Armour & Co. v. Glander

94 N.E.2d 117, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 82
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1950
DocketNo. 16296
StatusPublished

This text of 94 N.E.2d 117 (Armour & Co. v. Glander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armour & Co. v. Glander, 94 N.E.2d 117, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 82 (bta 1950).

Opinion

[83]*83OPINION

This is an appeal from a final order of the Tax Commissioner made on June 6, 1949, wherein an application for review and redetermination of a previous order made on May 12, 1949, was denied and the former order was permitted to stand unmodified. The cause now comes on for further and final consideration upon the Commissioner’s transcript, the notice of appeal, the transcript of the evidence adduced at a hearing had before the Board and an attorney examiner on October 7, 1949, oral arguments and brief of counsel. The appeal concerns the validity of a tax assessment against appellant for the year 1946 as a freight line company under the provisions of §§5416, 5463 and 5468 GC, which tax the proportion of the capital stock of a freight line company represented by its transitory rolling stock owned and used in Ohio.

It is maintained that the Tax Commissioner erred in his order or orders complained of, and that his finding presents three questions of law. Each query, with its accompanying operative facts, will be separately stated and considered. The facts are found within the Commissioner’s order, the transcript, a stipulation between counsel and record made. They are not in dispute.

First: Is a meat packing company “engaged in the business of operating cars for the transportation of freight” when it owns and uses refrigerator cars exclusively for making inter-company shipments of its own perishable products and for making deliveries of its products to customers?

Appellant is an Illinois corporation with its principal place, of business located in Chicago. It purchases, slaughters and sells at wholesale and delivers its products to purchasers. It has 34 packing plants located strategically to sources of supply. It maintains 251 refrigerator warehouses located near consuming centers, five of which are located in Ohio. Its products are shipped in refrigerator cars from its packing houses to its branch houses and customers. It also makes distribution from its packing plants and branch houses to customers directly by refrigerated motor trucks. During the years 1912 to 1934 Armour built or acquired 4,635 refrigerator cars at a cost of $8,983,184.32 which it owned and possessed on April 30, 1946, and which had a book value of $1,130,383.54 on said date. This book value was produced by deduction from cost price of claimed depreciation and destroyed cars. Its rolling stock was never leased or loaned to any other enterprise, but was used solely in the distribution of its own products. Armour’s investment in refrigerator cars on April [84]*8430, 1946, represented less than % of 1% of its total assets. Its total capital on May 1, 1946, as shown by its balance sheet, was $324,794,254.00. Armour and Company within itself maintains a division that is called Armour Car Lines which operates that branch of its business. It owns or owned considerable property, both real and personal, in Ohio in 1946 upon which it paid all taxes levied and assessed. This did not include, however, its refrigerator railroad cars. It had paid its franchise tax and was authorized to do business in Ohio. During 1946 its cars operated within and over and across the state. It made report of its rolling stock in 1946 as a freight line company.

Upon these facts appellant asserts that it was not engaged in the business of operating cars within the ordinary meaning of the language found in §5416 GC. It is said that its principal business and concern is the slaughtering of livestock and selling its packing house products at wholesale. It says that inter-company shipments and delivery to customers is but a fragmentary part of its packing business and that its refrigerator cars are mere tools of its trade and not subdivisions of its business. As a matter of precedent it relies almost entirely upon the reasoning and conclusion found in Southern Express Co. v. R. M. Rose Co., 124 Ga. 581. It, in substance, urges that it is one of three like enterprises (The Pullman Company and Wilson and Company), the latter of which owns and operates refrigerator cars in and across Ohio for its convenience and profit and which do not come within the scope, purpose, meaning and intent of the General Code sections under consideration. If this be true, then their migratory rolling stock (refrigerator cars) is not subject to this imposed tax in Ohio, but is tax exempt by reason of legislative omission. An examination of the Georgia case discloses that nothing said therein is responsive to the issue herein presented. Whatever is said in that case concerns the right, by ordinance, of a chartered city to ordain that delivery of liquor by a common carrier is a separate business subject to a license tax.

Sec. 5416 GC provides, in part, in paragraphs 1 and 6 thereof, that:

“Any person or persons, firm or firms, co-partnership or voluntary association, joint stock association, company or corporation, wherever organized or incorporated:
“When engaged in the business of operating cars for the transportation of freight, whether such freight is owned by such company, or any other person or company, over any [85]*85railway line or lines in whole or in part within this state, such line or lines not being owned, leased or operated by such company, whether such cars be termed box, flat, coal, or tank, stock, gondola, furniture or refrigerator cars, or by any other name, is a freight line company;” (Emphasis ours.)

Just because appellant owns its cars and carries its own freight as an adjunct of its principal business, it insists that it is not a freight line company amenable to the property tax upon its cars during their sojourn in Ohio. Ownership of car is not made the test. “Operating cars” is the term employed.

One may operate his own cars as well as those belonging to another. Ownership of the freight carried is made immaterial. Is the fact that Armour’s freight line or refrigerator car business is but Vz of 1% of its invested capital so fragmentary as to be inconsequential? If so, what percentage is the line of demarcation? As the question presented is a law question, the latter query cannot be answered by resort to the measuring stick known as the length of the chancellor’s foot. What the statute says must bring forth the answer. It makes no percentage or degree of a company’s activity in freight line business the test, but prescribes that all so engaged are freight line companies whether large or small. Some steel companies own and operate coal mines. Can it be that they are engaged only in steel production just because they may be pleased to say that their principal business is steel, not coal? Appellant is a 324 million dollar company, and even if it has but 2 million of its capital structure invested in refrigerator cars, that in itself, even in these times, is far from being an inconsiderable business. An organization may engage in numerous undertakings as is done by Standard Oil, DuPonts and Atlantic and Pacific, the latter of which the Federal Government would now disintegrate. The Farm Bureau sells insurance. Is it not in the insurance business just because its principal business is along other lines? Armour persists in its refrigerator car business. It must be advantageous and profitable in the accomplishment of its major purpose. It undoubtedly gives it an advantage over its competitors like Swift and Cudahay, who do not engage in refrigerator car ownership. We find no merit in appellant’s first contention. It is, in its refrigerator car operation, a freight line company under the Ohio statutes.

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Related

Pullman's Palace Car Co. v. Pennsylvania
141 U.S. 18 (Supreme Court, 1891)
Southern Express Co. v. Rose Co.
53 S.E. 185 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 N.E.2d 117, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armour-co-v-glander-bta-1950.