New York’s Amazon Tax is Unconstitutional

Recent North Carolina law school graduate Daniel Cowan’s law review article is entitled “New York’s Unconstitutional Tax on the Internet: Amazon.com v. New York State Department of Taxation & Finance and the Dormant Commerce Clause.”  The law reveiw’s abstract is:

As the current economic downturn continues to ripple through every sector of the economy, state governments from North Carolina to California are struggling to develop innovative tax policies to boost their plummeting revenues. Traditional methods of taxation are no longer sufficient to satisfy state expenditures—either government spending must change drastically or legislatures must approve new taxes to bolster falling revenues. The recent “Amazon tax” passed by the New York State Assembly is a prime example of the latter. The tax requires out-of-state retailers—such as Amazon.com, Inc. and Overstock.com, Inc.—to collect a use tax from in-state consumers if the retailers have marketing affiliates in the state which produce at least $10,000 in sales. In Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, however, the United States Supreme Court held that, under the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution, a state cannot require an out-of-state retailer to collect and remit a use tax unless the retailer has a “substantial nexus” with the taxing state. The Court invalidated a sales tax imposed by North Dakota on an out-of-state mail-order retailer, which had no offices or employees in the state. By invalidating this tax, the Court reaffirmed the bright-line rule of National Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Department of Revenue of Illinois that “a vendor whose only contacts with the taxing State are by mail or common carrier lacks the ‘substantial nexus’ required by the Commerce Clause;” in other words, some physical presence is required. Attempts by New York and other states to create statutorily this “substantial nexus” between out-of-state Internet retailers and the taxing state through the retailers’ marketing affiliates run afoul of Quill and its bright-line rule.

This Recent Development analyzes the recent New York County Civil Supreme Court decision, Amazon.com v. New York State Department of Taxation & Finance, which upholds the constitutionality of the tax. The focus is on Amazon’s Dormant Commerce Clause argument and the trial court’s application of the Supreme Court’s decision in Quill. This Recent Development argues that the New York trial court failed to apply Quill’s “substantial nexus” test properly and exaggerated the role of Amazon’s associates. As a result, the trial court incorrectly held that the tax on Amazon did not violate the Commerce Clause. When applied correctly, the Quill decision should invalidate New York’s tax on Amazon and similar out-of-state Internet retailers.

Bankruptcy Court Finds Links in Email Defamatory

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press:  “A federal bankruptcy court in Texas became one of the first to find that individuals can be held liable for linking to defamatory blog posts earlier this year.  The court in In re Perry held that an individual’s e-mail opened him up to a defamation claim even though he did not author any of the inflammatory postings himself.”

See “Linking to Blog in Email Treated as “Publication” in Defamation Claim.”

Judge Convicts Mother in Facebook Flap with Son

Los Angeles Times:  “A woman who locked her son out of his Facebook account and posted vulgarities and other items on it was convicted . . . of misdemeanor harassment and ordered not to have contact with the teenager.”

Business May Regret Suing Student for Alleged Defamatory Statements on Facebook

Freep.com:  “A Western Michigan University student is giving a Kalamazoo towing company a costly lesson in customer service and the power of the Internet.  After getting nowhere with the company and paying $118 to get his car back, Kurtz created a Facebook page, “Kalamazoo Residents Against T&J Towing,” which has attracted more than 11,000 members since February, many with similar complaints about the company.”

Since creating the Facebook page: (1)  T&J sued the young student for $750,000 for slander and libel, (2) the student counter-sued T&J, (3) T&J lost one half of its commercial accounts, (4) the student’s lawyers are considering adding a class action lawsuit after the student’s Facebook page “found” many other people who claimed to have been harmed by T&J.

“Suing an angry college student with 11,000 followers is ‘like dousing dry sticks with kerosene and lighting a match’ . . . .”

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