Colbert Mill & Feed Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission

1941 OK 12, 109 P.2d 504, 188 Okla. 366, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 21, 1941
DocketNo. 29834.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1941 OK 12 (Colbert Mill & Feed Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission) 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
Colbert Mill & Feed Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission, 1941 OK 12, 109 P.2d 504, 188 Okla. 366, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 14 (Okla. 1941).

Opinion

HURST, J.

The question for decision here is whether, under the Consumers and Users Tax Act of 1937, art. 10, ch. 66, S. L. 1937, 68 O.S.A. §§ 1249-1249w, sales of specially prepared or mixed feed fed to livestock in preparing them for market or slaughter are taxable.

Plaintiff paid, under protest, the taxes for August and October, 1937, and filed this action to recover the taxes so paid. From a judgment in favor of the Oklahoma Tax Commission, this appeal was taken.

The record discloses that the plaintiff operates feeding pens adjacent to the Oklahoma City stockyards. It receives and feeds livestock, principally cattle, belonging to others and charges for the *367 feed used and also makes a separate charge for the service. The period of intensive feeding by it is usually from 40 to 60 days. The result of such feeding is that the livestock take on added weight and the quality of the flesh when converted into beef is greatly improved, and is known as corn-fed beef. Animals so fed are easily distinguishable from those not so fed, and command a better price per pound.

We here set out the provisions of the act having a bearing on the question presented, and around which the argument of the parties revolves (the italics are ours):

“The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this Act, shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this Section, except where the context clearly indicates a different meaning: . . . (h) The terms ‘consumer’ or ‘user’ shall mean the person to whom the sale is made, or to whom taxable services are furnished.” (Sec. 4.)
“There is hereby levied an excise tax of two (2%) per centum, except where a greater rate is hereinafter provided, upon the gross proceeds or gross receipts derived from the sale subsequent to May 31, 1937, to consumers or users, for use or consumption, of the following: (a) Tangible personal property. . . .” (Sec. 5.)
“There is hereby specifically exempted from the tax imposed by this Act the following: . . . (p) Gross receipts or gross proceeds derived from sales by wholesalers or jobbers to retail merchants for resale purposes.” (Sec. 6.)
“In order for goods, wares, merchandise, and property to be classified as having been sold for resale, such articles must be the object of the subject matter to be sold and not articles that become incidental to the sale of other articles, such as wrapping, packing, crating or other incidental materials.
“Goods, wares, merchandise, and property sold for use in manufacturing, compounding, processing, assembling or preparing for sale, can be classified as having been sold for the purposes of resale or the subject matter of resale only in the event such goods, wares, merchandise, or property becomes a recognizable, integral part of the manufactured, compounded, processed, assembled or prepared products. Such sales of goods, wares, merchandise, and property not conforming to this requirement are classified for the purpose of this Act as being ‘for consumption or use’.” (Paragraphs 3 and 4 of sec. 14.)

The plaintiff relies principally on the language used in the fourth subdivision of section 14, last above quoted. It contends that the feed was sold for use in “processing” or “preparing for salé” the livestock so fed by it, and that the feed so fed becomes “a recognizable integral part” of the finished product. It also contends that section 14 relates to the section which levies the tax, not to the exemption provision, and should be strictly construed against the tax. On the contrary, the Tax Commission denies such contention, and argues that section 14 relates to the exemption provision, and should be strictly construed against the plaintiff.

1. We are inclined to the position taken by the Tax Commission, and believe the trial court correctly held that the sales of the feed are taxable. We must assume that the Legislature intended the words used in the statute to be understood in their ordinary sense, except where they were given a different meaning in the act. Section 24, O. S. 1931, 25 O.S.A. § 1. The words “processing,” “preparing for sale”, and “recognizable, integral part” are not defined in the act. It is our duty to construe the various portions of the act, if possible, so as to make all parts harmonious. Bankers Union Life Ins. Co. v. Read, 182 Okla. 103, 77 P. 2d 26.

a. The word “resale” is not found in section 5, the provision levying the tax. The expression “for resale purposes” is found in section 6, which contains the exemption provisions. Then in section 14 (the first two paragraphs of which have to do with paying taxes as required by the act), we find in the fourth paragraph thereof the provision on which the plaintiff relies, and it contains the expressions “purposes of re *368 sale” and “subject matter of resale.” Said paragraph standing alone is meaningless, as it purports neither to levy a tax nor make an exemption. The last sentence of the paragraph makes it clear that articles of property not coming under the classification provided in the first sentence of the paragraph are classified “for consumption or use,” which we must assume means they were subjected to the tax under the language used in section 5, “for use or consumption.” We are, therefore, of the opinion that the first sentence in the fourth paragraph of section 14 refers back to the exemption provision, since the word “resale” is found only in sections 6 and 14, and it does not refer back to section 5, which levies the tax.

(b) Was the feed sold for use in “processing” or “preparing for sale” the livestock? We think not. In Webster’s New International Dictionary, Second Edition, 1939, the word “process” is defined as follows:

“To subject to some special process or treatment. . . . Specif, (a) To heat, as fruit, with steam under pressure so as to cook or sterilize; (b) To subject (esp. raw material) to a process of manufacture, development, preparation for the market, etc.; to convert into marketable form, as livestock by slaughtering, grain by milling, cotton by spinning, milk by pasteurizing, fruits and vegetables by sorting and repacking. ...”

Under this definition the feed was processed when it was mixed and made ready for sale for feeding purposes. It was consumed, not processed, when it was fed to the livestock. A small part of -it was changed, by nature, and converted into flesh and part into improving the quality of all the flesh of the animal. The case of Kennedy v. State Board, 224 Iowa, 405, 276 N. W. 205, is in point. It was there held that the use of fertilizer added to the ground to stimulate the growth of vegetables and increase the quantity produced was not a “processing of tangible personal property” as that term was used in the Iowa Sales Tax Law so as to exempt the sale of the fertilizer from the tax.

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1941 OK 12, 109 P.2d 504, 188 Okla. 366, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colbert-mill-feed-co-v-oklahoma-tax-commission-okla-1941.