ARMCO STEEK CORP. v. Dept. of Assess. & Tax.

202 A.2d 741, 236 Md. 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 28, 1964
Docket[No. 380, September Term, 1963.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 A.2d 741 (ARMCO STEEK CORP. v. Dept. of Assess. & Tax.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ARMCO STEEK CORP. v. Dept. of Assess. & Tax., 202 A.2d 741, 236 Md. 168 (Md. 1964).

Opinion

236 Md. 168 (1964)
202 A.2d 741

ARMCO STEEL CORPORATION
v.
STATE DEPARTMENT OF ASSESSMENTS AND TAXATION

[No. 380, September Term, 1963.]

Court of Appeals of Maryland.

Decided July 28, 1964.

The cause was argued before HENDERSON, HAMMOND, PRESCOTT, HORNEY and MARBURY, JJ.

John Henry Lewin and Robert M. Thomas, with whom were Venable, Baetjer & Howard on the brief, for the appellant.

George W. Baker, Jr., with whom were Thomas B. Finan, Attorney General, Joseph Allen, City Solicitor of Baltimore, and Martin B. Greenfeld, Assistant City Solicitor, on the brief, for the appellees.

PRESCOTT, J., delivered the opinion of the Court.

Having successfully "bearded the lion" on two previous occasions[1] to the tune of some one million or more dollars, appellant makes its third bid to avert paying to Baltimore City *172 a tax on certain of its tangible personal property. The origin of this litigation occurred in December, 1956, when the Mayor and City Council (Mayor and Council), by Ordinance 643, repealed a tax exemption extended to certain personal property and raw materials of manufacturers.[2] Section 4 of the Ordinance continued the exemption in favor of "ores and unrefined metals shipped into the City for processing or refining purposes, and metals derived therefrom in the hands of the refiner * * *." The meaning of these terms as used in Section 4 is fully explained in Armco I. In April, 1958, the Mayor and Council adopted Ordinance 1340, which reinstated, by stages, the old general manufacturers' exemption, and continued the full exemption in favor of "ores and unrefined metals" in practically the same, if not the same, language as that used in Section 4 of Ordinance 643. See Section 50 (e) of Ordinance 1340. In Armco I, supra, we held that Armco qualified for full exemption under the terms of the ordinance. In December, 1959, twenty-four days after our decision in Armco I, the Mayor and Council ordained Ordinance 156. Sections 2 and 3 of that Ordinance, which would have applied retroactively to the years 1958 and 1959, were considered and found to be "ineffective" in Armco II. Section 4 of Ordinance 156, which became effective on January 1, 1960, repealed and reordained with amendments Section 50 (e) of Ordinance 1340 so as to read as follows:

"Provided, further, that in the year 1960 and each year thereafter, ores and unrefined metals shipped into the City for refining by others than the owners thereof, and the metals derived therefrom, while the said ores and unrefined metals, and metals derived therefrom, are in the hands of the refiner, shall be exempt from assessment and taxation for all ordinary municipal purposes * * *. The term `refining' as used herein, means the reduction of ores and unrefined metals to a fine and pure state, unmixed and not alloyed with other metals or compounds."

*173 Armco claimed an exemption under the above section for 1960 and 1961 (after 1961 the full exemption was restored) on its ores and scrap metals which were shipped into the City for manufacture of its various grades of stainless steel. The parties stipulated as to the assessed value of said ores and metals; that they were owned by Armco; that they were not reduced to a fine and pure state, unmixed and not alloyed with other metals or compounds; and that Armco's operations in 1960 and 1961 were the same as those described by this Court in Armco I.

The State Department of Assessments and Taxation (the successor of the State Tax Commission) denied Armco's claim for exemption, and this denial was sustained by the Maryland Tax Court and the Baltimore City Court, Judge Prendergast presiding. Armco has again appealed.

Judge Prendergast below quite accurately observed "the record is quite voluminous, including not only extensive testimony * * *, but innumerable exhibits * * *." (The record extract contains 546 pages; appellant's brief 100 pages; appellees' brief 110 pages; and appellant's reply brief 30 pages.) He then stated the case could be determined by answering three questions, and proceeded to answer them. Although the "questions presented" by the appellant are, in reality, merely different alleged reasons as to why certain provisions of Section 4 of Ordinance 156 are invalid and hence there is but one basic question to be answered (Are certain of the provisions of Section 4 invalid?), we shall consider the questions as presented by appellant and answer them.

It should be noted at this time that Section 5 of Ordinance 156 provides that in case "it be judicially determined that any word, phrase, clause [etc.] * * * is invalid, the remaining provisions * * * shall not be affected thereby * * *." It is Armco's aim to have the provisions in said Section 4 "by others than the owners thereof" and the definition of "refining" stricken down, and, if this be done, Armco claims that it is entitled to the exemption under the section as it now reads.

We approach a determination of whether Section 4 is valid or invalid (other sections of the ordinance are not challenged), not from a consideration as to whether it is a classification or *174 subclassification of property for the purposes of taxation, but from a consideration of what it really is. In its present form, Section 4 is no more and no less than a section of an ordinance which grants a total exemption from taxation "for all ordinary municipal purposes" to certain specified classes of property. Even before the amendment of Article 15 of the Declaration of Rights in 1915, when it read "every other person [except paupers] * * * ought to contribute his proportion of public taxes for the support of government, according to his actual worth in real or personal property," exemptions have been upheld when not constituting an arbitrary discrimination in favor of a particular person or class. Judge Alfred S. Niles, in his work "Maryland Constitutional Law, at page 32, says concerning exemptions in Maryland: "This exception seems to be somewhat hard to maintain on principle, but as our court has said, the power of the legislature to grant such exemption `has been exercised from the origin of the government.'" When approached in the manner mentioned above, many of the alleged illusory and ephemeral constitutional objections to the section, like the Arabs, "silently steal away," although the analogy between the tests to be applied in determining the validity of an exemption of property from taxation and a classification of property for the purpose of taxation is apparent.

I and VI

These questions may conveniently be considered together. Armco opens its attack against the validity of Section 4 by claiming the exemption provided for therein was an "ad hoc" and "tailored" one to grant relief to only one company, and this was done by a "special" ordinance instead of a general one as required by Section 6, subsection (33) (e) of the Baltimore City Charter. The City answers by stating Section 4 was not adopted pursuant to Section 6, subsection (33) (e), but was adopted under the authority of subsection 33 1/2, and, in any event, it was not a "special" ordinance.

The respective contentions are partially answered in Kimball-Tyler v. Balto. City, supra, 214 Md.

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202 A.2d 741, 236 Md. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armco-steek-corp-v-dept-of-assess-tax-md-1964.