Re Taxes Pacific Guano & Fertilizer Co.

32 Haw. 431, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 17
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1932
DocketNos. 1981 AND 1981A.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 431 (Re Taxes Pacific Guano & Fertilizer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Re Taxes Pacific Guano & Fertilizer Co., 32 Haw. 431, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 17 (haw 1932).

Opinion

*432 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

The Pacific Guano & Fertilizer Company, a corporation, returned its property situate in Honolulu at a total valuation of $1,626,070 and its property situate in Hilo at $288,637, or a total return of $1,914,707. The assessor assessed the Honolulu property at $3,422,522 and the Hilo property at $735,263, or a total assessment of $4,157,785. *433 The territorial board of equalization to which the taxpayer appealed valued the Honolulu property at $3,339,180 and the Hilo property at $560,820, or a total valuation of $3,900,000. From the decision of' the board the taxpayer appeals to this court.

In its return the taxpayer valued its property item by item. The land Avas returned at $381,084, the improvements at $494,565 and the personalty at $750,422, or a total of $1,626,070. Upon the return relating to the property in Honolulu the assessor, in the columns entitled “assessor’s value of land, improvements,” made entries showing that he valued the Honolulu property, item by item, as follows: the land at $409,628, the improvements at $516,131 and the personalty at $750,422, — or a total, by this method, of $1,676,181. In the return relating to the Hilo property the company valued its land at $155,302 and its personalty at $133,335, or a total of $288,637. In this latter return the assessor made no entries showing the value attached by him to these items of property separately. C. G. Owen, manager and treasurer of the taxpayer’, gave testimony tending to shOAAr the correctness of the valuations returned by the corporation for the items of property separately, both in Honolulu and in Hilo. No testimony on this subject was given by or on behalf of the assessor. While the total valuation attributed by the assessor to the various items of property, considered separately, exceeds that of the taxpayer by the sum of $50,111, the taxpayer in argument in this court practically waived this comparatively small difference. In so far, therefore, as the values of the separate items are concerned, the aggregate is found to be, upon the undisputed evidence, $1,676,181 for the Honolulu property and $288,637 for the Hilo property, or a total of $1,964,818.

The assessor arrived at his total valuation of $4,157,785

*434 by capitalizing the average profits of the company for a few years last past and by using also what is known in our tax decisions as the “stock sale method,” the two methods, according to his testimony, producing fairly close results. The argument on behalf of the assessor seems to proceed largely upon the assumption that under the “enterprise for profit” provisions of our statutes there is such a thing as an enterprise, an entity, to be valued and taxed, which is distinct from the property composing the enterprise and which may include property which under our statute is nontaxable. If this is a correct statement of an assumption underlying the argument for the assessor, then the assumption is not well founded in law. It has been clearly held by this court that under the provisions just referred to it is the property which in combination forms the basis of an enterprise for profit which is taxable and that further only those portions of the property are so taxable which are included within the statutory definitions of “real property” and “personal property.” In other words, for the purposes of our tax laws there is no such entity as an “enterprise” for profit separate and distinct from the property which is used together in the business. The provisions relating to enterprises for profit were first enacted into law in 1896. Laws of 1896, Act 51. In February, 1897, in Inter-Island Steam Nav. Co. v. Shaw, 10 Haw. 624, 625, 629, 630, this court said: “Each law, the old and the new, provides for a tax upon real property and upon personal property, and defines what is included under each of those terms. * * * We may readily concede that, as contended for the plaintiff, the sections in question” (referring to what is now R. L. 1925, §§ 1320, 1334), “as well as numerous other portions of the statute, show that the legislature intended to tax only the property forming the basis of an enterprise for profit, and did not intend to tax the *435 enterprise as such itself. * * * It is true, these considerations are referred to in section 17” (now the third paragraph of the proviso in section 1320) “only in connection with the value of the ‘enterprise,’ hut we have no hesitation in holding that ‘enterprise’ as here used was intended to mean ‘the property forming the basis of an enterprise,’ as in the preceding paragraph, or ‘the property constituting an enterprise’ as in the succeeding paragraph; this is also obvious from the language of Sec. 68” (now section 1334) “which requires the person making the return to set forth the aggregate value of the combined property of the enterprise. * * * This is holding, not that the Avords ‘combined property’ in other parts of these sections were intended to mean ‘enterprise’ but that ‘enterprise’ in the third paragraph of Sec. 17 was intended to mean ‘combined property of an enterprise.’ ” Property, therefore, Avhich is not included within the statutory definitions of real property and personal property is not taxable and, if its income is used in the capitalization of profits method, its value must be deducted before the true aggregate value of the property forming the basis of the enterprise can be ascertained.

This taxpayer owns in Honolulu various parcels of land with twenty-four buildings thereon. ' Twenty-one of these buildings are used for warehouse purposes. It owns also certain machinery, trucks and other personalty. It is engaged in the business of buying and selling materials which are used as fertilizers by sugar cane plantations and pineapple plantations and perhaps other lesser industries. None of these materials is mined on its OAvn lands. All of them are purchased outside of the Territory. Some are. brought from the mainland of the United States and some are imported from South America and from Europe. Some of these materials are sold direct from the ship upon its arrival within the Territory. Upon these *436 importations the company merely charges a, commission (three per cent) as its compensation for the services rendered. A small part of its profits, perhaps ten per cent or fifteen per cent, is derived from the sale of materials received from without the Territory and converted by its machinery into new chemical combinations. The major part of its business, however, consists merely in the mixing, without chemical changes, of the imported materials and in the selling of the new mixtures thus produced.. Those who purchase fertilizers from the taxpayer prescribe the mixture that is desired and the company mixes and furnishes in accordance with the prescriptions. Of the fertilizer materials dealt with by the corporation only from one-fourth to one-fifth is on hand on January 1 of each year, the taxation date. The remaining three-fourths or four-fifths is imported from time to time during the remaining three hundred and sixty-four days of the year.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Haw. 431, 1932 Haw. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/re-taxes-pacific-guano-fertilizer-co-haw-1932.