321 Mass. 90 | Mass. | 1947
The commissioner of corporations and taxation, acting under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c'. 58, § 2, as most recently amended by St. 1941, c. 726, § 2, forwarded to the board of assessors of the city of Boston a list of corporations known to him to be liable to taxation in the said city under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) cc. 59, 60A, 63, in which he classified as a domestic manufacturing corporation the First National Stores Inc., and as a foreign manufacturing corporation
The Appellate Tax Board found that the First National Stores Inc. was a corporation organized under the laws of this Commonwealth, and that it conducted a general retail business selling food products in a number of retail stores throughout New England and in some parts of the State of New York. It owned and operated machinery for the baking of bread and pastry and the processing of food. It made preserves, jams, jellies, peanut butter, mayonnaise, extracts, bread, cake, and carbonated beverages, roasted coffee, prepared bacon and corned beef, manufactured sausages, and smoked hams. It sold these products together with similar products which it purchased from others. Live stock was bought, slaughtered and dressed in the corporation's plant. The corporation also maintained a plant for printing price tickets, inventory forms and books. A laundry was conducted for cleaning the coats worn by the clerks in its various stores and by employees in different departments. The gross sales for the year ending September 30, 1944, were $165,952,948, of which approximately $30,000,000 represented goods processed by the corporation, for the production of which it employed nine hundred forty-three persons. The assessors conceded that certain of these “activities performed by the First National Stores Inc. constitute manufacturing.”
The only question presented in the first case is whether. the Appellate Tax Board erred in deciding that the First National Stores Inc. should be classified as a “domestic business corporation” as defined in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, § 30, and not as a “domestic manufacturing corporation” as defined in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, § 38C, as appearing in St. 1937, c. 383, § 1, and in the second case is whether the board erred in deciding that Armour and Company should be classified as a “foreign corporation” as defined in G. L, (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, § 30, and not as a “foreign manufacturing corporation” as defined in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, § 42B, as appearing in St. 1937, c. 383, § 2.
. The adoption in 1916 of our present system of taxation of income precipitated a long and difficult struggle in this Commonwealth to discover a method of taxing national banks or their shareholders which would conform to the Constitution of the United States and to the acts of Congress. The history of legislation in an effort to accomplish this result is set forth in considerable detail in Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation v. Woburn National Bank, 315 Mass. 505. Congress by an amendment of March 25, 1926, to U. S. Rev. Sts. § 5219 (44 U. S. Sts. at Large, 223;
A radical change in the taxing of manufacturing corporations was effected by St. 1936, c. 362, § 1, which exempted the machinery of manufacturing corporations from local taxation by amending G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 5, Sixteenth. Clause Sixteenth as thus amended, in so far as it relates to the exemption from taxation of machinery owned by corporations, reads as follows: “property, other than real estate, poles, underground conduits, wires and pipes, and
The assessors contend that neither of these corporations comes within these statutory definitions of manufacturing corporations. We must first inquire whether they were engaged in manufacturing in this Commonwealth. Manufacture ordinarily and commonly denotes the process of transforming raw or finished materials by hand or machinery, and through human skill and knowledge, into something possessing a new nature and name and adapted to a new use. Commonwealth v. Green, 253 Mass. 458. Boston & Maine Railroad v. Billerica, 262 Mass. 439.
Doubtless, some of the transactions undertaken by the First National Stores Inc. constitute manufacturing. The assessors concede this to be true. The production of bread and pastry and the preparation and canning of jams, jellies and similar articles, already mentioned, are manufacturing operations.
The assessors urge that it was not intended that a meat packing corporation and a retail chain store corporation should be deemed to be manufacturing corporations where whatever manufacturing they do is merely incidental to their main business, which is of a nonmanufacturing nature. We are not concerned with how these corporations may be regarded for some general purpose, because the Legislature has set up the particular standards by which they are to be classified as manufacturing or nonmanu-facturing corporations for the single purpose of determining whether they are entitled to the exemption from local taxation upon their machinery.
The object of St. 1936, c. 362, § 1, was to encourage manufacturing in this Commonwealth by removing the burden of local taxation upon the machinery, and by substituting therefor a tax at the rate of $5 per thousand in the assessment of the corporate franchise tax. It was
The Legislature in designating the corporations entitled to this exemption did not limit it to corporations that were organized exclusively for or wholly engaged in manufacturing, or to those having a certain percentage of their capital invested in manufacturing, or to those whose manufacturing operations comprised a certain proportion of their entire business, as was provided for in the statutes of other jurisdictions — see 10 Am. L. R. 1273 — but our Legislature adopted the classification made in St. 1930, c. 220, §§ 5, 7, inserting §§ 38C and 42B in c. 63 of the General Laws, appearing since in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, §§ 38C, 42B. The exemption was granted to every domestic and foreign corporation which was engaged in manufacturing in this Commonwealth. This does not mean that every corporation, which in the conduct of its business manufactures to a trivial extent something used in aid of a busi- . ness which is essentially of a nonmanufacturing character, is entitled to this exemption from the local tax on machinery. A garment cleansing corporation that prepares its own cleaning solvent, a laundry corporation that manufactures its own soap, and a hotel corporation that makes its own furniture polish are not manufacturing corporations. It would be impracticable to draft a statute that would classify each particular corporation, and the matter was left to the commissioner in the first instance to determine the classi- . fication of each corporation.
We do not agree with the contention of the assessors that the manufacturing operations of a corporation must comprise its principal business before it may be properly classi-fled as a manufacturing corporation. The statutory definitions do not in terms or by necessary implication so
Corporations whose manufacturing operations are substantial, whether viewed with respect to the-financial receipts they bring to the corporation, or the proportion of the entire corporate income that they comprise, or the percentage of the entire capital which is invested in them, or the number of persons employed in them as compared with the total number of employees of the corporations, or the ratio to the entire business activities of the corporation, must be regarded as manufacturing corporations within our statutory definitions specifying those that are exempted from local taxation of their machinery. Upon the facts found by the Appellate Tax Board, the corporations in question were entitled to be classified as manufacturing corporations, as they were by the commissioner, and in each case the decision must be for the commissioner.
So ordered.
Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association v. United States, 207 U. S. 556. American Fruit Growers, Inc. v. Brogdex Co. 283 U. S. 1. American Sumatra Tobacco Corp. v. Tone, 127 Conn. 132. Dolese & Shepard Co. v. O’Connell, 257 Ill. 43. Standard Tailoring Co. v. Louisville, 152 Ky. 504. H. M. Rowe Co. v. State Tax Commission, 149 Md. 251. People v. Morgan, 61 App. Div. (N. Y.) 373. Red Hook Cold, Storage Co. Inc. v. Department of Labor of New York, 268 App. Div. (N. Y.) 11. Engle v. Sohn & Co. 41 Ohio St. 691. Commonwealth v. Weiland Packing Co. 292 Pa. 447.
Phillips v. Byers, 189 Cal. 665. H. H. Kohlsaat & Co. v. O’Connell, 255 Ill. 271. Nixa Canning Co. v. Lehmann-Higginson Grocer Co. 70 Kans. 664. Louisville v. Zinmeister & Sons, 188 Ky. 570. State v. Lanasa, 151 La. 706. State v. E. I. Young Co. Inc. 157 La. 845. County Commissioners of Carroll County v. B. F. Shriver Co. 146 Md. 412. American Glucose Co. v. State, 16 Stew. (N. J.) 280. Commonwealth v. Snyder’s Bakery, 348 Pa. 308.
Engle v. Sohn & Co. 41 Ohio St. 691. Neuhoff Packing Co. v. Sharpe, 146 Tenn. 293. J. H. Allison & Co. v. Killough, 156 Tenn. 294. Morris & Co. Inc. v. Commonwealth, 116 Va. 912. Commonwealth v. Meyer, 180 Va. 466. But see Commonwealth v. Wetland Packing Co. 292 Pa. 447.
Barron v. Boston, 187 Mass. 168. Seeley v. Gwillim, 40 Conn. 106. Lexington v. Lexington Leader Co. 193 Ky. 107. American Newspapers, Inc. v. State Tax Commission, 174 Md. 56. Evening Journal Association v. State Board of Assessors, 18 Vroom, 36. Commonwealth v. J. B. Lippincott Co. 156 Pa. 513.
Commonwealth v. Keystone Laundry Co. 203 Pa. 289.
The economic situation existing in 1936 due to the decline in manufae-taring in this Commonwealth is described in the report of the recess commission (House Document No. 143 of 1936). Statute 1936, c. 362, was enacted pursuant to this report.
It may be noted that the early draft of House Bill No. 714 of 1930, which finally became St. 1930, c. 220, defined domestic and foreign manufacturing corporations as those whose principal business was manufacturing, and that this qualifying clause was struck out.
See v. Building Commissioner of Springfield, 246 Mass. 340. Arruda v. Director General of Railroads, 251 Mass. 255. Commonwealth v. S. S. Kresge Co. 267 Mass. 145, 148. Liddell v. Standard Accident Ins. Co. 283 Mass. 340, 347. Hanlon v. Rollins, 286 Mass. 444, 447. Gallagher v. Wheeler, 292 Mass. 547. Attorney General v. J. P. Cox Advertising Agency, Inc. 298 Mass. 383. Kennedy v. Consolidated Motor Lines, Inc. 312 Mass. 84, 87. West's Case, 313 Mass. 146.