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Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, 504 U.S. 298 (1992), was a United States Supreme Court ruling, since overturned, concerning use tax.The decision effectively prevented states from collecting any sales tax from retail purchases made over the Internet or other e-Commerce route unless the seller had a physical presence in the state.
The Office of State Tax Commissioner is a North Dakota state government agency responsible for licensing: alcoholic beverage wholesalers, farm wineries, microbrew pubs, and out-of-state direct shippers, and; all suppliers selling or shipping alcoholic beverages to liquor and beer wholesalers in North Dakota; and for taxing:
South Dakota has a 4.2% state sales tax, plus any additional local taxes. An additional 1.5% sales tax is added during the summer on sales in tourism-related businesses, dedicated to the state's office of tourism. City governments are allowed a maximum of 2% sales tax for use by the local government, especially in Sioux Falls in Minnehaha ...
The Streamlined Sales Tax Project (SSTP), first organized in March 2000, is intended to simplify and modernize sales and use tax collection and administration in the United States. It arose in response to efforts by Congress to permanently prohibit states from collecting sales tax on online commerce.
North Dakota utility regulators in an unusual move granted a request to reconsider their denial of a key permit for a proposed carbon dioxide pipeline. Chairman Randy Christmann said the panel ...
An attempt to require a Delaware e-commerce vendor to collect North Dakota tax was overturned by the court in the 1992 decision on Quill Corp. v. North Dakota. [26] A number of observers and commentators have argued, so far unsuccessfully, for a Congressional adoption of this physical presence nexus test.
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