Source: http://hozir.org/utelcom-inc-v-commissioner-of-revenue.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 08:33:44+00:00

Document:
This is an appeal under the formal procedure pursuant to G.L. c. 62C, § 39, from the refusal of the Commissioner of Revenue (“Commissioner”) to abate public service corporation excises assessed against Utelcom, Inc. (“Utelcom”) for tax years 1993 and 1994 (the “tax years at issue”).
Commissioner Gorton heard the appeal and was joined in the decision for the appellee by former Chairman Burns and Commissioners Scharaffa and Rose.
These findings of fact and report are made at the requests of the appellant and the appellee pursuant to G.L. c. 58A, § 13 and 831 CMR 1.32.
Kathleen King Parker, Esq. and Laurence D. Pierce, Esq. for the appellant.
Andrew P. O’Meara, Esq. and Daniel A. Shapiro, Esq. for the appellee.
On the basis of a stipulation and exhibits and testimony submitted during the hearing of this appeal, the Appellate Tax Board (“Board”) made the following findings of fact.
Utelcom, a corporation organized as a business corporation under the laws of the State of Kansas, was a limited partner of Sprint Communications Company, L.P. (the “Sprint Limited Partnership”). Utelcom directly owned a 4.94% limited partnership interest in the Sprint Limited Partnership and indirectly, through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Sprint International Communications Corporation, owned an additional 1.94% interest in the Sprint Limited Partnership. Utelcom thus owned nearly 7% of the Sprint Limited Partnership as a limited partner. The general partner of Sprint Limited Partnership was U.S. Telecom, Inc. (“U.S. Telecom”), a Kansas corporation. The general partner and the other limited partners of Sprint Limited Partnership, including Utelcom, were all wholly-owned, directly and indirectly, subsidiaries of Sprint Corporation (“Sprint”), a publicly-traded Kansas corporation.
The Sprint Limited Partnership provided long distance telephone service in Massachusetts during the tax years at issue. It maintained a place of business and owned property in Massachusetts at all relevant times. The Sprint Limited Partnership filed a United States Partnership Return of Income, Form 1065, for federal tax purposes during the tax years at issue. The Commissioner treated the Sprint Limited Partnership as a telephone company for purposes of real estate taxation, centrally valuing its personal property under G.L. c. 59, § 39.
On March 17, 1997, after receiving from the Commissioner a Notice of Failure to File, Utelcom filed a Massachusetts corporate excise tax return, Form 355-B, under protest, for each of the tax years at issue and paid the tax shown thereon as due, which it contended was $456, the minimum corporation excise. The Commissioner conducted an audit of Utelcom’s tax returns and issued a Notice of Intention to Assess (“NIA”) on September 27, 1997, proposing additional assessments of corporation excises. At a conference before the Commissioner’s Appeal and Review Bureau, the appellant argued that, if it were taxable in Massachusetts, a premise that it disputed, then it should have been taxable as a utility corporation under G.L. c. 63, § 52A, by virtue of its being a partner in Sprint Limited Partnership, a utility corporation doing business in Massachusetts.
The Commissioner ultimately determined that Utelcom was subject to tax under G.L. c. 63, § 52A as a utility corporation. The Commissioner thus sent the appellant a revised NIA. By Notice of Assessment (“NOA”) dated December 15, 1998, the Commissioner assessed Utelcom additional public service corporation franchise tax for tax year 1994. Utelcom paid the additional assessment in full on January 14, 1999. On May 21, 1999, Utelcom filed applications for abatement requesting abatement for the tax years at issue in the total tax amount of $20,491 ($456 for tax year 1993, which Utelcom paid with the return filed under protest, and $20,035 for tax year 1994), plus interest and penalties. By notice dated July 19, 2001, the Commissioner denied the applications for abatement.1 Utelcom then seasonably filed its petition with the Board. On the basis of these facts, the Board found it had jurisdiction over this appeal.
For the reasons stated in the following Opinion, the Board found that Utelcom, as a limited partner in the Sprint Limited Partnership, was “doing business” in the Commonwealth and, therefore, was subject to Massachusetts utility corporation excise for the tax years at issue. Accordingly, the Board issued a decision for the appellee in this appeal.
Utility corporations “doing business” in the Commonwealth are subject to tax pursuant to G.L. c. 63, § 52A. It is undisputed that the Sprint Limited Partnership was “doing business” in the Commonwealth and accordingly was subject to the utility corporation excise. The issue in this appeal was whether Utelcom’s holding of a limited partnership interest in the Sprint Limited Partnership constituted “doing business” for purposes of § 52A and thus subjected the nonresident limited partner to the Massachusetts utility corporation excise. Stated another way, the Board addressed whether Sprint Limited Partnership’s business could be attributed to the appellant, thereby providing nexus for Massachusetts to tax the appellant on its income earned as a limited partner of the partnership.
For personal income tax purposes, a non-resident limited partner of a partnership engaged in business in Massachusetts is taxable on his or her distributive share of partnership income. See Neese v. Commissioner of Revenue, 9 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. 103 (1987). In Neese, the Board rejected the Commissioner’s argument that a limited partner was not engaged in the business of the partnership and, therefore, was not entitled to claim his distributive share of partnership losses as a deduction on his nonresident income tax return. Relying on G.L. c. 62, § 5A, which provides for taxation of all income “effectively connected with . . . any trade or business . . . carried on by the taxpayer in the commonwealth,” and on § 17, which provides for taxation of nonresident individuals on their “distributive share of [partnership] income or loss and of any item of deduction or credit,” the Board ruled that nonresident limited partners are subject to individual income tax on their distributive shares of partnership income and losses unless specifically excluded.2 Id. at 108. The Board rejected any distinction between general and limited partners for these purposes: “[f]rom our examination of all the pertinent statutes, as set forth above, nothing, on the facts of this appeal, seems to turn on whether the nonresident taxpayer is a limited partner or a general partner in a Massachusetts limited partnership engaged in a business.” Id. at 107.
The Board followed this holding in Katz v. Commissioner of Revenue, 24 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. 59, and in Deveau v. Commissioner of Revenue, 24 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. 299 (1998). In Katz, the Board found nexus to tax the appellant, a nonresident limited partner, on his distributive share of partnership income earned from the sale of partnership property located in the Commonwealth. Pursuant to G.L. c. 62, § 5A and § 17, the appellant was taxable on the gain “to the same extent as if the gain were received directly by the Appellant and his wife.” 24 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. at 61. In Deveau, the Board found nexus for the Commonwealth to tax a nonresident individual partner, ruling that “if a partnership is engaged in business in the Commonwealth and generates income from such activities, the partners are engaged in business and their share of the partnership proceeds is subject to the personal income tax.” 24 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. at 304, citing Neese, 9 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. at 109. The Board made no distinction between general and limited partners in this regard.
Since § 52A does not offer a specific definition of “doing business,” other than extending what it includes, the Board looked to other provisions within Chapter 63 for guidance. G.L. c. 63, § 39 provides that “doing business shall mean and include each and every act, power, right, privilege, or immunity exercised or enjoyed in the commonwealth, as an incident to or by virtue of the powers and privileges acquired by the nature of such organizations.” This definition is broad enough to include earning income from a limited partnership interest, because the receipt of income as an investor constitutes the enjoyment of privileges from a state. See, e.g., International Harvester v. Wisconsin Dep’t of Tax’n, 322 U.S. 435, 441-42 (1944) (upholding a tax on a nonresident shareholder on dividends received from a corporation doing business in Wisconsin, finding the earning of income to be “subject to state regulation” and “within the protections of the state and entitled to the numerous other benefits which it confers”); see also Borden Chemicals and Plastics, L.P. v. Zehnder, 726 N.E.2d 73, 79 (Ill. App. Ct. 2000) (ruling that a limited partner’s “connection to Illinois is not only its partnership interest in the entity that availed itself of the laws of Illinois, but also [its] receipt of distributable income earned in Illinois”). Therefore, the Board ruled that under the § 39 definition of “doing business,” there was sufficient nexus to tax the appellant on its distributive share of income received from the Sprint Limited Partnership.
The appellant argued that the definition for “doing business” in § 39 should not apply to § 52A, because § 52A already provides its own definition for that term. However, the Board first found that, as explained above, § 52A does not define “doing business” but merely extends what the term includes. Second, the rules of statutory construction require that the same phrase found in different sections of a chapter should have the same meaning throughout the chapter unless specifically provided otherwise. Plymouth County Nuclear Information Committee, Inc. v. Energy Facilities Siting Council, 374 Mass. 236 (1978) (“[I]n the absence of a plain contrary indication, a word used in one part of a statute in a definite sense should be given the same meaning in another part of the same statute.”). Moreover, § 52A merely provides a particular example, not applicable to the appellant, which is offered “without limiting [the] generality” of the term “doing business.” The Board found no conflict between the two provisions as they apply to the appellant, and accordingly ruled that the definition for “doing business” in § 39 also applied to § 52A as applied to the appellant.
The appellant also argued that the business of Sprint Limited Partnership should not be attributed to it, because § 52A does not explicitly attribute the business of a partnership to a corporate utility partner. However, even in the absence of explicit cross-references, the courts and the Board read § 17 together with a relevant taxing statute to apply the partnership attribution rules to a given tax situation. See, e.g., Neese, 9 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. at 106-7 (referencing § 17 to attribute the income of a partnership to an individual partner, thereby subjecting the income to tax under § 5A). Utelcom essentially argued that the so-called “aggregate theory”3 embodied in G.L. c. 62, § 17 should not apply to corporate utility partners even though it applies to other Massachusetts partners. See Bernstein v. State Tax Commission, ATB Docket Nos. 60796, 60797, 60823 (“By St. 1966 c. 698 Massachusetts changed radically its treatment of the taxation of partnerships and partners by abandoning the “entity” theory, so called, and apparently putting Massachusetts on a basis very much like the federal IRC which taxes only the individual partner.”). See also Deveau, 24 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. at 304 (finding that “if a partnership is engaged in business in the Commonwealth . . . the partners are engaged in business and their share of the partnership proceeds is subject to the personal income tax”), citing Neese, 9 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. at 109. The Board rejected the appellant’s argument and ruled that the attribution rule of § 17 applies to corporate utility partners that receive distributive share income subject to tax under § 52A.
Moreover, the Board found that the appellant benefited from the aggregate theory when the business of Sprint Limited Partnership was attributed to it, enabling the appellant to obtain the more favorable tax treatment of a utility corporation under § 52A. If the business of the partnership were not attributable to the partners, they would be subject to the corporation excise, not the public service corporation franchise tax. The Board found that consistent application of the tax provisions requires that the appellant also be found to have nexus with Massachusetts by the attribution of the business of the Sprint Limited Partnership to Utelcom, its limited partner. Kargman v. Commissioner of Revenue, 389 Mass. 784, 788 (1983) (“Statutes which do not necessarily conflict should be construed to have consistent directives so that both may be given effect, Rock v. Massachusetts Comm'n Against Discrimination, 384 Mass. 198, 203 (1981), and statutes should be interpreted as a whole to constitute a consistent and harmonious provision, Milton v. Metropolitan Dist. Comm'n, 342 Mass. 222, 225 (1961); Bolster v. Commissioner of Corps. & Taxation, 319 Mass. 81, 84-85 (1946).”). Accordingly, the Board found and ruled that the taxation of the distributive share income earned by Utelcom is consistent with the legislative intent to tax partnership income at the partner’s level.
Contrary to the appellant’s argument, the Board found no conflict between the decisions of Dupee'>Commissioner of Revenue v. Dupee, 423 Mass. 617 (1996) and Cohen v. Commissioner of Revenue, 18 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. 28 (1995) and its decision in the instant appeal. In Dupee, the court held that the attribution language of G.L. c. 62, § 17A4 did not apply to tax a shareholder on his share of gain from the sale of an S-corporation’s interest, because the gain at issue was not a distributive share from the S-corporation to the shareholder. Dupee, 423 Mass. at 623. Similarly, the Board in Cohen found that where income is earned by the partner directly rather than being “passed through” to the partners, the attribution rules in § 17 do not apply, because “this concept is applicable only in the context of ‘distributive share’ income.” Cohen, 18 Mass. App. Tax Bd. Rep. at 36-7. It is undisputed that the gain at issue here was distributive share income. Accordingly, the decisions of Dupee and Cohen did not apply.
As a limited partner in a partnership doing business in the Commonwealth, Utelcom was also doing business in Massachusetts for purposes of § 52A. Therefore, Utelcom had nexus with the Commonwealth and was subject to tax on its distributive share of partnership income earned in Massachusetts. Accordingly, the Board issued a decision for the appellee in this appeal.
1 Form CA-6, the Application for Abatement signed by the taxpayer, provides that “[c]onsent is hereby given, pursuant to Chapter 58A, Section 6, for the Commissioner of Revenue to act upon this application after six months from the date of filing.” The appellant did not strike this portion of Form CA-6, nor did it later withdraw this consent.
2 While § 17 provides a specific exclusion for income from a limited partnership “engaged exclusively in buying, selling, dealing in or holding securities in its own behalf and not as a broker,” this exception was not relevant to that appeal.
3 The aggregate theory treats a partnership as an aggregate of its partners by attributing the business and the income of the partnership to the partners. The opposing theory is the entity theory, which treats a partnership as a separate, taxable entity apart from its partners.
4 Section 17A is similar to § 17, but specifically governs S-corporations rather than partnerships.

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