Exxon Corp. v. Schofield

583 So. 2d 1195, 1991 WL 119718
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 1991
DocketCA 90 1074
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 583 So. 2d 1195 (Exxon Corp. v. Schofield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Exxon Corp. v. Schofield, 583 So. 2d 1195, 1991 WL 119718 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

583 So.2d 1195 (1991)

EXXON CORPORATION
v.
Otha Lynn SCHOFIELD, Director of Finance for the City of Baton Rouge and the Parish of East Baton Rouge.

No. CA 90 1074.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

June 27, 1991.
Writ Denied November 1, 1991.

Robert Roland, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant Exxon Corp.

David R. Cassidy, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellant Otha Schofield, Director of Finance for City of Baton Rouge, etc.

Before SAVOIE, CRAIN and FOIL, JJ.

FOIL, Judge.

Exxon Corporation (Exxon) filed this suit to recover sales and use taxes paid under protest, claiming that use of certain materials comes under various exclusions of the tax ordinance. The defendant taxing authority, Otha Lynn Schofield, Director of Finance for the City of Baton Rouge and the Parish of East Baton Rouge (City-Parish), answered Exxon's petition and reconvened for 10% attorney's fees on all *1196 taxes, interest and penalties. The parties later stipulated to a refund of the amount paid pending adjudication of the matter.

Exxon manufactures and sells certain polyethylene and rubber products produced in its plastics and chemical plants at its Baton Rouge Refinery. The City-Parish claimed taxes are owed on certain materials utilized by Exxon in the manufacture, packaging and shipping of its products. After trial, in written reasons for judgment, the trial court ruled that no taxes were owed by Exxon. Subsequently, in amended reasons for judgment, the court issued the following three rulings:

(1) Initiators and chain transfer agents—These materials form an integral and identifiable part of the polymer produced and are purchased for "further processing" under the terms of the Parish ordinance. They are thus excluded from taxation.

(2) Ethylene, propylene and HOF (Heavy OXO Fraction)—The temporary detour of these materials through the refrigeration unit is not a taxable use because all of the product is ultimately sold and the product is then taxed at the point of sale. Imposition of the use tax would be a duplicate tax, which is prohibited by City-Parish ordinance.

(3) Packaging materials—Exxon is a "dealer" and, as such, should have collected sales tax for these "retail sales" from its customers. Under the ordinance, Exxon is liable for failure to collect the tax. Exxon owes the City-Parish $748,719 plus interest.

Exxon appealed, urging error in ruling 3, and the City-Parish appealed, contesting rulings 1 and 2. We disagree with the City-Parish, but agree with Exxon. Accordingly, we reverse that portion of the judgment assessing taxes on the packaging materials. We will address each issue in the order of the rulings noted above.

INITIATORS AND CHAIN TRANSFER AGENTS

The City-Parish argues that the initiators and chain transfer agents are taxable because they were not bought by Exxon solely for resale, nor do they qualify for the reprocessing exclusion. It asserts that these chemicals are processing tools, similar in function to the fuel used for machinery, which are consumed by Exxon in the polymerization process.

Exxon contends that the initiators and chain transfer agents used in its manufacture of polyethylene constitute raw materials purchased for further processing and come within the reprocessing exclusion of the taxing ordinance.

The issue is whether the materials in question are used by Exxon as an ultimate consumer (as in the case of fuel for which a sales/use tax is due when purchased by the manufacturer), or whether, on the other hand, the materials are processed into the final product so that the purchaser of the final product, as the ultimate consumer, pays the tax rather than the manufacturer. Before addressing the legal aspects of this issue, we feel a summary of the factual context is appropriate.

The polymerization process begins with the introduction of ethylene and continues with the addition of various chemical ingredients, including the initiators and chain transfer agents. As testified to by Exxon's witness, Mr. William J. Bailey, an expert in the field of polymer chemistry, the process, in a simplified form, is as follows. Essentially, a monomer (ethylene), a type of building block, is converted to a polymer, a giant molecule called a "macromolecule." Several thousand macromolecules are put together to form a big, long chain. After the ethylene is introduced, the process involves three chemical steps or reactions which are ongoing and occur within a matter of a fraction of a second.

The first step occurs when certain chemicals or chain initiators are introduced and then heated. High pressure and high temperature are used to make the initiators break into fragments which produce free radicals. This is known as the chain initiation stage.

The second reaction which occurs is the chain growth. During this stage, due to high pressure and high temperature, the *1197 free radicals will react with the heated ethylene to form another radical. These reactions continue moving down a "chain" until two radicals react with themselves. The amount of initiators introduced affects the size of the molecule produced. For instance, a small amount of initiators produces an enormously long "chain," while a large amount of initiators produces a fairly short "chain."

The final step in the chemical process is chain termination. This occurs when two chains come together and form a stable bond at that point, with initiator fragments on both ends. The end result is a macromolecule with an identifiable shape and a specific molecular weight.

Exxon also uses other chemicals called chain transfer agents to achieve the same result as using more initiators, which are very expensive. Chain transfer agents cause certain molecules, which would have been added to the bottom of a growing chain, to be transferred to another molecule, thereby creating two molecules instead of one. The result is a lower average molecular weight.

Ultimately, the various chemicals used by Exxon are manufactured into one-eighth inch polyethylene pellets which are then sold to Exxon's customers. Each pellet contains a quadrillion (a billion times a billion) of the "chains" or macromolecules referred to above. As noted, different recipes employing variances in the initiators and chain transfer agents are used to produce the approximately 80 different reactor grades of low density polyethylene products required by Exxon's customers. Differences in the amounts of these chemicals affect the resulting physical properties of the products; for example, molecular weight, tensile strength and density. Each grade of polyethylene provides the different properties required by Exxon's customers for their particular use of the end product.

The issue we are faced with involves the applicability of the reprocessing exclusion to the City-Parish sales/use tax set forth in Parish Ordinance 7714. Because retail sales tax should only apply to sales to the ultimate consumer of the goods, the sale of materials for further processing is excluded from the definition of "sale at retail." Section 1(f) of the ordinance provides, in pertinent part:

(f) The term "sale at retail" shall not include sales of materials for further processing into articles of tangible personal property for sale at retail ...

Rule 38 of the rules and regulations of the City of Baton Rouge for administration of the sales and use taxes sets forth the administrative construction of the above reprocessing exclusion. It states as follows:

Rule 38. Sales to manufacturers and producers.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Exxon Corp.
676 So. 2d 783 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1996)
Opinion Number
Louisiana Attorney General Reports, 1993
Exxon Corp. v. Schofield
588 So. 2d 103 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
583 So. 2d 1195, 1991 WL 119718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exxon-corp-v-schofield-lactapp-1991.