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State seeks to toss capital gains tax challenge

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State seeks to toss capital gains tax challenge

Constantine wins D endorsement in 34th, home to both himself and Nguyen

Paul Queary
Jun 17, 2021
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State seeks to toss capital gains tax challenge

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We’re catching up on the legal challenge to the capital gains tax passed by the Legislature earlier this year.

The challenge was filed way out in Douglas County, likely in aid of getting the case before the Division III of the Court of Appeals in hopes those Eastern Washington judges would issue a definitive ruling that the capital gains tax is an unconstitutional income tax. That, in theory, would increase the chances that the Washington Supreme Court agrees to toss it onto the pile of failed attempts to overcome that decades-old precedent.

This week the folks over at Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s office moved to dismiss the case, arguing that the plaintiffs haven’t shown even shown they would pay the tax, which won’t be collected until 2023. Failing that, the state asked to move the whole throwdown to their home hardwood in Thurston County.

The picturesque Douglas County Courthouse out in Waterville, where this showdown is currently scheduled to take place.

First, a little review: lawmakers narrowly passed a 7 percent tax on most capital gains over $250,000, earlier this year. The tax is expected to bring in roughly $500 million per year from around 17,000 people. There are a variety of exemptions, including real estate and retirement accounts.

It’s intended as a start on restructuring a tax system that falls heavily on the poor and lightly on the extremely wealthy. Lawmakers called it an “excise tax” on the transaction that created the capital gains, rather than an income tax aimed at the wealthy, which was broadly ruled unconstitutional by the Washington Supreme Court in the 1930s. But it’s also intended as a test case to overturn that precedent.

The Legislature also protected it from a referendum challenge, which discouraged opponents from forcing a statewide vote in November. So for now, the action is in the courts.

To illustrate how the tax would work, let’s briefly adopt the portrayal of it as a levy on the idle rich: imagine the now 30-something offspring of one of the original Microsoft executives selling $10 million of the stock daddy got for $10,000 back in the bad-hair days. That’s a capital gain of $9,990,000. Born-rich Heir would owe $681,800 under the new tax, or roughly enough to buy the sixth-most-expensive vintage comic book ever sold at auction.

In which Bat-Man investigates his first case at a shady Chemical Corporation.

The tax doesn’t kick in until next year, which means it won’t be collected until 2023. For that reason, Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s team argued this week that the collection of rich folks who sued to overturn the tax don’t yet have a legal leg to stand on. In general, you’re not allowed to sue until you’ve been harmed in some way.

“None of the plaintiffs have paid the capital gains tax, nor have they been assessed the tax by the department,” the AG’s office wrote. “Further, it is presently unknown and unknowable whether any of the plaintiffs will actually owe the tax in the future.”

The state’s motion also argued that the plaintiffs are trying to jump the gun on an existing process for challenging taxes, which requires the aggrieved party to go to Thurston Court either to challenge a tax after it’s been assessed or to demand a refund after it’s been paid.

Now we’re sure that the capitalists among you are already tearing your hair out at this argument, because if you’re fixing to unload some of dad’s stock to round out the comic book collection — or, less facetiously, preparing to liquidate $10 million in assets so you can expand your business and put a bunch more people to work — you want to know how much tax you’re going to owe beforehand, especially if it’s arguably unconstitutional. You really don’t want to make a six-figure bet on how nine people in robes are going to rule a year hence. In fact, we should expect an avalanche of this kind of transaction late this year as people take their capital gains ahead of the tax kicking in.

It also seems clear that there are deals scheduled to come to fruition in 2022 that would be subject to the tax that might fall through — or just become substantially less lucrative — because of it. It’ll be interesting to see if one of the existing plaintiffs, or someone else, steps forward to details such a deal and establish standing to sue.

The state also argues that the case should be moved to Thurston County, where the Department of Revenue would collect and administer the tax. That would give the state at least a subjective home-court advantage. There’s been some interesting research done on home-field advantage in actual sports, and it turns out that advantage stems mostly from favorable treatment by the officials.

1
Turns out having 65,000 people screaming at you isn’t great for your decision-making abilities, as anyone who remembers Packers vs. Seahawks on Sept. 24, 2012, can attest.
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Does that translate to the much less raucous game of appellate law? Would the judges of Thurston County Superior Court be more hospitable to the tax than Judge Brian Huber, the lone judge of Douglas County Superior Court, because his conservative neighbors likely view it as creeping socialism?

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Would the appeals court judges of Division III be more inclined to strike it down than their peers in Division II, some of whom formerly worked for the attorney general’s office? If not, then why all the fighting?

It seems unlikely that the court will unilaterally agree to move the case to Olympia, but a protracted fight over the standing of the plaintiffs does seem likely. So don’t expect a swift resolution on this case.


34th District Democrats back Constantine over Nguyen

Incumbent King County Executive Dow Constantine won the backing of Democrats on his home turf of the 34th Legislative District by a wide margin recently, getting nearly 70 percent of the vote over challenger Joe Nguyen, who represents the same district in the state Senate.

The one-sided result in the district that includes West Seattle, White Center and Burien, follows last week’s lopsided fundraising results, in which Constantine reported a nearly 9-1 advantage over his challenger thanks to raking in bank from establishment donors in May.

Constantine has been racking up mainstream endorsements from Democrats since Nguyen’s challenge was floated earlier this year. Among them were Nguyen’s seatmates in the 34th, Reps. Eileen Cody and Joe Fitzgibbon. Fitzgibbon seconded Constantine’s nomination at the June 9 endorsement meeting and defended the incumbent’s record.

Nguyen took a couple of hits during the debate for signing a letter spun up by the Washington Hospitality Association several months ago arguing for an aggressive reopening of restaurants. But the speakers mostly praised his progressive zeal in Olympia and encouraged him to remain there.

As we’ve noted in the past, Nguyen is not unlike 20-years-ago Constantine, confident, ambitious, and eager for higher office. The result marks an interesting shift in tone from the 34th District Democrats’ 2018 endorsement process. Then, Constantine raised hackles for his aggressive push on behalf of one of his top aides

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at the executive’s office, who went on to lose to Nguyen in November. Nguyen’s wide margin of victory in that race is one of the elements that make his challenge to Constantine intriguing.


Milo mentors the next generation

MIlo showing new puppy Curtis the finer points of fetching on a fine soft evening in Portland during our recent road trip,

If you’re the kind of Observer reader who immediately scrolls to the end for the Milo picture, or someone who just enjoys excellent dogs on the road in cool cars, check out the preview for Ragtop Dog, our new writing project coming soon to an inbox near you.

1

Turns out there’s a whole book on this, but just go with the Freakonomics Cliff Notes.

2

For the football-averse among you, the Seahawks won that game on a last-second pass from Russell Wilson to Golden Tate, much to the delight of the boozed-up thousands in attendance. The play is widely considered to be one of the worst pieces of officiating in football history. There was a disputed call on the catch, which rightfully went the Seahawks’ way, and a missed call for flagrant pass interference on Tate, which should have won the game for the Packers. Ask any Hawks fan about and you’re likely to get a shrug and this response: “Home cookin’, baby.”

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Huber was appointed by Gov. Jay Inslee in 2019 after more than 20 years of private practice in Wenatchee.

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Conflict of Interest Disclaimer: Your correspondent, who was then a strategic communications consultant and a voting member of the 34th District Democrats, both wrote a check to that top aide, Shannon Braddock, and voted for her in the endorsement process, which resulted in a joint endorsement for both candidates.

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