GM sues San Francisco, seeking $121
million in back taxes, penalties
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[December 28, 2023]
By Greg Bensinger
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - General Motors has sued the city of San
Francisco, seeking to recover more than $100 million, alleging that it
was charged a higher tax bill than warranted because its Cruise
self-driving car unit was improperly used to make the calculations.
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The new GM logo is seen on the facade of the General Motors headquarters
in Detroit, Michigan, U.S., March 16, 2021. Picture taken March 16,
2021. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File Photo |
In
the case filed in California Superior Court in San Francisco, GM
is seeking $108 million in back taxes over the course of seven
years, as well as $13 million in penalties and interest,
according to the complaint. The Detroit automaker said San
Francisco-based Cruise is operated separately from GM, generates
only a minimal amount of sales and should not be used to
calculate GM’s liabilities in the city where the parent company
has a limited presence. GM said in the lawsuit that it sold only
about $677,000 worth of goods in San Francisco in 2022.
The lawsuit was filed on Friday. Bloomberg reported the news
earlier on Wednesday.
Neither the San Francisco city attorney’s office nor GM
immediately responded to requests for comment.
While the funds would represent a small portion of GM’s reported
$156.7 billion in sales in 2022, the lawsuit comes as San
Francisco is projecting an $800 million budget deficit over the
coming two fiscal years amid a pandemic recovery that has
stalled. Mayor London Breed has asked city agencies to cut their
budgets by 10% to help close the gap.
“The California Government Code mandates that the city taxes
must fairly reflect the proportion of activity actually carried
on within the city, and they do not, either generally or as
applied to GM,” the company wrote in its complaint.
The Cruise unit at issue is contracting after an October
accident in San Francisco that caused a furor in the city and
caught the attention of regulators. The incident has caused
Cruise to pull its U.S. cars off roads, undergo a safety review
and cut nearly a quarter of its staff nationwide.
(Reporting by Greg Bensinger in San Francisco; Editing by
Matthew Lewis)
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