Summary
noting that although tax-exemption statutes are to be strictly construed, party was entitled to exemption because, inter alia, exemption's general purpose of producing multiplied tax revenues was served
Summary of this case from District of Columbia Office of Tax & Revenue v. Bae System Enterprise System Inc.Opinion
No. 29762
Decided June 14, 1944.
Taxation — Sales and use tax — Exemption — Sections 5546-1 and 5546-25, General Code — Sales of tangible personalty used in producing tangibles for sale by processing — Equipment and supplies used and consumed in handling crushed stone for ultimate sale.
Sales of tangible personal property used and consumed in operations consisting of transporting crushed-stone products from a stone crushing and screening plant to yards adjacent thereto, and of draining, cleaning, blending and reassembling such products to comply with the required specifications of the purchasing trade before they are available and ready for market and sale, are sales of personal property used and consumed directly in the production by processing of tangible personal property for sale and are, under the provisions of Sections 5546-1 and 5546-25, General Code, exempt from state sales and use taxes.
APPEAL from the Board of Tax Appeals.
This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals modifying a determination of sales and use tax reassessment by the appellant as Tax Commissioner against the appellee, The France Company. Recovery of sales and use taxes is sought by appellant on certain purchases which appellee claims were of goods, the sale of which is not subject to such tax.
The appellee, during the time involved in this inquiry, was engaged in operating a stone quarry, a stone crushing and screening plant and storage yards. The tax was assessed upon certain purchases of supplies and equipment used and consumed by the appellee in its yard operations in handling crushed-stone products for ultimate sale. The operations in question were those which followed after the stone had been quarried, removed from the quarry, crushed and screened on the ground level. These operations consisted of the removal of the screened product to the yards of the appellee, connected directly with the stone crushing plant, where it was stored prior to sale, and of the reassembling of this product in form and proportions as required by purchasers, preparatory to and including loading for shipment.
The tangible personal property, the subject matter of the audit and assessment, was used only in yard operations and consisted of dump cars, movable tracks, together with rails, ties, spikes and bolts, which go to make up the movable tracks, locomotive engines, locomotive cranes, movable shovels, loaders, together with coal, petroleum products and other supplies consumed in the operation of this equipment. Other pertinent facts are stated in the opinion.
Mr. R.H. Rogers and Mr. Brandon G. Schnorf, for appellee.
Mr. Thomas J. Herbert, attorney general, and Mr. A.A. Cartwright, for appellant.
The determination of this appeal calls for the construction of Sections 5546-1 and 5546-25, General Code, as applied to the use of the equipment and supplies in question in the operations of the appellee in its plant yards.
The pertinent portion of Section 5546-1, General Code, under which appellee claims exemption, is as follows:
" 'Retail sale' and 'sales at retail' include all sales excepting those in which the purpose of the consumer is * * * to use or consume the thing transferred directly in the production of tangible personal property for sale by * * * processing * * *."
The appellant contends that the tangible personal property in question was not used in the "production of tangible personal property for sale by * * * processing"; that the production and processing was completed in the crushing and screening process; and that the subsequent operations in which the personal property in question was used constituted a distribution and marketing of the crushed-stone products. The appellee, on the other hand, contends that the storage of the crushed-stone products in its yards and the operations of washing, cleaning, blending and reassembling were still a necessary process in preparing the product for the market, and that such operations constituted a continuation of the production and processing of the materials for sale.
The record shows that slightly less than half of the stone crushed and screened during the period involved was transferred immediately from the screen to trucks and cars for immediate delivery to purchasers. The remainder of the crushed stone, in order to keep the plant in continuous operation, was transferred to storage piles in the yards from immediately adjacent to three-eighths of a mile from the screen. The transportation of this product and its reassembly for delivery to purchasers were accomplished by the use of the tangible personal property above described and now under consideration.
The stone was crushed into various sizes to meet the specifications of purchasers and was used for railroad ballast, road building, building construction, agricultural limestone and other purposes. The purchasers' specifications frequently called for combinations of certain percentages of grades or sizes of the product, which are made up from the storage piles in the yards. Some of the product is washed in connection with the crushing operation and this product must be drained in the yards before it is ready for delivery. The undisputed testimony is that a storage pile of crushed stone is never sold as a storage pile. There is always a blending operation necessary. The product is salable as specification material only when it reaches a car for rail shipment, or a customer's truck.
The appellant in his interpretation of the taxing statute lays much stress on the words "directly" and "processing" as used and applied in the statutory clause "to use or consume the thing transferred directly in the production of tangible personal property for sale by * * * processing * * *."
If the operations in question constitute "processing," it would seem to follow that the property in question was used directly for such purpose. The word "process" is defined as "a mode of treatment of certain materials to produce a given result. It is an act, or a species of acts, performed upon the subject matter to be transformed and reduced to a different state or thing." Cochrane v. Deener, 94 U.S. 780, 788, 24 L.Ed., 139.
The word "processing" is defined as meaning " 'to subject to some special process or treatment. To subject (esp. raw material) to a process of manufacture, development, preparation for the market.' " Kennedy v. Bd. of Assessment and Review, 224 Iowa 405, 407, 276 N.W. 205.
The evidence as to the operations of the defendant relating to its product after it left the crushing and screening plant shows that it was a continuing process necessary to prepare the product for market. In other words, the material was not ready for sale or delivery until these operations had been completed; and while tax exemption statutes are to be strictly construed (38 Ohio Jurisprudence, 852, Section 114), the general purpose of the exemption was served in this instance in that the property in question was used and consumed in producing and making available for market and sale much more valuable property which would produce multiplied tax revenues. Bailey v. Evatt, Tax Commr., 142 Ohio St. 616. See, also, Western Cartridge Co. v. Smith, Coll., 121 F.2d 593.
The question here involved is one of mixed law and fact, subject to determination by the Board of Tax Appeals. On review of the record made before that board, this court cannot say that the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals was unreasonable or unlawful. Therefore, the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is affirmed.
Decision affirmed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., WILLIAMS and TURNER, JJ., concur.
MATTHIAS, ZIMMERMAN and BELL, JJ., dissent.
I fully concur in the majority opinion wherein it states the legal principle pertinent to this case, which is that "tax exemption statutes are to be strictly construed."
I dissent, however, from the action of the majority in discarding that well established principle in the consideration and decision of this case. The rule that exceptions to a general law are to be strictly construed is likewise applicable.
The items of property involved, which are enumerated in the statement of facts and need not be here repeated, were in my opinion used primarily not as instrumentalities for processing, but rather for the transportation of crushed stone to storage piles in appellee's yards a considerable distance from the screens.
As these storage piles were made, under the law of gravitation the larger stone rolled down to the bottom of the pile. There was no subjection of the crushed stone to any manner of treatment except a so-called washing "which is done in the mill at the crushing operation;" nor was there any transformation of the stone after leaving the screens. If there was any processing, that had been accomplished by the stone-crushing machinery which is not involved in the question of tax exemption.
The property involved in this case other than that used in the transportation of crushed stone consisted of movable shovels, loaders, etc., used to load trucks and railroad cars from the crushed stone storage piles for shipment or delivery of the crushed stone to appellee's customers.
The operators of the movable shovels and loaders consummated the claimed processing by scooping from the bottom, the side or the top of the piles of stone as required to meet the specifications of customers. It requires an expansion of any definition of the term to properly denominate such action as "processing."
The conclusion that the property enumerated was used directly in processing and therefore exempt from the state sales and use taxes was entirely unwarranted. The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals should be reversed.
ZIMMERMAN and BELL, JJ., concur in the foregoing dissenting opinion.