The Palm Beach Post

Court: Online travel firms exempt on tax

California justices reject government­s’ pleas on hotel taxes.

- By Maura Dolan and Hugo Martin Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — In a loss for California’s local government­s, the state’s Supreme Court decided Monday that online travel companies such as Expedia are exempt from paying hotel occupancy taxes.

The ruling came in one of several lawsuits filed by California cities and counties against the online firms, including Hotwire and Priceline.com.

The local government­s have been attempting to get the firms to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in back taxes.

Lawyers for the government argued the tax should be based on the total amount the companies collect from consumers, not the lower dollar figure the hotels receive. Cities and counties wanted the online sites to pay the difference.

The state high court agreed the tax should be based on the higher amount but said the online companies were not obligated to pay it.

“It changes the rules in California,” said Kent L. Richland, who represente­d the city of San Diego in the case decided Monday. “It is going to affect all these cases because they are going to have to be decided under new rules.”

Several cities and counties still have cases pending, including a lawsuit by Los Angeles. So far, the online travel firms have won most of the disputes, which have been litigated across the country.

California’s top court, examin- ing a San Diego transient occupancy ordinance, said it applied only to hotel operators, not the online businesses. Online travel companies “are not operators,” the court said in a unanimous decision. San Diego sued the companies in an attempt to recover about $21 million in back taxes.

Hotels contract with online sites to provide rooms at discounted rates. The sites charge a higher rate and require consumers to pay a charge for taxes and fees.

Hotels have been paying occupancy taxes based on the amounts they received for their rooms, not the higher price paid by consumers to the travel firms

Industry officials say online travel companies typically mark up the wholesale price by 8 percent to as high as 22 percent, but there is no standard for this.

Local government­s may still be able to recover the additional tax revenue by suing hotels, which were not a party in Monday’s case.

If hotels are sued, the internet firms could end up paying anyway, Richland said.

Most hotels have contracts that obligate online travel companies to compensate them for any taxes eventually owed, Richland said.

A spokesman for the California Hotel and Lodging Associatio­n said the good news is that the ruling calls on online travel companies to pay taxes based on the rate they charge guests, not on the wholesale price charged to them by the hotels.

But it also means hotel owners will be responsibl­e for finding out from the online travel companies how much they marked up the rooms and collect tax on that higher rate.

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