HB0213

HOUSE BILL 213

56th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - second session, 2024

INTRODUCED BY

Micaela Lara Cadena and Derrick J. Lente and Cristina Paraj n and Joshua N. Hernandez

 

 

 

 

AN ACT

RELATING TO TAXATION; AMENDING THE LIQUOR EXCISE TAX ACT; IMPOSING THE TAX ON RETAILERS; PROVIDING AN EXEMPTION; CHANGING THE RATES OF THE TAX TO A PERCENTAGE BASIS; AMENDING DEFINITIONS IN THE LIQUOR EXCISE TAX ACT; ELIMINATING FORTIFIED WINE AS A SPECIFIC TYPE OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE; CHANGING THE DISTRIBUTIONS OF THE TAX; EXCLUDING THE LIQUOR EXCISE TAX FROM THE DEFINITION OF "GROSS RECEIPTS" IN THE GROSS RECEIPTS AND COMPENSATING TAX ACT; REPEALING THE LOCAL DWI GRANT PROGRAM ACT AND SECTIONS OF THE LIQUOR EXCISE TAX ACT.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:

     SECTION 1. Section 7-1-6.40 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1997, Chapter 182, Section 1, as amended) is amended to read:

     "7-1-6.40. DISTRIBUTION OF LIQUOR EXCISE TAX--[LOCAL DWI GRANT FUND--CERTAIN MUNICIPALITIES] DRUG COURT FUND--ALCOHOL AND SUBSTANCE USE HARMS ALLEVIATION FUND.--

          [A. A distribution pursuant to Section 7-1-6.1 NMSA 1978 in an amount equal to forty-five percent of the net receipts attributable to the liquor excise tax shall be made to the local DWI grant fund.

          B. A distribution pursuant to Section 7-1-6.1 NMSA 1978 of twenty thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($20,750) monthly from the net receipts attributable to the liquor excise tax shall be made to a municipality that is located in a class A county and that has a population according to the most recent federal decennial census of more than thirty thousand but less than sixty thousand and shall be used by the municipality only for the provision of alcohol treatment and rehabilitation services for street inebriates.]

          A. A distribution pursuant to Section 7-1-6.1 NMSA 1978 shall be made to the alcohol and substance use harms alleviation fund in an amount equal to the net receipts attributable to the liquor excise tax, less two million eighty-four thousand dollars ($2,084,000) monthly and the amount distributed pursuant to Subsection B of this section.

          [C. Beginning July 1, 2019] B. A distribution pursuant to Section 7-1-6.1 NMSA 1978 in an amount equal to [five percent of] two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) monthly from the net receipts attributable to the liquor excise tax shall be made to the drug court fund."

     SECTION 2. Section 7-9-3.5 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 2003, Chapter 272, Section 3, as amended) is amended to read:

     "7-9-3.5. DEFINITION--GROSS RECEIPTS.--

          A. As used in the Gross Receipts and Compensating Tax Act:

                (1) "gross receipts" means the total amount of money or the value of other consideration received from selling property in New Mexico, from leasing or licensing property employed in New Mexico, from granting a right to use a franchise employed in New Mexico, from selling services performed outside New Mexico, the product of which is initially used in New Mexico, or from performing services in New Mexico. In an exchange in which the money or other consideration received does not represent the value of the property or service exchanged, "gross receipts" means the reasonable value of the property or service exchanged;

                (2) "gross receipts" includes:

                     (a) any receipts from sales of tangible personal property handled on consignment;

                     (b) the total commissions or fees derived from the business of buying, selling or promoting the purchase, sale or lease, as an agent or broker on a commission or fee basis, of any property, service, stock, bond or security;

                     (c) amounts paid by members of any cooperative association or similar organization for sales or leases of personal property or performance of services by such organization;

                     (d) amounts received from transmitting messages or conversations by persons providing telephone or telegraph services;

                     (e) amounts received by a New Mexico florist from the sale of flowers, plants or other products that are customarily sold by florists where the sale is made pursuant to orders placed with the New Mexico florist that are filled and delivered outside New Mexico by an out-of-state florist;

                     (f) the receipts of a home service provider from providing mobile telecommunications services to customers whose place of primary use is in New Mexico if: 1) the mobile telecommunications services originate and terminate in the same state, regardless of where the services originate, terminate or pass through; and 2) the charges for mobile telecommunications services are billed by or for a customer's home service provider and are deemed provided by the home service provider. For the purposes of this section, "home service provider", "mobile telecommunications services", "customer" and "place of primary use" have the meanings given in the federal Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Act; and

                     (g) receipts collected by a marketplace provider engaging in business in the state from sales, leases and licenses of tangible personal property, sales of licenses and sales of services or licenses for use of real property that are sourced to this state and are facilitated by the marketplace provider on behalf of marketplace sellers, regardless of whether the marketplace sellers are engaging in business in the state; and 

                (3) "gross receipts" excludes:

                     (a) cash discounts allowed and taken;

                     (b) New Mexico gross receipts tax, governmental gross receipts tax, leased vehicle gross receipts tax, [and] cannabis excise tax and liquor excise tax payable on transactions for the reporting period;

                     (c) taxes imposed pursuant to the provisions of any local option gross receipts tax that is payable on transactions for the reporting period;

                     (d) any gross receipts or sales taxes imposed by an Indian nation, tribe or pueblo; provided that the tax is approved, if approval is required by federal law or regulation, by the secretary of the interior of the United States; and provided further that the gross receipts or sales tax imposed by the Indian nation, tribe or pueblo provides a reciprocal exclusion for gross receipts, sales or gross receipts-based excise taxes imposed by the state or its political subdivisions;

                     (e) any type of time-price differential;

                     (f) amounts received solely on behalf of another in a disclosed agency capacity; and

                     (g) amounts received by a New Mexico florist from the sale of flowers, plants or other products that are customarily sold by florists where the sale is made pursuant to orders placed with an out-of-state florist for filling and delivery in New Mexico by a New Mexico florist.

          B. When the sale of property or service is made under any type of charge, conditional or time-sales contract or the leasing of property is made under a leasing contract, the seller or lessor may elect to treat all receipts, excluding any type of time-price differential, under such contracts as gross receipts as and when the payments are actually received. If the seller or lessor transfers the seller's or lessor's interest in any such contract to a third person, the seller or lessor shall pay the gross receipts tax upon the full sale or leasing contract amount, excluding any type of time-price differential."

     SECTION 3. Section 7-17-2 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1966, Chapter 49, Section 2, as amended) is amended to read:

     "7-17-2. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Liquor Excise Tax Act:

          A. "alcoholic beverages" means distilled or rectified spirits, potable alcohol, brandy, whiskey, rum, gin, aromatic bitters or any similar beverage, including blended or fermented beverages, dilutions or mixtures of one or more of the foregoing containing more than one-half of one percent alcohol by volume, but "alcoholic beverages" does not include medicinal bitters;

          B. "barrel" means the equivalent of thirty-one gallons;

          [B.] C. "beer" means an alcoholic beverage obtained by the fermentation of any infusion or decoction of barley, malt and hops or other cereals in water and includes porter, beer, ale and stout;

          [C.] D. "cider" means an alcoholic beverage made from the normal alcoholic fermentation of the juice of sound, ripe apples or pears that contains not less than one-half of one percent of alcohol by volume and not more than eight and one-half percent of alcohol by volume;

          [D.] E. "department" means the taxation and revenue department, the secretary of taxation and revenue or any employee of the department exercising authority lawfully delegated to that employee by the secretary;

          [E. "fortified wine" means wine containing more than fourteen percent alcohol by volume when bottled or packaged by the manufacturer, but "fortified wine" does not include:

                (1) wine that is sealed or capped by cork closure and aged two years or more;

                (2) wine that contains more than fourteen percent alcohol by volume solely as a result of the natural fermentation process and that has not been produced with the addition of wine spirits, brandy or alcohol; or

                (3) vermouth and sherry;]

          F. "microbrewer" means a person who produces less than two hundred thousand barrels of beer per year;

          G. "person" includes, to the extent permitted by law, a federal, state or other governmental unit or subdivision or an agency, department, institution or instrumentality thereof;

          H. "retailer" means a person having a place of business in New Mexico who sells, offers for sale or possesses for the purpose of selling alcoholic beverages in New Mexico;

          [H.] I. "small winegrower" means a winegrower who produces less than one million five hundred thousand liters of wine in a year;

          [I.] J. "spirituous liquors" means alcoholic beverages, except fermented beverages such as wine, beer, cider and ale;

          [J. "wholesaler" means a person holding a license issued under Section 60-6A-1 NMSA 1978 or a person selling alcoholic beverages that were not purchased from a person holding a license issued under Section 60-6A-1 NMSA 1978;]

          K. "wine" means an alcoholic beverage other than cider that is obtained by the fermentation of the natural sugar contained in fruit or other agricultural products, with or without the addition of sugar or other products, and that does not contain more than twenty-one percent alcohol by volume; and

          L. "winegrower" means a person licensed pursuant to Section 60-6A-11 NMSA 1978."

     SECTION 4. Section 7-17-5 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1993, Chapter 65, Section 8, as amended) is amended to read:

     "7-17-5. IMPOSITION AND RATE OF LIQUOR EXCISE TAX--EXEMPTION.--

          A. There is imposed on a [wholesaler] retailer who sells alcoholic beverages on which the tax imposed by this section has not been paid an excise tax, to be referred to as the "liquor excise tax", at the following rates [on] of the price paid for alcoholic beverages sold by the retailer:

                [(1) on spirituous liquors, except as provided in Paragraph (9) of this subsection, one dollar sixty cents ($1.60) per liter;

                (2) on beer, except as provided in

Paragraph (5) of this subsection, forty-one cents ($.41) per gallon;

                (3) on wine, except as provided in Paragraphs (4) and (6) of this subsection, forty-five cents ($.45) per liter;

                (4) on fortified wine, one dollar fifty cents ($1.50) per liter;

                (5) on beer manufactured or produced by a microbrewer and sold in this state, provided that proof is furnished to the department that the beer was manufactured or produced by a microbrewer, eight cents ($.08) per gallon on the first thirty thousand barrels sold, twenty-eight cents ($.28) per gallon for all barrels sold over thirty thousand barrels but less than sixty thousand barrels and forty-one cents ($.41) per gallon for sixty thousand or more barrels sold;

                (6) on wine manufactured or produced by a small winegrower and sold in this state, provided that proof is furnished to the department that the wine was manufactured or produced by a small winegrower:

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