River Products Co. v. Board of Review of Washington County

332 N.W.2d 116, 1982 Iowa App. LEXIS 1555
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 29, 1982
DocketNo. 2-67633
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 332 N.W.2d 116 (River Products Co. v. Board of Review of Washington County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
River Products Co. v. Board of Review of Washington County, 332 N.W.2d 116, 1982 Iowa App. LEXIS 1555 (iowactapp 1982).

Opinion

DONIELSON, Judge.

Defendant, The Board of Review of Washington County, Iowa, appeals from the district court’s ruling reversing the Board of Review of Washington County’s determination that equipment used by plaintiff at its limestone quarries should be taxed as real property pursuant to Iowa Code § 427A.l(l)(e) (1981). The district court disagreed with the Board’s determination that the equipment was used in a process of manufacturing. We affirm the district court’s ruling.

When issues heard before the Board are appealed to the district court, the appeal is heard in equity. Equitable Life Insurance Co. v. Board of Review of the City of Des Moines, 281 N.W.2d 821, 823 (Iowa 1979). Our review of the district court’s ruling is thus de novo. Id. We give weight to the trial court’s findings but are not bound by them. See Power v. Regis, 220 N.W.2d 587, 589 (Iowa 1974).

I.

The plaintiff, The River Products Company, operates limestone quarries in Washington County, Iowa. Plaintiff sells the aggregates mainly for road construction materials and as agricultural limestone for farmfields. The quarrying operation in Washington County involves the removal of rock at the Keota site by drilling and dynamiting. The large rock pieces are placed in a primary crusher which reduces the rocks to pieces, eight inches or smaller. These pieces are then conveyed by belt to the secondary plant where the rocks are broken down further and screened to separate the lime and to separate the rock pieces into desired sizes. Some of the rock is taken to the stockpile as a finished product for sale. The rock has also been run through a “batch washer” to wash off the small particles of lime adhering to the rock. This product is then sold as a concrete aggregate used by ready mix plants and highway contractors. The plaintiff also owns a “pug mill” which is usually located in Johnson County but which is mobile and can be brought to Washington County sites. The pug mill is used rarely to provide an additional moisturizing process. During this process, either water or calcium chloride is run over the rock so it will stay moist for a longer period of time once it is packed. It is important to note that neither the “batch washer” process, nor the “pug washer” process had been used by plaintiff during the period for which the tax is at issue. In fact, the general superintendent of rock quarries operations at River Products Company testified that, at no time since his employment in 1963 had any water or calcium chloride been added to the rock at the Keota site and only once in 1975 had the rock been washed at the Washington Township site.

The Washington County Assessor and Board of Review assessed and taxed certain property used in plaintiff’s operation as real estate. That property consists of the following items: a Gardner Portable Air Compressor; a Portable Bin; a Gardner Air Trac Drill; a Diesel Electric Generator; a Diesel Engine; a Mack Truck; a Mack Dump Truck; a Euclid Rear Dump Truck; a Universal Impact (Primary Crusher); a Portable Plant (Secondary Crusher); a Caterpillar Bulldozer; a Hobart Welder; and three Michigan Loaders (endloaders). All of these items are on wheels or are track-type vehicles and are moved from site to site and county to county regularly. Each item is licensed as special mobile equipment for road movement purposes. The board determined that the equipment should be taxed as real property pursuant to Iowa Code § 427A.l(l)(e) (1981) on the ground that it was used in a process of manufacturing.

The plaintiff appealed to the district court, which reversed the board’s determination and ruled that the equipment was not used in a manufacturing enterprise and therefore could not be taxed as real property pursuant to section 427A.l(l)(e). The board now appeals the court’s ruling.

II.

Iowa Code § 428.20 (1981) provides:

[118]*118Any person, firm, or corporation who purchases, receives, or holds personal property of any description for the purpose of adding to the value thereof by any process of manufacturing, refining, purifying, combining or different materials, or by the packing of meats, with a view to selling the same for gain or profit, shall be deemed a manufacturer for the purpose of this title, and shall list such property for taxation.

Only if plaintiff is engaged in manufacturing will the machinery used in its operations be taxed as real estate under section 427A.l(l)(e). The board argues the district court erred by concluding that the plaintiff does not engage in manufacturing. The board asserts the plaintiff’s processes should be classified as manufacturing on the ground the plaintiff “adds to the value of” the material it quarries and changes the material into “a new or different article having a new or distinctive name or character.”

The district court relied on Iowa Limestone Co. v. Cook, 211 Iowa 534, 233 N.W. 682 (1930), in which the Iowa Supreme Court held that the process of quarrying, crushing, screening, and marketing rock was not a manufacturing enterprise for the purpose of taxation under a statute similar to section 427A.l(l)(e). In Iowa Limestone, the supreme court noted that the quarrying process merely changed the material in question from “large stone” to “small stone”, without adding or removing anything and without changing the material into “a new or different article having any new or distinctive name or character.” Id. at 541, 233 N.W. at 686. The district court in the present case stated that it felt itself bound by the holding of Iowa Limestone.

The board’s attack on the Iowa Limestone case is twofold. Initially, it argues that, in deciding the case, the Iowa Supreme Court “adopted the faulty reasoning” of an earlier Pennsylvania court decision, Commonwealth v. John T. Dyer Quarry Co., 250 Pa. 589, 95 A. 797 (1915). The board objects to these cases as focusing “on the outward appearance of the object as opposed to the manner in which the products may be used.” It urges the court to determine whether a ‘new or different article having any new or distinctive name or character’ has been ‘manufactured’ by looking at the use to which the products are put; “if they are not suited for the same uses, they must be different articles.”

This argument, however, indicates a misunderstanding on the part of the board, of those cases decided prior to and those cases following the Iowa Limestone approach. These cases suggest that the manner in which the end products were used was indeed a consideration in determining whether the company was engaged in manufacturing. For example in People ex rel. Tomkins Cove Stone v. Saxe, 176 App.Div. 1, 5, 162 N.Y.S. 408, 411 (1916), the court held that the quarrying, crushing, sorting and preparing of stone for sale did not constitute manufacturing but noted that a different question would have been presented had the addition of other substances produced an article “having a different character and use.” Id. Similarly, in Commonwealth v. John T. Dyer Quarry Co., 250 Pa.

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Bluebook (online)
332 N.W.2d 116, 1982 Iowa App. LEXIS 1555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/river-products-co-v-board-of-review-of-washington-county-iowactapp-1982.