Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Retailers seek resolution in Supreme Court tax case

- JOYCE M. ROSENBERG

NEW YORK — Retailers are hoping for a resolution this year from the U.S. Supreme Court, which hears arguments Tuesday in a decades-old dispute: Whether companies must collect sales tax on items sold in a state where they don’t have a store or other building.

If the court backs government officials who say they’re losing billions of dollars in uncollecte­d taxes, thousands of small companies could be forced to start charging their out-of-state customers for them. Some businesses fear that could alienate customers used to tax-free shopping. On the other side: Retailers who do collect sales tax and believe those who don’t have an unfair advantage.

The justices will hear online retailers Wayfair, Overstock. com and Newegg challengin­g a South Dakota law enacted last May requiring out-ofstate retailers that have sales of more than $100,000 or over 200 transactio­ns a year in the state to collect sales tax. Their decision could have national implicatio­ns on e-commerce, although Congress can pass legislatio­n afterward that broadens or narrows the law.

It’s not only about the money, says Stephanie Harvey, owner of exit343des­ign in Conshohock­en, Pa. There are more than 10,000 sales tax jurisdicti­ons in the United States: 45 states, the District of Columbia, counties and municipali­ties.

“Adding this sales tax isn’t just about the tax itself — it’s about the cost of time to navigate and file [taxes] or the additional expense of hiring someone to do so on behalf of the business,” says Harvey, whose design and printing company has an online store and sells merchandis­e to other retailers.

The justices are likely to rule by June on whether to overturn a 1992 decision, Quill

v. North Dakota, that said companies cannot be forced to collect sales tax from customers in a state where they don’t have a physical presence like a store or distributi­on center. Collecting tax from online sales hasn’t been a question for big online retailers like Walmart or Macy’s since they have stores in most or all states. They also have accounting systems and financial staffs for the work.

Small retailers have software options to help collect taxes and do the administra­tive work, but it’s an added cost. Whether it’s worth it may depend on how much revenue a seller gets from other states. The most comprehens­ive software can work with the programs retailers use to process sales transactio­ns. The software sellers determine the correct sales tax rate and submit payments and reports to tax authoritie­s.

Retailers who sell through Amazon.com can also have sales tax collected, although many don’t on out-of-state transactio­ns. Amazon itself long resisted collecting sales tax but now does so nationwide on its own merchandis­e. Some of the smaller sellers say their overhead will increase if

Quill is overturned.

“It is going to be a process, and frankly, it would affect the bottom line of the company,” says Dave “Lando” Landis, owner of Rocker Rags, an online seller of clothing with photos and logos of rock musicians. The company, based in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., gets a small percentage of its sales from out-of-state customers.

Landis uses e-commerce software and expects to link it with a sales tax program if he must start collecting taxes in other states.

Adrienne Kosewicz pays $3,300 a year for tax collection software to handle payments and reports to her home state, Washington. Her Seattle-based online business, Play It Safe World Toys, sells through Amazon, which handles computatio­n and collection. “When you expand your reach, costs often come with it. That’s business,” she says.

It’s customer sentiment, not an administra­tive burden, that concerns Gregory Hook. The vice president at QKiddo, an online children’s clothing retailer in New York, worries that consumers who don’t understand the situation will wonder, “How come a couple of months ago I got this product and I wasn’t being charged tax and now I am?”

He’s planning on explaining any changes to customers. “We don’t want them to think we’re running an unethical business,” he says.

Though some retailers aren’t daunted by the effort required to collect taxes, the potential for complicati­ons is clear, said Bill McClellan, vice president for the industry group Electronic Retailing Associatio­n.

“Each situation is going to be a little different, depending on their legacy software, bandwidth. Multiply that across the ecosystem and there just isn’t a magic wand,” says McClellan, who describes his group’s members as split on the out-ofstate tax question.

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