18 N.E.2d 405 | Ohio | 1938
The question is whether operations of The Schumacher Stone Company, appellee, in crushing and screening limestone into various merchantable sizes, are to be deemed manufacturing. If manufacturing, then the personal property thus used and owned should be assessed, under Sections 5385, 5386 and 5388, General Code, at only fifty per cent, but if used otherwise in business then at seventy per cent of the true value thereof.
The Tax Commission of Ohio denied to the stone company the status of a manufacturer in respect to the personal property used in such operations. On appeal, *530 the Court of Common Pleas reversed the order of the Tax Commission. The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas. The cause is in this court for review by reason of allowance of a motion of the Tax Commission to have the record certified.
One claim made by the Tax Commission is that the Court of Common Pleas had no jurisdiction to consider and determine the appeal from its order for the reason that the order did not relate either to the liability or valuation of the property of The Schumacher Stone Company but was an order relating solely to the classification of the property for taxation purposes. We are not in accord with such view. This court held inStandard Oil Co. v. Zangerle, Aud.,
Are the operations of appellee's mill in crushing and screening limestone a manufacturing process? A part of Section 5385, General Code, reads as follows: "A person who purchases, receives or holds personal property, of any description, for the purpose of adding to the value thereof by manufacturing, refining, rectifying, or by the combination of different materials with a view of making a gain or profit by so doing, is a manufacturer * * *." It is agreed that appellee *531 crushes and screens stone with a view of making a gain or profit by so doing. No claim is made that the process involved is either refining or rectifying. The company claims that its crushing and screening operations are a manufacturing process while the Tax Commission contends that no articles are manufactured.
Counsel for the Tax Commission place considerable stress on the fact that prior to the enactment, in 1931, of the law providing for classification of personal property, the company had never made a tax return as a manufacturer although it had been in the same business for many years. This fact is not controlling for the reason that prior to the enactment of that law, it made no particular difference as to classification of the personal property here in question. Moreover, if a mistake had been previously made in making a return, appellee should not be prevented now from having the personal property taxed according to its true status. Reference is also made to the purpose for which The Schumacher Stone Company was incorporated. Counsel for the Tax Commission state in their brief: "There is no suggestion in the evidence in this case, or otherwise, that this company, so far as its articles of incorporation or other stated purposes are concerned, was organized for the purpose of 'manufacturing' anything." While such fact might be material under certain circumstances, it is not determinative in the instant case. Commonwealth v.McCrady-Rodgers Co.,
The Tax Commission of Ohio is invested by statute with authority in respect to certain questions of taxation. It is peculiarly adapted to review such questions. The provision that personal property used in manufacturing should be assessed at only fifty per cent of the true value thereof instead of seventy per cent is in the nature of an exemption and he who claims such exemption has the burden to show by clear and convincing evidence that the Tax Commission was *532
in error. Commonwealth v. McCrady-Rodgers, supra. See alsoChicago, Burlington Kansas City Ry. Co. v. Guffey, 120. U.S., 569,
We have the question whether the machinery and equipment used by the company in crushing and screening stone was personal property used in manufacturing. Personal property used by appellee in quarrying the stone is not here involved.
The operations of the plaintiff may be briefly described as follows: The company owns a large quarry from which stone is blasted, after which the resulting material is taken by means of cars up an incline to the mill and the first preliminary crushers. Stone going through the first crusher in the mill varies "from little fine stuff to pieces that are two inches thick and some eight inches square and probably larger," as the record shows. After leaving the first crusher the resulting product goes through a vibrating screen which separates the larger pieces for the purpose of passing same into a number 3 crusher. After passing through crusher number 3, the stone is small enough to pass through a 2 1/2-inch square mesh screen. In brief, the process of crushing and screening is continued until a variety of marketable products are produced each having a special designation according to the use for which it is best adapted. Different grades of stone are numbered according to size for purpose of sale. Standard sizes of stone produced by the appellee comprise numbers 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 34, 46 and M.22.
The larger part of the stone sold from the plant consists of sizes numbered 46, 4, 6 and 7. Number 46 is used for ordinary gravel roads. Number 4 is used for tarring roads and macadam for state highways. Numbers *533 6 and 7 are used for patching roads. Numbers 4, 6 and 7 may be mixed so as to make number 46. Some of the finer products are sold as agricultural limestone for soil improvement, some for concrete and building purposes and some for poultry or stock feed. Whatever the product, designation or use, however, it is all stone and sold as a stone product. No skill or labor of any kind is applied to make the particles of stone conform to any particular shape or design. The particles produced are not unlike particles of stone crushed by hammers and hand labor except that by improved machinery the crushing is done much more rapidly and the resulting product more efficiently screened into various sizes.
The use of stone for road construction is neither new nor modern. The ancients used stone for such purposes and evidence of stone roadways built in England by the Legions of Caesar may still be observed. Limestone has likewise been one of the most common materials for building roadways in this country. In early days most of the work was performed by manual labor with hammers and other simple tools. With the advent of the motor vehicle and the necessity for hard surfaced highways, the crushing and screening of stone by machinery was greatly accelerated. The simple method of removing and crushing stone from quarries by manual labor was superseded by steam shovels, inclined tramways, crushers and vibrating screens, such as are used by the appellee in the instant case.
Originally no one would have claimed that the process of crushing and screening of stone for road purposes was manufacturing. It is now claimed, however, that, since by modern machinery, in a series of operations, the rough stone as it comes from the quarry may be crushed and screened into 14 different sizes, each designed and sold for a specific purpose as is done by appellee, the process may be properly described as manufacturing. *534
The word "manufacture" is defined by Webster as follows: "(2) to work, as raw or partly wrought materials, into suitable forms for use; as, to manufacture wool, iron, etc. (3) To fabricate; to invent; also, to produce mechanically." The definition of "manufacture" given by Standard Dictionary is "to make or fashion by working on or combining material; form or produce by some industrial process; fashion by hand or machinery; especially when done in considerable quantities and as a regular business; * * *." In holding the process of turning green coffee into a finished product to be manufacturing, it was stated in City of Louisville v.Zinmeister Sons,
Cutting agate and tiger-eye stones into parts and into shapes of penholder handles and other articles was decided to be manufacturing in Erhardt v. Hahn, 55 F., 273. Likewise the making of ice cream by a large plant and extensive machinery.Hughes Co. v. City of Lexington,
In the case of Engle v. Sohn Co.,
The mere subjection of articles, such as corks, to a cleansing and coating process to adapt them to a special use does not amount to manufacture. Anheuser-Busch Brewing Assn. v.United States,
A sawmill, which converts logs into lumber, was ruled to be a manufacturing establishment, in Bogart v. Tyler's Admr.,
Referring now to cases concerned with the crushing and screening of limestone, we find the weight of authority to be that such operations are not regarded as a manufacturing process, although in a few jurisdictions it is held otherwise. In the case of Graff v. Minnesota Flint Rock Co.,
In the following cases operations similar to those of appellee were held not to be manufacturing: Wellington *537
v. Inhabitants of Belmont,
One of the leading cases on the subject isCommonwealth v. John T. Dyer Quarry Co.,
The operations of appellee in crushing and screening limestone are not unlike the processes cited in the foregoing cases. In reaching the conclusion that the personal property in question was not used in manufacturing, the Tax Commission had ample reason and authority. We are in accord with its action. The order of the Tax Commission should have been sustained and therefore the judgment of the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas, is reversed.
Judgment reversed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., MATTHIAS, ZIMMERMAN and WILLIAMS, JJ., concur.
DAY, J., dissents.
DIXON, J., not participating. *539