Lead Opinion
T1 Aрache Corporation, a producer of oil and gas, purchased equipment and other items that it used at its wells to produce oil, gas, and related hydrocarbons. Apache Corporation (Apache) claims that: (1) It paid sales taxes on these purchases; (2) A sales tax exemption is provided to manufacturers; and (8) Apache is a manufacturer and entitled to a refund from the Tax Commission for the these purchases. Specifically, Apache claims that gas compression, dehydration, and other processes occurring at the wellhead amount to a manufacturing process, and any expenditures made as a manufacturing process are entitled to be exempt from a sales tax. The Tax Commission claims that field processing is not "processing" in a manufacturing sense, and that Apache is not entitled to any refund.
12 Apache's request for refund relates to purchases made between March 1, 1997 and February 29, 2000. The refund was divided into two amounts, $439,506.77 attributable to purchases made before November 1, 1998, and $329,269.63 attributable to purchases made on or after November 1, 1998. The relevant statutes were amended effective November 1, 1998. They were also amended in 2008.
13 In Dolese Bros. v. State ex rel. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
f 4 Apache claimed the sales tax exemption provided for the "[slales of goods, wares, merehandise, tangible personal property, machinery and equipment to a manufacturer for use in a manufacturing operation." 68 O.S.Supp.1998 § 1359(1). Apache sought an exemption based uрon its alleged status as a
{5 In 1998 a new statute was created, 68 O.S.Supp.1998 § 1859.2, and it requires a manufacturer to obtain a "manufacturer exemption permit" to "qualify for the exemption authorized in paragraph 1 of section 1359. ..."
A. In order to qualify for the exemption authorized in paragraph 1 of Section 1359 of Title 68 of the Oklahoma Statutes, at the time of sale, the person to whom the sale is made, provided the purchaser is a resident of this state, shall be required to furnish the vendor proof of eligibility for the exemption as required by this section. All vendors shall honor the proof of eligibility for sales tax exemption as authorized under this section, and sales to a person providing such proof shall be exempt from the tax levied by Section 1850 et seq. of Title 68 of the Oklahoma Statutes.
B. Each resident monufacturer wishing to claim the exemption authorized in paragraph 1 of Section 1359 of Title 68 of the Oklahoma Statutes shall be required to secure from the Oklahoma Tax Commission a manufacturer exemption permit, the size and design of which shall be prescribed by the Tax Commission. This permit shall constitute proof of eligibility for the exemption provided in paragraph 1 of Section 1859 of Title 68 of the Oklahoma Statutes. Each such manufacturer shall file with the Tax Commission an application for an exemption permit, setting forth such information as the Tax Commission may require. The application shall be signed by the owner of the business or representative of the business entity and as a natural person, and, in the case of a corporation, as a legally constituted officer thereof.
68 O.S.Supp.1998 § 1859.2(A) & (B), (emphasis added).
16 Apache argues that it should not be required to obtain a permit because it learned during this litigation that even if it had timely sought a permit, the Tax Commission would have denied its application. Apache did apply for an exemption permit on April 18, 2000, several days after the period for which it seeks a refund. The record clearly shows that Apache's application for a pеrmit would have been denied. Apache's argument assumes that the permit is part of an administrative remedy to obtain the manufacturer's exemption. The Tax Commission asserts that Apache's failure to obtain, or least attempt to obtain, the permit bars the exemption for a refund of taxes paid on or after November 1, 1998.
17 Exhaustion of administrative remedies is not required when those remedies are inadequate, ineffective or unavailable. Dewey v. State ex rel. Oklahoma Firefighters Pension and Retirement System,
T8 Apache asks that our definition of an "ineffective remedy" include circumstances where a party would have been unsuccessful in an administrative proceeding. Some courts have stated that certainty of an adverse administrative decision may makе exhaustion futile UDC Chairs Chapter, American Ass'n of University Professors v. Board of Trustees of University of District of Columbia,
T9 We applied this exception to the exhaustion doctrine in Bankoff v. Board of
T10 The requirement to exhaust administrative remedies is a prudential rule when exhaustion is not required by statute. Waste Conmections, Inc. v. Oklahoma Dept. of Environmental Quality,
111 Section 1359.2 provides a procedure "in order to qualify for the exemption," and a manufacturer desiring the exemption "shall be required to secure from the Oklahoma Tax Commission a manufacturer exemption permit." The term "shall" is often used in a statute as part of a command or a mandatory duty. TuLsа County Budget Bd. v. Tulsa County Excise Bd.,
Exemptions. Manufacturers.
There are hereby specifically exempted from the tax levied by this article:
(1) Goods, wares, merchandise, and property purchased for the purpose of being used or consumed in the process of manufacturing, compounding, processing, assembling, or preparing for sale a finished article and such goods, wares, merchandise, or property become integral parts of the manufactured, compounded, processed, assembled, or prepared products or are consumed in the process of manufacturing, compounding, processing, assembling, or preparing products for resale. The term "manufacturing plants" shall mean those establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing or processing operations, and generally recognized as such;
68 0.S.Supp.1997 § 1859(1).
Another exemption for manufacturers stated:
(3) Sale of machinery and equipment purchased and used by persons establishing new manufacturing plants in Oklahoma, and machinery and equipment purchased or equipment built on site and used by persons in the operation of manufacturing plants already established in Oklahoma. This exemption shall not apply unless such machinery and equipment is incorporated into, and directly used in, the proсess of manufacturing property for sale or resale. The term "manufacturing plants" shall mean those establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing or processing operations, and generally ree-ognized as such....
68 O.S.Supp.1997 § 1859(3), (material omitted).
Manufacturing was defined as:
(D) "Manufacturing" means and includes every operation commencing with the first production stage of any article of tangible personal property and ending with the completion of tangible personal property having the physical properties which it has when transferred by the manufacturer to another.
63 0.S.Supp.1997 $ 1352(D).
{13 Apache argues that it purchased property for the purpose of being used in a process that changed an unsaleable hydrocarbon into a saleable product. Apache argues that processing occurs after the hydrocarbons reach the surface. These by-drocarbons are compressed, dehydrated, and flow through pipes located on the surface at the well site. Apache stated that raw hydrocarbons are not marketable at the moment they reach the surface, and that field processing is required by all buyers of oil and natural gas. Apache stated that its equipment performed the normal field processing. This processing occurred prior to the hydrocarbons passing through the sales meter located at the well.
114 The parties discuss the meaning of the term "processing," the Commission asserting that such does not occur at the well site and Apache asserting the opposite. The Commission relies upon a treatise stating that what happens to hydrocarbons at a well is not processing; however, the material does
I 15 In Dolese Bros. v. State ex rel. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
There being no applicable statutory definition of manufacturing in effect at that time, the court looked for guidance to cases from other jurisdictions and adopted the following from the Illinois Supreme Court:
"[The word 'manufacture' is not to be given its technical meaning. The Century Dictionary defines it as 'the production of articles for use from raw or prepared materials by giving these materials new forms, qualities, properties, or combinations, whether by hand labor or machine.""
. The significance of Cain's Coffee is that it defined manufacturing in terms of an activity's transformative effect upon raw or prepared materials in the course of producing a new article for use.
Dolese Bros.,
We then explained that the definition for manufacturing found in the 1998 version of § 1852, the same as in the 1997 version, continued with the concept of equating manufacturing with a process where one or more of the physical properties of the original raw materials were changed by that process. Id., at ¶ 20,
1 16 The Commission argues that a particular activity may be considered as manufacturing for the purpose of the exemption only if or when that activity is generally recognized as manufacturing. Is the production process recognized as manufacturing? We addressed this issue in Dolese when we determined whether sand plants were engaged in manufacturing
In Schulte Oil, where we held that the remanufacture of used oilfield pipe constitutes manufacturing, we said of Cain's Coffee and Tulsa Machinery [Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,208 Okl. 138 ,253 P.2d 1067 (1953)]:
"The salient point in each of these cases is that a product was changed into one that became marketable or more usable. Here, the process of rеbuilding damaged oilfield pipe transforms a virtually unusable and nonmarketable product into serviceable and saleable merchandise. While it is true that after the remanufac-turing process is accomplished the end product is still used oilfield pipe, the remanufactured article is nonetheless new and different from the form of the material used in making it.
1130 Although natural and blended sand are both sand in their essential properties, the procedures applied by Dolese to the natural form of the material produce tangible personal property-blended sand-that is substantially new and different from that which originally existed. Natural sand is "a virtually unusable and nonmark-etable product" in today's constructiоn industry. Blended sand, although composed of the same materials as natural sand, is "nonetheless new and different from the form of the material used in making it."
Dolese Bros., at ¶¶ 29-30,
We then said that "[al person with knowledge of what takes place in the production of blended sand today would recognize the operations occurring at a sand production facility as manufacturing." Id. at ¶ 31,
1 17 Refining of hydrocarbons and converting them into various marketable products has long been considered in Pennsylvania as a type of manufacturing. Appeal of Atlantic Refining Co.,
(18 The opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals is vacated. The Order of the Tax Commission is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the matter is remanded to the Tax Commission for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Relevant 2003 amendments to .§ 1352 and 1359 state as follows.
68 O.$.Supp.2003 § 1352(9) & (10):
9. "Manufacturing" means and includes the activity of converting or conditioning tangible personal property by changing the form, composition, or quality of character of some existing material or materials, including natural resources, by procedures commonly regarded by the аverage person as manufacturing, compounding, processing or assembling, into a material or materials with a different form or use. "Manufacturing" does not include extractive industrial activities such as mining, quarrying, logging, and drilling for oil, gas and water, nor oil and gas field processes, such as natural pressure reduction, mechanical separation, heating, cooling, dehydration and compression;
10. "Manufacturing operation" means the designing, manufacturing, compounding, processing, assembling, warehousing, or preparing of articles for sale as tangible personal property. A manufacturing operation begins at the point where the materials enter the manufacturing site and ends at the point where a finished product leaves the manufacturing site. "Manufacturing operation" does not include administration, sales, distribution, transportation, site construction, or site maintenance. Extractive activities and field processes shall not be deemed to be a part of a manufacturing operation even when performed by a person otherwise engaged in manufacturing;
68 0.8.Supp.:2003 § 1359(1):
Exemptions-Manufacturers.
There are hereby specifically exempted from the tax levied by Section 1350 et seq. of this title:
1. Sales of goods, wares, merchandise, tangible personal property, machinery and equipment to a manufacturer for use in a manufacturing operation. Goods, wares, merchandise, property, machinery and еquipment used in a nonman-ufacturing activity or process as set forth in paragraph 9 of Section 1352 of this title shall not be eligible for the exemption provided for in this subsection by virtue of the activity or process being performed in conjunction with or integrated into a manufacturing operation;
. For explanation and application of the maxim that the law compels no one to do vain or useless things, see Broom's Legal Maxims, 169 (R. Kersley 10th ed.1939); Sir Anthony Main's Case, 3 Co. Rep. 20 b, 21 a, 77 Eng. Rep. 80, 81 (K.B. 1596); Black's Law Dictionary, 1056-1057 (4th ed.1951), (definition for corresponding Latin maxim Zex neminem cogit ad vana seu inutilia ).
. It is true that the High Court has allowed the exhaustion requirement to be met by an administrative official stating that a particular claim would be denied in an administrative hearing. Mathews v. Diaz,
. Because we affirm the denial of a refund for taxes paid on or after November 1, 1998, we need not address whether Apache qualified for the exemption pursuant to the 1998 version of § 1352. That statute states at § 1352(9) & (10):
(9) "Manufacturing" means the aсtivity of converting or conditioning tangible personal property by changing the form, composition, or quality of character of some existing material or materials, by procedures commonly regarded as manufacturing, compounding, processing or assembling, into a material or materials with a different form or use. "Manufacturing" does not include exiractive industrial activities such as mining, quarrying, logging, and drilling for oil, gas and water, but may include processes subse*1065 quent to extraction if such processes result in a change of the form or use of the material extracted;
(10) "Manufacturing operation'" means the designing, manufacturing, compounding, processing, assembling, warehousing, or preparing of articles for sale as tangible personal property. A manufacturing operation begins at the point where the materials enter the manufacturing site and ends at the point where the finished product leaves the manufacturing site. "Manufacturing operation" does not include administration, sales, distribution, transportation, site construction, or site maintenance;
. The compressors purchased by Apache are not used for transportation, but to prepare the hydrocarbons for passing through the sales meter.
. See, Schulte Oil Co., Inc. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom WATT, C.J., joins, dissenting.
[ 1 The court's opinion holds that the language of the 2003 amendment
12 Both the Tax Commission. and the legislature (in its afterenacted 2003 amendment) treat the taxable event in question here in
T3 Subsequent amendments can be (and often are) used to clarify legislative intent in the earlier-enacted law
T4 Administrators usually participate in the law-making process and may be especially well informed of legislative intent.
T5 There is here record proof to support the Tax Commission's construction of the taxing statute in question. The ageney maintains that the activities of the taxpayer do not qualify for the manufacturing exemption
T6 The Tax Commission urges that all the well-site activity upon which the claims are based is not generally recognized as manufacturing within the meaning of § 1859, which provides an exemption from sales tax for machinery and equipment "purchased and used by persons establishing new manufacturing plants in Oklahoma, and machinery and equipment purchased or equipment built on site and used by persons in the operation of manufacturing plants already established in Oklahoma." The phrase "manufacturing plants" means "those establishments primarily engaged in manufacturing or processing operations, and generally recognized as such."
7 The Tax Commission takes the position that the activities of the taxpayer at well-sites are not commonly regarded as manufacturing or processing but rather as extractive in nature (a part of the lifting operations), and, therefore as not exempt by § 1859. To support this contention the Tax Commission issued its May 2000 Order No.2000-05-083-016 which states:
Within the industry itself, "Field processes, which normally take place on or near the lease, such as natural pressure reduction, mechanical separation, heating, cooling, dehydration, and compression аre NOT considered processing."9 And under the industry classification system developed internationally and published by the United States Office of Management and Budget, activities such as operating separators, emulsion breakers, desilting equipment, field gathering lines and "all other activities in the preparation of oil and gas up to the point of shipment from the producing property," are considered as Oil and Gas Extraction, which is classified as 'mining' -NOT manufacturing."10
The order's quoted text is the quintessence of the Tax Commission's pre-2003 construction.
SUMMARY
T8 The Court's pronouncement does not accord with the law. A well-established rule teaches that statutes exempting one from taxation are to be strictly construеd against the exemption.
. The terms of 68 O.S. Supp.2003 § 1352(9) and (10) are:
9. "Manufacturing" means and includes the activity of converting or conditioning tangible personal property by chаnging the form, composition, or quality of character of some existing material or materials, including natural resources, by procedures commonly regarded by the average person as manufacturing, compounding, processing or assembling, into a material or materials with a different form or use. "Manufacturing" does not include extractive industrial activities such as mining, quarrying, logging, and drilling for oil, gas and water, nor oil and gas field processes, such as natural pressure reduction, mechanical separation, heating, cooling, dehydration and compression;
10. "Manufacturing operation" means the designing, manufacturing, compounding, processing, assembling, warehousing, or preparing of articles for sаle as tangible personal property. A manufacturing operation begins at the point where the materials enter the manufacturing site and ends at the point where a finished product leaves the manufacturing site. "Manufacturing operation" does not include administration, sales, distribution, transportation, site construction, or site maintenance. Extractive activities and field processes shall not be deemed to be a part of a manufacturing operation even when performed by a person otherwise engaged in manufacturing;
{emphasis added).
The terms of 68 O.S. Supp.2003 § 1359(1) are:
Exemptions-Manufacturers
There are hereby specifically exempted from the tax levied by Section 1350 et seq. of this title:
1. Sales of goods, wares, merchandise, tangible persоnal property, machinery and equipment to a manufacturer for use in a manufacturing operation. Goods, wares, merchandise, property, machinery and equipment used in a nonmanufacturing activity or process as set forth in paragraph 9 of Section 1352 of this title shall not be eligible for the exemption provided for in this subsection by virtue of the activity or process being performed in conjunction with or integrated into a manufacturing operation;
(emphasis added).
. Cox v. Dawson,
. Letteer v. Conservancy District No. 30,
. Oral Roberts University v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
. Davis v. United States,
The U.S. Supreme Court declared as early as 1827 that "[in the construction of a doubtful and ambiguous law, the contemporaneous construction of those who were called upon to act under the law, and were appointed to carry its provisions into effect, is entitled to very great respect." Edwards' Lessee v. Darby,
Two arguments traditionally have been offered for upholding longstanding agency interpretation. Deference to longstanding interpretation (1) provides certainty and predictability to persons affected by the interpretations and (2) encourages the lawmakers to make better laws. See Cass R. Sunstein. "Interpreting Statutes in the Regulatory State," 103 Harv. L.Rev. 405, 457-59 (1989).
. All the taxable events (from March 1, 1997 to October 31, 1998) for which the court's pro'nouncement approves today a tax payer's refund occurred during a period in which the precise impact of the "manufacturing exemption" upon post-lifting on-site proсessing remained entirely unconcretized either by legislative amendments or by this court's jurisprudence. It is this un-concretized state of the law's applicable norms that allowed the restrictive agency construction, later adopted by the 2003 amendment, to carry the day. Davis, supra note 5 at 133.
. Davis, supra note 5 at 133. Professor Davis adds that "... [tlhe longer the regulations have been outstanding the more reluctant a court may be to upset them ... [and][sluch specific and established administrative interpretation of the statute is valid and 'should not be overruled except for weighty reasons.""
. Linda Galler, "Emerging Standards For Judicial Review Of IRS Revenue Rulings", 72 B.U.L.Rev. 841, 876-77 (1992). See National Muffler Dealers Ass'n v. U.S.,
. Howard R. Williams & Charles J. Meyers, Oil and Gas Law 831 (1998) (emphаsis added).
. Office of Management and Budget, North American Industry Classification System-United States 67 (1997) (emphasis added).
. McDonald's Corp. v. Oklahoma Tax Com'n,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom OPALA, V.C.J., HODGES and BOUDREAU, JJ. join, dissenting:
DISSENTING OPINION
T1 In 2003, the legislature amended 68 0.8. Supp.2008 § 1852 to expressly provide that "Extractive activities and field processes shall not be deemed to be a part of a manufacturing operation even when performed by a person engaged in manufacturing." This, of course, was precisely what Apache was doing. The majority opinion holds that the language of the 2003 amendment cannot be considered in interpreting earlier versions of
12 Where, as here, a prior enactment was ambiguous, "it may be presumed that the amendment was made to more clearly express the legislative intention previously indefinitely expressed." Magnolia Pipe Line Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
13 Allowing the refund for the 1997-98 period would require reaching the conclusion that the legislature intended to change the law, not simply clarify it, when it passed the 2003 amendment. But, given the timing of Dolese and the subsequent 2003 amendment, passed in the first legislative session after Dolese was decided, it is clear that the legislature never intended for the manufacturing exemption to apply to field processing of oil, gas, or other minerals extracted from the earth. Accordingly, I would have let stand the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals.
"I 4 I respectfully dissent.
