Online Merchants Guild v. C.D. Hassell, in his official capacity as Sec'y. of Revenue, Dept. of Revenue ( 2022 )


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  •             IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Online Merchants Guild,                     :
    Petitioner                 :
    :
    v.                                   : No. 179 M.D. 2021
    :
    C. Daniel Hassell, in his official          :
    capacity as Secretary of Revenue,           :
    Department of Revenue,                      :
    Respondent              : Argued: June 22, 2022
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
    HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge
    OPINION
    BY JUDGE CEISLER                                            FILED: September 9, 2022
    Before this Court are cross-applications for summary relief filed by C. Daniel
    Hassell, the Secretary of Revenue (Revenue), and the Online Merchants Guild
    (Guild), a trade association comprised of online businesses that sell merchandise
    through Amazon’s Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) Program.1 The key issue before
    this Court is whether non-Pennsylvania businesses that sell merchandise through
    Amazon’s FBA Program must collect and remit Pennsylvania sales tax pursuant to
    1
    As described on Amazon’s website, the FBA Program is an Amazon service through
    which “businesses outsource order fulfillment to Amazon. Businesses send products to Amazon
    fulfillment centers and[,] when a customer makes a purchase, [Amazon will] pick, pack, and ship
    the order. [Amazon] can also provide customer service and process returns for those orders.” See
    https://sell.amazon.com/fulfillment-by-amazon?ld=seussoagoog-sitelink-fba2-D (last visited
    September 8, 2022).
    Section 237(b)(1) of the Tax Reform Code of 1971 (Tax Code),2 which provides that
    “[e]very person maintaining a place of business” in the Commonwealth of
    Pennsylvania (Commonwealth) must collect and remit Pennsylvania sales tax, or
    pay personal income tax (PIT) pursuant to Section 302(b) of the Tax Code,3 which
    imposes PIT at a rate of 3.75 % upon nonresidents for income derived “from sources
    within this Commonwealth.”
    After careful review, we hold that Revenue has failed to provide sufficient
    evidence that non-Pennsylvania businesses selling merchandise through the FBA
    Program (FBA Merchants), and whose connections to the Commonwealth were only
    shown to be limited to the storage of merchandise by Amazon in one of Amazon’s
    Pennsylvania warehouses, have sufficient contacts with the Commonwealth such
    that Revenue can mandate they collect and remit sales tax or pay PIT pursuant to
    Sections 237(b)(1) and 302(b) of the Tax Code. Accordingly, we grant the Guild’s
    cross-application for summary relief and deny the cross-application for summary
    relief filed by Revenue.
    I. Background
    Before engaging in a recitation of the relevant facts in this matter, it is helpful
    to first review the legal precedent governing when a state may exercise jurisdiction
    over a nonresident business, as well as the pertinent provisions of the Tax Code.
    A. Case Law
    Whether a person or entity may be liable for taxes revolves around the well
    established notion that the potentially liable party must have “minimum contacts”
    with the forum jurisdiction. Wirth v. Commonwealth, 
    95 A.3d 822
     (Pa. 2014). In
    2
    Act of March 4, 1971, P.L. 6, as amended, 72 P.S. § 7237(b)(1).
    3
    Added by the Act of August 4, 1991, P.L. 97, 72 P.S. § 7302(b).
    2
    Quill Corporation, Inc. v. North Dakota, 
    504 U.S. 298
     (1992), the United States
    (U.S.) Supreme Court reviewed whether a North Dakota taxing statute
    impermissibly required an out-of-state mail-order business, which had neither retail
    outlets nor sales representatives in North Dakota, to collect and remit North Dakota’s
    use tax, in violation of Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S.
    Constitution (Due Process Clause)4 and Article I, Section 8, Clause 3 of the U.S.
    Constitution (Commerce Clause).5 Quill Corporation, Inc. (Quill), a purveyor of
    office equipment and supplies, solicited business to North Dakota residents through
    catalogs and flyers, magazine advertisements, and telephone calls. 
    Id. at 302
    . The
    North Dakota taxing statute required any retailer, defined as any person engaging in
    regular or systematic solicitation of a consumer market in the state, to collect a “use
    tax” for any property purchased for storage, use, or consumption within the state.
    
    Id.
     In analyzing the constitutionality of the use tax, as applied to Quill, the U.S.
    Supreme Court noted that the Due Process Clause and Commerce Clause reflected
    different constitutional concerns, and a taxing statute that comported with due
    process may nonetheless violate the Commerce Clause. 
    Id. at 305-06
    . A due process
    analysis typically encompassed the concepts of notice and fair warning and looked
    to “the fundamental fairness of government activity” and whether a state’s exercise
    of power over a nonresident was legitimized by the nonresident’s connections to that
    state. 
    Id. at 312
    . A Commerce Clause analysis, conversely, was “informed . . . by
    structural concerns about the effects of state regulation on the national economy.”
    4
    The Due Process Clause relevantly provides that no state shall “deprive any person of
    life, liberty, or property, without due process of law[.]” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1.
    5
    The Commerce Clause provides that “[t]he Congress shall have Power . . . [t]o regulate
    Commerce with foreign [n]ations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes.” U.S.
    Const. art. I § 8, cl. 3.
    3
    Id. A tax would sustain against a Commerce Clause challenge where it: (1) applied
    to an activity with a substantial nexus to a taxing state; (2) was fairly apportioned;
    (3) did not discriminate against interstate commerce; and (4) was fairly related to the
    services provided by the state. Id. at 311 (citing Complete Auto Transit, Inc. v.
    Brady, 
    430 U.S. 274
    , 279 (1992)).
    As to Quill’s activities in North Dakota, the U.S. Supreme Court held that
    Quill “purposely directed its activities at North Dakota residents [and] the magnitude
    of those contacts” was sufficient to withstand a due process challenge. Id. at 308.
    Regarding the Commerce Clause, however, the U.S. Supreme Court reaffirmed its
    prior determination in National Bellas Hess, Inc. v. Department of Revenue of
    Illinois, 
    386 U.S. 753
     (1967) (overruled by South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., 
    138 S. Ct. 2080
     (2018)), that an out-of-state vendor whose only contacts with the taxing state
    were by mail or common carrier lacked the substantial nexus required. Quill, 
    504 U.S. at 317
    . Accordingly, as Quill did not have a physical presence in North Dakota,
    the Commerce Clause shielded it from collecting and remitting the North Dakota
    use tax. 
    Id. at 302
    .
    In 2018, after recognizing changes in the marketplace brought about by
    internet sales, the U.S. Supreme Court explicitly overruled Quill in Wayfair, which
    concerned a South Dakota act that required out-of-state sellers to collect and remit
    sales tax “as if” they had a physical presence in the state. Relying on Quill, the South
    Dakota Supreme Court had affirmed a lower court decision invaliding the act, which
    applied to sellers delivering more than $100,000 in goods or services, or engaging
    in more than 200 transactions for the sale of goods or services, into the state. 
    138 S. Ct. at 2089
    . The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the physical presence requirement in
    Quill as unsound, given that a business with a single salesperson located in a
    4
    particular state would be required to collect and remit sales tax but a business with
    identical sales and a website accessible in every state would not. 
    Id. at 2093
    . The
    U.S. Supreme Court noted that the Commerce Clause was designed to prevent states
    from engaging in economic discrimination, not to relieve those engaged in interstate
    commerce from their share of a state’s tax burden. 
    Id. at 2093-94
    . Quill undermined
    these precepts, as it put local, and many interstate businesses, at a competitive
    disadvantage relative to remote sellers. 
    Id. at 2094
    . In the absence of Quill’s
    physical presence requirement, the U.S. Supreme Court turned to the first prong of
    the test identified in Complete Auto, which simply asked whether a tax applied to an
    activity with a substantial nexus to the taxing authority. 
    Id. at 2099
    . The South
    Dakota act only applied to those out-of-state sellers delivering more than $100,000
    in goods or services or engaging in 200 or more separate transactions delivering
    goods and services, a quantity of business that the U.S. Supreme Court felt “could
    not have occurred unless the seller availed itself of the substantial privilege of
    carrying on business in South Dakota.” 
    Id.
     As the Wayfair respondents were large
    national companies with an extensive presence, the substantial nexus requirement in
    Complete Auto was satisfied. Id.6
    While Pennsylvania courts have not yet addressed the narrow issue of whether
    a nonresident business that stores merchandise in a Pennsylvania warehouse is
    subject to the sales tax and PIT provisions of the Tax Code, they have reviewed
    whether due process is implicated by the imposition of taxes on nonresidents. In
    Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States v. Murphy, 
    621 A.2d 1078
     (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1993), this Court relevantly addressed whether a realty transfer tax imposed
    6
    Because other principles that might invalidate the South Dakota act had not been litigated,
    the U.S. Supreme Court vacated the judgment of the South Dakota Supreme Court and remanded
    the matter for further proceedings. Wayfair, 
    138 S. Ct. at 2100
    .
    5
    by the City of Philadelphia (City) on the sale of a nonresident’s real property violated
    the Due Process and Commerce Clauses of the U.S. Constitution. We recognized
    that the “minimal connection between” the taxing authority and the person it sought
    to tax required that the taxes imposed bear a rational relationship “to the protections,
    opportunities[,] and benefits given by the taxing authority.” Id. at 1091 (internal
    citations omitted). “The simple but controlling question” concerned whether the
    taxing authority had “given anything for which it [could] ask [in] return.” Id.
    (emphasis in original). Although the settlement disposing of the real property took
    place out of state, the real property itself was located in the City, which created the
    connection required to withstand a claim under the Due Process Clause. Id. at 1092.
    The realty transfer tax also survived the appellants’ Commerce Clause challenge, as
    it satisfied the test outlined in Complete Auto. Id. at 1093. The realty transfer tax
    had a substantial nexus with the City, as it only applied to transfers of real property
    located within the City’s jurisdiction. Id. at 1093. The tax was fairly apportioned,
    which meant that it could not be imposed a second time by another jurisdiction and
    that it “reasonably reflect[ed] the in-state component of the activity being taxed[,]”
    because only the City, and no other locality, could tax sales of real estate located
    within its borders, and the only portion of the transaction subject to taxation was that
    which involved the transfer of City real estate.         Id.   The tax was deemed
    nondiscriminatory, as it applied at the same rate to both residents and nonresidents.
    Id. Finally, the tax was fairly related to the municipal services provided by the City
    to owners of real property located therein. Id. at 1093-94.
    In Marshall v. Commonwealth, 
    41 A.3d 67
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012), this Court
    upheld Revenue’s imposition of PIT on Robert Marshall (Marshall), a nonresident
    partner of a Connecticut limited partnership (Partnership) that owned the U.S. Steel
    6
    Tower, a 64-story office building, and the underlying parcel of land, located in
    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.        Marshall challenged the PIT on several grounds,
    including due process, arguing that he lacked minimum contacts with the
    Commonwealth.7 
    Id. at 73
    . This Court rejected Marshall’s due process argument,
    as the Partnership’s primary purpose was ownership and maintenance of the U.S.
    Steel Tower. 
    Id. at 74
    . Marshall “purposefully availed himself of the opportunity
    to invest in Pennsylvania real estate through [the Partnership,]” which provided
    sufficient minimum contacts for the imposition of PIT after the Partnership disposed
    of the property. 
    Id.
    Our Supreme Court reached the same conclusion in Wirth, which consolidated
    an appeal from our decision in Marshall with appeals filed by other nonresident
    partners of the Partnership. The Supreme Court noted that the analysis of the
    appellants’ due process claims, and whether they could be liable for PIT, considered
    whether they had minimum contacts with Pennsylvania. Id. at 837. Whether
    minimum contacts existed turned on whether the appellants could “reasonably
    anticipate being taxed upon a taxable event.” Id. The Supreme Court agreed with
    Revenue that the primary purpose of the Partnership was “to own, operate, and gain
    income from” the U.S. Steel Tower. Id. at 839. As a result, through the Partnership’s
    ownership and operation of the U.S. Steel Tower, the appellants “purposefully
    availed themselves” of Pennsylvania law, thus establishing minimum contacts
    within Pennsylvania. Id.
    B. The Tax Code
    Section 202(a) of the Tax Code, 72 P.S. § 7202(a), imposes a six percent tax
    “upon each separate sale at retail of tangible personal property or services[.]”
    Because Marshall failed to properly develop his argument that Revenue’s action violated
    7
    the Commerce Clause, we deemed the issue waived. Marshall, 
    41 A.3d at 73
    .
    7
    Pursuant to Section 237(b)(1) of the Tax Code, 72 P.S. § 7237(b)(1), Pennsylvania
    sales tax must be collected and remitted by “[e]very person maintaining a place of
    business” in the Commonwealth.8 Further, any person that is required to collect
    Pennsylvania sales tax from another person, and that fails to do so, shall be liable for
    the full amount of the tax that should have been collected.
    The Department of Revenue (Department), or its agents, is authorized by
    Section 272 of the Tax Code to “examine the books, papers[,] and records of any
    taxpayer in order to verify the accuracy and completeness of any return made or, if
    no return was made, to ascertain and assess the tax imposed by [the Tax Code].” 72
    P.S. § 7272 (emphasis added). “Taxpayer” is defined in Section 201(n) of the Tax
    Code, 72 P.S. § 7201(n), as “[a]ny person required to pay or collect the tax imposed
    by [the Tax Code.]” Section 272 further provides that the Department may “examine
    any person, under oath, concerning taxable sales or use by any taxpayer or
    concerning any other matter relating to the enforcement or administration of [the
    Tax Code], and to this end may compel the production of books, papers[,] and
    records and the attendance of all persons whether as parties or witnesses whom it
    believes to have knowledge of such matters. The procedure for such hearings or
    examinations shall be the same as that provided by The Fiscal Code [9] relating to
    inquisitorial powers of fiscal officers.” Id. The relevant provision of The Fiscal
    Code, Section 1602(a), grants the Secretary of Revenue, for the purpose of
    determining the amount of taxes owed, and the collection thereof, authority to
    examine a taxpayer’s records and to compel the production of records and the
    8
    “Person” includes “[a]ny natural person, association, fiduciary, partnership,
    corporation[,] or other entity[.]” Section 201(e) of the Tax Code, 72 P.S. § 7201(e).
    9
    Act of April 9, 1929, P.L. 343, as amended, 72 P.S. §§ 1-1805.
    8
    attendance of any person, whether a party or witness, deemed necessary for the
    investigation and examination of “any public account[.]” 72 P.S. § 1602(a). Should
    a person neglect or refuse to produce the records requested by the Secretary of
    Revenue, Section 1602(c) of The Fiscal Code, 72 P.S. § 1602(c), authorizes the
    issuance of a summons “directed to the sheriff of the county in which the person”
    resides to procure the records.
    “Maintaining a place of business in this Commonwealth” is defined, in
    relevant part, as follows:
    (1) Having, maintaining or using within this
    Commonwealth, either directly or through a subsidiary,
    representative or an agent, an office, distribution house,
    sales house, warehouse, service enterprise or other place
    of business; or any agent of general or restricted authority,
    or representative, irrespective of whether the place of
    business, representative or agent is located here,
    permanently or temporarily, or whether the person or
    subsidiary maintaining the place of business,
    representative or agent is authorized to do business within
    this Commonwealth.
    (2) Engaging in any activity as a business within this
    Commonwealth by any person, either directly or
    through a subsidiary, representative or an agent, in
    connection with the lease, sale or delivery of tangible
    personal property or the performance of services thereon
    for use, storage or consumption or in connection with the
    sale or delivery for use of the services described in
    subclauses (11) through (18) of clause (k) of this section,
    including, but not limited to, having, maintaining or
    using any office, distribution house, sales house,
    warehouse or other place of business, any stock of goods
    or any solicitor, canvasser, salesman, representative or
    agent under its authority, at its direction or with its
    permission, regardless of whether the person or subsidiary
    is authorized to do business in this Commonwealth.
    ....
    9
    (3.5)(i) Engaging in any activity as a business by any
    person, either directly or through a subsidiary,
    representative or an agent, in connection with the lease,
    sale or delivery of tangible personal property into this
    Commonwealth or the performance of services for use,
    storage[,] or consumption[,] or in connection with the sale
    or delivery for use in this Commonwealth of at least
    [$100,000] during the preceding twelve-month calendar
    period.[10]
    72 P.S. § 7201(b) (emphasis added).
    Section 201 of the Tax Code contains several terms that are specifically
    germane to Internet sales,11 as follows:
    (hhh) “Forum.” A place where sales at retail occur,
    whether physical or electronic. The term includes a store,
    a booth, an Internet website, a catalog[,] or similar place.
    (iii) “Marketplace facilitator.” A person that facilitates the
    sale at retail of tangible personal property. For purposes
    of this article, a person facilitates a sale at retail if the
    person or an affiliated person:
    (1) lists or advertises tangible personal property for
    sale at retail in any forum; and
    (2) either directly or indirectly through agreements
    or arrangements with third parties, collects the
    payment from the purchaser and transmits the
    payment to the person selling the property.
    The term includes a person that may also be a vendor.
    (jjj) “Marketplace seller.” A person that has an agreement
    with a marketplace facilitator to facilitates sales for that
    person.
    10
    Section 201(b)(3.5)(i) of the Tax Code was added by the Act of June 28, 2019, P.L. 50,
    No. 13 (Act 13), 72 P.S. § 7201(b)(3.5)(i).
    11
    Added by Section 1 of Act 13.
    10
    72 P.S. § 7201(hhh), (iii), and (jjj).
    Section 237(b.1) of the Tax Code provides that a marketplace facilitator
    maintaining a place of business in the Commonwealth must collect and remit
    Pennsylvania sales tax on all sales, leases, and deliveries of tangible personal
    property by marketplace sellers whose sales are facilitated through the marketplace
    facilitator’s forum.12
    C. Factual Background
    Turning to the instant matter, in an agreement executed between Amazon and
    Revenue on January 30, 2012 (2012 Agreement), Amazon agreed to voluntarily
    collect and remit Pennsylvania sales tax on its internet sales. Deposition of Kevin
    Milligan,13 3/23/22, at 63; Guild’s Br., Ex. 4. The 2012 Agreement focused on the
    collection of sales tax for goods owned and sold by Amazon. Milligan dep. at 71.
    In 2017, Revenue began developing a strategy for collecting sales tax from FBA
    Merchants that had a physical presence in the Commonwealth. Id. at 80-82. This
    strategy coincided with the enactment of the Act of October 30, 2017, P.L. 672 (No.
    43), which added provisions to the Tax Code addressing the collection of sales tax
    for online sales. Id. at 126, 145. Shortly thereafter, Amazon and Revenue entered
    into a second agreement whereby, effective April 1, 2018, Amazon would collect
    and remit Pennsylvania sales tax on FBA sales (2018 Agreement). Id. at 157. The
    2018 Agreement also provided that Amazon would not be liable for any sales tax
    12
    72 P.S. § 7237(b.1).
    13
    Milligan is the special advisor to Revenue’s deputy secretary of taxation. Milligan dep.,
    3/23/22, at 9.
    11
    owed for FBA sales made prior to April 1, 2018.14 Id. at 161, 171. FBA Merchants,
    who were not parties to the 2018 Agreement, remained obligated to pay any
    outstanding sales tax for pre-April 1, 2018 FBA sales and for any FBA sales made
    after that date “if Amazon messed up” and failed to collect sales tax. Id. at 207.
    On June 2, 2021, the Guild filed a petition for review (PFR) with this Court
    after its members received a Business Activities Questionnaire Request (Business
    Activities Request)15 from Revenue indicating that they “may have” a physical
    presence in Pennsylvania that would require the collection and remittance of
    Pennsylvania sales tax and the payment of PIT. Stipulation ¶ 1(a). The Business
    Activities Request noted that, under the Tax Code, storing property, including
    inventory, at a distribution or fulfillment center, or at any other location within
    Pennsylvania, constituted a physical presence that created tax obligations, such as
    income and sales tax, that must be reported and remitted as of the date the property
    was first located within Pennsylvania. Emergency Relief Application, Ex. 1.
    14
    During this same time period, the Commonwealth Department of Community and
    Economic Development issued its response to a request for proposal (RFP) issued by Amazon for
    the location of a second Amazon headquarters, offering Amazon up to $4.6 billion in financial
    assistance should it choose Pennsylvania as the site for its new headquarters.           See
    https://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/5113274/Letter-SecretaryDavin-AmazonHQ2-RFP-
    1.pdf (last viewed September 8, 2022). On November 13, 2018, Amazon selected New York City,
    New York, and Arlington, Virginia, as the destinations for its new headquarters. See
    https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/science/2018/09/12/timeline-amazons-search-hq-2-its-
    second-headquarters/1273275002/ (last viewed September 8, 2022). Amazon later abandoned
    plans        to      locate      a      headquarters       in       New       York      City.
    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/14/nyregion/amazon-hq2-queens.html (last viewed September
    8, 2022).
    15
    The declaration of Suzanne Tarlini, Director of Revenue’s Bureau of Registration and
    Taxpayer Management, indicates that, as of March 23, 2021, Revenue mailed 11,263 Business
    Activities Requests to nonresident businesses believed to have a nexus with the Commonwealth.
    Guild’s Br., Ex. 7; Revenue’s Br., Ex. G.
    12
    Recipients of the Business Activities Request were offered the opportunity to
    participate in a voluntary compliance program (Compliance Program) that would
    assist them in complying with any past due tax obligations and that offered a limited
    lookback period that would relieve them of tax obligations accruing prior to January
    1, 2019. Id. Businesses interested in participating were directed to complete and
    return a questionnaire to Revenue within 15 days of the Business Activities
    Request’s date, which Revenue would thereafter review for purposes of determining
    the businesses’ tax obligations. Id. Businesses deemed subject to Pennsylvania sales
    and income tax would be registered as such and notified of their tax collection and
    filing obligations. Id. The Business Activities Request further indicated that
    “[f]ailure to provide the information requested [would] result in additional
    enforcement actions and the business [would] forfeit any penalty relief or limited
    lookback provisions provided by the [Compliance Program].” Id. (emphasis added).
    On June 3, 2021, the Guild filed an application for emergency relief, seeking
    a stay of Revenue’s June 8, 2021 deadline for complying with the Business Activities
    Request.     Then-President Judge Brobson denied the application as moot after
    Revenue agreed to extend the deadline to June 22, 2021.16 Following a June 9, 2021
    status conference, the parties agreed to file cross-applications for summary relief,
    along with supporting briefs. Revenue’s compliance deadline was extended pending
    this Court’s disposition of their cross-applications for summary relief. June 30, 2021
    Stipulation, ¶ 5.
    Prior to initiating the instant action, on February 26, 2021, the Guild filed a
    complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief with the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Pennsylvania (District Court), arguing that Revenue’s
    16
    The June 8, 2021 extension was itself an extension of the original May 8, 2021 deadline
    agreed to by the parties. Emergency Relief Application, Ex. 5.
    13
    attempts to collect Pennsylvania sales tax from the Guild’s members violated their
    constitutional rights. June 30, 2021 Stipulation, ¶ 1.17 As part of the District Court
    action, Scott Moody (Moody), a Guild member and nonresident FBA Merchant,
    testified that he began selling merchandise through the FBA Program in September
    2018. Emergency Relief Application, Ex. 2, Notes of Testimony (N.T.), 4/29/21, at
    9, 13, 48. Moody related that, in addition to conducting its own first-party online
    sales, Amazon permits third-party merchant sales that are fulfilled directly by the
    merchant. Id. at 14. Conversely, FBA sales are, as the name suggests, fulfilled
    entirely by Amazon, which collects payment from the customer and ships the
    merchandise directly from an Amazon warehouse. Id. at 23. To participate in the
    FBA Program, an FBA Merchant submits a list of its inventory to Amazon, which
    is then shipped to a location designated by Amazon. Id. at 24. An FBA Merchant
    cannot select the warehouse to which its merchandise will be shipped, unless it pays
    a fee to participate in an “inventory placement service” that enables the FBA
    Merchant to direct its shipments to certain locations. Id. at 26, 37. This service only
    governs the initial shipment of merchandise to Amazon, as the FBA Merchant
    retains “no further control” over merchandise received by Amazon, unless the FBA
    Merchant elects to withdraw its products from sale on Amazon. Id. at 26. Following
    the sale of its merchandise through the FBA Program, an FBA Merchant receives
    payment from Amazon, minus funds withheld “to cover potential refunds.” Id. at
    24. FBA Merchants have no contact with the customers that purchase their
    merchandise. Id. at 36.
    17
    The District Court ultimately dismissed the Guild’s complaint, as it concerned an
    unsettled matter of Pennsylvania law. June 30, 2021 Stipulation, ¶ 1; Emergency Relief
    Application, Ex. 4.
    14
    Moody testified that he received a Business Activities Request from Revenue
    in early 2021 indicating that his business may be subject to Pennsylvania sales and
    income tax due to the storage of merchandise in one of Amazon’s Pennsylvania
    warehouses. Id. at 40; Emergency Relief Application, Ex. 1. Moody stated that he
    could not verify his business activity in Pennsylvania because he could not identify
    how much of his FBA inventory was stored there. N.T., 4/29/21, at 40, 47. He
    believed that Amazon collected sales tax on FBA sales when he initially began
    participating in the FBA Program in 2018. Id. at 44. Moody conceded during cross-
    examination that the FBA agreement he executed with Amazon provides that he is
    responsible for collecting, reporting, and paying any taxes that Amazon has not
    collected and remitted on his behalf. Id. at 50. Moody also acknowledged that he
    owns the merchandise offered through the FBA Program until a customer pays for
    it. Id. at 53. He agreed that he had neither received any tax assessments from
    Revenue, nor had he been contacted by Revenue’s criminal tax section or its Bureau
    of Audits. Id. at 57-58.
    Following the submission of briefs in support of the parties’ cross-
    applications for summary relief and oral argument, which took place on June 22,
    2022, this matter is now ready for our disposition.
    II.        Issues
    The primary issue before this Court is whether FBA Merchants are subject to
    the sales tax and PIT provisions of the Tax Code because Amazon stored their
    merchandise in warehouses located in the Commonwealth.18 Additionally, the Guild
    argues that Revenue lacks the authority to collect sales tax in a retroactive manner,
    that the relevant provisions of the Tax Code do not apply to the Guild’s nonresident
    18
    We have reordered the issues so that we may first address the Guild’s constitutional
    claims.
    15
    members, and that Revenue’s enforcement efforts violate the federal Internet Tax
    Freedom Act (ITFA).19
    III.   Discussion
    An application for summary relief is evaluated according to the standards for
    summary judgment. Myers v. Com., 
    128 A.3d 846
    , 849 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015). An
    application for summary relief may be granted if a party’s right to judgment is clear
    and no issues of material fact are in dispute. 
    Id.
     To be entitled to summary relief,
    the parties must demonstrate the nonexistence of any genuine issue of material fact.
    Thompson Coal Co. v. Pike Coal Co., 
    412 A.2d 466
    , (Pa. 1979).
    First, we address whether imposition of the sales tax collection and remittance
    provisions in Section 237(b)(1) of the Tax Code on nonresident FBA Merchants
    implicates the Due Process Clause of the U.S. Constitution. A taxpayer challenging
    the constitutionality of tax legislation bears a heavy burden. Leonard v. Thornburgh,
    
    489 A.2d 1349
    , 1351 (Pa. 1985). Tax legislation is presumed to be constitutionally
    valid and will only be declared unconstitutional where it “clearly, palpably, and
    plainly violates the Constitution.” Free Speech, LLC v. City of Phila., 
    884 A.2d 966
    ,
    971 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005).          Any doubts regarding the constitutionality of tax
    legislation should be resolved in favor of upholding the legislation. 
    Id.
    As already discussed herein, the Due Process Clause protects citizens from
    unfair tax burdens by limiting the power of states and their political subdivisions to
    impose extra-territorial taxation. Equitable Life, 
    621 A.2d at 1091
     (internal citations
    omitted). To comply with due process, such taxation is restricted to cases in which
    there exists “some definitive link, some minimal connection, between the state and
    19
    
    Pub. L. No. 105-277,
     Div. C. Title XI, §§ 1100-1104, 
    112 Stat. 2681
     (1998) (current
    version at 
    47 U.S.C. § 151
     note). The ITFA generally prohibits the imposition of any
    discriminatory tax on electronic commerce.
    16
    the person, property[,] or transaction it seeks to tax[.]” 
    Id.
     The existence of
    minimum contacts requires “some act” by which an entity “purposefully avails itself
    of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum [s]tate, thus invoking the
    benefits and protections of its laws.” Wirth, 95 A.3d at 838 (quoting Hanson v.
    Denckla, 
    357 U.S. 235
    , 253 (1958)). The existence of such a link turns upon the
    individual facts of each case. L.L. Bean, Inc. v. Com., 
    516 A.2d 820
    , 824 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1986). The placement of goods into the stream of commerce with an
    expectation that they will be purchased by a state’s consumers may indicate
    purposeful availment; however, “as a general rule, it is not enough that the defendant
    might have predicted that its goods will reach the forum [s]tate.” J. McIntyre Mach.,
    Ltd. v. Nicastro, 
    564 U.S. 873
    , 882 (2011). As we noted in Equitable Life, “[t]he
    simple but controlling question is whether the taxing authority has given anything
    for which it [could] ask [in] return.” Equitable Life, 
    621 A.2d at 1091
     (emphasis in
    original).
    The Guild argues that Revenue cannot establish sufficient minimum contacts
    exist that would bring the FBA Merchants within Revenue’s jurisdictional reach.
    Amazon, not the FBA Merchants, controls the storage and shipment of goods in the
    FBA Program, and an FBA Merchant’s mere participation in the FBA Program does
    not create meaningful contacts with the Commonwealth. At most, the Guild argues,
    it creates the possibility that Amazon would “unilaterally decide to store goods in
    Pennsylvania, as opposed to” a facility located in another state. Guild’s Br. at 21.
    Revenue concedes that a state must have personal jurisdiction over a
    nonresident business before it can require the payment of taxes. It argues, however,
    that the Business Activities Request sent to FBA Merchants is not a demand for tax
    payments. Rather, it is a “demand for information concerning potential tax liability,”
    17
    which Revenue has the authority to seek under Section 272 of the Tax Code.
    Revenue’s Br. at 16. Revenue denies that the Compliance Program violates an FBA
    Merchant’s due process rights, as any FBA Merchant declining to participate will
    receive notice of any adverse decision made by Revenue and the opportunity to
    appeal that decision. Revenue further contends that the Guild’s due process claim
    is premature because no FBA Merchants have received a tax assessment from
    Revenue. Conversely, Revenue asserts that the FBA Merchants may not press a
    federal due process claim because they have not first taken advantage of any
    available administrative processes.        Moreover, Revenue suggests that, by
    participating in the FBA Program, the FBA Merchants should have reasonably
    anticipated that they would incur tax liability in the Commonwealth.
    While it appears that Revenue has not issued a tax assessment against any of
    the FBA Merchants, we do not agree that the Business Activities Request mailed by
    Revenue is merely a “demand for information.” Rather, the Business Activities
    Request indicates that “[f]ailure to provide the information requested will result in
    additional enforcement actions,” language that clearly suggests the existence of
    pending enforcement actions. Emergency Relief Application, Ex. 1 (emphasis
    added). We likewise reject Revenue’s argument that the Guild’s due process claim
    is premature, as it is not clear what, if any, administrative processes are available to
    the FBA Merchants, beyond their strict compliance with the dictates of the Business
    Activities Request. Moreover, the administrative process identified by Revenue,
    notice and the opportunity to appeal an adverse tax assessment, would be available
    only following a determination of tax liability. Essentially, if we correctly follow
    Revenue’s reasoning, FBA Merchants, simply by virtue of having enrolled in the
    FBA Program, have placed themselves within Revenue’s jurisdiction and thus have
    18
    no means to challenge Revenue’s authority to investigate their records and determine
    their tax liability until after Revenue has investigated their records and determined
    their tax liability. This circuitous line of reasoning is unsupported by the statutory
    framework and controlling jurisprudence.
    Critically, Revenue’s investigative powers under Section 272 apply to the
    records of taxpayers, not individuals or entities Revenue suspects may be taxpayers.
    Furthermore, Section 272 does not grant Revenue the unfettered authority to seek
    business information from any person or entity it desires for the purpose of
    determining its status as a taxpayer. Due process requires a connection between the
    taxing authority and the person or entity it seeks to tax and “some act” indicating the
    alleged taxpayer has availed itself of the taxing authority’s protections,
    opportunities, and services. Wirth, 95 A.3d at 838.
    The record reflects that Amazon determines the location to which goods are
    shipped by an FBA Merchant. Even where an FBA Merchant has paid to participate
    in Amazon’s “inventory placement service,” an FBA Merchant has no control over
    its merchandise once Amazon receives it. Therefore, while an FBA Merchant may
    initially ship its merchandise to a Pennsylvania warehouse owned and operated by
    Amazon, whether the merchandise remains in that location is a decision made solely
    by Amazon. Once the merchandise is purchased by an Amazon customer, Amazon
    is responsible for shipping it to the customer. The identity and location of the
    purchaser is not disclosed to the FBA Merchant. Milligan, Revenue’s special
    advisor to the deputy secretary for taxation, acknowledged during his deposition that
    FBA sales are made through Amazon’s website, that Amazon collects payment for
    the purchased goods, and that Amazon is responsible for shipping the merchandise
    to the customer in an Amazon-branded box. Milligan Dep. at 136-37. We are hard
    19
    pressed to envision how, in these circumstances, an FBA Merchant has placed its
    merchandise in the stream of commerce with the expectation that it would be
    purchased by a customer located in the Commonwealth, or has availed itself of the
    Commonwealth’s protections, opportunities, and services.
    Regarding the imposition of PIT, the parties only briefly touch upon this issue
    in their respective principal and reply briefs. Revenue’s argument, however, that
    FBA Merchants “may have outstanding [PIT] obligations” appears to be based on
    the same faulty proposition that, because Amazon may have stored an FBA
    Merchant’s property in one of its Pennsylvania warehouses, an FBA Merchant has
    income sourced from within the Commonwealth.                   Without more, Revenue’s
    argument must fail, as Revenue’s power to examine a taxpayer’s records under
    Section 272 of the Tax Code does not extend to demanding business information
    from every participant in Amazon’s FBA Program, simply because Revenue
    suspects that person or entity “may be in violation of Pennsylvania’s tax laws[.]”
    Revenue’s Br. at 18. This Court came to a similar conclusion in Bloomingdale’s By
    Mail, Ltd. v. Department of Revenue, 
    516 A.2d 827
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1986), and L.L.
    Bean.20
    In both Bloomingdale’s and L.L. Bean, the Department sought transactional
    sales data from nonresident mail order companies, Bloomingdale’s By Mail, Ltd.
    (BBM) and L.L.Bean, Inc. (L.L. Bean). The Department also sought to compel the
    collection and remittance of Pennsylvania sales tax. In the case of L.L. Bean, its
    products were sold by V.F. Corporation (V.F.), an unrelated Pennsylvania
    corporation that owned and operated retail stores in the Commonwealth. L.L. Bean,
    While our decisions in Bloomingdale’s and L.L. Bean were decided prior to Wayfair, the
    20
    Wayfair decision only impacted the analysis of Commerce Clause claims. Our review in
    Bloomingdale’s and L.L. Bean involved a due process analysis, which was unaffected by Wayfair.
    20
    
    516 A.2d at 823
    . The Department argued that V.F. was L.L. Bean’s “representative”
    for purposes of Section 201(b)(2) of the Tax Code,21 and, therefore, L.L. Bean
    maintained a place of business in the Commonwealth. This Court rejected the
    Department’s argument that V.F. acted as L.L. Bean’s representative, as L.L. Bean
    exerted no control over V.F., V.F.’s operation of its stores, or V.F.’s employees. 
    Id. at 823
    . V.F. set the prices for merchandise sold at its stores, which used V.F.-
    branded shopping bags.      
    Id.
     L.L. Bean’s contacts with V.F. were limited to
    protecting L.L. Bean’s trademark, providing advice on how to display L.L. Bean’s
    goods and improve V.F.’s sales, and confirming the accuracy of L.L. Bean’s record
    keeping. 
    Id. at 823, 825
    . We also rejected the Department’s argument that Section
    272 of the Tax Code granted the Department authority to compel L.L. Bean’s release
    of its transaction sales data for the purpose of collecting Pennsylvania sales tax from
    L.L. Bean’s customers. 
    Id. at 826
    . Section 272 of the Tax Code specifies that The
    Fiscal Code governs the procedure for investigating and examining a taxpayer’s
    records. To that end, Section 1602(c) of The Fiscal Code, 72 P.S. § 1602(c),
    authorizes the issuance of a summons directed “to the sheriff of the county in which
    the person or persons reside[.]”      We construed this provision as limiting the
    Department’s investigative power to in-state residents, a construction bolstered by
    Section 273 of the Tax Code, which requires that common carriers delivering goods
    by a nonresident shipped to the Commonwealth “maintain adequate records of such
    deliveries[.]” 72 P.S. § 7273; L.L. Bean, 
    516 A.2d at 826
    . We reasoned that Section
    273 would be rendered superfluous if the General Assembly intended that Section
    272 of the Tax Code apply to nonresidents. Therefore, we held that Section 272 did
    The 2019 amendments to the definition of “maintaining a place of business in this
    21
    Commonwealth” do not affect this Court’s analysis of L.L. Bean.
    21
    not grant the Department broad power to obtain the records of a nonresident. L.L.
    Bean, 
    516 A.2d at 826
    .
    The sole issue in Bloomingdale’s concerned whether the Department had
    authority under Section 272 of the Tax Code to compel the attendance of out-of-state
    witnesses and the production of out-of-state documents. Relying on L.L. Bean, we
    held that the Department’s subpoena power under Section 272 of the Tax Code could
    only be utilized “within the borders of the Commonwealth.” Bloomingdale’s, 
    516 A.2d at 829
    .
    To paraphrase the question we posed in Equitable Life, the record fails to
    disclose what, if anything, the Commonwealth has given the FBA Merchants “for
    which it can ask [in] return.” Equitable Life, 
    621 A.2d at 1091
    .               Furthermore,
    Revenue’s investigative powers under Section 272 may not be utilized against
    persons or records located outside the Commonwealth. Accordingly, we grant the
    Guild’s cross-application for summary relief.22 Revenue’s cross-application for
    summary relief is denied.
    __________________________________
    ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    22
    In light of our disposition of the Guild’s due process claim, we need not address its
    remaining arguments.
    22
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Online Merchants Guild,               :
    Petitioner           :
    :
    v.                              : No. 179 M.D. 2021
    :
    C. Daniel Hassell, in his official    :
    capacity as Secretary of Revenue,     :
    Department of Revenue,                :
    Respondent        :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 9th day of September, 2022, the cross-application for
    summary relief filed by the Online Merchants Guild is hereby GRANTED. The
    cross-application for summary relief filed by C. Daniel Hassell is DENIED.
    __________________________________
    ELLEN CEISLER, Judge