Current through Register Vol. XLI, No. 38, September 20, 2024
7.1. Resident individual. An individual may
be a resident of West Virginia for income tax purposes, and be taxable as a
resident, even though such individual would not be deemed a resident for other
purposes.
7.1.1. As used in these
regulations, the term "resident individual" means and includes;
7.1.1.1. All persons domiciled in West
Virginia, with the exception of those domiciliary residents who maintain no
permanent place of abode in this State, maintain a permanent place of abode
elsewhere and spend in the aggregate not more than thirty (30) days of the
taxable year in this State; or.
7.1.1.2. Any person, other than a member of
the Armed Forces of the United States, who is not domiciled in West Virginia
but who maintains a permanent place of abode in this state and spends in the
aggregate more than 183 days of the taxable year in this state.
7.1.2. Domicile Defined. Domicile,
in general, is the place which an individual intends to be his permanent home;
the place to which he intends to return whenever he may be absent.
7.1.2.1. A domicile once established
continues until the person in question moves to a new location with the bona
fide intention of making his fixed and permanent home there.
7.1.2.2. No change of domicile results from a
removal to a new location if the intention is to remain there only for a
limited time even if the individual has sold or disposed of his former home.
7.1.2.2.a. The burden is upon any person
asserting a change of domicile to show that the necessary intention to change
domicile existed.
7.1.2.2.b. In
determining an individual intention regarding a change of domicile, his
declarations will be given due weight but will not be conclusive if they are
contradicted by his conduct.
7.1.2.2.c. The fact that a person registers
and votes in one place is an important indication of domicile but not
necessarily determinative, especially if the facts indicate that such actions
were merely undertaken to escape taxation in a particular
jurisdiction.
7.1.2.3.
Domicile is not dependant on citizenship. For example, an alien who has
permanently established his home in West Virginia is domiciled in this state
regardless of whether he has become a citizen of the United States or has
applied for citizenship. A citizen of the United States, however, will not
ordinarily be deemed to have changed his domicile by going to a foreign country
unless it is clearly established that he intends to remain there permanently. A
citizen of the United States domiciled in West Virginia who goes abroad because
of an assignment by his employer or for study, research or recreation, does not
lose his West Virginia domicile unless it is clearly shown that such individual
intends to remain abroad permanently and not to return.
7.1.2.4. An individual can have only one (1)
domicile. Where an individual has two (2) or more homes, his domicile is at the
home he regards as principal and permanent. In determining his intention in
this matter, the length of time customarily spent at each location is important
but not conclusive. A person who maintains a permanent place of abode in West
Virginia and spends more than one hundred eighty-three (183) days of the
taxable year in this state is taxable as a resident, regardless of his
domicile.
7.1.2.5. A wife's
domicile follows that of her husband unless a separate domicile has been
established by her. A child's domicile generally follows that of his father, or
of his mother after the father's death, until the child reaches the age of
self-support and actually establishes his own separate domicile. The domicile
of a child of divorced parents ordinarily follows that of the custodial
parent.
7.1.3. Permanent
place of abode. A permanent place of abode means a dwelling place permanently
maintained by the taxpayer, whether or not owned by him, and will generally
include a dwelling place owned or leased by his or her spouse.
7.1.3.1. A mere camp or cottage, or other
similar site or dwelling, which is suitable and used only for vacation purposes
does not constitute a permanent place of abode.
7.1.3.2. A place of abode, whether in West
Virginia or elsewhere, will not be deemed permanent if such abode is maintained
only during a temporary stay for the accomplishment of a particular purpose.
7.1.3.2.a. Where an individual domiciled in
another state is assigned to his employer's West Virginia office for a fixed
and limited period, after which he is to return to his permanent location, and
said individual takes an apartment or other dwelling in West Virginia during
the fixed and limited period, he will not be deemed a resident for income tax
puposes even if he spends more than one hundred eighty-three (183) days of the
taxable year in this State, because his place of abode here is not permanent.
This person, however, will be taxable as a nonresident for income tax purposes
on his income from West Virginia sources, including his salary or other
compensation for services performed in West Virginia.
7.1.3.2.b. If an individual's assignment to
his employer's West Virginia office is not for a fixed or limited period, but
is for an indefinite period, the individual's West Virginia place of abode will
be deemed a permanent place of abode and he will be a resident for tax purposes
if he spends more than one hundred eighty-three (183) days of the year in West
Virginia.
7.1.3.3. In
the case of a person domiciled in West Virginia, the maintenance of a permanent
place of abode in this state is alone sufficient to make him a resident for tax
purposes, even though he remains outside the state for the entire year because
the one hundred eighty-three (183) day rule applies only to taxpayers who are
not domiciled in West Virginia.
7.1.4. Rules for days within and without West
Virginia. In counting the number of days spent within and without West
Virginia, presence within the State for any part of a calendar day constitutes
a day spent within the State, except that such presence within the State may be
disregarded if it is solely for the purpose of boarding a plane, train or bus
for travel to a destination outside West Virginia, or while traveling by motor
vehicle, plane or train through West Virginia to a destination outside the
State. Any person domiciled outside this state who maintains a permanent place
of abode within this State during any taxable year and claims to be a
nonresident must keep and have available for examination by the Tax
Commissioner adequate records to substantiate the fact that he did not spend
more than one hundred eighty-three (183) days of such taxable year within the
State.
7.1.5. Certain Persons Not
Deemed Residents Although Domiciled in West Virginia. Any individual domiciled
in West Virginia is a resident for income tax purposes for a specific taxable
year, unless for such year he satisfies all three (3) of the following
conditions:
(1) he maintains no permanent
place of abode in West Virginia,
(2) he maintains a permanent place of abode
elsewhere, and
(3) he spends in the
aggregate not more than thirty (30) days of the taxable year in West
Virginia.
7.1.5.1. Example. An
individual, although retaining his West Virginia domicile, maintains his only
permanent place of abode in the State of New York. As long as this individual
continues to meet all three (3) conditions set forth under Subsection 7.1.5
above, he will be a nonresident of West Virginia for income tax purposes. If,
however, for any taxable year there is a failure to meet any one (1) of the
three (3) Subsection 7.1.5 conditions, the individual is subject to West
Virginia's personal income tax as a resident for that year.
7.1.5.2. Where an individual domiciled in
West Virginia claims to be a nonresident for any taxable year, the burden is
upon said individual to show that during the year in question all three (3)
Subsection 7.1.5 conditions had been satisfied.
7.2. Nonresident individual. For personal
income tax purposes, a nonresident individual is any person who is not a
resident as defined in subsection 7.1 of this regulation.
7.2.1. All references in these regulations to
nonresidents are equally applicable to nonresident aliens unless otherwise
specifically provided.
7.3. Resident estate or trust. A resident
estate or trust means and includes:
(1) The
estate of a descendent who at his death was domiciled in this state;
(2) a trust created by will of a descendent
who at the date of his death was domiciled in West Virginia; or
(3) a trust created by, or consisting of
property of, a person domiciled in West Virginia.
7.3.1. Examples.
Example 1. An individual who is domiciled in Canada, creates
a trust with a bank in Charleston, as trustee. The corpus of this trust
consists of securities of American corporations, which are actively traded by
the trustee on the several Stock Exchanges and also consists of rental property
located in West Virginia. The beneficiaries of the trust are all West Virginia
residents. Regardless of whether the trust is held to be a resident of the
United States for federal income tax purposes, it is, for purposes of this
State's personal income tax law, a nonresident trust.
Example 2. An individual who is a domiciliary resident of
West Virginia, creates a trust with the a bank in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, as
trustee. The trust corpus consists of West Virginia rental property and
Pennsylvania rental property. The beneficiaries of the trust are all residents
of Pennsylvania. The trust is a resident trust for West Virginia income tax
purposes.
7.4.
Nonresident estate or trust. A nonresident estate or trust is an estate or
trust which is not a resident estate or trust as defined in subsection 7.3. of
this regulation.
7.5. Cross
reference. For effect of a change of an individual's resident status, see
section 54 of these regulations.