Summary
In Powhatan Mining Co. v. Peck (1953), 160 Ohio St. 389, 52 O.O. 246, 116 N.E.2d 426, the question was whether specifically designed trucks used to haul gob from a coal-cleaning plant were used directly in mining.
Summary of this case from Internatl. Salt Co. v. TracyOpinion
No. 33546
Decided December 23, 1953.
Taxation — Sales and use taxes — Sections 5546-1 and 5546-25, General Code — Property not used "directly in" an activity, when — Property used for transportation to and from an activity — Trucks transporting waste material from cleaning plant — Not used directly in production by processing.
1. Where the principal use of property claimed to be used "directly in" a particular activity is in transportation to or from that activity, as distinguished from transportation which is a part of that activity or between essential steps of that activity, such use is not "directly in" such activity within the meaning of Sections 5546-1 and 5546-25, General Code.
2. Specially designed trucks used only in transporting a useless by-product from a coal cleaning plant and tipple are not used directly in the production of tangible personal property by processing or mining within the meaning of Section 5546-25, General Code, even though it is necessary to use such trucks to remove such by-product in order to continue such processing or mining.
APPEAL from the Board of Tax Appeals.
This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals affirming assessments by the Tax Commissioner of taxes upon the use of certain trucks purchased by appellant outside Ohio.
The facts are not in dispute.
Appellant is engaged in the business of producing and mining coal. As part of its operations, appellant maintains and operates a large tipple and cleaning and processing plant. This plant processes raw coal by separating the marketable coal from the incombustible slag, rock and slate or, as it is generally called in the industry, gob.
The raw coal comes from three sources. Part is brought to the cleaning plant by conveyor belt from a deep mine located immediately adjacent to the cleaning plant. Part is transported five miles by truck from a second mine. The balance is brought by rail from a third mine located three miles away.
The cleaning plant employs three separate processes. Batteries of vibrating screens separate out all lumps of raw coal larger than eight inches in size and all lumps smaller than three-eights of an inch in size. So far as possible, gob is separated by hand pickers from the raw coal lumps larger than eight inches. These hand-picked lumps of gob are placed on steel conveyors and carried into a steel gob bin or chute. The large lumps of raw coal remaining are crushed to an eight-inch size. All raw coal less than eight inches but greater than three-eights of an inch in size is washed hydraulically. The gob separated by the washing process is conveyed to a second gob chute. All raw coal of less than three-eights of an inch is washed by a stream of air and the fine gob separated from coal by this pneumatic process moves by conveyor to a third gob chute. The cleaned coal moves by conveyor to railroad cars or barges for transportation.
The three gob bins or chutes through which the gob passes each have a capacity of about 25 tons. They are built sufficiently high off the ground to permit large trucks to drive beneath, and they open at the bottom to allow the gob to fall by gravity into the trucks.
The trucks involved in this proceeding are gob trucks used exclusively to continue the flow of the gob from the raw coal through the gob chutes to the dumping areas. They are ten-ton GMC trucks with specially designed dump bodies without tailgates and were purchased by appellant for this sole use. Continuously, as the gob moves into the three gob chutes, gob trucks are driven under the chutes, filled by gravity, driven to the dumping area, dumped and immediately driven back for other loads.
Formerly, in the days of hand loading, coal was loaded by hand at the face and the miner picked out most of the impurities at the working place. These impurities he stored in the cavities from which he had already mined the coal. He was paid on a piecework basis calculated on the tonnage of clean coal which he loaded and sent to the surface and, consequently, relatively little gob left the mine. Only gob for which there was no room available in the mine was loaded in a separate car and sent to the surface to be disposed of.
Under the full seam mining system used by appellant, the entire seam is cut and shot down preparatory to loading and all the coal and refuse shot together is loaded mechanically and sent to the surface. Thus, the raw coal produced and sent to the surface contains large quantities of rock, slag, slate and other refuse which would in large part have been left in the mine under older mining methods.
Appellant's cleaning plant, when operating as it is now on a two-shift basis, handles approximately 9,000 tons of raw coal a day. The material brought to the surface is composed of approximately 75 per cent clean coal and 25 per cent separable refuse. Of the 9,000 tons of raw coal now handled daily, approximately 2,200 tons are gob. The gob itself is completely useless and the coal completely unmarketable until the gob has been removed. If the trucks should fail to remove the gob, the entire plant would shut down in ten minutes.
Messrs. Jones, Day, Cockley Reavis, Mr. Bayless Manning and Messrs. Thornburg Lewis, for appellant.
Mr. C. William O'Neill, attorney general, Mr. Paul Tague, Jr., and Mr. Jack Bertsch, for appellee.
The question to be determined is whether specially designed trucks purchased outside Ohio by appellant solely for use in hauling gob from its coal-cleaning plant and tipple are, within the meaning of Section 5546-25, General Code, used "directly in the production of tangible personal property for sale by * * * processing, [or] mining."
In recent years, this court has been required to determine whether, in numerous diverse factual situations, "the purpose of the consumer" was "to use * * * the thing transferred directly in the production of tangible personal property for sale by manufacturing, processing * * * mining * * * farming, agriculture * * *; or directly in making retail sales or directly in the rendition of a public utility service; * * * or to use * * * the thing directly in industrial cleaning of tangible personal property," within the meaning of those words as set forth in Sections 5546-1 and 5546-25, General Code. See, for example, Saunders Mills, Inc., v. Evatt, Tax Commr., 139 Ohio St. 227,
39 N.E.2d 526; Bailey v. Evatt, Tax Commr., 142 Ohio St. 616, 53 N.E.2d 812; France Co. v. Evatt, Tax Commr., 143 Ohio St. 455, 55 N.E.2d 652; Dye Coal Co. v. Evatt, Tax Commr., 144 Ohio St. 233, 58 N.E.2d 653; Pioneer Linen Supply Co. v. Evatt, Tax Commr., 146 Ohio St. 248, 65 N.E.2d 711; Huron Fish Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 146 Ohio St. 631, 67 N.E.2d 546; Kroger Grocery Baking Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 149 Ohio St. 120, 77 N.E.2d 921; Fyr-Fyter Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 150 Ohio St. 118, 80 N.E.2d 776; Terteling Bros., Inc., v. Glander, Tax Commr., 151 Ohio St. 236, 85 N.E.2d 379; Tri-State Asphalt Corp. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 152 Ohio St. 497, 90 N.E.2d 366; Mead Corp. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 153 Ohio St. 539, 93 N.E.2d 19; Jackson Iron Steel Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 154 Ohio St. 369, 96 N.E.2d 21; W.E. Anderson Sons Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 154 Ohio St. 561, 97 N.E.2d 29; Crowell-Collier Publishing Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 155 Ohio St. 511, 99 N.E.2d 649; National Tube Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 157 Ohio St. 407, 105 N.E.2d 648; Athens Home Telephone Co. v. Peck, Tax Commr., 158 Ohio St. 557, 110 N.E.2d 571; American Compressed Steel Corp. v. Peck, Tax Commr., ante, 207, 115 N.E.2d 153.
In each of those instances this court has been called upon to determine what the General Assembly meant by the word "directly" as used in that statute, or, more specifically, whether, in the particular case, there was a direct use in a particular activity of the items whose sale was claimed not to be subject to the sales or use tax.
What may appear to one person to be a direct use in a particular case may appear to another equally intelligent and reasonable person not to be a direct use. This probably explains many of the differences of opinion which have been exhibited by the decisions of this court in determining whether, in a particular case, a direct use was or was not involved. However, if the question as to whether a direct use is involved is allowed to depend upon the facts and circumstances of each case, without reference to decisions rendered in other cases, this court will be merely contributing to the confusion caused by the ambiguous statutory word "directly." Our aim should be to remove that ambiguity. This can only be done by endeavoring to make each decision rendered consistent with previous decisions rendered. The results may be what will seem to reasonable and intelligent persons to represent the drawing of artificial and arbitrary boundaries or lines. However, such boundaries or lines should be helpful as a guide to those charged with the administration of the tax laws and to members of the bar, who must advise their clients as to the meaning of those laws.
We believe that our previous decisions have generally recognized that, where the principal use of property claimed to be used "directly in" a particular activity is in transportion to or from that activity, as distinguished from transportation which is a part of that activity or between essential steps of that activity, such use is not "directly in" such activity within the meaning of Sections 5546-1 and 5546-25, General Code. Tri-State Asphalt Corp. v. Glander, Tax Commr., supra, 504, and American Compressed Steel Corp. v. Peck, Tax Commr., supra.
Here, the principal use of the trucks involved is admittedly in transportation from a place where it may be said that there is a "production of tangible personal property for sale by * * * processing * * * [or] mining." This case does differ from a case such as Crowell-Collier Publishing Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., supra, where the transportation involved was of a useful product. Here, the transportation involved is of a useless by-product of the production by processing or mining. However, we believe this court would increase rather than tend to remove the ambiguity of the statutory word "directly" if we recognized a different line or boundary with respect to such a useless by-product from that which we have recognized with respect to a useful product.
The necessity of removing the by-product in order to continue the production by processing or mining in the instant case was no greater than was the necessity of removing the useful product in the Crowell Publishing Co. case in order to continue the production by processing in that case.
It is argued that, under the decision and reasoning in Bailey v. Evatt, Tax Commr., supra, the sale of a dragline used in strip mining to strip overburden from coal and deposit the incombustible slag in a gob pile would be recognized as excepted from taxation; and that there is no distinction between the function of such a dragline and the function of the cleaning plants and trucks used in appellant's deep mine. It may be observed that that argument would be more pursuasive in the instant case if an effort had to be made to establish that the chutes were directly used in production by processing or mining. However, it is sufficient to state that the principal use of such a dragline could be said to be a part of the actual production by mining of the coal. That being so, it could be considered as used directly in production by mining within the principles announced by this court in Mead Corp. v. Glander, Tax Commr., supra.
Our conclusion is that these trucks were not used directly in production by processing or mining within the meaning of Section 5546-25, General Code. It follows that the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals must be affirmed.
Decision affirmed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., HART, ZIMMERMAN, STEWART and LAMNECK, JJ., concur.
For the reasons which caused me to dissent in the case of Crowell-Collier Publishing Co. v. Glander, Tax Commr., 155 Ohio St. 511, 99 N.E.2d 649, I dissent in the instant case. I agree that the sale of equipment used in transportation before manufacturing begins and after it is finished should not be considered as excepted from the sales and use taxes. However, it is my opinion that the tendency of previous decisions of this court is to consider the manufacturing process as terminated too soon. It does not seem reasonable that manufacturing ceases with the last blow of the hammer, the last movement of the press or the last spray of paint. The removal of the manufactured articles from the end of the production line is imperative. Obviously, they can not be allowed to pile up at that point if production is to continue. I believe that all effort expended in removal of the finished articles, which is necessary to keep the production line in operation, is part of the manufacturing process. The equipment so employed should be treated as used directly in the production of tangible personal property by manufacturing, under Section 5546-25, General Code.
The same reasoning applies in the instant case where the question is whether the trucks are used directly in the mining operation, and the question arises under the same statute.
The operation of mining comprises many closely integrated steps. The operation is not completed when the coal is dislodged by the charge of explosive or otherwise in the mine. In the modern method of mining outlined in this case the mining operation is not terminated until the coal and the gob are completely separated at the cleaning plant. This point in the process is analogous to the end of the production line in a manufacturing plant. Neither the coal nor the gob can be allowed to pile up under the screens of the cleaning plant. In my judgment the final step in the mining process is the expenditure of such effort to remove both the coal and the gob as may be necessary to keep the cleaning plant and the mine back of it in continuous operation. It is conceded that if the trucks here involved and which constantly remove the gob were to cease operation for a few minutes the mine would close. In my judgment the removal of the gob by these trucks should be considered the final step in the mining operation and the trucks should be treated as being used exclusively in the mining operation so as to except their use from the tax.