City of Phoenix v. Marathon Steel Co.

722 P.2d 341, 150 Ariz. 173, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 864
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedNovember 7, 1985
DocketNo. 1 CA-CIV 7363
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 722 P.2d 341 (City of Phoenix v. Marathon Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Phoenix v. Marathon Steel Co., 722 P.2d 341, 150 Ariz. 173, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 864 (Ark. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

OGG, Judge.

The City of Phoenix appeals a trial court judgment upholding an administrative hearing officer’s ruling reducing a city privilege license tax assessment by the sum of $538,954.26. We affirm, and further grant appellee Marathon Steel Company’s request for an award of attorneys’ fees pursuant to Rule 25, Arizona Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure.

The City conducted a review of Marathon’s sales of certain steel products to Arizona Public Service and the Salt River Project during the period from March 1, 1975 through May 31, 1978. As a result of that review, the City assessed an additional tax liability, including interest and penalties, in the amount of $586,312.62 through November 30, 1978. Pursuant to § 14-29 of the Phoenix City Code, Marathon filed a petition for redetermination of the assessment with the City Auditor.

The matter was tried before a hearing officer for the City Auditor’s department on October 3, 1979. After hearing the evidence and considering written memoranda submitted by the parties, the hearing officer issued a lengthy determination letter on October 30, 1980 ruling that the sales at issue were exempt from the privilege license tax pursuant to former § 14-40(1) of the Phoenix City Code.1 Although Marathon had advanced other bases for its petition for redetermination, the hearing officer did not consider them. On November 24, 1980, the City Treasurer issued a letter reducing the original assessment by $538,-954.26 in accordance with the hearing officer’s ruling.

The City thereafter commenced the instant action in superior court pursuant to § 14-19(f) of the Phoenix City Code. Both sides moved for summary judgment, having stipulated that the transcript of the administrative hearing would be used as the factual predicate on which the court would decide those motions, subject to supplementation by depositions, exhibits and affidavits if necessary.

[175]*175The trial court’s minute entry ruling stated in pertinent part:

THE COURT FINDS as a fact that the materials sold APS, PVNGS and SRP were not:
“the same as or similar to tangible personal property being sold through distributors, jobbers, wholesalers, retailers or other persons than those substantially and principally engaging or continuing in the actual manufacturing, processing, fabricating, modifying or assembling thereof____”
The Court thus rules that Defendant is entitled to the exemption as provided in Section 14-40(1) to the Phoenix City Code for the sales to APS, PVNGS and SRP which form the basis of Plaintiff’s Complaint herein.
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED granting Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED denying Plaintiff’s Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment.

Formal judgment was entered in favor of Marathon on August 29, 1983 and this appeal followed.

The record reveals the following material facts. The sales by Marathon to APS comprised steel products for use in constructing the Palo Verde nuclear generating station and the coal-fired Cholla and Ocotillo generating stations. The steel products purchased for use at Palo Verde included steel reinforcing bar (rebar) and structural steel items like pipe supports, ladders, platforms, structural steel members, plate girders and polar crane rails.

Marathon did not act as a middleman with respect to any of these items. Instead, it fabricated each item from raw steel in accordance with the requirements of the drawings and specifications for Palo Verde. All these items were incorporated into the Palo Verde “power block”, which comprises the containment, radwaste, control, diesel generator, auxiliary, fuel and turbine structural components of that portion of the plant which is designed to generate electricity. The fabricated steel products other than rebar were each designed to fit individually designated locations on a design drawing and an erection drawing. Each piece could generally fit only one place at the construction site. None of those pieces would have been available through distributors, jobbers, wholesalers or retailers, and there is no competition between Marathon and distributors, jobbers, wholesalers or retailers in the sale of that kind of steel product.

Marathon also produced the rebar used at Palo Verde. In doing so, Marathon did the engineering work, prepared detailed drawings, fabricated and finished the rebar according to the specifications and requirements for Palo Verde. The rebar incorporated into Palo Verde was required to meet Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) standards relating to size, chemical composition, uniform quality and tracing requirements. Like the structural steel items Marathon sold for use at Palo Verde, rebar which met the NRC standards would have been unavailable from distributors, jobbers, wholesalers or retailers in Arizona. Businesses of that kind neither compete nor care to compete with manufacturers or fabricators in providing that kind of rebar.

The steel products APS bought from Marathon for the Cholla plant comprised steel tanks, flue gas ductwork and supports, and rebar used to reinforce the foundations necessary to support heavy pieces of generating equipment. Almost every piece of rebar used at Cholla was subjected to a specific bending schedule. The steel for the Ocotillo plant was used in an air preheater draining system. None of these steel products would have been available from a distributor, wholesaler or jobber. This type of steel would only have been sold by a fabricator. There is no competition between wholesalers, jobbers or distributors on the one hand, and fabricators on the other, for the placement of orders for such items.

The steel products SRP bought from Marathon for the Coronado generating station included rebar for structural support; breeching and ductwork; structural steel [176]*176for the rotary car dumper building, ash pipe supports, scrubber ductwork supports, and the coal silo bay; and fabricated steel for the sulphur dioxide scrubber reaction mix tanks. None of the fabricated steel was available from distributors, jobbers, wholesalers or retailers.

The rebar used in each of the generating stations was required to meet specifications relating to size, chemical composition, length and shape. All the rebar fabricated and sold by Marathon was No. 18, meaning that it was 18/8ths inches in diameter. It was undisputed that only a fabricator like Marathon would sell rebar of that size. Further, Marathon did not merely purvey the rebar but also subjected it to fabrication processes of various kinds, including cutting it to specified lengths and bending it into loops, stirrups and other shapes.

The trial court found that the steel in question was not the same as or similar to tangible personal property sold by distributors, jobbers, wholesalers or retailers. It accordingly ruled that the sales in question were exempt under former § 14-40(1) of the Phoenix City Code. The City challenges this ruling on appeal only as it applies to Marathon’s sales of rebar. The City notes that the evidence tended to show that jobbers and distributors in the Phoenix area also sell rebar. Although the rebar Marathon sold APS and SRP was not “the same as” rebar handled by jobbers, distributors, wholesalers or retailers, the City argues that it was still rebar and thus was “similar” to it within the meaning of § 14-40(1). Other than its citation to

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Bluebook (online)
722 P.2d 341, 150 Ariz. 173, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-phoenix-v-marathon-steel-co-arizctapp-1985.