In Re the Appeal of LaFarge Midwest/Martin Tractor Co.

271 P.3d 732, 293 Kan. 1039, 2012 Kan. LEXIS 151
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 2, 2012
Docket102,852
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 271 P.3d 732 (In Re the Appeal of LaFarge Midwest/Martin Tractor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Appeal of LaFarge Midwest/Martin Tractor Co., 271 P.3d 732, 293 Kan. 1039, 2012 Kan. LEXIS 151 (kan 2012).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnson, J.:

LaFarge Corporation (LaFarge) operates a Portland cement manufacturing facility on a tract of private property it owns in Fredonia, Kansas. The tract includes a contiguous limestone quariy on one side at which LaFarge uses its Caterpillar equipment to load the raw material and haul it across the property to tire hammermills that perform the initial step in the cement manufacturing process. LaFarge paid sales taxes to Martin Tractor Company on the purchase of repair parts for its loaders and haulers, but then unsuccessfully sought a refund of the sales taxes from the Kansas Department of Revenue (KDR). Ultimately, the Court of Tax Appeals (COTA) determined that the equipment, and therefore the repair parts, is exempt under K.S.A. 2010 Supp. 79-3606(kk)(2)(D) as being an integral or essential part of the integrated production operation of the cement manufacturing facility. We agree that the equipment is being primarily used in the cement manufacturing business and at the manufacturing facility. Accordingly, we affirm COTA’s refund of sales taxes.

Factual and Procedural Overview

In tire first step of tire cement manufacturing operation, controlled explosions are used to blast limestone rock and other raw materials from the face of the quarry situated on one side of *1041 LaFarge’s tract. The blasting is performed by a third party. The question of the use or taxability of the third party’s equipment is not an issue in this appeal.

At the quarry, LaFarge uses its own Caterpillar loaders to scoop up and place the loose limestone rock onto LaFarge-owned Caterpillar haulers. The haulers tiren transport the limestone over internal haul roads on LaFarge’s tract of private property (tract) to another contiguous area of die tract where the processing buildings and equipment — such as hammermills, crushers, and kilns — are located.

At some point after arriving at the processing site, the limestone is loaded into a hammermill to commence the process of transforming the raw material into Portland cement. While a description of the processes involved in that transformation is interesting, it is unnecessary to our decision in this case. We are concerned solely with the raw limestone loading and hauling operations, which are performed entirely upon LaFarge’s tract, i.e., the subject equipment does not leave LaFarge’s private property. The loaders are situated and operated on the portion of the tract that encompasses the quarry; the haulers travel between the quarry and the hammermills. None of the equipment is registered for highway use.

Sometime after July 1, 2000, LaFarge purchased repair parts for its loaders and haulers from Martin Tractor Company. In conjunction with those purchases, LaFarge paid sales taxes totaling $16,217.05. LaFarge filed for a refund of those sales taxes, claiming the repair parts were exempt from such taxation under K.S.A. 2010 Supp. 79-3606(kk)(l)(C).

The KDR denied the claim, and LaFarge appealed to the COTA. KDR filed a motion for summary judgment with COTA, which in its order denying summary judgment stated that KDR’s argument could be distilled as follows:

“1. LaFarge engages in two distinct business operations on its property. The first is a limestone excavation operation, which is conducted in and around the quarry. The second is a cement manufacturing operation, which begins with the crushing activities performed at the hammermill machines.
“2. K.S.A. 79-3606(kk)(l)(C) exempts sales of parts for machinery and equipment only if the machinery and equipment is used as an integral or essential part *1042 of an integrated production operation by a manufacturing or processing plant or facility.
“3. The LaFarge manufacturing plant operations begin at the hammermill machines because that is where the raw materials extracted from the quarry are [first] crushed or odierwise processed.
“4. The loaders and haulers are used in the quarry operation. They are not used primarily in the manufacturing operation at the plant.
“5. Therefore, neither tire loaders nor the haulers, nor their repair and replacement parts, are exempt from sales tax because the machinery and equipment is not used as part of an integrated production operation by a manufacturing or processing plant or facility, as required by K.S.A. 79-3606(kk)(l)(A).”

COTA found that “[t]he deficiency in [KDR’s] line of argument is revealed upon careful examination of the relevant statutory provisions within the context of the overall legislative scheme expressed throughout K.S.A. 79-3606(kk).” Specifically, COTA found that KDR had failed to show that the loaders and haulers were not used as part of an integrated production operation and had failed to show that the machinery was not being used at the physical location of the manufacturing or processing plant or facility. Accordingly, COTA denied KDR’s motion for summary judgment. Although the order noted that LaFarge’s attorney had obliquely suggested that the court could enter summary judgment in favor of LaFarge based on the evidence in the record, COTA declined to do so.

Both parties filed a motion for reconsideration, and COTA granted the motions. After reconsideration, a majority of the court modified its prior order to grant complete summary judgment in favor of LaFarge. A dissenting judge opined that the case was not ripe for summary judgment in favor of LaFarge, albeit that judge observed that she “cannot imagine just what information could be elicited by [KDR] on cross-examination that would convince this court that the equipment in question is not part of the manufacturing process.” KDR appealed COTA’s decision, claiming that it did not correctly, and strictly, construe the exemption provisions of K.S.A. 79-3606(kk).

Statutory Sales Tax Exemption

Article 36 of Chapter 79 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated con *1043 tains the Kansas Retailers’ Sales Tax Act. K.S.A. 2010 Supp. 79-3606 sets forth those sales that are exempt from the Act, i.e., the transactions on which a sales tax is not imposed. Subsection (kk) addresses sales of and repairs on machinery and equipment used by a manufacturing or processing plant or facility. K.S.A. 2010 Supp. 79-3606(kk)(l).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 P.3d 732, 293 Kan. 1039, 2012 Kan. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-appeal-of-lafarge-midwestmartin-tractor-co-kan-2012.