Heath v. Research-Cottrell, Inc.

529 S.W.2d 336, 258 Ark. 813, 1975 Ark. LEXIS 1705
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 3, 1975
Docket75-104
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 529 S.W.2d 336 (Heath v. Research-Cottrell, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heath v. Research-Cottrell, Inc., 529 S.W.2d 336, 258 Ark. 813, 1975 Ark. LEXIS 1705 (Ark. 1975).

Opinions

Elsijane T. Roy, Justice.

Appellee, Research-Cottrell, Inc., under a subcontract agreement with the Bechtel Corporation, contractor for the Arkansas Nuclear 1 Unit of Arkansas Power & Light Company located in Russellville, Arkansas, was engaged to design, furnish and install a natural draft cooling tower for Arkansas Power & Light Company at the nuclear generating power station. After an audit, appellant served appellee with a notice of tax assessment which was upheld in an administrative hearing. Appellee brought a petition for declaratory judgment in the Chancery Court of Pope County, Arkansas. After trial the court entered judgment for the appellee declaring the notices of assessment to have been wrongfully issued, and that appellee was entitled to a use tax exemption.

Appellee first alleged that an exemption is applicable under Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3106 (D)(2)(d), which statute gives an exemption for machinery and equipment required by state law or regulations to be installed and utilized by manufacturing facilities to prevent or rfeduce air and/or water pollution. It was under this theory that the court found for appellee. The other theory advanced by appellee is that a specific exemption applies under Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3106 (D)(2), and that the cooling tower constructed was machinery and equipment used directly in manufacturing.

The appellant contends that there is no exemption under either theory, and that under Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3129 and § 84-3130 appellee is a contractor and therefore a consumer of the items purchased, and consequently responsible for paying the use tax on such purchases. The appellant also contends that since appellee is a contractor, that any exemption which could possibly be applied to Arkansas Power & Light Company would not be imputed to the contractor. The appellant’s last contention is that certain exemptions were granted by the legislature to utilities by Act 439 of 1969, which was later modified by Act 222 of 1971, presently codified as Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-31.05.1 (H). The net effect of appellant’s last contention is that utilities are afforded unique exemption status in the use tax laws, and are not characterized as manufacturers but as utilities, and therefore, even if Arkansas Power & Light Company had an exemption, it would not be under the manufacturing exemption of Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3106 (D)(2), but would be limited to Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3105.1 (H).

Appellant brings this appeal from the adverse decision of the Pope County Chancery Court.

For reversal appellant contends the chancellor erred in finding that appellee Research-Cottrell, Inc., a contractor, is entitled to the benefits of the use tax exemption found in Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3106 (D)(2)(d).

Under appellee’s first contention we find the issue to be whether appellee Research-Cottrell, in performing its contract with Bechtel Corporation (the general contractor) to install a cooling tower at the nuclear generating facility of Arkansas Power & Light Company, is entitled to the exemptions to the use tax found in the above cited statute.

Under well established law, appellee, Research-Cottrell, Inc., has the burden of clearly proving any right to an exemption. C.J.C. Corporation v. Cheney, Commissioner, 239 Ark. 541, 390 S.W. 2d 437 (1965).

The basic use tax exemptions were enacted in Act 487 of the 1949 Acts of Arkansas, (Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3106). These basic use tax exemptions have been amended several times, including Act 5 of the 1968 Acts of Arkansas (First Ex. Sess.) which is now codified as Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3106 (D)(2)(d) (1973 Cum. Supp.). The exact language of the statute is as follows:

“There are hereby specifically exempted from the taxes levied in this Act:
“(D)(2)(d) Machinery and equipment required by State law or regulations to be installed and utilized by manufacturing or processing plants or facilities in this State to prevent or reduce air and/or water pollution or contamination which might otherwise result from the operation of such plant or facility.”

This part of the statute was passed because the legislature recognized the increased anxiety of concerned citizens about damage to the environment caused by the disposal of industrial waste and thermal discharge. About the same time federal and state governments began pollution abatement efforts which took several forms. One method was to grant subsidies in the form of tax incentives. By the end of 1969 a number of states had amended their tax laws to offer one or another form of incentive as a mode of approach to the pollution problem.

Arkansas passed the cited exemption to the use tax laws in an effort to encourage industries to make substantial capital investments in order to prevent and reduce air and water pollution and to protect the overall environment. This was clearly the purpose of the tax exemption.

Appellee, to qualify for the pollution use tax exemption, must fit precisely within the statutory definition.

Appellant takes the position that a cooling tower is not machinery and equipment but is only “a massive cement structure.” Such a characterization of the cooling tower does not preclude its being machinery or equipment.

Appellant also draws a comparison between the cooling structure at issue and a chimney, asserting that an ordinary person would share appellant’s reluctance to characterize this tower as a machine. Appellee, on the other hand, has made available the testimony of the mechanical engineer who was responsible for the design and construction of the cooling tower and who found no difficulty in denominating this tower a machine. He stated that natural draft cooling towers are evaporative cooling machines, and probably the largest pollution control mechanisms in use today. In this instance, the cooling machine serves to prevent the hot water, which is a necessary by-product to electrical generation, from damaging the waterways (in this instance Dardanelle Reservoir). The testimony was that fish and plant life would be significantly damaged in the Reservoir without the operation of the cooling tower.

The testimony of one of appellee’s engineers on this issue follows:

Q. Could you briefly for us, in your own words, just describe what is an evaporative cooling tower?
A. An evaporative cooling tower is really quite a simple machine that uses the laws of nature to do its work for it. It consists of a device which raises water to some elevation, allows it to fall back to the ground thereby engaging with air which is moving in the other direction and allowing the transfer of energy from the water to the air and heat in the form of energy is being transferred.
* * *
Q. All right, would you describe this cooling tower as a pollution control device, Mr. Haggerty?
A. Yes, it certainly is. Its function is to prevent the discharge of the very high quantities of heat into the local body of water, which would result in thermal pollution of that body of water. So its use, therefore, is a pollution control device designed to prevent thermal pollution.
Q.

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Heath v. Research-Cottrell, Inc.
529 S.W.2d 336 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
529 S.W.2d 336, 258 Ark. 813, 1975 Ark. LEXIS 1705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heath-v-research-cottrell-inc-ark-1975.