Amend the amendment by inserting after section 7 the following:
‘
Amend the bill by inserting after section 4 the following:
‘Sec. 5. 36 MRSA §1861-B is enacted to read:
Amend the amendment in section 13 by adding at the end the following new sentence: 'That section of this Act that enacts Title 36, section 1861-B applies retroactively to March 1, 2010.'
Amend the amendment by relettering or renumbering any nonconsecutive Part letter or section number to read consecutively.
summary
This amendment allows a lessor of tangible personal property who collects sales tax erroneously on the lease or rental of that property to use the erroneously collected sales tax, less any refunds of that erroneously collected tax to customers, to offset an assessment against that lessor for use tax on that property. The lessor is required to apply to the State Tax Assessor for the offset no later than 30 days following the use tax assessment and provide the names and last known addresses of the customers from whom the sales tax was erroneously collected and not refunded, the date of that collection and the amount of the sales tax erroneously collected. The assessor is required to determine whether each customer received a refund of the erroneously collected sales tax and to notify in writing those customers who did not. A customer who fails to request a refund within 90 days following notification by the assessor forfeits any right to that refund. Following the refund of any erroneously collected sales tax, the assessor is required to provide an offset to the lessor of the amount of the sales tax erroneously collected, less any refunds and administrative costs, up to the amount of the use tax assessment. This amendment specifies that the erroneously collected sales tax is not subject to abandoned property laws. Finally, this amendment applies this provision retroactively to March 1, 2010.
FISCAL NOTE REQUIRED
(See attached)