
entity described in Subsections (1)(h)(i) through (vii), other than an
insurance company taxable under Title 59, Chapter 9, Taxation of Admitted
Insurers;
(ix) a corporation or other business entity
that derives more than 50 percent of its total gross income for financial
accounting purposes from finance leases.
For purposes of this subsection, a "finance lease" shall mean
any lease transaction that is the functional equivalent of an extension of
credit and that transfers substantially all of the benefits and risks incident
to the ownership of property. The
phrase shall include any direct financing lease or leverage lease that meets
the criteria of Financial Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 13,
Accounting for Leases, or any other lease that is accounted for as a financing
lease by a lessor under generally accepted accounting principles. For this classification to apply:
(A) the average of the gross income in the
current tax year and immediately preceding two tax years must satisfy the more
than 50 percent requirement; and
(B) gross income from incidental or
occasional transactions shall be disregarded;
(x) any other person or business entity,
other than an insurance company, a credit union exempt from the corporation
franchise tax under Section 59-7-102, a real estate broker, or a securities
dealer, that derives more than 50 percent of its gross income from activities
that a person described in Subsections (1)(h)(ii) through(vii) and (1)(h)(ix)
is authorized to transact.
(A) For purposes of this subsection, the
computation of gross income shall not include income from non-recurring,
extraordinary items; and
(B) The Tax Commission is authorized to
exclude any person from the application of Subsection (1)(h)(x) upon receipt of proof, by clear and
convincing evidence, that the income-producing activity of that person is not
in substantial competition with those persons described in Subsections
(1)(h)(ii) through (vii) and (1)(h)(ix).
(i) "Gross rents" means the
actual sum of money or other consideration payable for the use or possession of
property.
(i) Gross rents includes:
(A) any amount payable for the use or
possession of real property or tangible property whether designated as a fixed
sum of money or as a percentage of receipts, profits or otherwise;
(B) any amount payable as additional rent
or in lieu of rent, such as interest, taxes, insurance, repairs or any other
amount required to be paid by the terms of a lease or other arrangement; and
(C) a proportionate part of the cost of any
improvement to real property, made by or on behalf of the taxpayer, that
reverts to the owner or lessor upon termination of a lease or other
arrangement. The amount included
in gross rents is the amount of amortization or depreciation allowed in
computing the taxable income base for the taxable year. However, where a building is erected on
leased land by or on behalf of the taxpayer, the value of the land is
determined by multiplying the gross rent by eight and the value of the building
is determined in the same manner as if owned by the taxpayer.
(ii) Gross rents does not include:
(A) reasonable amounts payable as separate
charges for water and electric service furnished by the lessor;
(B) reasonable amounts payable as service
charges for janitorial services furnished by the lessor;
(C) reasonable amounts payable for storage,
provided those amounts are payable for space not designated and not under the
control of the taxpayer; and
(D) that portion of any rental payment
applicable to the space subleased from the taxpayer and not used by the
taxpayer.
(j) "Loan" means any extension of
credit resulting from direct negotiations between the taxpayer and the
taxpayer's customer, or the purchase, in whole or in part, of an extension of
credit from another.
[a)]
(i) Loan includes
participations, syndications, and leases treated as loans for federal income
tax purposes.
(ii) Loan does not include properties
treated as loans under Section 595 of the federal Internal Revenue Code,
futures or forward contracts, options, notional principal contracts such as
swaps, credit card receivables, including purchased credit card relationships,
non-interest bearing balances due from depository institutions, cash items in
the process of collection, federal funds sold, securities purchased under
agreements to resell, assets held in a trading account, securities, interests
in a real estate mortgage investment conduit as defined in Section 860D of the
Internal Revenue Code, or other mortgage-backed or asset-backed security, and
other similar items.
(k) "Loans secured by real
property" means that fifty percent or more of the aggregate value of the
collateral used to secure a loan or other obligation, when valued at fair
market value as of the time the original loan or obligation was incurred, was
real property.
(l) "Merchant discount" means the
fee, or negotiated discount, charged to a merchant by the taxpayer for the
privilege of participating in a program whereby a credit card is accepted in
payment for merchandise or services sold to the card holder.
(m) "Participation" means an extension of credit in which an undivided ownership interest is held on a pro rata basis in a single loan or pool of loans and related collateral. In a loan participation, the credit originator initially makes the loan and then subsequently resells all or a portion of it to other lenders. The participation may or may not be known to the borrower.
(n) "Person" means an individual,
estate, trust, partnership, corporation, and any other business entity.
(o) "Principal base of
operations" means:
(i) with respect to transportation
property, the place of more or less permanent nature from which that property
is regularly directed or controlled; and
(ii) with respect to an employee, the place
of more or less permanent nature from which the employee regularly:
(A) starts his work and to which he
customarily returns in order to receive instructions from his employer;
(B) communicates with his customers or
other persons; or
(C) performs any other functions necessary
to the exercise of his trade or profession at some other point or points.
(i)
"Real property owned" and "tangible personal property
owned" mean real and tangible personal property, respectively:
(A)
on which the taxpayer may claim depreciation for federal income tax purposes;
or
(B) property to which the taxpayer holds
legal title and on which no other person may claim depreciation for federal
income tax purposes, or could claim depreciation if subject to federal income
tax.
(ii) Real and tangible personal property do
not include coin, currency, or property acquired in lieu of or pursuant to a
foreclosure.
(q) "Regular place of business"
means an office at which the taxpayer carries on business in a regular and
systematic manner and is continuously maintained, occupied, and used by
employees of the taxpayer.
(r) "State" means a state of the
United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any
territory or possession of the United States, or any foreign country.
(s) "Syndication" means an
extension of credit in which two or more persons fund and each person is at
risk only up to a specified percentage of the total extension of credit or up
to a specified dollar amount.
(t) "Taxable" means:
(i) a taxpayer is subject in another state
to a net income tax, a franchise tax measured by net income, a franchise tax
for the privilege of doing business, a corporate stock tax, including a bank
shares tax, a single business tax, an earned surplus tax, or any tax imposed
upon or measured by net income; or
(ii) another state has jurisdiction to
subject the taxpayer to taxes regardless of whether that state actually imposes
those taxes.
(u) "Transportation property"
means vehicles and vessels capable of moving under their own power, such as
aircraft, trains, water vessels and motor vehicles, as well as any equipment or
containers attached to that property, such as rolling stock, barges, and
trailers.
(2) Apportionment and Allocation.
(a) A financial institution whose business
activity is taxable both within and without this state, or a financial
institution whose business activity is taxable within this state and is a
member of a unitary group that includes one or more financial institutions
where any member of the group is taxable without this state, shall allocate and
apportion its net income as provided in this rule. All items of nonbusiness income shall be allocated pursuant
to the provisions of Section 59-7-306.
A financial institution organized under the laws of a foreign country,
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or a territory or possession of the United
States, whose effectively connected income, as defined under the federal
Internal Revenue Code, is taxable both within this state and within another
state, other than the state in which it is organized, shall allocate and apportion
its net income as provided in this rule.
(b
The fraction by which business income shall be apportioned to the state shall
be determined in accordance with rule R865-6F-8(3) and (6). Except as modified by this rule, the
property factor shall be determined in accordance with R865-6F-8(7), the
payroll factor in accordance with R865-6F-8(8), and the sales factor in
accordance with R865-6F-8(9).
(c) Each factor shall be computed according
to the cash or accrual method of accounting as used by the taxpayer for the
taxable year.
(d) If a unitary group of corporations
filing a combined report includes one or more corporations meeting the
definition of financial institution and one or more corporations that do not
meet that definition, the provisions of this rule regarding the calculation of
the property, payroll, and receipts factors of the apportionment fraction shall
apply only to those corporations meeting the definition of financial
institution. Those corporations
not meeting the definition of financial institution shall compute their
apportionment data based on [Tax rule R865-6F-8 or such other industry
apportionment rule adopted by the Tax Commission that may be applicable. The apportionment data of all members
of the unitary group shall be included in calculating a single apportionment
fraction for the unitary group.
The numerators and denominators of the property, payroll, and receipts
factors of the financial institutions shall be added to the numerators and
denominators, respectively, of the property, payroll, and sales factors of the
nonfinancial institutions to determine the property, payroll, and sales factors
of the unitary group.
(3) Receipts Factor.
(a) In general. The receipts factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is
the receipts of the taxpayer in this state during the taxable year and the
denominator of which is the receipts of the taxpayer within and without this
state during the taxable year. The
method of calculating receipts for purposes of the denominator is the same as
the method used in determining receipts for purposes of the numerator. The receipts factor shall include only
those receipts that constitute business income and are included in the
computation of the apportionable income base for the taxable year.
(b) Receipts from the lease of real
property. The numerator of the
receipts factor includes receipts from the lease or rental of real property
owned by the taxpayer and receipts from the sublease of real property, if the
property is located within this state.
(c) Receipts from the lease of tangible
personal property.
(i) Except as described in Subsection
(3)(d), the numerator of the receipts factor includes receipts from the lease
or rental of tangible personal property owned by the taxpayer if the property
is located within this state when it is first placed in service by the lessee.
(ii) Receipts from the lease or rental of
transportation property owned by the taxpayer are included in the numerator of
the receipts factor to the extent that the property is used in this state.
(A) The extent an aircraft will be deemed
to be used in this state and the amount of receipts that shall be included in
the numerator of this state's receipts factor are determined by multiplying all
the receipts from the lease or rental of the aircraft by a fraction, the
numerator of which is the number of landings of the aircraft in this state and
the denominator of which is the total number of landings of the aircraft.
(B) If the extent of the use of any
transportation property within this state cannot be determined, that property
will be deemed to be used wholly in the state in which the property has its
principal base of operations.
(C) A motor vehicle will be deemed to be
used wholly in the state in which it is registered.
(d) Interest from loans secured by real
property.
(i) The numerator of the receipts factor
includes interest and fees or penalties in the nature of interest from loans
secured by real property if the property is located within this state. If the property is located both within
this state and one or more other states, the receipts described in this
subsection are included in the numerator of the receipts factor if more than
fifty percent of the fair market value of the real property is located within
this state. If more than fifty
percent of the fair market value of the real property is not located within any
one state, the receipts described in this subsection shall be included in the
numerator of the receipts factor if the borrower is located in this state.
(ii) The determination of whether the real
property securing a loan is located within this state shall be made as of the
time the original agreement was made, and any and all subsequent substitutions
of collateral shall be disregarded.
(e) Interest from loans not secured by real
property. The numerator of the
receipts factor includes interest and fees or penalties in the nature of
interest from loans not secured by real property if the borrower is located in
this state.
(f) Net gains from the sale of loans. The numerator of the receipts factor
includes net gains from the sale of loans. Net gains from the sale of loans includes income recorded
under the coupon stripping rules of Section 1286 of the Internal Revenue Code.
(i) The amount of net gains, but not less
than zero, from the sale of loans secured by real property included in the
numerator is determined by multiplying the net gains by a fraction the
numerator of which is the amount included in the numerator of the receipts
factor pursuant to Subsection (3)(d), and the denominator of which is the total
amount of interest and fees or penalties in the nature of interest from loans
secured by real property.
(ii) The amount of net gains, but not less
than zero, from the sale of loans not secured by real property included in the
numerator is determined by multiplying the net gains by a fraction the
numerator of which is the amount included in the numerator of the receipts
factor pursuant to Subsection (3)(e), and the denominator of which is the total
amount of interest and fees or penalties in the nature of interest from loans
not secured by real property.
(g) Receipts from credit card
receivables. The numerator of the
receipts factor includes interest and fees or penalties in the nature of
interest from credit card receivables and receipts from fees charged to card
holders, such as annual fees, if the billing address of the card holder is in
this state.
(h) Net gains from the sale of credit card
receivables. The numerator of the
receipts factor includes net gains, but not less than zero, from the sale of
credit card receivables multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the
amount included in the numerator of the receipts factor pursuant to Subsection
(3)(g), and the denominator of which is the taxpayer's total amount of interest
and fees or penalties in the nature of interest from credit card receivables
and fees charged to card holders.
(i) Credit card issuer's reimbursement
fees. The numerator of the
receipts factor includes all credit card issuer's reimbursement fees multiplied
by a fraction, the numerator of which is the amount included in the numerator
of the receipts factor pursuant to Subsection (3)(g), and the
denominator of which is the taxpayer's total amount of interest and fees or
penalties in the nature of interest from credit card receivables and fees
charged to card holders.
(j) Receipts from merchant discount. The numerator of the receipts factor
includes receipts from merchant discount if the commercial domicile of the
merchant is in this state. The
receipts shall be computed net of any cardholder charge backs, but shall not be
reduced by any interchange transaction fees or by any issuer's reimbursement
fees paid to another for charges made by its card holders.
(k) Loan servicing fees.
(i) The numerator of the receipts factor
includes loan servicing fees derived from loans secured by real property
multiplied by a fraction the numerator of which is the amount included in the
numerator of the receipts factor pursuant to Subsection (3)(d), and the
denominator of which is the total amount of interest and fees or penalties in
the nature of interest from loans secured by real property.
(ii) The numerator of the receipts factor
includes loan servicing fees derived from loans not secured by real property
multiplied by a fraction the numerator of which is the amount included in the
numerator of the receipts factor pursuant to Subsection (3)(e), and the denominator of which is the total
amount of interest and fees or penalties in the nature of interest from loans
not secured by real property.
(iii) In circumstances in which the taxpayer
receives loan servicing fees for servicing either the secured or the unsecured
loans of another, the numerator of the receipts factor shall include those fees
if the borrower is located in this state.
(l) Receipts from services. The numerator of the receipts factor
includes receipts from services not otherwise apportioned under this section if
the service is performed in this state.
If the service is performed both within and without this state, the
numerator of the receipts factor includes receipts from services not otherwise
apportioned under this section if a greater proportion of the income-producing
activity is performed in this state based on cost of performance.
(m) Receipts from investment assets and
activities and trading assets and activities.
(i) Interest, dividends, net gains, but not
less than zero, and other income from investment assets and activities and from
trading assets and activities shall be included in the receipts factor.
(ii) Investment assets and activities and
trading assets and activities include investments securities, trading account
assets, federal funds, securities purchased and sold under agreements to resell
or repurchase, options, futures contracts, forward contracts, notional
principal contracts such as swaps, equities, and foreign currency transactions.
(iii) The receipts factor shall include the
following investment and trading assets and activities:
(A) The receipts factor shall include the
amount by which interest from federal funds sold and securities purchased under
resale agreements exceeds interest expense on federal funds purchased and
securities sold under repurchase agreements.
(B) The receipts factor shall include the
amount by which interest, dividends, gains and other income from trading assets
and activities, including assets and activities in the matched book and
arbitrage book, and foreign currency transactions, exceed amounts paid in lieu
of interest, amounts paid in lieu of dividends, and losses from those assets
and activities.
(iv) The numerator of the receipts factor
includes interest, dividends, net gains, but not less than zero, and other
income from investment assets and activities and from trading assets and
activities described in Subsection (3)(m) that are attributable to this state.
(A) The amount of interest, dividends, net gains, but not less than zero, and other income from investment assets and activities in the investment accounts attributed to this state and included in the numerator is determined by multiplying all such income from assets and activities by a fraction, the numerator of which is the average value of the assets properly assigned to a regular place of business of the taxpayer within this state and the denominator of which is the average value of all those assets.
(B) The amount of interest from federal funds sold and purchased and from securities purchased under resale agreements and securities sold under repurchase agreements attributable to this state and included in the numerator is determined by multiplying the amount of those funds and securities described in Subsection (3)(m)(iii)(A) by a fraction, the numerator of which is the average value of federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell that are properly assigned to a regular place of business of the taxpayer within this state and the denominator of which is the average value of all those funds and securities.
(C) The amount of interest, dividends, gains, and other income from trading assets and activities, including assets and activities in the matched book and arbitrage book and foreign currency transactions, but excluding amounts described in Subsections (3)(m)(iv)(A) and (3)(m)(iv)(B), attributable to this state and included in the numerator is determined by multiplying the amount described in Subsection (3)(m)(iii)(B) by a fraction, the numerator of which is the average value of those trading assets that are properly assigned to a regular place of business of the taxpayer within this state and the denominator of which is the average value of all those assets.
(D) For purposes of this subsection,
average value shall be determined using the rules for determining the average
value of tangible personal property set forth in Subsections (4)(c) and (d).
(v) In lieu of using the method set forth
in Subsection (3)(m)(iv), the taxpayer may elect, or the Tax Commission may
require in order to fairly represent the business activity of the taxpayer in
this state, the use of the method set forth in this subsection.
(A) The amount of interest, dividends, net
gains, but not less than zero, and other income from investment assets and
activities in the investment account attributed to this state and included in
the numerator is determined by multiplying all income from those assets and
activities by a fraction, the numerator of which is the gross income from those
assets and activities properly assigned to a regular place of business of the
taxpayer within this state and the denominator of which is the gross income
from all those assets and activities.
(B)
The amount of interest from federal funds sold and purchased and from
securities purchased under resale agreements and securities sold under
repurchase agreements attributable to this state and included in the numerator
is determined by multiplying the amount of those funds and securities described
in Subsection (3)(m)(iii)(A) by a fraction, the numerator of which is the gross
income from those funds and securities properly assigned to a regular place of
business of the taxpayer within this state and the denominator of which is the
gross income from all those funds and securities.
(C) The amount of interest, dividends, gains and other income from trading assets and activities, including assets and activities in the matched book and arbitrage book and foreign currency transactions, but excluding amounts described in Subsections (3)(m)(v)(A) or (B), attributable to this state and included in the numerator is determined by multiplying the amount described in Subsection (3)(m)(iii)(B) by a fraction, the numerator of which is the gross income from those trading assets and activities properly assigned to a regular place of business of the taxpayer within this state and the denominator of which is the gross income from all those assets and activities.
(vi) If the taxpayer elects or is required
by the Tax Commission to use the method set forth in Subsection (3)(m)(v), the
taxpayer shall use this method on all subsequent returns unless the taxpayer
receives prior permission from the Tax Commission to use, or the Tax Commission
requires, a different method.
(vii) The taxpayer shall have the burden of
proving that an investment asset or activity or trading asset or activity was
properly assigned to a regular place of business outside of this state by
demonstrating that the day-to-day decisions regarding the asset or activity
occurred at a regular place of business outside this state. Where the day-to-day decisions
regarding an investment asset or activity or trading asset or activity occur at
more than one regular place of business and one regular place of business is in
this state and one regular place of business is outside this state, that asset
or activity shall be considered to be located at the regular place of business
of the taxpayer where the investment or trading policies or guidelines with
respect to the asset or activity are established. Unless the taxpayer demonstrates to the contrary, policies
and guidelines shall be presumed to be established at the commercial domicile
of the taxpayer.
(n) All other receipts. The numerator of the receipts factor includes all other receipts pursuant to the rules set forth in Rule R865-6F-8(9) and (10).
(o)
Attribution of certain receipts to commercial domicile.
(i) Except as provided in Subsection
(3)(o)(ii), all receipts that would be assigned under this section to a state
in which the taxpayer is not taxable shall be included in the numerator of the
receipts factor if the taxpayer's commercial domicile is in this state.
(ii)(A)
If a unitary group includes one or more financial institutions, and if any
member of the unitary group is subject to the taxing jurisdiction of this
state, the receipts of each financial institution in the unitary group shall be
included in the numerator of this state's receipts factor as provided in
Subsections (3)(a) through (n) rather than being attributed to the commercial
domicile of the financial institution as provided in Subsection (3)(o)(i).
(B) If a unitary group includes one or more
financial institutions whose commercial domicile is in this state, and if any
member of the unitary group is taxable in another state under section 59-7-305,
the receipts of each financial institution in the unitary group that would be
included in the numerator of the other state's receipts factor under
Subsections (3)(a) through (n) may not be included in the numerator of this
state's receipts factor.
(4) Property Factor.
(a) In General.
(i) For taxpayers that do not elect to
include the property described in Subsections (4)(g) through (i) within the
property factor, the property factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is
the average value of real property and tangible personal property owned by or
rented to the taxpayer that is located or used within this state during the
taxable year, and the denominator of which is the average value of all that
property located or used within and without this state during the taxable year.
(ii) For taxpayers that elect to include the
property described in Subsections (4)(g) through (i) within the property
factor, the property factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is the
average value of real property and tangible personal property owned by or
rented to the taxpayer that is located or used within this state during the
taxable year, and the average value of the taxpayer's loans and credit card
receivables that are located within this state during the taxable year, and the
denominator of which is the average value of all that property located or used
within and without this state during the taxable year.
(b) Property included. The property factor shall include only
property the income or expenses of which are included, or would have been
included if not fully depreciated or expensed, or depreciated or expensed to a
nominal amount, in the computation of the apportionable income base for the
taxable year.
(c) Value of property owned by the
taxpayer.
(i) For taxpayers that do not elect to
include the property described in Subsections (4)(g) through (i) within
the property factor, the value of real property and tangible personal property
owned by the taxpayer is the original cost or other basis of that property for
federal income tax purposes without regard to depletion, depreciation or
amortization.
(ii) For taxpayers that elect to include the
property described in Subsections (4)(g) through (i) within the property
factor:
(A) The value of real property and tangible
personal property owned by the taxpayer is the original cost or other basis of
that property for federal income tax purposes without regard to depletion,
depreciation or amortization.
(B) Loans are valued at their outstanding
principal balance, without regard to any reserve for bad debts. If a loan is charged-off in whole or in
part for federal income tax purposes, the portion of the loan charged off is
not outstanding. A specifically
allocated reserve established pursuant to regulatory or financial accounting
guidelines that is treated as charged-off for federal income tax purposes shall
be treated as charged-off for purposes of this rule.
(C) Credit card receivables are valued at
their outstanding principal balance, without regard to any reserve for bad
debts. If a credit card receivable
is charged-off in whole or in part for federal income tax purposes, the portion
of the receivable charged-off is not outstanding.
(d) Average value of property owned by the
taxpayer. The average value of
property owned by the taxpayer is computed on an annual basis by adding the
value of the property on the first day of the taxable year and the value on the
last day of the taxable year and dividing the sum by two.
(i) If averaging on this basis does not
properly reflect average value, the Tax Commission may require averaging on a
more frequent basis, or the taxpayer may elect to average on a more frequent
basis.
(ii) When averaging on a more frequent basis
is required by the Tax Commission or is elected by the taxpayer, the same
method of valuation must be used consistently by the taxpayer with respect to
property within and without this state and on all subsequent returns unless the
taxpayer receives prior permission from the Tax Commission to use a different
method, or the Tax Commission requires a different method of determining
average value.
(e) Average value of real property and
tangible personal property rented to the taxpayer.
(i) The average value of real property and
tangible personal property that the taxpayer has rented from another and are
not treated as property owned by the taxpayer for federal income tax purposes,
shall be determined annually by multiplying the gross rents payable during the
taxable year by eight.
(ii) If the use of the general method described in this subsection results in inaccurate valuations of rented property, any other method that properly reflects the value may be adopted by the Tax Commission or by the taxpayer when approved in writing by the Tax Commission. Once approved, that other method of valuation must be used on all subsequent returns unless the taxpayer receives prior approval from the Tax Commission to use a different method, or the Tax Commission requires a different method of valuation.
(f) Location of real property and tangible
personal property owned or rented to the taxpayer.
(i) Except as described in Subsection
(4)(f)(ii), real property and tangible personal property owned by or rented to
the taxpayer are considered located within this state if they are physically
located, situated, or used within this state.
(ii) Transportation property is included in
the numerator of the property factor to the extent that the property is used in
this state.
(A) The extent an aircraft will be deemed to be used in this state and the amount of value that shall be included in the numerator of this state's property factor is determined by multiplying the average value of the aircraft by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of landings of the aircraft in this state and the denominator of which is the total number of landings of the aircraft everywhere.
(B) If the extent of the use of any transportation property within this state cannot be determined, the property will be deemed to be used wholly in the state in which the property has its principal base of operations.
(C) A motor vehicle will be deemed to be
used wholly in the state in which it is registered.
(g) Location of Loans.
(i) A loan is considered located within
this state if it is properly assigned to a regular place of business of the
taxpayer within this state.
(ii) A loan is properly assigned to the
regular place of business with which it has a preponderance of substantive
contacts. A loan assigned by the
taxpayer to a regular place of business without the state shall be presumed to
have been properly assigned if:
(A) the taxpayer has assigned, in the
regular course of its business, the loan on its records to a regular place of
business consistent with federal or state regulatory requirements;
(B) the assignment on its records is based
upon substantive contacts of the loan to the regular course of business; and
(C) the taxpayer uses the records reflecting assignment of loans for the filing of all state and local tax returns for which an assignment of loans to a regular place of business is required.
[c)]
(iii) The presumption of proper
assignment of a loan provided in Subsection (4)(g)(ii) may be rebutted
upon a showing by the Tax Commission, supported by a preponderance of the
evidence, that the preponderance of substantive contacts regarding the loan did
not occur at the regular place of business to which it was assigned on the
taxpayer's records. When the
presumption has been rebutted, the loan shall then be located within this state
if:
(A) the taxpayer had a regular place of
business within this state at the time the loan was made; and
(B) the taxpayer fails to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the preponderance of substantive contacts regarding the loan did not occur within this state.
(iv) In the case of a loan assigned by the taxpayer to a place without this state that is not a regular place of business, it shall be presumed, subject to rebuttal by the taxpayer on a showing supported by the preponderance of the evidence, that the preponderance of substantive contacts regarding the loan occurred within this state if, at the time the loan was made the taxpayer's commercial domicile, as defined in this rule, was within this state.
(v) To determine the state in which the
preponderance of substantive contacts relating to a loan have occurred, the
facts and circumstances regarding the loan at issue shall be reviewed on a
case-by-case basis, and consideration shall be given to activities such as the solicitation,
investigation, negotiation, approval, and administration of the loan.
(A) Solicitation. Solicitation is either active or passive.
(I) Active solicitation occurs when an
employee of the taxpayer initiates the contact with the customer. The activity is located at the regular
place of business at which the taxpayer's employee is regularly connected or
working out of, regardless of where the services of the employee were actually
performed.
(II) Passive solicitation occurs when the
customer initiates the contact with the taxpayer. If the customer's initial contact was not at a regular place
of business of the taxpayer, the regular place of business, if any, where the
passive solicitation occurred is determined by the facts in each case.
(B) Investigation. Investigation is the procedure whereby
employees of the taxpayer determine the credit-worthiness of the customer as
well as the degree of risk involved in making a particular agreement. The activity is located at the regular
place of business at which the taxpayer's employees are regularly connected or
working out of, regardless of where the services of those employees were
actually performed.
(C) Negotiation. Negotiation is the procedure whereby employees of the taxpayer and its customer determine the terms of the agreement, such as amount, duration, interest rate, frequency of repayment, currency denomination, and security required. The activity is located at the regular place of business at which the taxpayer's employees are regularly connected or working out of, regardless of where the services of those employees were actually performed.
(D) Approval. Approval is the procedure whereby employees or the board of
directors of the taxpayer make the final determination whether to enter into
the agreement.
(I) The activity is located at the regular
place of business at which the taxpayer's employees are regularly connected or
working out of, regardless of where the services of those employees were
actually performed.
(II) If the board of directors makes the
final determination, the activity is located at the commercial domicile of the
taxpayer.
(E) Administration. Administration is the process of managing the account.
(I) Administration includes bookkeeping,
collecting the payments, corresponding with the customer, reporting to
management regarding the status of the agreement and proceeding against the
borrower or the security interest if the borrower is in default.
(II) The activity is located at the regular
place of business that oversees this activity.
(h) Location of credit card
receivables. For purposes of
determining the location of credit card receivables, credit card receivables
shall be treated as loans and shall be subject to the provisions of Subsection
(4)(g).
(i) Period for which properly assigned loan
remains assigned. A loan that has
been properly assigned to a state shall, absent any change of material fact,
remain assigned to that state for the length of the original term of the
loan. Thereafter, the loan may be
properly assigned to another state if the loan has a preponderance of
substantive contact to a regular place of business in that state.
(j) Each taxpayer shall make an initial
election on whether to include the property described in Subsections (4)(g)
through (i) within the property factor.
The initial election is the election made or the filing position taken
on the first return filed after the effective date of this rule. This election is irrevocable for a
period of three years from the time the initial election is made, except in the
case where a substantial ownership change occurs and commission approval is
obtained to change the election.
After the initial three-year period, the election may be revocable only
with the prior approval of the commission and shall require the showing of a
significant change in circumstance.
(5) Payroll factor.
(a) In general. The payroll factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is
the total amount paid in this state during the taxable year by the taxpayer for
compensation and the denominator of which is the total compensation paid by the
taxpayer both within and without this state during the taxable year. The payroll factor shall include only
that compensation included in the computation of the apportionable income tax
base for the taxable year.
(b) Compensation relating to nonbusiness
income and independent contractors.
The compensation of any employee for services or activities connected
with the production of nonbusiness income, and payments made to any independent
contractor or any other person not properly classifiable as an employee, shall
be excluded from both the numerator and denominator of this factor.
(c) When compensation paid in this
state. Compensation is paid in
this state if any one of the following tests, applied consecutively, is met:
(i) The employee's services are performed
entirely within this state.
(ii) The employee's services are performed both within and without the state, but the service performed without the state is incidental to the employee's service within the state. The term "incidental"means any service that is temporary or transitory in nature, or that is rendered in connection with an isolated transaction.
(iii) If the employee's services are
performed both within and without this state, the employee's compensation will
be attributed to this state:
(A) if the employee's principal base of
operations is within this state;
(B) if there is no principal base of
operations in any state in which some part of the services are performed, but
the place from which the services are directed or controlled is in this state;
or
(C) if the principal base of operations and
the place from which the services are directed or controlled are not in any
state in which some part of the service is performed but the employee's
residence is in this state.
(6) This rule is effective for taxable
years beginning after December 31, 1997.
Effective: 11/17/06