Hey, there! Log in / Register

Getting cells to make drugs counts as manufacturing for tax purposes, court rules

The Supreme Judicial Court ruled today that a biotech company that genetically modifies bacteria and animal cells to produce new drugs is engaged in manufacturing, which means it has to pay more state taxes.

The ruling is a victory for the state Department of Revenue, which had sought to avoid refunding some $3 million to Genentech for the years 1998 through 2004, years for which the company originally paid taxes based on the manufacturing formula but then sought refunds claiming it is not a manufacturer.

Although Genentech does not produce its drugs in Massachusetts, it has or had significant ties here, including researchers, clinical trials and a partner that would take its drugs and put them into capsules for sale; the state tax amount is based on an estimate of its revenues from the state.

To come to its conclusion that the revenue department was right, the state's highest court first reached back to earlier rulings that defined manufacturing as "the implication of change wrought through the application of forces directed by the human mind, which results in the transformation of some preexisting substance or element into something different, with a new name, nature or use."

And then it delved into how Genentech gets proteins for use against everything from diabetes to cancer, in which company scientists first modify the DNA of E. coli or Chinese-hamster ovary cells to produce a given protein, then grow the cells in vats, then use a series of purification steps to separate the protein from the growth solutions and, in the case of some cells, destroy them to release the protein.

With that, the court rejected Genentech's assertion it is engaged in something akin to mining, in which nothing major is done to the extracted final product:

Genentech argues its activities are comparable to mining. Unlike the extraction and crushing of rocks in the Tilcon-Warren Quarries case [in which a company that took large rocks and smashed them into smaller rocks was ruled not a manufacturer], however, Genentech is not merely paring something down to a smaller size. See 392 Mass. at 673. Nor do the cells that Genentech develops remain significantly unchanged. Rather, Genentech scientists and other employees, by hand or machine, implant DNA molecules into a cell to genetically transform the medium to behave in ways other than what its natural genetic code would dictate. Although the cells may replicate thereafter on their own, each genetically modified and replicated cell is different from the original cell in a most fundamental way. Moreover, the modified cell itself is far from the final product: it is the "protein of interest" that Genentech extracts from each of the modified cells and then purifies that serves as the source of each drug that Genentech then markets and sells.

As a fallback argument, Genentech also argued that even if it did "manufacture" stuff, it was not a manufacturer in "substantial part" because so little of its revenue was actually derived from manufacturing.

The court disassembled that argument as well, noting that that only applied if one included the billions of dollars of "revenue" Genentech derived from a cycle of investments and investment redemptions to meet short-term money needs, carried out by a company department of 3 to 7 employees - out of a workforce of roughly 4,700.

The court, noting the company did not include these billions in its excise-tax filings in California, said that idea was kind of silly:

We agree with the [Mass. Appellate Tax Board] that such a result is "distortive" of Genentech's operations, transforming, for Massachusetts corporate income tax purposes, this self-described biotechnology company with substantial revenue derived from sales of its specialty drugs into essentially an investment business.

Topics: 
Free tagging: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon Complete Genentech ruling259.54 KB


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

Gee why don't we have manufacturing jobs?

(Not about the decision, about the law).

up
Voting closed 0

My understanding is that mftring gets taxed at higher rate because that general class of enterprises have more opportunities to claim capital exemptions and also generally have more impacts on health and environment that the state ends up being expected to ammeliorate.

But...ianatl !!

up
Voting closed 0

And higher rate than what other kinds of businesses?

Or was this company just getting a lower tax rate intended to promote R&D labs and/or investment, and the state is just telling them they have to pay the normal business tax rate instead because they are manufacturing rather than pure R&D/investment?

up
Voting closed 0

It's just a different way of calculating state tax based on the type of business. In the decision it says most businesses file based on the three factors of property, payroll, and sales but manufacturing companies file based on a single factor related to their manufacturing activity. In this case there was a small office of people who handled the company's cash back and forth as they invested their surplus and pulled it out as needed. If my interpretation after a quick scan of the decision is right it seems as though the bean counters figured out that the business tax would be less if they considered those financial movements their primary business rather than the production of biologic drugs. The court disagreed and found them primarily a manufacturing company.

up
Voting closed 0

Your interpretation makes more sense to me.

up
Voting closed 0

Sorry for the confusion. The actual rate charged companies is the same. The difference is the formula the state requires companies to use to figure out just how much income to tax at that rate: In Massachusetts, manufacturers have to use a different formula than other companies. Why that is might take a tax attorney to explain :-).

up
Voting closed 0

Yes, the rate is the same. The difference is the amount of income being taxed at that rate.

Most (not all) non-manufacturing corporations determine the portion of their total income that is taxed in Massachusetts based on the proportionate amount of their total property, payroll, and sales located in Massachusetts ("three-factor" apportionment, which was invented in Massachusetts around 1919). For the last twenty years or so (it was phased in over about five years), manufacturing corporations and some others have been required to use "single-factor" apportionment, based solely on the proportion of their total sales located in Massachusetts.

In comparison to the standard three-factor apportionment, single-factor apportionment benefits corporations that have proportionately more property and payroll in Massachusetts than they have sales, i.e., in-state manufacturers who are making stuff here and selling it elsewhere. It disadvantages corporations that have their property and payroll outside of Massachusetts and just sell products here. The theory is that you're encouraging/not discouraging local manufacturers from investing in Massachusetts and hiring more employees because doing so doesn't increase their tax liability, which would be the case if they had to use three-factor apportionment.

FWIW, single-factor apportionment originated with mutual fund companies and was originally designed to persuade Fidelity as well as other financial services companies to expand (or at least not contract) in Massachusetts.

Historically (and still so for in-state manufacturers), qualifying as a manufacturing corporation was desirable from a state tax point of view, as briefly noted in the SJC opinion in this case. Dating back to the 1930s, manufacturing corporations get property tax breaks. Currently, they also get sales tax breaks (not really breaks, since the stuff they're buying shouldn't be subject to sales tax in any case) and investment tax credits. As noted above, the single-factor apportionment is also a tax break for in-state manufacturers.

--gpm

up
Voting closed 0

And I'm glad Universal Hub's taxes are simpler :-).

up
Voting closed 0

If the courts agreed that what Genetech does is not manufacturing then the actual manufacturing of flu vaccine would also be disqualified as it is the same exact process.

up
Voting closed 0