500 N.E.2d 910 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1985
Appellant, Madison Seed Co., Inc., is in the business of marketing seeds to farmers. It obtains raw grains and soybeans from growers under contract, and then prepares them so that they are ready for planting when sold. Appellee, the Tax Commissioner of the state of Ohio, ordered appellant to pay $15,124.53 in sales and use taxes, including a penalty, pursuant to an audit of appellant's purchases from January 1, 1977 through June 30, 1979. The assessment order was based upon the determination that appellant is not engaged in "manufacturing or processing" within the meaning of R.C.
On June 10, 1982, appellant filed a notice of appeal with the Ohio Board of Tax Appeals (the "board"). A hearing was held on January 26, 1983, and on March 8, 1985, the board issued a decision and order in which it modified the assessment, and allowed an exemption solely for appellant's seed treater and parts for it.
From this decision, appellant timely *283 filed a notice of appeal with this court, naming the following as his sole assignment of error:
"The Board of Tax Appeals erred in determining that the Appellant's entire operation is not exempt from Ohio sales and use taxation."
Appellant first argues under this assignment of error that appellant's entire operation comes within the statutory definition of "manufacturing or processing" and therefore appellant's entire operation is exempt R.C.
"`Manufacturing' or `processing' means the transformation orconversion of material or things into a different state or formfrom that in which they originally existed and, for the purpose of the exceptions contained in division (E)(2) of this section, includes the adjuncts used during and in, and necessary to carry on and continue, production to complete a product at the same location after such transforming or converting has commenced." (Emphasis added.)
When appellant receives raw soybeans they are usable for seed and other various purposes such as feed, food and fiber. The raw soybeans may contain a higher content of moisture than desired, as well as contaminants and defective seeds, and as a result they have a lower level of germination than desired. In order to improve the germination level of the raw soybeans, appellant uses a series of processes to remove the moisture, contaminants and defective seeds.
First the seeds are placed in grain bins which have false floors to allow drying of the seeds in order to reduce their moisture content. Since the soybeans are fragile, and must be handled gently, a special bean ladder is used to lower the beans into the bins.
After the soybeans are dried, they are run over screens which separate contaminants such as sticks and oversized or undersized seeds which are likely to be less germinable. Then another process, the spiral, is used which separates seeds which are not well-rounded, and which are therefore likely to be diseased. Next, a gravity table is used to remove seeds which are lighter than normal due to cracks on their bulls.
After passing over the gravity table, the remaining seeds are treated with a fungicide and colored so as to identify them as having been treated. The coloring step is necessary because by law, after these soybeans have been treated, they may only be used for seed purposes.
The board determined that appellant is engaged in "manufacturing or processing" according to the statutory definition of these terms. However, the board found that the only item used by appellant directly in manufacturing for sale under R.C.
Both appellee and the board rely on the case of Gressel v.Kosydar (1973),
"An operation by which the value of materials or things is enhanced, without an accompanying change in the state or *284 form of such property, does not constitute `processing,' as that term is used in R.C.
Unlike the situation in Gressel, in the case sub judice, the board found that appellant was engaged in manufacturing or processing since a change in the state or form of the raw soybeans occurred when they were treated and colored. Since appellant is engaged in manufacturing or processing, any combined processes necessary to complete the manufacture of the final marketable product are considered to be manufacturing processes.Tax Comm. of Ohio v. J. Chas. McCullough Seed Co. (1935),
The marketable product produced by appellant is a treated, disease-resistant seed, with a five to fifteen percent improved germinability over the raw soybeans initially received from its growers. Therefore, each process used by appellant in order to improve the germinability of the raw soybeans is not preliminary to manufacturing or processing, but rather is directly involved in the final marketable product's manufacture, and must be exempt. As such, we hold the board was unreasonable in not finding that appellant's entire operation is exempt from the Ohio sales and use tax. 3535 Salem Corp. v. Lindley (1979),
We further note that the record does not show that any of appellant's screening processes are used for disposal of scrap or waste materials such as to disallow exemption as per Ohio Adm. Code
Due to our finding on appellant's first argument under its assignment of error, we feel no need to discuss appellant's other contention that appellant's operation constitutes "refining" and is therefore exempt.
Accordingly, appellant's first assignment of error is well-taken.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
KOEHLER, P.J., JONES and HENDRICKSON, JJ., concur.