Phillips Harborplace, appellant, operates a full menu seafood restaurant, cafeteria, raw bar, carry-out and market within Baltimore’s Harborplace pavilion. The restaurant kitchen and preparation rooms also serve the other facilities. About 40 percent of what the appellant sells constitutes crab dishes, including crab imperial, crab cakes and crab thermidore.
For the tax year 1981, the State Department of Assessments and Taxation, appellee, assessed appellant’s kitchen equipment as personal property. Appellant protested, arguing that its equipment qualifies for the manufacturing
The Tax Court found that appellant’s kitchen equipment does not qualify for the exemption and the Circuit Court for Baltimore City (Noel, J.) upheld the decision. This appeal followed.
The issue before us concerns the interpretation of a statute.
The rules of statutory construction of such a statute — indeed, the rules to follow for the very statute, Code, Article 81 § 9, that we must interpret — were set forth in Perdue, Inc. v. State Department of Assessments and Taxation,
It is fundamental that statutory tax exemptions are strictly construed in favor of the taxing authority and if any real doubt exists as to the propriety of an exemption that doubt must be resolved in favor of the State. In other words, ‘to doubt an exemption is to deny it.’ In addition the Legislature has explicitly stipulated in § 9 of Art. 81 that all exemptions are to be strictly construed. Furthermore, the State’s taxing prerogative is never presumed to be relinquished and the abandonment of this power must be proved by the party asserting the exemption.
Perdue,
Obviously, then, the appellant has a heavy burden to overcome if it is to prevail. Indeed, appellant’s case collapses under the weight of that burden. Not only can a reasoning mind reach the Tax Court’s conclusion, it would be hard pressed to do anything else.
For a product to be labeled as manufactured, it must go through “a substantial transformation in form and uses from its original state.” Perdue v. State Department of Assessments and Taxation, supra,
Appellant, however, asserts that “anything that changes the state of food” is manufacturing equipment. The specific machinery that he argues should be included under this heading may be placed in three categories: a) machines that make ice, b) machines that clean, slice, mix, peel or other
Macke Co. v. State Department of Assessments and Taxation,
When previously faced with the issue of interpreting the word “manufacturing” in other contexts, Maryland courts have investigated what the word would mean to “the average man” and then abided by the result. See, e.g., Macke, supra, and State Tax Commission v. Baltimore Block & Tile Co.,
It is noteworthy that several other jurisdictions have discussed the ordinary or common meaning of “manufacturing” in relation to restaurants. See McDonald’s Corp. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
The Supreme Court in Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association v. United States,
Manufacture implies a change, but every change is not manufacture, and yet every change in an article is the result of treatment, labor, and manipulation. But something more is necessary.... There must be transformation; a new and different article must emerge, ‘having a distinctive name, character, or use.’
Anheuser-Busch,
To cook or boil or otherwise prepare a fish or a crustacean is to change the creature, certainly, but it is far from manufacturing it. The name of the final “product”, be it crab imperial, lobster tail, or stuffed shrimp, implies a close linkage to its original state. The character of the product — its freshness, its natural taste — enforces this linkage. Stuffings and other additives may enhance the flavor of the food, but do not change its essential character. The reason fish, crabs, and the like are delivered to Phillips is that they will be used as food, and this use remains unchanged. See Arnreich,
Appellant’s attempt to apply this “average man” test to determine the plain meaning of “manufacturing equipment” is remarkable:
The “average man” test cannot be applied here unless the facts are tailored to the average man____ [W]ere the average man involved in a multi-million dollar plant required to prepare hundreds of meals a day, and the manager of complex processes of sophisticated machinery as is Phillips Harborplace, he would surely consider such cooking to be manufacturing.
Appellant leans heavily on two Tax Court decisions, Dunkin Donuts of Glen Burnie, Inc. v. State Department of Assessments and Taxation, Maryland Tax Reporter (CCH) par. 200-573, at 10,249 (Md. Tax Court Feb. 4, 1969) and The Yogurt Tree, Inc. v. State Department of Assessments and Taxation, Md. Tax Case No. 513 A & B (1984). Phillips also believes that Commissioners of Carroll County v. B.F. Shriver Co.,
Carroll County is irrelevant to our inquiry because the canning business at issue there did not involve cooking food for retail trade. Maryland Tax Court cases, while often instructive, do not of course carry precedential weight here. In this instance they seem off the mark because the manufacturing that was deemed to have occurred in them only involved the combining of grains and dairy products into a sometimes quite different end product. They did not involve the killing, cooking or processing of fish or animal parts, the processes which are at the heart of the case sub judice.
Another argument that the appellant offers is that another section of Article 81, § 324(s), part of the Retail Sales
This argument overlooks at least two points. First, different treatment of one item by different tax statutes does not necessarily imply an inconsistency that need be corrected by judicial harmonizing, because the legislative purpose underlying each of the statutes may be different. See Perdue Foods, 264 Md. at 690,
Secondly, although both § 9A(c)(1) and § 324(s) serve as defining provisions, the § 324 definitions apply only to the Retail Sales Act subtitle of Article 81. Thus, by the very terms of § 324, subsection (s) has no application to § 9A. Appellant’s argument based on statutory harmony is without merit.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
APPELLANT TO PAY THE COSTS.
Notes
. Article 81 reads in pertinent part:
§ 9A. Personal property exemptions.
(a) Generally; exemptions strictly construed. — The following tangible personal property shall be exempt from assessment and from State, county and city ordinary taxation, except as otherwise stated herein, each and all of which exemptions shall be strictly construed.
(c) Manufacturing equipment. — (1) The following property used in manufacturing: tools (including mechanical tools); implements, however operated; machinery; manufacturing apparatus or engines, whether or not in use; except where the property is declared to be taxable by this subsection.
. The scope of review is substantially broader if "an erroneous conclusion of law” is involved. Ramsay, Scarlett,
