The County of Contra Costa and its officials charged with the levy, assessment, collection and cancellation of property taxes have appealed from a judgment which granted the American Smelting and Refining Company a *440 peremptory writ of mandate commanding appellants to cancel an allegedly illegal property tax assessment, and an injunction permanently restraining the collection of property taxes levied on that assessment. 1 The assessment, made in 1966 for the 1966-1967 secured assessment roll, involves personal property of an aggregate assessed value of $12,666,078. The property consists of imported metal-bearing ores and concentrates, such material in process, and refined metals, including gold, subject to United States Customs Bond, similar materials of foreign origin, including gold in petitioner’s bonded warehouse, but not subject to bond, and gold of domestic origin. The assessment covers the inventories of such metals held on the first Monday of March 1966, and those which allegedly escaped assessment in the three preceding years. The total tax involved is $846,781.39.
The controversy embraced in the legal issues presented by this ease antedates the founding of the present federal government.
2
It finds expression in the commerce clause
3
and the import-export clause
4
of the United States Constitution. The interpretations and application of the constitutional concepts are found in those precedents stemming from
Brown
v.
Maryland
(1827)
The observations of Chief Justice Marshall, in
Brown
v.
Maryland, supra,
apply to the controversy presented by this case. There he wrote: ‘ The constitutional prohibition on the states to lay a duty on imports—a prohibition which a vast
*441
majority of them must feel an interest in preserving—may certainly come in conflict with their acknowledged power to tax persons and property within their territory. The power, and the restriction on it, though quite distinguishable, when they do not approach each other, may yet, when the intervening colors between white and black, approach so nearly as to perplex the understanding, as colors perplex the vision in marking the distinction between them. Yet the distinction exists, and must be marked as the cases arise.” (
In this case immunity from taxation is predicated upon the following principles: First, that under the commerce clause, the Congress has explicitly, by approval of a Customs Regulation, prohibited the taxation of imported goods while under customs bond; Second, that even in the absence of the regulation, Congress by providing for bonded smelting and refining warehouses has preempted whatever rights the state or local government otherwise might have to tax imported ores and metals which are subject to bond; Third, that in any event the controverted assessment and tax would constitute a prohibited burden on foreign commerce. It is further asserted that the import-export clause precludes state and local taxation of the ores and minerals because they do not enter into domestic commerce until they are shipped from the smelter. Finally, the exemption of gold, whether of foreign or domestic origin, and whether unrefined and encompassed in ore, or in refined or pure state, is predicated upon federal laws and regulations governing the production, ownership and use of that precious metal.
The taxing authorities assail the ultimate findings of fact and the conclusions of law upon which the judgment is predicated. They insist that the taxpayer by engaging in the local business of smelting and refining, has subjected the property appropriated to that enterprise to local taxation, and that the regulations of the federal government which are designed to protect the collection of customs duties, and to restrict the market for gold do not endow such property with immunity from state or local taxation.
An examination of the uncontradicted facts in the light of the applicable principles of law leads to the conclusions that the ores and minerals in question, with the exception of those appropriated to fulfill the taxpayer’s obligation to reexport, are not protected by the import-export clause, or the com *442 meree clause; and that neither the federal laws and regulations enacted for the regulation of foreign commerce and the protection of the federal revenues, nor the laws and regulations restricting traffic in gold gives the ores and minerals an immunity from nondiscriminatory local taxation. The judgment must be reversed.
General Facts
The following facts are extracted from the uncontroverted findings of fact made by the trial court.
The taxpayer is a corporation organized under the laws of New Jersey, with its principal office and place of business in New York. It is engaged in business in several states and in foreign countries. The present controversy arises out of its ownership of a lead smelter and refinery at Selby, in Contra Costa County, which it operates for the purpose of extracting refined lead and other metals from ores and concentrates. Most of the metal-bearing ores and concentrates smelted and refined by petitioner at Selby arrive by ocean-going transport from foreign countries. The ores and concentrates are unloaded directly onto the taxpayer’s dock from the ship. Befined lead, refined gold, refined silver, minor amounts of refined platinum and palladium, and by-product materials containing copper, zinc, antimony, tin, bismuth and cadmium requiring further refining emerge from the smelter and refinery. The by-product materials are sent to refineries in other states for further refining. The refined metals extracted by Selby are not manufactured products but are unwrought metals sold to manufacturers for use as raw materials, except for those sales of gold bullion made to the United States government, and except for about 6 percent of the plant’s total lead production which is produced in the form of antimonial lead, with antimony which is derived from the ores, concentrates and scrap lead processed in the smelter.
The taxpayer treats ores and concentrates under the terms and conditions of contracts negotiated with the owners of the material to be treated. Usually such a contract will provide that possession and risk of loss will pass to the taxpayer as “Buyer” at the time the property is delivered at the smelter. The taxpayer undertakes to pay the “Seller” for the raw material received on the basis of a stated percentage of the metal content at published market prices for those metals, *443 with specified deductions, called margins, for smelting and refining. 5
In some cases the owner of the ores or concentrates desires to market some or all of the metals himself or is required to return those metals to the country of origin. In such cases a toll contract is negotiated stating the percentage of each metal content to be accounted for, the condition governing the return of metals, and the charges for smelting and refining. Under this type of contract the taxpayer returns to the supplier a quantity of metal equivalent to the accountable content of the ores delivered. The form of contract is essentially the same as that used in the case of ores over which the taxpayer has the unfettered power of disposition except that the return of an equivalent amount of metal is substituted for payment in cash. 6
*444 After their arrival at the taxpayer’s plant, the ores and concentrates are segregated by producer and shipment, and are stored and assigned lot identification numbers in the taxpayer’s yards. For technological reasons lots from each foreign mine must be enabled to enter the smelting and refining process as a separate unit because of the differing composition of different lots.
Throughout the years in question, and for over 40 years, the Selby refinery has been designated a Class 7 Customs Bonded Smelting and Refining Warehouse, and has continuously operated as such with the full approval of the United States Bureau of Customs. (See § 312 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended [19 U.S.C.A. § 1312].) Within its Selby bonded warehouse, the taxpayer smelts and refines imported metal-bearing materials upon which duties have not yet become payable and which are in the custody and under the supervision of the United States Bureau of Customs, together with imported metal-bearing materials which have been duty-paid, or which are duty-free. Domestic metal-bearing ores also enter the taxpayer’s smelting processes. These domestic materials, which the taxpayer uses as fluxes, have a low metal content compared to the imported concentrates from which most of the silica and limestone naturally present in the ore has been removed by milling and concentrating processes at the foreign mines. The concentrating of ores permits the foreign miner to avoid shipping charges on relatively worthless rock and earth. Since the smelting process requires the use of limestone, silica and other fluxes, the taxpayer’s Selby plant acquires these materials from domestic sources and in domestic fluxing ores of low-grade metal content. The taxpayer does *445 not contest its assessment by Contra Costa County for property taxes on the metal content of ores of domestic origin, other than on domestic gold.
The taxpayer has been licensed by the United States Treasury Department, Office of Domestic Gold and Silver Operations to hold for treatment a maximum of ‘ ‘ 400,000 fine troy ounces” of gold. On the first Monday of March in 1966, and of each prior year, it was in possession of inventories of gold for treatment, in ores or in some stage of refining, or entirely refined and awaiting shipment. The taxpayer performs no manufacturing operation on gold, it only refines fine gold from gold-bearing materials.
On June 15, 1966, the county tax assessor notified petitioner that the 1966-1967 tax roll would reflect an assessment of $13,093,766 representing the aggregate of metal inventories of foreign origin on hand the first Monday in March 1966, and similar inventories which had escaped assessment for the tax years 1963-1964, 1964-1965 and 1965-1966. (See Rev. & Tax. Code, §§ 531-535. [The taxpayer raised objections to the application of the escaped assessment procedure before the board of supervisors, but did not carry them forward in its petition for a writ of mandate.]) The taxpayer made an application to the board of supervisors for a reduction of its assessment, a hearing was held and the application was denied. This litigation ensued. The trial court found that $12,353,760 of the proposed assessment represented property of foreign origin. Of this sum, $5,226,030 was unprocessed and the balance represented material in process and refined metal. Of the total sum of foreign origin, $8,970,009 represented property in bond, $4,779,403 unprocessed, and $4,190,606 in process and refined metal. Of the total property of foreign origin, $1,277,300 represented gold in ore, in process and refined. In addition, the court found that there was $292,318 in gold of domestic origin in varying stages of production. The total of the property of foreign origin, plus the value of the domestic gold, was relieved of the assessment and the tax.
Import-Export Clause
The court found as an ultimate finding of fact: “Metals refined from metal-bearing materials imported- at petitioner’s Selby bonded smelting and refining warehouse do not enter the domestic commerce of the United States until after they leave the bonded warehouse enroute to a domestic *446 purchaser. ’ ’ Embodied in its conclusions of law is the statement, “Pursuant ... to the import clause of the United States Constitution (Art. I, § 10, cl. 2) ... the Court will issue its writ of mandate. ...” The taxing authorities contend that the ultimate finding of fact is a mixed finding of fact and conclusion of law. The taxpayer asserts that it is a true finding of fact which is predicated upon other circumstances established by the evidence and set forth in the findings of fact. Analysis of this assertion indicates that it is predicated upon facts which tend to show that other federal laws and regulations have granted immunity to the property and so have withheld it from domestic commerce. This theory is discussed below in connection with the analysis of the question of federal preemption under the commerce clause. It is necessary to evaluate the immunity conferred by the import-export clause itself, not only to put the facts in proper perspective, but also because there is concededly some property, nondutiable or upon which the duty has been paid. Such property is on a different footing than that in which the federal government claims an interest in order to protect its revenue.
The fundamental test under the import-export clause was phrased by Chief Justice Marshall as follows: “. . . when the importer has so acted upon the thing imported, that it has become incorporated and mixed up with the mass of property in the country, it has, perhaps, lost its distinctive character as an import, and has become subject to the taxing power of the state: ...”
(Brown
v.
Maryland, supra,
The taxing authorities claim that the producers and the sellers of the ores and concentrates are the importers because they bear the risk of loss until the property is delivered to the taxpayer’s dock. They claim the right to tax which was recognized in
Waring
v.
The Mayor
(1868)
The taxing authorities also assert that the ores and concentrates and the resulting metals are not entitled to any immunity as imports because they are not packaged, but are handled in bulk. (See
E. J. Stanton & Sons
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1947)
In
Hooven & Allison Co.
v.
Evatt, supra,
the court stated: ' ‘ This Court has pointed out on several occasions that imports for manufacture cease to be such and lose their constitutional immunity from state taxation when they are subjected to the manufacture for which they were imported,
May
v.
New Orleans, supra,
Of the cases cited in
Hooven & Allison Co.
v.
Evatt, supra, Gulf Fisheries Co.
v.
MacInerney
(1927)
McGoldrick
v.
Gulf Oil Corp., supra,
does not contain anything to the contrary in regard to the claimed exemption under the import-export clause. The opinion recites: “For present purposes we may assume, without deciding, that had the crude oil not been imported in bond it would, upon its manufacture, have become a part of the common mass of property in the state and so would have lost its distinctive character as an import and its constitutional immunity as
*449
such from state taxation. See
Gulf Fisheries Co.
v.
MacInerney,
Hooven & Allison Co.
v.
Evatt, supra,
appeared to give immunity to imported materials held for manufacture or processing. This immunity was limited, if not abolished, by the companion cases of
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.
v.
Bowers,
and
United States Plywood Corp.
v.
City of Algoma
(1958)
From the foregoing there has been distilled a “current operational needs” test, to determine whether an inventory of materials of foreign origin may be subjected to taxation. (See
City & County of Denver
v.
Denver Publishing Co.
(1963)
In this case it is established that all of the materials imported and held by the taxpayer were committed to the smelting and refining process from which the metals which gave the materials their value would be extracted. 8a In the absence of some other countervailing factor the import-export clause confers no immunity on the materials held for further processing.
The taxpayer seeks to avoid this conclusion by distinguishing between manufacturing goods from imported raw materials, and the extraction of metals from raw ore or concentrates. The attempted distinction is one without a substantial difference. It is true that the goods produced by the manufacturing process generally have an intrinsic value distinguished from the value of the raw materials which went into their fabrication, whereas the metals extracted from the ores and concentrates are themselves raw materials, which previously gave value to the material from which they have been extracted. Any categorization of the taxability of the materials used in the various processes by the end results fails to correctly gauge where domestic commerce begins and importation leaves off. I-t is not merely the sale of the end product that constitutes the domestic commerce. It is the carrying on of the business of manufacturing, processing or extracting which is the subject of local jurisdiction. (See
Adams Mfg. Co.
v.
Storen
(1938)
*453 There remains for consideration the small amount of ores and refined metals attributable to toll contracts which the court found were included in the inventories. The findings are inconsistent (see fn. 6, and accompanying text, supra). On the one hand, it is stated that the foreign producer under such contracts owns the ores in storage, the material in process and the refined metal. On the other hand, the contracts are said to be similar to the general contracts, with the exception that payment is made in specie rather than money. It is acknowledged that no particular refined metal is appropriated to the satisfaction of the obligation incurred by the contracts.
Goods in transit for export are immune from state and local taxation. (See cases reviewed in
Von Hamm-Young Co.
v.
City & County of San Francisco
(1947)
Although it might be said that certain metal refined from the particular ore was appropriated for export, the facts do not show that there was such an appropriation. Prom all that appears the taxpayer was free to satisfy his obligation to the “owner” by sending refined metal from Selby, or an equivalent amount purchased domestically or anywhere else in the world. Under these circumstances, there is no particular refined metal which can claim the protection of the export portion of the import-export clause.
(Hugo Neu Corp.
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1966)
In
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.
v.
Bowers, supra,
the court stated: The design of the constitutional immunity was to prevent ‘ [t]he great importing States [from laying] a tax on the non-importing States, ’ to which the imported property is or might ultimately be destined, which would not only discriminate against them but also ‘ would necessarily produce countervailing measures on the part of those States whose situation was less favorable to importation. ’
(Brown
v.
Maryland, supra,
at 440 [
No independent ground of tax immunity is found under the import-export clause.
Commerce Clause
The court found as an ultimate finding of fact, “The assessed taxes would constitute a serious economic burden on foreign commerce.” It concluded in part, “Pursuant ... to the commerce clause of the United States Constitution (Art. I, § 8, cl. 3) ... the Court will issue its writ of mandate.”
In
Brown
v.
Maryland, supra,
Chief Justice Marshall reviewed “ [t]he oppressed and degraded state of commerce, previous to the adoption of the constitution. . . .” (
The distinction between the restraint on state power imposed by the commerce clause, and the prohibitions of the import-export clause are set forth in
Richfield Oil Corp.
v.
State Board
(1946)
‘ ‘ It seems clear that we cannot write any such qualifications into the Import-Export Clause. It prohibits every State from laying ‘ any ’ tax on imports or exports without the consent of Congress. Only one exception is created—‘ except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws. ’ The fact of a single exception suggests that no other qualification of the absolute prohibition was intended. It would entail a substantial revision of the Import-Export Clause to substitute for the prohibition against ‘any’ tax a prohibition against ‘any discriminatory’ tax. As we shall see, the question as to what is exportation is somewhat entwined with the question as to what is interstate commerce. But the two clauses, though complementary, serve different ends. And the limitations of one cannot be read into the other.” (329 U.S. at pp. 75-76 [91 L.Ed. at pp. 88-89].)
The taxpayer acknowledges that before a state tax or regulation can be declared unconstitutional under the commerce clause, it must be shown to “burden” the commerce involved, be it interstate or foreign (see
Halliburton Oil Well etc. Co.
v.
Reily
(1963)
The most obvious form of discrimination is a tax or regulation which directly singles out a subject which is solely related to the protected activity. (See
Spector Motor Service
v.
O’Connor
(1951)
. Discrimination may also occur because the effect of a tax or regulation, nondiscriminatory on its face, is such as to place an actual recognizable burden on foreign or interstate commerce. Such a situation occurs when the protected business is forced to bear a heavier tax burden than domestic business (see
Halliburton Oil Well etc. Co.
v.
Reily, supra,
The taxpayer does not claim that the question posed by this case falls within any of the foregoing precedents. It does insist that “a concern with the actuality of operation” of the tax (see
Halliburton Oil Well etc. Co.
v.
Reily, supra,
The facts bearing on the taxpayer’s contentions are as follows: The Selby plant is the only lead smelter and refinery located at tidewater in the Western Hemisphere. In the years 1963, 1964 and 1965 it refined quantities of gold of domestic and foreign origin, newly mined silver, and primary lead and antimonial lead which constituted a substantial (10 percent— 13.9 percent) percentage of domestic, and in the ease of silver, world, production. The taxpayer competes in a world market for the ores and concentrates which it smelts and refines. Its competitors are in Japan and other foreign countries. 11 To be competitive it has had to reduce the smelting and refining *460 margins charged foreign producers to the minimum. 12 The disputed tax on foreign ores, concentrates and metals on hand in March 1966 was $220,801.94 and is not likely to be less in future years. The court found the average property tax charge per ton and the average smelting and refining charge per ton. 13 It found that an attempt to pass on these charges to the supplying producers would result in the taxpayer’s losing its business to foreign smelters, and that the imposition of the tax would materially reduce the Selby smelter’s international competitive position. 14
The taxpayer’s contracts with foreign producers contain a provision that all governmental charges, except income taxes, are to be borne by the producer through a deduction from the computed purchase price. 15 The court made extensive findings *461 concerning the consequences which would result from the enforcement of this clause if the tax were upheld. 16
The taxpayer asserts that the burden on foreign commerce is clear and direct because the imposition of the tax would result in a direct charge on the foreign producer when the price he receives is redued by the amount of the tax. It is obvious that this result would be occasioned not by the levy and collection of the tax of itself, but because of the contractual relationship of the parties.
“The legal right of a taxpayer to decrease the amount of what otherwise would be his taxes, or altogether avoid them, by means which the law permits cannot be doubted. [Citations.] ”
(Gregory
v.
Helvering
(1935)
In
Browning
v.
Waycross
(1914)
The taxpayer contends that an unequal, discriminatory burden is imposed because the tax, which is predicated upon the property on hand on the first Monday in March, will fall only on those producers whose ores and concentrates and metals are on hand at Selby on tax day, and that those whose shipments have been received, processed and sold between annual assessment days will escape the tax. 17 This overlooks the fact that all the ores and concentrates are purchased by the taxpayer, and are not the property of the producers. Any eccentricity in the purchase price received by the producers for various shipments would be occasioned by the contract, not the administration of the taxing system. As noted above, the parties by contract cannot deprive the local government of its power to tax local commerce.
Along the same line, the taxpayer insists that the imposition of the tax will cause foreign producers to ship elsewhere or withhold shipments if it appears that their shipment will arrive at Selby on or just prior to the lien date. (See Rev. & Tax. Code, §§ 117, 405 and 2192.) One answer to this contention is that under any contract similar to that attached to the complaint, the producer is already bound to deliver his production and pay the tax. Secondly, the consequence again is attributable to the contract, not the tax.
The taxpayer also demonstrates, and it is obvious, that if it does not pass the tax on to the producers, its competitive situation in bidding for foreign ores and concentrates is weakened to the extent of the tax. The same result follows if its labor costs, or insurance rates, or fuel and power costs increase. If the national interest necessitates a constant flow of refined metals, particularly lead, 18 through Selby at costs which the domestic price for the refined metals cannot meet, the national treasury and not the local taxing entities, should *464 bear the cost of necessary subsidization as the government of Japan allegedly is doing for its smelters and refineries.
The taxpayer relies upon the principle that the commerce clause should be interpreted to prohibit the tax in order to prevent a tidewater state from burdening users and consumers in the interior states. (See
Cook
v.
Pennsylvania
(1878)
Finally, the taxing authorities are accused of attempting to share and interfere with the federal government’s power to impose duties on imports, and regulate the flow of commerce according to its wishes by the exercise of this power. The opposite side of the coin reveals that the taxpayer seeks a subsidy under the cloak of a constitutional exemption which does not exist. The crucial factor is that the protected commerce has heen interrupted so that the taxpayer may process the goods to his profit. The burdens imposed by the local government for the services rendered the processor do not violate the unembellished provisions of the commerce clause.
Federal Preemption
In this ease approximately three-quarters of the value ($8,970,009 out of $12,353,760) of materials of foreign origin which were assessed were subject to United States Custom Bond. The taxpayer claims that the applicable legislation, and the regulations which have permitted it to establish its premises as a bonded smelting and refining warehouse preempt any right that the local government otherwise might have to levy nondiscriminatory property taxes on the property of foreign origin which is locally processed by the taxpayer.
The ultimate findings of fact recite: ‘Throughout the years 1963 through 1966, petitioner’s Selby plant was designated and operated as a Class 7 Customs Bonded Warehouse under the laws of the United States with the complete approval of the United States Bureau of Customs.
“. . . Throughout the years 1963 through 1966, the United States Bureau of Customs supervised the smelting and refining of imported materials containing dutiable metals in petitioner’s bonded warehouse at Selby; while inside the bonded warehouse, the imported metal-bearing materials remained in the custody of the United States Bureau of Customs."
*465 The court concluded: “The Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, constitutes congressional regulation of foreign commerce which prohibits state or local government taxation of imported goods in petitioner’s Customs Bonded Warehouse.
“Pursuant to the foregoing preemptive federal regulation ... to the supremacy clause of the United States Constitution (Art. VI, cl. 2)[
19
] . . . and to decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States
(McGoldrick
v.
Gulf Oil Corp.
(1940)
In
Board of Trustees
v.
United States
(1933)
“The Congress may determine what articles may be imported into this country and the terms upon which importation is permitted.” (289 U.S. at pp. 56-57 [
Section 312 of the Tariff Act of 1930 as amended (June 17, 1930, ch. 497, tit. III, § 312; 46 Stat. 692; May 24, 1962, Pub. *466 L. 87-456, tit. III, § 301(b); 76 Stat. 75; 19 U.S.C.A., § 1312) provides for the establishment of a bonded smelting or refining warehouse. 20 The provisions for cancellation of charges against the bond recognize the fungible nature of the refined metal. They refer to “a quantity of the same kind of metal contained in any product of smelting or refining of metal-bearing materials equal to the dutiable quantity contained in the imported metal-bearing materials less wastage . . .” (§312, subd. (b), pars. (1), (3), (4) and (5).) The bond is discharged to the extent such quantity is exported, or transferred to another bonded smelting or refining warehouse, or transferred to another bonded custom warehouse, or to the extent the bond charges for the duties may be transferred to another bonded smelter or refining warehouse where ‘ ‘ there is on hand at the warehouse . . . sufficient like metal in any form to satisfy the transferred bond charges.’’ (Id.) Charges against the bond may of course be discharged “upon payment of duties on the dutiable quantity of metal contained in the imported metal-bearing materials. ’' (§ 312, subd. (b), par. (2).)
_ Similar provisions have existed since 1894. (See Historical Note, 19 U.S.C.A., § 1312 at p. 46.)
In re Guggenheim Smelting Co.
(3d Cir. 1903)
An examination of the law and the regulations promulgated *468 under it (19 C.F.R., §§ 19.17-19.25) reveals that the purpose of the creation of the bonded smelter is, as set forth in section 19.18, to carry out the following mandate. A quantity of dutiable metal equal to “ [t]he full dutiable contents of such metal-bearing materials, as ascertained by commercial assay made by Government chemists, less the wastage allowance (including dutiable metals entirely lost in smelting or refining, or both) . . . must be either exported, duty-paid, or transferred to another bonded warehouse. . . ."In the classification of warehouses, the regulations recognize that the bonded smelter and refinery may treat imported metal-bearing materials for domestic consumption as well as for exportation. 21 The law (see fn. 20, supra) expressly recognizes that metal-bearing materials of both foreign and domestic origin may be processed. In dealing with the question of losses in production, the regulations require a statement of the metal-bearing materials worked during the fiscal year which “shall show the quantity of foreign materials and the quantity of domestic material put in process during the smelting operations." (§19.19, subd. (b).) Throughout it is recognized that the government’s interest is in the “dutiable contents" of the material treated; by inference it is recognized that there may also be nondutiable contents. The determination of this dutiable content is of concern to the government, but after sampling and weighing there is no requirement that bonded metal-bearing materials shall be kept separate and distinct from nonbonded material. 22
Once the imported metal-bearing materials with dutiable contents have been sampled and weighed they become, although segregated in lots for technological reasons in processing, a part of the mass of material in the bonded warehouse. The government’s interest thereafter is to insure that there is sufficient quantity of refined dutiable metal on hand at all times to cover the assayed dutiable contents of the metal-bearing materials received, until payment of duty on or export or transfer of that amount. There is no inherent reason *469 that a tax on the manufacturer's inventories of metal-bearing materials and refined metals of foreign origin will interfere with the government’s interest any more than the concededly permissible taxes on the plant itself and on the metal-bearing materials and refined metals of domestic origin.
If the federal government’s interest in protecting its revenue, as embodied in pertinent law and regulation, is considered as precluding the imposition of a tax on property of foreign origin, the dutiable contents of the metal-bearing material, 23 and the dutiable metal on hand of foreign origin would be excluded from assessment and tax. If the duties were paid because of a threatened rise in duties, or for some other reason, the dutiable property would then be subject to tax. 24 The mere incident of the time of payment of the federal duty, as controlled by the taxpayer, does not appear to be a rational criteria upon which to predicate the determination of the local government’s right to tax. The security interest of the federal government should not affect the local government’s right to tax any more than would a banker’s pledge or chattel mortgage affect Ohio’s right to tax the ore at Youngstown.
Furthermore, it should be noted that under the fungible property basis through which the federal government protects its right to duties, the property on hand as subject to bond may in fact originally have been of domestic origin. 25
*470 The law and regulations governing bonded smelting and refining warehouses do not compel the conclusion that Congress in the exercise of its power to regulate foreign commerce has attempted to create a warehouse enclave of foreign commerce to provide a means whereby goods may be processed locally and (toll contracts aside) be subsequently sold and consumed in domestic commerce. All that appears is an intent to relieve the processor of the obligation to pay the duty until the refined product is actually consumed or sold in domestic commerce, and the intent to relieve him of the obligation to pay any duty if the refined product is exported. (Cf. § 313; 19 U.S.C.A., § 1313, which provides for refunds, as a drawback, where imported material upon which a duty has been paid is used in the domestic manufacture or production of goods which are exported.)
The gravitation to the principle of
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.
v.
Bowers, supra,
which the foregoing conclusions indicate, is not unchallenged. The development of the law governing bonded manufacturing warehouses (Tariff Act of 1930, § 311; 19 U.S.C.A., § 1311; and see 19 C.F.R., § 19.13-19.16) has produced a celestial body, which the lower court found drew this case into its orbit. In
McGoldrick
v.
Gulf Oil Co., supra,
In further examining the law and regulations, the court continued: “Article 942 of the Customs Regulations of 1931 provides that ‘ merchandise in bonded warehouse is not subject to levy, attachment, or other process of a State court . . .’ and that ‘imported goods in bonded warehouse are exempt from taxation under the general laws of the several States.' These regulations, continued in Customs Regulations of 1937, Art. 940, appeared as Art. 731, Regulations of 1915, and Art. 850 of Regulations of 1923. They were thus in force when the Tariff Act of 1930 was adopted and were incorporated by reference, cf.
McCaughn
v.
Hershey Chocolate Co.,
The court concluded: “The provisions of the Revenue Act of 1932, read with those of the Tariff Act of 1930 and with the Statutes and regulations which we have mentioned, thus afford a comprehensive scheme for the regulation of the importation of the crude petroleum and of its control while in
*472
the course of manufacture in bond into fuel oil and its delivery as ships’ stores to vessels in foreign commerce, all calculated to insure the devotion of the manufactured oil exclusively to that purpose.”
(Id.,
pp. 426-427 [
“The question remains, whether the present tax conflicts with the Congressional policy adopted by the Acts of Congress which we have discussed. As we have seen, the exemption and drawback provisions were designed, among other purposes, to relieve the importer of the import tax so that he might meet foreign competition in the sale of fuel as ships’ stores. In furtherance of that end Congress provided for the segregation of the imported merchandise from the mass of goods within the state, prescribed the procedure to insure its use for the intended purpose, and by reference confirmed and adopted customs regulations prescribing that the merchandise, while in bonded warehouse, should be free from state taxation. It is evident that the purpose of the congressional regulation of the commerce would fail if the state were free at any stage of the transaction to impose a tax which would lessen the competitive advantage conferred on the importer by Congress, and which might equal or exceed the remitted import duty.”
(Id.,
pp. 428-429 [
The taxing authorities seek, not to overrule, but to distinguish the Gulf Oil ease. The taxpayer with equal ardor insists that the principles set forth above control the disposition of this case. The salient distinction is that the provisions governing a manufacturing warehouse, such as that in which the imported crude petroleum was manufactured into fuel oil in the Gulf Oil case, limit withdrawal and sale of the product to the export trade (see § 311, and 19 C.F.R., § 19.15), and, under Gulf Oil, to sale for ships’ stores; whereas, under the provisions governing bonded smelting and refining warehouses, all or any part of the product may be introduced into domestic commerce when the duty, previously calculated and secured by the Customs Bond, is paid. (See, § 312, and 19 C.F.R., § 19.18.) In Gulf Oil the property and its resulting products were irrevocably destined for foreign commerce, or ships’ stores as a concommitant of such commerce favored by Congress, from the time the crude petroleum was imported. In this case, after the imported metal-bearing material was weighed and sampled, the importer was free to deal with the material, with the possible exception of that received on toll *473 contracts, in any manner it wished, subject only to the payment of duty. 26a
In Gulf Oil the combination of laws and regulations demonstrated and executed the congressional policy to relieve the importer of the import tax so that he might meet foreign competition in the sale of fuel as ships ’ stores. So here it may be assumed that Congress in providing for the discharge of the obligation to pay the duty when the refined metal is exported (see § 312, subd. (b), par. (1), and 19 C.F.R., § 19.20, subd. (a)) has intended that the importer should be able to compete with foreign smelters in international trade without being subjected to an import tax. The implementation of this policy is satisfied by the exemption of that portion of the metal-bearing material that is earmarked to be refined for export purposes.
It is urged that the congressional intent goes further; that Congress in providing for bonded smelting and refining warehouses intended to give refiners and smelters immunity from all local taxes and regulations so that they could more freely compete in smelting and refining metal-bearing materials of foreign origin which were destined for domestic consumption. Two questions suggest themselves: To what extent may Congress follow imports through domestic processing and sale to favor them over domestic goods? and, To what extent has it acted to so do? It is recognized that in the exercise of the granted powers over interstate and foreign commerce, the federal government through regulation of such commerce may impose demands which impinge upon intrastate commerce.
(Atlanta Motel
v.
United States
(1964)
For these reasons, and for those set forth above in connection with the analysis of the statute and regulations, it is concluded that the laws and regulations relating specifically to bonded smelting and refining warehouses do not fall within the orbit of the Gulf Oil case, and confer an immunity from a nondiscriminatory tax on property of foreign origin being processed for domestic consumption.
The paragraphs in
Gulf Oil
referring to the Customs Regulations are said to establish as a matter of law that Congress has provided, “ ‘imported goods in bonded warehouse are exempt from taxation under the general laws of the several States.’ ” (See
The
Gulf Oil
case has been applied in this state. In
National Distillers etc. Corp.
v.
City & County San Francisco
(1956)
It is clear that
National Distillers,
as does
Gulf Oil,
involves goods involved in the stream of exports which are not available for or connected with domestic commerce on the lien date.
29
The same is true of other cases in which a state has been restrained from interfering with the transit of liquor into foreign commerce, even against the contention that the Twenty-First Amendment gave the states greater powers than they otherwise would have.
(Hostetter
v.
Idlewild etc. Liquor Corp.
(1964)
Cases arising under the law governing Foreign Trade Zones (Act of June 18, 1934, ch. 590; 48 Stat. 998; 19 U.S.C.A., §§ 81a-81u) are not controlling or persuasive here. The statute indicates that Congress is cognizant of the manner in which it may directly create a true free trade enclave, and under those provisions has acted to do so. It has been determined that a
*478
state law requiring the licensing of those who are engaged in the business of soliciting sales of liquor does not apply to a business conducted within a free trade zone.
(During
v.
Valente
(1944)
The Ohio cases of
Republic Steel Corp.
v.
Porterfield, supra,
Gulf Oil
was also considered in
Shell Oil Co.
v.
State Board
*479
of Equalization
(1966)
On the taxing authorities’ side there is some authority for the proposition that the use of a bonded warehouse to protect the government’s interest in its revenue in and of itself will not prevent the imposition of a state or local tax on goods held for local use. ”... the right of a state consistently with the Constitution of the United States to tax tangible property having a situs within its borders, irrespective of the residence of the owner, and to impose the duty on a warehouseman to pay a tax upon distilled spirits in his custody, even although the warehouse in which they were stored was bonded under the laws of the United States” has been consistently upheld.
(Hannis Distilling Co.
v.
Baltimore
(1910)
The principle that goods may lose their status as imports
*480
and become subject to local taxation despite the fact that they are subject to bond is suggested by several cases dealing with the importation of cattle under bond. In
State
v.
Harper
(Tex.Civ.App. 1945)
“The fact that the customs duties had not been collected is not determinative of the issue, nor is the fact that the cattle were not released from the custody and control of the customs officers a deciding factor.” (
It is concluded that neither the laws, nor the regulations, nor the precedents on which the taxpayer relies show a congressional intent to interfere with the right of the state to tax goods which have been imported for, and have been appropriated to, processing for domestic consumption, and that such right is not foreclosed because the importer-processor has withheld payment of the duty and has given a bond to secure such payment after the completion of the processing.
The doctrine of federal preemption does, however, offer a haven with respect to metal-bearing materials and the quantity of refined metal found therein that is the subject of toll contracts. It could be said, as noted above, that since no specific refined metal is appropriated for export until payment in specie is actually made, there is no property to exempt. The law and regulations particularly applicable to bonded smelting and refining warehouses imply that at the time metal-bearing materials are received under a. toll contract and are weighed and sampled, the taxpayer is charged with the obligation to ultimately export the amount of refined metal called for by the contract. Gulf Oil suggests, if it does not compel, that an amount of refined metal in that quantity be treated as in the flow of import-processing-export, and be exempted from local taxation. This gives full weight to the regulatory aspects of the tariff laws and regulations, without unduly hampering the local government’s right to be compensated from the fruits of domestic commerce.
Federal Regulation of Gold
The court found as an ultimate fact: “4. Petitioner is *482 licensed by the United States to refine gold at its Selby plant pursuant to the laws of the United States; petitioner accounts to the United States Treasury Department for all gold that enters its Selby plant and disposes of gold or gold-bearing materials only by re-export or by sale to the United States government or to private persons or concerns licensed by the United States Treasury Department to buy it. ’ ’
It concluded: “2. A property tax on gold of either foreign or domestic origin, at petitioner’s Selby plant, whether in ores and concentrates, in process of being refined or in completely refined form, is an unconstitutional invasion of an area preempted by the United States under Title 31, U.S. Code, and Regulations there authorized, and other United States statutes, and is therefore removed from state and local jurisdiction under the supremacy clause of the United States Constitution (Art. VI, cl. 2).”
The question concerns the domestic gold, in metal-bearing materials, in materials in process and as refined, and such gold as is received from foreign sources on other than toll contracts. Gold is not a dutiable metal, and the content in the metal-bearing materials is ascertained when the material is weighed and sampled upon entry (see fn. 23, supra). There may therefore be no “Customs” interest in the gold in process, even if it is to be reexported. The Gold Regulations, however, expressly deal with the subject of Gold imported in gold-bearing-materials for re-export.” (31 C.F.R., § 54.32.) Deference to the principle of Gulf Oil suggests that gold, as represented by equivalent refined specie, which is appropriated for reexport, at the time' of the entry, should occupy a protected status as part of a flow of foreign commerce favored by Congress.
An examination of the provisions of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934 (Act of Jan. 30, 1934, ch. 6, 48 Stat. 337, and see 31 U.S.C.A., § 440 and sections referred to therein), and the regulations issued as authorized therein (Gold Reserve Act of 1934, ch. 6, § 3; 31 U.S.C.A., § 442; and 31 C.F.R., §§54.1-54.52) fails to sustain the conclusions of the trial court.
The validity of the act and the regulations has been established against objections raised on constitutional grounds.
(Laycock
v.
Kenney
(9th Cir. 1959)
The law does not prohibit all traffic in gold as a metal,, it merely authorizes the regulation of its acquisition and use. 31 The regulations are summarized in Laycock v. Kenney, supra, as follows: ‘ ‘ The present regulations issued by the Secretary *484 pursuant to this section are in essentially the same form as those originally issued under the Act. (See 31 C.F.R ch. I, pt. 54.) They provide for a licensing system by which all gold in the United States, except in its natural state, is regulated. Section 12 of the regulations prohibits all dealing in gold or its processing except as expressly authorized in the regulations or as licensed in accordance with the regulations. Section 19 specifically authorizes the acquisition or transportation of gold within the United States in its ‘natural state’ without the necessity of holding a license. ‘Natural state’ is defined in Section 4 (11) as ‘gold recovered from natural sources which has not been melted, smelted, or refined or otherwise treated by heating or by a chemical or electrical process.' But under Section 22 gold other than in the natural state can be ‘ acquired, held, transported, melted or treated, imported or exported, or earmarked for industrial, professional or artistic use only to the extent permitted by licenses issued to persons who have such need. ’ Therefore, . . . the possessor of gold ore—gold in its ‘natural state’—can sell it freely within the United States. ... [I]f the gold is processed in any way, it must be done under a license and sold only to persons licensed to purchase, or under Section 21, to persons not licensed, if they need only a specified small amount for use in industry, profession or art. Under Section 35, the United States mints are authorized to purchase gold, including that recovered from natural deposits in the United States, provided it has never been held at any time in noncompliance with the gold regulations, and has been ‘ acquired, held, melted or treated’ in accordance with a duly issued Treasury license. Section 44 authorizes the mints to pay $35 per Troy ounce of fine gold, less mint charges, for all gold it purchases. Section 51 authorizes the mints to sell gold to persons licensed to purchase it at $35 per Troy ounce. ’ ’ (270 F.2d at pp. 585-586; and see 31 C.F.R., § 54.1, et seq.)
The taxpayer is licensed to “acquire and hold, transport, melt and treat, and import gold only for processing or disposition” in accordance with the terms of its license. The license provides that the smelter may dispose of the gold by processing or use in the industry, profession or art in which it is regularly engaged, by sale to a United States mint or Assay ■Officer, or by furnishing it to licensed persons. , .
■ Although all traffic in gold coinage has been prohibited and title to coins and bullion is vested in the United States (see
*485
Lilley
v.
Leggett
(1943)
A series of cases dealing with the power of the federal government to regulate interstate commerce supports the conclusion that the laws and regulations governing traffic in gold do not render the metal government property, or indicate that the mining and treatment of gold bearing ore is not normal commerce. (Cf.
Fox
v.
Summit King Mines
(D.Nev. 1943)
' In 1906 Congress passed “An Act Forbidding the importation, exportation, or carriage in interstate commerce of falsely or spuriously stamped articles of merchandise made of gold or silver or their alloys, and for other purposes.” (June 13, 1906, ch. 3289, 34 Stat. 260, 15 U.S.C.A., §§ 294-300.) Section 7 of that act (15 U.S.C.A., § 300) reads as follows: “All articles of merchandise to which sections 294-300 of this title apply which shall have been transported into any State, Territory, District," or possession of the United States, and shall remain therein for use, sale, or storage, shall, upon arrival in such State, Territory, District, or possession, be .subject to the operation of all the laws of such "State, Territory, District, or possession of the United States to the same extent and in the same manner as though such articles of merchandise had been produced in such State, Territory, District, or possession, and shall not be exempt therefrom by reason of being introduced therein in original packages or otherwise. ’ ’ The taxpayer contends .that this section indicates that Congress understood and intended that the right of the states to tax or regulate traffic in gold was otherwise preempted. Since the statute only purports to prohibit the false marking of articles of merchandise made in whole or in part of gold or silver, and does not refer to refined metal, and since it was adopted over a quarter of a century before the more rigid laws and regulations dealing with gold as a metal, it is completely irrelevant to the question at issue in this ease.
The taxpayer’s contention that a tax on the gold held by it in metal-bearing materials, in materials in process, and as refined metal is improper because it is a tax on property of the United States must be rejected. This conclusion makes it unnecessary to determine whether the tax could be upheld as a levy upon the taxpayer’s possessory interest in government property. (Cf.
City of Detroit
v.
Murray Corp.
(1958)
In
United States
v.
Allegheny County, supra,
the court found that the substance of the procedure was to lay an ad
*487
valorem general property tax on property owned by the United States. (
The taxpayer again urges -that the levy of the tax will impinge on the federal regulatory scheme because the imposition of the tax will increase the costs of- production and lessen the supply of gold so urgently needed by the federal government. The burden is caused by the federal government’s fixed price. The record does not in fact indicate whether production or profits will suffer by payment of the tax. No interference with the exercise of the prerogatives of the federal,government is found. The situation is analogous to the highly regulated liquor business. The exercise of a constitutional power to regulate has not relieved the goods of the burden of taxation.
(Three G. Distillery Corp.
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1941)
It is concluded that the gold, other than that appropriated to the satisfaction of contracts which obligate the taxpayer tó export and return the refined product or its equivalent in *488 specie, is subject to assessment and tax in whatever form it is found on the lien day.
Conclusion
The value of all minerals in metal-bearing materials on hand and in process, and of refined metals on hand, other than refined metals appropriated for the satisfaction of toll contracts or otherwise unconditionally appropriated for reexport (see fn. 6, supra) are subject to assessment and tax.
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for revision of the findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment in accordance with the views herein set forth.
Molinari, P. J., and Elkington, J., concurred.
A petition for rehearing was denied on April 29, 1969, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 2,1969.
Notes
The taxpayer alleged, the taxing authorities admitted, and the trial court found, that the trial court had jurisdiction to hear and determine the taxpayer’s petition for writ of mandate. (See
Eisley
v.
Mohan
(1948)
See Madison, Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787, August 28, 1787 (Hunt & Scott 1st ed.).
Article I, section 8, clause 3 of the United States Constitution provides : ‘ ‘ The Congress shall have Power ... To regulate Commerce with Foreign Nations, and among the several States and with the Indian Tribes. ’ ’
Article I, section 10, clause 2 provides: "... No State shall, without the Consent of the Congress, lay any Imposts or Duties on Imports or Exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection Laws: and the net Produce of all Duties and Imposts, laid by any State on Imports or Exports, shall be for the Use of the Treasury of the United States; and all such Laws shall be subject to the Revision and Control of the Congress. ’ ’
The trial court further found: ‘ ‘ The form of contract by which petitioner acquires all the ores and concentrates it treats except those under toll contract [see text, infra] does not speak in terms of ownership but in terms of possession and risk of loss. ... In economic effect, petitioner smelts and refines the ores and concentrates for the account of the foreign producer and accounts to him for the metals extracted therefrom, at the market price effective thirty days from receipt of the ores or concentrates. ’ ’
Any implication from the foregoing that the ores and concentrates and the metal extracted therefrom remain the property of the foreign producer until the taxpayer pays for the refined metal would not be consistent with the facts. The contract which the taxpayer appended to its petition for writ of mandate is clearly a contract of sale. The purchase price is predicated not upon the actual amount of refined metal produced, but upon the assay of the ore or concentrate. The buyer-refiner has protected itself by providing that the price fluctuations during the period the raw material would normally be in process will be a risk of the seller, by providing for an increase in deductions from the purchase price in the event of an increase in the average hourly wage at its plant, and by providing that taxes (see discussion, infra) shall be deducted from the purchase price. Nevertheless, the contract expressly recites: "After sampling, the product [the ore or concentrate purchased] may be placed in process, commingled, or otherwise disposed of by Buyer.”
The court further found with respect to these contracts: "Pursuant to its toll contracts with foreign miners, petitioner’s Selby smelter and refinery processes certain foreign ores which at all times belong to the foreign producer. The foreign producer mines and ships said ores, owns them while they are stored and then processed at Selby, and directs the ultimate disposition, i.e., whether import or export, of metals refined therefrom. At no time does petitioner own said ores or exercise control over them except at the direction of the foreign producer. However, refined metal is fungible and so is the particular foreign ore or concentrate after it reaches a certain stage in the smelting process. The Customs Regulations so recognize. Por this reason, petitioner actually delivers an equivalent amount of refined metal to the foreign producer, not all of which may have come from his ore or concentrate.” Of the total inven *444 tories ($12,353,760) of property of foreign origin, the amount attributable to toll contracts ($131,869) is only slightly over one percent. The court further found: “The percentages of the metal content of foreign ores and concentrates received at Selby that have been reexported under the supervision of the Bureau of Customs in the years 1963-66 are as follows:
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The taxpayer now contends that there were imported metals (in excess of those embraced in toll contracts) which were committed to reexport on the lien dates involved. The record fails to show the amount involved on the respective lien dates or the basis for classifying the metals as committed to reexport.
For a thorough review of the cited ease, the prior decisions, and the fundamental principles involved by a distinguished teacher of constitutional law, see, Note, Professor Thomas Reed Powell, State Taxation of Imports—When Does an Import Cease to he an Import? (1945) 58 Harv.L.Rev. 858.
‘‘The facts in the Youngstown case are stipulated. In essence, they are that Youngstown, an Ohio corporation, operates an industrial plant in or near Youngstown, Ohio, where it manufactures iron and steel. In addition to the use of domestic ores, it imports iron ores from five countries ‘for ultimate use in [its] open hearth [and] blast furnaces’ in its manufacturing processes. The imported ores arrived in shiploads ‘in bulk’ either at an Atlantic or a Lake Erie port of entry where they are unloaded from the ship into railroad cars and are thereby transported to Youngstown’s plant in Ohio. The plant is enclosed by a wire fence. Within the enclosure and ‘adjacent to [the] manufacturing facilities’ are several ‘ ore yards ’ for the storage of supplies of ore. Each ore yard consists of ‘two parallel walls, on which there [is] a movable ore bridge. ’ When the imported ores arrive at this final destination, they are unloaded into one of the ore yards, but, because the ore from each country is different from the others and each is imported for a different use, the ores are kept segregated as to the country of origin by being ‘placed in a separate pile in a separate area of the ore yard. ’ The daily manufacturing needs for ore are taken from these piles. As needed, ores are conveyed from the particular pile or piles selected to ‘stock bins’ or ‘stock houses,’ holding one or two days’ supply and located in close proximity to the furnaces, from which the ores are fed into the furnaces. As ore from a particular ‘pile’ in the ore yard is thus taken and consumed, other like ore is similarly imported from the same country and is brought to the plant and unloaded on top of the remainder of that particular pile. This course is continuously repeated. Youngstown endeavors to maintain ‘a supply of imported ores to meet its estimated requirements for a period of at least three months.’ The ores are not imported ‘for resale,’ but ‘for use in manufacturing [at the Ohio plant].’” (358 U.S. at pp. 536-537 [3 L.Ed.2d at pp. 493-494].)
“The facts in the United States Plywood Corp. case were found in *450 detail by the trial court and those findings are not challenged here. In essence, they are that United States Plywood Corporation (petitioner) operates an industrial plant in Algoma, Wisconsin,, where it manufactures veneered wood products. It uses both domestic and imported lumber and veneers in its manufacturing processes. The imported lumber is shipped in railroad cars directly from Canada to petitioner’s plant. It is unfinished, and is received in bulk or as loose, individual pieces or boards. It is also ‘green’ when received and therefore must be dried before it can be used by petitioner. Upon arrival at destination, it is unloaded and carted to petitioner’s storage yard, located ‘adjacent’ to its plant, where it is stacked in the open in such a way as to allow the air freely to circulate through the stacks for the ‘ dominant purpose ’ of air-drying it. This method does not so completely dry the lumber as to make kiln-drying unnecessary, but it does materially reduce the time and expense of that process. Prom time to time, so much of the lumber - as is about to be put into veneered products is taken from the stacks and placed in a kiln where the drying is completed and the lumber readied for use. The veneers are imported from three countries. They are received in bundles and are kept in that form in piles, separated as to specie, in petitioner’s plant for use as needed in the day-to-day operations of the plant. ’ ’ (Id., pp. 538-539 [3 L.Ed.2d at pp. 494-495].)
The taxpayer offered to prove, on the basis of testimony that 4,200 t'ohs of ore-bearing material on hand would be necessary to keep the plant in constant operation on a 12-day processing schedule, that all -foreign crude stock over that amount was held in excess of current operational needs! The trial court correctly applied
Virtue Bros.
v.
County of Los Angeles'
(I960)
Chief Justice Marshall’s supposition that goods in interstate commerce would enjoy the same protection afforded imports
(Brown
v.
Maryland, supra, 25
U.S. at p. 449 [
The findings of fact do not indicate the net profit which the taxpayer derives from its Selby operations. It may be assumed for argument, without factual basis, that the imposition of the tax would warrant an increase in prices (if the market would bear it, and if it is not prohibited by law, as with gold) to insure a fair profit, or conversely that the payment of the tax would render the refinery a marginal or a losing operation.
The court additionally found: “Its tidewater location enables petitioner’s Selby smelter .and refinery to compete with lead smelters in Europe and Japan for the custom smelting required by Foreign producers of ores and concentrates. Only the largest foreign mine operators can afford to construct the technologically complex and expensive smelting and refining facilities for themselves. Most of the foreign ores and concentrates treated at Selby come from Peru, Bolivia and Australia. Ores from these sources can as readily move to lead smelters in Japan, Europe or Canada as to Selby. Severe competition for Selby may come from any of those foreign smelters in the case of any specific contract negotiation, depending upon the particular matellurgieal quality of an ore, market conditions and the condition of a smelter’s ore supply. For *460 some years many of the foreign custom smelters, especially the Japanese, have been increasing the quantities they have acquired or attempted to acquire from Peru, Bolivia and Australia. Through price supports, the Japanese government subsidizes customs smelters located in Japan.”
The court specifically found: "To meet competition from foreign custom smelters over recent years petitioner has made concessions in its smelting and refining charges. Its 1966 contracts with foreign mine operators provided for smelting and refining charges averaging about $5.00 per ton less than those specified in the 1961 contracts (after adjustment for increased wage rates). ’ ’
These figures are: '' Average Property Average Smelting Tax Charge Per & Refining Charge Ton Per Ton On first Monday in March 1966 On first Monday in March 1963 On first Monday in March 1964 On first Monday in March 1965 $ 9.86 $116.90 4.49 ‘ 107.33 5.65 111.77 11.62 106.47”
These findings read: "Por petitioner to pass on to its ore suppliers a property tax of $5.00 per ton or more would result in its loss of many and possibly all ores from those suppliers to foreign custom smelters.
"... Petitioner passes on to its foreign suppliers the United States import duty on lead. The effect of the duty under normal conditions is to produce a higher price for lead in the United States than prevails in the world market. Accordingly, the foreign producer can afford to pay this duty out of the higher price when petitioner charges the duty to the supplier. The imposition of a property tax by Contra Costa County will not increase United States lead prices, as does the customs duty which is uniform throughout the United States.
"... Its tidewater location with ease of access to ocean shipping gives the Selby plant a competitive advantage over plants not so located since unloading and reloading charges and rail freight are eliminated. The property tax the County-of Contra Costa séeks to impose will materially reduce the international competitive advantage of a seaeoast location.”
This clause reads:' "Taxes: All taxes, or other governmental charges, national, local or municipal, now or hereafter imposéd in' respect to or *461 measured by the product purchased hereunder, or the production, extraction, smelting, refining, sale, transportation, exportation, proceeds or value thereof, or of the metals derived therefrom, other than income taxes levied upon the Buyer, shall be for the account of the Seller and shall be deducted from the purchase price payable hereunder. ’ ’
These findings read: ”... All of petitioner’s contracts with foreign producers contain provisions that all governmental levies, except income taxes, are to be borne by the foreign producer. If petitioner is to enforce this provision it must, for practical reasons, do so currently, i.e., when remitting net balances to the foreign producer. Once the net balances have been paid over, petitioner would have great expense and doubtful results in suing in foreign courts to recover the tax reimbursement.
”... Possibly only the foreign producers whose ores are present on tax day are liable to reimburse petitioner, and so the practice could develop, if petitioner must pay the tax and seek reimbursement, whereby foreign producers would simply refuse to ship ores at that time. Since petitioner’s Selby plant is predominantly a refiner of foreign ores, this could effectively put it out of operation for a month or so each year. Thus having to pay the tax as a condition to disputing it could do petitioner irreparable harm.
‘ ‘ Petitioner probably could not compete effectively with its foreign competitors if it should become known that foreign producers with ore or metals present at Selby on tax day would be burdened with the property tax. They would simply send their ores to the foreign competition, which would do petitioner permanent and irreparable harm because petitioner relies for its business in important part on its financial and technical ability to take all the lead ore a producer sends it and it cannot afford to have the foreign producers become accustomed to sending ore elsewhere.
”The taxes asserted by respondents would under these contracts become an economic burden on those foreign producers who happen to have ores or metals present at Selby on the first Monday in March. Other foreign producers not having ores or metals present at Selby on the first Monday in March would suffer no such burden. ’ ’
Compare the average inventory method as referred to in section 5711.16 of the Revised Code of Ohio as set out in concurring opinion of Taft, C. J., in
Wheeling Steel Corp.
v.
Porterfield
(1968)
The taxpayer states: "The United States to meet its war needs has either eliminated import quotas or reduced or suspended its own duties on the very metals Contra Costa County is attempting to tax (19 U.S.C.A., § 1202).”
Article VI, clause 2 provides: "This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding. ’ ’
Seetion 312 provides in pertinent part: “ (a) Any plant engaged in smelting or refining, or both, of metal-bearing materials as defined in this section may, upon the giving of satisfactory bond, be designated a bonded smelting or refining warehouse. Metal-bearing materials may be entered into a bonded smelting or refining warehouse without the payment of duties thereon and there smelted or refined, or both together with metal-bearing materials of domestic or foreign origin. Upon arrival of imported metal-bearing materials at the warehouse they shall be sampled according to commercial methods and assayed both under customs supervision. The bond shall be charged with a sum equal in amount to the duties which would be payable on such metal-bearing materials in their condition as imported if entered for consumption, and the bond charge shall be adjusted to reflect changes in the applicable rate of duty occurring while the imported materials are still covered by the bond . . . (g) Labor performed and services rendered pursuant to this section shall be under the supervision of an officer of the customs, to be appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury and at the expense of the manufacturer. The Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to make such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the provisions of this section. ’ ’
19 C.F.R., section 19.1, provides in part, ‘ ‘ (a) Customs warehouses shall he designated according to the following classifications: . . . (7) Class 7. Warehouses bonded for smelting and refining imported metal-bearing materials for exportation or domestic consumption. ’ ’ See also section 19.18, subd. (b) which regulates withdrawal for consumption upon the payment of duty.
19 C.F.R. section 19.17, subdivision (f), provides: "Bonded metal-bearing materials shall be kept separate and distinct from nonbonded material until they have been sampled and weighed. ’ ’
The taxpayer contended and the court found that gold and other non-durable metals present in lead-bearing ores and concentrates are in United States Customs Bond so long as the dutiable lead in those ores and concentrates remains in United States Customs Bond. The taxing authorities assert (for the first time on appeal, according to the taxpayer) that the duty free metal in the metal-bearing material should be assessed and taxed in any event. As noted above, the federal government’s interest is in the dutiable contents of the metal-bearing materials, and it is protected, not in reference to the raw material itself, hut in reference to the refined dutiable metal on hand. The determination of the dutiable contents is made from samples taken on entry, and therefore could furnish a guide for determining what portion of the value of the property, if any, should be excluded from assessment and tax by the local government.
The In-Process and Processed Inventories of materials of • foreign origin which were not in United States Customs Bond were found to be as follows for the years in question: 1963, §1,011,873; 1964, §956,078;. 3965, §969,177; and 1966, none. ' . '
If the taxpayer’s Custom Bond is charged with a quantity of-duti-.. able metal at'another refinery where it is. not threatened with a-prop.erty. tax, and some metal of the same type of domestic .origin.is on hand at. Selby, it apparently may subject the latter to the Customs Bond' and release the former for consumption, (See § 312, subd. (b), par. (5), and 19 C.F.R., § 19.24.)
The regulations in effect presently, and in the years in question, contain the reference alluded to by the court among the general provisions (§§ 19.2-19.10) governing customs warehouses and control of merchandise therein in the following manner: “§19.6 Permits; releases, (a) . . . . (b) .... (e) Merchandise covered by a notice of lien filed by the carrier shall not be released until the lien has been satisfied or discharged.
' ‘ ^Imported goods in bonded warehouse are exempt from taxation or judicial process of any State or subdivision thereof. (See T.D. 50200) ” T.D. 50200 is the reported decision in the Gulf Oil case and is headed by a statement which recites ‘ ‘ that fuel oil manufactured in bonded warehouse and free of duty on withdrawal for use as vessel’s supplies is not subject to sales tax under state law in view of congressional policy.”
The taxpayer suggests that it had metals on hand on the respective lien days in excess of fixed import quotas, and that such metals could not be released into the stream of domestic commerce upon the payment of duty. (See 19 U.S.C.A., § 1202, Appendix to the Tariff Schedules, part 2, Temporary Modifications Proclaimed Pursuant to Trade-Agreement Legislation, Items 925.01-925.04 [pp. 545-546] fixing quarterly quotas for lead-bearing ores, zinc-bearing ores, univrought lead and unwrought zinc which is the product of specified foreign countries.) Attention has not been directed to any finding or any evidence which reveals that these quotas in fact restricted the taxpayer’s use of the property proposed to be taxed. The quotas were revoked October 22, 1965 (19 U.S.C.A. (1969 pocket part) pp. 99-100), and, in any event, could not affect that portion of the assessment for the current year, 1966-1967.
It would then appear that Congress by imposing the duty, which is at the heart of the bonding process, intended to keep up a price to foster domestic production, and yet also intended to encourage the smelting and refining of foreign metal-bearing materials. If such processing is for export only it does not affect the market for domestic metals. On the other hand, if the processing is for domestic use, and the refined metals are sold under the protection of the duty, the combination of the duty and the subsidy can only serve to lower the price of the refined metal or enrich the operator of the tidewater smelter, because the metals presumably could be secured in the world market at the domestic price less the duty, without further subsidy to the producer. Moreover, if such a subsidy is desirable, the logical method of accomplishing the result would be to have lower duties on refined metals processed domestically from ore-bearing materials of foreign origin, than the duties on refined metals which have been processed abroad.
The phrase quoted by the court in
Gulf Oil
(
The regulation, interpreted in the light of the precedents upon which it was based, means no more than that imported goods which are entitled to constitutional protection are exempt from state and local taxation while in a bonded warehouse. Significantly, the provisions in article 731 *476 of the 1915 Regulations, and in article 850 of the 1923 Regulation are grouped with the regulations pertaining to storage warehouses, while the regulations for manufacturing and for smelting and refining bonded warehouses are in separately entitled groups. In the 1931 Regulations, the provisions, contained in article 942 are grouped with the general provisions and reentitled "merchandise in bonded warehouse is not subject to levy or attachment. ..." Reference to United States Code, title 26, section 747, was inserted at the beginning of the article. The 1937 Regulations follow the same format.
Were it not for the Gulf Oil ease, the conclusion that this sentence embodied in general instructions for the administration of bonded warehouses, could expand the exemption from state and local taxation beyond the constitutional premises upon which it was predicated would not be worthy of comment. In any event, as noted above, Gulf Oil does not require an interpretation extending the exemption beyond the constitutional mandate.
The conclusion that the property on which the duty had been paid was -exempted from taxation by federal regulation may be questioned; The other evidence, however, clearly demonstrated that although, it. could be sold domestically without loss to the federal revenue, it was not feasible to do so because of the manner in which it had been prepared and packaged.
The taxing authorities suggest that Chief Justice Stone, who had authored the Gulf Oil case six years earlier, would have clarified Harper if he had thought it necessary. This suggestion is of doubtful merit, particularly in view of the fact that the records of the Supreme Court reflect the following entry on the day certiorari was denied in Harper: “Mr. Chief Justice Stone was stricken on the bench on April 22, 1946, and passed away during the evening of the same day.” (327 U.S. at p. III.)
Seetion 3 of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934 provides: “The Secretary of the Treasury shall, by regulations issued hereunder, with the approval of the President, prescribe the conditions under which gold may be acquired and held, transported, melted- or treated, imported, exported, or earmarked: (a) for industrial, professional, and artistic use; (b) by the Federal Reserve banks for the purpose of settling international balances ; and (e) for such other purposes as in his judgment are not inconsistent with the purposes of sections 315b, 405b, 408a, 408b, 440-446, 752, 754a, 754b, 767, 821, 822a, 822b, and 824 of this title and sections 213, 411-415, 417, and 467 of Title 12. Gold in any form may be acquired, transported, melted or treated, imported, exported, or earmarked or held in custody for foreign or domestic account (except on behalf of the United States) only to the extent permitted by, and subject, to the conditions prescribed in, or pursuant to, such regulations. Such regulations may exempt from the provisions of this section, in whole or in part, gold situated in places beyond the limits of the continental United States.” (31 U.S.C.A. § 442.)
