OSCPA to file amicus brief for 2020 municipal income tax refunds

OSCPA to file amicus brief for 2020 municipal income tax refunds

By Greg Saul, Esq., CAE, director of tax policy


House Bill 197, a
2020 law change early in the pandemic, was intended to address the significant withholding challenges faced by employers of workers who suddenly were working remotely – often outside the city where the business itself was located.  However, many cities where the money was withheld refused to grant refunds to the remote taxpayers.

OSCPA worked in 2021 to secure a law change in House Bill 110 ensuring qualified remote workers would be able to receive municipal tax refunds for Tax Year 2021. In that same bill, the Legislature left it up to the Ohio Supreme Court to address refunds for 2020. The goal is that the Ohio Supreme Court will clearly recognize the distinction between employers’ withholding and employees’ tax liability.

Several cases were filed in Ohio questioning the constitutionality of requiring individual taxpayers to pay income tax to municipalities where they neither lived nor physically performed services.  Two of those cases have reached the Ohio Supreme Court. Both were decided against the taxpayers at the appellate level, and the Ohio Supreme Court declined to hear the first appeal (Columbus) in March 2022.

However, the Ohio Supreme Court voted 4-3 on June 7, 2022 to take up the second case (Cincinnati), Schaad v. Alder.  Justices Kennedy, DeWine, Fischer, and Donnelly voted to take up the case.  Justices O’Connor, Stewart, and Brunner dissented.
  

OSCPA will file an amicus brief on Aug. 15 to support taxpayers in their efforts to obtain 2020 refunds based on the Society's position that taxing persons who neither work nor live in a jurisdiction is unconstitutional. In an interesting twist on July 25, the City of Lebanon filed an amicus brief on behalf of their resident taxpayer Josh Schaad instead of defending Cincinnati.  Lebanon said in their brief:

“However, taxing an individual for neither working nor living in a city [Cincinnati] is unjust, as the city is not providing services to that individual and the entities [Lebanon] which are providing those services may be being denied fair funding. During the enforced work-from-home period where workers were ‘deemed’ to be working in the municipalities of their office, the actual municipalities in which they lived had to pick up the slack while their citizens were being unfairly taxed.”

The Ohio Supreme Court has yet to set a hearing schedule on this case, but oral arguments likely will occur in late 2022 or early 2023, with a decision arriving later in 2023.