Richard Pomp’s incredible opus, “The Unfilled Promise of the Indian Commerce Clause and State Taxation,” has been published in the Tax Lawyer.
Here is the pdf: Richard Pomp Indian Commerce Clause Article
Richard Pomp’s incredible opus, “The Unfilled Promise of the Indian Commerce Clause and State Taxation,” has been published in the Tax Lawyer.
Here is the pdf: Richard Pomp Indian Commerce Clause Article
Here: #14 Opening Brief of Plaintiff-Appellant
Lower court materials are here.
Richard Pomp has published his mammoth article in the ABA’s “The Tax Lawyer.” A short description of this paper is here. If you are a member of the ABA taxation section, you can get the whole thing here.
An excerpt:
This Article is an expanded version of luncheon remarks delivered at a symposium on the Commerce Clause at Georgetown Law School. A few things became clear after my address on the Indian Commerce Clause and state taxation. Many people at the Conference had only a faint memory that such a clause even existed. To most state tax practitioners and academics, “the Commerce Clause” meant the Interstate Commerce Clause and, perhaps secondarily, the Foreign Commerce Clause, but certainly not the Indian Commerce Clause.
True, a small group of “Indian law” insiders has long existed. These specialists have traditionally serviced tribes endowed with natural resources. More recently, revenue generated across the country from Indian gaming, hotels, restaurants, manufacturing, industrial parks, gas stations, cement factories, timber operations, smokeshops, or sports franchises has created legal work for firms that traditionally did not practice Indian law.
This new group of practitioners has quickly learned what the more experienced firms have long known: the issues raised by the taxation of Indians, the tribes, and those doing business with them are sui generis—and complicated, even by tax standards. To be sure, state tax lawyers are used to multijurisdictional issues. Taxes are levied by sewer, water, school, and transit districts; cities; counties; states; and the national government—tribal taxes would seem to add merely one more level.
Although comforting, this view would be misleading. Indian taxation drags lawyers into areas outside their normal comfort zone. Practitioners need to master treaties between the federal government and the tribes; state enabling acts; numerous Indian-specific statutes and executive orders that often reflect polar swings in Congressional policy; special Indian canons of construction; the unique patchwork pattern of land ownership on reservations; and concepts like “Indian sovereignty” that serve as a ubiquitous, amorphous, and malleable backdrop in many cases. Bread-and-butter issues for state tax lawyers—like apportionment and discrimination—take on new meanings. The Indian tax cases tolerate results that would violate the Interstate Commerce Clause. The formative Supreme Court cases on Indian taxation often reflect the composition of the bench and sympathies (or lack thereof) of individual justices for the Indians. Add to this the difficulty of obtaining up-to-date information on tribal tax codes, and the result is a labyrinth of unpredictability.
While the topic of my conference presentation and hence the subject of this Article is the Indian Commerce Clause and state taxation—and not a treatise on all aspects of state taxation (and nothing on federal taxation)—I would disserve the reader by not straying a bit afield. To cut to the chase, the Court has emasculated and denigrated the Indian Commerce Clause, preventing implementation of the Founders’ vision. Readers would have every right to feel that slogging their way through this lengthy Article was not worth the effort if that were the only message at the end of the journey. And so, with the encouragement of the conference organizers and journal editors, I have interpreted my charge broadly to sketch the contours of other Indian tax doctrines so that the reader will have a feel for the signposts and boundaries. I have focused on a selection of prominent U.S. Supreme Court cases, mostly involving state taxation; many more could have been discussed. My goal is not to be exhaustive (or exhausting), but rather suggestive and illustrative.
Here is the opinion in Gordon v. Holder.
An excerpt:
Plaintiff-Appellant Robert Gordon is a Seneca Indian and a delivery seller of tobacco products. As a delivery seller, Gordon distributes his products by mail, rather than through abrick-and-mortar retail store. See 15 U.S.C. § 375(5)–(6). Prior to the PACT Act, ninety-five percent of Gordon’s business came from the sale of tobacco by internet and phone. But since the Act’s passage, Gordon claims he has lost almost all of his business due to the remedial measures Congress enacted.
The Tax Court of Canada recently released Hester v. The Queen, which addressed the issue of tax exemptions for Aboriginals working off the reserve for an employer located on a reserve. The two Aboriginal appellants (Joseph Hester and Mildred Bondy) argued that:
(1) in interpreting the phrase “situated on a reserve” in subsection 87(1) of the Indian Act, employment income is situate where the employer is located.
(2) the “connecting factor” analysis (as laid out in Williams v. The Queen, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 877) was intended to have limited analysis and does not apply to employment income.
Julie Pigeon, from Batchewana First Nation in Ontario was not successful in her attempt to avoid paying taxes to the Canadian government.
The case is here.
The Minister of National Revenue reassessed Pigeon’s tax liability for her income on the basis that her salary for the years in question was not the personal property of an Indian situated on a reserve (she lived off the reserve) within the meaning of section 87 of the Indian Act and — therefore — she was not exempt from income tax by any other enactment of Parliament within the meaning of paragraph 81(1)(a) of the Income Tax Act
Deputy Judge Rowe of the Tax Court of Canada noted that she hadn’t served the required notice on the Attorney General of Canada and on each Attorney General of the Provinces prior to her attack on the constitutional validity of the particular provision of the Act.
Interestingly, other than reading a written statement in court, Ms. Pigeon did not call any evidence.
Her statement is provided below, in its entirety.
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