NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-0789-18T3
XPEDITE SYSTEMS, INC.,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
DIRECTOR, DIVISION OF
TAXATION,
Defendant-Respondent.
_____________________________
Argued October 17, 2019 – Decided January 9, 2020
Before Judges Whipple, Gooden Brown and Mawla.
On appeal from the Tax Court of New Jersey, Docket
No. 018847-2010.
Zachry T. Gladney (Alston & Bird, LLP) of the New
York bar, admitted pro hac vice, argued the cause for
appellant (Alston & Bird, LLP, attorneys; Steven L.
Penaro and Zachry T. Gladney, on the briefs).
Michael J. Duffy, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant
Attorney General, of counsel; Michael J. Duffy, on the
brief).
PER CURIAM
Plaintiff Xpedite Systems, Inc. (Xpedite) appeals from a September 5,
2018 Tax Court order denying its motion for summary judgment, granting
defendant Director, Division of Taxation's (Division) cross-motion for summary
judgment, and dismissing plaintiff's complaint. Xpedite argues the Tax Court
judge erroneously calculated the portion of income, or "receipts," Xpedite
earned from services performed in New Jersey between 1998 and 2002, that
should have been allocated to New Jersey for tax purposes. We affirm primarily
for the reasons stated in the thorough written opinion of Judge Mala Sundar.
Xpedite is a broadcast fax service incorporated in Delaware with
headquarters in New Jersey. Users of Xpedite's services, generally businesses,
send their customer lists, customer contact information, and documents to
Xpedite's New Jersey headquarters via their own fax machines, telephone lines,
or computer internet servers. Once the user's documents and customer lists are
received at Xpedite's New Jersey headquarters, Xpedite uses its proprietary
software, located on computers in its New Jersey headquarters, to quickly send
out a large volume of faxes, e-mails, or voice messages. Xpedite's software can
also add features such as message-opening tracking and links within the
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messages that allow its users' customers to forward the messages to their
contacts.
The messages go out through a multi-state network made up of leased
phone lines and some of Xpedite's own switching hardware. The messages are
tracked to make sure delivery is successful, and Xpedite compiles reports at their
New Jersey headquarters for its users so they can see the delivery status of their
messages. Xpedite's mass e-mail and fax messaging services include a variety
of formats and options. Users are charged per minute or per page for fax
services, per file size for e-mail services, and per minute for other services.
Instead of sending faxes out individually to their customers, users send a
single transmission through Xpedite's system to a list of fax addresses, which
will be distributed to multiple recipients in a matter of minutes. Users can also
upload customer lists and documents through Xpedite's website. After the user
uploads their customer list file, the user then uploads the document file they
would like to have sent to their customer list. For e-mails, Xpedite offers other
add-on services.
From its New Jersey location, Xpedite distributes the document to the
user's customer list by entering the destinations into its proprietary routing
software program, contained in hardware located in New Jersey. For faxes,
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Xpedite's proprietary software then determines the "least cost route" (LCR) for
fax delivery. The information is then sent by telephone line, to switches, called
"remote fax delivery controllers" (RFDC), which are located both inside and
outside of New Jersey. The RFDC then connects to phone lines, both in and out
of New Jersey, to broadcast the messages. If the initial route is tied up, the
broadcast message is re-routed to another line to facilitate a timely delivery.
Intrastate broadcasts "almost always are done from an out of state []RFDC[]
because interstate rates are usually less than intrastate rates."
For e-mails, after a job submission is uploaded to Xpedite's website,
Xpedite's program runs checks to verify all required information is present ;
validates data; cancels invalid, duplicate, and blocked addresses; retrieves lists
and profile specifications; creates a basic template for the message; and
incorporates the user's additions. The program then creates an individual,
customized message for every recipient and sends them by "forward[ing] each
customized message to the [i]nternet mail server that handles domain mail for
the destination. Once every message is on its way to its target address, a posting
report is generated, if [the user] requested one." Once a connection is made to
a carrier's phone lines, Xpedite monitors to ensure a successful transmission,
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then sends users reports on the results of both fax and e-mail broadcasts and
deliveries.
For the years at issue herein, 1998 to 2002, Xpedite calculated its receipts
and allocated them to New Jersey according to where it billed its customers,
utilizing N.J.A.C. 18:7-8.10(a). While Xpedite receives all, or nearly all, orders
at Tinton Falls and the orders are processed and sent out through the Tinton Falls
"core platform," New Jersey users made up less than ten percent of Xpedite's
total users in the years at issue.
Xpedite was audited by the State of New Jersey for Corporation Business
Tax (CBT), Gross Income Tax (GIT), Sales Tax, and Use Tax for the years
relevant to this inquiry. On May 11, 2007, the auditor issued an amended
narrative finding Xpedite had been calculating its receipts for the period in
question as per N.J.A.C. 18:7-8.10(a) Example Two, which describes a situation
where a taxpayer earns income from long distance
telephone calls. The taxpayer bills the originators of
the long-distance calls. The example states that the
appropriate method of allocating the long-distance
[(LD)] revenue attributable to services performed in
N[ew] J[ersey] is to base it upon billings for calls
originating in N[ew] J[ersey].
The auditor stated that Xpedite was sourcing sales to the state wher e invoices
were billed—the address where its customer's accounts payable are processed.
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The auditor determined that Xpedite is a telecommunication retailer and not a
telecom provider because it does not originate the carrier signal service (dial
tone), but rather uses the signal much like a freight company uses a toll road.
Xpedite sends customers' information over the carrier signal.
Although Xpedite calculated its receipts for the CBT according to where
its customer's accounts payable are processed, the auditor found this method did
not accurately calculate New Jersey receipts, did not reflect the trade, business
practice, and economic realities underlying the generation of charges for the
services, and did not reflect Xpedite's business activities in New Jersey.
Pursuant to N.J.S.A.54:10A-8 and -10, the auditor suggested three alternate
methods to determine Xpedite's New Jersey receipts, all "reflect[ing] a
measurement of transmission origination." The auditor's suggested methods
were:
[Alternate method one:] Per Jeffrey Carter, Sales Tax
Billing Manager (6/30/2004), New Jersey is the
origination point of all transmissions, thus the service
allocation would be 100%;
[Alternate method two:] Per Gary Schwerdt, Manager
of Network Cost & Routing (7/26/2004), approximately
98% of all telecom services originate in New Jersey,
thus the service allocation would be 98%;
[Alternate method three:] Per Gary Schwerdt, Manager
of Network Cost & Routing (7/26/2004), 59.32% of the
A-0789-18T3
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RFDC (switching devices) which receive the
transmission from New Jersey are located in New
Jersey. The remaining 40.68% of the devices are
located outside of New Jersey but are directed by New
Jersey. Transmissions destined for New Jersey are
almost always routed through equipment located
outside of New Jersey. Service allocation would be
89.83%.
Because sales of services originated and were performed in New Jersey and thus
sourced to New Jersey, the auditor maintained that the receipts factor should be
100%.
However, the auditor was directed by the Division to instead allocate
receipts to New Jersey in accordance with N.J.A.C. 18:7-8.10(c), which
allocates twenty-five percent of receipts to the state of origin, fifty percent of
receipts to the state where the service is performed, and twenty-five percent of
receipts to the state of termination for "a total of 76.306% of receipts allocable
to New Jersey." On September 28, 2007, the Division sent Xpedite a notice of
assessment related to its final audit determination, stating that as a result of the
audit, Xpedite was liable for $4,975,353.02, including penalty and interest, for
CBT and Sales and Use Tax for the years 1998 to 2005. Xpedite contested the
Division's assessment and the matter was reviewed.
On August 4, 2010, conferee Nita Vakharia (Conferee Vakharia) issued a
conference report with her findings. Based on the fact that Xpedite had its main
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location in New Jersey, all the faxes and e-mails for mass mailing originated
and were processed in New Jersey, the equipment was located in New Jersey,
and the service was performed in New Jersey, Conferee Vakharia found that
under United Parcel Serv. Gen. Serv. Co. v. Director, Div. of Taxation, 25 N.J.
Tax 1 (Tax 2009), aff'd, 430 N.J Super. 1 (App. Div. 2013), aff'd, 220 N.J. 90
(2014), 100% of the receipts should be allocated to New Jersey under N.J.A.C.
18:7-8.10(a). Therefore, because the Division had only apportioned seventy-six
percent of receipts to New Jersey, Conferee Vakharia upheld the audit
assessment based on the twenty-five – fifty – twenty-five formula under
N.J.A.C. 18:7-8.10(c). On August 6, 2010, the Division issued a final
determination to Xpedite stating the audit assessment had been upheld, and that
$6,160,570 was due.
On November 2, 2010, Xpedite filed a complaint in the Tax Court of New
Jersey, contesting the final determination regarding the CBT tax allocation only.
Both parties moved for summary judgment and the Tax Court denied both
motions, holding that facts had not yet been sufficiently developed to decide the
percentage of allocation of Xpedite's sales receipts properly allocable to New
Jersey. To that end, the Division deposed Gary Schwerdt, Xpedite's manager
A-0789-18T3
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for least-cost routing and network cost and routing. No one from Xpedite's
current ownership group or management appeared at the deposition.
On June 2, 2017, Xpedite again moved for summary judgment, submitting
its secondary public offering filing and Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) filings as evidence of its business model. The Division cross-moved for
summary judgment, providing Schwerdt's deposition to establish Xpedite's
business model. Xpedite argued that it should be taxed under N.J.A.C. 18:7-
8.10(a), but not 100% as the auditor originally determined and which Conferee
Vakharia found would be appropriate. Rather, Xpedite asserted it should be
taxed according to Example Two which demonstrates how a long-distance
telecommunications company, which earns its income from "the sale of long
distance telephone communications service" and bills the customers who initiate
the call directly for all calls placed by them, should allocate the receipts to New
Jersey based on "billings for calls originating in New Jersey."
Xpedite asserted the economic realities of the way it generates receipts
are like a long-distance telephone service. Xpedite argued given those
similarities, it should source receipts using the same methodology bec ause the
services are performed under the statute at the location the services are received
by the customer. Xpedite contends the services are received by their users at
A-0789-18T3
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the user's billing location. Xpedite further argued that the "origination" of the
transmission is not in New Jersey, but at the user's location when and where the
user faxes or sends their order to Xpedite. Xpedite also asserted that N.J.A.C.
18:7-8.10 subsection (c) does not apply to them under United Parcel, as that
subsection is only meant for those businesses that are not located in New Jersey,
but where transactions "barely touch[]" New Jersey.
On September 5, 2018, the Tax Court issued an order and opinion relying
on the SEC filings, Schwerdt's deposition testimony, and the undisput ed
material facts recited by each party. The court made extensive factual findings
and legal conclusions, denied Xpedite's motion for summary judgment, granted
the Division's cross-motion for summary judgment, and dismissed Xpedite's
complaint. The Tax Court affirmed the Division's assessments, stating that "the
material facts are undisputed as are the documents in support of each party's
summary judgment motion. Although parties may draw different conclusions
from the undisputed facts and documents, the court is not bound by the differing
interpretations as a reason to deny summary judgment."
The Tax Court further found that
[The Division]'s audit determined that Xpedite's
allocation based on its costs-of-performance
inadequately represented the receipts allocable to New
Jersey. Xpedite provides nothing to contradict this
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basis for the CBT assessments. Rather, it offers an
alternate methodology, namely Example [Two]. An
example cannot trump a statute or regulation. Further,
the language and intent of Example [Two] shows that it
is limited to regulated LD carriers, [and] thus would not
apply to Xpedite. Even if Example [Two] is deemed to
be ambiguous as to its intendment and reach, it will not
apply to Xpedite because the clear intent of the
controlling statutes and implementing regulation is an
inclusion of all receipts, pursuant to which, and based
on the facts presented to the court, would require 100%
of Xpedite's receipts as allocable to New Jersey.
The court noted N.J.A.C. 18:7-8.10(a) is "broadly intended," providing
that an allocation methodology for receipts for "services performed within the
state" must "reflect the trade or business practice and economic realities
underlying the generation of the compensation for services" so that receipts from
services are subject to the CBT and must be allocated to New Jersey if they are
not otherwise apportioned.
Relying on United Parcel, 25 N.J. Tax at 36, the Tax Court determined
that even where users accessing a data processing service were out-of-state,
100% of receipts were taxable to New Jersey because the equipment that
performed data processing, as well as the personnel operating, maintaining, and
repairing the equipment, were all located in New Jersey.
A-0789-18T3
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Because Xpedite does have some switching devices located out-of-state,
the court found it was not unreasonable or arbitrary for the Division to use the
twenty-five – fifty – twenty-five methodology to allocate Xpedite's receipts.
The Tax Court rejected Xpedite's argument that it fits into Example Two
of N.J.A.C. 18:7-8.10(a) because at the time Example Two was promulgated,
telecommunications providers were subject to fees and tariffs, as well as Federal
Communications Commission regulations, none of which apply to Xpedite.
Rather, Xpedite is dependent on such carriers for its business, transmitting its
users' calls, and for call origination and termination. Finally, the Tax Court
noted that even if the terms in Example Two are vague, "an example or
illustration cannot limit or expand the statute or the regulation . . . [m]oreover,
the issue in this case is the reasonableness of [the Division's] allocation
methodology as to which it has 'broad authority' to make adjustments which
would 'accurately and fairly' represent a taxpayer's 'activity, business, receipts.'"
(quoting Metromedia, Inc. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 97 N.J. 313, 323 (1984)).
The Tax Court also resolved the apparent inconsistency of Xpedite's sales taxes,
which are collected for "telecommunications services," in that the Sales and Use
Tax Act "broadly defines telecommunications" and
also because the issue here is the allocation of receipts
to New Jersey, where consideration must be given not
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just to the nature of services, but also to the cost of
performance and economic realities, and Example
[Two] is limited to an LD telephone company, of LD
telephone calls, and of toll revenues from LD calls.
The court noted that the "economic reality" of Xpedite's business is that
almost everything to do with the fax blasts [(Xpedite's
services)], occurs in New Jersey . . . the fact that it uses
RFDC's or POPs [(point of presence)] located outside
New Jersey is only to lower costs, and does not change
the fact that the transmissions begin in New Jersey (the
[user] is presumably using its own [local telephone
lines] to send its order to Xpedite, thus, Xpedite cannot
claim to be providing LD telephone services to its
customer in this regard.).
The Tax Court found the Division's allocation of receipts was in line with
the language and intent of the controlling statute and regulations, and that its
adjustment to Xpedite's allocation factor was reasonable under Metromedia.
The Tax Court also found that Xpedite had not met its burden of overcoming the
presumptive correctness of the Division's CBT assessments. This appeal
followed.
Our review of a decision by the Tax Court is highly deferential and "we
have a limited scope of review following a determination of that court." Estate
of Taylor v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 422 N.J. Super. 336, 341 (App. Div. 2011).
Because the Tax Court has "special expertise," its findings will not be disturbed
unless they are arbitrary or lack substantial evidential support in the record.
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Yilmaz, Inc. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 390 N.J. Super. 435, 443 (App. Div.
2007). Conversely, we review the Tax Court's legal determinations de novo.
Alcatel-Lucent USA Inc. v. Twp. of Berkeley Heights, 460 N.J. Super. 243, 249
(App. Div. 2019).
To understand the receipts allocation factor that is at issue, it is helpful to
understand what the CBT is. Under the 1998 version of N.J.S.A. 54:10A-2,
which was the audit period at issue in this matter, "[e]very domestic or foreign
corporation" must pay an annual tax "for the privilege of doing business,
employing or owning capital or property, or maintaining an office, in [New
Jersey]." N.J.S.A. 54:10A-2 (1998). A corporation doing business in New
Jersey that also "maintains a regular place of business outside [New Jersey] 'is
obligated to pay tax only on that portion of its entire net income which is
allocable to [New Jersey].'" Flagstar Bank v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 29 N.J. Tax
130, 147 (Tax 2016) (quoting Stryker Corp. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 18 N.J.
Tax 270, 272-73 (Tax 1999) (citing N.J.S.A. 54:10A-6)).
What is allocable to New Jersey is ordinarily computed using a formula
that multiplies a corporation's entire net income by a portion of the corporation's
property value within New Jersey, a portion of the sales, or "receipts" from
"services performed within [New Jersey]," and the payroll of the corporation.
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See N.J.S.A. 54:10A-6(A)-(C); see also Flagstar Bank, 29 N.J. Tax at 147. This
formula "[limits] taxation under the CBT to only that income that has a sufficient
nexus to New Jersey to satisfy constitutional constraints on State taxation."
Flagstar Bank, 29 N.J. Tax at 147 (citing Cent. Nat'l-Gottesman, Inc. v. Dir.,
Div. of Taxation, 14 N.J. Tax 545, 552 (Tax 1995)).
When the three-factor allocation formula under N.J.S.A. 54:10A-6 does
not fit in a situation, because it "does not properly reflect the activity, business,
receipts, capital, entire net worth or entire net income of a taxpayer reasonably
attributable to [New Jersey]," the commissioner "may adjust it by . . . (e)
applying any other similar or different method calculated to effect a fair and
proper allocation of the entire net income and the entire net worth reasonably
attributable to [New Jersey]." N.J.S.A. 54:10A-8(e) (1998).
This section "invest[s] the Director with broad authority to adjust a
[N.J.S.A. 54:10A-6] allocation factor if it does not properly reflect a taxpayer's
business activity reasonably attributable to [New Jersey]." Hess Realty Corp. v.
Dir., Div. of Taxation, 10 N.J. Tax 63, 81 (Tax 1988). Here, the record reflects
that Xpedite's users received the benefit of the service at Xpedite's New Jersey
headquarters, where the users' messages were processed, the users' messages
were monitored, and the reports on the success or failure of the message
A-0789-18T3
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deliveries were compiled and then sent to the users, all using the proprietary
software located on hardware in Xpedite's New Jersey headquarters. Xpedite's
users had to send their customer lists and documents to Xpedite's New Jersey
headquarters, using local telephone lines or internet service to which they were
personally subscribed, to be processed before they were sent out.
Xpedite's services, and the revenues generated from them, are performed
at its headquarters in New Jersey using its hardware and proprietary software,
and given the holding under United Parcel, 100% of its receipts could be sourced
to New Jersey under subsection (a). However, unlike the taxpayer in United
Parcel, Xpedite does utilize some out-of-state phone lines and switches in
performing its services, some of which it maintains and owns. Consequently,
even if the New Jersey headquarters is directing and monitoring the transmission
throughout the entire message delivery, the messages are traveling through that
out-of-state equipment. Therefore, 100% receipt allocation to New Jersey may
not reflect the realities of its business, and the seventy-six percent allocation
reached by the Division using the twenty-five – fifty – twenty-five method under
subsection (c), even though it can be inferred that (c) only applies to those out -
of-state businesses with mere contact with New Jersey, may more accurately
reflect the way Xpedite earns receipts from its services. Under N.J.S.A. 54:10A-
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8, the Director exercised broad discretion to adjust a receipts allocation to reflect
the economic realities of Xpedite's business.
Therefore, the resulting seventy-six percent allocation from the Division's
use of the twenty-five – fifty – twenty-five formula under (c), instead of 100%
under United Parcel, reasonably reflects the portion of Xpedite's services
performed in New Jersey and was therefore well within the Director's discretion.
The Tax Court's findings are supported by adequate facts in the record.
Further, after a de novo review, we discern no error. We do not address
Xpedite's remaining arguments as they lack sufficient merit to warrant
discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
Affirmed.
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