delivered the opinion of the Court.
Pursuant to Code § 58-1145, Solite Corporation filed an application seeking correction of allegedly erroneous assessments of county license taxes for the years 1973, 1974, and 1975. Solite alleged that it was exempt from county license taxes under the provisions of Code § 58-266.1 (A) (4) because its sand and gravel operations constituted manufacturing. The trial court held that Solite’s operations did not constitute manufacturing and consequently denied its application.
The issue presented is whether Solite’s extracting and processing (crushing, washing, screening, grading, and blending) of sand and gravel constitute manufacturing within the meaning of Code § 58-266.1 (A)(4); *
Solite operates a facility in King George County where it extracts broken rocks, clay, and sand from the earth after removing the topsoil. These raw materials are then transported to its plant where the clay and other waste materials are removed through washing. The sand is separated from the rock. Machinery then crushes the broken rocks to desired sizes and then reassembles various grades of the rock together, blending the rock into a gravel mixture. A similar procedure is followed in separating, grading, and combining different types of extracted sand. The finished products, “concrete sand” and “No. 68 gravel,” are sold to suppliers or builders for use in highway and building construction projects. There was evidence that prior to this processing, the raw materials have only nominal value and could only be used as landfill.
In resolving questions concerning the applicability of tax exemptions, we have followed several well-settled rules. “Statutes granting tax exemptions are construed strictly against the taxpayer. When a tax statute is susceptible of two constructions, one granting an exemption and the other not granting it, courts adopt the con
*663
struction which denies the exemption.”
Commonwealth
v.
Community Motor Bus,
Our determination of whether Solite’s activities constitute manufacturing is guided by our prior decisions. In
Prentice
v.
City of Richmond,
These prior decisions indicate that unless the processing transforms the new material into an article or a product of substantially different character, it cannot be considered to be manufacturing even though the processing increases the value or usefulness of the product. In
Prentice, supra,
Under this standard, the Court in
Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association
determined that processing cork for use in bottling beer did not constitute manufacturing because “a cork put through the claimant’s process is still a cork.”
Solite notes that Kentucky and Missouri have adopted broader definitions of manufacturing.
See Department of Revenue
v.
Allied Drum Service, Inc.,
Courts have uniformly held that the quarrying of rock is not manufacturing.
See, e.g., Rock of Ages Corp.
v.
Commissioner of Taxes,
Other aspects of Solite’s operation likewise fail to meet the requisites for manufacturing. Although the washing, the screening, and the grading remove impurities and segregate the various grades of sand and gravel, these procedures do not substantially alter the character of the sand and gravel. Moreover, the blending of various grades of gravel in making “No. 68 gravel” and the blending of various grades of sand in making “concrete sand” do not constitute manufacturing. The mere blending together of various ingredients, in the absence of a transformation into a product of substantially different character, is not manufacturing.
Ohio Ferro-Alloys Corp.
v.
Kosydar,
After Solite’s processing of the raw materials, the sand is still sand and the rock is still rock. The sand and gravel marketed by Solite have not been transformed into articles of substantially different character. We conclude, therefore, that Solite’s processing of sand and gravel does not constitute manufacturing within the meaning of Code § 58-266.1(A) (4).
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.
Notes
Code § 58-266.1 (A) (4) provides as follows:
“No city, town or county shall levy any license tax on a manufacturer for the privilege of manufacturing and selling goods, wares and merchandise at wholesale at the place of manufacture, whether the same be measured by gross receipts or otherwise, any city or town charter provisions to the contrary notwithstanding.”
