Quote Originally Posted by Cory
Therefore only people ordering their equipment from a business which also has a brick and mortar store fall under your original statement.

You have it backwards. Online sellers with a location in your state *are* required to collect sales tax, and they always do. Web sites with no such location are *not* required to collect sales tax, so most of them don't.


When they don't collect the salestax, you are liable to send it in for yourself.


Quote Originally Posted by Cory
Don't mean to nit pick, but youfairly generically stated anyone in California purchasing anything out of state was evading taxes.

No. When someone buys out of state from a web site that charges sales tax, of course they are not evading taxes. They paid them at the time of sale. It's only when they don't pay the taxes at the end of the year (or within 1 month in some states) that they have evaded taxes.


In my post I specifically quoted and responded to the following:
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"]"I will buy all my lenses and
bodies from out of state stores with no sales tax (in california its
close to 10% right now)"



Quote Originally Posted by Cory
Ifsomeone in Cali is ordering from someone like B&amp;H(a New York store) they are doing nothing wrong.

Of course they are doing nothing wrong. As long as they calculate their tax liability and send a check to their state DOR. If they don't, then they are evading taxes illegally.


Quote Originally Posted by Cory


I'm in Washington, but I can't think of any company that is in my own state that I would end up mail ordering something from other than Amazon (and they are kind of an exception as they ONLY do mail order).


Howdy, neighbor! I live in Washington, too (Vancouver).


When you and I buy from Amazon.com, they charge us salestax at the time of purchase, so we don't have to calculate the tax and send in the form. But if we buy from all the other online web sites that don't charge sales tax, we are held liable to send the amount in directly to the Washington State Dept of Revenue ourselves by the 15th of the following month.


This is the form you are supposed to be filing every month, twelve times a year:


Washington State Consumer Use Tax Return Form


If you buy something on the 31st, you only have 15 days to send in the form before it becomes overdue and you become liable for penalties and interest. (Of course, most people have been buying things out of state without paying use tax for decades, so you can imagine the amount they owe!) Here is their little brochure about it:


Washington State Use Tax Brochure


The fact that you (and 99.9% of all of us Washingtonians) are evading taxes illegally is indisputable. Of course, you'll never get caught. And until now you didn't even know you were doing it. But that doesn't change the fact that it is illegal tax evasion, just like your boss paying you under the table instead of reporting your income to the IRS.


EDIT: [I see you edited your post with a few more questions. Here are the answers:]


Quote Originally Posted by Cory
An interesting question might be: If someone in
Cali is ordering something from Amazon and Amazon is re-sellingit from
a retailer in Cali... what are the legal responsibilities? Heh

It's simple. If Amazon collects the sales tax, then you don't have to do anything. If they don't, and the retailer in Cali doesn't either, then you have to send in the salestax yourself.


Quote Originally Posted by Cory
Having to pay tax on orders from a business which
has stores in your state I can see having to pay tax on, but the
efforts to try and make people pay taxes on mail order purchases made
from companies in other states is going too far.

Fair has nothing to do with it. I'm talking about what's *legal*. If you want to illegally evade taxes because you think the taxes are unfair, that's your choice. But it doesn't change the fact that you are still evading taxes illegally.


Quote Originally Posted by Cory
What happens if you
WALK IN to Camera store in south Oregon buy a lens, then drivehome to
northern Cali?


You must track the full amount that you spent, calculate what the tax rate would have been if you bought it locally (the city and zipcode where you put it "into use"), then send that amount into the state within one month. (Washington allows 15 days after the start of the next month, I'm not sure how much time California gives you, but certainly no more than 1 year.)


Quote Originally Posted by Cory


Are they going to make you start paying taxes on that
too?


"Start"? It has been that way for decades! The rise of mail order catalogs, TV buying, and Internet purchases have only increased the frequency with which people evade taxes.


Quote Originally Posted by Cory
I don't see that they have any right to attempt to collect taxes
on purchases like that.

Well, your personal views don't change the fact that it's tax evasion. If you want to see it changed, you'll have to change how you vote or get politically active about it.