Years ago there was a discussion about this on this forum, but I'm not sure anything was ever settled. Probably depends on court rulings which may or may not be definitive. But I'm going to ask if anything reliable was ever determined.
Companies are allowing (and sometimes encouraging) their employees to work from home. One universally accepted doctrine is that the state source of income is "wherever the work is done." States have become aggressive in recent years to horn in on as much taxable income as they can.
One particularly litiguous case was a New Jersey employer who allowed a New York resident to work from home. New Jersey insisted on taxing this guy with New Jersey wages on his non-resident return. New York insisted on taxing the guy for a proportional amount of earnings worked from his home. The employee was confronted with paying taxes to both states on the same income. The thing ended up in BOTH state courts (neither of which were expected to be objective).
The New York court ruled taxation in favor of New York and of course insisted they were applying state law irrespective of what another state ruled. New Jersey court ruled the entire salary was taxable to New Jersey and expressed it was irrelevant what New York did. Thus neither state govt was interested in any action against the other state to settle anything, although the situation was receiving notoriety everywhere.
My question: Has anything been settled -- and I'm not speaking just of NY and NJ. I'm interested in knowing whether there has been a convention or agreement among states that is being widely observed???
Companies are allowing (and sometimes encouraging) their employees to work from home. One universally accepted doctrine is that the state source of income is "wherever the work is done." States have become aggressive in recent years to horn in on as much taxable income as they can.
One particularly litiguous case was a New Jersey employer who allowed a New York resident to work from home. New Jersey insisted on taxing this guy with New Jersey wages on his non-resident return. New York insisted on taxing the guy for a proportional amount of earnings worked from his home. The employee was confronted with paying taxes to both states on the same income. The thing ended up in BOTH state courts (neither of which were expected to be objective).
The New York court ruled taxation in favor of New York and of course insisted they were applying state law irrespective of what another state ruled. New Jersey court ruled the entire salary was taxable to New Jersey and expressed it was irrelevant what New York did. Thus neither state govt was interested in any action against the other state to settle anything, although the situation was receiving notoriety everywhere.
My question: Has anything been settled -- and I'm not speaking just of NY and NJ. I'm interested in knowing whether there has been a convention or agreement among states that is being widely observed???
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