With a new decision from the Court of Appeals, many boat owners that paid tax to Maryland may be entitled to a refund. If you purchased your vessel outside of Maryland and eventually paid vessel tax here, you may wish to immediately contact us concerning refunds. Please call 410 263 4464 or send an email to dschwenk@annapolis.net. Please review the information on our refunds page - Boat Tax Refunds
On March 14, 2005, Maryland's highest court, the Court of Appeals, spoke for
the first time on the interpretation of Maryland's vessel excise tax. In Kushell
v. DNR, a case briefed and argued by J. Dirk Schwenk for Lochner and Schwenk,
LLC, the Court held that the Department of Natural Resources could not tax all
federally documented vessels. For decades the DNR had taken the position
that it could tax any boat that was principally used in Maryland. Mr.
Kushell admitted to having his boat in Maryland, but argued that he did not
purchase the boat with the intent that it be principally used in this state,
since he had used it in California for nearly a decade before entering Maryland
waters. Kushell argued that he could only be taxed if he had: "possession
within the State of a vessel purchased outside the State to be used principally
in the State" under the statute. This argument was repeatedly rejected,
including by the Office of Administrative Hearings (the first level of appeal);
the Secretary of the DNR (the second level of appeal); and the Circuit Court for
Anne Arundel County (the third level of appeal). The Court of Appeals,
however, unanimously agreed with Mr. Kushell (and Mr. Schwenk) and held that the
plain language of the statute required that, to be taxable, a federally
documented boat must be purchased with the specific intent that it be
principally used in Maryland. Because of the way that boat tax is
structured, this should also mean that a boat purchased and registered in
another state is not taxable, so long as the numbering system of the other state
is maintained. The Court's decision can be found
Kushell v.
DNR on the Court of Appeals website.
On the same day, the Court issued a second decision concerning the boat tax.
This appeal was not handled by Lochner and Schwenk, LLC, and its result went
against the vessel owner. In Schwarz v. DNR, the vessel owner purchased
the boat in Maryland, but did not remove it within 30 days as the DNR requires.
The vessel owner argued that he kept the boat in Maryland for a longer period
because the boat required significant warranty repairs. Ultimately, the
vessel owner invested nearly $35,000 in after-market stabilizers to address a
significant stability issue, then took the boat South to Florida. During
the first appeal, the Office of Administrative Hearings held that Mr. Schwarz
did not meet the repair exception to the tax because the boat had not been "held
for maintenance or repair" for periods of greater than 30 days, and it was
therefore simply being used in Maryland waters. In the Circuit Court, the
judge held that there was no exception at all to the tax for a boat that was
purchased in Maryland, and so the "maintenance and repair" exception did not
apply. The Court of Appeals clearly struggled with whether the Circuit
Court was correct, but in a split decision analyzed the case on the basis of the
maintenance and repair issues. In so doing, the Maryland's boat dealers
and brokers narrowly avoided a decision that could have crippled the industry,
since every boat purchased or sold in Maryland would have been taxed, irrespective of
where the boat was to be used. In dissent, Judge Wilner stated:
"If the Circuit Court's reading of the statute is correct [that there is no
exception to the tax for boats that are purchased in Maryland], but may cause
some economic hardship to the boating industry in Maryland, the industry can ask
the General Assembly, which is now in session and will remain in session for
another month, to reconsider the tax statute and create the exemption that is
not presently there. That is the normal way, and a perfectly effective
way, in which a statutory construction decision by this Court can be reviewed by
the Legislature. If the General Assembly believes that the kind of
exemption created by the Department of Natural Resources should exist, it can
easily and quickly place it into the law. To acknowledge but then fail to
address the issue will, because of the lingering uncertainty, create more of a
hardship for the boating industry than a clear decision which, unfavorable to
the industry, can easily be corrected by the legislature."
And so, boat dealers and brokers were that close to losing the 30 day
exemption to the boat tax. What the DNR will do next remains to be seen.
The Court's decision can be found at
Schwarz v.
DNR.
For the immediate future, this changes the Maryland tax analysis for all
owners of vessels whether purchased in or outside of Maryland. The following are probably subject
to tax:
1. Boats purchased in Maryland and principally used in
Maryland. It remains to be seen whether a boat can continue to avoid taxation if it leaves the state within 30 days.
2. Federally documented boats that are purchased elsewhere, but the owner
plans to bring the boat to Maryland and principally use it in this State.
This may apply to a Maryland resident, one that intends to become a Maryland
resident, or one who expects to use the boat for more days in Maryland than in
any other state or territory of the United States, especially in the first year
or so after purchase.
3. A state numbered boat purchased in a state without a sales tax (such as
Delaware), and on which valid State numbers are kept, but the boat is purchased
with the intent that it be principally used in Maryland.
By contrast, the following should no longer be subject to the tax:
1. Federally documented boats that were purchased elsewhere, and the owner
did not plan at the time of purchase to bring the boat to Maryland for principal
use. Examples would include: out of state residents relocating to
Maryland; out of state residents visiting Maryland, even staying in Maryland, so
long as the boat was initially purchased for use elsewhere; out of state
residents purchasing elsewhere, but ending up for extended periods in Maryland
by accident, illness or other change of plans.
2. State numbered boats that were purchased elsewhere, are properly numbered
by the other state, and the owner did not plan at the time of purchase to bring
the boat to Maryland for principal use. See above for examples.
In Schwarz, the Court declined to overturn the DNR's view that a boat that is
purchased in Maryland and files a Certification of Principal Use that the boat
will leave the State within 30 days is not subject to tax, at least so long as
the boat does leave the State. This Firm supports that exemption because
it is needed by the marine industry of this State, but has grave concerns about
whether it is really an enforceable exemption in the law.
As always, boat tax issues are entirely tied up in the peculiar facts of the
situation, and this page must be viewed as general information and not specific
advice. The intent of a purchaser is particularly subject to inference,
and should be presented in the best possible light, if one is to achieve success
on this point. There are no cases addressing the fine line indicating when
a boat is purchased with the intent that it be principally used in Maryland, so
this area is ripe for both powerful advocacy and grave misstep. If
proceeding without representation, great caution is advised.