Comparing Wayfair to Wynne: Lessons for the Future of the Dormant Commerce Clause

31 Pages Posted: 17 Sep 2018

See all articles by Edward A. Zelinsky

Edward A. Zelinsky

Yeshiva University - Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law

Date Written: September 14, 2018

Abstract

A comparison of South Dakota v. Wayfair with Comptroller of the Treasury of Maryland v. Wynne indicates that the prospect ofthe Supreme Court jettisoning the dormant Commerce Clause altogether is unlikely. However, the justices who would abandon the dormant Commerce Clause can exercise decisive influence in particular cases as they did in Wayfair. The current Court’s dormant Commerce Clause skeptics – Justices Thomas and Gorsuch –provided the crucial fourth and fifth votes in Wayfair to overturn Quill.

It will continue to be rare for the Court to reverse its own dormant Commerce Clause decisions. Far from opening the floodgates, Wayfair indicates that the Court is reluctant to overrule its dormant Commerce Clause cases in light of Congress’s ultimate constitutional power to regulate interstate commerce. However,when neither the Court nor Congress has spoken on a particular issue, the Court will consider extending the dormant Commerce Clause as it did in Wynne.

Going forward, an important issue under the dormant Commerce Clause will be the double taxation which results when an individual is deemed to be a resident for tax purposes by two states, each of which taxes all of the dual resident’s income. Wayfair and Wynne suggest that, despite the compelling arguments against the double state taxation of dual residents’ incomes, the Court will be reluctant to set aside its precedents upholding the double state taxation of dual residents.

The Court is more likely to extend dormant Commerce Clause protection when states are overly-aggressive in taxing the incomes of nonresidents. In particular, the Court is more likely to apply the dormant Commerce Clause apportionment principle to curb New York’s “convenience of the employer” doctrine to avoid New York’s double state income taxation of telecommuters on the days they work at their out-of-state homes.

Keywords: internet commerce, dormant Commerce Clause, electronic commerce, sales tax, Wayfair, Wynne, Quill, substantial nexus, stare decisis, convenience of the employer, physical presence, statutory residence

Suggested Citation

Zelinsky, Edward A., Comparing Wayfair to Wynne: Lessons for the Future of the Dormant Commerce Clause (September 14, 2018). Chapman Law Review, Forthcoming, Cardozo Legal Studies Research Paper No. 563, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3249785

Edward A. Zelinsky (Contact Author)

Yeshiva University - Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law ( email )

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New York, NY 10003
United States
212-790-0277 (Phone)

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