Originally posted by FEDUKE404
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Once upon a time, all we had was domicile. While there are many indicators of domicile (voter registration, organizational memberships, etc.), at its core, domicile is a subjective test. How do you prove where the person "intends to return"? So wealthy people in the Northeast could buy a condo in FL or TX or other states with no income tax, change their voter registration, and start claiming that state as a domicile, thus limiting the state where they lived and worked to taxing just the wages earned there.
So states enacting statutory residency for the explicit purpose of coming up with a result that could be different from domicile. The effect is that it's perfectly possible to have a domicile in one state (and thus be taxed as a full year resident of that state) and be a statutory resident of another state (and thus be taxed as a full year resident of that state as well). It might seem fairer if a state that enacted statutory residence would give up the domicile test (and some do, to a limited extent), but that still wouldn't remove the case of being a statutory resident of one state while continuing to be domiciled in another.
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