Morrison-Kudson Co. v. State Board of Equalization

135 P.2d 927, 58 Wyo. 500, 1943 Wyo. LEXIS 62
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1943
Docket2243
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 135 P.2d 927 (Morrison-Kudson Co. v. State Board of Equalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison-Kudson Co. v. State Board of Equalization, 135 P.2d 927, 58 Wyo. 500, 1943 Wyo. LEXIS 62 (Wyo. 1943).

Opinion

*510 Blume, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Laramie County affirming a tax assessment made by the State Board of Equalization against the Morrison-Knudson Company, a corporation, and others, appellants herein, under the use and sales tax acts of this state.

There was included in the order of assessment of the State Board of Equalization, affirmed by the district court, an assessment of use tax in the sum Ojf $6782.09, by reason of personal property bought by appellants outside of this state and used in the construction of the so-called Seminoe Dam and Power Plant in this state. The facts in conection with that construction were found by the court as follows:

“That in the construction of said dam and power plant, said appellants purchased large quantities of sand, gravel and cement; which sand and gravel were first washed and screened and then mixed with cement and water in large mixers by appellants to form concrete; that said concrete was then poured into large forms, previously constructed, to set and harden; that *511 large quantities of reinforcing steel were used in said cement and used elsewhere in the construction of said dam and power plant; that one section of said dam was poured at a time and by many repetitions of this act the finished dam and power plant were constructed; that in the construction of said dam and power plant certain other raw materials, including lumber, nails, bolts and nuts, were used and were united with other materials to form said dam and power plant; that the Seminoe Dam and Power Plant was a finished product, the result of the placing together and blending of the aforementioned raw materials.”

No exceptions were taken to this finding. The appellants claim that they are exempt from the payment of the tax by reason of the fact that they are manufacturers within the meaning of the provisions of Subdivision (e), Section 4, Chapter 118, Session Laws 1937, known as the Use Tax Act, which exempts from the provisions thereof “tangible personal property or product which directly enters into or becomes an ingredient or component part of any manufactured article or substance or commodity and the furnished container, label or shipipng case thereof”. The court did not proceed to find what part of the purchases above mentioned became an ingredient or component part of the dam, and merely found that the dam is not a “manufactured article”. The appellants also contended that part of the property was not readily purchasable and hence exempt under subdivision (k) of Section 4 of the Act aforesaid. The court made no finding on this contention. It is not necessary to consider the lack of finding in this respect, for it is conceded in the brief of appellants “that if they (appellants) are within the exemptions of the act it must be as manufacturers, and that if the dam and power plant is not a manufactured article there is no statutory basis for the exemption claimed by them as to the purchases in question.”

As supporting the contention that they are manufacturers, and that the dam constructed is a manufac *512 tured article within the meaning of the use tax act, appellants cite us to several cases, including Friday v. Haul & Kaul Co., 216 U. S. 449, 54 L. Ed. 562, 30 Sup. Ct. 561, a bankruptcy case. Numerous cases have been decided on the question as to who is a manufacturer within tax exemption provisions. Notes with numerous cases on the subject are found in 10 A. L. R. 1273 and 116 A. L. R. 1111. Some of the cases are irreconcilable. In State v. American Cresote Works, 163 La. 547, 112 So. 412, for instance, it was held that one who creosotes ties is a manufacturer. The contrary was held in Indiana Cresoting Co. v. McNutt, 210 Ind. 656, 5 N. E. (2d) 310. In a broad sense, no doubt, the term “manufacturer” may be said to include the construction of a dam, but courts have recognized that the term must be construed in connection with the subject matter with which it is used, and that the legislative intention must be sought. In some cases the term has been given a broad, in others a narrow, meaning. In speaking of the making of a dam, we ordinarily use the term “construction”, and “manufacture”. Section 112-101, Rev. St. 1931, provides that “words and phrases shall be taken in their plain and usual sense, but technical words and phrases having a peculiar and appropriate meaning in law shall be understood according to their technical import”. We have no reason to believe that the legislature in the instant case used the term “manufacturing” in a technical sense,, and unless we can find that they used it in that sense we presume that the legislature used the. term in its natural, ordinary and everyday meaning. Ward v. Board of Commissioners, 36 Wyo. 460, 256 Pac. 1039; State ex rel. v. Jack, 52 Wyo. 173, 183, 70 P. (2d) 888; 59 C. J. 975.

Some cases tend to sustain the contention that construction work is manufacturing within taxing laws. Commonwealth v. Keystone Bridge Co., 156 Pa. 500, 27 Atl. 1, and see Comm. v. Filbert Paving Construc *513 tion Co., 229 Pa. 231, 78 Atl. 101. In Wesco Co. v. State Revenue Commission, 178 Ga. 479, 173 S. E. 404, however, it was held that a highway contractor who manufactured asphalt as incidental to surfacing roads was taxable under the general provisions of the occupational tax statute and not under a provision relative to the business of “manufacturing, compounding or preparing for sale”. The case is closely in point here. In Syracuse Improvement Company v. Morgan, 59 App. Div. 302, 69 N. Y. S. 263, and People ex rel. v. Knight, 99 App. Div. 62, 90 N. Y. S. 537, it was held that the preparation of a street for the laying of the pavement and placing the paving thereon is not in any sense a process of manufacture within the meaning of the revenue law. So, too, a construction company engaged in the business of erecting concrete buildings was held not to be a manufacturing company. People ex rel. v. Turner Construction Co., 186 N. Y. S. 890, 196 App. Div. 231, affirmed in 231 N. Y. 610, 132 N. E. 908. The court said in part:

“But assuming that the construction of concrete buildings may be technically considered as a manufacturing operation, it nevertheless is a fact that it is an operation which resulted in producing real property and not merchandise, which latter is personal property, movable and vendable as such. A concrete construction is an immovable mass affixed to the realty and a part thereof. Although the construction of concrete buildings may be an operation of manufacture, it is also a building operation. It by no means follows, however, because the appellant may be a manufacturing corporation under the bankruptcy act, that it is such under the tax laws of this state.”

See also Comm. v. Paul W. Bounds Co., 316 Pa. 29, 173 Atl. 633. In Com. v. Wark Co., 301 Pa. 150, 151 Atl. 786, the court stated that “a construction corporation, in the sense of doing construction work, such as erecting buildings, is an organization clearly dis *514 tinguished from a corporation organized for and engaged in producing an article of commerce, and the word ‘manufacturing’ by no natural meaning should include the former class”.

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Bluebook (online)
135 P.2d 927, 58 Wyo. 500, 1943 Wyo. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-kudson-co-v-state-board-of-equalization-wyo-1943.