Minnaert v. Department of Revenue

113 N.W.2d 868, 366 Mich. 117
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1962
DocketDocket 47, Calendar 48,920
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 113 N.W.2d 868 (Minnaert v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnaert v. Department of Revenue, 113 N.W.2d 868, 366 Mich. 117 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

Black, J.

This is a suit for declaratory relief against the allegedly unlawful imposition of a tax. The plaintiff, having been assessed by the defendant revenue department a use tax of $14,383.94 “on the price paid for materials and equipment” acquired by him between January 1, 1955, and December 31, 1957, prays for a decree declaring that such materials and equipment were acquired and used in “industrial processing” and so were exempt from use- and sales-taxation.

The issue as brought to this Court requires application to the testimonially established facts of 2 *119 interrelated exemptive provisions of the use tax act and the sales tax act. They appear, abbreviated, in the margin. * The chancellor, after an extended hearing, entered a decree of exemption in favor ■of plaintiff. The defendant department of revenue appeals.

White Pine Copper Company mines copper ore and manufactures copper ingots for sale in the copper market. Its mining and manufacturing operations are conducted in Ontonagon county, adjacent to the Porcupine Mountain State Park, some 4 to 6 miles inland from the southerly shore of Lake Superior. Great quantities of pure or decanted water are required for the manufacturing process. To supply such need the company has constructed an intake, opposite Silver City in the deeper waters •of Lake Superior, from which it pumps water by means of a 36-inch pipe to its inland mill. The latter is located strategically near the headwaters of numerous small streams forming a part of the northerly watershed of the Upper Peninsula. Such streams are coursed .substantially parallel. They average, at the point of present interest, but a few hundred yards apart. Each drains almost due north into *120 Lake Superior. One carries a name. The others do not.

The company has constructed, across the gullies and valleys of these streams, what is designated in the record as a “tailings dam.” It plans like construction, by like means and for the same purpose, as manufacturing operations and lawful disposition of waste products emanating from the company’s mill may in the future require. These earthen dams are, when completed, designed to provide vast areas for lawful disposition of “tailings.” The dam presently in use is 7,800 feet long. It is 40 feet high, and provides an impound of more than 1 square mile.. Another like dam, extending parallel to the one presently in use, is now under construction. It is to be 8,900 feet long.

“Tailings” constitute the final waste product of the company’s mining and manufacturing process. Such waste product is liquid or substantially son. It consists of water, mud, crushed rock and noxious chemicals. Since tailings cannot be released into public waters, the company makes disposition thereof as now indicated.

The company’s present “tailings dam” is constructed below the level of its mill. The tailings are released from the mill, into the area of impound, called a “tailings pond.” The solid and semisolid' portions of such tailings sink slowly to the bottom of the pond, leaving at the top clear water, clear enough for use in .the industrial process. Such water is known as decántate. It is pumped back into the mill and is steadily utilized, with the fresh water which is continuously supplied from Lake Superior, in the manufacturing process. The mill requires, in the course of normal operations, 11,500 gallons per minute of lake water and decántate. Of this required supply 9,000 gallons per minute come from the lake and 2,500 gallons per minute come from *121 “decant towers.” Such towers are constructed in the pond, of steel and concrete. They are approximately 10 feet square. The decántate flows steadily into them and is sump-pumped back to the mill as indicated above. The company’s mill superintendent testified, without dispute, that “as time goes on and we expand and have increased production, the amount of this reclaimed water [decántate] will increase.”

Turning now to plaintiff’s part in these operations. He has contracted with the company, continuously -since 1955, to construct, heighten, enlarge and compact the company’s present dam and pond and the •company’s partly constructed new dam and pond. For such exclusive purpose ho as acquired and used, and continues to acquire and use, heavy earth-moving equipment, consisting principally of large bulldozers and earth movers. All this equipment is utilized in fulfillment of plaintiff’s said contract. The performance thereof takes place entirely on premises of the company. No part of such equipment has been purchased for use on other jobs; neither has it been used elsewhere.

The defendant would use-tax such equipment. Plaintiff objects either to use- or sales-taxation thereof. This brings us to the presented issue: Whether, on these facts of no dispute, plaintiff has sustained the burden of persuasion that his equipment was acquired for exempted use or consumption in “industrial processing” and has been so used •or consumed.

Having considered the unusual nature of this industrial operation and plaintiff’s contribution thereto, we find ourselves in complete agreement with the ■chancellor’s decision. The quoted exemptive provisions are written in simple English. The difficulty lawyers and judges experience in the application thereof is due invariably to the dissimilarity of cir *122 cumstances under which the State would tax and the taxpayer ■ would exempt, and particularly to< law’s common ailment, uncertainty about the facts. In this case; fortunately and commendably, the parties have made a certain and comprehensive record of visibly decisive facts. Thus, in the words of Cardozo, * the applicable rule of law has sprouted from the seed and turned its branches toward the light. We proceed, by way of summary.

White Pine cannot manufacture, in Michigan at least, without lawful disposition of tremendous quantities .of liquid tailings which, in the manufacturing process, are steadily discharged from its mill. White Pine has found a way to make such disposition .and, hand in hand, a way to repeatedly utilize a substantial portion of such tailings in its manufacturing process. The way so found requires- unending construction of huge seepage-proof dams and ponds. Such construction in turn requires the acquisition, use and consumption—on White Pine’s-premises— of heavy earth-moving equipment.

Such equipment at no time is affixed to realty within the quoted provisos of the sales and use tax acts. If there is some other ■ available method of disposition of such tailings that method does not appear in the record. And even if such alternative were available it is for White Pine—not the revenue department—to say which method it will employ to “prepare raw material * * * for the market” (see definitional adoption in Bay Bottled Gas Co. v. Department of Revenue, 344 Mich 326, 330). The work accomplished by means of plaintiff’s equip *123

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Bluebook (online)
113 N.W.2d 868, 366 Mich. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnaert-v-department-of-revenue-mich-1962.