Client Alert: Maryland Bill Seeks to Impose Tax on Economic Transfers
February 19, 2004
The Maryland House of Delegates introduced a bill designated as H.B. 1,
entitled the “Public School Construction Assistance Act of 2004,” that would
impose transfer and recordation taxes on transfers of 80 percent or more of the
economic interests in entities that primarily own real estate in Maryland. The
bill was assigned to the Ways and Means Committee and to the Appropriations
Committee of the House of Delegates on January 23, 2004. If passed in its
current form, the law would take effect on January 1, 2005.
Presently, transfers of economic interests are not subject to Maryland’s
transfer and recordation taxes and real property transactions are often
structured as sales of partnership, corporate or limited liability company
interests in order to avoid these taxes, which are significant (for example,
total state and county transfer and recordation taxes in Montgomery County,
Maryland are an aggregate of 2.19 percent). H.B. 1 would severely limit the
ability to structure transactions in this manner to avoid Maryland’s high
transfer and recordation taxes.
This bill is the latest in a series of similar bills, all seeking to close
this perceived loophole. A pair of similar bills, H.B. 19 and S.B. 120 of the
2003 legislative session, nearly passed last year and the expectation is high
that the current H.B. 1 will pass this year.
A description of the status of the bill and a link to the bill text can be
found at:
http://mlis.state.md.us/2004rs/billfile/hb0001.htm.
For more information, e-mail Curtis L. Sano at
curtis.sano@hklaw.com, David L.
Winstead at david.winstead@hklaw.com,
Robert L. Gorham at robert.gorham@hklaw.com,
or Joseph B. Whitebread at
joseph.whitebread@hklaw.com, or call toll free, 1-888-688-8500.