Fiscal impact reports (FIRs) are prepared by the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) for standing finance
committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
if they are used for other purposes.
Current FIRs (in HTML & Adobe PDF formats) are a vailable on the NM Legislative Website (legis.state.nm.us).
Adobe PDF versions include all attachments, whereas HTML versions may not. Previously issued FIRs and
attachments may be obtained from the LFC in Suite 101 of the State Capitol Building North.
F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR SJC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/26/08
2/5/08 HB
SHORT TITLE Business Entity Reporting & Penalties
SB 168/aSJC
ANALYST Earnest
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
FY10
($0.1)
($0.1) Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Regulation Commission (PRC)
Office of the Attorney General (OAG)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of the SJC Amendment
The Senate Judiciary Committee amendment makes the technical changes suggested by OAG
and PRC. The term “report" is replaced by “return" for clarification. For non-profit entities,
under this amendment, the reporting requirement and extension of time to file a report in current
statute are left intact.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 168 amends the Corporate Reports Act to reduce from one year to 30 days the time
the Public Regulation Commission (PRC) may grant an extension for filing a required corporate
report. The bill require biennial reports, plus a $10 fee, instead of annual reports and reduces the
penalty for failure file the report from $200 to $100.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
PRC estimates a minimal net fiscal impact between the decreases in late filing fees against the
increase in the additional filing fee for biennial reports and civil penalty for failure to timely file
such report. All fees collected by the corporations bureau are deposited in the general fund.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 168/aSJC – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Current law imposes a civil penalty of $200 for late filing of annual or supplemental reports.
PRC may grant a one year extension, effectively making the report biennial. PRC indicates that
entities can pay this amount or re-incorporate under a different name for a lower cost. This bill
will assess a smaller late fee of $100 which is lower than the total cost to re-incorporate under
another name given all costs associated with the transaction from the corporation to the PRC.
The net effect of the bill would be to encourage business to maintain their corporate status within
the State of New Mexico.
Further, PRC reports the reason for requiring limited liability companies to file biennial reports
is to keep track of their existence. Currently, there is no method of knowing whether these
entities are still in existence. Without information provided directly to the PRC that a limited
liability company is no longer in existence, the name of the limited liability company cannot be
used by another entity. More generally, the public has an interest in knowing that the database of
a state agency is updated regularly and therefore reasonably accurate.
OAG indicates that the bill amends NMSA Section 53-5-7 to apparently eliminate a conflict
between sections in that act as to whether for-profit corporate reports must be filed on an annual
or biennial basis. The provisions would be consistent in requiring biennial corporate report
filings.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
PRC would have to provide limited training to staff if this bill is enacted and the commission’s
database would have to be changed slightly to accept and electronically report biennial reports
from limited liability companies. The changes would need to be disseminated to the public at
nominal expense.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
PRC reports that the deleted text on page 6, lines 10 through 22, should remain intact and the
current language of the statute kept as is.
OAG suggests that definitions for “report" and “returns" be added to the law. NMSA Sections
53-5-6 and 53-8-83 1978 contain references to both “reports" and “returns". This bill reduces the
allowable extension of time for filing a “return" as required by the Corporate Reports Act and the
Nonprofit Corporation Act from twelve months to thirty days, However, a review of those acts,
and the PRC rules governing corporate filings (NMAC 12.3.2; 12.3.3), did not reveal any
requirement for the filing of corporate tax returns with the Public Regulation Commission. It is
possible that the use of the term “return" is intended to be synonymous with the term “report".
However, the failure of the bill to eliminate extensions based upon the United States Internal
Revenue Code as applied to for-profit corporations, while eliminating that language for non-
profit corporations, implies that those terms are not synonymous.
BE/mt