Lead Opinion
Cargo Carriers, Inc., manufactures barges at Pine Bluff. Some are sold to third parties, some are retained and delivered to Inland Waterways Division, a separate division of Cargo Carriers, Inc. In 1978 the Arkansas Department of Revenues assessed a deficiency of $204,948.22 in Gross Receipts Tax (Sales Tax) claimed by the State on the delivery of sixty-six barges to Inland Waterways. The State took the position that when the sixty-six barges were “withdrawn from inventory” a taxable event occurred within the meaning of Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-1902 (d) (Repl. 1980) which reads in part:
“The term ‘gross proceeds’ or ‘gross receipts’ shall include the value of any goods, wares, merchandise, or property withdrawn or used from the established business or from the stock and trade of the established reserves for consumption or use in such business or by any other person.”
Cargo protested and when administrative remedies provided no relief, it filed suit in chancery to enjoin collection of the tax, claiming the assessment of taxes amounted to an illegal exaction and, hence, was prohibited by Article 16 § 13 of the Constitution of Arkansas. Cargo contended that § 84-1902 (d) was not applicable because the barges were only partially completed in Arkansas. It said the unfinished hulls were then ferried to Paducah, Kentucky, for final completion and so the barges did not become a part of Cargo’s fleet until they had entered interstate commerce outside the State of Arkansas. Cargo’s petition asked for a refund of $61,180.89 in Use Taxes it had paid on the value of materials used in constructing the barges.
After testimony and proof the Chancellor found that the barges were completed at Pine Bluff and became subject to the Sales Tax under § 84-1902 (d) at that time. A deficiency of $204,948.22, based on the value of the completed barges at the time of delivery, was assessed and Cargo’s claim of refund was denied, as the proof showed that Cargo had been credited with the amount of Use Tax paid.
On appeal, no issue is raised that the Chancellor’s findings are against the preponderance of the evidence. Instead, we are asked to hold the Arkansas Gross Receipts Tax, as applied in this case, unconstitutional under the commerce, due process and equal protection clauses of the Constitution of the United States.
The State counters Cargo’s assignment of error with the familiar rule that constitutional questions cannot be raised for the first time on appeal. T. H. Epperson & Son, Inc. v. Robinson,
Cargo cites only an amendment to its petition asserting that the assessment against it constitutes “an illegal exaction prohibited by the Constitution of the State of Arkansas”, as evidence that the issue was first presented to the trial court. But that attempt must fail. Art. 16 § 13 of the Arkansas Constitution provides that any citizen may institute suit in behalf of himself and others to protect against the enforcement of any illegal exactions. There is nothing about that provision of the Arkansas Constitution that bears any resemblance to those provisions of the United States Constitution which Cargo claims are violated, i.e. the commerce, due process or equal protection clauses. We readily reject the premise that a litigant can argue a violation of the illegal exaction provision of the Arkansas Constitution before the trial court and contend on appeal his argument includes the commerce, due process and equal protection clauses of the United States Constitution as well. Such a holding would be hostile to the principle that arguments must be presented to the trial court with clarity and particularity in order to be noticed on appeal. Abernathy v. State,
The decree is affirmed.
Supplemental Opinion on Denial of Rehearing delivered March 28, 1983
Rehearing
In our opinion in Cargo Carriers, Inc. v. Charles D. Ragland, Director,
By Petition for Rehearing, appellant has satisfied us that these arguments, though not pleaded, were sufficiently raised in the trial court to be preserved on appeal. Appended to the Petition for Rehearing is a copy of appellant’s
Memorandum Brief submitted to the Chancellor after trial, but before the decision, which cites the commerce and equal protection clauses. Whether the Chancellor considered the arguments to be belated, or merely unpersuasive, we have no way of knowing, as the decree makes no mention of them. However that may be, we agree appellant is entitled to have these assignments of error decided on their merits and we have accordingly reviewed the arguments in appellant’s brief.
Appellant concedes we have often held that a manufacturer who withdraws stock from its own inventory for its own use becomes liable for sales tax on such goods. Georgia Pacific Corp. v. Larey,
Appellant leans heavily on Complete Auto Transit Inc. v. Brady,
In Auto Transit the Court extracted what might be seen as the essence of a number of relevant decisions, before and after Spector, as sustaining a tax against commerce clause challenge when: The tax is applied to an activity with a substantial nexus with the taxing state, is fairly apportioned, does not discriminate against interstate commerce, and is fairly related to the services provided by the taxing state.
Appellant concedes, as it must, that it has a nexus to Arkansas, in that it owns and operates a substantial manufacturing plant in Arkansas. But its argument then by-passes that reality and suggests that the taxed activity which must meet the test oiAuto Transit is the operation of the barges, that is, the carriage of goods for hire, which is admittedly done out-of-state by Inland Waterways Division. We find no language in the Auto Transit opinion which modifies the substantial nexus requirement as appellant would have us do, nor anything there or elsewhere to suggest it is the use to which its product is put that determines whether a manufacturer has a substantial nexus within a given state. We reject that supposition. At issue here is a sales tax, a levy on three percent of the gross receipts of goods manufactured in Arkansas, not a privilege or franchise tax on activities thought to be subject to the taxing jurisdiction of this State. The activity of appellant here scrutinized is not the operation of its barges, but their manufacture, and the taxability of that enterprise is clear. International Harvester Co. v. Department of Treasury,
Appellant urges that still another element of the Auto Transit case is impinged here, i.e. the tax is discriminatory on its face because Cargo Carriers is being assessed a three percent gross receipt tax while those who purchase barges from it, and who compete with it, have not had to pay the same tax. This is essentially the equal protection argument as well. Appellee’s response is that had appellant’s out-of-state purchasers taken title or possession of the barges in Arkansas, they too would have been subject to the sales tax. Nor is it shown whether such purchasers were subject to a use tax in other states. Thus, whether appellant has a competitive disadvantage is an open question. We think what has been said before is sufficient, we disagree that the imposition of a sales tax on goods manufactured in Arkansas under the circumstances of this case discriminates against interstate commerce.
The existence of a rational relationship between the taxing state and the taxable event is not subject to question. (Auto Transit, supra, Moorman Manufacturing Company v. Bair,
Rehearing denied.
Notes
Justices Blackmun and Rehnquist, dissenting, Colonial Pipeline Company v. Triagle,
