County of Franklin, Virginia v. Underwood Logging, LLC, d/b/a Underwood Logging

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 2025
Docket0092243
StatusUnpublished

This text of County of Franklin, Virginia v. Underwood Logging, LLC, d/b/a Underwood Logging (County of Franklin, Virginia v. Underwood Logging, LLC, d/b/a Underwood Logging) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Franklin, Virginia v. Underwood Logging, LLC, d/b/a Underwood Logging, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges AtLee, Athey and White UNPUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

COUNTY OF FRANKLIN, VIRGINIA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0092-24-3 JUDGE KIMBERLEY SLAYTON WHITE JULY 15, 2025 UNDERWOOD LOGGING, LLC, d/b/a UNDERWOOD LOGGING

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FRANKLIN COUNTY James J. Reynolds, Judge

Christopher S. Dadak (Guynn Waddell, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Mitchell P. Goldstein (C. Steven Setliff; Setliff Law, P.C., on brief), for appellee.

This case involves a dispute between a logging company and a county government. At

the heart of the dispute are two issues. First, at what rate should the county assess the equipment

of the logging company. Second, for what years was the equipment of the logging company

located in the county and subject to the county’s taxation. On the first issue, the trial court

correctly ruled that the applicable rate was the machinery and tools rate but improperly found

that the rate only applied to a portion of the company’s equipment. On the second issue, the trial

court’s conclusion that the company’s equipment was located outside of the county in years

2020, 2021, and 2022, was supported by the evidence. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND

Underwood Logging, LLC, is a timber harvesting and chipping company with its

principal place of business in Franklin County. Underwood performs harvesting and chipping

operations in several other counties, including Pittsylvania County. Underwood’s operations

involve cutting timber, processing trees into logs, pulpwood, and biomass chips, and transporting

those products to mills. Underwood primarily stored the relevant equipment at its job sites

which were described in its timber harvest notifications forms (“Harvest Forms”) and Form 1034

Virginia Forest Products Tax Returns (“1034 Form”).

Underwood begins a job when it receives a call from a landowner or a mill requesting

Underwood to cut timber down from their land. Before Underwood can begin cutting timber

down at a job site, it builds a road, if needed, and a landing where the felled trees can be

processed. Underwood then uses a cutter to cut the trees, a skidder to transport the trees to the

landing, and a loader to delimb the trees. After the trees are cut into logs, Underwood takes what

is left of the trees and feeds them into a chipper that produces chips. About 95% of

Underwood’s jobs involve the production of logs, pulpwood, and chips. The remaining 5% of

jobs may only produce logs and/or pulpwood. Underwood does not have a separate business unit

or business line that is dedicated to chipping operations, and it does not file a separate tax return

for its chipping operations.

In 2019, Underwood registered with the Commonwealth of Virginia Department of

Taxation as a forestry severer1 in order to pay the Forest Products Tax pursuant to Code

§ 58.1-1600 et seq. (“Forest Products Tax” or “FPT”). An entity that is registered as a severer

and pays the FPT is entitled to have its “[m]achinery or tools and repair parts therefor or

1 Under Code § 58.1-1601, “severer” means any person in the Commonwealth of Virginia that fells, cuts, or otherwise separates timber or any other such forest product from the soil. -2- replacements thereof, used directly in the harvesting of forest products for sale or for use as a

component part of a product to be sold” taxed at a rate that “shall not exceed that applicable

generally to the machinery and tools.” See Code § 58.1-3508.

Underwood uses all of its forestry equipment when it is in the field for a job. Thus, when

Underwood is in the field, the location of the job is also the location of the forestry equipment.

The locations of Underwood’s job sites are documented in Harvest Forms submitted to the

Virginia Department of Forestry to inform it when and where Underwood has started a job, as

well as 1034 Forms, filed with the Virginia Department of Taxation.

Underwood’s Harvest Forms show that Underwood began a job in Pittsylvania County on

December 31, 2019, and notified the Virginia Department of Forestry of that work January 2,

2020. Underwood then began a job in Franklin County on January 8, 2020.

In 2020, Underwood began storing its equipment in Pittsylvania County when it was not

in use at a job site, believing it could receive a more favorable tax treatment in Pittsylvania

County than in Franklin County. Pittsylvania County assessed personal property taxes on

Underwood’s equipment for the tax year 2020, and Underwood paid those taxes. Underwood’s

Harvest Forms show that Underwood began a job in Pittsylvania County on September 30, 2020,

and then a job in Franklin County on February 4, 2021.

In June 2021, Underwood purchased real property in Pittsylvania County. Prior to that

purchase, Underwood did not own or lease any property outside of Franklin County. Underwood

now stores its equipment on the Pittsylvania County property when it is not in use at a job site.

For the first quarter of 2020, Underwood reported on its 1034 Forms that it was only

harvesting in Franklin County. Its Harvest Forms showed jobs in Franklin County and in Henry

County. In the first quarter of 2021, Underwood reported only harvesting in Franklin County,

and Harvest Forms confirm that Underwood did not have any harvests outside of Franklin

-3- County in the first quarter of 2021. Underwood did not have any harvests in Pittsylvania County

in 2021. In the first quarter of 2022, Underwood reported only harvesting in Henry County on

the 1034 Forms. Its Harvest Forms showed a job in Franklin County in March 2022. Harvest

Forms provided by Underwood and stipulated by the parties show that, from 2019 to 2022, 66%

of Underwood’s harvest acreage was in Franklin County and 8% was in Pittsylvania County.

Underwood paid the Commonwealth of Virginia the FPT on the logs, pulpwood, biomass

chips, and fuel chips that it produced during the years 2018-2022.2 Franklin County, however,

assessed Underwood’s forestry equipment from 2018-2022 at the heavy equipment rate of $1.89

per $100 in assessed value, which is higher than the machinery and tools rate, reasoning that

Underwood only paid the FPT on its chipping operations, which involved biomass and fuel

chips.

Underwood challenged Franklin County’s tax assessment for the years 2020 through

2022, claiming that its equipment had been located in Pittsylvania County on 2020, 2021, and

2022’s tax days.3 For tax years 2018-2022, Underwood also challenged Franklin County’s tax

rate, arguing that its payment of the forest products tax barred Franklin County from taxing its

equipment at a rate higher than Franklin County taxed machinery and tools.4

After a hearing, the circuit court found that, for tax purposes, Underwood’s equipment

was located in Pittsylvania County for tax years 2020 through 2022. The circuit court noted that

2 Underwood’s customers paid the Commonwealth of Virginia the FPT on the logs and pulpwood that Underwood produced for those years, thus satisfying all that was due to the Commonwealth. 3 Underwood’s first complaint only contested the 2020 and 2021 tax assessments. Underwood’s second complaint broadened the challenge to “tax year 2020 . . . all future tax years . . .

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County of Franklin, Virginia v. Underwood Logging, LLC, d/b/a Underwood Logging, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-franklin-virginia-v-underwood-logging-llc-dba-underwood-vactapp-2025.