Before you read further — which describes you?
Quick Answer
California residency case law has developed through four waves: (1) early 20th-century foundational decisions on domicile; (2) mid-century Whittell and similar cases establishing closest connection test; (3) late 20th-century expansion of temporary/transitory analysis; and (4) modern Noble and Appeal of Bragg cases addressing specific fact patterns. The short version is that California courts and the Board of Equalization (now OTA) have developed robust residency jurisprudence. Each taxpayer’s situation is analyzed against accumulated case law.1
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Four waves of California residency case law.
The Four Waves of Case Law Development
| Wave | Key Development2 |
|---|---|
| Early 20th Century | Domicile foundation |
| Mid-Century | Closest connection test |
| Late 20th Century | Temporary/transitory expansion |
| Contemporary | Fact-specific modern rulings |
Quick Reference
Jump to wave: foundation, tests, expansion, or modern.
1. Early 20th Century — Domicile Foundation
Courts established domicile as residence + intent.
If this is you: Understanding foundation informs current analysis. Domicile requires both physical presence and intent.
Foundation Applications
- Physical residence.
- Intent to remain.
- Documented both elements.
- Historical continuity.
- Statutory evolution.
2. Mid-Century — Closest Connection Test
Multi-state situations resolved by closest connection.
If this is you: Multi-state life. Closest connection test developed in mid-century cases. Multi-factor analysis.
3. Late 20th Century — Temporary/Transitory Expansion
Courts refined temporary/transitory purpose analysis.
If this is you: Extended absences or stays. Case law provides framework for when temporary is truly temporary.
4. Contemporary Cases
Modern cases address specific fact patterns.
If this is you: Unique situation. Modern cases provide guidance on specific scenarios — snowbirds, remote workers, expatriates.
Unique residency situation? Book consultation.
Residency Case Law Lookup
| Case | Significance |
|---|---|
| Whittell | Closest connection |
| Bragg | Modern factors application |
| Noble | Specific fact pattern |
| FTB Publication 1031 | Official guidance |
| RTC §17014 | Statutory foundation |
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Case Law and Statute
- Statute provides framework.
- Case law interprets specific applications.
- Each residency case builds on prior decisions.
Case Law Impact on Audits
| Situation | Case Law Application |
|---|---|
| Multi-state residents | Closest connection test |
| Temporary absence | Temp/trans expansion cases |
| Unique facts | Modern case-specific rulings |
Case Law in Escalation
Audit Analysis
FTB cites case law in findings.
Appeals
Case law central to Appeals briefs.
OTA / Superior Court
Formal case law argument.
First 48 Hours Case Research
- Identify analogous fact patterns.
- Research relevant cases.
- Assess favorable / unfavorable precedent.
- Build case strategy.
- Engage counsel for formal analysis.
The ROI Question
Case law drives residency outcomes. Professional case law analysis is essential for complex matters.
When to Engage
- Complex residency facts.
- Contested residency determination.
- Appeals at any level.
Frequently Asked Questions
How has California residency case law developed?
Four waves. Early 20th century foundational domicile decisions. Mid-century closest connection test. Late 20th century temporary/transitory expansion. Contemporary fact-specific rulings.
What is the most important residency case?
Multiple candidates. Whittell established closest connection. Bragg refined factor analysis. Specific cases address specific facts. No single dispositive decision.
Does case law override the statute?
Case law interprets but does not override statute. Statute provides framework; case law provides application. Both operate together.
What is the closest connection test?
Developed in mid-century cases. Multi-factor analysis of where taxpayer has strongest connections. Used in multi-state situations.
How do courts define temporary/transitory?
Through case-by-case analysis. Late 20th century cases expanded the concept. No fixed duration; depends on purpose and documentation.
Are there recent residency cases?
OTA has issued numerous decisions since 2018. FTB precedent cases continue to develop doctrine. Modern cases address remote work, snowbirds, and specific multi-state patterns.
Does case law favor FTB or taxpayer?
Mixed. Cases turn on facts. Well-documented residency claims often prevail. Weak documentation typically loses.
How do I find relevant cases?
FTB publications cite key cases. OTA decisions publicly available. Westlaw/Lexis for formal case research. Attorney representation typical for research-intensive matters.
Are OTA decisions precedential?
Mixed. Some OTA decisions are designated as precedential. Others are persuasive but not binding. Check designation.
What’s the Bragg case?
Representative modern case applying residency factors. Key factors included home, family location, business ties. Illustrates factor weighting in practice.
Do I need case law for my residency audit?
For material matters, yes. Auditor cites favorable FTB cases; you cite favorable taxpayer cases. Balanced analysis supports favorable outcome.
Does federal case law apply?
Federal Commerce Clause cases sometimes relevant. State residency generally governed by state law and case law. Federal limits in constitutional context.
How often does case law change?
Gradually. Foundational principles stable. Specific applications develop with new factual patterns. Remote work era producing new case law rapidly.
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Next Steps
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