The Columbus Dispatch

State Supreme Court to hear NASCAR challenge of tax on broadcasts

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COLUMBUS – The Ohio Supreme Court has scheduled oral arguments in a case involving the state's attempt to tax NASCAR for broadcasti­ng its races in Ohio.

At issue before the court is whether the state tax commission­er properly subjected those broadcasts to Ohio's commercial activities tax during an audit from 2005 to 2010. The tax requires payments on a company's annual sales. Oral arguments have been set for Jan. 25.

The state argues its imposing of the tax is based on NASCAR'S commercial activity, meaning the organizati­on's sale of Ohio broadcast rights.

NASCAR could avoid the issue by excluding Ohio from its licensing contracts, the state said in a September court filing. “But as long as Ohio is included in its licensing agreements, Ohio is relevant to NASCAR'S receipts,” the Ohio Attorney General's office said.

The Tax Commission­er determined NASCAR owed Ohio $549,520, according to court records.

Dayton Beach, Florida-based NASCAR maintains that its commercial activities in Ohio such as broadcasti­ng races and selling merchandis­e are done by other companies – Fox Broadcasti­ng Co., for example – which are taxed accordingl­y.

Applying the tax to NASCAR broadcasts in Ohio is “an unconstitu­tional expansion of tax liability for out-ofstate content providers,” NASCAR argued in an August filing.

NASCAR maintains that its commercial activities in Ohio such as broadcasti­ng races and selling merchandis­e are done by other companies, which are taxed accordingl­y.

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