Ill. Admin. Code tit. 86, § 100.3010 - Business and Nonbusiness Income (IITA Section 301)
a) In general. For purposes of administration
of Article 3 of the Illinois Income Tax Act:
1) For transactions and activities occurring
prior to July 30, 2004 (the effective date of Public Act 93-0840), business
income is income arising from transactions and activity in the regular course
of a trade or business and includes income from tangible and intangible
property constituting integral parts of a person's regular trade or business
operations. (See IITA Section 1501(a)(1), prior to amendment by Public Act
93-0840.) The classification of income by the labels occasionally used, such as
manufacturing income, sales income, interest, dividends, rents, royalties,
gains, and operating income, is of no aid in determining whether income is
business or nonbusiness income. Income of any type or class and from any source
is business income if it arises from transactions and activity occurring in the
regular course of trade or business operations. Accordingly, the critical
element in determining whether income is "business income" or "nonbusiness
income" is the identification of the transactions and activity that are the
elements of a particular trade or business. In general, all transactions and
activity that are dependent upon or contribute to the operations of the
economic enterprise as a whole will be transactions and activity arising in the
regular course of a trade or business.
2) For transactions or activities occurring
on or after July 30, 2004, business income is all income that may be treated as
apportionable business income under the Constitution of the United States. (See
IITA Section 1501(a)(1), after amendment by Public Act 93-0840.) By adopting
this definition, the General Assembly overruled the decisions in the following
cases:
A) Blessing/White, Inc. v. Zehnder,
329 Ill. App. 3d 714 (Third Div. 2002) and American States Insurance Co. v.
Hamer, 352 Ill. App. 3d 521 (First Div. 2004), which held that the gain on a
sale of an entire line of business was nonbusiness income. This "liquidating
sale" exclusion from business income was based on the courts' construction of
the statutory definition of business income prior to the enactment of Public
Act 93-0840, and not on any principle of the Constitution of the United
States.
B) Hercules, Inc. v.
Zehnder, 324 Ill. App. 3d 329 (First Div. 2001), which held that gain realized
on the sale of the taxpayer's stock in a subsidiary corporation that it had
received in exchange for the contribution of assets used in its business was
not business income. The taxpayer's basis in its stock was determined by its
basis in the assets exchanged, so that the gain realized on the sale was
attributable, at least in part, to its use of those assets in its business
before the exchange. Accordingly, the investment that produced the gain had an
operational function related to that business, and is subject to apportionment
under Allied-Signal v. Director, 504 US 768 (1992). In addition, the court's
holding that the taxpayer was not engaged in a unitary business with the
subsidiary was based in part on the fact that the taxpayer did not meet the
statutory "common ownership" requirement in IITA Section 1501(a)(27), which
provides that a corporation must be owned more than 50% in order to be engaged
in a unitary business. There is no such requirement in the Constitution of the
United States, and a unitary business may exist with less than 50% common
ownership. See In re Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co., 39 P.3d 21 (Ks. 2002) and
True v. Heitkamp, 470 NW2d 582 (N.D. 1991). Accordingly, a taxpayer may be
engaged in a unitary business with a subsidiary in which it holds only a
minority interest, so that the gain or loss realized on the sale of its stock
in the subsidiary is subject to apportionment under Allied-Signal v. Director,
504 US 768 (1992).
3)
For all taxable years:
A) Business income is
net of the deductions allocable thereto and does not include compensation or
the deductions allocable thereto (IITA Section 1501(a)(1)).
B) Nonbusiness income means all income other
than business income or compensation (IITA Section 1501(a)(13)).
C) A person's income is business income
unless clearly classifiable as nonbusiness income.
b) Two or more businesses of a
single person
1) A person may have more than
one "trade or business". In such cases, it is necessary to determine the
business income attributable to each separate trade or business. In the case of
a person other than a resident, the income of each business is then apportioned
by a formula that takes into consideration the instate and outstate factors
relating to the trade or business the income of which is being
apportioned.
2) Example: The person
is a corporation with three operating divisions. One division is engaged in
manufacturing aerospace items for the federal government. Another division is
engaged in growing tobacco products. The third division produces and
distributes motion pictures for theaters and television. Each division operates
independently; there is no strong central management. Each division operates in
this State as well as in other states. In this case, it is fair to conclude
that the corporation is engaged in three separate "trades or businesses".
Accordingly, the amount of business income attributable to the corporation's
trade or business activities in this State is determined by applying an
apportionment formula to the business income of each business.
3) The determination of whether the
activities of the person constitute a single trade or business or more than one
trade or business will turn on the facts in each case. In general, the
activities of the person will be considered a single business if there is
evidence to indicate that the segments under consideration are integrated with,
dependent upon, or contribute to each other and the operations of the person as
a whole. The following factors are considered to be good indicia of a single
trade or business, and the presence of any one of these factors creates a
strong indication that the activities of the person constitute a single trade
or business.
A) Same type of business. A
person is generally engaged in a single trade or business when all of its
activities are in the same general line. For example, a person that operates a
chain of retail grocery stores will almost always be engaged in a single trade
or business.
B) Steps in a vertical
process. A person is almost always engaged in a single trade or business when
its various divisions or segments are engaged in a vertically structured
enterprise. For example, a person that explores for and mines copper ores;
concentrates, smelts and refines the copper ores; and fabricates the refined
copper into consumer products is engaged in a single trade or business,
regardless of the fact that the various steps in the process are operated
substantially independently of each other with only general supervision from
the person's executive offices.
C)
Strong centralized management. A person that might otherwise be considered as
engaged in more than one trade or business is properly considered as engaged in
one trade or business when there is a strong central management, coupled with
the existence of centralized departments for functions such as financing,
advertising, research or purchasing. Thus, some corporations may properly be
considered as engaged in only one trade or business when the central executive
officers are normally involved in the operations of the various divisions and
there are centralized offices that perform for the divisions the normal matters
that a truly independent business would perform for itself, such as accounting,
personnel, insurance, legal, purchasing, advertising or financing. Note in this
connection that neither the existence of central management authority, nor the
exercise of that authority over any particular function (through centralized
departments or offices), is determinative in itself; the entire operations of
the person must be examined in order to determine whether or not strong
centralized management absent other unitary indicia as described in this
subsection (b) (i.e., same type of business or steps in a vertical process)
justifies a conclusion that the activities of the person constitute a single
trade or business. Both elements of strong centralized management, i.e., strong
central management authority and the exercise of that authority through
centralized departments or offices, must exist in order to justify a conclusion
that the operations of seemingly separate divisions are significantly
integrated so as to constitute a single trade or business.
c) Items referred to in IITA
Section 303 and unspecified items under IITA Section 301(c)(2)
1) In general. IITA Section 303 provides
rules for the allocation by persons other than residents of Illinois of any
item of capital gain or loss, and any item of income from rents or royalties
from real or tangible personal property, interest, dividends, and patent or
copyright royalties, and prizes awarded under the Illinois Lottery Law [20 ILCS
1605 ], together with any item of deduction directly allocable to that income,
to the extent the item constitutes nonbusiness income. In addition, IITA
Section 301(c)(2) provides rules for the allocation by these persons of
unspecified items of nonbusiness income. Any item may, in a given case,
constitute either business income or nonbusiness income depending on all the
facts and circumstances. The following are rules and examples for determining
whether particular income is business or nonbusiness income. (The examples used
throughout these regulations are illustrative only and do not purport to set
forth all pertinent facts.)
2)
Rents from real and tangible personal property. Rental income from real and
tangible property is business income if the property with respect to which the
rental income was received is used in the person's trade or business or is
attendant to it and is includable in the property factor under Section
100.3350.
A) Example A: A corporation operates a
multistate car rental business. The income from car rentals is business
income.
B) Example B: A corporation
is engaged in the heavy construction business in which it uses equipment such
as cranes, tractors, and earth moving vehicles. The corporation makes
short-term leases of the equipment when particular pieces of equipment are not
needed on any particular project. The rental income is business
income.
C) Example C: A corporation
operates a multistate chain of men's clothing stores. The corporation purchases
a five-story office building for use in connection with its trade or business.
It uses the street floor as one of its retail stores and the second and third
floors for its general corporate headquarters. The remaining two floors are
leased to others. The rental of the two floors is attendant to the operation of
the corporation's trade or business. The rental income is business
income.
D) Example D: A corporation
operates a multistate chain of grocery stores. As an investment, it uses
surplus funds to purchase an office building in another state, leasing the
entire building to others. The rental is not attendant to, but rather is
separate from, the operation of the grocery store trade or business. The net
rental income is nonbusiness income.
E) Example E: A corporation operates a
multistate chain of men's clothing stores. The corporation invests in a
20-story office building and uses the street floor as one of its retail stores
and second floor for its general corporate headquarters. The remaining 18
floors are leased to others. The rental of the 18 floors is not attendant to,
but rather is separate from, the operation of the corporation's trade or
business. The net rental income is nonbusiness income.
F) Example F: A corporation constructed a
plant for use in its multistate manufacturing business and 20 years later the
plant was closed and put up for sale. The plant was rented for a temporary
period from the time it was closed by the corporation until it was sold 18
months later. The rental income is business income and the gain on the sale of
the plant is business income.
3) Gains or losses from sales of assets. Gain
or loss from the sale, exchange or other disposition of real or tangible
personal property constitutes business income if the property, while owned by
the person, was used in its trade or business. However, if such property was
utilized for the production of nonbusiness income or otherwise was removed from
the property factor before its sale, exchange or other disposition, the gain or
loss will constitute nonbusiness income. See Section 100.3350.
A) Example A: In conducting its multistate
manufacturing business, a corporation systematically replaces automobiles,
machines, and other equipment used in the business. The gains or losses
resulting from those sales constitute business income.
B) Example B: A corporation constructed a
plant for use in its multistate manufacturing business and 20 years later sold
the property at a gain while it was in operation by the corporation. The gain
is business income.
C) Example C:
Same as subsection (c)(3)(B) except that the plant was closed and put up for
sale but was not in fact sold until a buyer was found 18 months later. The gain
is business income.
D) Example D:
Same as subsection (c)(3)(C) except that the plant was rented while being held
for sale. The rental income is business income and the gain on the sale of the
plant is business income.
4) Interest. Interest income is business
income where the intangible with respect to which the interest was received, is
held or was created in the regular course of the person's trade or business
operations or where the purpose for acquiring or holding the intangible is
related or attendant to such trade or business operations.
A) Example A: A corporation operates a
multistate chain of department stores, selling for cash and on credit. Service
charges, interest, or time-price differentials and the like are received with
respect to installment sales and revolving charge accounts. These amounts are
business income.
B) Example B: A
corporation conducts a multistate manufacturing business. During the year the
taxpayer receives a federal income tax refund and collects a judgment against a
debtor of the business. Both the tax refund and the judgment bore interest. The
interest income is business income.
C) Example C: A corporation is engaged in a
multistate manufacturing and wholesaling business. In connection with that
business, the corporation maintains special accounts to cover items such as
workers' compensation claims, rain and storm damage, machinery replacement,
etc. The moneys in those accounts are invested at interest. Similarly, the
corporation temporarily invests funds intended for payment of federal, state
and local tax obligations. The interest income is business income.
D) Example D: A corporation is engaged in a
multistate money order and traveler's check business. In addition to the fees
received in connection with the sale of the money orders and traveler's checks,
the corporation earns interest income by the investment of the funds pending
their redemption. The interest income is business income.
E) Example E: A corporation is engaged in a
multistate manufacturing and selling business. The corporation usually has
working capital and extra cash totaling $200,000 that it regularly invests in
short-term interest bearing securities. The interest income is business
income.
5) Dividends.
Dividends are business income where the stock with respect to which the
dividends are received, is held or was acquired in the regular course of the
person's trade or business operations or where the purpose for acquiring or
holding the stock is related or attendant to such trade or business operations.
A) Example A: A corporation operates a
multistate chain of stock brokerage houses. During the year the corporation
receives dividends on stock it owns. The dividends are business
income.
B) Example B: A corporation
is engaged in a multistate manufacturing and wholesaling business. In
connection with that business, the corporation maintains special accounts to
cover items such as workers' compensation claims, etc. A portion of the moneys
in those accounts is invested in interest-bearing bonds. The remainder is
invested in various common stocks listed on national stock exchanges. Both the
interest income and any dividends are business income.
C) Example C: Several unrelated corporations
own all of the stock of another corporation whose business operations consist
solely of acquiring and processing materials for delivery to the corporate
owners of its stock. The corporations acquired the stock in order to obtain a
source of supply of materials used in their manufacturing businesses. The
dividends are business income.
D)
Example D: A corporation is engaged in a multistate heavy construction
business. Much of its construction work is performed for agencies of the
federal government and various state governments. Under state and federal laws
applicable to contracts for these agencies, a contractor must have adequate
bonding capacity, as measured by the ratio of its current assets (cash and
marketable securities) to current liabilities. In order to maintain an adequate
bonding capacity, the corporation holds various stocks and interest-bearing
securities. Both the interest income and any dividends received are business
income.
E) Example E: A corporation
receives dividends from the stock of its subsidiary or affiliate that acts as
the marketing agency for products manufactured by the corporation. The
dividends are business income.
F)
Example F: A corporation is engaged in a multistate glass manufacturing
business. It also holds a portfolio of stock and interest-bearing securities,
the acquisition and holding of which are unrelated to the corporation's trade
or business operations. The dividends and interest income received are
nonbusiness income.
6)
Patent and copyright royalties. Patent and copyright royalties are business
income where the patent or copyright with respect to which the royalties were
received, is held or was created in the regular course of the person's trade or
business operations or where the purpose for acquiring or holding the patent or
copyright is related or attendant to such trade or business operations.
A) Example A: A corporation is engaged in the
multistate business of manufacturing and selling industrial chemicals. In
connection with that business, the corporation obtained patents on some of its
products. The corporation licensed the production of the chemicals in foreign
countries in return for which the corporation receives royalties. The royalties
received by the taxpayer are business income.
B) Example B: A corporation is engaged in the
music publishing business and holds copyrights on numerous songs. The
corporation acquired the assets of a smaller publishing company, including
music copyrights. These acquired copyrights are thereafter used by the
corporation in its business. Any royalties received on these copyrights are
business income.
C) Example C: Same
as Example B, except that the acquired company also held the patent on a type
of phonograph needle. The corporation does not manufacture or sell phonographs
or phonograph equipment and the holding of the patent is unrelated to its
publishing business operations. Any royalties received on the patent would be
nonbusiness income.
d) Proration and recapture of deductions
1) Most of a person's allowable deductions
will be attributable only to the business income arising from a particular
trade or business or to a particular item of nonbusiness income. In some cases,
an allowable deduction may be attributable to the business income of more than
one trade or business and/or to several items of nonbusiness income.
2) In such cases, the deduction shall be
prorated among the trades or businesses and such items of nonbusiness income in
a manner that fairly distributes the deduction among the classes of income to
which it is attributable. In filing returns with this State, if a person
departs from or modifies the manner of prorating any deduction used in returns
for prior years, the taxpayer should disclose in the return for the current
year the nature and extent of the modification. If the returns or reports filed
by a person with all states to which the taxpayer reports under Article IV of
the Multistate Tax Compact or the Uniform Division of Income for Tax Purposes
Act are not uniform in the attribution or proration of any deduction, the
person shall disclose in its return to this State the nature and extent of the
variance.
3) If in prior years
income from an asset or business has been classified as business income and in
a later year is demonstrated to be non-business income, then all expenses,
without limitation, deducted in such later year and in the 2
immediately-preceding taxable years related to that asset or business that
generated the non-business income shall be added back and recaptured as
business income in the year of the disposition of the asset or business. Such
amount shall be apportioned to Illinois using the greater of the apportionment
fraction computed for the business under IITA Section 304 for the taxable year
or the average of the apportionment fractions computed for the business under
IITA Section 304 for the taxable year and for the 2 immediately preceding
taxable years (IITA Section 203(e)(3)).
e) Definitions
1) The term "allocation" refers to the
assignment of nonbusiness income to a particular state.
2) The term "apportionment" refers to the
division of business income between states by the use of a formula containing
apportionment factors.
3) The term
"business activity" refers to the transactions and activity occurring in the
regular course of a particular trade or business.
4) The term "person" under IITA Section
1501(a)(18) shall be construed to mean and include an individual, trust,
estate, partnership, association, firm, company, corporation or
fiduciary.
5) The term "taxpayer"
is defined in IITA Section 1501(a)(24) to mean any person subject to the tax
imposed by the Act.
6) For a
definition of the term "commercial domicile", see Section
100.3210.
7) For a definition of the term "resident",
see Section
100.3020.
8) For a definition of the term "state", see
Section
100.3110.
9) For a definition of the term "taxable in
another state", see Section
100.3200.
Notes
Amended at 32 Ill. Reg. 6055, effective March 25, 2008
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