Quaker Oats Co. v. Jackson

745 S.W.2d 269, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 745 S.W.2d 269 (Quaker Oats Co. v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quaker Oats Co. v. Jackson, 745 S.W.2d 269, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 1 (Tenn. 1988).

Opinions

OPINION

BROOKS McLEMORE, Chancellor (Ret.), Special Judge by Designation.

The trial court ordered a refund of sales and use taxes paid under protest by plaintiff-appellee, Quaker Oats Company, hereinafter designated plaintiff, based upon a finding that the material taxed was “consumed” by plaintiff. The Tennessee Commissioner of Revenue has appealed and we reverse.

The Commissioner assessed the sales and use tax on a catalyst, 5% palladium on alumina (palladium catalyst), used by plaintiff in the manufacture of furan at its Memphis manufacturing facility. The palladium catalyst is purchased from Engel-hardt Industries of New Jersey. The tax period in question is April 1, 1981 through March 31, 1984.

At the facility, the palladium catalyst on alumina is placed into a reactor with calcium acetate and liquid furfural. After pressure and heating, the subsequent reaction produces furan gas which is boiled off and captured. A constant level of furfural is maintained anywhere from 32 to 60 hours (48 hours on the average). At the end of these periods the process becomes inefficient and rapidly tails off. Upon completion, the liquid furfural is separated from the remaining materials which form a black sludge. The furfural is returned to the manufacturing process to minimize loss. The sludge, consisting of palladium catalyst on alumina, tars, polymers, and other [270]*270materials is collected and shipped to Engel-hardt for recovery of pure palladium.

The actual catalytic agent is the palladium which constitutes 5% of the palladium on alumina catalyst. The alumina, the other 95% of the material, is used because it is a very porous or sponge-like material that has 300 square meters of surface per gram or 2.6 million times the surface area of similarly sized pure palladium. This characteristic is essentia] to the economical production of furan. The reaction requires surface contact with the active sites of the palladium. By increasing the surface contact, the direct contact between the catalyst and the reactant is increased, along with the efficiency of the reaction. The reaction effectively ends because tars and polymers fill in the porous alumina, and other chemicals in the process act as poison on the palladium.

The spent palladium on alumina catalyst or sludge has no further use in this form for plaintiff. Pure palladium, however, is expensive and Engelhardt has the capacity to separate out approximately 85% of the original amount of the palladium from the remaining materials. Engelhardt then uses the recovered palladium to manufacture a new palladium catalyst which is shipped to their customers, including plaintiff. Plaintiff receives an unspecified amount of credit on its account with Engel-hardt based on the value of the recovered palladium.

The legislature has imposed a tax on the “sale at retail” or “use” of tangible personal property in this state. Tennessee Code Annotated § 67-6-101 et seq. In defining a “sale at retail” or “use,” the legislature excluded certain industrial materials used in the future processing, manufacturing, or conversion into finished articles. Specifically, T.C.A. § 67-6-102(13)(E) states:

“Sale at retail,” “use,” “storage,” and “consumption” shall not include the sale, use, storage or consumption of industrial materials and explosives for future processing, manufacture or conversion into articles of tangible personal property for resale where such industrial materials and explosives become a component part of the finished product or are used directly in fabricating, dislodging, sizing, converting, or processing such materials or parts thereof, ...

The Commissioner of Revenue, based on the exclusion from the definition of “sale at retail” provided for industrial materials set forth above, promulgated .Rule 1320-5-1-40(2) (referred to as “Rule 40”) which provides:

(1) Materials and taxable services bought for future processing, manufacturing or conversion into articles of tangible personal property for resale, where such materials become a component part of the finished products, are not subject to Sales or Use Tax.
(2) Materials and supplies coming in direct contact with, and which are consumed within twenty-five (25) consecutive calendar days, in the processing of manufactured products, are not subject to the Sales or Use Tax. Unless materials and supplies come in direct contact with and are consumed within twenty-five (25) consecutive calendar days, they will not be considered as industrial materials or supplies exempt from the Sales or Use Tax. The time period, here indicated, shall apply to any single article in the solid state or to the contents of a container in which liquid is held for introduction for direct contact with the product being manufactured.

The Commissioner in assessing the tax took the position that materials which are totally consumed during an industrial process or which, after use in this manner, have only minimal salvage value, may be purchased exempt from sales or use tax. However, when catalysts or industrial materials are first used in the industrial process, cleansed, or purified and then re-introduced back into the industrial process then these materials have not been consumed and therefore, have not met the requirements for exemption.

Two issues are presented:

(1) Whether the consumption requirement of Rule 40 is void as an unreasonable [271]*271and arbitrary exercise of the Commissioner’s rule-making power, and

(2) Whether the plaintiff “consumed” the palladium catalyst for purposes of Rule 40.

T.C.A. § 67-6-402 authorizes the Commissioner to make reasonable rules not inconsistent with the taxing statutes. In the absence of a clear showing that rules are arbitrary or contrary to statute, the Court should not substitute its judgment for the Commissioner’s. Pidgeon-Thomas Iron Company v. Shelby Co., 217 Tenn. 288, 397 S.W.2d 375 (1965). On the other hand, rules contrary to the express directives of the taxing statute are void. Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Woods, 620 S.W.2d 473 (Tenn.1981).

The trial court found that the rule was not unreasonably interpretative of the statute but was vague as to the meaning of consumption.

Plaintiff contends that because the palladium catalyst on alumina was directly used in the process of manufacture that it met the requirements for the statutory exemption, and that the consumption requirement is a second and additional requirement to the statutory requirement of direct use and such additional requirement invalidates the rule.

The Commissioner argues that the rule merely clarifies what the legislature intended. That the legislature intended that the “component part” exemption and the “used directly” be on an equal footing and that the consumption requirement simply does that. That is, both the “direct use” and the “component part” aspects of the exemption statute assume that the exempt product will be fully used.

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Bluebook (online)
745 S.W.2d 269, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quaker-oats-co-v-jackson-tenn-1988.