General Motors Corp. v. Indiana Department of State Revenue

578 N.E.2d 399, 1991 Ind. Tax LEXIS 10, 1991 WL 179989
CourtIndiana Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1991
Docket49T05-8912-TA-00064
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 578 N.E.2d 399 (General Motors Corp. v. Indiana Department of State Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Motors Corp. v. Indiana Department of State Revenue, 578 N.E.2d 399, 1991 Ind. Tax LEXIS 10, 1991 WL 179989 (Ind. Super. Ct. 1991).

Opinion

FISHER, Judge.

General Motors Corporation (GM) seeks a refund of Indiana Gross Retail Sales and Use taxes (sales/use tax) assessed and collected by the Indiana Department of State Revenue (Department) on expendable packing materials GM purchased and used in transporting certain automobile parts from one GM facility to another during the calendar years 1978, 1979, 1980, and 1981.

FACTS

GM manufactures motor vehicles (automobiles). GM is a Delaware corporation with its principal places of business in Detroit, Michigan, and New York, New York. GM is organized as a vertically integrated production process, manufacturing automobile parts at component plants and then transporting these parts to other GM plants for final assembly. Throughout the calendar years of 1978 through 1981, GM owned and operated several component plants in Indiana. GM purchased expends-ble packing materials, such as corrugated cardboard cartons, separators, liners, pads, wrapping paper, plastic plugs, pallets, and other items (packing materials), to protect the parts during shipment to assembly plants outside of Indiana. The packing materials were used to package and protect products, such as lamps, transmissions, and other automobile parts, when shipped from one GM facility to another (component plant to assembly plant).

In audits prior to 1978, the Department allowed an exemption from sales/use tax for GM's packing materials. After a sue ceeding audit, however, the Department assessed sales/use tax on identical packing materials purchased in the tax years 1978 through 1981, which GM paid with interest in 1984, 1985, and 1986.

On December 28, 1986, GM timely filed claims for refund of the sales/use tax and interest paid on both its purchase of the packing materials and other items on behalf of some of its divisions in the aggregate amount of $2,082,009.47. GM filed its original tax petition for refund of sales/use tax on December 12, 1989, although the Department has not issued a final determination concerning GM's claims for refund. 1 Prior to the trial in this case, the parties settled all the issues involved in GM's claims for refund except the issue involving the tax treatment of GM's packing materials. Concerning this remaining claim, GM seeks a refund of sales/use tax and interest in the amount of $453,266.25 paid on its *401 purchase of packing materials for the years at issue.

Additional facts will be included as nee-essary.

ISSUES

I. Whether GM's purchases of packing materials are exempt from sales/use tax because they are used within an integrated production process entitling GM to a refund?

II. Whether GM is entitled to receive interest from the Department on the interest portion of its overpayment that the Department held? If so, what is the applicable interest rate and period of accrual?

I. EXEMPTION

GM claims its packing materials are exempt from sales/use tax under IND. CODE 6-2-1-89(b)(6) and its successor IND.CODE 6-2.5-5-8 (1980) (collectively referred to as the equipment exemption). 2 The sales/use tax statutes provide an exemption for manufacturing equipment directly used in the direct production of other tangible personal property:

Sales of manufacturing machinery, tools and equipment to be directly used in the direct production, manufacture, fabrication, assembly, extraction, mining, processing, refining or finishing of tangible personal property; sales of agricultural machinery, tools and equipment to be directly used by the purchaser in the direct production, extraction, harvest ing or processing of agricultural commodities; and sales of tangible personal property to be directly used by the purchaser in the direct production or manufacture of any such manufacturing or agricultural machinery, tools and equipment.

IC 6-2-1-39(b)(6) (emphasis added).

In 1980, the equipment exemption was re-codified, providing:

Transactions involving manufacturing machinery, tools, and equipment are exempt from the state gross retail tax if the person acquiring that property acquires it for his direct use in the direct production, manufacture, fabrication, assembly, extraction, mining, processing, refining, or finishing of other tangible personal property.

IC 6-2.5-5-8(b) (emphasis added).

The double direct standard, expressed in the statutory language emphasized above, is the touchstone of the equipment exemption from sales/use tax. In Indiana Department of State Revenue v. Cave Stone, Inc. (1983), Ind., 457 N.E.2d 520, the seminal case interpreting the double direct standard, the Indiana Supreme Court recognized the essential and integral test to determine whether the double direct standard is met. The court held the transportation equipment at issue was both essential to transforming erude stone into a marketable product and integral to "the ongoing process of transformation." Id. at 524.

The court's inquiry focused on the production process itself, defining it broadly to encompass all the production steps involved in transforming work in process into a finished marketable product:

The [equipment exemption] statute circumscribes all of the operations or processes by which the finished product is derived. Thus, we find that the production or processing of the stone begins at the time of the initial stripping, drilling, and blasting at the quarry and ends at the time the stone is stockpiled. The production process is continuous and indivisible.
The issue, then, is whether the transportation is an integral part of the production or processing of the stone.

Id. at 524. Consequently, the equipment exemption's double direct standard is met when the manufacturing equipment used is an essential and integral part of an integrated production process.

*402 ESSENTIAL AND INTEGRAL

The Department does not dispute GM's assertion that its packing materials are both essential and integral to its production of finished automobiles. GM asserts its packing materials are essential to protect automobile parts during shipment to the final assembly plants and to aid convenience and safety in loading and unloading. The evidence reveals that without such protection, the parts could be scratched, broken, or otherwise damaged and consequently, unusable for installation as part of a finished automobile.

Packing materials are integral to GM's production process because they function within the integrated series of steps necessary to produce a finished automobile. Indeed, unless the parts are carefully transported from component plants to assembly plants, no marketable automobiles could result. See Id. at 524. The court therefore finds GM's packing materials are an essential and integral part of producing a finished automobile.

INTEGRATED PRODUCTION PROCESS

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578 N.E.2d 399, 1991 Ind. Tax LEXIS 10, 1991 WL 179989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-motors-corp-v-indiana-department-of-state-revenue-indtc-1991.