Metal Form Corp. v. Leachman

599 S.W.2d 922, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 299
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 22, 1980
Docket61482, 61483, 61484 and 61485
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 599 S.W.2d 922 (Metal Form Corp. v. Leachman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metal Form Corp. v. Leachman, 599 S.W.2d 922, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 299 (Mo. 1980).

Opinions

JAMES A. FINCH, Jr., Senior Judge.

This consolidated appeal involves four cases wherein plaintiffs Metal Form Corporation (Metal Form) and Mesker-Clark, Inc. (Mesker) sought recovery of manufacturers’ license taxes for 1977 and 1978 which they had paid under protest. These taxes had been paid pursuant to assessments made under §§ 150.300 to 150.3701 which require that manufacturers be licensed and taxed on their raw materials and finished products, as well as the tools, machinery and appliances used by them, the ad valorem tax so imposed to be equal to that imposed on real estate. The assessments were based on the highest amount of raw materials and finished products, plus tools, machinery and equipment, which taxpayer had on hand at any time between the first Monday in January and the first Monday in April of the year involved. The trial court held the manufacturers’ license tax statute to be unconstitutional and ordered that the taxes paid under protest should be refunded. Defendant Leachman, the County Collector, then appealed. We have jurisdiction because construction of the revenue laws of the state is involved. Mo.Const., art. V, § 3. We reverse and remand with directions.

Metal Form is a welded fabrications manufacturer in St. Louis County. Its assessed valuations for 1977 and 1978 were $22,780 and $21,620. Taxes paid thereon were [924]*924$1,784.17 for 1977 and $1,695.51 for 1978. Mesker, also located in St. Louis County, is a manufacturer of steel doors and frames. It paid taxes for 1977 and 1978 of $15,987.86 and $14,414.34 on the basis of assessed valuations of $199,300 and $183,850.

Payment of these taxes under protest was authorized by § 139.031 RSMo 1969 as amended by Laws 1971, p. 204, § 1. Subsection 139.031.1 thereof provides in pertinent part:

“Any such taxpayer desiring to pay any taxes under protest shall, at the time of paying such taxes, file with the collector a written statement setting forth the grounds on which his protest is based, and shall further cite any law, statute, or facts on which he relies in protesting the whole or any part of such taxes.”

Pursuant to said statutory requirement each payment of taxes was accompanied by a letter addressed to the County Collector which advised that the taxes were paid under protest as authorized by § 139.031. The explanation given therein was that the statutes in question (§§ 150.300 to 150.370, and particularly §§ 150.310 and 150.320) violate art. X, § 4(a) of the Missouri Constitution which, after providing that all taxable property shall be classified for tax purposes as class 1, real property, class 2, tangible personal property or class 3, intangible personal property, states in pertinent part:

“The general assembly, by general law, may provide for further classification within classes 2 and 3, based solely on the nature and characteristics of the property, and not on the nature, residence or business of the owner, or the amount owned.”

The letters pertaining to the 1977 taxes (cases 61482 and 61485) gave no further explanation. The letters protesting payment of the 1978 taxes (cases 61483 and 61484) contained this additional paragraph:

“The manufacturer’s license tax, Section 150.300 to Section 150.370 inclusive, violates Article 10, Section 4(a) of the Missouri Constitution on its face in taxing Manufacturers upon a subclassification of property based upon the nature, residence and business of the owner and the amount owed (sic) and not solely by the nature and characteristics of the property.”

Within the time limit specified in § 139.-031.2 (ninety days after filing of protest), plaintiffs filed petitions in the Circuit Court which sought recovery of the taxes paid under protest. These petitions alleged that the taxes had been paid under protest, that the checks given in payment had been accompanied by letters alleging unconstitutionality of the taxing statute and that copies of the letters were attached. As previously noted, the only constitutional provision asserted in the letters to have been violated was art. X, § 4(a).

At the time these cases were submitted to the trial court for decision, plaintiffs amended their petitions to allege that in addition to being an unauthorized subclassi-fication of tangible personal property contrary to art. X, § 4(a), the taxing statute also violated art. X, §§ 3 and 6 of the Missouri Constitution. It asserted that having the tax levied on the greatest amount of such property on hand between the first Monday in January and the first Monday in April rather than January 1, the date used by other taxpayers, was contrary to the uniformity clause of art. X, § 3, and that excluding manufacturers whose raw materials, finished products, tools, machinery and appliances aggregated less than one thousand dollars2 established an unconstitutional exemption contrary to art. X, § 6.

The trial court held that the manufacturers’ license tax violates art. X, §§ 4(a) and 6 but not § 3. On appeal plaintiffs continue to assert that the tax is in violation of all three constitutional provisions.

We conclude and hold that the single issue presented for decision is whether the tax creates an impermissible subclassifica[925]*925tion of tangible personal property in violation of art. X, § 4(a). That was the only infirmity asserted by plaintiffs in the letters which accompanied their protested tax payments. Said letters made no reference to Mo.Const., art. X, § 3 or 6 and did not rely thereon as a basis for protesting payment of the taxes. Therefore, plaintiffs have not timely raised those issues as the legislature clearly required when it stated in § 139.031.1 that a taxpayer paying under protest shall specifically set out the grounds on which the protest is based and the law or statutes on which he relies.

We should and do enforce this explicitly stated statutory requirement, the justification for which is apparent. Payment of taxes under protest requires that those funds be impounded by the collector until the protest is resolved. The various agencies (counties, cities, school districts, library districts, etc.) to which such taxes are to be distributed for use in their current operations are denied those funds during that time. The effect on such agencies, where, as here, very substantial sums are paid under protest, can inhibit their ability to pay necessary expenses and hence be very detrimental. Therefore, it is important, as the legislature recognized, that payment under protest be on the basis of a then perceived specific entitlement to relief, and not on the basis of a general claim which taxpayer hopes he may substantiate later by finding some justification and authority. Accordingly, we limit our consideration to the alleged violation of art. X, § 4(a) asserted in the letter of protest which accompanied the tax payments. We do not reach or consider in this case the claim of plaintiffs that the manufacturers’ tax statutes violate the uniformity requirement of art. X, § 33 or the claim that the exclusion of small manufacturers under the provisions of § 150.310.3 violates art. X, § 6 by granting an unauthorized exemption.4

In deciding this case we note at the outset that there are no issues of fact to be resolved. The cases were submitted on agreed statements of fact. The issue of whether §§ 150.310 and 150.320 violate art. X, § 4(a) involves only a question of law.

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Metal Form Corp. v. Leachman
599 S.W.2d 922 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
599 S.W.2d 922, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metal-form-corp-v-leachman-mo-1980.