Lodi News-Sentinel

Supreme Court split on if online sellers must collect sales taxes

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court took up a huge sales tax case on Tuesday with the expectatio­n it was ready to bring online shopping under the same rules that apply to ordinary retailers.

But that outcome was less certain after Tuesday’s argument. The justices were clearly divided, but in unusual coalitions of conservati­ves and liberals.

One side said Congress, not the courts, should set the rules for taxing interstate commerce.

At issue is a 1992 ruling involving mail-order catalogs when the justices found that states may not require out-ofstate mailers to collect sales taxes on behalf of their residents.

Now, in the era of online shopping, that decision in Quill v. North Dakota is said to cost states and municipali­ties between $8 billion and $13 billion a year in lost tax revenue.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Samuel A. Alito Jr. and Elena Kagan said Congress is better suited to devise a new system. Roberts worried that requiring people who run their own websites to collect sales taxes for an estimated 12,000 taxing jurisdicti­ons across the nation would be overly burdensome. There needs to be a minimum threshold, he said.

Kagan added, “Congress can craft a compromise in a way that we cannot.”

Justice Sonia Sotomayor said she is worried that “overturnin­g precedents will create a massive amount of lawsuits.”

But Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said it should not be left to Congress to grapple with the court’s previous decision. “If time and changing conditions have rendered (the Quill decision) obsolete, why should the court say: Well, we’ll let Congress fix it?”

Justice Anthony Kennedy agreed that the Quill ruling was “incorrect” and should be overruled. And Justice Neil M. Gorsuch said it was unfair to traditiona­l retailers who must collect sales taxes. “Why should this court favor a particular business model that relies not on brick and mortar but on mail order?” he asked.

Justice Stephen G. Breyer, who could hold the deciding vote, asked questions about the costs and burdens of collecting sales taxes, but he did not signal he was leaning one way or the other.

The case, South Dakota v. Wayfair, began when the state passed a law requiring retailers who do more than $100,000 worth of business there to collect its 4.5 percent sales tax, even if they were located in other states. Predictabl­y, the law was struck down as unconstitu­tional based on the Quill decision.

But the high court then voted to hear the state’s argument that the Quill decision should be overruled.

For online shoppers across the U.S., the court’s decision could mean higher prices, although many large internet sellers, including Amazon, have already been collecting sales taxes in recent years.

Traditiona­l brick-and-mortar retailers believe the case is about fairness. They have had to collect taxes on all of their sales, while shoppers knew they could often pay less by buying the same products online.

State and local government­s see online sales as a source of needed revenue. Last year, the Government Accountabi­lity Office estimated these government­s were losing $13 billion a year in uncollecte­d sales taxes. A group called the Marketplac­e Fairness Coalition said the loss was much higher and could be as much as $33 billion a year.

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