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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Taylor
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
3/08/07
3/9/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Small Wine Maker Gross Receipt
SB 1131
ANALYST Francis
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
(442.0)
(450.0) Recurring General Fund
(233.0)
(238.0) Recurring DWI Grant
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 1131 makes the following changes to the Liquor Excise Tax Act:
redefines “wine" as an alcoholic beverage other than cider made by fermenting fruit or
other agricultural products that does not contain more than 20 percent alcohol by volume;
redefines “person" to include institutions;
defines “winegrower" as a person who has received a winegrowers business license from
the state;
changes the threshold to be taxed as a small winegrower to 950 thousand liters;
allows winegrowers to transfer wine to each other for the purpose of processing, bottling
or storage without the transfer volume being taxed provided the wine is returned to the
original owner;
The effective date for the changes is July 1, 2007.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 1131 – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The fiscal impact shown here has been revised to more accurately account for out-of-state
wineries that will be able to take advantage of the lower excise tax.
TRD reports that the increase in production level to be included at the small winer rate will lower
liquor excise revenues by $675,000. 65.43 percent of this is a reduction in general fund revenue
and the balance is a reduction in the local DWI grant fund.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
TRD reports that the increase in the production level will allow the two largest wine producers in
New Mexico to qualify as “small winers." They have also expressed concern that the fiscal
impacts may be understated because wholesalers can pay the lower tax on wine they pay on wine
they buy from small wineries, regardless of where the winery is. This higher level of production
increases the number of wineries nationwide that qualify for wholesale purposes.
The federal government provides a credit for small producers. The threshold for receiving the
federal credit is 250,000 gallons or 950,000 liters. This would match the definition proposed here
but the federal credit is only on the first 375,000 liters for these producers. [Section 5041(c)(1) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 5041(c)(1))]
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD:
House Bill 1145 makes several clarifications that will improve administration of the
Liquor Excise Tax as it applies to small wineries. In particular, adding the definition of
“winegrower" and clarifying the treatment of wine transferred from a small winery to a
wholesaler for distribution are useful clarifications. Several provisions of the bill raise
concerns however.
Page 3 & 4 section G. Intent of the proposed changes to the definition of “Person" is
unclear. As amended, the definition states that it “includes" various governmental
entities, but it doesn’t state whether it applies to any non-governmental entities. On its
face, it would appear that no private wholesaler would match the definition. Since this
definition is used in the Liquor Excise Tax to define terms like “wholesaler," which in
turn define who is subject to tax, the implication would be that no private wholesaler is
subject to the tax. Effectively the whole tax base would be eliminated. If this is not the
intent of the legislation, the definition of person should be clarified to indicate that it
continues to include various types of private business entities.
Page 7 paragraph B. The proposed new deduction – for wine received from another New
Mexico winegrower for processing, bottling or storage and subsequent return to the
transferor – would be more correctly treated as an exemption than a deduction for the tax.
The receiver is performing a service, not producing wine and this service should not
count toward the service provider’s wine production numbers. The exemption might be
better placed in a new section 7-17.9.1
NF/csd