Austin, Nichols & Co. v. Oklahoma County Board of Tax-Roll Corrections

1978 OK 65, 578 P.2d 1200, 1978 Okla. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 9, 1978
Docket51243
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1978 OK 65 (Austin, Nichols & Co. v. Oklahoma County Board of Tax-Roll Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin, Nichols & Co. v. Oklahoma County Board of Tax-Roll Corrections, 1978 OK 65, 578 P.2d 1200, 1978 Okla. LEXIS 393 (Okla. 1978).

Opinion

BARNES, Justice:

This is an appeal by Appellants, licensed non-resident sellers of alcoholic beverages, who were assessed personal property taxes on goods (alcoholic beverages) temporarily stored at a warehouse in Oklahoma County until sold to licensed liquor wholesalers in Oklahoma and surrounding States. The facts were stipulated and only a question of law is presented — the proper construction of Article X, § 6A, Oklahoma Constitution.

That section separated into numbered clauses to facilitate discussion, is as follows:

“(1) All property consigned to a consignee in this State from outside this State to be forwarded to a point outside this State, which is entitled under the tariffs, rules, and regulations approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission to be forwarded at through rates from the point of origin to the point of destination, if not detained within this State for a period of more than ninety (90) days, shall be deemed to be property moving in interstate commerce, and no such property shall be subject to taxation in this State; (2) provided, that goods, wares and merchandise, whether or not moving on through rates, shall be deemed to move in interstate commerce, and not subject to taxation in this State if not detained more than nine (9) months where such goods, wares and merchandise are so held for assembly, storage, manufacturing, processing or fabricating purposes; (3) provided, further, that personal property consigned for sale within this State must be assessed as any other personal property.”

This section of our Constitution was adopted by the people on September 17, 1966.

The pertinent facts, stipulated to by the parties, are as hereinafter related: Each Appellant is administratively headquartered in New York, New York, and each ships its manufactured goods to Oklahoma from points outside Oklahoma other than New York. To facilitate the distribution and sale of Appellants’ goods to wholesalers, Appellants established an accommodation warehouse in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, where the goods are shipped and stored until sold to wholesalers in Oklahoma and surrounding States.

At the time of commencement of these proceedings, the County Assessor of Oklahoma County recognized that goods stored in Oklahoma County and sold by Appellants outside the State were exempt from taxation under Article X, § 6A, of the Oklahoma Constitution. Therefore, the scope of this appeal is limited to the question of the taxable status of the goods sold to wholesalers in Oklahoma.

Appellants’ sales to wholesalers are initiated by orders from the wholesalers. Wholesalers’ purchase orders may be forwarded from the wholesalers directly to Appellants or placed at the warehouse for transmission to Appellants. In either case, the decision to sell to the wholesaler is made by Appellants at their administrative headquarters and not by the warehouse. After processing the order and upon credit review by Appellants, if the goods are to be sold, Appellants order the warehouse to release the goods to the wholesalers. The wholesalers pick up the goods by truck at the warehouse.

Invoicing and payment is conducted directly between Appellants and the wholesalers. Title to the goods passes from Appellants directly to the wholesaler and does not pass to the warehouseman in the distribution process. Inventory figures indicate that the goods are not retained in the warehouse in excess of nine months prior to sale to wholesalers.

Appellants herein protested the addition of their merchandise to the Oklahoma County tax rolls on the ground that their goods were exempt from taxation under the second clause of Article X, § 6A, supra. Appellee, Oklahoma County Board of Tax-Roll Corrections, denied the exemption by its order of December 20, 1976. Each Appellant tendered the disputed taxes under protest to the Oklahoma County Treasurer.

*1202 Appellants then appealed to the District Court of Oklahoma County, and the case was submitted on an agreed stipulation of facts and briefs. On July 5, 1977, the Trial Court rendered its decision affirming the Board.

The Trial Court found that (1) Appellants’ goods, wares and merchandise shipped into Oklahoma County and stored for periods of less than nine months for sale to wholesalers in Oklahoma are not exempt from personal property taxes in Oklahoma County under Article X, § 6A, of the Oklahoma Constitution; (2) that the exemption granted by the second clause of § 6A is applicable only to goods, wares and merchandise shipped to points outside the State; (3) that the third clause of § 6A is indicative of the requirement that goods, wares and merchandise must be shipped to points outside the State of Oklahoma to be exempt under the second clause; and (4) that Appellants’ goods, wares and merchandise are consigned for sale in Oklahoma within the meaning of the third clause of § 6A and are not exempt from personal property taxes. From that judgment Appellants bring the present appeal.

The issue before this Court is whether the second clause of § 6A, supra, affords an exemption to “goods, wares and merchandise” shipped into Oklahoma from outside the State and detained in storage for periods of less than nine months without regard to the final destination of the shipment, or whether § 6A, supra, must be read to include an additional requirement that “goods, wares and merchandise” must leave the State to be exempt.

The Trial Court read into the second clause the requirement that the goods leave the State prior to the expiration of nine months.

Appellants contend the Trial Court erred, and that the plain language of the second clause of § 6A, supra, renders the goods tax exempt if they are not detained in storage more than nine months, whether or not sold to wholesalers in Oklahoma or outside the State. In support of this position, Appellants rely on In re Assessment of 1969, Crescent Precision Products, Inc., 514 P.2d 933 (Okl.1973), wherein we said:

“ * * * It is apparent that § 6A consists of three grammatically complete and independent clauses, each with its own subject, which are mutually supportive of and complementary to each other and yet each expressing a complete thought with no ambiguities or absurdities. There are no adjectives or other words in the second clause requiring or suggesting that it is so modified by the first clause as to require incorporation therein the words ‘consigned’ or ‘consignee’. The subject of the first clause is limited to property consigned; the subject of the second clause (‘goods, wares and merchandise’) is not so limited. If, for instance, the subject of the second clause had been ‘such property’, it would then have been necessary to refer to the first clause in order to determine what property was intended, but such is not the case. Insofar as the facts of this case are concerned, clauses 1 and 2, except as being mutually supportive of and complementary to each other, are independent and coordinate, having different subjects, and each capable of standing alone. It thus cannot be said that the first clause modifies the second clause or that the limitations of the first clause are ‘carried over’ into the second one.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1978 OK 65, 578 P.2d 1200, 1978 Okla. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-nichols-co-v-oklahoma-county-board-of-tax-roll-corrections-okla-1978.