Cherry v. Board of Review

26 N.W.2d 316, 238 Iowa 189, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 322
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 11, 1947
DocketNo. 46948.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 N.W.2d 316 (Cherry v. Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherry v. Board of Review, 26 N.W.2d 316, 238 Iowa 189, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 322 (iowa 1947).

Opinion

Majsttz, J.-

All of tbe evidence in this case appears in tbe form of an agreed stipulation. Howard H. Cherry, plaintiff herein, a resident of Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa, prior to and since 1942 was tbe owner of certain shares of stock —four thousand common and two hundred preferred — in the Cherry-Burrell Corporation, a foreign corporation incorporated in the state of Delaware, and engaged in the manufacturing and merchandising of certain equipment and articles used in the dairy industry and also in the buying and selling of various items connected with such industry. This corporation has three manufacturing plants: one at Cedar Rapids, Iowa; another at Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and a third at Little Falls, New York. It sold such products at the Cedar Rapids plant and also at about fourteen other places in the United States and outside of Iowa.11 Another was at Toronto, Canada. No sales were made at the Milwaukee or Little Falls plants. The general offices of the company were in Chicago.

Over protests of the plaintiff, the Board of Review of the City of Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa, assessed plaintiff’s stock as moneys and credits for the years 1942, 1943, 1944, and 1945. Proper appeals were taken to the district court of Linn County, Iowa. That court confirmed and approved the action of the assessing board. Plaintiff objected to the assessment on the ground that under the law the corporation, so far as the taxation of its stock was concerned, was a merchant rather than a manufacturer, by reason of the provisions .of section 6971, Code of 1939 (section 428.16, Code of 1946), and being such merchant its stock was exempt from taxation by virtue of section 6944, Code of 1939 (427.1, Code of 1946).

*191 Following the judgment and decree of the trial court this appeal was taken.

In this opinion we will refer to the Cherry-Burrell Corporation as the corporation; Howard H. Cherry, whose shares of stock were assessed, as the appellant; and the Board of Review of Linn County, Iowa, et al., as the appellees.

Appellant argues that in determining the question as to whether or not the corporation is to be classed as a merchant or as a manufacturer, for the purposes of taxation, the entire business of the corporation, both within and without the state, is to be considered. On the other hand, appellees claim that to determine such question the only business to be considered is that carried on in Iowa.

The trial court adopted the claim as set forth by the ap-pellees, holding that, considering the Iowa business only of the corporation, it was a manufacturer and not a merchant. This is the sole question in the case.

In determining this question certain statutes are involved. We have already referred to two of them. We think that section 6985, Code of 1939 (section 429.2, Code of 1946) is also to be considered. Following are the statutes referred to:

Section 429.2, Code of 1946, provides:

“Moneys — credits—annuities—bank notes — stock. Moneys, credits, and corporation shares or stocks, except as otherwise provided * * * shall be assessed and * * * shall be taxed upon the uniform basis throughout the state of fivb mills on the dollar of actual valuation, same to be assessed and collected where the owner resides.” (Italics supplied.)

Section 427.1, Code of 1946 (section 6944, Code of 1939), provides: 1

“Exemptions. The following classes of property shall not be taxed. * * * 20. Capital stock of utility companies. The shares of capital stock of telegraph and telephone companies, freight line and equipment companies, transmission line companies as defined in section 437.1, express companies, corporar tions engaged in merchandising as defined in section 428.16, domestic corporations engaged in manufacturing as defined in *192 section 428.20, and corporations not organized for pecuniary profit.” (Italics supplied.)

Section 428.18, Code of 1946 (section 6971, Code of 1939), provides:

“ ‘Merchant’ defined: Any person, firm, or corporation owning or having in his possession or under his control within the state, with authority to sell the same, any personal property purchased with a view to its being sold, or which has been consigned to him from any place out of this state to be sold within the same, or to be delivered or shipped by him within or without this state, except a warehouseman as defined in section 542.58, shall be held to be a merchant for the purposes of this title.”

Considering the above statutes in the light of the stipulated facts, it will readily be seen that the question for determination is whether or not the corporation is a merchant within the meaning of said section 428.16, Code of 1946.

Before proceeding with the consideration of such matter, we call attention to a rule of law of our state respecting the taxation of property and the exemption therefrom. Taxation of property being the rule, the burden is upon the one claiming such exemption to show that the property is. exempt within the meaning of the statute. Board of Directors v. Board of Supervisors, 228 Iowa 544, 293 N. W. 38; Readlyn Hospital v. Hoth, 223 Iowa 341, 272 N. W. 90; Lichty v. Board of Review, 230 Iowa 756, 298 N. W. 654.

. In this case the burden is upon appellant to show that the stock sought to be held exempt comes within the rule of the statute. As concerns the question of exemption of shares of its stock from taxation, a foreign corporation cannot be both a manufacturer and a merchant. Lichty v. Board of Review, supra; Sturges v. Carter, 114 U. S. 511, 5 S. Ct. 1014, 29 L. Ed. 240.

The business of the corporation was widespread. It was in the field of dairy equipment and supplies and embraced both manufacturing such products and buying from others for resale. But one of the manufacturing plants of the corporation is located in Iowa, that being at Cedar Rapids, the others being *193 at Milwaukee, 'Wisconsin, and Little Falls, New York. At the last two manufacturing plants there were no sales divisions. At the Cedar Rapids plant there was a sales division. Many sales divisions or branches were outside the state of Iowa. As regards the goods manufactured at the three plants, they were transferred by the plant manufacturing same to the sales division of the corporation where required for the filling of orders, by transfer of inventory, these being made at the actual manufacturing costs.

As we understand this method — that is, the transfer by inventory of the manufactured items at the manufacturing plants at Milwaukee and Little Falls — it was simply a bookkeeping matter carried on between various divisional organizations within the corporation. Such transfers did not divest the products of being manufactured products of the corporation, no matter when or where sold. Such products would necessarily be classed as sales of products manufactured by the corporation.

Appellant stresses the claim that it is the sum total of the corporation’s business which determines the value of the stock held by him in the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.W.2d 316, 238 Iowa 189, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherry-v-board-of-review-iowa-1947.