In Re Wheeling Steel Corp. Assessment Personal Property Brooke County 1951 Taxes

73 S.E.2d 644, 137 W. Va. 653, 1952 W. Va. LEXIS 68
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1952
Docket10467, 10461
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 S.E.2d 644 (In Re Wheeling Steel Corp. Assessment Personal Property Brooke County 1951 Taxes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Wheeling Steel Corp. Assessment Personal Property Brooke County 1951 Taxes, 73 S.E.2d 644, 137 W. Va. 653, 1952 W. Va. LEXIS 68 (W. Va. 1952).

Opinion

Riley, President:

Case No. 10461, In Re: Matter of Assessment, Marine *655 Equipment, Wheeling Steel Corporation, involves a writ of error awarded the Assessor of Ohio County to a judgment of the circuit court of that county; and Case No. 10467, In re: Wheeling Steel Corporation Assessment Personal Property Brooke County 1951 Taxes, involves a writ of error awarded Wheeling Steel Corporation to a judgment of the circuit court of that county, which judgments, respectively, deny to the Assessor of Ohio County the right to tax certain tangible personal property, consisting of various items of marine equipment belonging to Wheeling Steel Corporation, and authorizes the Assessor of Brooke County to tax a substantial part thereof. By order of this Court entered on February 28, 1952, upon the joint motion of the Assessor of Ohio County, the Assessor of Brooke County, and Wheeling Steel Corporation, by their respective attorneys, the two cases, Case No. 10461 and No. 10467, were consolidated, and heard together upon a single printed record, consisting of the proceedings in Brooke County, and pertinent parts of the record of the proceedings in Ohio County, as designated by the parties. On this basis the cases were submitted to this Court on oral arguments and briefs of counsel for the respective interested parties.

Wheeling Steel Corporation, a Delaware corporation, maintaining its principal office in Wilmington, Delaware, and qualified to do business as a foreign corporation in the States of Minnesota, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas and West Virginia, was engaged primarily in the manufacture of iron and steel, steel products, and, incidental thereto and for its own use, the manufacture of coke and the mining of iron ore and coal.

The general business office of Wheeling Steel Corporation is located in Wheeling, Ohio County, where its books and accounting records are kept. There its stockholders’ and directors’ meetings are regularly held, as authorized by the laws of the State of Delaware; and there the corporation’s chairman of the board of directors, president, treasurer, secretary, and chief counsel reside.

*656 The iron ore used in the corporation’s blast furnaces in large part is obtained from mines owned or held under long-time leases by other corporations, in which the corporation has an interest, and from a mine in the State of Minnesota, held by the corporation under a long-term lease. The corporation obtains the coal used by it from mines owned by it, or owned or held under long-time leases by Consumers Mining Company, a wholly owned subsidiary, incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware. Consumers Mining Company operates mines at Martins Ferry, Belmont County, Ohio; and at Barking and Harmarville, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. The corporation has plants or factories at Steubenville, Mingo Junction, Yorkville, and Martins Ferry, Ohio; at East Steubenville, Follansbee, and Beech Bottom, Brooke County, West Virginia; at Wheeling, Ohio County, West Virginia; and Benwood, Marshall County, West Virginia. The principal manufacturing plants of the corporation are located in the State of Ohio.

As an incident to its business, the corporation transports coal on the Allegheny and Ohio Rivers to some of its plants and its coke ovens at East Steubenville, Brooke County, West Virginia, by certain marine equipment, owned by the corporation, which, on January 1, 1951, consisted of the following:

a. M. S. LaBelle 1000 H. P. Diesel
b. M. S. Ductillite 760 H. P. Diesel
c. M. S. Principio 640 H. P. Diesel
d. 1 Drydock 219' x 45' x 17%'
e. 1 Derrick Boat 72' x 45' x 12'
f. 1 Suction Dredge 80' x 18' x 5'
g. 1 Steel Lumber Barge 140' x 26' x 10'
h. 1 Steel Fuel Flat Barge 100' x 26' x 8'
i. 1 Machine and Tool Boat 100' x 26' x 8'
j. 1 Pump Boat 60' x 24' x 5'
k. 1 Landing Fleet Float 104' x 26' x 5'
l. 58 Steel Barges 210' x 26' x 11'
m. 25 Steel Barges 140' x 26' x 10'
n. 4 Landing Floats 100'. x 20' x 6'

*657 On January 1, 1951, the location of the corporation’s marine equipment was as follows:

Located at Oakmont mine, Allegheny River, 3 barges;
Located at Harmar mine, Allegheny River, 12 barges;
Located at Pittsburgh harbor, Monongahela River, M. S. “Principio”; pump boat No. 1; 1 landing boat and 7 barges;
Located at Jack’s Run harbor, Ohio River, Pittsburgh, 3 barges;
Located at East Steubenville, Brooke County, M. S. “LaBelle”; M. S. “Ductillite”; 1 drydock; 1 derrick boat; 1 suction dredge; marine warehouse; pump boat No. 2; 1 landing float; steel lumber barge No. 255; steel fuel flat barge No. 59; and 40 barges;
Located at Steubenville, Ohio, 1 spar flat;
Located at Mingo Junction, Ohio, 1 barge;
Located at Yorkville, Ohio, 1 spar flat and 2 barges;
Located at Martins Ferry, Ohio, 1 spar flat;
Located at Benwood, Marshall County, 1 spar flat and 3 barges;
Located at Moundsville, Marshall County, 4 barges;
Located at Point Pleasant, Mason County, West Virginia, 2 barges;
Located at Hugheston, Kanawha County, West Virginia, on Kanawha River, 5 barges; and barge No. 503; somewhere on the Ohio or Kanawha River in tow of Ohio River Company’s steamer with the Kanawha River as its destination.

The three Diesel motorships: (a.) LaBelle; (b.) Ductil-lite; and (c.) Principio, were used principally for moving coal from the mines at Barking and Harmarville, Alle *658 gheny County, Pennsylvania, on the Allegheny River, to coke ovens owned by the corporation, and located at East Steubenville, Brooke County, West Virginia. Some coal purchased by the corporation from the Berwind-White Coal Company and Johnstown Coal & Coke Company, is transported from Jack’s Run harbor in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, to the corporation’s coke ovens at East Steubenville, Brooke County; and some coal purchased from a mine at Moundsville, Marshall County, West Virginia, is transported to Benwood, in Marshall County; and Yorkville, in Jefferson County, Ohio. A small amount of the Moundsville Coal is occasionally transported to the corporation’s coke ovens at East Steu-benville, Brooke County. No coal or coke, and for that matter, no other product, is transported in the corporation’s marine equipment to or from any plant or factory of the corporation in Ohio County. The corporation maintains no harbor or landing float or other marine equipment in that county.

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73 S.E.2d 644, 137 W. Va. 653, 1952 W. Va. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wheeling-steel-corp-assessment-personal-property-brooke-county-1951-wva-1952.