legal news


Register | Forgot Password

MICROSOFT CORPORATION v. FRANCHISE TAX BOARD PART-I

MICROSOFT CORPORATION v. FRANCHISE TAX BOARD PART-I
08:30:2006

MICROSOFT CORPORATION v. FRANCHISE TAX BOARD



Filed 8/17/06 (This opinion precedes companion case, S127086, also filed 8/17/06)





IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA





MICROSOFT CORPORATION, )


)


Plaintiff and Respondent, )


) S133343


v. )


) Ct.App. 1/3 A105312


FRANCHISE TAX BOARD, )


) City and County of San Francisco


Defendant and Appellant. ) Super. Ct. No. 400444


__________________________________ )


Ours is a global economy. In contrast, government, and the taxing authority used to fund it, is national and local. This geographic disparity generates difficulties when each jurisdiction seeks its piece of the economic pie, a pie generated by economic activity that knows no borders.


The Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act (UDITPA)[1] attempts to address these problems and fairly assess corporate taxes. Adopted by the District of Columbia and 22 states, including California, it seeks to establish uniform rules for the attribution of corporate income, rules that in theory will result in an equitable taxation scheme--equitable to each jurisdiction, seeking its own fair share, and equitable to the taxpayer, who in the absence of uniform rules faces the prospect of having the same income taxed by two, three, or more different states.


The UDITPA's application is not always clear.[2] This case requires us to resolve how the UDITPA should apply to income arising from the redemption of marketable securities, a critical aspect of the operations of the treasury departments of many large corporations, including plaintiff Microsoft Corporation (Microsoft). We conclude (1) the redemption of marketable securities at maturity generates â€





Description Redemption of marketable securities at maturity generates gross receipts that are includible in the formula used to calculate a multistate entity's tax under the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes Act. Where corporation's income and receipts from its short-term investments in marketable securities were extremely small in comparison with the income and receipts from the rest of its business activities, Franchise Tax Board properly used alternative UDITPA formula to determine portion of corporation's sales attributable to California as part of formula by which corporation's business income for state tax purposes is calculated.
Rating
0/5 based on 0 votes.

    Home | About Us | Privacy | Subscribe
    © 2024 Fearnotlaw.com The california lawyer directory

  Copyright © 2024 Result Oriented Marketing, Inc.

attorney
scale