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Introduced Version House Bill 4029 History

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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted


H. B. 4029


(By Mr. Speaker, Mr. Kiss, and Delegate Trump)

[By Request of the Executive]

[Introduced January 14, 2002; referred to the

Committee on Finance.]




A BILL to repeal article thirteen-h, section twenty-four, article twenty-three and section twenty-two, article twenty-four, all of chapter eleven of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended; to repeal section five, article thirteen, chapter twenty-one of said code; to amend and reenact section four, article thirteen-n, chapter eleven of said code; to amend and reenact section twenty-four-a, article twenty-three of said chapter eleven; to amend and reenact section twenty-two-a, article twenty-four of said chapter eleven; to amend article thirteen-c of said chapter eleven by adding thereto a new section, designated section sixteen; and to further amend said chapter eleven, by adding thereto a new article, designated article thirteen-q, all relating generally to tax credits for certain business activity; terminating unused tax credits for increased generation of electricity, coal coking facilities, and costs of meeting requirements of security camera installation in Convenience Food Stores Safety Act; terminating new steel manufacturing operations tax credit, the credit for producing value-added products from raw agricultural products, the business investment and jobs investment tax credit, small business tax credit and corporate headquarters relocation tax credit but preserving certain tax credit for eligible activity occurring before termination date; specifying transition rules; establishing economic opportunity tax credit and, as to such credit, specifying short title, legislative findings and purpose for new credit; defining certain terms; specifying activity that qualifies for credit, how amount of allowable credit is determined, how credit is applied and against what tax liabilities credit may be applied; providing for forfeiture of unused tax credits, redetermination of credit and recapture of credit under certain circumstances; imposing recapture tax, interest and civil money penalty and specifying circumstance when they apply; allowing transfer of qualified investment to successors; requiring identification of investment credit property; requiring persona claiming credit to keep records of investment credit property and provide information to tax commissioner; providing rules for interpretation, construction, severability and burden of proof; requiring filing of application for credit as condition precedent to claiming credit and imposing consequences for failure to make timely application; specifying business activity eligible for economic opportunity credit; requiring periodic review of tax credit and performance reports to governor and Legislature; providing internal effective dates and making technical corrections in amended sections.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That article thirteen-h, section twenty-four, article twenty-three, and section twenty-two, article twenty-four, all of chapter eleven of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be repealed; that section five, article thirteen, chapter twenty-one of said code be repealed; that section four, article thirteen-n, chapter eleven of said code be amended and reenacted; that section twenty-four-a, article twenty-three of said chapter eleven be amended and reenacted; that section twenty-two-a, article twenty-four of said chapter eleven be amended and reenacted; that article thirteen-c of said chapter eleven be amended by adding thereto a new section, designated section sixteen; and that said chapter eleven be further amended by adding thereto a new article, designated article thirteen-q, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 13C. BUSINESS INVESTMENT AND JOBS EXPANSION TAX CREDIT.
§11-13C-16. Termination of credit; effective date.

(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this article to the contrary, no entitlement to any tax credit under this article shall result from, and no credit shall be available to any taxpayer for, investment placed in service or use after the thirty-first day of December, two thousand two.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this section, the provisions of sections one through fifteen of this article shall continue to apply to taxpayers that have gained entitlement to the credit pursuant to the placement of qualified investment into service or use prior to the first day of January, two thousand three.
(c) Transition rules. -- The general rule stated in subsection (a) of this section shall not apply:
(1) To qualified investment property placed in service or use prior to the first day of January, two thousand three.
(2) To property purchased or leased for business expansion that is placed in service or use on or after the first day of January, two thousand three, if at least one of the following clauses applies to the property:
(A) The new or expanded business facility was constructed, reconstructed or erected, pursuant to a written construction contract executed prior to the first day of January, two thousand three, as limited to the provisions of the contract as of that date then binding on the taxpayer, but only to the extent the new or expanded business facility is placed in service or use prior to the first day of January, two thousand four.
(B) The new or expanded business facility that is part of a project described in subdivision (1), subsection (a), section four-b of this article, was constructed, reconstructed or erected, pursuant to a written construction contract executed prior to the first day of January, two thousand three, as limited to the provisions of the contract as of that date then binding on the taxpayer: Provided, That only that portion of the contract price attributable to that percentage of the construction contract completed prior to the first day of January, two thousand four, (determined under principles set forth in section 460(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as in effect before the first day of January, two thousand three), which is placed in service or use prior to the first day of January, two thousand four, may be treated as property purchased for business expansion under section six of this article.
(C) The new or expanded business facility was purchased or leased pursuant to a written contract executed prior to the first day of January, two thousand three, as limited to the provisions then binding on the taxpayer as of that date, but only to the extent the new or expanded business facility is placed in service or use prior to the first day of January, two thousand four.
(D) The machinery or equipment or other tangible personal property purchased or leased for business expansion at a new or expanded business facility was purchased or leased by the taxpayer pursuant to a written contract to purchase or lease identifiable tangible personal property executed before the first day of January, two thousand three, as limited to the provisions of the written contract then binding on the taxpayer, but only to the extent the tangible personal property purchased or leased under the contract is placed in service or use before the first day of January, two thousand four.
ARTICLE 13N. TAX CREDIT FOR NEW STEEL MANUFACTURING OPERATIONS AFTER JULY 1, 1998.
§11-13N-4. Amount of credit allowed; expiration of the credit.

(a) Credit allowable. -- The amount of annual credit allowable under this article to an eligible taxpayer shall be two hundred fifty dollars for each new job at a new value-added steel product manufacturing facility located in this state, or at a new value-added steel product line of an existing manufacturing facility located in this state, that is filled by a full-time employee of the eligible taxpayer during the taxable year, subject to the following:
(1) When the new value-added steel product manufacturing facility, or the new steel product line of an existing value-added steel product manufacturing facility, is in operation for less than twelve months of the taxable year in which it is placed in service, the credit allowed by subsection (a) of this section shall be prorated by the ratio that the number of months in the taxpayer's taxable year during which the new value-added steel products facility, or the new products line of an existing value-added steel product manufacturing facility, was in service bears to twelve.
(2) When the eligible taxpayer stops manufacturing value-added steel products at the new value-added steel product manufacturing facility, or at the new steel product line of an existing value-added steel product manufacturing facility, during the taxable year, the credit allowed by subsection (a) of this section shall be prorated by the ratio that the number of months in the taxpayer's taxable year during which the new value-added steel products facility, or the new products line of an existing value-added steel product manufacturing facility, was in operation manufacturing value-added steel product bears to twelve.
(3) When determining the number of full-time employees who fill new jobs at the new value-added steel product manufacturing facility located in this state, or who fill new jobs at a new value-added steel product line of an existing manufacturing facility located in this state, the eligible taxpayer shall not include any position occupied by any employee of the eligible taxpayer, or of a related person, which existed in this state as of the first day of the second calendar month preceding the calendar month in which the new value-added steel product manufacturing facility, or a new value-added steel product line at an existing value-added steel products manufacturing facility first becomes operational, whether such the positions are filled by permanent, seasonal, temporary or part-time employees.
(4) The amount of credit allowable each taxable year shall be calculated annually based upon the number of new jobs filled by full-time employees during the taxable year: Provided, That the credit provided for in this article may only be taken one time for each new job created, and once claimed in a tax year for a new job the credit may not be claimed in a subsequent year for that position.
(b) Expiration of credit. -- This credit shall expire on the first day of July, two thousand five two. When the first day of July in the year two thousand five two falls during the taxable year of the eligible taxpayer, the amount of credit allowable for that taxable year shall be limited to that portion of the amount of credit that would have been allowable had the credit not expired multiplied by the ratio of the number of months during taxpayers taxable year ending before the first day of July, two thousand five two, bears to twelve.
ARTICLE 13Q. ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY TAX CREDIT.
§11-13Q-1. Short title.
This article may be cited as the "West Virginia Economic Opportunity Tax Credit Act."
§11-13Q-2. Legislative finding and purpose.
The Legislature finds that the encouragement of economic opportunity in this state is in the public interest and promotes the general welfare of the people of this state. In order to encourage greater capital investment in businesses in this state and thereby increase economic opportunity in this state, there is hereby enacted the economic opportunity tax credit.
§11-13Q-3. Definitions.
(a) General. -- When used in this article, or in the administration of this article, terms defined in subsection (b) shall have the meanings ascribed to them by this section, unless a different meaning is clearly required by either the context in which the term is used, or by specific definition, in this article.
(b) Terms defined.
(1) Business. -- The term "business" means any activity which is engaged in by any person in this state which is taxable under article thirteen, twenty-one, twenty-three or twenty-four of this chapter (or any combination of those articles of this chapter).
(2) Business expansion. -- The term "business expansion" means capital investment in a new or expanded business facility in this state.
(3) Business facility. -- The term "business facility" means any factory, mill, plant, refinery, warehouse, building or complex of buildings located within this state, including the land on which it is located, and all machinery, equipment and other real and personal property located at or within the facility, used in connection with the operation of the facility, in a business that is taxable in this state, and all site preparation and start-up costs of the taxpayer for the business facility which it capitalizes for federal income tax purposes.
(4) Commissioner or tax commissioner. -- The terms "commissioner" and "tax commissioner" are used interchangeably herein and mean the tax commissioner of the state of West Virginia, or his or her designee.
(5) Compensation. -- The term "compensation" means wages, salaries, commissions and any other form of remuneration paid to employees for personal services.
(6) Controlled group. -- The term "controlled group" means one or more chains of corporations connected through stock ownership with a common parent corporation if stock possessing at least fifty percent of the voting power of all classes of stock of each of the corporations is owned directly or indirectly by one or more of the corporations; and the common parent owns directly stock possessing at least fifty percent of the voting power of all classes of stock of at least one of the other corporations.
(7) Corporation. -- The term "corporation" means any corporation, joint-stock company or association, and any business conducted by a trustee or trustees wherein interest or ownership is evidenced by a certificate of interest or ownership or similar written instrument.
(8) Designee. -- The term "designee" in the phrase "or his designee," when used in reference to the commissioner, means any officer or employee of the state tax department duly authorized by the commissioner directly, or indirectly by one or more redelegations of authority, to perform the functions mentioned or described in this article.
(9) Eligible taxpayer. -- The term "eligible taxpayer" means any person who makes qualified investment in a new or expanded business facility located in this state and creates at least the required number of new jobs and who is subject to any of the taxes imposed by articles thirteen, twenty-one, twenty-three and twenty-four of this chapter (or any combination of those articles). "Eligible taxpayer" shall also include an affiliated group of taxpayers if the group elects to file a consolidated corporation net income tax return under article twenty-four of this chapter.
(10) Expanded facility. -- The term "expanded facility" means any business facility (other than a new or replacement business facility) resulting from the acquisition, construction, reconstruction, installation or erection of improvements or additions to existing property if the improvements or additions are purchased on or after the first day of January, two thousand three, but only to the extent of the taxpayer's qualified investment in the improvements or additions.
(11) Includes and including. -- The terms "includes" and "including," when used in a definition contained in this article, shall not be deemed to exclude other things otherwise within the meaning of the term defined.
(12) Leased property. -- The term "leased property" does not include property which the taxpayer is required to show on its books and records as an asset under generally accepted principles of financial accounting. If the taxpayer is prohibited from expensing the lease payments for federal income tax purposes, the property shall be treated as purchased property under this section.
(13) New business facility. -- The term "new business facility" means a business facility which satisfies all the requirements of paragraphs (A), (B), (C) and (D) of this subdivision (13).
(A) The facility is employed by the taxpayer in the conduct of a business the net income of which is or would be taxable under article twenty-one or twenty-four of this chapter. The facility shall not be considered a new business facility in the hands of the taxpayer if the taxpayer's only activity with respect to the facility is to lease it to another person or persons.
(B) The facility is purchased by, or leased to, the taxpayer after the first day of January, two thousand three.
(C) The facility was not purchased or leased by the taxpayer from a related person. The commissioner may waive this requirement if the facility was acquired from a related party for its fair market value and the acquisition was not tax motivated.
(D) The facility was not in service or use during the ninety days immediately prior to transfer of the title to the facility, or prior to the commencement of the term of the lease of the facility: Provided, That this ninety-day period may be waived by the commissioner if the commissioner determines that persons employed at the facility may be treated as "new employees" as that term is defined in this subsection.
(14) New employee. -
(A) The term "new employee" means a person residing and domiciled in this state, hired by the taxpayer to fill a position or a job in this state which previously did not exist in taxpayer's business enterprise in this state prior to the date on which the taxpayer's qualified investment is placed in service or use in this state. In no case shall the number of new employees directly attributable to the investment for purposes of this credit exceed the total net increase in the taxpayer's employment in this state: Provided, That the commissioner may require that the net increase in the taxpayer's employment in this state be determined and certified for the taxpayer's controlled group: Provided, however, That persons filling jobs saved as a direct result of taxpayer's qualified investment in property purchased or leased for business expansion may be treated as new employees filling new jobs if the taxpayer certifies the material facts to the commissioner and the commissioner expressly finds that:
(i) But for the new employer purchasing the assets of a business in bankruptcy under chapter seven or eleven of the United States bankruptcy code and the new employer making qualified investment in property purchased or leased for business expansion, the assets would have been sold by the United States bankruptcy court in a liquidation sale and the jobs so saved would have been lost; or
(ii) But for taxpayer's qualified investment in property purchased or leased for business expansion in this state, taxpayer would have closed its business facility in this state and the employees of the taxpayer located at the facility would have lost their jobs: Provided, That the commissioner shall not make this certification unless the commissioner finds that the taxpayer is insolvent as defined in 11 U.S.C. §101(32) or that the taxpayer's business facility was destroyed, in whole or in significant part, by fire, flood or other act of God.
(B) A person shall be deemed to be a "new employee" only if the person's duties in connection with the operation of the business facility are on:
(i) A regular, full-time and permanent basis.
(I) "Full-time employment" means employment for at least one hundred forty hours per month at a wage not less than the prevailing state or federal minimum wage, depending on which minimum wage provision is applicable to the business;
(II) "Permanent employment" does not include employment that is temporary or seasonal and therefore the wages, salaries and other compensation paid to the temporary or seasonal employees will not be considered for purposes of sections five and seven of this article; or
(ii) A regular, part-time and permanent basis: Provided, That the person is customarily performing the duties at least twenty hours per week for at least six months during the taxable year.
(15) New job. -- The term "new job" means a job which did not exist in the business of the taxpayer in this state prior to the taxpayer's qualified investment being made, and which is filled by a new employee.
(16) New property. -- The term "new property" means:
(A) Property, the construction, reconstruction or erection of which is completed on or after the first day of January, two thousand three, and placed in service or use after that date; and
(B) Property leased or acquired by the taxpayer that is placed in service or use in this state on or after the first day of January, two thousand three, if the original use of the property commences with the taxpayer and commences after that date.
(17) Original use. -- The term "original use" means the first use to which the property is put, whether or not the use corresponds to the use of the property by the taxpayer.
(18) Partnership and partner. -- The term "partnership" includes a syndicate, group, pool, joint venture or other unincorporated organization through or by means of which any business, financial operation or venture is carried on, and which is not a trust or estate, a corporation or a sole proprietorship. The term "partner" includes a member in such a syndicate, group, pool, joint venture or organization.
(19) Person. -- The term "person" includes any natural person, corporation or partnership.
(20) Property purchased or leased for business expansion.
(A) Included property. -- Except as provided in paragraph (B), the term "property purchased or leased for business expansion" means real property and improvements thereto, and tangible personal property, but only if the real or personal property was constructed, purchased, or leased and placed in service or use by the taxpayer, for use as a component part of a new or expanded business facility as defined in this section, which is located within West Virginia. This term includes only:
(1) Real property and improvements thereto having a useful life of four or more years, placed in service or use on or after the first day of January, two thousand three, by the taxpayer.
(2) Real property and improvements thereto, acquired by written lease having a primary term of ten or more years and placed in service or use by the taxpayer on or after the first day of January, two thousand three.
(3) Tangible personal property placed in service or use by the taxpayer on or after the first day of January, two thousand three, with respect to which depreciation, or amortization in lieu of depreciation, is allowable in determining the personal or corporation net income tax liability of the business taxpayer under article twenty-one or twenty-four of this chapter, and which has a useful life, at the time the property is placed in service or use in this state, of four or more years.
(4) Tangible personal property acquired by written lease having a primary term of four years or longer, that commenced and was executed by the parties thereto on or after the first day of January, two thousand three, if used as a component part of a new or expanded business facility, shall be included within this definition.
(5) Tangible personal property owned or leased, and used by the taxpayer at a business location outside this state which is moved into this state on or after the first day of January, two thousand three, for use as a component part of a new or expanded business facility located in this state: Provided, That if the property is owned, it must be depreciable or amortizable personal property for income tax purposes, and have a useful life of four or more years remaining at the time it is placed in service or use in this state, and if the property is leased, the primary term of the lease remaining at the time the leased property is placed in service or use in this state, must be four or more years:
(B) Excluded property. - The term "property purchased or leased for business expansion" shall not include:
(i) Property owned or leased by the taxpayer and for which the taxpayer was previously allowed tax credit under article thirteen-c, thirteen-d or thirteen-e of this chapter, or the tax credits allowed by this article.
(ii) Property owned or leased by the taxpayer and for which the seller, lessor, or other transferor, was previously allowed tax credit under article thirteen-c, thirteen-d or thirteen-e of this chapter, or the tax credits allowed by this article.
(iii) Repair costs, including materials used in the repair, unless for federal income tax purposes the cost of the repair must be capitalized and not expensed.
(iv) Airplanes.
(v) Property which is primarily used outside this state, with use being determined based upon the amount of time the property is actually used both within and without this state.
(vi) Property which is acquired incident to the purchase of the stock or assets of the seller, unless for good cause shown, the commissioner consents to waiving this requirement.
(vii) Natural resources in place.
(viii) Purchased or leased property, the cost or consideration for which cannot be quantified with any reasonable degree of accuracy at the time the property is placed in service or use: Provided, That when the contract of purchase or lease specifies a minimum purchase price or minimum annual rent the amount thereof shall be used to determine the qualified investment in the property under section eight of this article if the property otherwise qualifies as property purchased or leased for business expansion.
(21) Purchase. -- The term "purchase" means any acquisition of property, but only if:
(A) The property is not acquired from a person whose relationship to the person acquiring it would result in the disallowance of deductions under section 267 or 707 (b) of the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and in effect on the first day of January, two thousand three.
(B) The property is not acquired by one component member of a controlled group from another component member of the same controlled group. The commissioner can waive this requirement if the property was acquired from a related party for its then fair market value; and
(C) The basis of the property for federal income tax purposes, in the hands of the person acquiring it, is not determined:
(i) In whole or in part by reference to the federal adjusted basis of the property in the hands of the person from whom it was acquired; or
(ii) Under Section 1014 (e) of the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and in effect on the first day of January, two thousand two.
(22) Qualified activity. -- The term "qualified activity" means any business or other activity subject to any of the taxes imposed by article thirteen, twenty-one, twenty-three or twenty-four of this chapter (or any combination of those articles of this chapter), but does not include the activity of severance or production of natural resources.
(23) Related person. -- The term "related person" means:
(A) A corporation, partnership, association or trust controlled by the taxpayer;
(B) An individual, corporation, partnership, association or trust that is in control of the taxpayer;
(C) A corporation, partnership, association or trust controlled by an individual, corporation, partnership, association or trust that is in control of the taxpayer; or
(D) A member of the same controlled group as the taxpayer.
For purposes of subdivisions (20) and (22) of this section, "control," with respect to a corporation, means ownership, directly or indirectly, of stock possessing fifty percent or more of the total combined voting power of all classes of the stock of the corporation entitled to vote. "Control," with respect to a trust, means ownership, directly or indirectly, of fifty percent or more of the beneficial interest in the principal or income of the trust. The ownership of stock in a corporation, of a capital or profits interest in a partnership or association or of a beneficial interest in a trust shall be determined in accordance with the rules for constructive ownership of stock provided in section 267 (c) of the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, other than paragraph (3) of that section.
(24) Replacement facility. -- The term "replacement facility" means any property (other than an expanded facility) that replaces or supersedes any other property located within this state that:
(A) The taxpayer or a related person used in or in connection with any activity for more than two years during the period of five consecutive years ending on the date the replacement or superseding property is placed in service by the taxpayer; or
(B) Is not used by the taxpayer or a related person in or in connection with any qualified activity for a continuous period of one year or more commencing with the date the replacement or superseding property is placed in service by the taxpayer.
(25) Research and development. -- The term "research and development" means systematic scientific, engineering or technological study and investigation in a field of knowledge in the physical, computer or software sciences, often involving the formulation of hypotheses and experimentation, for the purpose of revealing new facts, theories or principles, or increasing scientific knowledge, which may reveal the basis for new or enhanced products, equipment of manufacturing processes.
(A) Research and development includes, but is not limited to, design, refinement and testing of prototypes of new or improved products, or design, refinement and testing of manufacturing processes before commercial sales relating thereto have begun. For purposes of this section, commercial sales includes, but is not limited to, sales of prototypes or sales for market testing.
(B) Research and development does not include:
(i) Market research;
(ii) Sales research;
(iii) Efficiency surveys;
(iv) Consumer surveys;
(v) Product market testing;
(vi) Product testing by product consumers or through consumer surveys for evaluation of consumer product performance or consumer product usability;
(vii) The ordinary testing or inspection of materials or products for quality control (quality control testing);
(viii) Management studies;
(ix) Advertising;
(x) Promotions;
(xi) The acquisition of another's patent, model, production or process or investigation or evaluation of the value or investment potential related thereto;
(xii) Research in connection with literary, historical, or similar activities;
(xiii) Research in the social sciences, economics, humanities or psychology and other nontechnical activities; and
(xiv) The providing of sales services or any other service, whether technical service or nontechnical service.
(26) Taxpayer. -- The term "taxpayer" means any person subject to any of the taxes imposed by article thirteen, twenty-one, twenty-three or twenty-four of this chapter (or any combination of those articles of this chapter).
(27) This code. -- The term "this code" means the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended.
(28) This state. -- The term "this state" means the state of West Virginia.
(29) Used property. -- The term "used property" means property acquired after the thirty-first day of December, two thousand two, that is not "new property."
§11-13Q-4. Amount of credit allowed.
(a) Credit allowed. -- Eligible taxpayers shall be allowed a credit against the portion of taxes imposed by this state that are attributable to and the consequence of the taxpayer's qualified investment in a new or expanded business in this state, which results in the creation of new jobs. The amount of this credit shall be determined and applied as hereinafter provided in this article.
(b) Amount of credit. -- The amount of credit allowable is determined by multiplying the amount of the taxpayer's "qualified investment" (determined under section five or eight, or both) in "property purchased or leased for business expansion" (as defined in section three) by the taxpayer's new jobs percentage (determined under section nine). The product of this calculation establishes the maximum amount of credit allowable under this article due to the qualified investment.
(c) Application of credit over ten years. -- The amount of credit allowable must be taken over a ten-year period, at the rate of one tenth of the amount thereof per taxable year, beginning with the taxable year in which the taxpayer places the qualified investment in service or use in this state, unless the taxpayer elected to delay the beginning of the ten-year period until the next succeeding taxable year. This election shall be made in the annual income tax return filed under this chapter for the taxable year in which qualified investment is first placed into service or use by the taxpayer. Once made, the election cannot be revoked. The annual credit allowance shall be taken in the manner prescribed in section seven of this article.
(d) Placed in service or use. -- For purposes of the credit allowed by this section, property shall be considered placed in service or use in the earlier of the following taxable years:
(1) The taxable year in which, under the taxpayer's depreciation practice, the period for depreciation with respect to the property begins; or
(2) The taxable year in which the property is placed in a condition or state of readiness and availability for a specifically assigned function.
§11-13Q-5. Credit allowed for locating corporate headquarters in this state.

(a) Credit allowed. -- A corporation that presently has its corporate headquarters located outside this state that relocates its corporate headquarters in this state and employs, on a full-time basis, at its new corporate headquarters location, at least fifteen people, who are domiciled in this state, shall be allowed credit under this article, the amount of which shall be determined as provided in subsection (b) of this section. The restrictions set forth in subsection (a), section nineteen of this article do not apply to the credit for corporate headquarters relocations allowed under this section.
(b) Determination of credit. -- The amount of credit allowed by subsection (a) shall be determined, at the election of the taxpayer:
(1) By multiplying taxpayer's adjusted qualified investment by its new jobs percentage (as determined under section nine of this article); or
(2) By multiplying taxpayer's adjusted qualified investment by ten percent.
(c) Corporate headquarters relocations after December 31, 2002. -- For purposes of corporate headquarters relocations occurring on or after the first day of January, two thousand two, and notwithstanding any other provision of this article to the contrary:
(1) New jobs created in this state by relocation of a corporate headquarters may include jobs created in this state within twelve months before or after the month in which the qualified investment in the corporate headquarters relocation is placed into service or use in this state by:
(A) Relocation or transfer of employees of the corporation or employees of a related corporation or related person from an out-of-state location to the relocated corporate headquarters in this state, who: (i) Are or become employees of the corporation within twelve months before or after the month in which the qualified investment in the corporate headquarters is placed into service or use in this state; and (ii) whose regular place of work is in the corporate headquarters, or
(B) New employees of the corporation whose regular place of work is in the corporate headquarters.
(2) Multiple year projects certified under section six of this article may be allowed for corporate headquarters relocations under this section.
(d) Application of credit. -- The credit allowed by this section shall be applied in the manner prescribed in section seven of this article: Provided, That the amount of corporation net income taxes against which the credit allowed by this section may be applied shall be the sum of the corporation net income tax due on adjusted federal taxable income allocated to this state under section seven, article twenty-four of this chapter, plus that portion of the corporation net income tax due on adjusted federal taxable income apportioned to this state under section seven, article twenty-four of this chapter, that is further apportioned to the qualified investment using the payroll factor provided in subdivision (1), subsection (h), section seven of this article or an alternative means of apportionment as prescribed by the commissioner under said section seven. For all other purposes, the credit allowed by this section shall be treated as credit allowed by section four of this article.
(e) Definitions. -- For purposes of this section:
(1) Adjusted qualified investment. -- The term "adjusted qualified investment" means the taxpayer's qualified investment in the corporate headquarters as determined under section eight of this article and rules of the commissioner, plus the cost of the reasonable and necessary expenses it incurred to relocate its corporate headquarters at a location in this state from its prior location outside this state.
(2) Corporate headquarters. -- The term "corporate headquarters" means the place at which the corporation has its commercial domicile and from which the business of the corporation is primarily conducted.
(3) Reasonable and necessary expenses incurred to relocate corporate headquarters. -- The phrase "reasonable and necessary expenses incurred to relocate corporate headquarters" means only those expenses incurred and paid by the corporation, to unrelated third parties, to move its corporate headquarters and its corporate headquarters employees to this state that are, upon application by the corporation, determined by the commissioner to have been both reasonable and necessary to effectuate the move.
(4) The corporation. -- For purposes of this section, the term "the corporation" means the corporation for which the corporate headquarters is relocated.
§11-13Q-6. Credit allowable for certified projects.
(a) In general. -- A multiple year project certified by the commissioner shall be eligible for the credit allowable by this article. A project eligible for certification under this section is one where the qualified investment under this article creates at least the required minimum number of new jobs but the qualified investment is placed in service or use over a period of up to three successive tax years: Provided, That the qualified investment is made pursuant to a written business facility development plan of the taxpayer providing for an integrated project for investment at one or more new or expanded business facilities, a copy of which must be attached to the taxpayer's application for project certification and approved by the commissioner, and the qualified investment placed in service or use during the first tax year would not have been made without the expectation of making the qualified investment placed in service or use during the next two succeeding tax years;
(b) Application for certification. -- The application for certification of a project under this section shall be filed with and approved by the commissioner prior to any credit being claimed or allowed for the project's qualified investment and new jobs created as a direct result of the qualified investment. This application shall be approved in writing and shall contain the information as the commissioner may require to determine whether the project should be certified as eligible for credit under this article.
(c) Taking of credit. -- The participant or participants claiming the credit for qualified investments in a certified project shall annually file with their income tax returns filed under this chapter:
(A) Certification that the participant's qualified investment property continues to be used in the project and if disposed of during the tax year, was not disposed of prior to expiration of its useful life;
(B) Certification that the new jobs created by the project's qualified investment continue to exist and are filled by persons who are residents of this state; and
(C) Any other information the commissioner requires to determine continuing eligibility to claim the annual credit allowance for the project's qualified investment.
§11-13Q-7. Application of annual credit allowance.
(a) In general. -- The aggregate annual credit allowance for the current taxable year is an amount equal to the sum of the following:
(1) The one-tenth part allowed under section four of this article for qualified investment placed into service or use during a prior taxable year; plus
(2) The one-tenth part allowed under section four of this article for qualified investment placed into service or use during the current taxable year; plus
(3) The one-tenth part allowed under section five of this article for locating corporate headquarters in this state; or the amount allowed under section ten of this article of the taxable year.
(b) Application of current year annual credit allowance. -- The amount determined under subsection (a) of this section shall be allowed as a credit against eighty percent of that portion of the taxpayer's state tax liability which is attributable to and the direct result of the taxpayer's qualified investment, and shall be applied as provided in subsections (c) through (f), both inclusive, of this section, and in that order: Provided, That if the median salary of the new jobs is higher than the statewide average nonfarm payroll wage, as determined annually by the West Virginia bureau of employment programs, the amount determined under subsection (a) of this section shall be allowed as a credit against one hundred percent of that portion of the taxpayers state tax liability which is attributable to and the direct result of the taxpayer's qualified investment, and shall be applied, as provided in subsections (c) through (f), both inclusive, of this section, and in that order.
(c) Business and occupation taxes. -- That portion of the allowable credit attributable to qualified investment in a business or other activity subject to the taxes imposed by article thirteen of this chapter under section two-o of said article thirteen shall first be applied to reduce the taxes imposed or payable under section two-o, article thirteen of this chapter, for the taxable year (determined before application of allowable credits against tax and the annual exemption). In no case shall the credit allowed under this article be applied to reduce any tax imposed or payable under section two-f, or under any other section of article thirteen of this chapter except section two-o.
(1) If the taxes due under section two-o, article thirteen of this chapter are not solely attributable to and the direct result of the taxpayer's qualified investment in a business or other activity taxable under said section two-o, the amount of those taxes that are so attributable shall be determined by multiplying the amount of taxes due under said section two-o, for the taxable year (determined before application of any allowable credits against tax and the annual exemption), by a fraction, the numerator of which is all wages, salaries and other compensation paid during the taxable year to all employees of the taxpayer employed in this state, whose positions are directly attributable to the qualified investment in a business or other activity taxable under said section two-o. The denominator of the fraction shall be the wages, salaries and other compensation paid during the taxable year to all employees of the taxpayer employed in this state, whose positions are directly attributable to the business or other activity of the taxpayer that is taxable under the said article thirteen.
(2) The annual exemption allowed by section three, article thirteen of this chapter, plus any credits allowable under articles thirteen-d, thirteen-e, thirteen-r and thirteen-s of this chapter, shall be applied against and reduce only the portion of article thirteen taxes not apportioned to the qualified investment under this article: Provided, That any excess exemption or credits may be applied against the amount of article thirteen taxes apportioned to the qualified investment under this article, that is not offset by the amount of annual credit against the taxes allowed under this article for the taxable year, unless their application is otherwise prohibited by this chapter.
(d) Business franchise tax. --
(1) After application of subsection (c) of this section, any unused allowable credit shall next be applied to reduce the taxes imposed by said article twenty-three for the taxable year (determined after application of the credits against tax provided in section seventeen of said article, but before application of any other allowable credits against tax).
(2) If the taxes due under article twenty-three of this chapter are not solely attributable to and the direct result of the taxpayer's qualified investment in a business or other activity taxable under said article for the taxable year, the amount of the taxes which are so attributable shall be determined by multiplying the amount of taxes due (determined after application of the credits against tax as provided in section seventeen of article twenty-three, but before application of any other allowable credits), by a fraction, the numerator of which is all wages, salaries and other compensation paid during the taxable year to all employees of the taxpayer employed in this state, whose positions are directly attributable to the qualified investment in a business or other activity taxable under said article. The denominator of the fraction shall be wages, salaries and other compensation paid during the taxable year to all employees of the taxpayer employed in this state, whose positions are directly attributable to the business or other activity of the taxpayer that is taxable under said article.
(3) Any credits allowable under articles thirteen-d, thirteen-e, thirteen-r and thirteen-s of this chapter shall be applied against and reduce only the portion of article twenty-three taxes not apportioned to the qualified investment under this article: Provided, That any excess exemption or credits may be applied against the amount of article twenty-three taxes apportioned to the qualified investment under this article that is not offset by the amount of annual credit against those taxes allowed under this article for the taxable year, unless their application is otherwise prohibited by this chapter.
(e) Corporation net income taxes. --
(1) After application of subsections (c) and (d) of this section, any unused credit shall next be applied to reduce the taxes imposed by article twenty-four of this chapter for the taxable year (determined before application of allowable credits against tax).
(2) If the taxes due under article twenty-four of this chapter (determined before application of allowable credits against tax) are not solely attributable to and the direct result of the taxpayer's qualified investment, the amount of the taxes that is so attributable shall be determined by multiplying the amount of taxes due under article twenty-four for the taxable year (determined before application of allowable credits against tax), by a fraction, the numerator of which is all wages, salaries and other compensation paid during the taxable year to all employees of the taxpayer employed in this state whose positions are directly attributable to the qualified investment. The denominator of the fraction shall be the wages, salaries and other compensation paid during the taxable year to all employees of the taxpayer employed in this state.
(3) Any credits allowable under article twenty-four of this chapter shall be applied against and reduce only the amount of article twenty-four taxes not apportioned to the qualified investment under this article: Provided, That any excess credits may be applied against the amount of article twenty-four taxes apportioned to the qualified investment under this article that is not offset by the amount of annual credit against such taxes allowed under this article for the taxable year, unless their application is otherwise prohibited by this chapter.
(f) Personal income taxes. --
(1) If the person making the qualified investment is an electing small business corporation (as defined in section 1361 of the United States Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended), a partnership, a limited liability company that is treated as a partnership for federal income tax purposes or a sole proprietorship, then any unused credit (after application of subsections (c), (d) and (e) of this section) shall be allowed as a credit against the taxes imposed by article twenty-one of this chapter on the income from business or other activity subject to tax under article thirteen or twenty-three of this chapter or on income of a sole proprietor attributable to the business.
(2) Electing small business corporations, limited liability companies, partnerships and other unincorporated organizations shall allocate the credit allowed by this article among its members in the same manner as profits and losses are allocated for the taxable year.
(3) If the amount of taxes due under article twenty-one of this chapter (determined before application of allowable credits against tax) that is attributable to business, is not solely attributable to and the direct result of the qualified investment of the electing small business corporation, limited liability company, partnership, other unincorporated organization or sole proprietorship, the amount of the taxes that are so attributable shall be determined by multiplying the amount of taxes due under said article (determined before application of allowable credits against tax), that is attributable to business by a fraction, the numerator of which is all wages, salaries and other compensation paid during the taxable year to all employees of the electing small business corporation, limited liability company, partnership, other unincorporated organization or sole proprietorship employed in this state, whose positions are directly attributable to the qualified investment. The denominator of the fraction shall be the wages, salaries and other compensation paid during the taxable year to all employees of the taxpayer.
(4) No credit shall be allowed under this section against any employer withholding taxes imposed by article twenty-one of this chapter.
(g) If the wages, salaries and other compensation fraction formula provisions of subsections (c) through (f) of this section, inclusive, do not fairly represent the taxes solely attributable to and the direct result of qualified investment of the taxpayer the commissioner may require, in respect to all or any part of the taxpayer's businesses or activities, if reasonable:
(1) Separate accounting or identification; or
(2) Adjustment to the wages, salaries and other compensation fraction formula to reflect all components of the tax liability; or
(3) The inclusion of one or more additional factors that will fairly represent the taxes solely attributable to and the direct result of the qualified investment of the taxpayer and all other project participants in the businesses or other activities subject to tax; or
(4) The employment of any other method to effectuate an equitable attribution of the taxes.
In order to effectuate the purposes of this subsection, the commissioner may propose for promulgation rules, including emergency rules, in accordance with article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code.
(h) Unused credit. -- If any credit remains after application of subsection (b) of this section, the amount thereof shall be carried forward to each ensuing tax year until used or until the expiration of the third taxable year subsequent to the end of the initial ten year credit application period. If any unused credit remains after the thirteenth year, the amount thereof shall be forfeited. No carryback to a prior taxable year shall be allowed for the amount of any unused portion of any annual credit allowance.
§11-13Q-8. Qualified investment.
(a) General. -- The qualified investment in property purchased or leased for business expansion shall be the applicable percentage of the cost of each property purchased or leased for the purpose of business expansion which is placed in service or use in this state by the taxpayer during the taxable year.
(b) Applicable percentage. -- For the purpose of subsection (a), the applicable percentage of any property shall be determined under the following table:
If useful life is: The applicable percentage is:
Less than 4 years....................................0%
4 years or more but less than 6 years ..........33 1/3%
6 years or more but less than 8 years ..........66 2/3%
8 years or more ...................................100%
The useful life of any property, for purposes of this section, shall be determined as of the date the property is first placed in service or use in this state by the taxpayer, determined in accordance with such rules and requirements the tax commissioner may prescribe.
(c) Cost. -- For purposes of subsection (a), the cost of each property purchased for business expansion shall be determined under the following rules:
(1) Trade-ins. -- Cost shall not include the value of property given in trade or exchange for the property purchased for business expansion.
(2) Damaged, destroyed or stolen property. -- If property is damaged or destroyed by fire, flood, storm or other casualty, or is stolen, then the cost of replacement property shall not include any insurance proceeds received in compensation for the loss.
(3) Rental property. -
(A) The cost of real property acquired by written lease for a primary term of ten years or longer shall be one hundred percent of the rent reserved for the primary term of the lease, not to exceed twenty years.
(B) The cost of tangible personal property acquired by written lease for a primary term of:
(i) Four years, or longer, shall be one third of the rent reserved for the primary term of the lease;
(ii) Six years, or longer, shall be two thirds of the rent reserved for the primary term of the lease; or
(iii) Eight years, or longer, shall be one hundred percent of the rent reserved for the primary term of the lease, not to exceed twenty years: Provided, That in no event shall rent reserved include rent for any year subsequent to expiration of the book life of the equipment, determined using the straight-line method of depreciation.
(4) Self-constructed property. -- In the case of self-constructed property, the cost thereof shall be the amount properly charged to the capital account for depreciation in accordance with federal income tax law.
(5) Transferred property. -- The cost of property used by the taxpayer out-of-state and then brought into this state, shall be determined based on the remaining useful life of the property at the time it is placed in service or use in this state, and the cost shall be the original cost of the property to the taxpayer less straight line depreciation allowable for the tax years or portions thereof taxpayer used the property outside this state. In the case of leased tangible personal property, cost shall be based on the period remaining in the primary term of the lease after the property is brought into this state for use in a new or expanded business facility of the taxpayer, and shall be the rent reserved for the remaining period of the primary term of the lease, not to exceed twenty years, or the remaining useful life of the property (determined as aforesaid), whichever is less.
§11-13Q-9. New jobs percentage.
(a) In general. -- The new jobs percentage is based on the number of new jobs created in this state that are directly attributable to the qualified investment of the taxpayer.
(b) When a job is attributable. -- An employee's position is directly attributable to the qualified investment if:
(1) The employee's service is performed or his base of operations is at the new or expanded business facility;
(2) The position did not exist prior to the construction, renovation, expansion or acquisition of the business facility and the making of the qualified investment; and
(3) But for the qualified investment, the position would not have existed.
(c) Applicable percentage. --
(1) For the purpose of subsection (a)of this section, the applicable new jobs percentage shall be determined under the following table:
If number ofIf number of

new jobs in anew jobs in a

The applicabledistressednondistressed
percentage is:county is at least:county is at least
:
20% 15 30
25%140280
30%260520
(2) New jobs attributable to a qualified investment created in both distressed counties and nondistressed counties:
(A) If the majority of total new jobs created at the end of the third taxable year subsequent to qualified investment first having been placed into service or use is in distressed counties, the new jobs shall be treated as having been created in distressed counties.
(B) If the majority of total new jobs created at the end of the third taxable year subsequent to qualified investment first having been placed into service or use is in nondistressed counties, the new jobs shall be treated as having been created in non-distressed counties.
(C) If the number of new jobs created at the end of the third taxable year subsequent to qualified investment first having been placed into service or use is equally distributed between distressed counties and non-distressed counties, then the new jobs shall be categorized as having been created in distressed counties.
(3) For purposes of this article, a distressed county is one identified as a distressed county by the Appalachian Regional Commission as part of that agency's "Distressed County Program." A nondistressed county is a county which is not a distressed county.
(d) Certification of new jobs. -- With the annual return for the applicable taxes filed for the taxable year in which the qualified investment is first placed in service or use in this state, the taxpayer shall estimate and certify the number of new jobs reasonably projected to be created by it in this state within the period prescribed in subsection (f), that are, or will be, directly attributable to the qualified investment of the taxpayer. For purposes of this section, "applicable taxes" means the taxes imposed by articles thirteen, twenty-one, twenty-three and twenty-four of this chapter against which this credit is applied.
(e) Equivalency of permanent employees. -- The hours of part-time employees shall be aggregated to determine the number of equivalent full-time employees for the purpose of this section.
(f) Redetermination of new jobs percentage. -- With the annual return for the applicable taxes imposed, filed for the third taxable year in which the qualified investment is in service or use, the taxpayer shall certify the actual number of new jobs created by it in this state, that are directly attributable to the qualified investment of the taxpayer.
(1) If the actual number of jobs created would result in a higher new jobs percentage, the credit allowed under this article shall be redetermined and amended returns filed for the first and second taxable years that the qualified investment was in service or use in this state.
(2) If the actual number of jobs created would result in a lower new jobs percentage, the credit previously allowed under this article shall be redetermined and amended returns filed for the first and second taxable years. In applying the amount of redetermined credit allowable for the two preceding taxable years, the redetermined credit shall first be applied to the extent it was originally applied in the prior two years to personal income taxes, then to corporation net income taxes, then to business franchise taxes, and lastly to business and occupation taxes. Any additional taxes due under this chapter shall be remitted with the amended returns filed with the commissioner, along with interest, as provided in section seventeen, article ten of this chapter, and a ten percent penalty, which may be waived by the commissioner if the taxpayer shows that the overclaimed amount of the new jobs percentage was due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect.
§11-13Q-10. Credit for small business.
(a) Small business defined. -- For purposes of this section, the term "small business" means a business which has annual gross receipts of not more than seven million dollars (including the gross receipts of any affiliates in its controlled group): Provided, That beginning the first day of January, two thousand four, and on the first day of January of each year thereafter, the commissioner shall prescribe an amount that shall apply in lieu of the seven million dollar amount during that calendar year. This amount shall be prescribed by increasing the seven million dollar amount by the cost-of-living adjustment for that calendar year. The requirements for annual gross receipts, once met by a given taxpayer in that taxable year when qualified investment is first placed in service or use, shall not again be applied to that same taxpayer in subsequent years to defeat the small business credit to which the taxpayer gained entitlement in that year.
(1) Cost-of-living adjustment. -- For purposes of subsection (a), the cost-of-living adjustment for any calendar year is the percentage (if any) by which the consumer price index for the preceding calendar year exceeds the consumer price index for the calendar year two thousand two.
(2) Consumer price index for any calendar year. -- For purposes of subdivision (1) above, the consumer price index for any calendar year is the average of the federal consumer price index as of the close of the twelve-month period ending on the thirty-first day of August of that calendar year.
(3) Consumer price index. -- For purposes of subdivision (2) above, the term "Federal Consumer Price Index" means the most recent consumer price index for all urban consumers published by the United States department of labor.
(4) Rounding. -- If any increase under subdivision (1) above is not a multiple of fifty dollars, the increase shall be rounded to the next lowest multiple of fifty dollars.
(b) Amount of credit allowed.
(1) Credit allowed. -- An eligible small business taxpayer shall be allowed a credit against the portion of taxes imposed by this state that are attributable to and the direct consequence of the eligible small business taxpayer's qualified investment in a new or expanded business in this state which results in the creation of at least ten new jobs within twelve months after placing qualified investment into service. The amount of this credit shall be determined as provided in this section.
(2) Amount of credit. -- The annual amount of credit allowable under this section is determined by dividing the amount of the eligible small business taxpayer's "qualified investment" (determined under section eight of this article) in "property purchased for business expansion" (as defined in section three of this article) by ten. The amount of qualified investment so apportioned to each year of the ten-year credit period shall be the annual measure against which taxpayer's annual new jobs percentage (determined under subsection (d) of this section,) is applied. The product of this calculation establishes the maximum amount of credit allowable each year for ten consecutive years under this section due to the qualified investment.
(3) Application of credit. -- The annual credit allowance must be taken beginning with the taxable year in which the taxpayer places the qualified investment into service or use in this state, unless the taxpayer elects to delay the beginning of the ten-year credit period until the next succeeding taxable year. This election shall be made in the annual income tax return filed under this chapter by the taxpayer for the taxable year in which the qualified investment is first placed in service or use. Once made, this election cannot be revoked. The annual credit allowance shall be taken and applied in the manner prescribed in section seven of this article.
(c) New jobs. -- The term "new jobs" has the meaning ascribed to it in section three of this article.
(1) The term "new employee" shall have the meaning ascribed to it in section three of this article: Provided, That this term shall not include employees filling new jobs who:
(A) Are related individuals, as defined in subsection (i), section 51 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, or a person who owns ten percent or more of the business with such ownership interest to be determined under rules set forth in subsection (b), section 267 of said Internal Revenue Code; or
(B) Worked for the taxpayer during the six-month period ending on the date the taxpayer's qualified investment is placed in service or use and is rehired by the taxpayer during the six-month period beginning on the date taxpayer's qualified investment is placed in service or use.
(2) When a job is attributable. -- An employee's position is directly attributable to the qualified investment if:
(A) The employee's service is performed or his or her base of operations is at the new or expanded business facility;
(B) The position did not exist prior to the construction, renovation, expansion or acquisition of the business facility and the making of the qualified investment; and
(C) But for the qualified investment, the position would not have existed.
(d) New jobs percentage. -- The annual new jobs percentage is based on the number of new jobs created in this state by the taxpayer that is directly attributable to taxpayer's qualified investment.
(1) If at least ten new jobs are created and filled during the taxable year in which the qualified investment is placed in service or use, the applicable new jobs percentage shall be ten percent: Provided, That the new jobs percentage shall be determined in accordance with section nine of this article if the number of new jobs created equals or exceeds fifteen in a distressed county or thirty in a nondistressed county.
(2) During each of the remaining nine years of the ten-year credit period, the annual new jobs percentage shall be based on the average number of new jobs that were filled during that taxable year: Provided, That for purposes of estimating the new jobs percentage that will be applicable for each subsequent credit year, the taxpayer shall use the new jobs percentage allowable for the taxable year immediately prior thereto, and in the annual income tax return filed under this chapter for the then current tax year, taxpayer shall redetermine his or her allowable new jobs percentage for that year based on the average number of new employees employed in new jobs during that year (determined on a monthly basis) created as the direct result of taxpayer's qualified investment.
(e) Certification of new jobs. -- With the annual income tax return filed under this chapter for each taxable year during the ten-year credit period, the taxpayer shall certify:
(1) The new jobs percentage for that taxable year;
(2) The amount of the credit allowance for that year;
(3) If the business is a partnership, limited liability company or electing small business corporation, the amount of credit allocated to the partners, members or shareholders, as the case may be;
(4) That qualified investment property continue to be used in the business, or if any of it was disposed of during the year the date of disposition and that the property was not disposed of prior to expiration of its useful life, as determined under section eight of this article;
(5) That the new jobs created by the qualified investment continue to exist and are filled by persons who meet the definition of new employee (as defined in this section).
(f) Small business project. -- A small business may apply to the commissioner under section six of this article for certification as a project if that project will create at least ten new jobs.
(g) Rules. -- The commissioner may prescribe such rules as he or she may deem necessary in order to determine the amount of credit allowed under this section to a taxpayer; to verify taxpayer's continued entitlement to claim the credit; and to verify proper application of the credit allowed.
(h) The commissioner may require a taxpayer intending to claim credit under this section to file with the commissioner a notice of intent to claim this credit, before the taxpayer begins reducing his or her monthly or quarterly installment payments of estimated tax for the credit provided in this section.
§11-13Q-11. Forfeiture of unused tax credits; redetermination of credit allowed.

(a) Disposition of property or cessation of use. -- If during any taxable year, property with respect to which a tax credit has been allowed under this article:
(1) Is disposed of prior to the end of its useful life, as determined under section eight of this article; or
(2) Ceases to be used in an eligible business of the taxpayer in this state prior to the end of its useful life, as determined under said section eight, then the unused portion of the credit allowed for the property shall be forfeited for the taxable year and all ensuing years. Additionally, except when the property is damaged or destroyed by fire, flood, storm or other casualty, or is stolen, the taxpayer shall redetermine the amount of credit allowed in all earlier years by reducing the applicable percentage of cost of the property allowed under said section eight, to correspond with the percentage of cost allowable for the period of time that the property was actually used in this state in the new or expanded business of the taxpayer. Taxpayer shall then file a reconciliation statement for the year in which the forfeiture occurs and pay any additional taxes owed due to reduction of the amount of credit allowable for the earlier years, plus interest and any applicable penalties. The reconciliation statement shall be filed with the annual return for the primary tax for which the taxpayer is liable under articles thirteen and twenty-three of this chapter.
(b) Cessation of operation of business facility. -- If during any taxable year the taxpayer ceases operation of a business facility in this state for which credit was allowed under this article, before expiration of the useful life of property with respect to which tax credit has been allowed under this article, then the unused portion of the allowed credit shall be forfeited for the taxable year and all ensuing years. Additionally, except when the cessation is due to fire, flood, storm or other casualty, the taxpayer shall redetermine the amount of credit allowed in earlier years by reducing the applicable percentage of cost of the property allowed under section eight of this article, to correspond with the percentage of cost allowable for the period of time that the property was actually used in this state in a business of the taxpayer that is taxable under article thirteen, twenty-three or twenty-four, or in the case of a sole proprietorship, article twenty-one of this chapter. Taxpayer shall then file a reconciliation statement with the annual return for the primary tax for which the taxpayer is liable under articles thirteen, twenty-one or twenty-three of this chapter.
(c) Reduction in number of employees. -- If during any taxable year subsequent to the taxable year in which the new jobs percentage is redetermined as provided in section nine of this article, the average number of employees of the taxpayer, for the then current taxable year, employed in positions created because of and directly attributable to the qualified investment falls below the minimum number of new jobs created upon which the taxpayer's annual credit allowance is based, the taxpayer shall calculate what his or her annual credit allowance would have been had his or her new jobs percentage been determined based upon the average number of employees, for the then current taxable year, employed in positions created because of and directly attributable to the qualified investment. The difference between the result of this calculation and the taxpayer's annual credit allowance for the qualified investment as determined under section four of this article, shall be forfeited for the then current taxable year, and for each succeeding taxable year unless for a succeeding taxable year the taxpayer's average employment in positions directly attributable to the qualified investment once again meets the level required to enable the taxpayer to utilize its full annual credit allowance for that taxable year.
§11-13Q-12. Recapture of credit; recapture tax imposed.
(a) When recapture tax applies. --
(1) Any person who places qualified investment property in service or use and who fails to use the qualified investment property for at least the period of its useful life (determined as of the time the property was placed in service or use), or the period of time over which tax credits allowed under this article with respect to the property are applied under this article, whichever period is less, and who reduces the number of its employees filling new jobs in its business in this state, which were created and are directly attributable to the qualified investment property, after the third taxable year in which the qualified investment property was placed in service or use, or fails to continue to employ individuals in all the new jobs created as a direct result of the qualified investment property and used to qualify for the credit allowed by this article, prior to the end of the tenth taxable year after the qualified investment property was placed in service or use, the person shall pay the recapture tax imposed by subsection (b) of this section.
(2) This section shall not apply when section thirteen of this article applies. However, the successor, or the successors, and the person, or persons, who previously claimed credit under this article with respect to the qualified investment property and the new jobs attributable thereto, shall be jointly and severally liable for payment of any recapture tax subsequently imposed under this section with respect to the qualified investment property and new jobs.
(b) Recapture tax imposed. --
The recapture tax imposed by this subsection shall be the amount determined as follows:
(1) Full recapture. -- If taxpayer prematurely removes qualified investment property placed in service (when considered as a class) from economic service in the taxpayer's qualified investment business activity in this state, and the number of employees filling the new jobs created by the person falls below the number of new jobs required to be created in order to qualify for the amount of credit being claimed, taxpayer shall recapture the amount of credit claimed under section seven of this article for the taxable year, and all preceding taxable years, on qualified investment property which has been prematurely removed from service. The amount of tax due under this subdivision of subsection (b) of this section shall be an amount equal to the amount of credit that is recaptured under this subdivision (1).
(2) Partial recapture. -- If taxpayer prematurely removes qualified investment property from economic service in the taxpayer's qualified investment business activity in this state, and the number of employees filling the new jobs created by the person remains fifteen (distressed county) or thirty (nondistressed county) or more, but falls below the number necessary to sustain continued application of credit determined by use of the new job percentage upon which the taxpayer's one-tenth annual credit allowance was determined under section four or ten of this article, taxpayer shall recapture an amount of credit equal to the difference between: (A) The amount of credit claimed under section seven of this article for the taxable year, and all preceding taxable years; and (B) the amount of credit that would have been claimed in those years if the amount of credit allowable under section four or ten of this article had been determined based on the qualified investment property which remains in service using the average number of new jobs filled by employees in the taxable year for which recapture occurs. The amount of tax due under this subdivision of subsection (b) of this section shall be an amount equal to the amount of credit that is recaptured under this subdivision (2).
(3) Additional recapture. -- If after a partial recapture under subdivision (2) of this subsection, the taxpayer further reduces the number of employees filling new jobs, the taxpayer shall recapture an additional amount determined as provided under subdivision (1) of this subsection. The amount of tax due under this subdivision of subsection (b) of this section shall be an amount equal to the amount of credit that is recaptured under this subdivision (3).
(c) Recapture of credit allowed for projects. -- The commissioner may file in the West Virginia register an emergency legislative rule explaining how the provisions of this section shall be applied in the case of projects certified under section six of this article.
(d) Payment of recapture tax. -- The amount of tax recaptured under this section shall be due and payable on the day the person's annual return is due for the taxable year in which this section applies, under article twenty-one or twenty-four of this chapter. When the employer is a partnership, limited liability company or S corporation for federal income tax purposes, the recapture tax shall be paid by those persons who are partners in the partnership, members in the company, or shareholders in the S corporation, in the taxable year in which recapture occurs under this section.
(e) Rules. -- The commissioner may promulgate such rules as may be useful or necessary to carry out the purpose of this section and to implement the intent of the Legislature. Rules shall be promulgated in accordance with the provisions of article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code.
§11-13Q-13. Transfer of qualified investment to successors.
(a) Mere change in form of business. -- Property shall not be treated as disposed of under section eleven of this article, by reason of a mere change in the form of conducting the business as long as the property is retained in the successor business in this state, and the transferor business retains a controlling interest in the successor business. In this event, the successor business shall be allowed to claim the amount of credit still available with respect to the business facility or facilities transferred, and the transferor business shall not be required to redetermine the amount of credit allowed in earlier years.
(b) Transfer or sale to successor. -- Property shall not be treated as disposed of under section eleven of this article by reason of any transfer or sale to a successor business which continues to operate the business facility in this state. Upon transfer or sale, the successor shall acquire the amount of credit that remains available under this article for each subsequent taxable year and the transferor business shall not be required to redetermine the amount of credit allowed in earlier years.
§11-13Q-14. Identification of investment credit property.
Every taxpayer who claims credit under this article shall maintain sufficient records to establish the following facts for each item of qualified property:
(1) Its identity;
(2) Its actual or reasonably determined cost;
(3) Its straight-line depreciation life;
(4) The month and taxable year in which it was placed in service;
(5) The amount of credit taken; and
(6) The date it was disposed of or otherwise ceased to be qualified property.
§11-13Q-15. Failure to keep records of investment credit property.

A taxpayer who does not keep the records required for identification of investment credit property is subject to the following rules:
(1) A taxpayer shall be treated as having disposed of, during the taxable year, any investment credit property which the taxpayer cannot establish was still on hand, in this state, at the end of that year.
(2) If a taxpayer cannot establish when investment credit property reported for purposes of claiming this credit returned during the taxable year was placed in service, the taxpayer shall be treated as having placed it in service in the most recent prior year in which similar property was placed in service, unless the taxpayer can establish that the property placed in service in the most recent year is still on hand. In that event, the taxpayer will be treated as having placed the returned property in service in the next most recent year.
§11-13Q-16. Interpretation and construction.
(a) No inference, implication or presumption of legislative construction or intent shall be drawn or made by reason of the location or grouping of any particular section, provision or portion of this article; and no legal effect shall be given to any descriptive matter or heading relating to any section, subsection or paragraph of this article.
(b) The provisions of this article shall be reasonably construed in order to effectuate the legislative intent recited in section two of this article.
§11-13Q-17. Severability.
(a) If any provision of this article or the application thereof shall for any reason be adjudged by any court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, the judgment shall not affect, impair or invalidate the remainder of the article, but shall be confined in its operation to the provision thereof directly involved in the controversy in which the judgment shall have been rendered, and the applicability of the provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby.
(b) If any provision of this article or the application thereof shall be made invalid or inapplicable by reason of the repeal or any other invalidation of any statute therein addressed or referred to, such invalidation or inapplicability shall not affect, impair or invalidate the remainder of the article, but shall be confined in its operation to the provision thereof directly involved with, pertaining to, addressing or referring to the statute, and the application of the provision with regard to other statutes or in other instances not affected by any such repealed or invalid statute shall not be abrogated or diminished in any way.
§11-13Q-18. Burden of proof; application required; failure to make timely application.

(a) The burden of proof is on the taxpayer to establish by clear and convincing evidence that the taxpayer is entitled to the benefits allowed by this article.
(b) Application for credit required.
(1) Application required. -- Notwithstanding any provision of this article to the contrary, no credit shall be allowed or applied under this article for any qualified investment property placed in service or use until the person asserting a claim for the allowance of credit under this article makes written application to the commissioner for allowance of credit as provided in this subsection. An application for credit shall be filed no later than the last day of the due date, without extensions, for filing the tax returns required under article twenty-one or twenty-four of this chapter for the taxable year in which the property to which the credit relates is placed in service or use and all information required by the form shall be provided.
(2) Failure to make timely application. -- The failure to timely apply for the credit shall result in the forfeiture of fifty percent of the annual credit allowance otherwise allowable under this article. This penalty shall apply annually until the application is filed.
§11-13Q-19. Business eligible for credit entitlements.
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this article to the contrary, no entitlement to the economic opportunity tax credit shall result from, and no credit shall be available to any taxpayer for, investment placed in service or use except for taxpayers engaged in the following industries or business activities:
(1) Manufacturing, including, but not limited to, chemical processing and chemical manufacturing, manufacture of wood products and forestry products, manufacture of aluminum, manufacture of paper, paper processing, recyclable paper processing, food processing, manufacture of aircraft or aircraft parts, manufacture of automobiles or automobile parts, and all other manufacturing activities, but not timbering or timber severance or timber hauling, or mineral severance, hauling, processing or preparation, or coal severance, hauling, processing or preparation or synthetic fuel manufacturing taxable under section two-f, article thirteen of this chapter;
(2) Information processing, including, but not limited to, telemarketing, information processing, systems engineering, back office operations and software development;
(3) The activity of warehousing, including, but not limited to, commercial warehousing and the operation of regional distribution centers by manufacturers, wholesalers or retailers;
(4) The activity of goods distribution (exclusive of retail trade);
(5) Destination-oriented recreation and tourism;
(6) Research and development, as defined in section three of this article.
(b) Notwithstanding the fact that a company, entity or taxpayer is engaged in an industry or business activity enumerated in subsection (a) of this section, the company, entity or taxpayer must qualify for the economic opportunity tax credit by fulfilling the qualified investment, jobs creation and other credit entitlement requirements of this article in order to obtain entitlement to any credit under this article. Failure to fulfill the statutory requirements of this article shall result in a partial or complete loss of the tax credit.
§11-13Q-20. Tax credit review and accountability.
(a) Beginning on the first day of February, two thousand six and every third year thereafter, the commissioner shall submit to the governor, the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House of Delegates a tax credit review and accountability report evaluating the cost effectiveness of the economic opportunity credit during the preceding three-year period. The criteria to be evaluated shall include, but not be limited to, for each year of the three-year period:
(1) The numbers of taxpayers claiming the credit;
(2) The net number of new jobs created by all taxpayers claiming the credit;
(3) The cost of the credit;
(4) The cost of the credit per new job created;
(5) Comparison of employment trends for an industry and for taxpayers within the industry that claim the credit.
(b) Taxpayers claiming the credit shall provide any information the tax commissioner may require to prepare the report: Provided, That the information provided shall be subject to the confidentiality and disclosure provisions of sections five-d and five-s, article ten of this chapter of the code.
§11-13Q-21. Effective Date.
The credit allowed by this article shall be allowed for qualified investment placed in service or use on or after the first day of January, two thousand three.
ARTICLE 11. BUSINESS FRANCHISE TAX.
§11-23-24a. Tax credit for value-added products from raw agricultural products; regulations; termination of credit.

(a) Effective for taxable years beginning the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred ninety-seven, notwithstanding any provisions of this code to the contrary, any person, newly and solely engaged in the production of value-added products from raw agricultural products shall be allowed a credit, in the amount of one thousand dollars for each taxable year against the tax imposed by this article, for a period of five years from the date the person becomes subject to this article. The credit shall be allowed only against the tax imposed on that capital which is attributable to the value-added production activity in this state.
(b) For purposes of this section, "value-added product" means the following products derived from processing a raw agricultural product, whether for human consumption or for other use. The following enterprises qualify as processing raw agricultural products into value-added products: (1) The conversion of lumber into furniture, toys, collectibles and home furnishings; (2) the conversion of fruit into wine; (3) the conversion of honey into wine; (4) the conversion of wool into fabric; (5) the conversion of raw hides into semifinished or finished leather products; (6) the conversion of milk into cheese; (7) the conversion of fruits or vegetables into a dried, canned or frozen product; (8) the conversion of feeder cattle into commonly acceptable marketable retail portions; (9) the conversion of aquatic animals into a dried, canned, cooked or frozen product; and (10) the conversion of poultry into a dried, canned, cooked or frozen product.
(c) The tax commissioner may propose rules for promulgation in accordance with article three, chapter twenty-nine-a as may be necessary to effectuate the purposes of this section.
(d) No credit shall be available to any taxpayer under this section subsequent to the first day of July, two thousand two: Provided, That taxpayers which have gained entitlement to the credit pursuant to the terms of this section prior to the first day of July, two thousand two, may retain that entitlement and apply the credit in due course pursuant to the requirements and limitations of this section until the original five-year credit entitlement has been exhausted or otherwise terminated.
ARTICLE 24. CORPORATION NET INCOME TAX.
§11-24-22a. Tax credit for value-added products from raw agricultural products; regulations; termination of credit.

(a) Effective for taxable years beginning the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred ninety-seven, notwithstanding any provisions of this code to the contrary, any new corporation engaged solely in the production of value-added products from raw agricultural products shall be allowed a credit, in the amount of one thousand dollars for each taxable year against the tax imposed by this article, for a period of five years from the date the person becomes subject to this article. The credit shall be allowed only against the tax on taxable income which is attributable to the production of value-added products.
(b) Effective for taxable years beginning the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred ninety-seven, any new corporation engaged solely in the production of value-added products in West Virginia shall be allowed a tax credit, according to the schedule herein, for every one hour spent by a new permanent, full-time employee training to learn a skill specific to the production of value-added products as defined in article twenty-one, chapter thirty-one of this code. The tax credit shall be allowed for a maximum of sixty hours, per company, per year.
(c) For purposes of this section, tax credits for hours spent by a new permanent, full-time employee in training shall be allowed as follows:
(1) Corporations which employ up to five new employees shall be allowed a tax credit of two dollars for every one hour spent by a new employee in training as specified herein;
(2) Corporations which employ between six and twenty-five new employees shall be allowed a tax credit of one dollar and fifty cents for every one hour spent by a new employee in training as specified herein;
(3) Corporations which employ between twenty-six and seventy-five new employees shall be allowed a tax credit of one dollar and twenty-five cents for every one hour spent by a new employee in training as specified herein;
(4) Corporations which employ between seventy-six and one hundred and twenty-five new employees shall be allowed a tax credit of one dollar for every one hour spent by a new employee in training as specified herein; and
(5) Corporations which employ more than one hundred twenty-five new employees shall be allowed a tax credit of seventy-five cents for every one hour spent by a new employee in training as specified herein.
(d) For purposes of this section, "value-added product" means the following products derived from processing a raw agricultural product, whether for human consumption or for other use. The following enterprises qualify as processing raw agricultural products into value-added products: (1) The conversion of lumber into furniture, toys, collectibles and home furnishings; (2) the conversion of fruit into wine; (3) the conversion of honey into wine; (4) the conversion of wool into fabric; (5) the conversion of raw hides into semifinished or finished leather products; (6) the conversion of milk into cheese; (7) the conversion of fruits or vegetables into a dried, canned or frozen product; (8) the conversion of feeder cattle into commonly acceptable marketable retail portions; (9) the conversion of aquatic animals into a dried, canned, cooked or frozen product; and (10) the conversion of poultry into a dried, canned, cooked or frozen product.
(e) The tax commissioner may propose rules for promulgation in accordance with the provisions of article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code as may be necessary to effectuate the purposes of this article.
(f) No credit shall be available to any taxpayer under this section subsequent to the first day of July, two thousand two: Provided, That taxpayers which have gained entitlement to the credit pursuant to the terms of this section prior to the first day of July, two thousand two, may retain that entitlement and apply the credit in due course pursuant to the requirements and limitations of this section until the original five-year credit entitlement has been exhausted or otherwise terminated.

NOTE: The primary purpose of this bill is to replace the Business Investment and Jobs Expansion Tax Credit ("Supercredit") with a new Economic Opportunity Credit. Persons currently claiming Supercredit would continue to claim during the remaining credit period applicable to qualified investment and new applications for Supercredit would be allowed until the new credit goes into effect January 1, 2003.

The new credit is structurally similar to the Supercredit, but the complicated "rebate credit" and "deferred credit" provisions of the Supercredit are not included in the new credit. Additionally, under the new credit, eligible taxpayers who create at least fifteen new jobs in an economically distressed county, or thirty new jobs in a county which is not economically distressed, would be allowed a tax credit of at least 20% of their qualified investment.

The new credit would apply against Business Franchise Tax, State Business and Occupation Tax, Corporation Net Income Tax, and Personal Income Tax if the business is a sole proprietorship, partnership, S corporation or limited liability company.

Unlike the Supercredit, the types of businesses eligible for the new credit would include research and development.

This bill would also terminate the following tax credits which are ineffective or unused: Tax Credit for New Steel Manufacturing Operations; Tax Credit for Coal Coking Facilities; Tax Credit for Value-added Products from Raw Agricultural Products; and the Tax Credit for Convenience Food Store Security.

Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.

§11-13C-16 and §§11-13Q-1 through 21 are new; therefore, strike-throughs and underscoring have been omitted therein.


















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