Oxford Paper Co. v. Johnson

156 A.2d 235, 155 Me. 380, 1959 Me. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 30, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 156 A.2d 235 (Oxford Paper Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oxford Paper Co. v. Johnson, 156 A.2d 235, 155 Me. 380, 1959 Me. LEXIS 33 (Me. 1959).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

The State Tax Assessor levied a use tax against Oxford Paper Company, a resident corporation, which thereupon petitioned him to reconsider and abate such impost. The Assessor declined. The Paper Company paid the tax under protest and appeal to the Superior Court. The parties have in writing agreed upon the facts which in their turn induce issues of law. The case is before this court upon report for a final determination of the controversy.

The subject matter of the tax was a quantity of the chemical element, mercury, purchased without the State at retail sale during the years 1956 and 1957 by the Paper Company for use within the State in the manufacture for sale, of paper. The appellant contends that the mercury was exempt from tax within the language and intent of R. S. (1954), c. 17, §§ 2 and 4, as amended, in as much as that commodity was tangible personal property —

“---which becomes an ingredient or component part of, or which is consumed and destroyed or loses its identity in the manufacture of, tangible personal property for later sale---” R. S., c. 17, § 2; P. L., 1955, c. 144.

*382 Paragraphs 11 through 19 of the parties’ agreed stated ment authoritatively recite the significant facts. Because of the chemistry and natural science contained we quote rather than attempt a paraphrase.

“11. Mercury is a chemical metallic element. Its molecules are monatomic. Any quantity forms a neatly rounded globule. When a globule is subdivided, it breaks up into a number of equally perfect globules, which tend to coalesce when sufficiently near to one another.
“12. Mercury is used by Appellant in its manufacturing operations in the production of chlorine and sodium hydroxide, which chemical products are used to bleach or whiten the cellulose fibers from which high quality papers are made. The chlorine and sodium hydroxide are produced for this purpose by an electrolytic process in which an electric current is passed through a solution of brine obtained by dissolving sodium chloride in water. This process is accomplished in a cell known as the Sorensen cell.
“13. In the Sorensen cell there are two chambers which are isolated, one from the other. These chambers are designated, respectively, as the ‘decomposing chamber’ and the ‘denuding chamber’. The electrolysis or decomposition of the sodium chloride into sodium and chlorine takes place in the decomposing chamber. In order to recover the sodium and chlorine separately, it is necessary to remove one from the other, after the decomposition. This separation is accomplished by the use of mercury. The action of the Sorensen cell may be described as follows. Mercury flows through a special seal into the decomposing chamber where it spreads out over the bottom of the chamber and forms one electrode of the cell. Graphite slabs are suspended horizontally an inch or two above the mercury and form the second electrode of the cell. The saturated brine passes slowly through this chamber, forming an electrical bridge between the *383 mercury and the graphite slabs. When an electric current is passed through the brine, chlorine is evolved as a gas at the graphite electrode and elemental sodium is formed at the surface of the mercury. The chlorine gas is removed from the cell and conveyed to the bleaching process. The sodium forms a loose chemical combination with the mercury, known as an amalgam, and is removed with the mercury continuously, and transferred to the denuding chamber of the cell. There the amalgam of sodium and mercury comes in contact with fresh water and forms sodium hydroxide. The sodium hydroxide is then continuously removed from the denuding chamber and transferred to the bleaching process. The mercury, thus stripped of its sodium content, is returned to the decomposing chamber and the cycle is repeated.
“14. Thus, in the process described, mercury plays a threefold role: (1) as a conductor of electric current and one electrode of the cell, (2) as a temporary reactant with one of the products of decomposition, and (3) as a means of separating one of the products from the other and transporting the same.
“15. In the normal course of daily operation of the process described, some mercury is lost. This occurs in several ways, including evaporation into the atmosphere, permanent chemical combination with contaminents in the cell system, spillage, and absorption in the sodium hydroxide solution. The process thus necessitates a more or less continuous, day to day, replacement of the lost mercury.
“36. Appellant’s manufacturing system, as described, requires a level of 70,000 pounds of mercury, approximately, at all times. Of this amount, approximately 5,000 pounds are replaced each year, to replace the loss which occurs as described.
“17. In whatever manner the loss of the mercury occurs, as above described, such loss as to each atom or molecule of the mercury occurs instantaneously.
*384 “18. The Appellant contends that under the exclusion of section 2, of the Sales Act, the mercury-purchased by it for use in the process herein described is not taxable. The Appellee contends that the provisions of section 2 of the sales act do not exclude the item from the coverage of the sales and use tax for the reason that 70,000 pounds of mercury was in use in the process hereinbefore described at the beginning of the period of the assessment, and at the end of a year there was still 70,000 pounds of mercury in the trays, the loss, if any, was a day-to-day replacement as described in paragraph 15 of this Agreed Statement of Facts, and the quantity ‘consumed or destroyed’ would be only a percentage of any mercury purchased, and the exemption in section 2 of the Act granted in paragraph 4 of this statement of facts does not pertain to the procurement of raw materials that does not lose its identity within a year in the manufacture of tangible personal property.
“19. It is intended hereby to submit the issue of taxability to the Court, upon the foregoing facts. If the mercury is subject to tax this appeal shall be dismissed. If not subject to tax, this appeal shall be sustained, and Appellant shall be given credit on its account for the sum of $841.00.”

From the foregoing facts it becomes manifest that for this case warrant for any exclusion from the use tax of the mercury purchased must derive from either consumption or destruction or loss in identity of such mercury in the round of manufacture of tangible personal property for later sale. R. S., c. 17, § 2, as amended. Concededly the mercury does not become an ingredient or component part of the manufactured products of the appellant. Reduction in the mass of the appellant’s mercury resulting from its use in the manufacturing process must be ascribed to evaporation, chemical combination with contaminants, spillage and flushing away with the sodium hydroxide solution.

*385 In the machinery for converting raw material into paper mercury is constantly maintained by the appellant. 7% by weight of all the mercury thus utilized is lost in the process during a calendar year.

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Bluebook (online)
156 A.2d 235, 155 Me. 380, 1959 Me. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxford-paper-co-v-johnson-me-1959.