Lead Opinion
For the tax year at issue, R.C. 5733.061 granted the following franchise tax credit for investing in property used in manufacturing:
“A credit shall be allowed against the tax imposed by Chapter 5733. of the Revised Code for each taxable year. The credit shall equal the lesser of the amount of tax otherwise due under such chapter or the difference between:
“(B) The taxes that would have been charged against such property and paid during such year had it been listed and assessed for taxation at twenty per cent of its true value.” Am. Sub. H.B. No. 828 (137 Ohio Laws, Part II, 3500, 3502-3503).
R.C. 5711.16 states:
“A person who purchases, receives, or holds personal properly for the purpose of adding to its value by manufacturing, refining, rectifying, or combining different materials with a view of making a gain or profit by so doing is a manufacturer. * * *”
Stoneco argues that it manufactures marketable commodities (aggregate, sand, and agricultural limestone) from unmarketable material (limestone) and, consequently, that its equipment qualifies for credit. The commissioner, conversely, contends that Schumacher Stone Co. is indistinguishable and that the crushing and screening of limestone is not manufacturing. The issue before us is closely balanced and difficult to resolve. Nevertheless, we think Stoneco advances the better argument.
We agree with the commissioner that Schumacher Stone Co. is factually indistinguishable from the instant case. Schumacher blasted stone from its quarry and carted the stone to a primary crusher, where it crushed the stone to smaller stone. It then crushed the stone in successive crushers, separated the larger pieces with vibrating screens, and continued this process until it produced a variety of marketable grades of aggregate. Schumacher also produced agricultural limestone.
The court there held that Schumacher started with stone and sold stone. It reasoned that Schumacher did not apply skill or labor to make the particles of stone conform to any particular shape or design. After reviewing cases from other jurisdictions, the court concluded that the BTA’s predecessor, the Tax Commission, had ample reason and authority to find that Schumacher’s operations were not manufacturing.
However, we have travelled away from this narrow view in defining “manufacturing” for the personal property tax. In Red Top Brewing Co. v. Bowers (1955),
In Eastern Machinery Co., after explaining that statutes relating to the personal property tax broadened the
“The term, ‘manufacturing,’ is otherwise defined as the production of articles for use from raw or prepared materials by giving to these materials new forms, qualities, properties, or combinations, whether by hand labor or by machinery. * * *
“Usually, where, through the use of tools and machinery, commodities or items of personal property are by special treatment or processing transformed into other more valuable items of personal property as a commercial business, the operation is that of manufacturing. * * *”
In Continental Coffee Co. v. Bowers (1963),
In light of these cases, we hold that, for the tangible personal properly tax and, consequently, for the R.C. 5733.061 investment credit, manufacturing is the commercial use of engines, machinery, tools, and implements to convert material into a new form, quality, property, or combination and into a more valuable commodity for sale. Schumacher Stone Co. failed to recognize the new form given to the limestone by the crushing equipment and the more valuable commodity consequently created. Accordingly, we overrule Schumacher Stone Co. and hold that Stoneco’s equipment is used or designed to be used in manufacturing and that it qualifies for the R.C. 5733.061 investment credit.
In the instant case, Stoneco takes raw material, limestone, and converts it into a new form with new qualities and into a more valuable commodity, limestone aggregate. It converts a raw material that cannot be used for construction and transforms it into a product that can. Thus, Stoneco uses the crushing, sorting, and mixing equipment in manufacturing.
As to the quarrying equipment, such equipment is normally considered to be mining equipment and not manufacturing equipment. As explained below, we choose to apply an integrated plant test here in examining whether the quarrying equipment qualifies for the investment credit.
The statutes under review do not contain the term “directly,” as does the sales tax. This term has prevented us from applying the integrated plant test to the sales tax, to which we have instead applied the physical change test. Youngstown Bldg. Material & Fuel Co. v. Bowers (1958),
Thus, engines, machinery, tools, and implements that are synchronized into the manufacturing operation so that they are indispensable to the manufacture of the marketable commodity are used in manufacturing for the personal property tax and qualify for the R.C. 5733.061 investment credit.
Consequently, in the instant case, equipment with which Stoneco quarries the limestone qualifies for this credit. Stoneco could not produce aggregate without limestone, and the quarrying operation provides it. This operation is synchronized to the manufacture of aggregate, is indispensable to Stoneco’s manufacturing, and, therefore, is a part of Stoneco’s integrated plant. See, also, Rowe Contracting Co. v. State Tax Comm. (1972),
Accordingly, we reverse the BTA’s decision since it is unlawful.
Decision reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I respectfully dissent from the per curiam opinion. I do so, not because I do not agree with the substantive law announced by the majority, but because it requires us to overrule Schumacher Stone Co. v. Tax Comm. (1938),
