HB-4361, As Passed House, April 28, 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SUBSTITUTE FOR

 

HOUSE BILL NO. 4361

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

      A bill to amend 1967 PA 281, entitled

 

"Income tax act of 1967,"

 

by amending the title and sections 2, 4, 6, 24, 26, 30, 30f, 36,

 

51, 52, 91, 102, 103, 105, 110, 115, 132, 195, 201, 251, 255,

 

256, 265, 266, 270, 271, 272, 278, 301, 311, 315, 322, 325, 351,

 

355, 365, 402, 408, 451, 455, 471, 475, 508, 510, 512, 514, 520,

 

522, 526, 527a, 530, and 532 (MCL 206.2, 206.4, 206.6, 206.24,

 

206.26, 206.30, 206.30f, 206.36, 206.51, 206.52, 206.91, 206.102,

 

206.103, 206.105, 206.110, 206.115, 206.132, 206.195, 206.201,

 

206.251, 206.255, 206.256, 206.265, 206.266, 206.270, 206.271,

 

206.272, 206.278, 206.301, 206.311, 206.315, 206.322, 206.325,

 


206.351, 206.355, 206.365, 206.402, 206.408, 206.451, 206.455,

 

206.471, 206.475, 206.508, 206.510, 206.512, 206.514, 206.520,

 

206.522, 206.526, 206.527a, 206.530, and 206.532), section 4 as

 

amended by 2003 PA 52, section 26 as amended by 2003 PA 50,

 

section 30 as amended by 2009 PA 134, section 30f as added by

 

2000 PA 163, sections 51 and 270 as amended by 2007 PA 94,

 

section 52 as added by 1988 PA 1, section 110 as amended by 2003

 

PA 21, sections 255, 256, 301, and 475 as amended by 1996 PA 484,

 

section 265 as amended by 1998 PA 19, section 266 as amended by

 

2008 PA 447, section 272 as added by 2006 PA 372, section 278 as

 

added by 2010 PA 235, section 311 as amended by 2004 PA 199,

 

section 315 as amended by 2003 PA 49, sections 325 and 514 as

 

amended by 1987 PA 254, sections 351, 355, and 365 as amended by

 

2008 PA 360, section 402 as added and section 408 as amended by

 

1980 PA 169, section 451 as amended by 2003 PA 46, section 471 as

 

amended by 2002 PA 486, section 508 as amended by 1990 PA 283,

 

sections 510 and 520 as amended by 1995 PA 245, section 512 as

 

amended by 2003 PA 29, section 522 as amended by 2000 PA 41,

 

section 527a as amended by 2004 PA 335, and section 530 as

 

amended by 1982 PA 480, by designating sections 1 to 532 as part

 

1, and by adding part 2; and to repeal acts and parts of acts.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

 1                              TITLE

 

 2        An act to meet deficiencies in state funds by providing for

 

 3  the imposition, levy, computation, collection, assessment,

 

 4  reporting, payment, and enforcement by lien and otherwise of

 

 5  taxes on or measured by net income and on certain commercial,

 


 1  business, and financial activities; to prescribe the manner and

 

 2  time of making reports and paying the taxes, and the functions of

 

 3  public officers and others as to the taxes; to permit the

 

 4  inspection of the records of taxpayers; to provide for interest

 

 5  and penalties on unpaid taxes; to provide exemptions, credits and

 

 6  refunds of the taxes; to prescribe penalties for the violation of

 

 7  this act; to provide an appropriation; and to repeal certain acts

 

 8  and parts of acts.

 

 9                             PART 1

 

10        Sec. 2. (1) For the purposes of this act, part, the words,

 

11  terms and phrases set forth in this chapter and their derivations

 

12  have the meaning given therein. When not inconsistent with the

 

13  context, words used in the present tense include the future,

 

14  words in the plural number include the singular number, and in

 

15  the singular number include the plural. "Shall" is always

 

16  mandatory and "may" is always discretionary.

 

17        (2) Any term used in this act part shall have the same

 

18  meaning as when used in comparable context in the laws of the

 

19  United States relating to federal income taxes unless a different

 

20  meaning is clearly required. Any reference in this act part to

 

21  the internal revenue code shall include other provisions of the

 

22  laws of the United States relating to federal income taxes.

 

23        (3) It is the intention of this act part that the income

 

24  subject to tax be the same as taxable income as defined and

 

25  applicable to the subject taxpayer in the internal revenue code,

 

26  except as otherwise provided in this act.

 

27        Sec. 4. (1) "Board" means the state board of tax appeals.

 


 1        (2) "Business income" means all income arising from

 

 2  transactions, activities, and sources in the regular course of

 

 3  the taxpayer's trade or business and includes the following:

 

 4        (a) All income from tangible and intangible property if the

 

 5  acquisition, rental, management, or disposition of the property

 

 6  constitutes integral parts of the taxpayer's regular trade or

 

 7  business operations.

 

 8        (b) Gains or losses from stock and securities of any foreign

 

 9  or domestic corporation and dividend and interest income.

 

10        (c) Income derived from isolated sales, leases, assignment,

 

11  licenses, divisions, or other infrequently occurring

 

12  dispositions, transfers, or transactions involving property if

 

13  the property is or was used in the taxpayer's trade or business

 

14  operation.

 

15        (d) Income derived from the sale of a business.

 

16        (3) Not later than 2 years after the effective date of the

 

17  amendatory act that added subsection (2)(b), the department shall

 

18  report the impact of the amendatory act that added subsection

 

19  (2)(b) on the tax liability under this act of resident and

 

20  nonresident taxpayers to the house tax policy committee and the

 

21  senate finance committee.

 

22        Sec. 6. (1) "Commercial domicile" means the principal place

 

23  from which the trade or business of the taxpayer is directed or

 

24  managed.

 

25        (2) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of the department.

 

26        (2) (3) "Compensation" means wages as defined in section

 

27  3401 and other payments as provided in section 3402 of the

 


 1  internal revenue code.

 

 2        (3) (4) "Corporation" means, in addition to an incorporated

 

 3  entity, an association, trust or any unincorporated organization

 

 4  which is defined as a corporation in the internal revenue code.

 

 5        Sec. 24. "Tax year" or "taxable year" means the calendar

 

 6  year, or the fiscal year ending during such calendar year, upon

 

 7  the basis of which taxable income is computed under this act

 

 8  part. In the case of a return made for a fractional part of a

 

 9  year, the term shall mean the period for which such return is

 

10  made. Except for the first return required by this act, part, any

 

11  taxpayer's tax year shall be for the same period as is covered by

 

12  his federal income tax return.

 

13        Sec. 26. "Taxpayer" means any person subject to the taxes

 

14  imposed by this act, part, any employer required to withhold

 

15  taxes on salaries and wages, or any flow-through entity required

 

16  to withhold taxes on a nonresident member's share of income

 

17  available for distribution.

 

18        Sec. 30. (1) "Taxable income" means, for a person other than

 

19  a corporation, estate, or trust, adjusted gross income as defined

 

20  in the internal revenue code subject to the following adjustments

 

21  under this section:

 

22        (a) Add gross interest income and dividends derived from

 

23  obligations or securities of states other than Michigan, in the

 

24  same amount that has been excluded from adjusted gross income

 

25  less related expenses not deducted in computing adjusted gross

 

26  income because of section 265(a)(1) of the internal revenue code.

 

27        (b) Add taxes on or measured by income to the extent the

 


 1  taxes have been deducted in arriving at adjusted gross income.

 

 2        (c) Add losses on the sale or exchange of obligations of the

 

 3  United States government, the income of which this state is

 

 4  prohibited from subjecting to a net income tax, to the extent

 

 5  that the loss has been deducted in arriving at adjusted gross

 

 6  income.

 

 7        (d) Deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross income,

 

 8  income derived from obligations, or the sale or exchange of

 

 9  obligations, of the United States government that this state is

 

10  prohibited by law from subjecting to a net income tax, reduced by

 

11  any interest on indebtedness incurred in carrying the obligations

 

12  and by any expenses incurred in the production of that income to

 

13  the extent that the expenses, including amortizable bond

 

14  premiums, were deducted in arriving at adjusted gross income.

 

15        (e) Deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross income,

 

16  compensation, the following:

 

17        (i) Compensation, including retirement benefits, received for

 

18  services in the armed forces of the United States.

 

19        (ii) Retirement or pension benefits under the railroad

 

20  retirement act of 1974, 45 USC 231 to 231v.

 

21        (f) Deduct the following to the extent included in adjusted

 

22  gross income subject to the limitations and restrictions set

 

23  forth in subsection (9):

 

24        (i) Retirement or pension benefits received from a federal

 

25  public retirement system or from a public retirement system of or

 

26  created by this state or a political subdivision of this state.

 

27        (ii) Retirement or pension benefits received from a public

 


 1  retirement system of or created by another state or any of its

 

 2  political subdivisions if the income tax laws of the other state

 

 3  permit a similar deduction or exemption or a reciprocal deduction

 

 4  or exemption of a retirement or pension benefit received from a

 

 5  public retirement system of or created by this state or any of

 

 6  the political subdivisions of this state.

 

 7        (iii) Social security benefits as defined in section 86 of the

 

 8  internal revenue code.

 

 9        (iv) Beginning on and after January 1, 2007, retirement or

 

10  pension benefits not deductible under subparagraph (i) or

 

11  subdivision (e) from any other retirement or pension system or

 

12  benefits from a retirement annuity policy in which payments are

 

13  made for life to a senior citizen, to a maximum of $42,240.00 for

 

14  a single return and $84,480.00 for a joint return. The maximum

 

15  amounts allowed under this subparagraph shall be reduced by the

 

16  amount of the deduction for retirement or pension benefits

 

17  claimed under subparagraph (i) or subdivision (e) and by the

 

18  amount of a deduction claimed under subdivision (r). (p). For the

 

19  2008 tax year and each tax year after 2008, the maximum amounts

 

20  allowed under this subparagraph shall be adjusted by the

 

21  percentage increase in the United States consumer price index for

 

22  the immediately preceding calendar year. The department shall

 

23  annualize the amounts provided in this subparagraph as necessary.

 

24  As used in this subparagraph, "senior citizen" means that term as

 

25  defined in section 514.

 

26        (v) The amount determined to be the section 22 amount

 

27  eligible for the elderly and the permanently and totally disabled

 


 1  credit provided in section 22 of the internal revenue code.

 

 2        (g) Adjustments resulting from the application of section

 

 3  271.

 

 4        (h) Adjustments with respect to estate and trust income as

 

 5  provided in section 36.

 

 6        (i) Adjustments resulting from the allocation and

 

 7  apportionment provisions of chapter 3.

 

 8        (j) Deduct political contributions as described in section 4

 

 9  of the Michigan campaign finance act, 1976 PA 388, MCL 169.204,

 

10  or 2 USC 431, not in excess of $50.00 per annum, or $100.00 per

 

11  annum for a joint return.

 

12        (k) Deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross income,

 

13  wages not deductible under section 280C of the internal revenue

 

14  code.

 

15        (j) (l) Deduct the following payments made by the taxpayer in

 

16  the tax year:

 

17        (i) For the 2010 tax year and each tax year after 2010, the

 

18  amount of a charitable contribution made to the advance tuition

 

19  payment fund created under section 9 of the Michigan education

 

20  trust act, 1986 PA 316, MCL 390.1429.

 

21        (ii) The amount of payment made under an advance tuition

 

22  payment contract as provided in the Michigan education trust act,

 

23  1986 PA 316, MCL 390.1421 to 390.1442.

 

24        (iii) The amount of payment made under a contract with a

 

25  private sector investment manager that meets all of the following

 

26  criteria:

 

27        (A) The contract is certified and approved by the board of

 


 1  directors of the Michigan education trust to provide equivalent

 

 2  benefits and rights to purchasers and beneficiaries as an advance

 

 3  tuition payment contract as described in subparagraph (ii).

 

 4        (B) The contract applies only for a state institution of

 

 5  higher education as defined in the Michigan education trust act,

 

 6  1986 PA 316, MCL 390.1421 to 390.1442, or a community or junior

 

 7  college in Michigan.

 

 8        (C) The contract provides for enrollment by the contract's

 

 9  qualified beneficiary in not less than 4 years after the date on

 

10  which the contract is entered into.

 

11        (D) The contract is entered into after either of the

 

12  following:

 

13        (I) The purchaser has had his or her offer to enter into an

 

14  advance tuition payment contract rejected by the board of

 

15  directors of the Michigan education trust, if the board

 

16  determines that the trust cannot accept an unlimited number of

 

17  enrollees upon an actuarially sound basis.

 

18        (II) The board of directors of the Michigan education trust

 

19  determines that the trust can accept an unlimited number of

 

20  enrollees upon an actuarially sound basis.

 

21        (k) (m) If an advance tuition payment contract under the

 

22  Michigan education trust act, 1986 PA 316, MCL 390.1421 to

 

23  390.1442, or another contract for which the payment was

 

24  deductible under subdivision (l) (j) is terminated and the

 

25  qualified beneficiary under that contract does not attend a

 

26  university, college, junior or community college, or other

 

27  institution of higher education, add the amount of a refund

 


 1  received by the taxpayer as a result of that termination or the

 

 2  amount of the deduction taken under subdivision (l) (j) for

 

 3  payment made under that contract, whichever is less.

 

 4        (l) (n) Deduct from the taxable income of a purchaser the

 

 5  amount included as income to the purchaser under the internal

 

 6  revenue code after the advance tuition payment contract entered

 

 7  into under the Michigan education trust act, 1986 PA 316, MCL

 

 8  390.1421 to 390.1442, is terminated because the qualified

 

 9  beneficiary attends an institution of postsecondary education

 

10  other than either a state institution of higher education or an

 

11  institution of postsecondary education located outside this state

 

12  with which a state institution of higher education has

 

13  reciprocity.

 

14        (m) (o) Add, to the extent deducted in determining adjusted

 

15  gross income, the net operating loss deduction under section 172

 

16  of the internal revenue code.

 

17        (n) (p) Deduct a net operating loss deduction for the

 

18  taxable year as determined under section 172 of the internal

 

19  revenue code subject to the modifications under section 172(b)(2)

 

20  of the internal revenue code and subject to the allocation and

 

21  apportionment provisions of chapter 3 of this act part for the

 

22  taxable year in which the loss was incurred.

 

23        (o) (q) Deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross

 

24  income, benefits from a discriminatory self-insurance medical

 

25  expense reimbursement plan.

 

26        (p) (r) Beginning on and after January 1, 2007, subject to

 

27  any limitation provided in this subdivision, a taxpayer who is a

 


 1  senior citizen may deduct to the extent included in adjusted

 

 2  gross income, interest, dividends, and capital gains received in

 

 3  the tax year not to exceed $9,420.00 for a single return and

 

 4  $18,840.00 for a joint return. The maximum amounts allowed under

 

 5  this subdivision shall be reduced by the amount of a deduction

 

 6  claimed for retirement benefits under subdivision (e) or a

 

 7  deduction claimed under subdivision (f)(i), (ii), (iv), or (v). For

 

 8  the 2008 tax year and each tax year after 2008, the maximum

 

 9  amounts allowed under this subdivision shall be adjusted by the

 

10  percentage increase in the United States consumer price index for

 

11  the immediately preceding calendar year. The department shall

 

12  annualize the amounts provided in this subdivision as necessary.

 

13  Beginning January 1, 2012, the deduction under this subsection is

 

14  not available to a senior citizen born after 1945. As used in

 

15  this subdivision, "senior citizen" means that term as defined in

 

16  section 514.

 

17        (q) (s) Deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross

 

18  income, all of the following:

 

19        (i) The amount of a refund received in the tax year based on

 

20  taxes paid under this act part.

 

21        (ii) The amount of a refund received in the tax year based on

 

22  taxes paid under the city income tax act, 1964 PA 284, MCL

 

23  141.501 to 141.787.

 

24        (iii) The amount of a credit received in the tax year based on

 

25  a claim filed under sections 520 and 522 to the extent that the

 

26  taxes used to calculate the credit were not used to reduce

 

27  adjusted gross income for a prior year.

 


 1        (r) (t) Add the amount paid by the state on behalf of the

 

 2  taxpayer in the tax year to repay the outstanding principal on a

 

 3  loan taken on which the taxpayer defaulted that was to fund an

 

 4  advance tuition payment contract entered into under the Michigan

 

 5  education trust act, 1986 PA 316, MCL 390.1421 to 390.1442, if

 

 6  the cost of the advance tuition payment contract was deducted

 

 7  under subdivision (l) (j) and was financed with a Michigan

 

 8  education trust secured loan.

 

 9        (u) Deduct the amount calculated under section 30d.

 

10        (s) (v) Deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross

 

11  income, any amount, and any interest earned on that amount,

 

12  received in the tax year by a taxpayer who is a Holocaust victim

 

13  as a result of a settlement of claims against any entity or

 

14  individual for any recovered asset pursuant to the German act

 

15  regulating unresolved property claims, also known as Gesetz zur

 

16  Regelung offener Vermogensfragen, as a result of the settlement

 

17  of the action entitled In re: Holocaust victim assets litigation,

 

18  CV-96-4849, CV-96-5161, and CV-97-0461 (E.D. NY), or as a result

 

19  of any similar action if the income and interest are not

 

20  commingled in any way with and are kept separate from all other

 

21  funds and assets of the taxpayer. As used in this subdivision:

 

22        (i) "Holocaust victim" means a person, or the heir or

 

23  beneficiary of that person, who was persecuted by Nazi Germany or

 

24  any Axis regime during any period from 1933 to 1945.

 

25        (ii) "Recovered asset" means any asset of any type and any

 

26  interest earned on that asset including, but not limited to, bank

 

27  deposits, insurance proceeds, or artwork owned by a Holocaust

 


 1  victim during the period from 1920 to 1945, withheld from that

 

 2  Holocaust victim from and after 1945, and not recovered,

 

 3  returned, or otherwise compensated to the Holocaust victim until

 

 4  after 1993.

 

 5        (t) (w) Deduct, to the extent not deducted in determining

 

 6  adjusted gross income, both of the following:

 

 7        (i) Contributions made by the taxpayer in the tax year less

 

 8  qualified withdrawals made in the tax year from education savings

 

 9  accounts, calculated on a per education savings account basis,

 

10  pursuant to the Michigan education savings program act, 2000 PA

 

11  161, MCL 390.1471 to 390.1486, not to exceed a total deduction of

 

12  $5,000.00 for a single return or $10,000.00 for a joint return

 

13  per tax year. The amount calculated under this subparagraph for

 

14  each education savings account shall not be less than zero.

 

15        (ii) The amount under section 30f.

 

16        (u) (x) Add, to the extent not included in adjusted gross

 

17  income, the amount of money withdrawn by the taxpayer in the tax

 

18  year from education savings accounts, not to exceed the total

 

19  amount deducted under subdivision (w) (t) in the tax year and all

 

20  previous tax years, if the withdrawal was not a qualified

 

21  withdrawal as provided in the Michigan education savings program

 

22  act, 2000 PA 161, MCL 390.1471 to 390.1486. This subdivision does

 

23  not apply to withdrawals that are less than the sum of all

 

24  contributions made to an education savings account in all

 

25  previous tax years for which no deduction was claimed under

 

26  subdivision (w), (t), less any contributions for which no

 

27  deduction was claimed under subdivision (w) (t) that were

 


 1  withdrawn in all previous tax years.

 

 2        (y) Deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross income,

 

 3  the amount of a distribution from individual retirement accounts

 

 4  that qualify under section 408 of the internal revenue code if

 

 5  the distribution is used to pay qualified higher education

 

 6  expenses as that term is defined in the Michigan education

 

 7  savings program act, 2000 PA 161, MCL 390.1471 to 390.1486.

 

 8        (z) Deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross income,

 

 9  an amount equal to the qualified charitable distribution made in

 

10  the tax year by a taxpayer to a charitable organization. The

 

11  amount allowed under this subdivision shall be equal to the

 

12  amount deductible by the taxpayer under section 170 of the

 

13  internal revenue code with respect to the qualified charitable

 

14  distribution in the tax year in which the taxpayer makes the

 

15  distribution to the qualified charitable organization, reduced by

 

16  both the amount of the deduction for retirement or pension

 

17  benefits claimed by the taxpayer under subdivision (f)(i), (ii),

 

18  (iv), or (v) and by 2 times the total amount of credits claimed

 

19  under sections 260 and 261 for the tax year. As used in this

 

20  subdivision, "qualified charitable distribution" means a

 

21  distribution of assets to a qualified charitable organization by

 

22  a taxpayer not more than 60 days after the date on which the

 

23  taxpayer received the assets as a distribution from a retirement

 

24  or pension plan described in subsection (8)(a). A distribution is

 

25  to a qualified charitable organization if the distribution is

 

26  made in any of the following circumstances:

 

27        (i) To an organization described in section 501(c)(3) of the

 


 1  internal revenue code except an organization that is controlled

 

 2  by a political party, an elected official or a candidate for an

 

 3  elective office.

 

 4        (ii) To a charitable remainder annuity trust or a charitable

 

 5  remainder unitrust as defined in section 664(d) of the internal

 

 6  revenue code; to a pooled income fund as defined in section

 

 7  642(c)(5) of the internal revenue code; or for the issuance of a

 

 8  charitable gift annuity as defined in section 501(m)(5) of the

 

 9  internal revenue code. A trust, fund, or annuity described in

 

10  this subparagraph is a qualified charitable organization only if

 

11  no person holds any interest in the trust, fund, or annuity other

 

12  than 1 or more of the following:

 

13        (A) The taxpayer who received the distribution from the

 

14  retirement or pension plan.

 

15        (B) The spouse of an individual described in sub-

 

16  subparagraph (A).

 

17        (C) An organization described in section 501(c)(3) of the

 

18  internal revenue code.

 

19        (v) (aa) A taxpayer who is a resident tribal member may

 

20  deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross income, all

 

21  nonbusiness income earned or received in the tax year and during

 

22  the period in which an agreement entered into between the

 

23  taxpayer's tribe and this state pursuant to section 30c of 1941

 

24  PA 122, MCL 205.30c, is in full force and effect. As used in this

 

25  subdivision:

 

26        (i) "Business income" means business income as defined in

 

27  section 4 and apportioned under chapter 3.

 


 1        (ii) "Nonbusiness income" means nonbusiness income as defined

 

 2  in section 14 and, to the extent not included in business income,

 

 3  all of the following:

 

 4        (A) All income derived from wages whether the wages are

 

 5  earned within the agreement area or outside of the agreement

 

 6  area.

 

 7        (B) All interest and passive dividends.

 

 8        (C) All rents and royalties derived from real property

 

 9  located within the agreement area.

 

10        (D) All rents and royalties derived from tangible personal

 

11  property, to the extent the personal property is utilized within

 

12  the agreement area.

 

13        (E) Capital gains from the sale or exchange of real property

 

14  located within the agreement area.

 

15        (F) Capital gains from the sale or exchange of tangible

 

16  personal property located within the agreement area at the time

 

17  of sale.

 

18        (G) Capital gains from the sale or exchange of intangible

 

19  personal property.

 

20        (H) All pension income and benefits including, but not

 

21  limited to, distributions from a 401(k) plan, individual

 

22  retirement accounts under section 408 of the internal revenue

 

23  code, or a defined contribution plan, or payments from a defined

 

24  benefit plan.

 

25        (I) All per capita payments by the tribe to resident tribal

 

26  members, without regard to the source of payment.

 

27        (J) All gaming winnings.

 


 1        (iii) "Resident tribal member" means an individual who meets

 

 2  all of the following criteria:

 

 3        (A) Is an enrolled member of a federally recognized tribe.

 

 4        (B) The individual's tribe has an agreement with this state

 

 5  pursuant to section 30c of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.30c, that is in

 

 6  full force and effect.

 

 7        (C) The individual's principal place of residence is located

 

 8  within the agreement area as designated in the agreement under

 

 9  sub-subparagraph (B).

 

10        (bb) For tax years that begin after December 31, 2006,

 

11  deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross income, all or a

 

12  portion of the gain, as determined under this section, realized

 

13  from an initial equity investment of not less than $100,000.00

 

14  made by the taxpayer before December 31, 2009, in a qualified

 

15  business, if an amount equal to the sum of the taxpayer's basis

 

16  in the investment as determined under the internal revenue code

 

17  plus the gain, or a portion of that amount, is reinvested in an

 

18  equity investment in a qualified business within 1 year after the

 

19  sale or disposition of the investment in the qualified business.

 

20  If the amount of the subsequent investment is less than the sum

 

21  of the taxpayer's basis from the prior equity investment plus the

 

22  gain from the prior equity investment, the amount of a deduction

 

23  under this section shall be reduced by the difference between the

 

24  sum of the taxpayer's basis from the prior equity investment plus

 

25  the gain from the prior equity investment and the subsequent

 

26  investment. As used in this subdivision:

 

27        (i) "Advanced automotive, manufacturing, and materials

 


 1  technology" means any technology that involves 1 or more of the

 

 2  following:

 

 3        (A) Materials with engineered properties created through the

 

 4  development of specialized process and synthesis technology.

 

 5        (B) Nanotechnology, including materials, devices, or systems

 

 6  at the atomic, molecular, or macromolecular level, with a scale

 

 7  measured in nanometers.

 

 8        (C) Microelectromechanical systems, including devices or

 

 9  systems integrating microelectronics with mechanical parts and a

 

10  scale measured in micrometers.

 

11        (D) Improvements to vehicle safety, vehicle performance,

 

12  vehicle production, or environmental impact, including, but not

 

13  limited to, vehicle equipment and component parts.

 

14        (E) Any technology that involves an alternative energy

 

15  vehicle or its components. "Alternative energy vehicle" means

 

16  that term as defined in section 2 of the Michigan next energy

 

17  authority act, 2002 PA 593, MCL 207.822.

 

18        (F) A new technology, device, or system that enhances or

 

19  improves the manufacturing process of wood, timber, or

 

20  agricultural-based products.

 

21        (G) Advanced computing or electronic device technology

 

22  related to technology described under this subparagraph.

 

23        (H) Design, engineering, testing, or diagnostics related to

 

24  technology described under this subparagraph.

 

25        (I) Product research and development related to technology

 

26  described under this subparagraph.

 

27        (ii) "Advanced computing" means any technology used in the

 


 1  design and development of 1 or more of the following:

 

 2        (A) Computer hardware and software.

 

 3        (B) Data communications.

 

 4        (C) Information technologies.

 

 5        (iii) "Alternative energy technology" means applied research

 

 6  or commercialization of new or next generation technology in 1 or

 

 7  more of the following:

 

 8        (A) Alternative energy technology as that term is defined in

 

 9  section 2 of the Michigan next energy authority act, 2002 PA 593,

 

10  MCL 207.822.

 

11        (B) Devices or systems designed and used solely for the

 

12  purpose of generating energy from agricultural crops, residue and

 

13  waste generated from the production and processing of

 

14  agricultural products, animal wastes, or food processing wastes,

 

15  not including a conventional gasoline or diesel fuel engine or a

 

16  retrofitted conventional gasoline or diesel fuel engine.

 

17        (C) A new technology, product, or system that permits the

 

18  utilization of biomass for the production of specialty,

 

19  commodity, or foundational chemicals or of novel or economical

 

20  commodity materials through the application of biotechnology that

 

21  minimizes, complements, or replaces reliance on petroleum for the

 

22  production.

 

23        (D) Advanced computing or electronic device technology

 

24  related to technology described under this subparagraph.

 

25        (E) Design, engineering, testing, or diagnostics related to

 

26  technology described under this subparagraph.

 

27        (F) Product research and development related to a technology

 


 1  described under this subparagraph.

 

 2        (iv) "Competitive edge technology" means 1 or more of the

 

 3  following:

 

 4        (A) Advanced automotive, manufacturing, and materials

 

 5  technology.

 

 6        (B) Alternative energy technology.

 

 7        (C) Homeland security and defense technology.

 

 8        (D) Life sciences technology.

 

 9        (v) "Electronic device technology" means any technology that

 

10  involves microelectronics, semiconductors, electronic equipment,

 

11  and instrumentation, radio frequency, microwave, and millimeter

 

12  electronics; optical and optic-electrical devices; or data and

 

13  digital communications and imaging devices.

 

14        (vi) "Homeland security and defense technology" means

 

15  technology that assists in the assessment of threats or damage to

 

16  the general population and critical infrastructure, protection

 

17  of, defense against, or mitigation of the effects of foreign or

 

18  domestic threats, disasters, or attacks, or support for crisis or

 

19  response management, including, but not limited to, 1 or more of

 

20  the following:

 

21        (A) Sensors, systems, processes, or equipment for

 

22  communications, identification and authentication, screening,

 

23  surveillance, tracking, and data analysis.

 

24        (B) Advanced computing or electronic device technology

 

25  related to technology described under this subparagraph.

 

26        (C) Aviation technology including, but not limited to,

 

27  avionics, airframe design, sensors, early warning systems, and

 


 1  services related to the technology described in this

 

 2  subparagraph.

 

 3        (D) Design, engineering, testing, or diagnostics related to

 

 4  technology described under this subparagraph.

 

 5        (E) Product research and development related to technology

 

 6  described under this subparagraph.

 

 7        (vii) "Life sciences technology" means any technology derived

 

 8  from life sciences intended to improve human health or the

 

 9  overall quality of human life, including, but not limited to,

 

10  systems, processes, or equipment for drug or gene therapies,

 

11  biosensors, testing, medical devices or instrumentation with a

 

12  therapeutic or diagnostic value, a pharmaceutical or other

 

13  product that requires United States food and drug administration

 

14  approval or registration prior to its introduction in the

 

15  marketplace and is a drug or medical device as defined by the

 

16  federal food, drug, and cosmetic act, 21 USC 301 to 399, or 1 or

 

17  more of the following:

 

18        (A) Advanced computing or electronic device technology

 

19  related to technology described under this subparagraph.

 

20        (B) Design, engineering, testing, or diagnostics related to

 

21  technology or the commercial manufacturing of technology

 

22  described under this subparagraph.

 

23        (C) Product research and development related to technology

 

24  described under this subparagraph.

 

25        (viii) "Life sciences" means science for the examination or

 

26  understanding of life or life processes, including, but not

 

27  limited to, all of the following:

 


 1        (A) Bioengineering.

 

 2        (B) Biomedical engineering.

 

 3        (C) Genomics.

 

 4        (D) Proteomics.

 

 5        (E) Molecular and chemical ecology.

 

 6        (F) Biotechnology, including any technology that uses living

 

 7  organisms, cells, macromolecules, microorganisms, or substances

 

 8  from living organisms to make or modify a product for useful

 

 9  purposes. Biotechnology or life sciences do not include any of

 

10  the following:

 

11        (I) Activities prohibited under section 2685 of the public

 

12  health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.2685.

 

13        (II) Activities prohibited under section 2688 of the public

 

14  health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.2688.

 

15        (III) Activities prohibited under section 2690 of the public

 

16  health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.2690.

 

17        (IV) Activities prohibited under section 16274 of the public

 

18  health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.16274.

 

19        (V) Stem cell research with human embryonic tissue.

 

20        (ix) "Qualified business" means a business that complies with

 

21  all of the following:

 

22        (A) The business is a seed or early stage business as

 

23  defined in section 3 of the Michigan early stage venture

 

24  investment act of 2003, 2003 PA 296, MCL 125.2233.

 

25        (B) The business has its headquarters in this state, is

 

26  domiciled in this state, or has a majority of its employees

 

27  working a majority of their time in this state.

 


 1        (C) The business has a preinvestment valuation of less than

 

 2  $10,000,000.00.

 

 3        (D) The business has been in existence less than 5 years.

 

 4  This sub-subparagraph does not apply to a business, the business

 

 5  activity of which is derived from research at an institution of

 

 6  higher education located within this state or an organization

 

 7  exempt from federal taxation under section 501c(3) of the

 

 8  internal revenue code and that is located within this state.

 

 9        (E) The business is engaged only in competitive edge

 

10  technology.

 

11        (F) The business is certified by the Michigan strategic fund

 

12  as meeting the requirements of sub-subparagraphs (A) to (E) at

 

13  the time of each proposed investment.

 

14        (w) For tax years that begin after December 31, 2011, add,

 

15  to the extent deducted in determining adjusted gross income,

 

16  expenses incurred in the production of income that is not taxable

 

17  under this part.

 

18        (2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (7), a

 

19  personal exemption of $2,500.00 $3,700.00 multiplied by the

 

20  number of personal or dependency exemptions allowable on the

 

21  taxpayer's federal income tax return pursuant to the internal

 

22  revenue code shall be subtracted in the calculation that

 

23  determines taxable income.

 

24        (3) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (7), a single

 

25  additional exemption determined as follows shall be subtracted in

 

26  the calculation that determines taxable income in each of the

 

27  following circumstances:

 


 1        (a) $1,800.00 for each taxpayer and every dependent of the

 

 2  taxpayer who is 65 years of age or older. When a dependent of a

 

 3  taxpayer files an annual return under this act, the taxpayer or

 

 4  dependent of the taxpayer, but not both, may claim the additional

 

 5  exemption allowed under this subdivision. As used in this

 

 6  subdivision and subdivision (c), "dependent" means that term as

 

 7  defined in section 30e.

 

 8        (a) (b) $1,800.00 for each taxpayer and every dependent of

 

 9  the taxpayer who is a deaf person as defined in section 2 of the

 

10  deaf persons' interpreters act, 1982 PA 204, MCL 393.502; a

 

11  paraplegic, a quadriplegic, or a hemiplegic; a person who is

 

12  blind as defined in section 504; or a person who is totally and

 

13  permanently disabled as defined in section 522. When a dependent

 

14  of a taxpayer files an annual return under this act, part, the

 

15  taxpayer or dependent of the taxpayer, but not both, may claim

 

16  the additional exemption allowed under this subdivision. As used

 

17  in this subdivision, "dependent" means that term as defined in

 

18  section 30e.

 

19        (c) $1,800.00 if the taxpayer's return includes unemployment

 

20  compensation that amounts to 50% or more of adjusted gross

 

21  income.

 

22        (b) (d) For tax years beginning after 2007, $250.00 for each

 

23  taxpayer and every dependent of the taxpayer who is a qualified

 

24  disabled veteran. When a dependent of a taxpayer files an annual

 

25  return under this act, part, the taxpayer or dependent of the

 

26  taxpayer, but not both, may claim the additional exemption

 

27  allowed under this subdivision. As used in this subdivision:

 


 1        (i) "Qualified disabled veteran" means a veteran with a

 

 2  service-connected disability.

 

 3        (ii) "Service-connected disability" means a disability

 

 4  incurred or aggravated in the line of duty in the active

 

 5  military, naval, or air service as described in 38 USC 101(16).

 

 6        (iii) "Veteran" means a person who served in the active

 

 7  military, naval, marine, coast guard, or air service and who was

 

 8  discharged or released from his or her service with an honorable

 

 9  or general discharge.

 

10        (4) An individual with respect to whom a deduction under

 

11  section 151 of the internal revenue code is allowable to another

 

12  federal taxpayer during the tax year is not considered to have an

 

13  allowable federal exemption for purposes of subsection (2), but

 

14  may subtract $1,500.00 in the calculation that determines taxable

 

15  income for a tax year.

 

16        (5) A nonresident or a part-year resident is allowed that

 

17  proportion of an exemption or deduction allowed under subsection

 

18  (2), (3), or (4) that the taxpayer's portion of adjusted gross

 

19  income from Michigan sources bears to the taxpayer's total

 

20  adjusted gross income.

 

21        (6) In calculating taxable income, a taxpayer shall not

 

22  subtract from adjusted gross income the amount of prizes won by

 

23  the taxpayer under the McCauley-Traxler-Law-Bowman-McNeely

 

24  lottery act, 1972 PA 239, MCL 432.1 to 432.47.

 

25        (7) For each tax year beginning on and after January 1,

 

26  2013, the personal exemption allowed under subsection (2) shall

 

27  be adjusted by multiplying the exemption for the tax year

 


 1  beginning in 1997 2012 by a fraction, the numerator of which is

 

 2  the United States consumer price index for the state fiscal year

 

 3  ending in the tax year prior to the tax year for which the

 

 4  adjustment is being made and the denominator of which is the

 

 5  United States consumer price index for the 1995-96 2010-2011

 

 6  state fiscal year. The resultant product shall be rounded to the

 

 7  nearest $100.00 increment. The personal exemption for the tax

 

 8  year shall be determined by adding $200.00 to that rounded

 

 9  amount. As used in this section, "United States consumer price

 

10  index" means the United States consumer price index for all urban

 

11  consumers as defined and reported by the United States department

 

12  of labor, bureau of labor statistics. For each tax year, the

 

13  exemptions allowed under subsection (3) shall be adjusted by

 

14  multiplying the exemption amount under subsection (3) for the tax

 

15  year by a fraction, the numerator of which is the United States

 

16  consumer price index for the state fiscal year ending the tax

 

17  year prior to the tax year for which the adjustment is being made

 

18  and the denominator of which is the United States consumer price

 

19  index for the 1998-1999 state fiscal year. The resultant product

 

20  shall be rounded to the nearest $100.00 increment. For a taxpayer

 

21  whose total household resources are $75,000.00 or more for a

 

22  single return or $150,000.00 or more for a joint return, the

 

23  personal exemption allowed under subsection (2) shall be adjusted

 

24  by multiplying the exemption for the tax year for a single return

 

25  by a fraction, the numerator of which is $100,000.00 minus the

 

26  taxpayer's total household resources, and the denominator of

 

27  which is $25,000.00, and for a joint return by a fraction, the

 


 House Bill No. 4361 (H-1) as amended April 27, 2011

 1  numerator of which is $200,000.00 minus the taxpayer's total

 

 2  household resources, and the denominator of which is $50,000.00.

 

 3  The personal exemption allowed under subsection (2) shall not be

 

 4  allowed for a single taxpayer whose total household resources

 

 5  exceed $100,000.00 or for joint filers whose total household

 

 6  resources exceed $200,000.00. [                                   

 

 7                                                               ]

 

 8        (8) As used in subsection (1)(f), "retirement or pension

 

 9  benefits" means distributions from all of the following:

 

10        (a) Except as provided in subdivision (d), qualified pension

 

11  trusts and annuity plans that qualify under section 401(a) of the

 

12  internal revenue code, including all of the following:

 

13        (i) Plans for self-employed persons, commonly known as Keogh

 

14  or HR10 plans.

 

15        (ii) Individual retirement accounts that qualify under

 

16  section 408 of the internal revenue code if the distributions are

 

17  not made until the participant has reached 59-1/2 years of age,

 

18  except in the case of death, disability, or distributions

 

19  described by section 72(t)(2)(A)(iv) of the internal revenue code.

 

20        (iii) Employee annuities or tax-sheltered annuities purchased

 

21  under section 403(b) of the internal revenue code by

 

22  organizations exempt under section 501(c)(3) of the internal

 

23  revenue code, or by public school systems.

 

24        (iv) Distributions from a 401(k) plan attributable to

 

25  employee contributions mandated by the plan or attributable to

 

26  employer contributions.

 

27        (b) The following retirement and pension plans not qualified

 


 1  under the internal revenue code:

 

 2        (i) Plans of the United States, state governments other than

 

 3  this state, and political subdivisions, agencies, or

 

 4  instrumentalities of this state.

 

 5        (ii) Plans maintained by a church or a convention or

 

 6  association of churches.

 

 7        (iii) All other unqualified pension plans that prescribe

 

 8  eligibility for retirement and predetermine contributions and

 

 9  benefits if the distributions are made from a pension trust.

 

10        (c) Retirement or pension benefits received by a surviving

 

11  spouse if those benefits qualified for a deduction prior to the

 

12  decedent's death. Benefits received by a surviving child are not

 

13  deductible.

 

14        (d) Retirement and pension benefits do not include:

 

15        (i) Amounts received from a plan that allows the employee to

 

16  set the amount of compensation to be deferred and does not

 

17  prescribe retirement age or years of service. These plans

 

18  include, but are not limited to, all of the following:

 

19        (A) Deferred compensation plans under section 457 of the

 

20  internal revenue code.

 

21        (B) Distributions from plans under section 401(k) of the

 

22  internal revenue code other than plans described in subdivision

 

23  (a)(iv).

 

24        (C) Distributions from plans under section 403(b) of the

 

25  internal revenue code other than plans described in subdivision

 

26  (a)(iii).

 

27        (ii) Premature distributions paid on separation, withdrawal,

 


 House Bill No. 4361 (H-1) as amended April 27, 2011

 1  or discontinuance of a plan prior to the earliest date the

 

 2  recipient could have retired under the provisions of the plan.

 

 3        (iii) Payments received as an incentive to retire early unless

 

 4  the distributions are from a pension trust.

 

 5        (9) In determining taxable income under this section, the

 

 6  following limitations and restrictions apply:

 

 7        (a) For a person born before 1946, there are no restrictions

 

 8  or limitations under subsection (1)(f).

 

 9        (b) For a person born in 1946 through 1952, before that

 

10  person reaches the age of 67, that person is eligible for a

 

11  deduction of $20,000.00 for a single return and $40,000.00 for a

 

12  joint return, which deduction is restricted to income from

 

13  retirement or pension benefits. After that person reaches the age

 

14  of 67, that person is eligible for a deduction of $20,000.00 for

 

15  a single return and $40,000.00 for a joint return, which

 

16  deduction is available against all types of income and is not

 

17  restricted to income from retirement or pension benefits. However

 

18  if that person's total household resources exceed $75,000.00 for

 

19  a single return or $150,000.00 for a joint return, that person is

 

20  not eligible for a deduction of $20,000.00 for a single return

 

21  and $40,000.00 for a joint return.

 

22        (c) For a person born after 1952, the deduction under

 

23  subsection (1)(f)(i), (ii), or (iv) does not apply[.                 

 

24                          ] When that person reaches the age of 67,

 

25  that person is eligible for a deduction of $20,000.00 for a

 

26  single return and $40,000.00 for a joint return, which deduction

 

27  is available against all types of income and is not restricted to

 


 House Bill No. 4361 (H-1) as amended April 27, 2011

 1  income from retirement or pension benefits. If a person takes the

 

 2  deduction $20,000.00 for a single return and $40,000.00 for a

 

 3  joint return, that person shall not take the deduction under

 

 4  subsection (1)(f)(iii) and shall not take the personal exemption

 

 5  under subsection (2). That person may elect not to take the

 

 6  deduction of $20,000.00 for a single return and $40,000.00 for a

 

 7  joint return and elect to take the deduction under subsection

 

 8  (1)(f)(iii) and the personal exemption under subsection (2) if that

 

 9  election would reduce that person's tax liability. However, if

 

10  that person's total household resources exceed $75,000.00 for a

 

11  single return or $150,000.00 for a joint return, that person is

 

12  not eligible for a deduction of $20,000.00 for a single return

 

13  and $40,000.00 for a joint return.

 

14        (d) For a joint return, the limitations and restrictions in

 

15  this subsection shall be applied based on the age of the older

 

16  spouse filing the joint return.

[(10) As used in this section, "total household resources" means
    that term as defined in chapter 9.]

17        Sec. 30f. For tax years that begin after December 31, 1999,

 

18  taxable income for purposes of this act part equals taxable

 

19  income as determined under section 30 with the following

 

20  adjustments:

 

21        (a) For tax years that begin after December 31, 1999,

 

22  deduct, to the extent not deducted in determining adjusted gross

 

23  income, interest earned in the tax year on the contributions to

 

24  the taxpayer's education savings accounts if the contributions

 

25  were deductible under section 30(1)(w)(i) 30(1)(t)(i).

 

26        (b) For tax years that begin after December 31, 1999,

 

27  deduct, to the extent included in adjusted gross income,

 


 1  distributions that are qualified withdrawals from an education

 

 2  savings account to the designated beneficiary of that education

 

 3  savings account. As used in this subdivision, "qualified

 

 4  withdrawal" means that term as defined in the Michigan education

 

 5  savings program act, 2000 PA 161, MCL 390.1471 to 390.1486.

 

 6        Sec. 36. (1) "Taxable income" in the case of a resident

 

 7  estate or trust means federal taxable income as defined in the

 

 8  internal revenue code subject to the following adjustments:

 

 9        (a) Add gross interest income and dividends derived from

 

10  obligations or securities of states other than Michigan, in the

 

11  same amount which has been excluded from federal taxable income

 

12  less related expenses not deducted in computing federal taxable

 

13  income because of section 265 of the internal revenue code.

 

14        (b) Add taxes on or measured by income to the extent the

 

15  taxes have been deducted in arriving at federal taxable income.

 

16        (c) Add losses on the sale or exchange of obligations of the

 

17  United States government, the income of which this state is

 

18  prohibited from subjecting to a net income tax, to the extent

 

19  that the loss has been deducted in arriving at federal taxable

 

20  income.

 

21        (d) Deduct, to the extent included in federal taxable

 

22  income, income derived from obligations, or the sale or exchange

 

23  of obligations, of the United States government which this state

 

24  is prohibited by law from subjecting to a net income tax, reduced

 

25  by any interest on indebtedness incurred in carrying the

 

26  obligations, and by any expenses incurred in the production of

 

27  such income to the extent that the expenses, including

 


 1  amortizable bond premiums, were deducted in arriving at federal

 

 2  taxable income.

 

 3        (e) Adjustments resulting from the application of section

 

 4  271.

 

 5        (f) Deduct an adjustment resulting from the allocation and

 

 6  apportionment provisions of chapter 3.

 

 7        (2) The respective shares of an estate or trust and its

 

 8  beneficiaries, including, solely for the purpose of this

 

 9  allocation, nonresident beneficiaries, in the additions and

 

10  subtractions to taxable income shall be in proportion to their

 

11  respective shares of distributable net income of the estate or

 

12  trust as defined in the internal revenue code. If the estate or

 

13  trust has no distributable net income for the taxable year, the

 

14  share of each beneficiary in the additions and subtractions shall

 

15  be in proportion to his share of the estate or trust income for

 

16  the year, under local law or the terms of the instrument, which

 

17  is required to be distributed currently and any other amounts of

 

18  such income distributed in the year. Any balance of the additions

 

19  and subtractions shall be allocated to the estate or trust. If

 

20  capital gains and losses are distributed or distributable to a

 

21  beneficiary or beneficiaries under the internal revenue code, the

 

22  fiduciary shall advise each beneficiary of his share of the

 

23  adjustment under section 271. The election or failure to elect

 

24  under section 271 with respect to capital gains and losses

 

25  taxable to the estate or trust shall not affect the beneficiary's

 

26  right to elect or not to elect under section 271.

 

27        (3) An addition or subtraction shall not be made under this

 


 1  section which has the effect of duplicating an item of income or

 

 2  deduction if the taxpayer establishes to the satisfaction of the

 

 3  commissioner that the item is already reflected in federal

 

 4  taxable income. If an addition or subtraction with respect to the

 

 5  sale or exchange of obligations of the United States government

 

 6  proper adjustment, in accordance with rules promulgated by the

 

 7  commissioner department, of the deduction for excess of capital

 

 8  gains over capital losses shall be made.

 

 9        Sec. 51. (1) For receiving, earning, or otherwise acquiring

 

10  income from any source whatsoever, there is levied and imposed

 

11  under this part upon the taxable income of every person other

 

12  than a corporation a tax at the following rates in the following

 

13  circumstances:

 

14        (a) Before May 1, 1994, 4.6%.

 

15        (b) After April 30, 1994 and before January 1, 2000, 4.4%.

 

16        (c) For tax years that begin on and after January 1, 2000

 

17  and before January 1, 2002, 4.2%.

 

18        (d) For tax years that begin on and after January 1, 2002

 

19  and before January 1, 2003, 4.1%.

 

20        (e) On and after January 1, 2003 and before July 1, 2004,

 

21  4.0%.

 

22        (f) On and after July 1, 2004 and before October 1, 2007,

 

23  3.9%.

 

24        (g) On and after October 1, 2007 and before October 1, 2011,

 

25  January 1, 2013, 4.35%.

 

26        (h) Beginning on October 1, 2011 and each October 1 after

 

27  2011, the maximum rate under this subsection shall be reduced by

 


 1  0.1 each year until the rate is 3.95%.and after January 1, 2013,

 

 2  4.25%.

 

 3        (i) On and after October 1, 2015, 3.9%.

 

 4        (2) The following percentages of the net revenues collected

 

 5  under this section shall be deposited in the state school aid

 

 6  fund created in section 11 of article IX of the state

 

 7  constitution of 1963:

 

 8        (a) Beginning October 1, 1994 and before October 1, 1996,

 

 9  14.4% of the gross collections before refunds from the tax levied

 

10  under this section.

 

11        (b) After September 30, 1996 and before January 1, 2000,

 

12  23.0% of the gross collections before refunds from the tax levied

 

13  under this section.

 

14        (c) Beginning January 1, 2000, that percentage of the gross

 

15  collections before refunds from the tax levied under this section

 

16  that is equal to 1.012% divided by the income tax rate levied

 

17  under this section.

 

18        (3) The department shall annualize rates provided in

 

19  subsection (1) as necessary for tax years that end after April

 

20  30, 1994. The applicable annualized rate shall be imposed upon

 

21  the taxable income of every person other than a corporation for

 

22  those tax years.

 

23        (4) The taxable income of a nonresident shall be computed in

 

24  the same manner that the taxable income of a resident is

 

25  computed, subject to the allocation and apportionment provisions

 

26  of this act.part.

 

27        (5) A resident beneficiary of a trust whose taxable income

 


 1  includes all or part of an accumulation distribution by a trust,

 

 2  as defined in section 665 of the internal revenue code, shall be

 

 3  allowed a credit against the tax otherwise due under this act

 

 4  part. The credit shall be all or a proportionate part of any tax

 

 5  paid by the trust under this act part for any preceding taxable

 

 6  year that would not have been payable if the trust had in fact

 

 7  made distribution to its beneficiaries at the times and in the

 

 8  amounts specified in section 666 of the internal revenue code.

 

 9  The credit shall not reduce the tax otherwise due from the

 

10  beneficiary to an amount less than would have been due if the

 

11  accumulation distribution were excluded from taxable income.

 

12        (6) The taxable income of a resident who is required to

 

13  include income from a trust in his or her federal income tax

 

14  return under the provisions of 26 USC 671 to 679, shall include

 

15  items of income and deductions from the trust in taxable income

 

16  to the extent required by this act part with respect to property

 

17  owned outright.

 

18        (7) It is the intention of this section that the income

 

19  subject to tax of every person other than corporations shall be

 

20  computed in like manner and be the same as provided in the

 

21  internal revenue code subject to adjustments specifically

 

22  provided for in this act part.

 

23        (8) There is appropriated to the department of treasury for

 

24  the 2006-2007 state fiscal year the sum of $100,000.00 to begin

 

25  implementing the requirements of the amendatory act that added

 

26  this subsection. Any portion of this amount under this section

 

27  that is not expended in the 2006-2007 state fiscal year shall not

 


 1  lapse to the general fund but shall be carried forward in a work

 

 2  project account that is in compliance with section 451a of the

 

 3  management and budget act, 1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1451a, for the

 

 4  following state fiscal year.

 

 5        (8) (9) As used in this section:

 

 6        (a) "Person other than a corporation" means a resident or

 

 7  nonresident individual or any of the following:

 

 8        (i) A partner in a partnership as defined in the internal

 

 9  revenue code.

 

10        (ii) A beneficiary of an estate or a trust as defined in the

 

11  internal revenue code.

 

12        (iii) An estate or trust as defined in the internal revenue

 

13  code.

 

14        (b) "Taxable income" means taxable income as defined in this

 

15  act part subject to the applicable source and attribution rules

 

16  contained in this act part.

 

17        Sec. 52. For tax years beginning after 1986, a person with

 

18  respect to whom a deduction under section 151 of the internal

 

19  revenue code is allowable to another federal taxpayer during the

 

20  tax year is not considered to have an allowable federal exemption

 

21  for purposes of section 30(2) and, notwithstanding sections 51

 

22  and 315, if that person has an adjusted gross income for that tax

 

23  year of $1,500.00 or less, is exempt from the tax levied and

 

24  imposed in section 51 and is not required to file a return under

 

25  this act part.

 

26        Sec. 91. (1) A common trust fund meeting the requirements of

 

27  section 584 of the internal revenue code, shall not be subject to

 


 1  tax under this act part.

 

 2        (2) Each participant in the common trust fund shall, under

 

 3  rules prescribed by the department, include its proportionate

 

 4  share of the taxable income whether or not distributed and

 

 5  whether or not distributable.

 

 6        Sec. 102. In the case of taxable income of a taxpayer whose

 

 7  income-producing activities are confined solely to this state,

 

 8  the entire taxable income of such taxpayer shall be allocated to

 

 9  this state, except as otherwise expressly provided in this act

 

10  part.

 

11        Sec. 103. Any taxpayer having income from business activity

 

12  which is taxable both within and without this state, other than

 

13  the rendering of purely personal services by an individual, shall

 

14  allocate and apportion his net income as provided in this act

 

15  part.

 

16        Sec. 105. For purposes of allocation and apportionment of

 

17  income from business activity under this act part, a taxpayer is

 

18  taxable in another state if (a) in that state he is subject to a

 

19  net income tax, a franchise tax measured by net income, a

 

20  franchise tax for the privilege of doing business or a corporate

 

21  stock tax, or (b) that state has jurisdiction to subject the

 

22  taxpayer to a net income tax regardless of whether, in fact, the

 

23  state does or does not.

 

24        Sec. 110. (1) For a resident individual, estate, or trust,

 

25  all taxable income from any source whatsoever, except that

 

26  attributable to another state under sections 111 to 115 and

 

27  subject to section 255, is allocated to this state.

 


 1        (2) For a nonresident individual, estate, or trust, all

 

 2  taxable income is allocated to this state to the extent it is

 

 3  earned, received, or acquired in 1 or more of the following ways:

 

 4        (a) For the rendition of personal services performed in this

 

 5  state.

 

 6        (b) As a distributive share of the net profits of a

 

 7  business, profession, enterprise, undertaking, or other activity

 

 8  as the result of work done, services rendered, or other business

 

 9  activities conducted in this state, except as allocated to

 

10  another state pursuant to sections 111 to 114 and subject to

 

11  section 256.

 

12        (c) For tax years beginning after 1996, as a prize won by

 

13  the taxpayer under the McCauley-Traxler-Law-Bowman-McNeely

 

14  lottery act, 1972 PA 239, MCL 432.1 to 432.47.

 

15        (d) As winnings that are proceeds of a wagering transaction

 

16  paid on or after October 1, 2003 by a casino or as a payoff price

 

17  on a winning ticket that is the result of pari-mutuel wagering at

 

18  a licensed race meeting if the casino or licensed race meeting is

 

19  located in this state. As used in this section subdivision:

 

20        (i) "Casino" means a casino regulated by this state under the

 

21  Michigan gaming control and revenue act, the Initiated Law of

 

22  1996, 1996 IL 1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226, or a building on Native

 

23  American land or land held in trust by the United States for a

 

24  federally recognized Indian tribe on which gaming is conducted

 

25  under the Indian gaming regulatory act, Public Law 100-497, 102

 

26  Stat. Stat 2467.

 

27        (ii) "Pari-mutuel wagering" and "licensed race meeting" mean

 


 1  those terms as used in the horse racing law of 1995, 1995 PA 279,

 

 2  MCL 431.301 to 431.336.

 

 3        (3) The respective shares of a nonresident estate or trust

 

 4  and its beneficiaries, including, solely for purposes of

 

 5  allocation, resident and nonresident beneficiaries, in the income

 

 6  attributable to this state shall be in proportion to the

 

 7  respective shares of distributable net income of the

 

 8  beneficiaries under the internal revenue code. If the estate or

 

 9  trust has no distributable net income for the tax year, the share

 

10  of each beneficiary in the income attributable to this state

 

11  shall be in proportion to his or her share of the estate or trust

 

12  income for that year, under local law or the terms of the

 

13  instrument, that is required to be distributed currently and

 

14  other amounts of the income distributed in the year. Any balance

 

15  of the income attributable to this state shall be allocated to

 

16  the estate or trust.

 

17        (4) A nonresident estate or trust is allowed the credit

 

18  provided in section 256, except that the limitation shall be

 

19  computed by reference to the taxable income of the estate or

 

20  trust.

 

21        (4) (5) Rents and royalties from real or tangible personal

 

22  property, capital gains, interest, dividends, or patent or

 

23  copyright royalties, to the extent that they constitute a

 

24  nonbusiness income, shall be allocated as provided in sections

 

25  111 to 114.

 

26        Sec. 115. All business income, other than income from

 

27  transportation services shall be apportioned to this state by

 


 1  multiplying the income by a fraction, the numerator of which is

 

 2  the property factor plus the payroll factor plus the sales

 

 3  factor, and the denominator of which is 3 the sales factor

 

 4  calculated under section 121.

 

 5        Sec. 132. In the case of such taxable income other than that

 

 6  derived from the transportation of oil or gas by pipeline, that

 

 7  portion of the net income of the taxpayer derived from

 

 8  transportation services wherever performed that the revenue miles

 

 9  of the taxpayer in Michigan bear to the revenue miles of the

 

10  taxpayer everywhere. A revenue mile means the transportation for

 

11  a consideration or 1 net ton in weight or 1 passenger the

 

12  distance of 1 mile. The taxable income attributable to Michigan

 

13  sources in the case of a taxpayer engaged in the transportation

 

14  both of property and of individuals shall be that portion of the

 

15  entire net income of the taxpayer which is equal to the average

 

16  of his passenger miles and ton mile fractions, separately

 

17  computed and individually weighted by the ratio of gross receipts

 

18  from passenger transportation to total gross receipts from all

 

19  transportation, and by the ratio of gross receipts from freight

 

20  transportation to total gross receipts from all transportation,

 

21  respectively. If it is shown to the satisfaction of the

 

22  commissioner department that the foregoing information is not

 

23  available or cannot be obtained without unreasonable expense to

 

24  the taxpayer, the commissioner may use such other data which may

 

25  be available and which in the opinion of the commissioner

 

26  department will result in an equitable allocation of such

 

27  receipts to this state.

 


 1        Sec. 195. (1) If the allocation and apportionment provisions

 

 2  of this act part do not fairly represent the extent of the

 

 3  taxpayer's business activity in this state, the taxpayer may

 

 4  petition for or the commissioner department may require, in

 

 5  respect to all or any part of the taxpayer's business activity,

 

 6  if reasonable:

 

 7        (a) Separate accounting;

 

 8        (b) The exclusion of any one or more of the factors;

 

 9        (b) (c) The inclusion of 1 or more additional factors which

 

10  will fairly represent the taxpayer's business activity in this

 

11  state. ; or

 

12        (c) (d) The employment of any other method to effectuate an

 

13  equitable allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer's taxable

 

14  income.

 

15        (2) An alternative method will be effective only with

 

16  approval by the commissioner department.

 

17        Sec. 201. (1) A person who is exempt from federal income tax

 

18  pursuant to the provisions of the internal revenue code shall be

 

19  exempt from the tax imposed by this act part except the unrelated

 

20  taxable business income of an exempt person as determined under

 

21  the internal revenue code.

 

22        (2) Nothing in this section shall exempt a person from the

 

23  withholding and information return provisions of this act part.

 

24        Sec. 251. (1) The amount withheld under section 351 shall be

 

25  allowed to the recipient of the compensation as a credit against

 

26  the tax imposed on him or her by this act part.

 

27        (2) The amount so withheld during any calendar year shall be

 


 1  allowed as a credit for the taxable year beginning in such

 

 2  calendar year. If more than 1 taxable year begins in a calendar

 

 3  year, such amount shall be allowed as a credit for the last

 

 4  taxable year so beginning.

 

 5        Sec. 255. (1) A resident individual or resident estate or

 

 6  trust is allowed a credit against the tax due under this act part

 

 7  for the amount of an income tax imposed on the resident

 

 8  individual or resident estate or trust for the tax year by

 

 9  another state of the United States, a political subdivision of

 

10  another state of the United States, the District of Columbia, or

 

11  a Canadian province, on income derived from sources outside this

 

12  state that is also subject to tax under this act part or the

 

13  amount determined under subsection (3), whichever is less. For

 

14  purposes of the Canadian provincial credit, the credit is allowed

 

15  for only that portion of the provincial tax not claimed as a

 

16  credit for federal income tax purposes. It is presumed that the

 

17  Canadian federal income tax is claimed first. The provincial tax

 

18  claimed as a carryover deduction as provided in the internal

 

19  revenue code is not allowed as a credit under this section.

 

20        (2) The Canadian provincial credit shall be allowed for the

 

21  1978 tax year and for each tax year after 1978.

 

22        (3) The credit under this section shall not exceed an amount

 

23  determined by dividing income that is subject to taxation both in

 

24  this state and in another jurisdiction by taxable income and then

 

25  multiplying that result by the taxpayer's tax liability before

 

26  any credits are deducted.

 

27        Sec. 256. For a nonresident individual, estate, or trust, if

 


 1  the laws of the state of residence exempt a resident of this

 

 2  state from liability for the payment of income taxes on income

 

 3  earned for personal services performed in that state, the

 

 4  commissioner department may enter into a reciprocal agreement

 

 5  with that state to provide a similar tax exemption for that

 

 6  state's residents on income earned for personal services

 

 7  performed in this state.

 

 8        Sec. 265. (1) For the 1989 tax year and each tax year after

 

 9  1989, a taxpayer may credit against the tax imposed by this act

 

10  part for the tax year an amount equal to the tax paid in any

 

11  prior tax year attributable to income received by the taxpayer in

 

12  any prior tax year and repaid by the taxpayer during the tax year

 

13  if the taxpayer is eligible for a deduction or credit against his

 

14  or her federal tax liability pursuant to section 1341 of the

 

15  internal revenue code based on the repayment for the tax year. A

 

16  credit under this section for a tax year is allowed only if the

 

17  repayment for which a deduction or credit was taken pursuant to

 

18  section 1341 of the internal revenue code is not deducted in

 

19  calculating the taxpayer's adjusted gross income for the tax

 

20  year.

 

21        (2) If the credit allowed under this section exceeds the tax

 

22  liability of the taxpayer for the tax year, that portion of the

 

23  credit that exceeds the tax liability shall be refunded.

 

24        Sec. 266. (1) A qualified taxpayer with a rehabilitation

 

25  plan certified after December 31, 1998 and before January 1, 2012

 

26  may credit against the tax imposed by this act part the amount

 

27  determined pursuant to subsection (2) for the qualified

 


 1  expenditures for the rehabilitation of a historic resource

 

 2  pursuant to the rehabilitation plan in the year in which the

 

 3  certification of completed rehabilitation of the historic

 

 4  resource is issued. Only those expenditures that are paid or

 

 5  incurred during the time periods prescribed for the credit under

 

 6  section 47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code and any related

 

 7  treasury regulations shall be considered qualified expenditures.

 

 8        (2) The credit allowed under this section shall be 25% of

 

 9  the qualified expenditures that are eligible, or would have been

 

10  eligible except that the taxpayer elected to transfer the credit

 

11  under subsection (12), for the credit under section 47(a)(2) of

 

12  the internal revenue code if the taxpayer is eligible for the

 

13  credit under section 47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code or, if

 

14  the taxpayer is not eligible for the credit under section

 

15  47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code, 25% of the qualified

 

16  expenditures that would qualify under section 47(a)(2) of the

 

17  internal revenue code except that the expenditures are made to a

 

18  historic resource that is not eligible for the credit under

 

19  section 47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code, subject to both of

 

20  the following:

 

21        (a) A taxpayer with qualified expenditures that are eligible

 

22  for the credit under section 47(a)(2) of the internal revenue

 

23  code may not claim a credit under this section for those

 

24  qualified expenditures unless the taxpayer has claimed and

 

25  received a credit for those qualified expenditures under section

 

26  47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code or the taxpayer has elected

 

27  to transfer the credit under subsection (12).

 


 1        (b) A credit under this section shall be reduced by the

 

 2  amount of a credit received by the taxpayer for the same

 

 3  qualified expenditures under section 47(a)(2) of the internal

 

 4  revenue code.

 

 5        (3) To be eligible for the credit under this section, the

 

 6  taxpayer shall apply to and receive from the Michigan historical

 

 7  center certification state housing development authority that the

 

 8  historic significance, the rehabilitation plan, and the completed

 

 9  rehabilitation of the historic resource meet the criteria under

 

10  subsection (6) and either of the following:

 

11        (a) All of the following criteria:

 

12        (i) The historic resource contributes to the significance of

 

13  the historic district in which it is located.

 

14        (ii) Both the rehabilitation plan and completed

 

15  rehabilitation of the historic resource meet the federal

 

16  secretary of the interior's standards for rehabilitation and

 

17  guidelines for rehabilitating historic buildings, 36 CFR part 67.

 

18        (iii) All rehabilitation work has been done to or within the

 

19  walls, boundaries, or structures of the historic resource or to

 

20  historic resources located within the property boundaries of the

 

21  resource.

 

22        (b) The taxpayer has received certification from the

 

23  national park service that the historic resource's significance,

 

24  the rehabilitation plan, and the completed rehabilitation qualify

 

25  for the credit allowed under section 47(a)(2) of the internal

 

26  revenue code.

 

27        (4) If a qualified taxpayer is eligible for the credit

 


 1  allowed under section 47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code, the

 

 2  qualified taxpayer shall file for certification with the center

 

 3  authority to qualify for the credit allowed under section

 

 4  47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code. If the qualified taxpayer

 

 5  has previously filed for certification with the center authority

 

 6  to qualify for the credit allowed under section 47(a)(2) of the

 

 7  internal revenue code, additional filing for the credit allowed

 

 8  under this section is not required.

 

 9        (5) The center authority may inspect a historic resource at

 

10  any time during the rehabilitation process and may revoke

 

11  certification of completed rehabilitation if the rehabilitation

 

12  was not undertaken as represented in the rehabilitation plan or

 

13  if unapproved alterations to the completed rehabilitation are

 

14  made during the 5 years after the tax year in which the credit

 

15  was claimed. The center authority shall promptly notify the

 

16  department of a revocation.

 

17        (6) Qualified expenditures for the rehabilitation of a

 

18  historic resource may be used to calculate the credit under this

 

19  section if the historic resource meets 1 of the criteria listed

 

20  in subdivision (a) and 1 of the criteria listed in subdivision

 

21  (b):

 

22        (a) The resource is 1 of the following during the tax year

 

23  in which a credit under this section is claimed for those

 

24  qualified expenditures:

 

25        (i) Individually listed on the national register of historic

 

26  places or state register of historic sites.

 

27        (ii) A contributing resource located within a historic

 


 1  district listed on the national register of historic places or

 

 2  the state register of historic sites.

 

 3        (iii) A contributing resource located within a historic

 

 4  district designated by a local unit pursuant to an ordinance

 

 5  adopted under the local historic districts act, 1970 PA 169, MCL

 

 6  399.201 to 399.215.

 

 7        (b) The resource meets 1 of the following criteria during

 

 8  the tax year in which a credit under this section is claimed for

 

 9  those qualified expenditures:

 

10        (i) The historic resource is located in a designated historic

 

11  district in a local unit of government with an existing ordinance

 

12  under the local historic districts act, 1970 PA 169, MCL 399.201

 

13  to 399.215.

 

14        (ii) The historic resource is located in an incorporated

 

15  local unit of government that does not have an ordinance under

 

16  the local historic districts act, 1970 PA 169, MCL 399.201 to

 

17  399.215, and has a population of less than 5,000.

 

18        (iii) The historic resource is located in an unincorporated

 

19  local unit of government.

 

20        (iv) The historic resource is located in an incorporated

 

21  local unit of government that does not have an ordinance under

 

22  the local historic districts act, 1970 PA 169, MCL 399.201 to

 

23  399.215, and is located within the boundaries of an association

 

24  that has been chartered under 1889 PA 39, MCL 455.51 to 455.72.

 

25        (v) The historic resource is subject to a historic

 

26  preservation easement.

 

27        (7) A credit amount assigned under section 39c(7) of former

 


 1  1975 PA 228 or section 435 of the Michigan business tax act, 2007

 

 2  PA 36, MCL 208.1435, may be claimed against the partner's,

 

 3  member's, or shareholder's tax liability under this act part as

 

 4  provided in section 39c(7) of former 1975 PA 228 or section 435

 

 5  of the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1435.

 

 6        (8) If the credit allowed under this section for the tax

 

 7  year and any unused carryforward of the credit allowed by this

 

 8  section exceed the taxpayer's tax liability for the tax year,

 

 9  that portion that exceeds the tax liability for the tax year

 

10  shall not be refunded but may be carried forward to offset tax

 

11  liability in subsequent tax years for 10 years or until used up,

 

12  whichever occurs first. For projects for which a certificate of

 

13  completed rehabilitation is issued for a tax year beginning after

 

14  December 31, 2008 and for which the credit amount allowed is less

 

15  than $250,000.00, a qualified taxpayer may elect to forgo the

 

16  carryover period and receive a refund of the amount of the credit

 

17  that exceeds the qualified taxpayer's tax liability. The amount

 

18  of the refund shall be equal to 90% of the amount of the credit

 

19  that exceeds the qualified taxpayer's tax liability. An election

 

20  under this subsection shall be made in the year that a

 

21  certificate of completed rehabilitation is issued and shall be

 

22  irrevocable.

 

23        (9) For tax years beginning before January 1, 2009, if a

 

24  taxpayer sells a historic resource for which a credit under this

 

25  section was claimed less than 5 years after the year in which the

 

26  credit was claimed, the following percentage of the credit amount

 

27  previously claimed relative to that historic resource shall be

 


 1  added back to the tax liability of the taxpayer in the year of

 

 2  the sale:

 

 3        (a) If the sale is less than 1 year after the year in which

 

 4  the credit was claimed, 100%.

 

 5        (b) If the sale is at least 1 year but less than 2 years

 

 6  after the year in which the credit was claimed, 80%.

 

 7        (c) If the sale is at least 2 years but less than 3 years

 

 8  after the year in which the credit was claimed, 60%.

 

 9        (d) If the sale is at least 3 years but less than 4 years

 

10  after the year in which the credit was claimed, 40%.

 

11        (e) If the sale is at least 4 years but less than 5 years

 

12  after the year in which the credit was claimed, 20%.

 

13        (f) If the sale is 5 years or more after the year in which

 

14  the credit was claimed, an addback to the taxpayer's tax

 

15  liability shall not be made.

 

16        (10) For tax years beginning before January 1, 2009, if a

 

17  certification of completed rehabilitation is revoked under

 

18  subsection (5) less than 5 years after the year in which a credit

 

19  was claimed, the following percentage of the credit amount

 

20  previously claimed relative to that historic resource shall be

 

21  added back to the tax liability of the taxpayer in the year of

 

22  the revocation:

 

23        (a) If the revocation is less than 1 year after the year in

 

24  which the credit was claimed, 100%.

 

25        (b) If the revocation is at least 1 year but less than 2

 

26  years after the year in which the credit was claimed, 80%.

 

27        (c) If the revocation is at least 2 years but less than 3

 


 1  years after the year in which the credit was claimed, 60%.

 

 2        (d) If the revocation is at least 3 years but less than 4

 

 3  years after the year in which the credit was claimed, 40%.

 

 4        (e) If the revocation is at least 4 years but less than 5

 

 5  years after the year in which the credit was claimed, 20%.

 

 6        (f) If the revocation is 5 years or more after the year in

 

 7  which the credit was claimed, an addback to the taxpayer's tax

 

 8  liability shall not be made.

 

 9        (11) For tax years beginning after December 31, 2008, if a

 

10  certificate of completed rehabilitation is revoked under

 

11  subsection (5) or if the historic resource is sold or disposed of

 

12  less than 5 years after being placed in service as defined in

 

13  section 47(b)(1) of the internal revenue code and related

 

14  treasury regulations, the following percentage of the credit

 

15  amount previously claimed relative to that historic resource

 

16  shall be added back to the tax liability of the qualified

 

17  taxpayer that received the certificate of completed

 

18  rehabilitation and not the assignee in the year of the

 

19  revocation:

 

20        (a) If the revocation is less than 1 year after the historic

 

21  resource is placed in service, 100%.

 

22        (b) If the revocation is at least 1 year but less than 2

 

23  years after the historic resource is placed in service, 80%.

 

24        (c) If the revocation is at least 2 years but less than 3

 

25  years after the historic resource is placed in service, 60%.

 

26        (d) If the revocation is at least 3 years but less than 4

 

27  years after the historic resource is placed in service, 40%.

 


 1        (e) If the revocation is at least 4 years but less than 5

 

 2  years after the historic resource is placed in service, 20%.

 

 3        (f) If the revocation is at least 5 years or more after the

 

 4  historic resource is placed in service, an addback to the

 

 5  qualified taxpayer tax liability shall not be required.

 

 6        (12) A qualified taxpayer who receives a certificate of

 

 7  completed rehabilitation after December 31, 2008 may elect to

 

 8  forgo claiming the credit and transfer the credit along with the

 

 9  ownership of the property for which the credit may be claimed to

 

10  a new owner. The new owner shall be treated as the qualified

 

11  taxpayer having incurred the rehabilitation costs and shall be

 

12  subject to the recapture provisions under subsection (11) if the

 

13  new owner sells or disposes of the property within 5 years after

 

14  the new owner acquired the property. For purposes of this

 

15  subsection and subsection (11), the placed in service date for a

 

16  new owner is the date the new owner acquired the property for

 

17  which the credit is claimed.

 

18        (13) The department of history, arts, and libraries through

 

19  the Michigan historical center authority may impose a fee to

 

20  cover the administrative cost of implementing the program under

 

21  this section.

 

22        (14) The qualified taxpayer shall attach all of the

 

23  following to the qualified taxpayer's annual return under this

 

24  act part:

 

25        (a) Certification of completed rehabilitation.

 

26        (b) Certification of historic significance related to the

 

27  historic resource and the qualified expenditures used to claim a

 


 1  credit under this section.

 

 2        (c) A completed assignment form if the qualified taxpayer is

 

 3  an assignee under section 39c of former 1975 PA 228 or section

 

 4  435 of the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1435,

 

 5  of any portion of a credit allowed under that section.

 

 6        (15) The department of history, arts, and libraries shall

 

 7  authority may promulgate rules to implement this section pursuant

 

 8  to the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL

 

 9  24.201 to 24.328.

 

10        (16) The total of the credits claimed under this section and

 

11  section 39c of former 1975 PA 228 or section 435 of the Michigan

 

12  business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1435, for a rehabilitation

 

13  project shall not exceed 25% of the total qualified expenditures

 

14  eligible for the credit under this section for that

 

15  rehabilitation project.

 

16        (17) The department of history, arts, and libraries through

 

17  the Michigan historical center authority shall report all of the

 

18  following to the legislature annually for the immediately

 

19  preceding state fiscal year:

 

20        (a) The fee schedule used by the center and the total amount

 

21  of fees collected.

 

22        (b) A description of each rehabilitation project certified.

 

23        (c) The location of each new and ongoing rehabilitation

 

24  project.

 

25        (18) As used in this section:

 

26        (a) "Contributing resource" means a historic resource that

 

27  contributes to the significance of the historic district in which

 


 1  it is located.

 

 2        (b) "Historic district" means an area, or group of areas not

 

 3  necessarily having contiguous boundaries, that contains 1

 

 4  resource or a group of resources that are related by history,

 

 5  architecture, archaeology, engineering, or culture.

 

 6        (c) "Historic resource" means a publicly or privately owned

 

 7  historic building, structure, site, object, feature, or open

 

 8  space located within a historic district designated by the

 

 9  national register of historic places, the state register of

 

10  historic sites, or a local unit acting under the local historic

 

11  districts act, 1970 PA 169, MCL 399.201 to 399.215; or that is

 

12  individually listed on the state register of historic sites or

 

13  national register of historic places and includes all of the

 

14  following:

 

15        (i) An owner-occupied personal residence or a historic

 

16  resource located within the property boundaries of that personal

 

17  residence.

 

18        (ii) An income-producing commercial, industrial, or

 

19  residential resource or a historic resource located within the

 

20  property boundaries of that resource.

 

21        (iii) A resource owned by a governmental body, nonprofit

 

22  organization, or tax-exempt entity that is used primarily by a

 

23  taxpayer lessee in a trade or business unrelated to the

 

24  governmental body, nonprofit organization, or tax-exempt entity

 

25  and that is subject to tax under this act part.

 

26        (iv) A resource that is occupied or utilized by a

 

27  governmental body, nonprofit organization, or tax-exempt entity

 


 1  pursuant to a long-term lease or lease with option to buy

 

 2  agreement.

 

 3        (v) Any other resource that could benefit from

 

 4  rehabilitation.

 

 5        (d) "Local unit" means a county, city, village, or township.

 

 6        (e) "Long-term lease" means a lease term of at least 27.5

 

 7  years for a residential resource or at least 31.5 years for a

 

 8  nonresidential resource.

 

 9        (f) "Michigan historical center" or "center" means the state

 

10  historic preservation office of the Michigan historical center of

 

11  the department of history, arts, and libraries or its successor

 

12  agency. "Michigan state housing development authority" or

 

13  "authority" means the public body corporate and politic created

 

14  by section 21 of the state housing development authority act of

 

15  1966, MCL 1966 PA 346, MCL 125.1421.

 

16        (g) "Open space" means undeveloped land, a naturally

 

17  landscaped area, or a formal or man-made landscaped area that

 

18  provides a connective link or a buffer between other resources.

 

19        (h) "Person" means an individual, partnership, corporation,

 

20  association, governmental entity, or other legal entity.

 

21        (i) "Qualified expenditures" means capital expenditures that

 

22  qualify, or would qualify except that the taxpayer elected to

 

23  transfer the credit under subsection (12), for a rehabilitation

 

24  credit under section 47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code if the

 

25  taxpayer is eligible for the credit under section 47(a)(2) of the

 

26  internal revenue code or, if the taxpayer is not eligible for the

 

27  credit under section 47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code, the

 


 1  qualified expenditures that would qualify under section 47(a)(2)

 

 2  of the internal revenue code except that the expenditures are

 

 3  made to a historic resource that is not eligible for the credit

 

 4  under section 47(a)(2) of the internal revenue code, that were

 

 5  paid. Qualified expenditures do not include capital expenditures

 

 6  for nonhistoric additions to a historic resource except an

 

 7  addition that is required by state or federal regulations that

 

 8  relate to historic preservation, safety, or accessibility.

 

 9        (j) "Qualified taxpayer" means a person that is an assignee

 

10  under section 39c of former 1975 PA 228 or section 435 of the

 

11  Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1435, or either

 

12  owns the resource to be rehabilitated or has a long-term lease

 

13  agreement with the owner of the historic resource and that has

 

14  qualified expenditures for the rehabilitation of the historic

 

15  resource equal to or greater than 10% of the state equalized

 

16  valuation of the property. If the historic resource to be

 

17  rehabilitated is a portion of a historic or nonhistoric resource,

 

18  the state equalized valuation of only that portion of the

 

19  property shall be used for purposes of this subdivision. If the

 

20  assessor for the local tax collecting unit in which the historic

 

21  resource is located determines the state equalized valuation of

 

22  that portion, that assessor's determination shall be used for

 

23  purposes of this subdivision. If the assessor does not determine

 

24  that state equalized valuation of that portion, qualified

 

25  expenditures, for purposes of this subdivision, shall be equal to

 

26  or greater than 5% of the appraised value as determined by a

 

27  certified appraiser. If the historic resource to be rehabilitated

 


 1  does not have a state equalized valuation, qualified expenditures

 

 2  for purposes of this subdivision shall be equal to or greater

 

 3  than 5% of the appraised value of the resource as determined by a

 

 4  certified appraiser.

 

 5        (k) "Rehabilitation plan" means a plan for the

 

 6  rehabilitation of a historic resource that meets the federal

 

 7  secretary of the interior's standards for rehabilitation and

 

 8  guidelines for rehabilitation of historic buildings under 36 CFR

 

 9  part 67.

 

10        Sec. 270. (1) For tax years that begin after December 31,

 

11  2008, a taxpayer to whom a tax voucher certificate is issued

 

12  under an agreement entered into before January 1, 2012 or a

 

13  taxpayer that is the transferee of a tax voucher certificate that

 

14  is issued under an agreement entered into before January 1, 2012

 

15  may use the tax voucher certificate to pay any liability of the

 

16  taxpayer under section 51 or to pay any amount owed by the

 

17  taxpayer under section 351.

 

18        (2) A tax voucher certificate shall be used for the purposes

 

19  allowed under subsection (1) and only in a tax year that begins

 

20  after December 31, 2008.

 

21        (3) The amount of the tax voucher that may be used to pay a

 

22  liability due under this act part in any tax year shall not

 

23  exceed the lesser of the following:

 

24        (a) The amount of the tax voucher stated in the tax voucher

 

25  certificate held by the taxpayer.

 

26        (b) The amount authorized to be used in the tax year under

 

27  the terms of the tax voucher certificate.

 


 1        (c) The taxpayer's liability under this act part for the tax

 

 2  year for which the tax voucher is used.

 

 3        (4) If the amount of any tax voucher certificate held by a

 

 4  taxpayer or transferee exceeds the amount the taxpayer may use

 

 5  under subsection (3)(b) or (c) in a tax year, that excess may be

 

 6  used by the taxpayer or transferee to pay, subject to the

 

 7  limitations of subsection (3), any future liability of the

 

 8  taxpayer or transferee under this act part.

 

 9        (5) The tax voucher certificate, and any completed transfer

 

10  form that was issued pursuant to the Michigan early stage venture

 

11  investment act of 2003, 2003 PA 296, MCL 125.2231 to 125.2263,

 

12  shall be attached to the annual return under this act part. The

 

13  department may prescribe and implement alternative methods of

 

14  reporting and recording ownership, transfer, and utilization of

 

15  tax voucher certificates that are not inconsistent with the

 

16  provisions of this act. The department shall administer this

 

17  section to assure that any amount of a tax voucher certificate

 

18  used to pay any liability under this act part shall not also be

 

19  applied to pay any liability of the taxpayer or any other person

 

20  under the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1101 to

 

21  208.1601. The department shall take any action necessary to

 

22  enforce and effectuate the permissible issuance and use of tax

 

23  voucher certificates in a manner authorized under this section

 

24  and the Michigan early stage venture investment act of 2003, 2003

 

25  PA 296, MCL 125.2231 to 125.2263.

 

26        (6) As used in this section:

 

27        (a) "Certificate" or "tax voucher certificate" means the tax

 


 1  voucher certificate issued under section 23 of the Michigan early

 

 2  stage venture capital investment act of 2003, 2003 PA 296, MCL

 

 3  125.2253, or any replacement tax voucher certificate issued under

 

 4  former section 37e(9)(b) or (d) of the single business tax act,

 

 5  1975 PA 228, or section 419 of the Michigan business tax act,

 

 6  2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1419.

 

 7        (b) "Transferee" means a taxpayer to whom a tax voucher

 

 8  certificate has been transferred under section 23 of the Michigan

 

 9  early stage venture investment act of 2003, 2003 PA 296, MCL

 

10  125.2253, and former section 37e of the single business tax act,

 

11  1975 PA 228, or section 419 of the Michigan business tax act,

 

12  2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1419.

 

13        Sec. 271. (1) A taxpayer subject to the tax levied by

 

14  section 51 and whose income received after September 30, 1967 is

 

15  increased or diminished by the disposition of property acquired

 

16  before October 1, 1967, which is described in and subject to

 

17  subchapter P of the internal revenue code, may elect to recompute

 

18  taxable income by excluding therefrom the proportional gain or

 

19  loss incurred before October 1, 1967. Taxpayers so electing shall

 

20  be subject to a tax on taxable income thus recomputed at the

 

21  rates imposed by this act part. An election so made shall include

 

22  all items of gains or losses realized during the taxable year.

 

23        (2) The proportion of gain or loss occurring after September

 

24  30, 1967, to total gain or loss is equal to the proportion the

 

25  number of months after September 30, 1967, to date of disposition

 

26  bears to the number of months from date of acquisition to date of

 

27  disposition.

 


 1        Sec. 272. (1) For the following tax years that begin after

 

 2  December 31, 2007, 2011, a taxpayer may credit against the tax

 

 3  imposed by this act an amount equal to the specified percentages

 

 4  of the credit the taxpayer is allowed to claim as who is eligible

 

 5  to claim a credit under section 32 of the internal revenue code

 

 6  for a tax year may credit against the tax imposed by this act an

 

 7  amount equal to $25.00 for each minor child residing with the

 

 8  taxpayer on a return filed under this act for the same tax year.:

 

 9        (a) For tax years that begin after December 31, 2007 and

 

10  before January 1, 2009, 10%.

 

11        (b) For tax years that begin after December 31, 2008, 20%.

 

12        (2) If the credit allowed by this section exceeds the tax

 

13  liability of the taxpayer for the tax year, the state treasurer

 

14  shall refund the excess to the taxpayer without interest, except

 

15  as provided in section 30 of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.30.

 

16        Sec. 278. (1) Subject to the limitations provided under this

 

17  section, a taxpayer that makes a qualified investment after

 

18  December 31, 2010 and before January 1, 2013 2012 in a qualified

 

19  business may claim a credit against the tax imposed by this act

 

20  equal to 25% of the qualified investment made during the tax

 

21  year.

 

22        (2) To qualify for the credit under this section, the

 

23  taxpayer shall request certification from the Michigan strategic

 

24  fund within 60 days of making the investment. A taxpayer shall

 

25  not claim a credit under this section unless the Michigan

 

26  strategic fund has issued a certificate to the taxpayer. The

 

27  board shall not approve a credit under this section for a

 


 1  taxpayer who has been convicted of a felony involving a fiduciary

 

 2  obligation or the conversion or misappropriation of funds or

 

 3  insurance accounts, theft, deceit, fraud, misrepresentation, or

 

 4  corruption. The Michigan strategic fund shall forward a copy of

 

 5  each certificate received pursuant to this subsection to the

 

 6  governor, the president of the Michigan strategic fund, the

 

 7  chairperson of the senate finance committee, the chairperson of

 

 8  the house tax policy committee, the director of the senate fiscal

 

 9  agency, and the director of the house fiscal agency. The

 

10  requirements of section 28(1)(f) of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.28, do

 

11  not apply to the disclosure required by this subsection. The

 

12  Michigan strategic fund shall not certify more than $1,000,000.00

 

13  in qualified investments in any 1 qualified business. The

 

14  taxpayer shall attach the certificate to the annual return filed

 

15  under this act on which a credit under this section is claimed.

 

16  The certificate required under this subsection shall specify all

 

17  of the following:

 

18        (a) The total amount of investment made during the tax year

 

19  by the taxpayer in each qualified business.

 

20        (b) The total amount of qualified investments made in each

 

21  qualified business if different from the previous amount.

 

22        (c) The total amount of the credit under this section that

 

23  the taxpayer is allowed to claim for the designated tax year.

 

24        (3) A taxpayer shall not claim a credit of more than

 

25  $250,000.00 based on an investment in any 1 qualified business

 

26  and shall not claim a credit of more than $250,000.00 for

 

27  qualified investments in all qualified businesses in any 1 year.

 


 1  The credit allowed under this section shall be taken by the

 

 2  taxpayer in equal installments over 2 years beginning with the

 

 3  tax year in which the certification was issued.

 

 4        (4) The total amount of credits that the Michigan strategic

 

 5  fund may certify under this section per calendar year shall not

 

 6  exceed $9,000,000.00.

 

 7        (5) If the amount of the credit allowed under this section

 

 8  exceeds the tax liability of the taxpayer for the tax year, that

 

 9  portion of the credit that exceeds the tax liability of the

 

10  taxpayer for the tax year shall not be refunded but may be

 

11  carried forward to offset tax liability under this act in

 

12  subsequent tax years for a period not to exceed 5 tax years or

 

13  until used up, whichever occurs first.

 

14        (6) The board shall develop an application and approval

 

15  process in order to certify investments under this section and

 

16  adopt a program describing parameters and criteria to be used for

 

17  approving investments. As part of that program adoption, the

 

18  board may determine and describe the conditions to be met to be

 

19  considered an investment alongside or through an approved angel

 

20  group, seed capital firm, or venture capital firm.

 

21        (7) A taxpayer who has not paid or entered into an

 

22  installment agreement regarding a final assessment of an unpaid

 

23  liability for a state tax for which all rights of appeal have

 

24  been exhausted or who is currently in a bankruptcy proceeding is

 

25  not eligible to claim a credit under this section.

 

26        (8) As used in this section:

 

27        (a) "Board" means the board of directors of the Michigan

 


 1  strategic fund.

 

 2        (b) "Michigan strategic fund" means the Michigan strategic

 

 3  fund as described in the Michigan strategic fund act, 1984 PA

 

 4  270, MCL 125.2001 to 125.2093.125.2094.

 

 5        (c) "Qualified business" means a business that the board

 

 6  certifies as in compliance with all of the following at the time

 

 7  of the investment:

 

 8        (i) The business is a seed or early stage business as defined

 

 9  in section 3 of the Michigan early stage venture investment act

 

10  of 2003, 2003 PA 296, MCL 125.2233.

 

11        (ii) The business has its headquarters in this state, is

 

12  domiciled in this state, and has a majority of its employees

 

13  working in this state.

 

14        (iii) The business has a preinvestment valuation of less than

 

15  $10,000,000.00 and has fewer than 100 full-time equivalent

 

16  employees.

 

17        (iv) Except as otherwise provided under this subparagraph,

 

18  the business has been in existence less than 5 years; or, for a

 

19  business in which the business activity is derived from research

 

20  at an institution of higher education located within this state

 

21  or an organization exempt from federal taxation under section

 

22  501(c)(3) of the internal revenue code and that is located within

 

23  this state, the business has been in existence less than 10

 

24  years. As used in this subparagraph, a public or private college

 

25  or university that awards a bachelor's degree or other degrees is

 

26  an institution of higher education.

 

27        (v) The business is not a retail establishment as described

 


 1  in section 44-45 – retail trade, of the North American industry

 

 2  classification system, United States, 1997, published by the

 

 3  office of management and budget.

 

 4        (vi) The business has not claimed a credit under section 431,

 

 5  455, 457, or 459 of the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36,

 

 6  MCL 208.1431, 208.1455, 208.1457, and 208.1459.

 

 7        (d) "Qualified investment" means, except as otherwise

 

 8  provided under this subdivision, an investment of at least

 

 9  $20,000.00 certified by the Michigan strategic fund that is made

 

10  alongside of, or through, a seed venture capital or angel

 

11  investor group that is registered with the Michigan strategic

 

12  fund and is not in a business in which any member of the

 

13  investor's family is an employee or owner of the business or in

 

14  which the investor or any member of the investor's family has a

 

15  preexisting fiduciary relationship with the business. Qualified

 

16  investment does not include an investment in a business that

 

17  engages in life sciences technology unless those activities are

 

18  included in the definition of life sciences as that term is

 

19  defined under section 88a of the Michigan strategic fund act,

 

20  1984 PA 270, MCL 125.2088a.

 

21        Sec. 301. (1) Every person on a calendar year basis, if the

 

22  person's annual tax can reasonably be expected to exceed the

 

23  amount withheld under section 351 and the credits allowed under

 

24  this act part by more than $500.00, shall pay to the department

 

25  installments of estimated tax under this act part on or before

 

26  April 15, June 15, and September 15 of the person's tax year and

 

27  January 15 in the following year. Subject to subsection (3), each

 


 1  installment shall be equal to 1/4 the taxpayer's estimated tax

 

 2  under this act part after first deducting the amount estimated to

 

 3  be withheld under section 351.

 

 4        (2) For a taxpayer on other than a calendar year basis,

 

 5  there shall be substituted for the due dates provided in

 

 6  subsection (1) the appropriate due dates in the taxpayer's fiscal

 

 7  year that correspond to those in the calendar year.

 

 8        (3) For a taxpayer that pays estimated tax for the

 

 9  taxpayer's first tax year of less than 12 months, the amount paid

 

10  shall be that fraction of the estimated tax that is obtained by

 

11  dividing the total amount of estimated tax by the number of

 

12  payments to be made with respect to the tax year.

 

13        (4) There shall be allowed as a credit against the tax

 

14  imposed by this act part the amounts paid to the department

 

15  pursuant to this section.

 

16        (5) Instead of quarterly payments, a person subject to this

 

17  section may pay an estimated annual tax for the succeeding tax

 

18  year. The payment shall be made at the same time the person files

 

19  the annual return for the previous full tax year.

 

20        (6) A farmer or fisherman who elects to file and pay his or

 

21  her federal income tax under an alternative schedule provided in

 

22  section 6654 of the internal revenue code may file and pay the

 

23  tax imposed by this act part in the same manner. A seafarer may

 

24  file and pay the tax imposed by this act part in the same manner

 

25  as a farmer or fisherman under this subsection. As used in this

 

26  subsection, "seafarer" means an individual whose wages may not be

 

27  withheld for taxes by the state or a political subdivision of the

 


 1  state as provided in section 11108 of title 46 of the United

 

 2  States code, 46 U.S.C. USC 11108.

 

 3        (7) A bank or financial institution that submits quarterly

 

 4  estimated income tax payment information through the federal tax

 

 5  deposit system on magnetic tape and acts as fiduciary for 200 or

 

 6  more taxable trusts shall submit Michigan quarterly tax payment

 

 7  information on magnetic tape to the department.

 

 8        (8) A bank or financial institution that acts as fiduciary

 

 9  for more than 49 and fewer than 200 taxable trusts may enter into

 

10  an irrevocable agreement with the department to submit estimated

 

11  income tax payment information on magnetic tape to the

 

12  department.

 

13        (9) The payment of tax based on the information required

 

14  under subsections (7) and (8) shall be made through a wire

 

15  transfer to the state of Michigan contractual deposit account.

 

16        (10) A payment of estimated tax shall be computed on the

 

17  basis of the annualized rate established under section 51 for the

 

18  appropriate tax year to which the estimated tax payment is

 

19  applicable.

 

20        (11) Except as provided in subsection (1), the amount of an

 

21  estimated tax installment shall be computed, payment of estimated

 

22  tax shall be credited, and a period of underpayment shall be

 

23  determined in the same manner as provided in the internal revenue

 

24  code.

 

25        (12) As used in this section, "taxable trust" means a trust

 

26  required to make payments of estimated tax pursuant to subsection

 

27  (1).

 


 1        Sec. 311. (1) The taxpayer on or before the due date set for

 

 2  the filing of a return or the payment of the tax, except as

 

 3  otherwise provided in this act part, shall make out a return in

 

 4  the form and content as prescribed by the commissioner

 

 5  department, verify the return, and transmit it, together with a

 

 6  remittance of the amount of the tax, to the department.

 

 7        (2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (5), the

 

 8  department, upon application of the taxpayer and for good cause

 

 9  shown, may extend under prescribed conditions the time for filing

 

10  the annual or final return required by this act part. Before the

 

11  original due date, the taxpayer shall remit with an application

 

12  for extension the estimated tax due. In computing the tax due for

 

13  the tax year, interest at the rate established in, and penalties

 

14  imposed by, section 23 of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.23, shall be added

 

15  to the amount of tax unpaid for the period of the extension. The

 

16  department may require a tentative return and payment of an

 

17  estimated tax.

 

18        (3) Taxpayers who are husband and wife and who file a joint

 

19  federal income tax return pursuant to the internal revenue code

 

20  shall file a joint return.

 

21        (4) Except as provided in subsection (5), if the taxpayer

 

22  has been granted an extension or extensions of time within which

 

23  to file a final federal return for a taxable year, the filing of

 

24  a copy of the extension or extensions automatically extends the

 

25  due date of the final return under this act part for an

 

26  equivalent period. The taxpayer shall remit with the copy of the

 

27  extension or extensions the estimated tax due. In computing the

 


 1  tax due for the tax year, interest at the rate established in,

 

 2  and penalties imposed by, section 23 of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.23,

 

 3  shall be added to the amount of tax unpaid for the period of the

 

 4  extension.

 

 5        (5) If the taxpayer is eligible for an automatic extension

 

 6  of time within which to file a federal return based on service in

 

 7  a combat zone, the due date for filing an annual or final return

 

 8  or a return and payment of an estimated tax under this act part

 

 9  is automatically extended for an equivalent period of time. The

 

10  taxpayer is not required to file a copy of any federal extension,

 

11  but shall print "COMBAT ZONE" in red ink at the top of his or her

 

12  return when the return is filed. The taxpayer is not required to

 

13  pay the amount of tax due at the time the return is originally

 

14  due, and the department shall not impose any interest or

 

15  penalties for the amount of tax unpaid for the period of the

 

16  extension.

 

17        Sec. 315. (1) Every person, other than a corporation,

 

18  required to make a return for any taxable period under the

 

19  internal revenue code, except as otherwise specifically provided

 

20  in this act part, if his or her adjusted gross income is in

 

21  excess of the personal exemptions allowed by this act part shall

 

22  render on or before the fifteenth day of the fourth month

 

23  following the close of that taxable period to the department a

 

24  return setting forth all of the following:

 

25        (a) The amount of adjusted gross income on the return made

 

26  to the United States internal revenue service for federal income

 

27  tax purposes and as provided in the definitions contained in this

 


 1  act part and the rules issued under this act part.

 

 2        (b) The personal and dependency exemptions as allowed by

 

 3  this act part.

 

 4        (c) The amount of tax due under this act part, less credits

 

 5  claimed against the tax.

 

 6        (d) Other information for the purposes of carrying out this

 

 7  act part as may be prescribed by the department.

 

 8        (e) The balance of the tax shown to be due on the return is

 

 9  due and shall be paid by the date fixed for filing the return

 

10  unless the balance is less than $1.00, in which event payment is

 

11  not required.

 

12        (2) A nonresident member who has income in this state from 1

 

13  or more flow-through entities may elect to be included in the

 

14  composite income tax return of a flow-through entity of which the

 

15  nonresident member is a member.

 

16        (3) A flow-through entity may file a composite income tax

 

17  return on behalf of electing nonresident members and report and

 

18  pay the tax due based on the electing nonresident members' shares

 

19  of income available for distribution from the flow-through entity

 

20  for doing business in, or deriving income from, sources within

 

21  this state.

 

22        (4) A nonresident member that has been included in a

 

23  composite income tax return and also files an individual income

 

24  tax return for the same taxable period may claim a credit against

 

25  the tax imposed by this act part on that individual income tax

 

26  return for the amount of taxes paid on behalf of the nonresident

 

27  member by the flow-through entity on that composite income tax

 


 1  return.

 

 2        (5) A composite income tax return is due on or before each

 

 3  April 15 and shall report the information required by the

 

 4  department for the immediately preceding calendar year.

 

 5        Sec. 322. Any person electing to use "whole dollar amounts"

 

 6  under the provisions of section 6102 of the internal revenue code

 

 7  may use "whole dollar amounts" in the same manner for the

 

 8  purposes of this act part.

 

 9        Sec. 325. (1) A taxpayer required to file a return under

 

10  this act part may be required to furnish a true and correct copy

 

11  of any tax return or portion of any tax return and supporting

 

12  schedules that the taxpayer has filed under the provisions of the

 

13  internal revenue code.

 

14        (2) A taxpayer shall file an amended return with the

 

15  department showing any final alteration in, or modification of,

 

16  the taxpayer's federal income tax return that affects the

 

17  taxpayer's taxable income under this act part and of any

 

18  similarly related recomputation of tax or determination of

 

19  deficiency under the internal revenue code. If an increase in

 

20  taxable income results from a federal audit that increases the

 

21  taxpayer's federal income tax by less than $500.00, the

 

22  requirement under this subsection to file an amended return does

 

23  not apply but the department may assess an increase in tax

 

24  resulting from the audit. The amended return shall be filed

 

25  within 120 days after the final alteration, modification,

 

26  recomputation, or determination of deficiency. If the

 

27  commissioner department finds upon all the facts that an

 


 1  additional tax under this act part is owing, the taxpayer shall

 

 2  immediately pay the additional tax. If the commissioner

 

 3  department finds that the taxpayer has overpaid the tax imposed

 

 4  by this act part, a credit or refund of the overpayment shall

 

 5  immediately be made as provided in section 30 of Act No. 122 of

 

 6  the Public Acts of 1941, being section 205.30 of the Michigan

 

 7  Compiled Laws 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.30.

 

 8        Sec. 351. (1) Every employer in this state required under

 

 9  the provisions of the internal revenue code to withhold a tax on

 

10  the compensation of an individual, except as otherwise provided,

 

11  shall deduct and withhold a tax in an amount computed by

 

12  applying, except as provided by subsection (9), (10), the rate

 

13  prescribed in section 51 to the remainder of the compensation

 

14  after deducting from compensation the same proportion of the

 

15  total amount of personal and dependency exemptions of the

 

16  individual allowed under this act part that the period of time

 

17  covered by the compensation is of 1 year. The commissioner

 

18  department may prescribe withholding tables that may be used by

 

19  employers to compute the amount of tax required to be withheld.

 

20        (2) Every flow-through entity in this state shall withhold a

 

21  tax in an amount computed by applying the rate prescribed in

 

22  section 51 to the share of taxable income available for

 

23  distribution of each nonresident member after deducting from that

 

24  distributive income the same proportion of the total amount of

 

25  personal and dependency exemptions of the individual allowed

 

26  under this act part that the period of time covered by the

 

27  distributive income is of 1 year. If a flow-through entity is a

 


 1  nonresident member of a separate flow-through entity in this

 

 2  state, the flow-through entity in this state of which it is a

 

 3  member shall withhold the tax as required by this subsection on

 

 4  behalf of the flow-through entity that is a nonresident member

 

 5  and all nonresident members of that flow-through entity that is a

 

 6  nonresident member.

 

 7        (3) Every casino licensee shall withhold a tax in an amount

 

 8  computed by applying the rate prescribed in section 51 to the

 

 9  winnings of a nonresident reportable by the casino licensee under

 

10  the internal revenue code.

 

11        (4) Every race meeting licensee or track licensee shall

 

12  withhold a tax in an amount computed by applying the rate

 

13  prescribed in section 51 to a payoff price on a winning ticket of

 

14  a nonresident reportable by the race meeting licensee or track

 

15  licensee under the internal revenue code that is the result of

 

16  pari-mutuel wagering at a licensed race meeting.

 

17        (5) Every casino licensee or race meeting licensee or track

 

18  licensee shall report winnings of a resident reportable by the

 

19  casino licensee or race meeting licensee or track licensee under

 

20  the internal revenue code to the department in the same manner

 

21  and format as required under the internal revenue code.

 

22        (6) Every eligible production company shall, to the extent

 

23  not withheld by a professional services corporation or

 

24  professional employer organization, deduct and withhold a tax in

 

25  an amount computed by applying the rate prescribed in section 51

 

26  to the remainder of the payments made to the professional

 

27  services corporation or professional employer organization for

 


 1  the services of a performing artist or crew member after

 

 2  deducting from those payments the same proportion of the total

 

 3  amount of personal and dependency exemptions of the individuals

 

 4  allowed under this part.

 

 5        (7) (6) Except as otherwise provided under this subsection,

 

 6  all of the taxes withheld under this section shall accrue to the

 

 7  state on the last day of the month in which the taxes are

 

 8  withheld but shall be returned and paid to the department by the

 

 9  employer, flow-through entity, eligible production company,

 

10  casino licensee, or race meeting licensee or track licensee

 

11  within 15 days after the end of any month or as provided in

 

12  section 355, except prior to July 1, 1993, taxes deposited

 

13  pursuant to section 19(2) of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.19, are accrued

 

14  on the last day of the filing period. For an employer or flow-

 

15  through entity that has entered into an agreement with a

 

16  community college pursuant to chapter 13 of the community college

 

17  act of 1966, 1966 PA 331, MCL 389.161 to 389.166, a portion of

 

18  the taxes withheld under this section that are attributable to

 

19  each employee in a new job created pursuant to the agreement

 

20  shall accrue to the community college on the last day of the

 

21  month in which the taxes are withheld but shall be returned and

 

22  paid to the community college by the employer or flow-through

 

23  entity within 15 days after the end of any month or as provided

 

24  in section 355 for as long as the agreement remains in effect.

 

25  For purposes of this act part and 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.1 to

 

26  205.31, payments made by an employer or flow-through entity to a

 

27  community college under this subsection shall be considered

 


 1  income taxes paid to this state.

 

 2        (8) (7) An employer, flow-through entity, eligible

 

 3  production company, casino licensee, or race meeting licensee or

 

 4  track licensee required by this section to deduct and withhold

 

 5  taxes on compensation, a share of income available for

 

 6  distribution on which withholding is required under subsection

 

 7  (2), winning winnings on which withholding is required under

 

 8  subsection (3), or a payoff price on which withholding is

 

 9  required under subsection (4) holds the amount of tax withheld as

 

10  a trustee for the state is liable for the payment of the tax to

 

11  the state or, if applicable, to the community college and is not

 

12  liable to any individual for the amount of the payment.

 

13        (9) (8) An employer in this state is not required to deduct

 

14  and withhold a tax on the compensation paid to a nonresident

 

15  individual employee, who, under section 256, may claim a tax

 

16  credit equal to or in excess of the tax estimated to be due for

 

17  the tax year or is exempted from liability for the tax imposed by

 

18  this act. part. In each tax year, the nonresident individual

 

19  shall furnish to the employer, on a form approved by the

 

20  department, a verified statement of nonresidence.

 

21        (10) (9) An employer, flow-through entity, eligible

 

22  production company, casino licensee, or race meeting licensee or

 

23  track licensee required to withhold a tax under this act part, by

 

24  the fifteenth day of the following month, shall provide the

 

25  department with a copy of any exemption certificate on which the

 

26  employee, nonresident member, or person subject to withholding

 

27  under subsection (3) or (4) claims more than 9 personal or

 


 1  dependency exemptions, claims a status that exempts the employee,

 

 2  nonresident member, or person subject to withholding under

 

 3  subsection (3) or (4) from withholding under this section, or

 

 4  elects to pay the tax imposed by this act part calculated under

 

 5  section 51a.

 

 6        (11) (10) An employer shall deduct and withhold the tax

 

 7  imposed by this act part calculated under section 51a for a

 

 8  resident who files an exemption certificate under subsection (9)

 

 9  (10) to elect to pay the tax calculated under section 51a.

 

10        (12) (11) The exemption certificate required by this section

 

11  shall include the following statement, "Electing to file using

 

12  the no-form option may not be for everyone who is eligible. If a

 

13  taxpayer chooses the no-form option, he or she may not be

 

14  eligible for some of the credits allowed under this act part

 

15  including the property tax credit allowed under sections 520 and

 

16  522. , the tuition tax credit allowed under section 274, and the

 

17  city income tax credit allowed under section 257.".

 

18        (13) (12) As used in this section:

 

19        (a) "Casino" means that term as defined in section 110.

 

20        (b) "Casino licensee" means a person licensed to operate a

 

21  casino under the Michigan gaming control and revenue act, 1996 IL

 

22  1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226.

 

23        (c) "Eligible production company" means that term as defined

 

24  under section 455 of the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36,

 

25  MCL 208.1455.

 

26        (d) (c) "Race meeting licensee" and "track licensee" mean a

 

27  person to whom a race meeting license or track license is issued

 


 1  pursuant to section 8 of the horse racing law of 1995, 1995 PA

 

 2  279, MCL 431.308.

 

 3        Sec. 355. (1) All provisions relating to the administration,

 

 4  collection, and enforcement of this act part apply to the

 

 5  employer, flow-through entity, eligible production company,

 

 6  casino licensee, or race meeting licensee or track licensee

 

 7  required to withhold taxes and to the taxes required to be

 

 8  withheld. If the department has reasonable grounds to believe

 

 9  that an employer, flow-through entity, eligible production

 

10  company, casino licensee, or race meeting licensee or track

 

11  licensee will not pay taxes withheld to the state or, if

 

12  applicable, to the community college, as prescribed by this act,

 

13  part, or to provide a more efficient administration, the

 

14  department may require the employer, flow-through entity,

 

15  eligible production company, casino licensee, or race meeting

 

16  licensee or track licensee to make the return and pay to the

 

17  department or, if applicable, to the community college, the tax

 

18  deducted and withheld at other than monthly periods, or from time

 

19  to time, or require the employer, flow-through entity, eligible

 

20  production company, casino licensee, or race meeting licensee or

 

21  track licensee to deposit the tax in a bank approved by the

 

22  department in a separate account, in trust for the department or,

 

23  if applicable, the community college, and payable to the

 

24  department or the community college, and to keep the amount of

 

25  the taxes in the account until payment over to the department or

 

26  the community college.

 

27        (2) Every publicly traded partnership as that term is

 


 1  defined under section 7704 of the internal revenue code that has

 

 2  equity securities registered with the securities and exchange

 

 3  commission under section 12 of title I of the securities and

 

 4  exchange act of 1934, 15 USC 78l, shall file on or before each

 

 5  August 31 all unitholder information from the publicly traded

 

 6  partnership's schedule K-1 for the immediately preceding calendar

 

 7  year by paper or electronic format on a form prescribed by the

 

 8  department.

 

 9        (3) As used in this section:

 

10        (a) "Casino" means that term as defined in section 110.

 

11        (b) "Casino licensee" means a person licensed to operate a

 

12  casino under the Michigan gaming control and revenue act, 1996 IL

 

13  1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226.

 

14        (c) "Eligible production company" means that term as defined

 

15  in section 455 of the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL

 

16  208.1455.

 

17        (d) (c) "Race meeting licensee" and "track licensee" mean a

 

18  person to whom a race meeting license or track license is issued

 

19  pursuant to section 8 of the horse racing law of 1995, 1995 PA

 

20  279, MCL 431.308.

 

21        Sec. 365. (1) Every employer, flow-through entity, eligible

 

22  production company, casino licensee, and race meeting licensee

 

23  and track licensee required by this act part to deduct and

 

24  withhold taxes for a tax year on compensation, share of income

 

25  available for distribution, winnings, or payoff on a winning

 

26  ticket shall furnish to each employee, nonresident member, or

 

27  person with winnings or a payoff on a winning ticket subject to

 


 1  withholding under this act part on or before January 31 of the

 

 2  succeeding year a statement in duplicate of the total

 

 3  compensation, share of income available for distribution,

 

 4  winnings, or payoff on a winning ticket paid during the tax year

 

 5  and the amount deducted or withheld. However, if employment is

 

 6  terminated before the close of a calendar year by an employer who

 

 7  goes out of business or permanently ceases to be an employer in

 

 8  this state, or a flow-through entity, eligible production

 

 9  company, casino licensee, race meeting licensee, or track

 

10  licensee goes out of business or permanently ceases to be a flow-

 

11  through entity, eligible production company, casino licensee,

 

12  race meeting licensee, or track licensee before the close of a

 

13  calendar year, then the statement required by this subsection

 

14  shall be issued within 30 days after the last compensation, share

 

15  of income available for distribution, winnings, or payoff of a

 

16  winning ticket is paid. A duplicate of a statement made pursuant

 

17  to this section and an annual reconciliation return, MI-W3, shall

 

18  be filed with the department by February 28 of the succeeding

 

19  year except that an employer, flow-through entity, eligible

 

20  production company, casino licensee, and race meeting licensee

 

21  and track licensee who goes out of business or permanently ceases

 

22  to be an employer, flow-through entity, eligible production

 

23  company, casino licensee, and race meeting licensee and track

 

24  licensee shall file the statement and the annual reconciliation

 

25  return within 30 days after going out of business or permanently

 

26  ceasing to be an employer, flow-through entity, eligible

 

27  production company, casino licensee, and race meeting licensee

 


 1  and track licensee.

 

 2        (2) Every employer, flow-through entity, eligible production

 

 3  company, casino licensee, and race meeting licensee and track

 

 4  licensee required by this act part to deduct or withhold taxes

 

 5  from compensation, share of income available for distribution,

 

 6  winnings, or payoff on a winning ticket shall make a return or

 

 7  report in form and content and at times as prescribed by the

 

 8  department. An employer or flow-through entity that has entered

 

 9  into an agreement with a community college pursuant to chapter 13

 

10  of the community college act of 1966, 1966 PA 331, MCL 389.161 to

 

11  389.166, and is required to deduct or withhold taxes from

 

12  compensation and make payments to a community college pursuant to

 

13  the agreement for a portion of those taxes withheld shall, for as

 

14  long as the agreement remains in effect, delineate in the return

 

15  or report required under this subsection between the amount

 

16  deducted or withheld and paid to the state and that amount paid

 

17  to a community college.

 

18        (3) Every employee, nonresident member, or person with

 

19  winnings or a payoff on a winning ticket subject to withholding

 

20  under this act part shall furnish to his or her employer, flow-

 

21  through entity, eligible production company, casino licensee, and

 

22  race meeting licensee and track licensee information required for

 

23  the employer, flow-through entity, eligible production company,

 

24  casino licensee, and race meeting licensee and track licensee to

 

25  make an accurate withholding. An employee, nonresident member, or

 

26  person with winnings or a payoff on a winning ticket subject to

 

27  withholding under this act part shall file with his or her

 


 1  employer, flow-through entity, eligible production company,

 

 2  casino licensee, and race meeting licensee and track licensee

 

 3  revised information within 10 days after a decrease in the number

 

 4  of exemptions or a change in status from a nonresident to a

 

 5  resident. An employee shall file revised information with his or

 

 6  her employer within 10 days after the employee completes the

 

 7  residency requirements under section 31(11)(d), and when a change

 

 8  of status occurs from resident of a renaissance zone to

 

 9  nonresident of a renaissance zone. Within 10 days after an

 

10  employer receives revised information from an employee who

 

11  completes the residency requirements under section 31(11)(d), the

 

12  employer shall forward a copy of that revised information to the

 

13  department. The employee, nonresident member, or person with

 

14  winnings or a payoff on a winning ticket subject to withholding

 

15  under this act part may file revised information when the number

 

16  of exemptions increases or when a change in status occurs from

 

17  that of a resident of this state to a nonresident of this state.

 

18  Revised information shall not be given retroactive effect for

 

19  withholding purposes. An employer, flow-through entity, eligible

 

20  production company, casino licensee, and race meeting licensee

 

21  and track licensee shall rely on this information for withholding

 

22  purposes unless directed by the department to withhold on some

 

23  other basis. If an employee, nonresident member, or person with

 

24  winnings or a payoff on a winning ticket subject to withholding

 

25  under this act part fails or refuses to furnish information, the

 

26  employer, flow-through entity, eligible production company,

 

27  casino licensee, and race meeting licensee and track licensee

 


 1  shall withhold the full rate of tax from the employee's total

 

 2  compensation, the nonresident member's share of income available

 

 3  for distribution, or the winnings of a person with winnings or a

 

 4  payoff on a winning ticket subject to withholding under this act

 

 5  part. As used in this subsection, "renaissance zone" means a

 

 6  renaissance zone designated pursuant to the Michigan renaissance

 

 7  zone act, 1996 PA 376, MCL 125.2681 to 125.2696.

 

 8        (4) As used in this section:

 

 9        (a) "Casino" means that term as defined in section 110.

 

10        (b) "Casino licensee" means a person licensed to operate a

 

11  casino under the Michigan gaming control and revenue act, 1996 IL

 

12  1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226.

 

13        (c) "Eligible production company" means that term as defined

 

14  in section 455 of the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL

 

15  208.1455.

 

16        (d) (c) "Race meeting licensee" and "track licensee" mean a

 

17  person to whom a race meeting license or track license is issued

 

18  pursuant to section 8 of the horse racing law of 1995, 1995 PA

 

19  279, MCL 431.308.

 

20        Sec. 402. The tax imposed by this act part shall be

 

21  administered by the department in accordance with Act No. 122 of

 

22  the Public Acts of 1941, as amended, and this act 1941 PA 122,

 

23  MCL 205.1 to 205.31, and this part. In case of conflict between

 

24  the provisions of Act No. 122 of the Public Acts of 1941, as

 

25  amended, and this act, 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.1 to 205.31, and this

 

26  part, the provisions of this act part shall prevail.

 

27        Sec. 408. A person liable for any tax imposed under this act

 


 1  part shall keep and maintain accurate records in a form as to

 

 2  make it possible to determine the tax due under this act part.

 

 3        Sec. 451. (1) A domestic corporation, a foreign corporation,

 

 4  or other business entity authorized to transact business in this

 

 5  state that submits a certificate of dissolution or requests a

 

 6  certificate of withdrawal from this state shall request a

 

 7  certificate from the department stating that taxes are not due

 

 8  under section 27a of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.27a, not more than 60

 

 9  days after submitting the certificate of dissolution or

 

10  requesting the certificate of withdrawal. A corporation or other

 

11  business entity that does not request a certificate stating that

 

12  taxes are not due is subject to the same penalties under section

 

13  24 of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.24, that a taxpayer would be subject

 

14  to for failure to file a return.

 

15        (2) An estate of a person subject to tax under this act part

 

16  shall not be closed without the payment of the tax levied by this

 

17  act part, both in respect to the liability of the estate and

 

18  decedent prior to his or her death.

 

19        Sec. 455. Every person shall keep such records, books and

 

20  accounts as may be necessary to determine the amount of tax for

 

21  which it is liable under the provisions of this act part and as

 

22  the department may require for a period of 6 years. The records,

 

23  books and accounts shall be open for examination at any time

 

24  during regular business hours of the taxpayer by the department

 

25  and its agents. Any person who violates any provision of this

 

26  section is guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be fined not more

 

27  than $1,000.00 or imprisoned not more than 1 year in the county

 


 1  jail, or both.

 

 2        Sec. 471. (1) The tax imposed by this act part shall be

 

 3  administered by the department. The department shall prescribe

 

 4  forms for use by taxpayers and may promulgate rules for all of

 

 5  the following:

 

 6        (a) The maintenance by taxpayers of records, books, and

 

 7  accounts.

 

 8        (b) The computation of the tax.

 

 9        (c) The manner and time of changing or electing accounting

 

10  methods and of exercising the accounting method options contained

 

11  in this act part.

 

12        (d) The making of returns, the payment of tax due, and the

 

13  ascertainment, assessment, and collection of the tax.

 

14        (2) The rules shall follow the rulings of the United States

 

15  internal revenue service with respect to the federal income tax

 

16  if those rulings are not inconsistent with this act part, and the

 

17  department may adopt as a part of the rules any portions of the

 

18  internal revenue code or rulings, in whole or in part.

 

19        (3) A summary of state expenditures and revenues by major

 

20  category, in dollar amounts and percentage of total, for the most

 

21  recent state fiscal year that the information is available, shall

 

22  be printed in the instruction booklet accompanying each state

 

23  income tax return.

 

24        (4) Each state income tax return shall contain a space for

 

25  the taxpayer to indicate the school district in which the

 

26  taxpayer resides.

 

27        (5) The department may provide information in the

 


 1  instruction booklet about the purchase of an annual state park

 

 2  motor vehicle permit pursuant to part 741 of the natural

 

 3  resources and environmental protection act, 1994 PA 451, MCL

 

 4  324.74101 to 324.74125.

 

 5        (6) In the instruction booklet that accompanies the annual

 

 6  return required under this act part, the department shall provide

 

 7  a clear and concise listing of each credit and each deduction

 

 8  allowed under this act part and a reference to a detailed

 

 9  explanation.

 

10        (7) The department shall post the list described in

 

11  subsection (6) on the department's official website.

 

12        Sec. 475. (1) The tax imposed by this act part is in

 

13  addition to all other taxes for which the taxpayer is liable and

 

14  the proceeds derived from the tax shall be credited to the

 

15  general fund to be allocated and distributed as provided in this

 

16  act part.

 

17        (2) Each year that the contribution designation program

 

18  established in section 440 is in effect, an amount equal to the

 

19  cumulative designations made under section 440 less the annual

 

20  amount appropriated to the department of treasury for the purpose

 

21  of administering the children's trust fund and implementing

 

22  section 440, shall be appropriated from the general fund to the

 

23  children's trust fund in the department of treasury for use

 

24  solely in support of the purposes provided in the act that

 

25  created the children's trust fund.

 

26        Sec. 508. (1) "Gross rent" means the total rent contracted

 

27  to be paid by the renter or lessee of a homestead pursuant to

 


 1  dealing at arms' length with the landlord of the homestead. When

 

 2  the landlord and tenant have not dealt with each other at arms'

 

 3  length and the department believes that the gross rent charged is

 

 4  excessive, the department may adjust the gross rent to a

 

 5  reasonable amount for the purposes of this chapter.

 

 6        (2) "Homestead" means a dwelling or unit in a multiple-unit

 

 7  dwelling that is subject to ad valorem taxes, or a service charge

 

 8  in lieu of taxes as provided by section 15a of Act No. 346 of the

 

 9  Public Acts of 1966, as amended, being section 125.1415a of the

 

10  Michigan Compiled Laws, the state housing development authority

 

11  act of 1966, 1966 PA 346, MCL 125.1415a, owned and occupied as a

 

12  home by the owner of the dwelling or unit, or occupied as the

 

13  dwelling of the renter or lessee, including all unoccupied real

 

14  property not classified for ad valorem tax purposes as

 

15  commercial, industrial, residential, or timber-cut over, owned by

 

16  the owner of the homestead. Beginning in the 1990 tax year, a

 

17  homestead does not include unoccupied real property that is

 

18  leased or rented by the owner to another person and that is not

 

19  adjacent and contiguous to the home of the owner. Additionally,

 

20  the following apply:

 

21        (a) If a homestead is an integral part of a larger unit of

 

22  assessment such as commercial, industrial, residential, timber-

 

23  cut over, or a multipurpose or multidwelling building, the tax on

 

24  the homestead shall be the same proportion of the total property

 

25  tax as the proportion of the value of the homestead is to the

 

26  total value of the assessed property.

 

27        (b) If the gross receipts of the agricultural or

 


 House Bill No. 4361 (H-1) as amended April 27, 2011

 1  horticultural operations do not exceed the household income, or

 

 2  if there are no gross receipts, the following apply:

 

 3        (i) If the claimant has lived on the land 10 years or more,

 

 4  all of the adjacent and contiguous agricultural or horticultural

 

 5  lands shall be considered a homestead and the credit is allowed

 

 6  for all the land.

 

 7        (ii) If the claimant has lived on the land less than 10

 

 8  years, not more than 5 acres of adjacent and contiguous

 

 9  agricultural or horticultural land shall be considered a part of

 

10  the homestead and the credit is allowed for that part of the

 

11  land.

 

12        (c) A mobile home or trailer coach in a trailer coach park

 

13  is a homestead and the site rent for space is considered the rent

 

14  of a homestead. The specific tax levied by section 41 of Act No.

 

15  243 of the Public Acts of 1959, being section 125.1041 of the

 

16  Michigan Compiled Laws, 1959 PA 243, MCL 125.1041, is considered

 

17  a property tax.

 

18        (3) "Household" means a claimant and spouse.

 

19        (4) "Household incomeTotal household resources" means all

 

20  income received by all persons of a household in a tax year while

 

21  members of a household, plus any net business loss [after netting all

 

22  business income and loss, plus any net rental or royalty loss, plus any

 

23  deduction from federal adjusted gross income for a carryback or
    carryforward of a net operating loss as defined in section 172(b)(2) of
    the internal revenue code
.]

24        Sec. 510. (1) "Income" means the sum of federal adjusted

 

25  gross income as defined in the internal revenue code plus all

 

26  income specifically excluded or exempt from the computations of

 

27  the federal adjusted gross income except that beginning with the

 


 1  1988 tax year, a deduction for a carryback or carryover of a net

 

 2  operating loss shall not exceed federal modified taxable income

 

 3  as defined in section 172(b)(2) of the internal revenue code.

 

 4  Also, a person who is enrolled in an accident or health insurance

 

 5  plan may deduct from income the amount that person paid in

 

 6  premiums in the tax year for that insurance plan for the person's

 

 7  family. Income does not include any of the following:

 

 8        (a) The first $300.00 of gifts in cash or kind from

 

 9  nongovernmental sources.

 

10        (b) The first $300.00 received from awards, prizes, lottery,

 

11  bingo, or other gambling winnings.

 

12        (c) Surplus foods.

 

13        (d) Relief in kind supplied by a governmental agency.

 

14        (e) Payments or credits under this act part.

 

15        (f) A governmental grant that has to be used by the claimant

 

16  for rehabilitation of the claimant's homestead.

 

17        (g) Stipends received by a person 60 years of age or older

 

18  who is acting as a foster grandparent under the foster

 

19  grandparent program authorized pursuant to section 211 of part B

 

20  of title II of the domestic volunteer service act of 1973, Public

 

21  Law 93-113, 42 U.S.C. USC 5011, or who is acting as a senior

 

22  companion pursuant to section 213 of part C of title II of the

 

23  domestic volunteer service act of 1973, Public Law 93-113, 42

 

24  U.S.C. USC 5013.

 

25        (h) Amounts deducted from monthly social security or

 

26  railroad retirement benefits for medicare premiums.

 

27        (i) Contributions by an employer to life, accident, or

 


 1  health insurance plans.

 

 2        (j) Energy assistance grants and energy assistance tax

 

 3  credits.

 

 4        (2) "Owner" means a natural person who owns or is purchasing

 

 5  a homestead under a mortgage or land contract, who owns or is

 

 6  purchasing a dwelling situated on the leased lands of another, or

 

 7  who is a tenant-stockholder of a cooperative housing corporation.

 

 8        Sec. 512. (1) "Paraplegic, hemiplegic, or quadriplegic"

 

 9  means an individual, or either 1 of 2 persons filing a joint tax

 

10  return under this act part, who is a paraplegic, hemiplegic, or

 

11  quadriplegic at the end of the tax year.

 

12        (2) "Property taxes" means, for tax years before the 2003

 

13  tax year, general ad valorem taxes due and payable, levied on a

 

14  homestead within this state including property tax administration

 

15  fees, but does not include penalties, interest, or special

 

16  assessments unless assessed in the entire city, village, or

 

17  township, levied using a uniform millage rate on all real

 

18  property not exempt by state law from the levy of the special

 

19  assessment, and levied and based on state equalized valuation or

 

20  taxable value.

 

21        (3) "Qualified person" means a claimant and any person,

 

22  domiciled in Michigan, who can be claimed as a dependent under

 

23  the internal revenue code and who does not file a claim under

 

24  this act part for the same tax year. The term does not include

 

25  the additional exemptions allowed for age or blindness.

 

26        (4) "Renter" means a person who rents or leases a homestead.

 

27        Sec. 514. (1) "Senior citizen" means an individual, or

 


 House Bill No. 4361 (H-1) as amended April 27, 2011

 1  either 1 of 2 persons filing a joint tax return under this act

 

 2  part, who is 65 years of age or older at the close of the tax

 

 3  year. The term also includes the unremarried surviving spouse of

 

 4  a person who was 65 years of age or older at the time of death.

 

 5        (2) "Serviceperson" means a person who is currently serving

 

 6  in the armed forces of the United States or is separated from the

 

 7  armed forces for less than a year, and who was a resident of this

 

 8  state at least 6 months prior to the time of entering the armed

 

 9  forces or was a resident of this state at least 5 years prior to

 

10  filing a claim under this chapter.

 

11        (3) "State income tax" or "state income tax act" means the

 

12  tax levied by this act part.

 

13        Sec. 520. (1) Subject to the limitations and the definitions

 

14  in this chapter, a claimant may claim against the tax due under

 

15  this act part for the tax year a credit for the property taxes on

 

16  the taxpayer's homestead deductible for federal income tax

 

17  purposes pursuant to section 164 of the internal revenue code, or

 

18  that would have been deductible if the claimant had not elected

 

19  the zero bracket amount or if the claimant had been subject to

 

20  the federal income tax. The property taxes used for the credit

 

21  computation shall not be greater than the amount levied for 1 tax

 

22  year. A person is not eligible for a credit under this section if

 

23  the taxable value of his or her homestead [              ] in the

 

24  year in which the credit is claimed is greater than $135,000.00.

 

25  As used in this subsection, "taxable value" means that value

 

26  determined under section 27a of the general property tax act,

 

27  1893 PA 206, MCL 211.27a.

 


 1        (2) A person who rents or leases a homestead may claim a

 

 2  similar credit computed under this section and section 522 based

 

 3  upon 17% of the gross rent paid for tax years before the 1994 tax

 

 4  year, or 20% of the gross rent paid for tax years after the 1993

 

 5  tax year. A person who rents or leases a homestead subject to a

 

 6  service charge in lieu of ad valorem taxes as provided by section

 

 7  15a of the state housing development authority act of 1966, Act

 

 8  No. 346 of the Public Acts of 1966, being section 125.1415a of

 

 9  the Michigan Compiled Laws 1966 PA 346, MCL 125.1415a, may claim

 

10  a similar credit computed under this section and section 522

 

11  based upon 10% of the gross rent paid.

 

12        (3) If the credit claimed under this section and section 522

 

13  exceeds the tax liability for the tax year or if there is no tax

 

14  liability for the tax year, the amount of the claim not used as

 

15  an offset against the tax liability shall, after examination and

 

16  review, be approved for payment, without interest, to the

 

17  claimant. In determining the amount of the payment under this

 

18  subsection, withholdings and other credits shall be used first to

 

19  offset any tax liabilities.

 

20        (4) If the homestead is an integral part of a multipurpose

 

21  or multidwelling building that is federally aided housing or

 

22  state aided housing, a claimant who is a senior citizen entitled

 

23  to a payment under subsection (2) may assign the right to that

 

24  payment to a mortgagor if the mortgagor reduces the rent charged

 

25  and collected on the claimant's homestead in an amount equal to

 

26  the tax credit payment provided in this chapter. The assignment

 

27  of the claim is valid only if the Michigan state housing

 


 1  development authority, by affidavit, verifies that the claimant's

 

 2  rent has been so reduced.

 

 3        (5) Only the renter or lessee shall claim a credit on

 

 4  property that is rented or leased as a homestead.

 

 5        (6) A person who discriminates in the charging or collection

 

 6  of rent on a homestead by increasing the rent charged or

 

 7  collected because the renter or lessee claims and receives a

 

 8  credit or payment under this chapter is guilty of a misdemeanor.

 

 9  Discrimination against a renter who claims and receives the

 

10  credit under this section and section 522 by a reduction of the

 

11  rent on the homestead of a person who does not claim and receive

 

12  the credit is a misdemeanor. If discriminatory rents are charged

 

13  or collected, each charge or collection of the higher or lower

 

14  payment is a separate offense. Each acceptance of a payment of

 

15  rent is a separate offense.

 

16        (7) A person who received aid to families with dependent

 

17  children, state family assistance, or state disability assistance

 

18  pursuant to the social welfare act, Act No. 280 of the Public

 

19  Acts of 1939, as amended, being sections 400.1 to 400.119b of the

 

20  Michigan Compiled Laws 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b, in the

 

21  tax year for which the person is filing a return shall have a

 

22  credit that is authorized and computed under this section and

 

23  section 522 reduced by an amount equal to the product of the

 

24  claimant's credit multiplied by the quotient of the sum of the

 

25  claimant's aid to families with dependent children, state family

 

26  assistance, and state disability assistance for the tax year

 

27  divided by the claimant's household income. total household

 


 1  resources. The reduction of credit shall not exceed the sum of

 

 2  the aid to families with dependent children, state family

 

 3  assistance, and state disability assistance for the tax year. For

 

 4  the purposes of this subsection, aid to families with dependent

 

 5  children does not include child support payments that offset or

 

 6  reduce payments made to the claimant.

 

 7        (8) A credit under subsection (1) or (2) shall be reduced by

 

 8  10% for each claimant whose household income exceeds $73,650.00

 

 9  total household resources exceed $41,000.00 and by an additional

 

10  10% for each increment of $1,000.00 of household income total

 

11  household resources in excess of $73,650.00 $41,000.00.

 

12        (9) If the credit authorized and calculated under this

 

13  section and section 522 and adjusted under subsection (7) or (8)

 

14  does not provide to a senior citizen who rents or leases a

 

15  homestead that amount attributable to rent that constitutes more

 

16  than 40% of the household income total household resources of the

 

17  senior citizen, the senior citizen may claim a credit based upon

 

18  the amount of household income total household resources

 

19  attributable to rent as provided by this section.

 

20        (10) A senior citizen whose gross rent paid for the tax year

 

21  is more than the percentage of household income total household

 

22  resources specified in subsection (9) for the respective tax year

 

23  may claim a credit for the amount of rent paid that constitutes

 

24  more than the percentage of the household income total household

 

25  resources of the senior citizen specified in subsection (9) and

 

26  that was not provided to the senior citizen by the credit

 

27  computed pursuant to this section and section 522 and adjusted

 


 1  pursuant to subsection (7) or (8).

 

 2        (11) The department may promulgate rules to implement

 

 3  subsections (9) to (16) (15) and may prescribe a table to allow a

 

 4  claimant to determine the credit provided under this section and

 

 5  section 522 in the instruction booklet that accompanies the

 

 6  respective income tax or property tax credit forms used by

 

 7  claimants.

 

 8        (12) A senior citizen may claim the credit under subsections

 

 9  (9) to (16) (15) on the same form as the property tax credit

 

10  permitted by subsection (2). The department shall adjust the

 

11  forms accordingly.

 

12        (13) A senior citizen who moves to a different rented or

 

13  leased homestead shall determine, for 2 tax years after the move,

 

14  both his or her qualification to claim a credit under subsections

 

15  (9) to (16) (15) and the amount of a credit under subsections (9)

 

16  to (16) (15) on the basis of the annualized final monthly rental

 

17  payment at his or her previous homestead, if this annualized

 

18  rental is less than the senior citizen's actual annual rental

 

19  payments.

 

20        (14) For a return of less than 12 months, the claim for a

 

21  credit under subsections (9) to (16) (15) shall be reduced

 

22  proportionately.

 

23        (15) The Michigan state housing development authority shall

 

24  report on the effect of the credit provided by subsections (9) to

 

25  (16) on the price of rented and leased homesteads. If the

 

26  authority determines that the price of rented and leased

 

27  homesteads has increased as a result of the credit provided by

 


 1  subsections (9) to (16), the authority shall make recommendations

 

 2  to the legislature to remedy this situation. The report shall be

 

 3  made to the chairpersons of the house and senate committees that

 

 4  have primary responsibility for taxation legislation 2 years

 

 5  after the credit provided by subsections (9) to (16) is in

 

 6  effect.

 

 7        (15) (16) The total credit allowed by this section and

 

 8  section 522 shall not exceed $1,200.00 per year.

 

 9        Sec. 522. (1) The amount of a claim made pursuant to this

 

10  chapter shall be determined as follows:

 

11        (a) A claimant is entitled to a credit against the state

 

12  income tax liability under this part equal to 60% of the amount

 

13  by which the property taxes on the homestead, or the credit for

 

14  rental of the homestead for the tax year, exceeds 3.5% of the

 

15  claimant's household income for that tax year.the following:

 

16        (i) For a claimant with total household resources of

 

17  $21,000.00 or less, an amount equal to 100% of the difference

 

18  between the property taxes on the homestead or the credit for

 

19  rental of the homestead for the tax year and 3.5% of total

 

20  household resources.

 

21        (ii) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

22  than $21,000.00 and less than or equal to $22,000.00, an amount

 

23  equal to 96% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

24  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 

25  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

26        (iii) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

27  than $22,000.00 and less than or equal to $23,000.00, an amount

 


 1  equal to 92% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

 2  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 

 3  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

 4        (iv) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

 5  than $23,000.00 and less than or equal to $24,000.00, an amount

 

 6  equal to 88% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

 7  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 

 8  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

 9        (v) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

10  than $24,000.00 and less than or equal to $25,000.00, an amount

 

11  equal to 84% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

12  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 

13  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

14        (vi) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

15  than $25,000.00 and less than or equal to $26,000.00, an amount

 

16  equal to 80% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

17  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 

18  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

19        (vii) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

20  than $26,000.00 and less than or equal to $27,000.00, an amount

 

21  equal to 76% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

22  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 

23  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

24        (viii) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

25  than $27,000.00 and less than or equal to $28,000.00, an amount

 

26  equal to 72% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

27  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 


 House Bill No. 4361 (H-1) as amended April 27, 2011

 1  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

 2        (ix) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

 3  than $28,000.00 and less than or equal to $29,000.00, an amount

 

 4  equal to 68% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

 5  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 

 6  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

 7        (x) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

 8  than $29,000.00 and less than or equal to $30,000.00, an amount

 

 9  equal to 64% of the difference between the property taxes on the

 

10  homestead or the credit for rental of the homestead for the tax

 

11  year and 3.5% of total household resources.

 

12        (xi) For a claimant with total household resources of more

 

13  than $30,000.00, an amount equal to 60% of the difference between

 

14  the property taxes on the homestead or the credit for rental of

 

15  the homestead for the tax year and 3.5% of total household

 

16  resources.

 

17        (b) A claimant who is [a senior citizen or ]a paraplegic,

 

18  hemiplegic, or quadriplegic and for tax years that begin after

 

19  December 31, 1999, a claimant who is totally and permanently

 

20  disabled or deaf is entitled to a credit against the state income

 

21  tax liability for the amount by which the property taxes on the

 

22  homestead, the credit for rental of the homestead, or a service

 

23  charge in lieu of ad valorem taxes as provided by section 15a of

 

24  the state housing development authority act of 1966, 1966 PA 346,

 

25  MCL 125.1415a, for the tax year exceeds the percentage of the

 

26  claimant's household income total household resources for that

 

27  tax year computed as follows:

 


 

     Household income                               Percentage

     Not over $3,000.00                                 .0%

     Over $3,000.00 but not over $4,000.00             1.0%

     Over $4,000.00 but not over $5,000.00             2.0%

     Over $5,000.00 but not over $6,000.00             3.0%

     Over $6,000.00                                    3.5%

 

 

 7        (c) For a tax year that begins before January 1, 2000, a

 

 8  claimant who is totally and permanently disabled is entitled to a

 

 9  credit against the state income tax liability equal to 60% of the

 

10  amount by which the property taxes on the homestead, or the

 

11  credit for rental of the homestead or for a service charge in

 

12  lieu of ad valorem taxes as provided in section 15a of the state

 

13  housing development authority act of 1966, 1966 PA 346, MCL

 

14  125.1415a, for the tax year, exceeds the percentage of the

 

15  claimant's household income for that tax year based on the

 

16  schedule in subdivision (b).

 

17        (c) (d) A claimant who is an eligible serviceperson,

 

18  eligible veteran, or eligible widow or widower is entitled to a

 

19  credit against the state income tax liability for a percentage of

 

20  the property taxes on the homestead for the tax year not in

 

21  excess of 100% determined as follows:

 

22        (i) Divide the taxable value allowance specified in section

 

23  506 by the taxable value of the homestead or, if the eligible

 

24  serviceperson, eligible veteran, or eligible widow or widower

 

25  leases or rents a homestead, divide 17% of the total annual rent

 

26  paid for tax years before the 1994 tax year, or 20% of the total

 


 1  annual rent paid for tax years after the 1993 tax year on the

 

 2  property by the property tax rate on the property.

 

 3        (ii) Multiply the property taxes on the homestead by the

 

 4  percentage computed in subparagraph (i).

 

 5        (d) (e) A claimant who is blind is entitled to a credit

 

 6  against the state income tax liability for a percentage of the

 

 7  property taxes on the homestead for the tax year determined as

 

 8  follows:

 

 9        (i) If the taxable value of the homestead is $3,500.00 or

 

10  less, 100% of the property taxes.

 

11        (ii) If the taxable value of the homestead is more than

 

12  $3,500.00, the percentage that $3,500.00 bears to the taxable

 

13  value of the homestead.

 

14        (2) A person who is qualified to make a claim under more

 

15  than 1 classification shall elect the classification under which

 

16  the claim is made.

 

17        (3) Only 1 claimant per household for a tax year is entitled

 

18  to the credit, unless both the husband and wife filing a joint

 

19  return are blind, then each shall be considered a claimant.

 

20        (4) As used in this section, "totally and permanently

 

21  disabled" means disability as defined in section 216 of title II

 

22  of the social security act, 42 U.S.C. USC 416.

 

23        (5) A senior citizen who has a total household income total

 

24  household resources for the tax year of $6,000.00 or less and who

 

25  for 1973 received a senior citizen homestead exemption under

 

26  former section 7c of the general property tax act, Act No. 206 of

 

27  the Public Acts of 1893 1893 PA 206, may compute the credit

 


 1  against the state income tax liability for a percentage of the

 

 2  property taxes on the homestead for the tax year determined as

 

 3  follows:

 

 4        (a) If the taxable value of the homestead is $2,500.00 or

 

 5  less, 100% of the property taxes.

 

 6        (b) If the taxable value of the homestead is more than

 

 7  $2,500.00, the percentage that $2,500.00 bears to the taxable

 

 8  value of the homestead.

 

 9        (6) For a return of less than 12 months, the claim shall be

 

10  reduced proportionately.

 

11        (7) The commissioner department may prescribe tables that

 

12  may be used to determine the amount of the claim.

 

13        (8) The total credit allowed in this section for each year

 

14  after December 31, 1975 shall not exceed $1,200.00 per year.

 

15        (9) The total credit allowable under this act part and part

 

16  361 of the natural resources and environmental protection act,

 

17  1994 PA 451, MCL 324.36101 to 324.36117, shall not exceed the

 

18  total property tax due and payable by the claimant in that year.

 

19  The amount by which the credit exceeds the property tax due and

 

20  payable shall be deducted from the credit claimed under part 361

 

21  of the natural resources and environmental protection act, 1994

 

22  PA 451, MCL 324.36101 to 324.36117.

 

23        Sec. 526. The right to file a claim is personal to the

 

24  claimant. The right may be exercised on behalf of a claimant by

 

25  an agent, guardian, attorney-in-fact, executor or administrator,

 

26  or other persons charged with the care of the person or property

 

27  of a claimant. When a claimant dies before he could have filed or

 


 1  after having filed a timely claim, the amount thereof may be paid

 

 2  to another member of the household or to the mortgagor of the

 

 3  state or federally aided housing, which is a multipurpose of

 

 4  multidwelling building, who has reduced the rent on the

 

 5  claimant's homestead because of the tax credit and payment

 

 6  provided in this chapter as determined by the commissioner

 

 7  department. If the claimant was the only member of his household

 

 8  and was not renting his homestead in a multipurpose or

 

 9  multidwelling building that is state or federally aided housing,

 

10  the claim shall be paid to his executor or administrator, but if

 

11  neither is appointed within 2 years after the filing of the

 

12  claim, the amount thereof of the claim shall escheat to the

 

13  state.

 

14        Sec. 527a. (1) For tax years 1985 through 1994, a claimant

 

15  may claim a credit against the state income tax for heating fuel

 

16  costs for the claimant's homestead in this state. For the 1996

 

17  tax year and each tax year after the 1996 tax year and subject

 

18  Subject to subsections (18) and (19), a claimant may claim a

 

19  credit for heating fuel costs for the claimant's homestead in

 

20  this state. An adult foster care home, nursing home, home for the

 

21  aged, or substance abuse center is not a homestead for purposes

 

22  of this section. The credit shall be determined in the following

 

23  manner:

 

24        (a) For the 1988 tax year through the 1994 tax year and,

 

25  subject Subject to subsections (18) and (19), for the 1996 tax

 

26  year and each tax year after the 1996 tax year, the following

 

27  table shall be used for the computation of a credit as computed

 


 1  under subdivision (c):

 

 

Exemptions    0 or 1    2     3     4      5       6 or more

Credit          $272   $326  $379  $450   $525 $601 + $76 for each

                                               exemption over 6

 

 

 5        (b) For tax years after the 1988 tax year, the The amounts

 

 6  in the table in subdivision (a) shall be adjusted each year as

 

 7  necessary by the department so that a claimant with a household

 

 8  income total household resources of less than 110% of the federal

 

 9  poverty income standards as defined and determined annually by

 

10  the United States office of management and budget is not denied a

 

11  credit.

 

12        (c) A claimant shall receive the greater of the credit

 

13  amount as determined in subparagraph (i) or (ii):

 

14        (i) Subtract 3.5% of the claimant's household income total

 

15  household resources from the amount specified in subdivision (a)

 

16  that corresponds with the number of exemptions claimed in the

 

17  return filed under this act, part, except that the number of

 

18  exemptions for purposes of this subdivision shall not exceed the

 

19  actual number of persons living in the household plus the

 

20  additional personal exemptions allowed under section 30, and any

 

21  dependency exemptions for a person or persons living in the

 

22  household under a custodial arrangement, even if the exemptions

 

23  may not be claimed for other income tax purposes. For a claimant

 

24  whose heating costs are included in his or her rent, multiply the

 

25  result of the preceding calculation by 50%.

 

26        (ii) Subject to subsection (2), for a claimant whose

 


 1  household income does total household resources do not exceed the

 

 2  maximum specified in the following table, as adjusted, that

 

 3  corresponds with the number of exemptions claimed in the return

 

 4  filed under this act part, subtract 11% of claimant's household

 

 5  income total household resources from the total cost incurred by

 

 6  a claimant for heating fuel from a heating fuel provider during

 

 7  the 12 consecutive monthly billing periods ending in October of

 

 8  the tax year, and multiply the resulting amount by 70%:

 

 

Exemptions    0 or 1     2         3        4        5      For each

10                                                              exemption

11                                                                over 5,

12                                                                 add

13                                                              $2,441.00

14                                                                to the

15                                                              maximum

16                                                                income

17                                                                total

18                                                              household

19                                                              resources

20 Maximum                                                     

21 Income Total                                                

22 Household                                                   

23 Resources     $7,060   $9,501    $11,943  $14,382  $16,824  

 

 

24        (d) For the 1988 tax year for the purposes of subdivision

 

25  (c), the total cost incurred by a claimant for heating fuel from

 

26  a heating fuel provider shall not exceed $1,190.00. For tax years

 

27  after the 1988 tax year, the The maximum cost incurred by a

 

28  claimant for heating fuel during a tax year shall be adjusted by


 

 1  multiplying the maximum cost for the immediately preceding tax

 

 2  year by the percentage by which the average all urban Detroit

 

 3  consumer price index for fuels and other utilities for the 12

 

 4  months ending August 31 of the tax year for which the credit is

 

 5  claimed exceeds that index's average for the 12 months ending on

 

 6  August 31 of the previous tax year, but not more than 10%. That

 

 7  product shall be added to the maximum cost of the immediately

 

 8  preceding tax year and then rounded to the nearest whole dollar.

 

 9  That dollar amount is the new maximum cost for the current tax

 

10  year. If the claimant received any credits to his or her heating

 

11  bill during the tax year, as provided for in subsection (6), the

 

12  credits shall be treated as costs incurred by the claimant.

 

13        (e) For tax years after the 1988 tax year, the The maximum

 

14  income amounts total household resources specified in subdivision

 

15  (c)(ii) shall be adjusted by multiplying the respective maximum

 

16  income amounts total household resources for the immediately

 

17  preceding tax year by the percentage by which the average all

 

18  urban Detroit consumer price index for all items for the 12

 

19  months ending August 31 of the tax year for which the credit is

 

20  claimed exceeds that index's average for the 12 months ending on

 

21  August 31 of the immediately preceding tax year, but not more

 

22  than 10%. That product shall be added to the immediately

 

23  preceding tax year's respective maximum income level total

 

24  household resources and then rounded to the nearest whole dollar.

 

25  That dollar amount is the new maximum income level for total

 

26  household resources for the then current tax year.

 

27        (2) An enrolled heating fuel provider shall notify each of


 

 1  its customers, not later than December 15 of each year, or, for

 

 2  1995 only, not later than January 10, 1996 or for 1996 only, not

 

 3  later than January 15, 1996, of the availability, upon request,

 

 4  of the information necessary for determining the credit under

 

 5  this section. For a claimant for whom, at the time of filing, the

 

 6  family independence agency department of human services is making

 

 7  direct vendor payments to an enrolled heating fuel provider, the

 

 8  enrolled heating fuel provider that accepts the direct payments

 

 9  shall provide the information necessary to determine the credit

 

10  before February 1 of each year. If an enrolled heating fuel

 

11  provider refuses or fails to provide to a customer the

 

12  information required to determine the credit, or if the claimant

 

13  is not a customer of an enrolled heating fuel provider, a

 

14  claimant may determine the credit provided in subsection

 

15  (1)(c)(ii) based on his or her own records.

 

16        (3) A credit claimed on a return that covers a period of

 

17  less than 12 months shall be calculated based on subsection

 

18  (1)(c)(i) and shall be reduced proportionately.

 

19        (4) The allowable amount of the credit under this section

 

20  shall be remitted to the claimant, other than a claimant whose

 

21  heating costs are included in his or her rent, in the form of an

 

22  energy draft that states the name of the claimant and is issued

 

23  by the department. For a claimant for whom, at the time of

 

24  filing, the family independence agency department of human

 

25  services has identified the enrolled heating fuel provider or is

 

26  making direct vendor payments to an enrolled heating fuel

 

27  provider, the department shall send the energy draft directly to


 

 1  the claimant's enrolled heating fuel provider, as identified by

 

 2  the claimant. If the department establishes a program or pilot

 

 3  program for the direct payment of energy drafts to enrolled

 

 4  heating fuel providers, enrolled heating fuel providers may

 

 5  submit to the department, in a manner prescribed by the

 

 6  department, the names of their customers who are claimants. If a

 

 7  claimant whose name has been submitted meets the standards

 

 8  established by the department, the department shall send that

 

 9  claimant's energy draft directly to the claimant's enrolled

 

10  heating fuel provider. If the enrolled heating fuel provider

 

11  submits names of claimants who are not its customers and the

 

12  energy drafts of any of those claimants are sent to the enrolled

 

13  heating fuel provider, the enrolled heating fuel provider shall

 

14  return the energy drafts or pay the value of the energy drafts to

 

15  the department plus interest on the amount of the energy drafts

 

16  at the rate calculated under section 23 of 1941 PA 122, MCL

 

17  205.23, for deficiencies in tax payments. Except as provided in

 

18  subsection (5), after July 31, a refundable credit for a prior

 

19  tax year may be paid in the form of a negotiable warrant. The

 

20  energy draft shall be negotiable only through the claimant's

 

21  enrolled heating fuel provider upon remittance by the claimant.

 

22        (5) If a claimant received home heating assistance from the

 

23  family independence agency department of human services, a

 

24  governmental agency, or a nonprofit organization 12 months prior

 

25  to remitting an energy draft to the claimant's enrolled heating

 

26  fuel provider and the amount of the energy draft is greater than

 

27  the total of outstanding bills incurred by the claimant with the


 

 1  enrolled heating fuel provider as of the date that the energy

 

 2  draft was remitted to the enrolled heating fuel provider, the

 

 3  enrolled heating fuel provider shall first apply the full amount

 

 4  of the energy draft to the claimant's outstanding bills and then

 

 5  apply any remaining amount to subsequent bills of the claimant

 

 6  until the full amount of the energy draft is used up or the

 

 7  expiration of 9 months after the date on which the energy draft

 

 8  was first applied to cover the claimant's outstanding bills. If

 

 9  there is any remaining energy draft amount at the end of the 9-

 

10  month period, or if before the end of the 9-month period the

 

11  claimant is no longer a customer of the enrolled heating fuel

 

12  provider, the enrolled heating fuel provider shall remit the

 

13  remaining amount to the claimant in the form of a fully

 

14  negotiable check within 14 days after the end of the 9-month

 

15  period or 14 days after the termination of services, whichever

 

16  occurs sooner. If the claimant did not receive home heating

 

17  assistance from the family independence agency department of

 

18  human services, a governmental agency, or a nonprofit

 

19  organization 12 months prior to remitting an energy draft, the

 

20  claimant, by checking the appropriate box to be included on the

 

21  energy draft or application for participation with an enrolled

 

22  heating fuel provider, may request from the enrolled heating fuel

 

23  provider a payment equal to the amount of the energy draft less

 

24  the amount of the outstanding bills. The enrolled heating fuel

 

25  provider shall issue the payment within 14 days after the

 

26  claimant's request. For purposes of this subsection, home heating

 

27  assistance does not include the credit allowed under this


 

 1  section.

 

 2        (6) If a claimant whose energy draft exceeds his or her

 

 3  outstanding bills does not request a payment from an enrolled

 

 4  heating fuel provider under subsection (5), an energy draft

 

 5  remitted to an enrolled heating fuel provider shall be applied

 

 6  upon receipt to the claimant's designated account. The energy

 

 7  draft may be used to cover outstanding bills that the claimant

 

 8  has incurred with the enrolled heating fuel provider and to cover

 

 9  subsequent heating costs until the full amount of the energy

 

10  draft is used or until 1 year after the date on which the energy

 

11  draft is first applied to the claimant's designated account. If a

 

12  credit amount remains from this energy draft after the 1-year

 

13  period, or if prior to the end of the 1-year period a claimant is

 

14  no longer a customer of the enrolled heating fuel provider, the

 

15  heating fuel provider shall remit the remaining unused portion to

 

16  the claimant in the form of a fully negotiable check within 14

 

17  days after the end of the 1-year period or within 14 days after

 

18  termination of service, whichever is sooner.

 

19        (7) A claimant who is no longer a resident of this state,

 

20  who is not a customer of an enrolled heating fuel provider, or

 

21  whose heating fuel provider refuses to accept an energy draft

 

22  shall return the energy draft to the department and request the

 

23  issuance of a negotiable warrant. A claimant may return an energy

 

24  draft to the department and request issuance of a negotiable

 

25  warrant if the energy draft is impractical because the claimant

 

26  has already purchased his or her energy supply for the year and

 

27  does not have an outstanding obligation to an enrolled heating


 

 1  fuel provider. The department may honor that request if it agrees

 

 2  that the use of the energy draft is impractical. The department

 

 3  shall issue the warrant within 14 days after receiving the energy

 

 4  draft from the claimant.

 

 5        (8) The enrolled heating fuel provider shall bill the

 

 6  department for credit amounts that have been applied to claimant

 

 7  accounts pursuant to subsection (6), and the department shall pay

 

 8  the bills within 14 days of receipt. The billing shall be

 

 9  accompanied by the energy drafts for which reimbursement is

 

10  claimed.

 

11        (9) A claimant whose heating fuel is provided by a utility

 

12  regulated by the Michigan public service commission is protected

 

13  against the discontinuance of his or her heating fuel service

 

14  from the date of filing a claim for the credit under this section

 

15  through the date of issuance of an energy draft and during a

 

16  period beginning December 1 of the tax year for which the credit

 

17  is claimed and ending March 31 of the following year if the

 

18  claimant participates in the winter protection program set forth

 

19  in R 460.2174 460.148 of the Michigan administrative code or if

 

20  the utility accepts the claimant's energy draft. The acceptance

 

21  of an energy draft by a utility is considered a request by the

 

22  claimant for the winter protection program. The energy draft

 

23  shall be coded by the department to denote claimants who are 65

 

24  years of age or older. If the claimant is a claimant whose

 

25  heating cost is included in his or her rent payments, the amount

 

26  of the claim not used as an offset against the state income tax,

 

27  after examination and review, shall be approved for payment,


 

 1  without interest, to the claimant.

 

 2        (10) If an enrolled heating fuel provider does not issue a

 

 3  payment or a negotiable check within 14 days or as otherwise

 

 4  provided in subsection (5) or (6), beginning on the fifteenth day

 

 5  or the fifteenth day after the expiration of the 9-month period

 

 6  under subsection (5), the amount due to the claimant is increased

 

 7  by adding interest computed on the basis of the rate of interest

 

 8  prescribed for delayed refunds of excess tax payments in section

 

 9  30(3) of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.30. The enrolled heating fuel

 

10  provider shall pay the interest and shall not bill the interest

 

11  to or be reimbursed for the interest by the department.

 

12        (11) Only the renter or lessee shall claim a credit on

 

13  property that is rented or leased as a homestead. Only 1 credit

 

14  may be claimed for a household. The credit under this section is

 

15  in addition to other credits to which the claimant is entitled

 

16  under this act part. A person who is a full-time student at a

 

17  school, community college, or college or university and who is

 

18  claimed as a dependent by another person is not eligible for the

 

19  credit provided by this section. A claimant who shares a

 

20  homestead with other eligible claimants shall prorate the credit

 

21  by the number of claimants sharing the homestead.

 

22        (12) A claimant who is eligible for the credit provided by

 

23  this section shall be referred by the department to the

 

24  appropriate state agency for determination of eligibility for

 

25  home weatherization assistance and shall accept weatherization

 

26  assistance if eligible and if assistance is available. A heating

 

27  fuel provider that is required by the Michigan public service


 

 1  commission to participate in the residential conservation

 

 2  services home energy analysis program shall annually contact each

 

 3  claimant to whom it provides heating fuel, and whose usage

 

 4  exceeds 200,000 cubic feet of natural gas or 18,000 kilowatt

 

 5  hours of electricity annually, and shall offer to provide a home

 

 6  energy analysis at no cost to the claimant. A heating fuel

 

 7  provider that is not required to participate in the residential

 

 8  conservation services program shall not be required to conduct a

 

 9  home energy analysis for its customers.

 

10        (13) If an enrolled heating fuel provider is regulated by

 

11  the Michigan public service commission, the Michigan public

 

12  service commission may use an enforcement method authorized by

 

13  law or rule to enforce the requirements prescribed by this

 

14  section on the enrolled heating fuel provider. If an enrolled

 

15  heating fuel provider is not regulated by the Michigan public

 

16  service commission, the family independence agency department of

 

17  human services may use an enforcement method authorized by law or

 

18  rule to enforce the requirements prescribed by this section on

 

19  the enrolled heating fuel provider.

 

20        (14) The department shall mail a home heating credit return

 

21  to every person who received assistance through family

 

22  independence programs the department of human services pursuant

 

23  to the social welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL 400.1 to 400.119b,

 

24  during the tax year.

 

25        (15) The department shall complete a study by August 1 of

 

26  1985, and of each subsequent year, of the actual heating costs of

 

27  each claimant who received a credit from the department under


 

 1  this section for the immediately preceding tax year.

 

 2        (16) The department may promulgate rules necessary to

 

 3  administer this section pursuant to the administrative procedures

 

 4  act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328.

 

 5        (17) The department shall provide a simplified procedure for

 

 6  claiming the credit under this section for claimants for whom, at

 

 7  the time of filing, the family independence agency department of

 

 8  human services is making direct vendor payments to an enrolled

 

 9  heating fuel provider.

 

10        (18) For the 2001 tax year and each tax year after the 2001

 

11  tax year, the credit under this section is allowed only if there

 

12  has been a federal appropriation for the federal fiscal year

 

13  beginning in the tax year of federal low income home energy

 

14  assistance program block grant funds of any amount. If the amount

 

15  of federal low income home energy assistance program block grant

 

16  funds available for the home heating credit is less than the full

 

17  home heating credit amount, each individual credit claimed under

 

18  this section shall be reduced by multiplying the credit amount by

 

19  a fraction, the numerator of which is the amount available for

 

20  the home heating credit and the denominator of which is the full

 

21  home heating credit amount. As used in this subsection, "amount

 

22  available for the home heating credit" means the sum of the

 

23  federal low income home energy assistance program block grant

 

24  allotment for this state for the federal fiscal year beginning in

 

25  the tax year and the amount as certified by the director of the

 

26  family independence agency department of human services carried

 

27  forward from the immediately preceding fiscal year for the low


 

 1  income home energy assistance program block grant minus the sum

 

 2  of the amount certified by the director of the family

 

 3  independence agency department of human services for

 

 4  administration of the low income home energy assistance program

 

 5  block grant, the amount certified by the director of the family

 

 6  independence agency department of human services for crisis

 

 7  assistance programs, and the amount certified by the director of

 

 8  the family independence agency department of human services for

 

 9  weatherization. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection,

 

10  the amount used for weatherization each fiscal year shall not

 

11  exceed $9,000,000.00 less the amount used for weatherization from

 

12  the emergency contingency funds received in the immediately

 

13  preceding year. For the 2004-2005 state fiscal year only, the

 

14  amount used for weatherization shall not exceed $9,000,000.00 and

 

15  shall not be reduced by the amount used for weatherization from

 

16  the emergency contingency funds received in the immediately

 

17  preceding year. The amounts under this subsection that require

 

18  certification by the director of the family independence agency

 

19  department of human services or by the state treasurer and the

 

20  director of the department of technology, management, and budget

 

21  shall be certified on or before December 30 of the tax year for

 

22  the 1996 tax year, and on or before November 1 of the tax year

 

23  for the 1997 tax year and each tax year after the 1997 tax year.

 

24  As used in this subsection, "full home heating credit amount"

 

25  means the amount certified by the state treasurer and the

 

26  director of the department of technology, management, and budget

 

27  to be the estimated amount of the credits that would have been


 

 1  provided under this section for the tax year if no reduction as

 

 2  provided in this subsection were made for that tax year.

 

 3        (19) For tax years after the 1994 tax year, a claimant who

 

 4  claims a credit under this section shall not report the credit

 

 5  amount on the claimant's income tax return filed under this act

 

 6  part as an offset against the tax imposed by this act part, but

 

 7  shall claim the credit on a separate form prescribed by the

 

 8  department. For tax years after the 1995 tax year, a credit

 

 9  claimed under this section shall not be allowed unless the claim

 

10  for the credit is filed with the department on or before the

 

11  September 30 immediately following the tax year for which the

 

12  credit is claimed.

 

13        (20) The state treasurer shall notify all of the following

 

14  each state fiscal year that the federal low income home energy

 

15  assistance program block grant allotment for this state for that

 

16  fiscal year is less than the full home heating credit amount:

 

17        (a) The chairpersons and vice-chairpersons of the senate and

 

18  house of representatives appropriations committees.

 

19        (b) The senate and house of representatives committees on

 

20  taxation and finance related issues.

 

21        (c) The senate and house of representatives committees on

 

22  energy and technology related issues.

 

23        (21) Notwithstanding section 30a of 1941 PA 122, MCL

 

24  205.30a, the credit allowed under this section is exempt from

 

25  interception, execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other

 

26  legal process to collect a debt. No portion of the credit allowed

 

27  or any rights existing under this section shall be applied as an


 

 1  offset to any liability of the claimant under section 30a of 1941

 

 2  PA 122, MCL 205.30a, or any arrearage or other debt of the

 

 3  claimant.

 

 4        (22) The department shall meet with interested parties

 

 5  including enrolled heating fuel providers and advocacy groups to

 

 6  identify and implement methods of improving the processing of

 

 7  claims for the credit allowed under this section and payments

 

 8  attributable to those credits.

 

 9        (23) As used in this section:

 

10        (a) "Claimant whose heating costs are included in his or her

 

11  rent" means a claimant whose rent includes the cost of heat at

 

12  the time the claim for the credit under this section is filed.

 

13        (b) "Enrolled heating fuel provider" means a heating fuel

 

14  provider that is enrolled with the family independence agency

 

15  department of human services as a heating fuel provider.

 

16        (c) "Heating fuel provider" means an individual or entity

 

17  that provides a claimant with heating fuel or electricity for

 

18  heating purposes.

 

19        Sec. 530. (1) The department may require reasonable proof

 

20  from the claimant in support of rent paid, property taxes paid,

 

21  household income, total household resources, size and nature of

 

22  the property claimed as a homestead, or any other information

 

23  required for the administration of this chapter.

 

24        (2) If a homestead is occupied for less than a 12-month

 

25  period, the credit computation shall be proportional to the

 

26  period of occupancy. A claimant shall not occupy more than 1

 

27  homestead at 1 time. If more than 1 homestead is occupied during


 

 1  the tax year, the credit computation shall be proportional to the

 

 2  period of occupancy of each homestead, but not for a total period

 

 3  of more than 1 year.

 

 4        (3) If unoccupied land is used for agricultural or

 

 5  horticultural purposes by the claimant, the credit shall be

 

 6  allowed only if the gross receipts of the agricultural or

 

 7  horticultural operations exceed the household income total

 

 8  household resources as defined in this act part.

 

 9        (4) A claim shall not be allowed if the department finds

 

10  that the claimant received title to the homestead primarily for

 

11  the purpose of receiving benefits under this chapter.

 

12        (5) The amount of a claim otherwise payable may be applied

 

13  by the department against a liability outstanding on the books of

 

14  the state against the claimant.

 

15        Sec. 532. The department shall prescribe forms for claiming

 

16  the credit, which forms shall be a component part of the state

 

17  income tax return. , except as provided in section 531. All

 

18  provisions of this act part including but not limited to audit,

 

19  review, determinations, appeals, hearings, notices, assessments,

 

20  and administration shall apply to this chapter.

 

21                             PART 2

 

22                           CHAPTER 10

 

23        Sec. 601. A term used in this part and not defined

 

24  differently shall have the same meaning as when used in

 

25  comparable context in the laws of the United States relating to

 

26  federal income taxes in effect for the tax year unless a

 

27  different meaning is clearly required. A reference in this part


 

 1  to the internal revenue code includes other provisions of the

 

 2  laws of the United States relating to federal income taxes.

 

 3        Sec. 603. (1) "Business activity" means a transfer of legal

 

 4  or equitable title to or rental of property, whether real,

 

 5  personal, or mixed, tangible or intangible, or the performance of

 

 6  services, or a combination thereof, made or engaged in, or caused

 

 7  to be made or engaged in, whether in intrastate, interstate, or

 

 8  foreign commerce, with the object of gain, benefit, or advantage,

 

 9  whether direct or indirect, to the taxpayer or to others, but

 

10  does not include the services rendered by an employee to his or

 

11  her employer or services as a director of a corporation. Although

 

12  an activity of a taxpayer may be incidental to another or to

 

13  others of his or her business activities, each activity shall be

 

14  considered to be business engaged in within the meaning of this

 

15  part.

 

16        (2) "Business income" means federal taxable income. For a

 

17  taxpayer that is a mutual or cooperative electric company exempt

 

18  under section 501(c)(12) of the internal revenue code, business

 

19  income equals the organization's excess or deficiency of revenues

 

20  over expenses as reported to the federal government by those

 

21  organizations exempt from the federal income tax under the

 

22  internal revenue code, less capital credits paid to members of

 

23  that organization, less income attributed to equity in another

 

24  organization's net income, and less income resulting from a

 

25  charge approved by a state or federal regulatory agency that is

 

26  restricted for a specified purpose and refundable if it is not

 

27  used for the specified purpose. For a tax-exempt taxpayer,


 

 1  business income means only that part of federal taxable income

 

 2  derived from unrelated business activity.

 

 3        Sec. 605. (1) "Corporation" means a taxpayer that is

 

 4  required or has elected to file as a C corporation as defined

 

 5  under section 1361(a)(2) and section 7701(a)(3) of the internal

 

 6  revenue code. Corporation does not include an insurance company

 

 7  or a financial institution.

 

 8        (2) "Department" means the department of treasury.

 

 9        (3) "Employee" means an employee as defined in section

 

10  3401(c) of the internal revenue code. A person from whom an

 

11  employer is required to withhold for federal income tax purposes

 

12  is prima facie considered an employee.

 

13        (4) "Employer" means an employer as defined in section

 

14  3401(d) of the internal revenue code. A person required to

 

15  withhold for federal income tax purposes is prima facie

 

16  considered an employer.

 

17        Sec. 607. (1) "Federal taxable income" means taxable income

 

18  as defined in section 63 of the internal revenue code, except

 

19  that federal taxable income shall be calculated as if section

 

20  168(k) and section 199 of the internal revenue code were not in

 

21  effect.

 

22        (2) "Foreign operating entity" means a United States person

 

23  that satisfies each of the following:

 

24        (a) Would otherwise be a part of a unitary business group

 

25  that has at least 1 person included in the unitary business group

 

26  that is taxable in this state.

 

27        (b) Has substantial operations outside the United States,


 

 1  the District of Columbia, any territory or possession of the

 

 2  United States except for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or a

 

 3  political subdivision of any of the foregoing.

 

 4        (c) At least 80% of its income is active foreign business

 

 5  income as defined in section 861(c)(1)(B) of the internal revenue

 

 6  code.

 

 7        (3) "Gross receipts" means the entire amount received by the

 

 8  taxpayer as determined by using the taxpayer's method of

 

 9  accounting used for federal income tax purposes, less any amount

 

10  deducted as bad debt for federal income tax purposes from any

 

11  activity whether in intrastate, interstate, or foreign commerce

 

12  carried on for direct or indirect gain, benefit, or advantage to

 

13  the taxpayer or to others except for the following:

 

14        (a) Proceeds from sales by a principal that the taxpayer

 

15  collects in an agency capacity solely on behalf of the principal

 

16  and delivers to the principal.

 

17        (b) Amounts received by the taxpayer as an agent solely on

 

18  behalf of the principal that are expended by the taxpayer for any

 

19  of the following:

 

20        (i) The performance of a service by a third party for the

 

21  benefit of the principal that is required by law to be performed

 

22  by a licensed person.

 

23        (ii) The performance of a service by a third party for the

 

24  benefit of the principal that the taxpayer has not undertaken a

 

25  contractual duty to perform.

 

26        (iii) Principal and interest under a mortgage loan or land

 

27  contract, lease or rental payments, or taxes, utilities, or


 

 1  insurance premiums relating to real or personal property owned or

 

 2  leased by the principal.

 

 3        (iv) A capital asset of a type that is, or under the internal

 

 4  revenue code will become, eligible for depreciation,

 

 5  amortization, or accelerated cost recovery by the principal for

 

 6  federal income tax purposes, or for real property owned or leased

 

 7  by the principal.

 

 8        (v) Property not described under subparagraph (iv) that is

 

 9  purchased by the taxpayer on behalf of the principal and that the

 

10  taxpayer does not take title to or use in the course of

 

11  performing its contractual business activities.

 

12        (vi) Fees, taxes, assessments, levies, fines, penalties, or

 

13  other payments established by law that are paid to a governmental

 

14  entity and that are the legal obligation of the principal.

 

15        (c) Amounts that are excluded from gross income of a foreign

 

16  corporation engaged in the international operation of aircraft

 

17  under section 883(a) of the internal revenue code.

 

18        (d) Amounts received by an advertising agency used to

 

19  acquire advertising media time, space, production, or talent on

 

20  behalf of another person.

 

21        (e) Amounts received by a newspaper to acquire advertising

 

22  space not owned by that newspaper in another newspaper on behalf

 

23  of another person. This subdivision does not apply to any

 

24  consideration received by the taxpayer for acquiring that

 

25  advertising space.

 

26        (f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,

 

27  amounts received by a taxpayer that manages real property owned


 

 1  by a third party that are deposited into a separate account kept

 

 2  in the name of that third party and that are not reimbursements

 

 3  to the taxpayer and are not indirect payments for management

 

 4  services that the taxpayer provides to that third party.

 

 5        (g) Proceeds from the taxpayer's transfer of an account

 

 6  receivable if the sale that generated the account receivable was

 

 7  included in gross receipts for federal income tax purposes. This

 

 8  subdivision does not apply to a taxpayer that during the tax year

 

 9  both buys and sells any receivables.

 

10        (h) Proceeds from any of the following:

 

11        (i) The original issue of stock or equity instruments or

 

12  equity issued by a regulated investment company as that term is

 

13  defined under section 851 of the internal revenue code.

 

14        (ii) The original issue of debt instruments.

 

15        (i) Refunds from returned merchandise.

 

16        (j) Cash and in-kind discounts.

 

17        (k) Trade discounts.

 

18        (l) Federal, state, or local tax refunds.

 

19        (m) Security deposits.

 

20        (n) Payment of the principal portion of loans.

 

21        (o) Value of property received in a like-kind exchange.

 

22        (p) Proceeds from a sale, transaction, exchange, involuntary

 

23  conversion, maturity, redemption, repurchase, recapitalization,

 

24  or other disposition or reorganization of tangible, intangible,

 

25  or real property, less any gain from the disposition or

 

26  reorganization to the extent that the gain is included in the

 

27  taxpayer's federal taxable income, if the property satisfies 1 or


 

 1  more of the following:

 

 2        (i) The property is a capital asset as defined in section

 

 3  1221(a) of the internal revenue code.

 

 4        (ii) The property is land that qualifies as property used in

 

 5  the trade or business as defined in section 1231(b) of the

 

 6  internal revenue code.

 

 7        (iii) The property is used in a hedging transaction entered

 

 8  into by the taxpayer in the normal course of the taxpayer's trade

 

 9  or business primarily to manage the risk of exposure to foreign

 

10  currency fluctuations that affect assets, liabilities, profits,

 

11  losses, equity, or investments in foreign operations; interest

 

12  rate fluctuations; or commodity price fluctuations. For purposes

 

13  of this subparagraph, the actual transfer of title of real or

 

14  tangible personal property to another person is not a hedging

 

15  transaction. Only the overall net gain from the hedging

 

16  transactions entered into during the tax year is included in

 

17  gross receipts. As used in this subparagraph, "hedging

 

18  transaction" means that term as defined under section 1221 of the

 

19  internal revenue code regardless of whether the transaction was

 

20  identified by the taxpayer as a hedge for federal income tax

 

21  purposes, provided, however, that transactions excluded under

 

22  this subparagraph and not identified as a hedge for federal

 

23  income tax purposes shall be identifiable to the department by

 

24  the taxpayer as a hedge in its books and records.

 

25        (iv) The property is investment and trading assets managed as

 

26  part of the person's treasury function. For purposes of this

 

27  subparagraph, a person principally engaged in the trade or


 

 1  business of purchasing and selling investment and trading assets

 

 2  is not performing a treasury function. Only the overall net gain

 

 3  from the treasury function incurred during the tax year is

 

 4  included in gross receipts. As used in this subparagraph,

 

 5  "treasury function" means the pooling and management of

 

 6  investment and trading assets for the purpose of satisfying the

 

 7  cash flow or liquidity needs of the taxpayer's trade or business.

 

 8        (q) The proceeds from a policy of insurance, a settlement of

 

 9  a claim, or a judgment in a civil action less any proceeds under

 

10  this subdivision that are included in federal taxable income.

 

11        (r) For a sales finance company, as defined in section 2 of

 

12  the motor vehicle sales finance act, 1950 (Ex Sess) PA 27, MCL

 

13  492.102, and directly or indirectly owned in whole or in part by

 

14  a motor vehicle manufacturer as of January 1, 2008, and for a

 

15  person that is a broker or dealer as defined under section

 

16  78c(a)(4) or (5) of the securities exchange act of 1934, 15 USC

 

17  78c, or a person included in the unitary business group of that

 

18  broker or dealer that buys and sells for its own account,

 

19  contracts that are subject to the commodity exchange act, 7 USC 1

 

20  to 27f, amounts realized from the repayment, maturity, sale, or

 

21  redemption of the principal of a loan, bond, or mutual fund,

 

22  certificate of deposit, or similar marketable instrument provided

 

23  such instruments are not held as inventory.

 

24        (s) For a sales finance company, as defined in section 2 of

 

25  the motor vehicle sales finance act, 1950 (Ex Sess) PA 27, MCL

 

26  492.102, and directly or indirectly owned in whole or in part by

 

27  a motor vehicle manufacturer as of January 1, 2008, and for a


 

 1  person that is a broker or dealer as defined under section

 

 2  78c(a)(4) or (5) of the securities exchange act of 1934, 15 USC

 

 3  78c, or a person included in the unitary business group of that

 

 4  broker or dealer that buys and sells for its own account,

 

 5  contracts that are subject to the commodity exchange act, 7 USC 1

 

 6  to 27f, the principal amount received under a repurchase

 

 7  agreement or other transaction properly characterized as a loan.

 

 8        (t) For a mortgage company, proceeds representing the

 

 9  principal balance of loans transferred or sold in the tax year.

 

10  For purposes of this subdivision, "mortgage company" means a

 

11  person that is licensed under the mortgage brokers, lenders, and

 

12  servicers licensing act, 1987 PA 173, MCL 445.1651 to 445.1684,

 

13  or the secondary mortgage loan act, 1981 PA 125, MCL 493.51 to

 

14  493.81, and has greater than 90% of its revenues, in the ordinary

 

15  course of business, from the origination, sale, or servicing of

 

16  residential mortgage loans.

 

17        (u) For a professional employer organization, any amount

 

18  charged by a professional employer organization that represents

 

19  the actual cost of wages and salaries, benefits, worker's

 

20  compensation, payroll taxes, withholding, or other assessments

 

21  paid to or on behalf of a covered employee by the professional

 

22  employer organization under a professional employer arrangement.

 

23        (v) Any invoiced items used to provide more favorable floor

 

24  plan assistance to a person subject to the tax imposed under this

 

25  act than to a person not subject to this tax and paid by a

 

26  manufacturer, distributor, or supplier.

 

27        (w) For an individual, estate, or other person organized for


 

 1  estate or gift planning purposes, amounts received other than

 

 2  those from transactions, activities, and sources in the regular

 

 3  course of the taxpayer's trade or business. For purposes of this

 

 4  subdivision, all of the following apply:

 

 5        (i) Amounts received from transactions, activities, and

 

 6  sources in the regular course of the taxpayer's business include,

 

 7  but are not limited to, the following:

 

 8        (A) Receipts from tangible and intangible property if the

 

 9  acquisition, rental, lease, management, or disposition of the

 

10  property constitutes integral parts of the taxpayer's regular

 

11  trade or business operations.

 

12        (B) Receipts received in the course of the taxpayer's trade

 

13  or business from stock and securities of any foreign or domestic

 

14  corporation and dividend and interest income.

 

15        (C) Receipts derived from isolated sales, leases,

 

16  assignments, licenses, divisions, or other infrequently occurring

 

17  dispositions, transfers, or transactions involving tangible,

 

18  intangible, or real property if the property is or was used in

 

19  the taxpayer's trade or business operation.

 

20        (D) Receipts derived from the sale of an interest in a

 

21  business that constitutes an integral part of the taxpayer's

 

22  regular trade or business.

 

23        (E) Receipts derived from the lease or rental of real

 

24  property.

 

25        (ii) Receipts excluded from gross receipts include, but are

 

26  not limited to, the following:

 

27        (A) Receipts derived from investment activity, including


 

 1  interest, dividends, royalties, and gains from an investment

 

 2  portfolio or retirement account, if the investment activity is

 

 3  not part of the taxpayer's trade or business.

 

 4        (B) Receipts derived from the disposition of tangible,

 

 5  intangible, or real property held for personal use and enjoyment,

 

 6  such as a personal residence or personal assets.

 

 7        (x) Receipts derived from investment activity by a person

 

 8  that is organized exclusively to conduct investment activity and

 

 9  that does not conduct investment activity for any person other

 

10  than an individual or a person related to that individual or by a

 

11  common trust fund established under the collective investment

 

12  funds act, 1941 PA 174, MCL 555.101 to 555.113. For purposes of

 

13  this subdivision, a person is related to an individual if that

 

14  person is a spouse, brother or sister, whether of the whole or

 

15  half blood or by adoption, ancestor, lineal descendent of that

 

16  individual or related person, or a trust benefiting that

 

17  individual or 1 or more persons related to that individual.

 

18        (y) Interest income and dividends derived from obligations

 

19  or securities of the United States government, this state, or any

 

20  governmental unit of this state. As used in this subdivision,

 

21  "governmental unit" means that term as defined in section 3 of

 

22  the shared credit rating act, 1985 PA 227, MCL 141.1053.

 

23        (z) Dividends and royalties received or deemed received from

 

24  a foreign operating entity or a person other than a United States

 

25  person, including, but not limited to, the amounts determined

 

26  under section 78 of the internal revenue code and sections 951 to

 

27  964 of the internal revenue code.


 

 1        (aa) Each of the following:

 

 2        (i) Sales or use taxes collected from or reimbursed by a

 

 3  consumer or other taxes the taxpayer collected directly from or

 

 4  was reimbursed by a purchaser and remitted to a local, state, or

 

 5  federal tax authority.

 

 6        (ii) In the case of receipts from the sale of cigarettes or

 

 7  tobacco products by a wholesale dealer, retail dealer,

 

 8  distributor, manufacturer, or seller, an amount equal to the

 

 9  federal and state excise taxes paid by any person on or for such

 

10  cigarettes or tobacco products under subtitle E of the internal

 

11  revenue code or other applicable state law.

 

12        (iii) In the case of receipts from the sale of motor fuel by a

 

13  person with a motor fuel tax license or a retail dealer, an

 

14  amount equal to federal and state excise taxes paid by any person

 

15  on such motor fuel under section 4081 of the internal revenue

 

16  code or under other applicable state law.

 

17        (iv) In the case of receipts from the sale of beer, wine, or

 

18  intoxicating liquor by a person holding a license to sell,

 

19  distribute, or produce those products, an amount equal to federal

 

20  and state excise taxes paid by any person on or for such beer,

 

21  wine, or intoxicating liquor under subtitle E of the internal

 

22  revenue code or other applicable state law.

 

23        (v) In the case of receipts from the sale of communication,

 

24  video, internet access and related services and equipment, any

 

25  government imposed tax, fee, or other imposition in the nature of

 

26  a tax or fee required by law, ordinance, regulation, ruling, or

 

27  other legal authority and authorized to be charged on a


 

 1  customer's bill or invoice.

 

 2        (vi) In the case of receipts from the sale of electricity,

 

 3  natural gas, or other energy source, any government imposed tax,

 

 4  fee, or other imposition in the nature of a tax or fee required

 

 5  by law, ordinance, regulation, ruling, or other legal authority

 

 6  and authorized to be charged on a customer's bill or invoice.

 

 7        (vii) Any deposit required under any of the following:

 

 8        (A) 1976 IL 1, MCL 445.571 to 445.576.

 

 9        (B) R 436.1629 of the Michigan administrative code.

 

10        (C) R 436.1723a of the Michigan administrative code.

 

11        (D) Any substantially similar beverage container deposit law

 

12  of another state.

 

13        (viii) An excise tax collected pursuant to the airport parking

 

14  tax act, 1987 PA 248, MCL 207.371 to 207.383, collected from or

 

15  reimbursed by a consumer and remitted as provided in the airport

 

16  parking tax act, 1987 PA 248, MCL 207.371 to 207.383.

 

17        (bb) For a regulated investment company as that term is

 

18  defined under section 851 of the internal revenue code, receipts

 

19  derived from investment activity by that regulated investment

 

20  company.

 

21        (cc) For fiscal years that begin after September 30, 2009,

 

22  unless the state budget director certifies to the state treasurer

 

23  by January 1 of that fiscal year that the federally certified

 

24  rates for actuarial soundness required under 42 CFR 438.6 and

 

25  that are specifically developed for Michigan's health maintenance

 

26  organizations that hold a contract with this state for medicaid

 

27  services provide explicit adjustment for their obligations


 

 1  required for payment of the tax under this act, amounts received

 

 2  by the taxpayer during that fiscal year for medicaid premium or

 

 3  reimbursement of costs associated with service provided to a

 

 4  medicaid recipient or beneficiary.

 

 5        (dd) For a taxpayer that provides health care management

 

 6  consulting services, amounts received by the taxpayer as fees

 

 7  from its clients that are expended by the taxpayer to reimburse

 

 8  those clients for labor and nonlabor services that are paid by

 

 9  the client and reimbursed to the client pursuant to a services

 

10  agreement.

 

11        (4) "Insurance company" means an authorized insurer as

 

12  defined in section 108 of the insurance code of 1956, 1956 PA

 

13  218, MCL 500.108.

 

14        (5) "Internal revenue code" means the United States internal

 

15  revenue code of 1986 in effect on January 1, 2012 or, at the

 

16  option of the taxpayer, in effect for the tax year.

 

17        Sec. 609. (1) "Person" means an individual, firm, bank,

 

18  financial institution, insurance company, limited partnership,

 

19  limited liability partnership, copartnership, partnership, joint

 

20  venture, association, corporation, subchapter S corporation,

 

21  limited liability company, receiver, estate, trust, or any other

 

22  group or combination of groups acting as a unit.

 

23        (2) "Professional employer organization" means an

 

24  organization, other than an organization whose business

 

25  activities are included in industry group 736 under the standard

 

26  industrial classification code as compiled by the United States

 

27  department of labor, that provides the management and


 

 1  administration of the human resources of another entity by

 

 2  contractually assuming substantial employer rights and

 

 3  responsibilities through a professional employer agreement that

 

 4  establishes an employer relationship with the leased officers or

 

 5  employees assigned to the other entity by doing all of the

 

 6  following:

 

 7        (a) Maintaining a right of direction and control of

 

 8  employees' work, although this responsibility may be shared with

 

 9  the other entity.

 

10        (b) Paying wages and employment taxes of the employees out

 

11  of its own accounts.

 

12        (c) Reporting, collecting, and depositing state and federal

 

13  employment taxes for the employees.

 

14        (d) Retaining a right to hire and fire employees.

 

15        (3) "Revenue mile" means the transportation for a

 

16  consideration of 1 net ton in weight or 1 passenger the distance

 

17  of 1 mile.

 

18        (4) "Sale" or "sales" means, except as provided in

 

19  subdivision (e), the amounts received by the taxpayer as

 

20  consideration from the following:

 

21        (a) The transfer of title to, or possession of, property

 

22  that is stock in trade or other property of a kind that would

 

23  properly be included in the inventory of the taxpayer if on hand

 

24  at the close of the tax period or property held by the taxpayer

 

25  primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of the

 

26  taxpayer's trade or business. For intangible property, the

 

27  amounts received shall be limited to any gain received from the


 

 1  disposition of that property.

 

 2        (b) The performance of services that constitute business

 

 3  activities.

 

 4        (c) The rental, lease, licensing, or use of tangible or

 

 5  intangible property, including interest that constitutes business

 

 6  activity.

 

 7        (d) Any combination of business activities described in

 

 8  subdivisions (a), (b), and (c).

 

 9        (e) For taxpayers not engaged in any other business

 

10  activities, sales include interest, dividends, and other income

 

11  from investment assets and activities and from trading assets and

 

12  activities.

 

13        (5) "Shareholder" means a person who owns outstanding stock

 

14  in a corporation or is a member of a business entity that files

 

15  as a corporation for federal income tax purposes. An individual

 

16  is considered as the owner of the stock owned, directly or

 

17  indirectly, by or for family members as defined by section

 

18  318(a)(1) of the internal revenue code.

 

19        (6) "State" means any state of the United States, the

 

20  District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any

 

21  territory or possession of the United States, and any foreign

 

22  country, or a political subdivision of any of the foregoing.

 

23        Sec. 611. (1) "Tangible personal property" means that term

 

24  as defined in section 2 of the use tax act, 1937 PA 94, MCL

 

25  205.92.

 

26        (2) "Tax" means the tax imposed under this part, including

 

27  interest and penalties under this part, unless the term is given


 

 1  a more limited meaning in the context of this part or a provision

 

 2  of this part.

 

 3        (3) "Tax-exempt person" means an organization that is exempt

 

 4  from federal income tax under section 501(a) of the internal

 

 5  revenue code, except the following:

 

 6        (a) An organization exempt under section 501(c)(12) or (16)

 

 7  of the internal revenue code.

 

 8        (b) An organization exempt under section 501(c)(4) of the

 

 9  internal revenue code that would be exempt under section

 

10  501(c)(12) of the internal revenue code but for its failure to

 

11  meet the requirement in section 501(c)(12) that 85% or more of

 

12  its income must consist of amounts collected from members.

 

13        (4) "Tax year" means the calendar year, or the fiscal year

 

14  ending during the calendar year, upon the basis of which the tax

 

15  base of a taxpayer is computed under this part. If a return is

 

16  made for a fractional part of a year, tax year means the period

 

17  for which the return is made. Except for the first return

 

18  required by this part, a taxpayer's tax year is for the same

 

19  period as is covered by its federal income tax return. A taxpayer

 

20  that has a 52- or 53-week tax year beginning not more than 7 days

 

21  before the end of any month is considered to have a tax year

 

22  beginning on the first day of the subsequent month. If the term

 

23  tax year in this part is used in reference to 1 or more previous

 

24  or preceding tax years and those referenced tax years are before

 

25  January 1, 2012, then those referenced tax years are deemed those

 

26  same tax years during which the Michigan business tax act, 2007

 

27  PA 36, MCL 208.1101 to 208.1601, applied.


 

 1        (5) "Taxpayer" means a corporation, insurance company,

 

 2  financial institution, or unitary business group, whichever is

 

 3  applicable under each chapter, that is liable for a tax,

 

 4  interest, or penalty under this part. For purposes of chapters 11

 

 5  and 14, taxpayer does not include an insurance company or a

 

 6  financial institution. For purposes of chapter 12, unless

 

 7  specifically included in the section, taxpayer does not include a

 

 8  corporation or a financial institution. For purposes of chapter

 

 9  13, taxpayer does not include a corporation or an insurance

 

10  company.

 

11        (6) "Unitary business group" means a group of United States

 

12  persons that are corporations, insurance companies, or financial

 

13  institutions, other than a foreign operating entity, 1 of which

 

14  owns or controls, directly or indirectly, more than 50% of the

 

15  ownership interest with voting rights or ownership interests that

 

16  confer comparable rights to voting rights of the other members,

 

17  and that has business activities or operations which result in a

 

18  flow of value between or among members included in the unitary

 

19  business group or has business activities or operations that are

 

20  integrated with, are dependent upon, or contribute to each other.

 

21        (7) "United States person" means that term as defined in

 

22  section 7701(a)(30) of the internal revenue code.

 

23        (8) "Unrelated business activity" means, for a tax-exempt

 

24  person, business activity directly connected with an unrelated

 

25  trade or business as defined in section 513 of the internal

 

26  revenue code.

 

27                           CHAPTER 11


 

 1        Sec. 621. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this part or

 

 2  under subsection (2), a taxpayer has substantial nexus in this

 

 3  state and is subject to the tax imposed under this part if the

 

 4  taxpayer has a physical presence in this state for a period of

 

 5  more than 1 day during the tax year, or if the taxpayer actively

 

 6  solicits sales in this state and has gross receipts of

 

 7  $350,000.00 or more sourced to this state.

 

 8        (2) For purpose of this section, "actively solicits" shall

 

 9  be defined by the department through written guidance that shall

 

10  be applied prospectively.

 

11        (3) As used in this section, "physical presence" means any

 

12  activity conducted by the taxpayer or on behalf of the taxpayer

 

13  by the taxpayer's employee, agent, or independent contractor

 

14  acting in a representative capacity. Physical presence does not

 

15  include the activities of professionals providing services in a

 

16  professional capacity or other service providers if the activity

 

17  is not significantly associated with the taxpayer's ability to

 

18  establish and maintain a market in this state.

 

19        Sec. 623. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this part,

 

20  there is levied and imposed a corporate income tax on every

 

21  taxpayer with business activity within this state unless

 

22  prohibited by 15 USC 381 to 384. The corporate income tax is

 

23  imposed on the corporate income tax base, after allocation or

 

24  apportionment to this state, at the rate of 6.0%.

 

25        (2) The corporate income tax base means a taxpayer's

 

26  business income subject to the following adjustments, before

 

27  allocation or apportionment, and the adjustment in subsection (4)


 

 1  after allocation or apportionment:

 

 2        (a) Add interest income and dividends derived from

 

 3  obligations or securities of states other than this state, in the

 

 4  same amount that was excluded from federal taxable income, less

 

 5  the related portion of expenses not deducted in computing federal

 

 6  taxable income because of sections 265 and 291 of the internal

 

 7  revenue code.

 

 8        (b) Add all taxes on or measured by net income and the tax

 

 9  imposed under this part to the extent that the taxes were

 

10  deducted in arriving at federal taxable income.

 

11        (c) Add any carryback or carryover of a net operating loss

 

12  to the extent deducted in arriving at federal taxable income.

 

13        (d) To the extent included in federal taxable income, deduct

 

14  dividends and royalties received from persons other than United

 

15  States persons and foreign operating entities, including, but not

 

16  limited to, amounts determined under section 78 of the internal

 

17  revenue code or sections 951 to 964 of the internal revenue code.

 

18        (e) Except as otherwise provided under this subdivision, to

 

19  the extent deducted in arriving at federal taxable income, add

 

20  any royalty, interest, or other expense paid to a person related

 

21  to the taxpayer by ownership or control for the use of an

 

22  intangible asset if the person is not included in the taxpayer's

 

23  unitary business group. The addition of any royalty, interest, or

 

24  other expense described under this subdivision is not required to

 

25  be added if the taxpayer can demonstrate that the transaction has

 

26  a nontax business purpose, is conducted with arm's-length pricing

 

27  and rates and terms as applied in accordance with sections 482


 

 1  and 1274(d) of the internal revenue code, and 1 of the following

 

 2  is true:

 

 3        (i) The transaction is a pass through of another transaction

 

 4  between a third party and the related person with comparable

 

 5  rates and terms.

 

 6        (ii) An addition would result in double taxation. For

 

 7  purposes of this subparagraph, double taxation exists if the

 

 8  transaction is subject to tax in another jurisdiction.

 

 9        (iii) An addition would be unreasonable as determined by the

 

10  treasurer.

 

11        (iv) The related person recipient of the transaction is

 

12  organized under the laws of a foreign nation which has in force a

 

13  comprehensive income tax treaty with the United States.

 

14        (f) To the extent included in federal taxable income, deduct

 

15  interest income derived from United States obligations.

 

16        (3) For purposes of subsection (2), the business income of a

 

17  unitary business group is the sum of the business income of each

 

18  person included in the unitary business group less any items of

 

19  income and related deductions arising from transactions including

 

20  dividends between persons included in the unitary business group.

 

21        (4) Deduct any available business loss incurred after

 

22  December 31, 2011. As used in this subsection, "business loss"

 

23  means a negative business income taxable amount after allocation

 

24  or apportionment. The business loss shall be carried forward to

 

25  the year immediately succeeding the loss year as an offset to the

 

26  allocated or apportioned corporate income tax base, then

 

27  successively to the next 9 taxable years following the loss year


 

 1  or until the loss is used up, whichever occurs first, but for not

 

 2  more than 10 taxable years after the loss year.

 

 3        Sec. 625. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section,

 

 4  the following are exempt from the tax imposed by this part:

 

 5        (a) The United States, this state, other states, and the

 

 6  agencies, political subdivisions, and enterprises of the United

 

 7  States, this state, and other states.

 

 8        (b) A person who is exempt from federal income tax under the

 

 9  internal revenue code except the following:

 

10        (i) An organization included under section 501(c)(12) or

 

11  501(c)(16) of the internal revenue code.

 

12        (ii) An organization exempt under section 501(c)(4) of the

 

13  internal revenue code that would be exempt under section

 

14  501(c)(12) of the internal revenue code except that it failed to

 

15  meet the requirements in section 501(c)(12) that 85% or more of

 

16  its income consist of amounts collected from members.

 

17        (iii) The tax base attributable to unrelated business

 

18  activities giving rise to the unrelated business taxable income

 

19  of an exempt person.

 

20        (c) A foreign person that is domiciled in a member country

 

21  of the North American free trade agreement is not subject to

 

22  taxation under this part if the foreign person is domiciled in a

 

23  subnational jurisdiction that does not impose an income tax on a

 

24  similarly situated person domiciled in this state whose presence

 

25  in the foreign country is the same as the foreign person's

 

26  presence in the United States. If a qualifying foreign person is

 

27  domiciled in a subnational jurisdiction that does not impose an


 

 1  income tax on businesses, but instead imposes some other type of

 

 2  subnational business tax, that foreign person is not subject to

 

 3  taxation under this part if that subnational business tax is not

 

 4  imposed on a similarly situated person domiciled in this state

 

 5  whose presence in the foreign country is the same as the foreign

 

 6  person's presence in the United States.

 

 7        (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of this part to the

 

 8  contrary, a foreign person subject to tax under this part shall

 

 9  calculate its corporate income tax base under this section.

 

10  Except as otherwise provided in this section, the corporate

 

11  income tax base of a foreign person is subject to all adjustments

 

12  and other provisions of this part. However, the corporate income

 

13  tax base shall not include proceeds from sales where title passes

 

14  outside the United States.

 

15        (3) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the

 

16  corporate income tax base of a foreign person includes the sum of

 

17  business income and the adjustments under section 623 that are

 

18  related to United States business activity.

 

19        (4) The sales factor for a foreign person is a fraction, the

 

20  numerator of which is the taxpayer's total sales in this state

 

21  where title passes inside the United States during the tax year

 

22  and the denominator of which is the taxpayer's total sales in the

 

23  United States where title passes inside the United States during

 

24  the tax year.

 

25        (5) As used in this section:

 

26        (a) "Business income" means, for a foreign person, gross

 

27  income attributable to the taxpayer's United States business


 

 1  activity and gross income derived from sources within the United

 

 2  States minus the deductions allowed under the internal revenue

 

 3  code that are related to that gross income. Gross income includes

 

 4  the proceeds from sales shipped or delivered to any purchaser

 

 5  within the United States and for which title transfers within the

 

 6  United States; proceeds from services performed within the United

 

 7  States; and a pro rata proportion of the proceeds from services

 

 8  performed both within and outside the United States to the extent

 

 9  the recipient receives benefit of the services within the United

 

10  States.

 

11        (b) "Domiciled" means the location of the headquarters of

 

12  the trade or business from which the trade or business of the

 

13  foreign person is principally managed and directed.

 

14        (c) "Foreign person" means a person formed under the laws of

 

15  a foreign country or a political subdivision of a foreign

 

16  country, whether or not the person is subject to taxation under

 

17  the internal revenue code.

 

18                           CHAPTER 12

 

19        Sec. 635. (1) Except as otherwise provided under subsection

 

20  (4), each insurance company shall pay a tax determined under this

 

21  chapter.

 

22        (2) The tax imposed by this chapter on each insurance

 

23  company shall be a tax equal to 1.25% of gross direct premiums

 

24  written on property or risk located or residing in this state.

 

25  Direct premiums do not include any of the following:

 

26        (a) Premiums on policies not taken.

 

27        (b) Returned premiums on canceled policies.


 

 1        (c) Receipts from the sale of annuities.

 

 2        (d) Receipts on reinsurance premiums if the tax has been

 

 3  paid on the original premiums.

 

 4        (e) The first $190,000,000.00 of disability insurance

 

 5  premiums written in this state, other than credit insurance and

 

 6  disability income insurance premiums, of each insurance company

 

 7  subject to tax under this chapter. This exemption shall be

 

 8  reduced by $2.00 for each $1.00 by which the insurance company's

 

 9  gross direct premiums from insurance carrier services in this

 

10  state and outside this state exceed $280,000,000.00.

 

11        (3) The tax calculated under this chapter is in lieu of all

 

12  other privilege or franchise fees or taxes imposed by this part

 

13  or any other law of this state, except taxes on real and personal

 

14  property, taxes collected under the general sales tax act, 1933

 

15  PA 167, MCL 205.51 to 205.78, and taxes collected under the use

 

16  tax act, 1937 PA 94, MCL 205.91 to 205.111, and except as

 

17  otherwise provided in the insurance code of 1956, 1956 PA 218,

 

18  MCL 500.100 to 500.8302.

 

19        (4) The tax imposed and levied under this chapter does not

 

20  apply to an insurance company authorized under chapter 46 or 47

 

21  of the insurance code of 1956, 1956 PA 218, MCL 500.4601 to

 

22  500.4673 and 500.4701 to 500.4747.

 

23        (5) For a taxpayer subject to the tax imposed under chapter

 

24  11, that portion of the tax base attributable to the services

 

25  provided by an attorney-in-fact to a reciprocal insurer pursuant

 

26  to chapter 72 of the insurance code of 1956, 1956 PA 218, MCL

 

27  500.7200 to 500.7234, is exempt from the tax imposed by that


 

 1  chapter.

 

 2        Sec. 637. (1) An insurance company may claim a credit

 

 3  against the tax imposed under this chapter in the following

 

 4  amounts:

 

 5        (a) Amounts paid to the Michigan worker's compensation

 

 6  placement facility pursuant to chapter 23 of the insurance code

 

 7  of 1956, 1956 PA 218, MCL 500.2301 to 500.2352.

 

 8        (b) Amounts paid to the Michigan basic property insurance

 

 9  association pursuant to chapter 29 of the insurance code of 1956,

 

10  1956 PA 218, MCL 500.2901 to 500.2954.

 

11        (c) Amounts paid to the Michigan automobile insurance

 

12  placement facility pursuant to chapter 33 of the insurance code

 

13  of 1956, 1956 PA 218, MCL 500.3301 to 500.3390.

 

14        (d) Amounts paid to the property and casualty guaranty

 

15  association pursuant to chapter 79 of the insurance code of 1956,

 

16  1956 PA 218, MCL 500.7901 to 500.7949.

 

17        (e) Amounts paid to the Michigan life and health guaranty

 

18  association pursuant to chapter 77 of the insurance code of 1956,

 

19  1956 PA 218, MCL 500.7701 to 500.7780.

 

20        (2) The assessments of an insurance company from the

 

21  immediately preceding tax year shall be used in calculating the

 

22  credits allowed under this section for each tax year.

 

23        Sec. 639. An insurance company shall be allowed a credit

 

24  against the tax imposed under this chapter in an amount equal to

 

25  50% of the examination fees paid by the insurance company during

 

26  the tax year pursuant to section 224 of the insurance code of

 

27  1956, 1956 PA 218, MCL 500.224.


 

 1        Sec. 641. (1) For amounts paid pursuant to section 352 of

 

 2  the worker's disability compensation act of 1969, 1969 PA 317,

 

 3  MCL 418.352, an insurance company subject to the worker's

 

 4  disability compensation act of 1969, 1969 PA 317, MCL 418.101 to

 

 5  418.941, may claim a credit against the tax imposed under this

 

 6  chapter for the tax year in an amount equal to the amount paid

 

 7  during that tax year by the insurance company pursuant to section

 

 8  352 of the worker's disability compensation act of 1969, 1969 PA

 

 9  317, MCL 418.352, as certified by the director of the bureau of

 

10  worker's disability compensation pursuant to section 391(6) of

 

11  the worker's disability compensation act of 1969, 1969 PA 317,

 

12  MCL 418.391.

 

13        (2) An insurance company claiming a credit under this

 

14  section may claim a portion of the credit allowed under this

 

15  section equal to the payments made during a calendar quarter

 

16  pursuant to section 352 of the worker's disability compensation

 

17  act of 1969, 1969 PA 317, MCL 418.352, against the estimated tax

 

18  payments made under section 681. Any credit in excess of an

 

19  estimated payment shall be refunded to the insurance company on a

 

20  quarterly basis within 60 calendar days after receipt of a

 

21  properly completed estimated tax return. Any subsequent increase

 

22  or decrease in the amount claimed for payments made by the

 

23  insurance company shall be reflected in the amount of the credit

 

24  taken for the calendar quarter in which the amount of the

 

25  adjustment is finalized.

 

26        (3) The credit under this section is in addition to any

 

27  other credits the insurance company is eligible for under this


 

 1  chapter.

 

 2        (4) Any amount of the credit under this section that is in

 

 3  excess of the tax liability of the insurance company for the tax

 

 4  year shall be refunded, without interest, by the department to

 

 5  the insurance company within 60 calendar days of receipt of a

 

 6  properly completed annual return required under this part.

 

 7        Sec. 643. (1) An insurance company is subject to the tax

 

 8  imposed by this chapter or by section 476a of the insurance code

 

 9  of 1956, 1956 PA 218, MCL 500.476a, if applicable, whichever is

 

10  greater.

 

11        (2) The tax year of an insurance company is the calendar

 

12  year.

 

13        (3) Notwithstanding section 685, an insurance company shall

 

14  file the annual return required under this part before March 2

 

15  after the end of the tax year, and an automatic extension under

 

16  section 685(3) is not available.

 

17        (4) For the purpose of calculating an estimated payment

 

18  required by section 681, the greater of the amount of tax imposed

 

19  on an insurance company under this chapter or under section 476a

 

20  of the insurance code of 1956, 1956 PA 218, MCL 500.476a, shall

 

21  be considered the insurance company's tax liability for the

 

22  immediately preceding tax year.

 

23        (5) The requirements of section 28(1)(f) of 1941 PA 122, MCL

 

24  205.28, that prohibit an employee or authorized representative

 

25  of, a former employee or authorized representative of, or anyone

 

26  connected with the department from divulging any facts or

 

27  information obtained in connection with the administration of a


 

 1  tax, do not apply to disclosure of a tax return required by this

 

 2  section.

 

 3                           CHAPTER 13

 

 4        Sec. 651. As used in this chapter:

 

 5        (a) "Billing address" means the location indicated in the

 

 6  books and records of the financial institution on the first day

 

 7  of the tax year or on a later date in the tax year when the

 

 8  customer relationship began as the address where any notice,

 

 9  statement, or bill relating to a customer's account is mailed.

 

10        (b) "Borrower is located in this state" or "credit card

 

11  holder is located in this state" means a borrower, other than a

 

12  credit card holder, that is engaged in a trade or business which

 

13  maintains its commercial domicile in this state, or a borrower

 

14  that is not engaged in a trade or business or a credit card

 

15  holder whose billing address is in this state.

 

16        (c) "Commercial domicile" means the headquarters of the

 

17  trade or business, that is the place from which the trade or

 

18  business is principally managed and directed, or if a financial

 

19  institution is organized under the laws of a foreign country, of

 

20  the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or possession

 

21  of the United States, such financial institution's commercial

 

22  domicile shall be deemed for the purposes of this chapter to be

 

23  the state of the United States or the District of Columbia from

 

24  which such financial institution's trade or business in the

 

25  United States is principally managed and directed. It shall be

 

26  presumed, subject to rebuttal, that the location from which the

 

27  financial institution's trade or business is principally managed


 

 1  and directed is the state of the United States or the District of

 

 2  Columbia to which the greatest number of employees are regularly

 

 3  connected or out of which they are working, irrespective of where

 

 4  the services of such employees are performed, as of the last day

 

 5  of the tax year.

 

 6        (d) "Credit card" means a credit, travel, or entertainment

 

 7  card.

 

 8        (e) "Credit card issuer's reimbursement fee" means the fee a

 

 9  financial institution receives from a merchant's bank because 1

 

10  of the persons to whom the financial institution has issued a

 

11  credit card has charged merchandise or services to the credit

 

12  card.

 

13        (f) "Financial institution" means any of the following:

 

14        (i) A bank holding company, a national bank, a state

 

15  chartered bank, an office of thrift supervision chartered bank or

 

16  thrift institution, a savings and loan holding company other than

 

17  a diversified savings and loan holding company as defined in 12

 

18  USC 1467a(a)(F), or a federally chartered farm credit system

 

19  institution.

 

20        (ii) Any entity, other than an entity subject to the tax

 

21  imposed under chapter 12, who is directly or indirectly owned by

 

22  an entity described in subparagraph (i) and is a member of the

 

23  unitary business group.

 

24        (iii) A unitary business group of entities described in

 

25  subparagraph (i) or (ii), or both.

 

26        (g) "Gross business" means the sum of the following less

 

27  transactions between those entities included in a unitary


 

 1  business group:

 

 2        (i) Fees, commissions, or other compensation for financial

 

 3  services.

 

 4        (ii) Net gains, not less than zero, from the sale of loans

 

 5  and other intangibles.

 

 6        (iii) Net gains, not less than zero, from trading in stocks,

 

 7  bonds, or other securities.

 

 8        (iv) Interest charged to customers for carrying debit

 

 9  balances of margin accounts.

 

10        (v) Interest and dividends received.

 

11        (vi) Any other gross proceeds resulting from the operation as

 

12  a financial institution.

 

13        (h) "Loan" means any extension of credit resulting from

 

14  direct negotiations between the financial institution and its

 

15  customer, or the purchase, in whole or in part, of such extension

 

16  of credit from another. Loans include participations,

 

17  syndications, and leases treated as loans for federal income tax

 

18  purposes. Loans shall not include properties treated as loans

 

19  under section 595 of the internal revenue code, futures or

 

20  forward contracts, options, notional principal contracts such as

 

21  swaps, credit card receivables, including purchased credit card

 

22  relationships, non-interest-bearing balances due from depository

 

23  institutions, cash items in the process of collection, federal

 

24  funds sold, securities purchased under agreements to resell,

 

25  assets held in a trading account, securities, interests in a real

 

26  estate mortgage investment conduit, or other mortgage-backed or

 

27  asset-backed security, and other similar items.


 

 1        (i) "Loan secured by real property" means that 50% or more

 

 2  of the aggregate value of the collateral used to secure a loan or

 

 3  other obligation, when valued at fair market value as of the time

 

 4  the original loan or obligation was incurred, was real property.

 

 5        (j) "Merchant discount" means the fee or negotiated discount

 

 6  charged to a merchant by the financial institution for the

 

 7  privilege of participating in a program whereby a credit card is

 

 8  accepted in payment for merchandise or services sold to the

 

 9  credit card holder.

 

10        (k) "Michigan obligations" means a bond, note, or other

 

11  obligation issued by a governmental unit described in section 3

 

12  of the shared credit rating act, 1985 PA 227, MCL 141.1053.

 

13        (l) "Participation" means an extension of credit in which an

 

14  undivided ownership interest is held on a pro rata basis in a

 

15  single loan or pool of loans and related collateral. In a loan

 

16  participation, the credit originator initially makes the loan and

 

17  then subsequently resells all or a portion of it to other

 

18  lenders. The participation may or may not be known to the

 

19  borrower.

 

20        (m) "Principal base of operations", with respect to

 

21  transportation property, means the place of more or less

 

22  permanent nature from which said property is regularly directed

 

23  or controlled. With respect to an employee, the principal base of

 

24  operations means the place of more or less permanent nature from

 

25  which the employee regularly does any of the following:

 

26        (i) Starts his or her work and to which he or she customarily

 

27  returns in order to receive instructions from his or her


 

 1  employer.

 

 2        (ii) Communicates with his or her customers or other persons.

 

 3        (iii) Performs any other functions necessary to the exercise

 

 4  of his or her trade or profession at some other point or points.

 

 5        (n) "Real property owned" and "tangible personal property

 

 6  owned" mean real and tangible personal property respectively on

 

 7  which the financial institution may claim depreciation for

 

 8  federal income tax purposes or to which the financial institution

 

 9  holds legal title and on which no other person may claim

 

10  depreciation for federal income tax purposes or could claim

 

11  depreciation if subject to federal income tax. Real and tangible

 

12  personal properties do not include coin, currency, or property

 

13  acquired in lieu of or pursuant to a foreclosure.

 

14        (o) "Regular place of business" means an office at which the

 

15  financial institution carries on its business in a regular and

 

16  systematic manner and which is continuously maintained, occupied,

 

17  and used by employees of the financial institution. The financial

 

18  institution shall have the burden of proving that an investment

 

19  asset or activity or trading asset or activity was properly

 

20  assigned to a regular place of business outside of this state by

 

21  demonstrating that the day-to-day decisions regarding the asset

 

22  or activity occurred at a regular place of business outside this

 

23  state. Where the day-to-day decisions regarding an investment

 

24  asset or activity or trading asset or activity occur at more than

 

25  1 regular place of business and 1 such regular place of business

 

26  is in this state and 1 such regular place of business is outside

 

27  this state, such asset or activity shall be considered to be


 

 1  located at the regular place of business of the financial

 

 2  institution where the investment or trading policies or

 

 3  guidelines with respect to the asset or activity are established.

 

 4  Unless the financial institution demonstrates to the contrary,

 

 5  such policies and guidelines shall be presumed to be established

 

 6  at the commercial domicile of the financial institution.

 

 7        (p) "Rolling stock" means railroad freight or passenger

 

 8  cars, locomotives, or other rail cars.

 

 9        (q) "Syndication" means an extension of credit in which 2 or

 

10  more persons finance the credit and each person is at risk only

 

11  up to a specified percentage of the total extension of the credit

 

12  or up to a specified dollar amount.

 

13        (r) "Transportation property" means vehicles and vessels

 

14  capable of moving under their own power, such as aircraft,

 

15  trains, water vessels, and motor vehicles, as well as any

 

16  equipment or containers attached to such property, such as

 

17  rolling stock, barges, or trailers.

 

18        (s) "United States obligations" means all obligations of the

 

19  United States exempt from taxation under 31 USC 3124(a) or exempt

 

20  under the United States constitution or any federal statute,

 

21  including the obligations of any instrumentality or agency of the

 

22  United States that are exempt from state or local taxation under

 

23  the United States constitution or any statute of the United

 

24  States.

 

25        Sec. 653. (1) Every financial institution with nexus in this

 

26  state as determined under section 621 is subject to a franchise

 

27  tax. The franchise tax is imposed upon the tax base of the


 

 1  financial institution as determined under section 655 after

 

 2  allocation or apportionment to this state, at the rate of 0.29%.

 

 3        (2) The tax under this chapter is in lieu of the tax levied

 

 4  and imposed under chapter 11 of this part.

 

 5        Sec. 655. (1) For a financial institution, tax base means

 

 6  the financial institution's net capital. Net capital means equity

 

 7  capital as computed in accordance with generally accepted

 

 8  accounting principles less the average daily book value of United

 

 9  States obligations and Michigan obligations. If the financial

 

10  institution does not maintain its books and records in accordance

 

11  with generally accepted accounting principles, net capital shall

 

12  be computed in accordance with the books and records used by the

 

13  financial institution, so long as the method fairly reflects the

 

14  financial institution's net capital for purposes of the tax

 

15  levied by this chapter. Net capital does not include up to 125%

 

16  of the minimum regulatory capitalization requirements of a person

 

17  subject to the tax imposed under chapter 12.

 

18        (2) Net capital shall be determined by adding the financial

 

19  institution's net capital as of the close of the current tax year

 

20  and preceding 4 tax years and dividing the resulting sum by 5. If

 

21  a financial institution has not been in existence for a period of

 

22  5 tax years, net capital shall be determined by adding together

 

23  the financial institution's net capital for the number of tax

 

24  years the financial institution has been in existence and

 

25  dividing the resulting sum by the number of years the financial

 

26  institution has been in existence. For purposes of this section,

 

27  a partial year shall be treated as a full year.


 

 1        (3) For a unitary business group of financial institutions,

 

 2  net capital calculated under this section does not include the

 

 3  investment of 1 member of the unitary business group in another

 

 4  member of that unitary business group.

 

 5        (4) For purposes of this section, each of the following

 

 6  applies:

 

 7        (a) A change in identity, form, or place of organization of

 

 8  1 financial institution shall be treated as if a single financial

 

 9  institution had been in existence for the entire tax year in

 

10  which the change occurred and each tax year after the change.

 

11        (b) The combination of 2 or more financial institutions into

 

12  1 shall be treated as if the constituent financial institutions

 

13  had been a single financial institution in existence for the

 

14  entire tax year in which the combination occurred and each tax

 

15  year after the combination, and the book values and deductions

 

16  for United States obligations and Michigan obligations of the

 

17  constituent institutions shall be combined. A combination shall

 

18  include any acquisition required to be accounted for by the

 

19  surviving financial institution in accordance with generally

 

20  accepted accounting principles or a statutory merger or

 

21  consolidation.

 

22        Sec. 657. (1) Except as otherwise provided under this

 

23  chapter, the tax base of a financial institution whose business

 

24  activities are confined solely to this state shall be allocated

 

25  to this state. The tax base of a financial institution whose

 

26  business activities are subject to tax both within and outside of

 

27  this state shall be apportioned to this state by multiplying the


 

 1  tax base by the gross business factor.

 

 2        (2) A financial institution whose business activities are

 

 3  subject to tax both within and outside of this state is subject

 

 4  to tax in another state in either of the following circumstances:

 

 5        (a) The financial institution is subject to a business

 

 6  privilege tax, a net income tax, a franchise tax measured by net

 

 7  income, a franchise tax for the privilege of doing business, or a

 

 8  corporate stock tax or a tax of the type imposed under this part

 

 9  in that state.

 

10        (b) That state has jurisdiction to subject the financial

 

11  institution to 1 or more of the taxes listed in subdivision (a)

 

12  regardless of whether that state does or does not subject the

 

13  financial institution to that tax.

 

14        (3) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (4), the

 

15  gross business factor is a fraction, the numerator of which is

 

16  the total gross business of the financial institution in this

 

17  state during the tax year and the denominator of which is the

 

18  total gross business of the financial institution everywhere

 

19  during the tax year.

 

20        (4) Except as otherwise provided under this subsection, for

 

21  a financial institution that is included in a unitary business

 

22  group, gross business includes gross business in this state of

 

23  every financial institution included in the unitary business

 

24  group without regard to whether the financial institution has

 

25  nexus in this state. Gross business between financial

 

26  institutions included in a unitary business group must be

 

27  eliminated in calculating the gross business factor.


 

 1        Sec. 659. Gross business in this state of the financial

 

 2  institution is determined as follows:

 

 3        (a) Receipts from credit card receivables including without

 

 4  limitation interest and fees or penalties in the nature of

 

 5  interest from credit card receivables and receipts from fees

 

 6  charged to credit card holders such as annual fees are in this

 

 7  state if the billing address of the credit card holder is located

 

 8  in this state.

 

 9        (b) Credit card issuer's reimbursement fees are in this

 

10  state if the billing address of the credit card holder is located

 

11  in this state.

 

12        (c) Receipts from merchant discounts are in this state if

 

13  the commercial domicile of the merchant is in this state.

 

14        (d) Loan servicing fees are in this state under any of the

 

15  following circumstances:

 

16        (i) For a loan secured by real property, if the real property

 

17  for which the loan is secured is in this state.

 

18        (ii) For a loan secured by real property, if the real

 

19  property for which the loan is secured is located both within and

 

20  without this state and 1 or more other states and more than 50%

 

21  of the fair market value of the real property is located in this

 

22  state.

 

23        (iii) For a loan secured by real property, if more than 50% of

 

24  the fair market value of the real property for which the loan is

 

25  secured is not located within any 1 state but the borrower is

 

26  located in this state.

 

27        (iv) For a loan not secured by real property, the borrower is


 

 1  located in this state.

 

 2        (e) Receipts from services are in this state if the

 

 3  recipient of the services receives all of the benefit of the

 

 4  services in this state. If the recipient of the services receives

 

 5  some of the benefit of the services in this state, the receipts

 

 6  are included in the numerator of the apportionment factor in

 

 7  proportion to the extent that the recipient receives benefit of

 

 8  the services in this state.

 

 9        (f) Receipts from investment assets and activities and

 

10  trading assets and activities, including interest and dividends,

 

11  are in this state if the financial institution's customer is in

 

12  this state. If the location of the financial institution's

 

13  customer cannot be determined, both of the following apply:

 

14        (i) Interest, dividends, and other income from investment

 

15  assets and activities and from trading assets and activities,

 

16  including, but not limited to, investment securities; trading

 

17  account assets; federal funds; securities purchased and sold

 

18  under agreements to resell or repurchase; options; futures

 

19  contracts; forward contracts; notional principal contracts such

 

20  as swaps; equities; and foreign currency transactions are in this

 

21  state if the average value of the assets is assigned to a regular

 

22  place of business of the taxpayer within this state. Interest

 

23  from federal funds sold and purchased and from securities

 

24  purchased under resale agreements and securities sold under

 

25  repurchase agreements are in this state if the average value of

 

26  the assets is assigned to a regular place of business of the

 

27  taxpayer within this state. The amount of receipts and other


 

 1  income from investment assets and activities is in this state if

 

 2  assets are assigned to a regular place of business of the

 

 3  taxpayer within this state.

 

 4        (ii) The amount of receipts from trading assets and

 

 5  activities, including, but not limited to, assets and activities

 

 6  in the matched book, in the arbitrage book, and foreign currency

 

 7  transactions, but excluding amounts otherwise sourced in this

 

 8  section, is in this state if the assets are assigned to a regular

 

 9  place of business of the taxpayer within this state.

 

10        (g) Interest charged to customers for carrying debit

 

11  balances on margin accounts without deduction of any costs

 

12  incurred in carrying the accounts is in this state if the

 

13  customer is located in this state.

 

14        (h) Interest from loans secured by real property is in this

 

15  state if the property is located in this state, if the property

 

16  is located both within this state and 1 or more other states and

 

17  more than 50% of the fair market value of the real property is

 

18  located in this state, or if more than 50% of the fair market

 

19  value of the real property is not located within any 1 state but

 

20  the borrower is located in this state.

 

21        (i) Interest from loans not secured by real property is in

 

22  this state if the borrower is located in this state.

 

23        (j) Net gains from the sale of loans secured by real

 

24  property or mortgage service rights relating to real property are

 

25  in this state if the property is in this state, if the property

 

26  is located both within this state and 1 or more other states and

 

27  more than 50% of the fair market value of the real property is


 

 1  located within this state, or if more than 50% of the fair market

 

 2  value of the real property is not located in any 1 state but the

 

 3  borrower is located in this state.

 

 4        (k) Net gains from the sale of loans not secured by real

 

 5  property or any other intangible assets are in this state if the

 

 6  depositor or borrower is located in this state.

 

 7        (l) Receipts from the lease of real property are in this

 

 8  state if the property is located in this state.

 

 9        (m) Receipts from the lease of tangible personal property

 

10  are in this state if the property is located in this state when

 

11  it is first placed in service by the lessee.

 

12        (n) Receipts from the lease of transportation tangible

 

13  personal property are in this state if the property is used in

 

14  this state or if the extent of use of the property within this

 

15  state cannot be determined but the property has its principal

 

16  base of operations within this state.

 

17                           CHAPTER 14

 

18        Sec. 661. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this part, the

 

19  tax base established under this part shall be apportioned in

 

20  accordance with this chapter.

 

21        (2) The tax base of a taxpayer whose business activities are

 

22  confined solely to this state shall be allocated to this state.

 

23  The tax base of a taxpayer whose business activities are subject

 

24  to tax both within and outside of this state shall be apportioned

 

25  to this state by multiplying each tax base by the sales factor

 

26  calculated under section 663.

 

27        (3) A taxpayer is subject to tax in another state in either


 

 1  of the following circumstances:

 

 2        (a) The taxpayer is subject to a business privilege tax, a

 

 3  net income tax, a franchise tax measured by net income, a

 

 4  franchise tax for the privilege of doing business, or a corporate

 

 5  stock tax.

 

 6        (b) That state has jurisdiction to subject the taxpayer to 1

 

 7  or more of the taxes listed in subdivision (a) regardless of

 

 8  whether that state does or does not subject the taxpayer to that

 

 9  tax.

 

10        Sec. 663. (1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (2)

 

11  and section 669, the sales factor is a fraction, the numerator of

 

12  which is the total sales of the taxpayer in this state during the

 

13  tax year and the denominator of which is the total sales of the

 

14  taxpayer everywhere during the tax year.

 

15        (2) Except as otherwise provided under this subsection, for

 

16  a taxpayer that is a unitary business group, sales include sales

 

17  in this state of every person included in the unitary business

 

18  group without regard to whether the person has nexus in this

 

19  state. Sales between persons included in a unitary business group

 

20  must be eliminated in calculating the sales factor.

 

21        (3) It is the intent of the legislature that each tax base

 

22  of a taxpayer is apportioned to this state by multiplying each

 

23  tax base by the sales factor multiplied by 100% and that

 

24  apportionment shall not be based on property, payroll, or any

 

25  other factor notwithstanding section 1 of 1969 PA 343, MCL

 

26  205.581.

 

27        Sec. 665. (1) Sales of the taxpayer in this state are


 

 1  determined as follows:

 

 2        (a) Sales of tangible personal property are in this state if

 

 3  the property is shipped or delivered, or, in the case of

 

 4  electricity and gas, the contract requires the property to be

 

 5  shipped or delivered, to any purchaser within this state based on

 

 6  the ultimate destination at the point that the property comes to

 

 7  rest regardless of the free on board point or other conditions of

 

 8  the sales.

 

 9        (b) Receipts from the sale, lease, rental, or licensing of

 

10  real property are in this state if that property is located in

 

11  this state.

 

12        (c) Receipts from the lease or rental of tangible personal

 

13  property are sales in this state to the extent that the property

 

14  is utilized in this state. The extent of utilization of tangible

 

15  personal property in this state is determined by multiplying the

 

16  receipts by a fraction, the numerator of which is the number of

 

17  days of physical location of the property in this state during

 

18  the lease or rental period in the tax year and the denominator of

 

19  which is the number of days of physical location of the property

 

20  everywhere during all lease or rental periods in the tax year. If

 

21  the physical location of the property during the lease or rental

 

22  period is unknown or cannot be determined, the tangible personal

 

23  property is utilized in the state in which the property was

 

24  located at the time the lease or rental payer obtained

 

25  possession.

 

26        (d) Receipts from the lease or rental of mobile

 

27  transportation property owned by the taxpayer are in this state


 

 1  to the extent that the property is used in this state. The extent

 

 2  to which an aircraft will be deemed to be used in this state and

 

 3  the amount of receipts that is to be included in the numerator of

 

 4  this state's sales factor are determined by multiplying all the

 

 5  receipts from the lease or rental of the aircraft by a fraction,

 

 6  the numerator of which is the number of landings of the aircraft

 

 7  in this state and the denominator of which is the total number of

 

 8  landings of the aircraft. If the extent of the use of any

 

 9  transportation property within this state cannot be determined,

 

10  then the receipts are in this state if the property has its

 

11  principal base of operations in this state.

 

12        (e) Royalties and other income received for the use of or

 

13  for the privilege of using intangible property, including

 

14  patents, know-how, formulas, designs, processes, patterns,

 

15  copyrights, trade names, service names, franchises, licenses,

 

16  contracts, customer lists, custom computer software, or similar

 

17  items, are attributed to the state in which the property is used

 

18  by the purchaser. If the property is used in more than 1 state,

 

19  the royalties or other income shall be apportioned to this state

 

20  pro rata according to the portion of use in this state. If the

 

21  portion of use in this state cannot be determined, the royalties

 

22  or other income shall be excluded from both the numerator and the

 

23  denominator. Intangible property is used in this state if the

 

24  purchaser uses the intangible property or the rights to the

 

25  intangible property in the regular course of its business

 

26  operations in this state, regardless of the location of the

 

27  purchaser's customers.


 

 1        (2) Sales from the performance of services are in this state

 

 2  and attributable to this state as follows:

 

 3        (a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, all

 

 4  receipts from the performance of services are included in the

 

 5  numerator of the apportionment factor if the recipient of the

 

 6  services receives all of the benefit of the services in this

 

 7  state. If the recipient of the services receives some of the

 

 8  benefit of the services in this state, the receipts are included

 

 9  in the numerator of the apportionment factor in proportion to the

 

10  extent that the recipient receives benefit of the services in

 

11  this state.

 

12        (b) Sales derived from securities brokerage services

 

13  attributable to this state are determined by multiplying the

 

14  total dollar amount of receipts from securities brokerage

 

15  services by a fraction, the numerator of which is the sales of

 

16  securities brokerage services to customers within this state, and

 

17  the denominator of which is the sales of securities brokerage

 

18  services to all customers. Receipts from securities brokerage

 

19  services include commissions on transactions, the spread earned

 

20  on principal transactions in which the broker buys or sells from

 

21  its account, total margin interest paid on behalf of brokerage

 

22  accounts owned by the broker's customers, and fees and receipts

 

23  of all kinds from the underwriting of securities. If receipts

 

24  from brokerage services can be associated with a particular

 

25  customer, but it is impractical to associate the receipts with

 

26  the address of the customer, then the address of the customer

 

27  shall be presumed to be the address of the branch office that


 

 1  generates the transactions for the customer.

 

 2        (c) Sales of services that are derived directly or

 

 3  indirectly from the sale of management, distribution,

 

 4  administration, or securities brokerage services to, or on behalf

 

 5  of, a regulated investment company or its beneficial owners,

 

 6  including receipts derived directly or indirectly from trustees,

 

 7  sponsors, or participants of employee benefit plans that have

 

 8  accounts in a regulated investment company, shall be attributable

 

 9  to this state to the extent that the shareholders of the

 

10  regulated investment company are domiciled within this state. For

 

11  purposes of this subdivision, "domicile" means the shareholder's

 

12  mailing address on the records of the regulated investment

 

13  company. If the regulated investment company or the person

 

14  providing management services to the regulated investment company

 

15  has actual knowledge that the shareholder's primary residence or

 

16  principal place of business is different than the shareholder's

 

17  mailing address, then the shareholder's primary residence or

 

18  principal place of business is the shareholder's domicile. A

 

19  separate computation shall be made with respect to the receipts

 

20  derived from each regulated investment company. The total amount

 

21  of sales attributable to this state shall be equal to the total

 

22  receipts received by each regulated investment company multiplied

 

23  by a fraction determined as follows:

 

24        (i) The numerator of the fraction is the average of the sum

 

25  of the beginning-of-year and end-of-year number of shares owned

 

26  by the regulated investment company shareholders who have their

 

27  domicile in this state.


 

 1        (ii) The denominator of the fraction is the average of the

 

 2  sum of the beginning-of-year and end-of-year number of shares

 

 3  owned by all shareholders.

 

 4        (iii) For purposes of the fraction, the year shall be the tax

 

 5  year of the regulated investment company that ends with or within

 

 6  the tax year of the taxpayer.

 

 7        (3) Receipts from the origination of a loan or gains from

 

 8  the sale of a loan secured by residential real property are

 

 9  deemed a sale in this state only if 1 or more of the following

 

10  apply:

 

11        (a) The real property is located in this state.

 

12        (b) The real property is located both within this state and

 

13  1 or more other states and more than 50% of the fair market value

 

14  of the real property is located within this state.

 

15        (c) More than 50% of the real property is not located in any

 

16  1 state and the borrower is located in this state.

 

17        (4) Interest from loans secured by real property is in this

 

18  state if the property is located within this state, if the

 

19  property is located both within this state and 1 or more other

 

20  states and if more than 50% of the fair market value of the real

 

21  property is located within this state, or if more than 50% of the

 

22  fair market value of the real property is not located within any

 

23  1 state but the borrower is located in this state. The

 

24  determination of whether the real property securing a loan is

 

25  located within this state shall be made as of the time the

 

26  original agreement was made and any and all subsequent

 

27  substitutions of collateral shall be disregarded.


 

 1        (5) Interest from a loan not secured by real property is in

 

 2  this state if the borrower is located in this state.

 

 3        (6) Gains from the sale of a loan not secured by real

 

 4  property, including income recorded under the coupon stripping

 

 5  rules of section 1286 of the internal revenue code, are in this

 

 6  state if the borrower is in this state.

 

 7        (7) Receipts from credit card receivables, including

 

 8  interest, fees, and penalties from credit card receivables and

 

 9  receipts from fees charged to cardholders, such as annual fees,

 

10  are in this state if the billing address of the cardholder is in

 

11  this state.

 

12        (8) Receipts from the sale of credit card or other

 

13  receivables are in this state if the billing address of the

 

14  customer is in this state. Credit card issuer's reimbursements

 

15  fees are in this state if the billing address of the cardholder

 

16  is in this state. Receipts from merchant discounts, computed net

 

17  of any cardholder chargebacks, but not reduced by any interchange

 

18  transaction fees or by any issuer's reimbursement fees paid to

 

19  another for charges made by its cardholders, are in this state if

 

20  the commercial domicile of the merchant is in this state.

 

21        (9) Loan servicing fees derived from loans of another

 

22  secured by real property are in this state if the real property

 

23  is located in this state, if the real property is located both

 

24  within and outside of this state and 1 or more states if more

 

25  than 50% of the fair market value of the real property is located

 

26  in this state, or if more than 50% of the fair market value of

 

27  the real property is not located in any 1 state but the borrower


 

 1  is located in this state. Loan servicing fees derived from loans

 

 2  of another not secured by real property are in this state if the

 

 3  borrower is located in this state. If the location of the

 

 4  security cannot be determined, then loan servicing fees for

 

 5  servicing either the secured or the unsecured loans of another

 

 6  are in this state if the lender to whom the loan servicing

 

 7  service is provided is located in this state.

 

 8        (10) Receipts from the sale of securities and other assets

 

 9  from investment and trading activities, including, but not

 

10  limited to, interest, dividends, and gains are in this state in

 

11  either of the following circumstances:

 

12        (a) The person's customer is in this state.

 

13        (b) If the location of the person's customer cannot be

 

14  determined, both of the following apply:

 

15        (i) Interest, dividends, and other income from investment

 

16  assets and activities and from trading assets and activities,

 

17  including, but not limited to, investment securities; trading

 

18  account assets; federal funds; securities purchased and sold

 

19  under agreements to resell or repurchase; options; futures

 

20  contracts; forward contracts; notional principal contracts such

 

21  as swaps; equities; and foreign currency transactions are in this

 

22  state if the average value of the assets is assigned to a regular

 

23  place of business of the taxpayer within this state. Interest

 

24  from federal funds sold and purchased and from securities

 

25  purchased under resale agreements and securities sold under

 

26  repurchase agreements is in this state if the average value of

 

27  the assets is assigned to a regular place of business of the


 

 1  taxpayer within this state. The amount of receipts and other

 

 2  income from investment assets and activities is in this state if

 

 3  assets are assigned to a regular place of business of the

 

 4  taxpayer within this state.

 

 5        (ii) The amount of receipts from trading assets and

 

 6  activities, including, but not limited to, assets and activities

 

 7  in the matched book, in the arbitrage book, and foreign currency

 

 8  transactions, but excluding amounts otherwise sourced in this

 

 9  section, is in this state if the assets are assigned to a regular

 

10  place of business of the taxpayer within this state.

 

11        (11) Receipts from transportation services rendered by a

 

12  person subject to tax in another state are in this state and

 

13  shall be attributable to this state as follows:

 

14        (a) Except as otherwise provided in subdivisions (b) through

 

15  (e), receipts shall be proportioned based on the ratio of revenue

 

16  miles of the person in this state to the revenue miles of the

 

17  person everywhere.

 

18        (b) Receipts from maritime transportation services shall be

 

19  attributable to this state as follows:

 

20        (i) 50% of those receipts that either originate or terminate

 

21  in this state.

 

22        (ii) 100% of those receipts that both originate and terminate

 

23  in this state.

 

24        (c) Receipts attributable to this state of a person whose

 

25  business activity consists of the transportation both of property

 

26  and of individuals shall be proportioned based on the total

 

27  receipts for passenger miles and ton mile fractions, separately


 

 1  computed and individually weighted by the ratio of receipts from

 

 2  passenger transportation to total receipts from all

 

 3  transportation, and by the ratio of receipts from freight

 

 4  transportation to total receipts from all transportation,

 

 5  respectively.

 

 6        (d) Receipts attributable to this state of a person whose

 

 7  business activity consists of the transportation of oil by

 

 8  pipeline shall be proportioned based on the ratio of the receipts

 

 9  for the barrel miles transported in this state to the receipts

 

10  for the barrel miles transported by the person everywhere.

 

11        (e) Receipts attributable to this state of a person whose

 

12  business activities consist of the transportation of gas by

 

13  pipeline shall be proportioned based on the ratio of the receipts

 

14  for the 1,000 cubic feet miles transported in this state to the

 

15  receipts for the 1,000 cubic feet miles transported by the person

 

16  everywhere.

 

17        (12) For purposes of subsection (11), if a taxpayer can show

 

18  that revenue mile information is not available or cannot be

 

19  obtained without unreasonable expense to the taxpayer, receipts

 

20  attributable to this state shall be that portion of the revenue

 

21  derived from transportation services performed everywhere that

 

22  the miles of transportation services performed in this state bear

 

23  to the miles of transportation services performed everywhere. If

 

24  the department determines that the information required for the

 

25  calculations under subsection (11) are not available or cannot be

 

26  obtained without unreasonable expense to the taxpayer, the

 

27  department may use other available information that in the


 

 1  opinion of the department will result in an equitable allocation

 

 2  of the taxpayer's receipts to this state.

 

 3        (13) Except as provided in subsections (14) through (19),

 

 4  receipts from the sale of telecommunications service or mobile

 

 5  telecommunications service are in this state if the customer's

 

 6  place of primary use of the service is in this state. As used in

 

 7  this subsection, "place of primary use" means the customer's

 

 8  residential street address or primary business street address

 

 9  where the customer's use of the telecommunications service

 

10  primarily occurs. For mobile telecommunications service, the

 

11  customer's residential street address or primary business street

 

12  address is the place of primary use only if it is within the

 

13  licensed service area of the customer's home service provider.

 

14        (14) Receipts from the sale of telecommunications service

 

15  sold on an individual call-by-call basis are in this state if

 

16  either of the following applies:

 

17        (a) The call both originates and terminates in this state.

 

18        (b) The call either originates or terminates in this state

 

19  and the service address is located in this state.

 

20        (15) Receipts from the sale of postpaid telecommunications

 

21  service are in this state if the origination point of the

 

22  telecommunication signal, as first identified by the service

 

23  provider's telecommunication system or as identified by

 

24  information received by the seller from its service provider if

 

25  the system used to transport telecommunication signals is not the

 

26  seller's, is located in this state.

 

27        (16) Receipts from the sale of prepaid telecommunications


 

 1  service or prepaid mobile telecommunications service are in this

 

 2  state if the purchaser obtains the prepaid card or similar means

 

 3  of conveyance at a location in this state. Receipts from

 

 4  recharging a prepaid telecommunications service or mobile

 

 5  telecommunications service are in this state if the purchaser's

 

 6  billing information indicates a location in this state.

 

 7        (17) Receipts from the sale of private communication

 

 8  services are in this state as follows:

 

 9        (a) 100% of the receipts from the sale of each channel

 

10  termination point within this state.

 

11        (b) 100% of the receipts from the sale of the total channel

 

12  mileage between each termination point within this state.

 

13        (c) 50% of the receipts from the sale of service segments

 

14  for a channel between 2 customer channel termination points, 1 of

 

15  which is located in this state and the other is located outside

 

16  of this state, which segments are separately charged.

 

17        (d) The receipts from the sale of service for segments with

 

18  a channel termination point located in this state and in 2 or

 

19  more other states or equivalent jurisdictions, and which segments

 

20  are not separately billed, are in this state based on a

 

21  percentage determined by dividing the number of customer channel

 

22  termination points in this state by the total number of customer

 

23  channel termination points.

 

24        (18) Receipts from the sale of billing services and

 

25  ancillary services for telecommunications service are in this

 

26  state based on the location of the purchaser's customers. If the

 

27  location of the purchaser's customers is not known or cannot be


 

 1  determined, the sale of billing services and ancillary services

 

 2  for telecommunications service is in this state based on the

 

 3  location of the purchaser.

 

 4        (19) Receipts to access a carrier's network or from the sale

 

 5  of telecommunications services for resale are in this state as

 

 6  follows:

 

 7        (a) 100% of the receipts from access fees attributable to

 

 8  intrastate telecommunications service that both originates and

 

 9  terminates in this state.

 

10        (b) 50% of the receipts from access fees attributable to

 

11  interstate telecommunications service if the interstate call

 

12  either originates or terminates in this state.

 

13        (c) 100% of the receipts from interstate end user access

 

14  line charges, if the customer's service address is in this state.

 

15  As used in this subdivision, "interstate end user access line

 

16  charges" includes, but is not limited to, the surcharge approved

 

17  by the federal communications commission and levied pursuant to

 

18  47 CFR 69.

 

19        (d) Gross receipts from sales of telecommunications services

 

20  to other telecommunication service providers for resale shall be

 

21  sourced to this state using the apportionment concepts used for

 

22  non-resale receipts of telecommunications services if the

 

23  information is readily available to make that determination. If

 

24  the information is not readily available, then the taxpayer may

 

25  use any other reasonable and consistent method.

 

26        (20) Except as otherwise provided under this subsection, for

 

27  a taxpayer whose business activities include live radio or


 

 1  television programming as described in subsector code 7922 of

 

 2  industry group 792 under the standard industrial classification

 

 3  code as compiled by the United States department of labor or are

 

 4  included in industry groups 483, 484, 781, or 782 under the

 

 5  standard industrial classification code as compiled by the United

 

 6  States department of labor, or any combination of the business

 

 7  activities included in those groups, media receipts are in this

 

 8  state and attributable to this state only if the commercial

 

 9  domicile of the customer is in this state and the customer has a

 

10  direct connection or relationship with the taxpayer pursuant to a

 

11  contract under which the media receipts are derived. For media

 

12  receipts from the sale of advertising, if the customer of that

 

13  advertising is commercially domiciled in this state and receives

 

14  some of the benefit of the sale of that advertising in this

 

15  state, the media receipts from the advertising to that customer

 

16  are included in the numerator of the apportionment factor in

 

17  proportion to the extent that the customer receives the benefit

 

18  of the advertising in this state. For purposes of this

 

19  subsection, if the taxpayer is a broadcaster and if the customer

 

20  receives some of the benefit of the advertising in this state,

 

21  the media receipts for that sale of advertising from that

 

22  customer shall be proportioned based on the ratio that the

 

23  broadcaster's viewing or listening audience in this state bears

 

24  to its total viewing or listening audience everywhere. As used in

 

25  this subsection:

 

26        (a) "Media property" means motion pictures, television

 

27  programs, internet programs and websites, other audiovisual


 

 1  works, and any other similar property embodying words, ideas,

 

 2  concepts, images, or sound without regard to the means or methods

 

 3  of distribution or the medium in which the property is embodied.

 

 4        (b) "Media receipts" means receipts from the sale, license,

 

 5  broadcast, transmission, distribution, exhibition, or other use

 

 6  of media property and receipts from the sale of media services.

 

 7  Media receipts do not include receipts from the sale of media

 

 8  property that is a consumer product that is ultimately sold at

 

 9  retail.

 

10        (c) "Media services" means services in which the use of the

 

11  media property is integral to the performance of those services.

 

12        (21) Terms used in subsections (13) through (20) have the

 

13  same meaning as those terms defined in the streamlined sales and

 

14  use tax agreement administered under the streamlined sales and

 

15  use tax administration act, 2004 PA 174, MCL 205.801 to 205.833.

 

16        (22) For purposes of this section, a borrower is considered

 

17  located in this state if the borrower's billing address is in

 

18  this state.

 

19        Sec. 667. (1) If the apportionment provisions of this part

 

20  do not fairly represent the extent of the taxpayer's business

 

21  activity in this state, the taxpayer may petition for or the

 

22  treasurer may require the following, with respect to all or a

 

23  portion of the taxpayer's business activity, if reasonable:

 

24        (a) Separate accounting.

 

25        (b) The inclusion of 1 or more additional or alternative

 

26  factors that will fairly represent the taxpayer's business

 

27  activity in this state.


 

 1        (c) The use of any other method to effectuate an equitable

 

 2  allocation and apportionment of the taxpayer's tax base.

 

 3        (2) An alternate method may be used only if it is approved

 

 4  by the department.

 

 5        (3) The apportionment provisions of this part shall be

 

 6  rebuttably presumed to fairly represent the business activity

 

 7  attributed to the taxpayer in this state, taken as a whole and

 

 8  without a separate examination of the specific elements of the

 

 9  tax base unless it can be demonstrated that the business activity

 

10  attributed to the taxpayer in this state is out of all

 

11  appropriate proportion to the actual business activity transacted

 

12  in this state and leads to a grossly distorted result or would

 

13  operate unconstitutionally to tax the extraterritorial activity

 

14  of the taxpayer.

 

15        (4) The filing of a return or an amended return is not

 

16  considered a petition for the purposes of subsection (1).

 

17        Sec. 669. All other receipts not otherwise sourced under

 

18  this part shall be sourced based on where the benefit to the

 

19  customer is received or, if where the benefit to the customer is

 

20  received cannot be determined, to the customer's billing address.

 

21                           CHAPTER 15

 

22        Sec. 671. (1) The credit provided in this section shall be

 

23  taken before any other credit under this part and is available to

 

24  any corporation, other than those taxpayers subject to the tax

 

25  imposed under chapter 12 or 13, with gross receipts that do not

 

26  exceed $20,000,000.00 and with adjusted business income minus the

 

27  loss adjustment that does not exceed $1,300,000.00 as adjusted


 

 1  annually for inflation using the Detroit consumer price index and

 

 2  subject to the following:

 

 3        (a) A corporation is disqualified if either of the following

 

 4  occurs for the respective tax year:

 

 5        (i) Compensation and directors' fees of a shareholder or

 

 6  officer exceed $180,000.00.

 

 7        (ii) The sum of the following amounts exceeds $180,000.00:

 

 8        (A) Compensation and directors' fees of a shareholder.

 

 9        (B) The product of the percentage of outstanding ownership

 

10  or of outstanding stock owned by that shareholder multiplied by

 

11  the difference between the sum of business income and, to the

 

12  extent deducted in determining federal taxable income, a

 

13  carryback or a carryover of a net operating loss or capital loss,

 

14  minus the loss adjustment.

 

15        (b) Subject to the reduction percentage determined under

 

16  subsection (3), the credit determined under this subsection shall

 

17  be reduced by the following percentages in the following

 

18  circumstances:

 

19        (i) If compensation and directors' fees of a shareholder or

 

20  officer are, or if the sum of the amounts in subdivision

 

21  (a)(ii)(A) and (B) is, more than $160,000.00 but less than

 

22  $165,000.00, the credit is reduced by 20%.

 

23        (ii) If compensation and directors' fees of a shareholder or

 

24  officer are, or if the sum of the amounts in subdivision

 

25  (a)(ii)(A) and (B) is, $165,000.00 or more but less than

 

26  $170,000.00, the credit is reduced by 40%.

 

27        (iii) If compensation and directors' fees of a shareholder or


 

 1  officer are, or if the sum of the amounts in subdivision

 

 2  (a)(ii)(A) and (B) is, $170,000.00 or more but less than

 

 3  $175,000.00, the credit is reduced by 60%.

 

 4        (iv) If compensation and directors' fees of a shareholder or

 

 5  officer are, or if the sum of the amounts in subdivision

 

 6  (a)(ii)(A) and (B) is, $175,000.00 or more but not in excess of

 

 7  $180,000.00, the credit is reduced by 80%.

 

 8        (2) For the purposes of determining disqualification under

 

 9  subsection (1), an active shareholder's share of business income

 

10  shall not be attributed to another active shareholder.

 

11        (3) The reduction percentage is the greater of the

 

12  following:

 

13        (a) The reduction percentage based on the compensation and

 

14  directors' fees of the shareholder or officer with the greatest

 

15  amount of compensation and directors' fees.

 

16        (b) The reduction percentage based on the sum of the amounts

 

17  in subsection (1)(a)(ii)(A) and (B) for the shareholder or officer

 

18  with the greatest sum of the amounts in subsection (1)(a)(ii)(A)

 

19  and (B).

 

20        (4) A corporation that qualifies under subsection (1) is

 

21  allowed a credit against the tax imposed under this part. The

 

22  credit under this subsection is the amount by which the tax

 

23  imposed under this part exceeds 1.8% of adjusted business income.

 

24        (5) If gross receipts exceed $19,000,000.00, the credit

 

25  shall be reduced by a fraction, the numerator of which is the

 

26  amount of gross receipts over $19,000,000.00 and the denominator

 

27  of which is $1,000,000.00. The credit shall not exceed 100% of


 

 1  the tax liability imposed under this part.

 

 2        (6) For a corporation that reports for a tax year less than

 

 3  12 months, the amounts specified in this section for gross

 

 4  receipts, adjusted business income, and share of business income

 

 5  shall be multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the

 

 6  number of months in the tax year and the denominator of which is

 

 7  12.

 

 8        (7) The department shall permit a corporation that elects to

 

 9  claim the credit allowed under this section based on the amount

 

10  by which the tax imposed under this part exceeds the percentage

 

11  of adjusted business income for the tax year as determined under

 

12  subsection (4), and that is not required to reduce the credit

 

13  pursuant to subsection (1) or (5), to file and pay the tax

 

14  imposed by this part without computing the tax imposed under

 

15  section 623.

 

16        (8) Compensation paid by a professional employer

 

17  organization to the officers of the client and to employees of

 

18  the professional employer organization who are assigned or leased

 

19  to and perform services for the client shall be included in

 

20  determining eligibility of the client under this section.

 

21        (9) As used in this section:

 

22        (a) "Active shareholder" means a shareholder who receives at

 

23  least $10,000.00 in compensation, directors' fees, or dividends

 

24  from the business, and who owns at least 5% of the outstanding

 

25  stock or other ownership interest.

 

26        (b) "Adjusted business income" means business income as

 

27  defined in section 603 with all of the following adjustments:


 

 1        (i) Add compensation and directors' fees of active

 

 2  shareholders of a corporation.

 

 3        (ii) Add, to the extent deducted in determining federal

 

 4  taxable income, a carryback or carryover of a net operating loss.

 

 5        (iii) Add, to the extent deducted in determining federal

 

 6  taxable income, a carryback or carryover capital loss.

 

 7        (iv) Add compensation and directors' fees of officers of a

 

 8  corporation.

 

 9        (c) "Client" means an entity whose employment operations are

 

10  managed by a professional employer organization.

 

11        (d) "Compensation" means all wages, salaries, fees, bonuses,

 

12  commissions, other payments made in the tax year on behalf of or

 

13  for the benefit of employees, officers, or directors of the

 

14  taxpayers. Compensation includes, but is not limited to, payments

 

15  that are subject to or specifically exempt or excepted from

 

16  withholding under sections 3401 to 3406 of the internal revenue

 

17  code. Compensation also includes, on a cash or accrual basis

 

18  consistent with the taxpayer's method of accounting for federal

 

19  income tax purposes, payments to a pension, retirement, or profit

 

20  sharing plan other than those payments attributable to unfunded

 

21  accrued actuarial liabilities, and payments for insurance for

 

22  which employees are the beneficiaries, including payments under

 

23  health and welfare and noninsured benefit plans and payment of

 

24  fees for the administration of health and welfare and noninsured

 

25  benefit plans. Compensation for a taxpayer licensed under article

 

26  25 or 26 of the occupational code, 1980 PA 299, MCL 339.2501 to

 

27  339.2518 and 339.2601 to 339.2637, includes payments to an


 

 1  independent contractor licensed under article 25 or 26 of the

 

 2  occupational code, 1980 PA 299, MCL 339.2501 to 339.2518 and

 

 3  339.2601 to 339.2637. Compensation does not include any of the

 

 4  following:

 

 5        (i) Discounts on the price of the taxpayer's merchandise or

 

 6  services sold to the taxpayer's employees, officers, or directors

 

 7  that are not available to other customers.

 

 8        (ii) Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision,

 

 9  payments to an independent contractor.

 

10        (iii) Payments to state and federal unemployment compensation

 

11  funds.

 

12        (iv) The employer's portion of payments under the federal

 

13  insurance contributions act, chapter 21 of subtitle C of the

 

14  internal revenue code, 26 USC 3101 to 3128, the railroad

 

15  retirement tax act, chapter 22 of subtitle C of the internal

 

16  revenue code, 26 USC 3201 to 3233, and similar social insurance

 

17  programs.

 

18        (v) Payments, including self-insurance payments, for

 

19  worker's compensation insurance or federal employers' liability

 

20  act insurance pursuant to 45 USC 51 to 60.

 

21        (e) "Detroit consumer price index" means the most

 

22  comprehensive index of consumer prices available for the Detroit

 

23  area from the United States department of labor, bureau of labor

 

24  statistics.

 

25        (f) "Loss adjustment" means the amount by which adjusted

 

26  business income was less than zero in any of the 5 tax years

 

27  immediately preceding the tax year for which eligibility for the


 

 1  credit under this section is being determined. In determining the

 

 2  loss adjustment for a tax year, a corporation is not required to

 

 3  use more of the taxpayer's total negative adjusted business

 

 4  income than the amount needed to qualify the corporation for the

 

 5  credit under this section. A corporation shall not be considered

 

 6  to have used any portion of the taxpayer's negative adjusted

 

 7  business income amount unless the portion used is necessary to

 

 8  qualify for the credit under this section. A corporation shall

 

 9  not reuse a negative adjusted business income amount used as a

 

10  loss adjustment in a previous tax year or use a negative adjusted

 

11  business income amount from a year in which the corporation did

 

12  not receive the credit under this section.

 

13        (g) "Officer" means an officer of a corporation including

 

14  all of the following:

 

15        (i) The chairperson of the board.

 

16        (ii) The president, vice president, secretary, or treasurer

 

17  of the corporation or board.

 

18        (iii) Persons performing similar duties to persons described

 

19  in subparagraphs (i) and (ii).

 

20                           CHAPTER 16

 

21        Sec. 680. (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this

 

22  part, a taxpayer with a certificated credit may, for the

 

23  taxpayer's first tax year after December 31, 2011 only, elect to

 

24  pay the tax imposed by the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36,

 

25  MCL 208.1101 to 208.1601, rather than the tax imposed by this

 

26  part. A taxpayer with a certificated credit that elects to pay

 

27  the tax imposed by the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL


 

 1  208.1101 to 208.1601, is not required to file an annual return

 

 2  under this part.

 

 3        (2) A taxpayer that elects under subsection (1) to file a

 

 4  return under the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL

 

 5  208.1101 to 208.1601, shall continue to file a return and pay the

 

 6  tax imposed under the Michigan business tax act, 2007 PA 36, MCL

 

 7  208.1101 to 208.1601, rather than the tax imposed by this part

 

 8  for each tax year thereafter until the certificated credit and

 

 9  any carry forward from that credit are used up.

 

10        (3) As used in this section, "certificated credit" means

 

11  that term as defined in section 107 of the Michigan business tax

 

12  act, 2007 PA 36, MCL 208.1107.

 

13        Sec. 681. (1) A taxpayer that reasonably expects liability

 

14  for the tax year to exceed $800.00 shall file an estimated return

 

15  and pay an estimated tax for each quarter of the taxpayer's tax

 

16  year.

 

17        (2) For taxpayers on a calendar year basis, the quarterly

 

18  returns and estimated payments shall be made by April 15, July

 

19  15, October 15, and January 15. Taxpayers not on a calendar year

 

20  basis shall file quarterly returns and make estimated payments on

 

21  the appropriate due date which in the taxpayer's fiscal year

 

22  corresponds to the calendar year.

 

23        (3) Except as otherwise provided under this subsection, the

 

24  estimated payment made with each quarterly return of each tax

 

25  year shall be for the estimated corporate income tax base for the

 

26  quarter or 25% of the estimated annual liability. The second,

 

27  third, and fourth estimated payments in each tax year shall


 

 1  include adjustments, if necessary, to correct underpayments or

 

 2  overpayments from previous quarterly payments in the tax year to

 

 3  a revised estimate of the annual tax liability. For a taxpayer

 

 4  that calculates and pays estimated payments for federal income

 

 5  tax purposes pursuant to section 6655(e) of the internal revenue

 

 6  code, that taxpayer may use the same methodology as used to

 

 7  calculate the annualized income installment or the adjusted

 

 8  seasonal installment, whichever is used as the basis for the

 

 9  federal estimated payment, to calculate the estimated payments

 

10  required each quarter under this section. The interest and

 

11  penalty provided by this part shall not be assessed if any of the

 

12  following occur:

 

13        (a) If the sum of the estimated payments equals at least 85%

 

14  of the liability and the amount of each estimated payment

 

15  reasonably approximates the tax liability incurred during the

 

16  quarter for which the estimated payment was made.

 

17        (b) For the 2012 tax year and each subsequent tax year, if

 

18  the preceding year's tax liability under this part was $20,000.00

 

19  or less and if the taxpayer submitted 4 equal installments the

 

20  sum of which equals the immediately preceding tax year's tax

 

21  liability.

 

22        (4) Each estimated return shall be made on a form prescribed

 

23  by the department and shall include an estimate of the annual tax

 

24  liability and other information required by the state treasurer.

 

25  The form prescribed under this subsection may be combined with

 

26  any other tax reporting form prescribed by the department.

 

27        (5) With respect to a taxpayer filing an estimated tax


 

 1  return for the taxpayer's first tax year of less than 12 months,

 

 2  the amounts paid with each return shall be proportional to the

 

 3  number of payments made in the first tax year.

 

 4        (6) Payments made under this section shall be a credit

 

 5  against the payment required with the annual tax return required

 

 6  in section 685.

 

 7        (7) If the department considers it necessary to insure

 

 8  payment of the tax or to provide a more efficient administration

 

 9  of the tax, the department may require filing of the returns and

 

10  payment of the tax for other than quarterly or annual periods.

 

11        (8) A taxpayer that elects under the internal revenue code

 

12  to file an annual federal income tax return by March 1 in the

 

13  year following the taxpayer's tax year and does not make a

 

14  quarterly estimate or payment, or does not make a quarterly

 

15  estimate or payment and files a tentative annual return with a

 

16  tentative payment by January 15 in the year following the

 

17  taxpayer's tax year and a final return by April 15 in the year

 

18  following the taxpayer's tax year, has the same option in filing

 

19  the estimated and annual returns required by this part.

 

20        Sec. 683. If a taxpayer's tax year to which this part

 

21  applies ends before December 31, 2012, then a taxpayer subject to

 

22  this part may elect to compute the tax imposed by this part for

 

23  the portion of that tax year to which this part applies or that

 

24  first tax year in accordance with 1 of the following methods:

 

25        (a) The tax may be computed as if this part were effective

 

26  on the first day of the taxpayer's annual accounting period and

 

27  the amount computed shall be multiplied by a fraction, the


 

 1  numerator of which is the number of months in the taxpayer's

 

 2  first tax year and the denominator of which is the number of

 

 3  months in the taxpayer's annual accounting period.

 

 4        (b) The tax may be computed by determining the corporate

 

 5  income tax base in the first tax year in accordance with an

 

 6  accounting method satisfactory to the department that reflects

 

 7  the actual corporate income tax base attributable to the period.

 

 8        Sec. 685. (1) An annual or final return shall be filed with

 

 9  the department in the form and content prescribed by the

 

10  department by the last day of the fourth month after the end of

 

11  the taxpayer's tax year. Any final liability shall be remitted

 

12  with this return. A taxpayer, other than a taxpayer subject to

 

13  the tax imposed under chapter 12 or 13, whose apportioned or

 

14  allocated gross receipts are less than $350,000.00 does not need

 

15  to file a return or pay the tax imposed under this part. A

 

16  taxpayer whose tax liability under this part is less than or

 

17  equal to $100.00 does not need to file a return or pay the tax

 

18  imposed under this part.

 

19        (2) The department, upon application of the taxpayer and for

 

20  good cause shown, may extend the date for filing the annual

 

21  return. Interest at the rate under section 23(2) of 1941 PA 122,

 

22  MCL 205.23, shall be added to the amount of the tax unpaid for

 

23  the period of the extension. The treasurer shall require with the

 

24  application payment of the estimated tax liability unpaid for the

 

25  tax period covered by the extension.

 

26        (3) If a taxpayer is granted an extension of time within

 

27  which to file the federal income tax return for any tax year, the


 

 1  filing of a copy of the request for extension together with a

 

 2  tentative return and payment of an estimated tax with the

 

 3  department by the due date provided in subsection (1) shall

 

 4  automatically extend the due date for the filing of an annual or

 

 5  final return under this part until the last day of the eighth

 

 6  month following the original due date of the return. Interest at

 

 7  the rate under section 23(2) of 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.23, shall be

 

 8  added to the amount of the tax unpaid for the period of the

 

 9  extension.

 

10        Sec. 687. (1) A taxpayer required to file a return under

 

11  this part may be required to furnish a true and correct copy of

 

12  any return or portion of any return filed under the provisions of

 

13  the internal revenue code.

 

14        (2) A taxpayer shall file an amended return with the

 

15  department showing any alteration in or modification of a federal

 

16  income tax return that affects its tax base under this part. The

 

17  amended return shall be filed within 120 days after the final

 

18  determination by the internal revenue service.

 

19        Sec. 689. At the request of the department, a taxpayer

 

20  required by the internal revenue code to file or submit an

 

21  information return of income paid to others shall, to the extent

 

22  the information is applicable to residents of this state, at the

 

23  same time file or submit the information in the form and content

 

24  prescribed to the department.

 

25        Sec. 691. A unitary business group shall file a combined

 

26  return that includes each United States person that is included

 

27  in the unitary business group. Each United States person included


 

 1  in a unitary business group or included in a combined return

 

 2  shall be treated as a single person, and all transactions between

 

 3  those persons included in the unitary business group shall be

 

 4  eliminated from the corporate income tax base and the

 

 5  apportionment formulas under this part. If a United States person

 

 6  included in a unitary business group or included in a combined

 

 7  return is subject to the tax under chapter 12 or 13, any

 

 8  corporate income attributable to that person shall be eliminated

 

 9  from the corporate income tax base and any sales attributable to

 

10  that person shall be eliminated from the apportionment formula

 

11  under this part.

 

12        Sec. 693. (1) The tax imposed by this part shall be

 

13  administered by the department of treasury pursuant to 1941 PA

 

14  122, MCL 205.1 to 205.31, and this part. If a conflict exists

 

15  between 1941 PA 122, MCL 205.1 to 205.31, and this part, the

 

16  provisions of this part apply.

 

17        (2) The department may promulgate rules to implement this

 

18  part pursuant to the administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969

 

19  PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328.

 

20        (3) The department shall prescribe forms for use by

 

21  taxpayers and may promulgate rules in conformity with this part

 

22  for the maintenance by taxpayers of records, books, and accounts,

 

23  and for the computation of the tax, the manner and time of

 

24  changing or electing accounting methods and of exercising the

 

25  various options contained in this part, the making of returns,

 

26  and the ascertainment, assessment, and collection of the tax

 

27  imposed under this part.


 

 1        (4) The tax imposed by this part is in addition to all other

 

 2  taxes for which the taxpayer may be liable.

 

 3        (5) The department shall prepare and publish statistics from

 

 4  the records kept to administer the tax imposed by this part that

 

 5  detail the distribution of tax receipts by type of business,

 

 6  legal form of organization, sources of tax base, timing of tax

 

 7  receipts, and types of deductions. The statistics shall not

 

 8  result in the disclosure of information regarding any specific

 

 9  taxpayer.

 

10        Sec. 695. The revenue collected under this part shall be

 

11  distributed to the general fund.

 

12        Sec. 697. There is appropriated to the department for the

 

13  2011-2012 state fiscal year the sum of $100.00 to begin

 

14  implementing the requirements of this part. Any portion of this

 

15  amount under this section that is not expended in the 2011-2012

 

16  state fiscal year shall not lapse to the general fund but shall

 

17  be carried forward in a work project account that is in

 

18  compliance with section 451a of the management and budget act,

 

19  1984 PA 431, MCL 18.1451a, for the following state fiscal year.

 

20        Enacting section 1. (1) Sections 28, 30d, 31, 51a, 116, 117,

 

21  118, 119, 120, 252, 253, 257, 260, 261, 264, 267, 268, 269, 274,

 

22  275, 276, 367, 482, 496, 498, and 499 of the income tax act of

 

23  1967, 1967 PA 281, MCL 206.28, 206.30d, 206.31, 206.51a, 206.116,

 

24  206.117, 206.118, 206.119, 206.120, 206.252, 206.253, 206.257,

 

25  206.260, 206.261, 206.264, 206.267, 206.268, 206.269, 206.274,

 

26  206.275, 206.276, 206.367, 206.482, 206.496, 206.498, and

 

27  206.499, are repealed effective January 1, 2012.


 

 1        (2) Sections 7 and 8 of the individual or family development

 

 2  account program act, 2006 PA 513, MCL 206.707 and 206.708, are

 

 3  repealed effective January 1, 2012.

 

 4        (3) Section 11 of the Traxler-McCauley-Law-Bowman bingo act,

 

 5  1972 PA 382, MCL 432.111, is repealed effective January 1, 2012.

 

 6        Enacting section 2. (1) Except as otherwise provided under

 

 7  subsection (2), this amendatory act takes effect January 1, 2012.

 

 8        (2) Section 51 of the income tax act of 1967, 1967 PA 281,

 

 9  MCL 206.51, as amended by this amendatory act, takes effect

 

10  October 1, 2011.