Sharp v. Chevron Chemical Co.

924 S.W.2d 429, 1996 WL 312032
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 17, 1996
Docket03-95-00628-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 924 S.W.2d 429 (Sharp v. Chevron Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp v. Chevron Chemical Co., 924 S.W.2d 429, 1996 WL 312032 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

KIDD, Justice.

Appellee Chevron Chemical Company (“Chevron”) filed suit against appellants 1 (collectively the “Comptroller”) in district court seeking a refund of sales tax. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. §§ 151.001-.801 (West 1992 & Supp.1996) (hereinafter the “Code”). 2 The disputed tax concerned Chevron’s purchase of piping installed in the Polyethylene Manufacturing Unit at its Cedar Bayou chemical plant located outside of Baytown. The district court rendered judgment ordering the Comptroller to issue a $257,362.86 refund to Chevron. The Comptroller appeals. We will affirm the judgment of the district court.

THE CONTROVERSY

Chevron is a major petrochemical company that manufactures polyethylene, a substance used in making various plastic products. In 1990, Chevron purchased extensive piping for use in the polyethylene manufacturing process at its Cedar Bayou plant. Chevron requested a refund from the Comptroller of the sales tax paid on its purchase of the piping. Chevron argued that the piping was exempt from sales tax because it is used in “actual manufacturing” operations. See Code § 151.318(g). The Comptroller denied *431 the request for a refund on the basis that the piping was used as “intraplant transportation equipment,” which is not eligible for the “actual manufacturing” exemption. Code § 151.318(c)(2). Chevron filed suit for a refund under Code section 112.151. The district court rendered judgment for Chevron and the Comptroller appeals.

The record shows that the piping in question is an integral part of a sealed, synchronized, interconnected manufacturing process that continuously produces polyethylene pellets. The Polyethylene Unit at the Cedar Bayou plant contains a variety of piping, different in size, length, and function. The piping contains and funnels unreacted materials, removes heat from the reactor, recaptures and recycles gases, lubricates machinery, allows for insertion of various substances needed in the manufacturing process, prevents dangerous, wasteful or polluting conditions from forming, and performs other functions which are necessary and essential to the manufacturing of polyethylene.

The Code exempts certain manufacturing equipment from sales tax:

(g) Each person engaged in manufacturing, processing, fabricating, or repairing tangible personal property for ultimate sale is entitled to a refund or a reduction in the amount of tax imposed by this chapter as provided by Subsection (h)/or the purchase of machinery, equipment, and replacement parts or accessories with a useful life in excess of six months if the equipment is used or consumed in or during the actual manufacturing, processing, fabrication, or repair of tangible personal •property for ultimate sale, and the use or consumption of the property is necessary or essential to the manufacturing, processing, fabrication, or repair operation, or to a pollution control process.

Code § 151.318(g) (emphasis added).

The Comptroller concedes that the piping in question meets the requirements of the “actual manufacturing” exemption contained in section 151.318(g). The Comptroller, however, argues that the piping is excluded from the exemption under Code section 151.318(c) because it is used for intraplant transportation. Section 151.318(c)(2) provides:

(c) The exemption does not include:
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(2) intraplant transportation equipment, maintenance or janitorial supplies or equipment, or other machinery, equipment, materials, or supplies that are used incidentally in a manufacturing, processing, or fabrication operation.

Code § 151.318(c)(2) (emphasis added). Chevron responds that the piping is an integral component part of the machinery at the plant, all of which provides a unified, sealed environment that makes the formation of polyethylene pellets possible. We are asked to decide a narrow question: must the piping used in Chevron’s manufacture of polyethylene be characterized as equipment dedicated to “intraplant transportation?”

DISCUSSION

Jurisdictional Question

In its first point of error, the Comptroller contends that the district court erred by considering a claim that was jurisdictionally barred because it was not alleged as a ground of error in Chevron’s motion for rehearing challenging the agency’s decision. See Code § 111.105(d). We find this argument to be without merit.

The Comptroller argues that the district court granted Chevron a refund on the basis that the piping was exempt from taxation as part of a pollution control system and contends that this specific ground of error was not raised in Chevron’s motion for rehearing. The Code requires that Chevron prove that use of the piping is necessary or essential to the “manufacturing, processing, fabrication, or repair operation, or to a pollution control process.” Code § 151.318(g) (emphasis added). Clearly, proving that the piping is necessary and essential to a pollution control operation is only one of several ways to qualify for the exemption. The record shows that Chevron properly raised a specific ground of error in its motion for rehearing arguing that the piping is necessary or essential to the “manufacturing pro *432 cess.” Chevron was not also required to argue that the piping was necessary and essential to a “pollution control process.” Furthermore, while the pollution control function of the piping may not have been specifically referred to as a “pollution control process,” it is addressed generally in Chevron’s motion for rehearing:

The piping is a component part of Claimant’s processing system that is vital not only to the actual functioning of the system but also to the very existence of the product: without the piping, Claimant’s processing system could not function, and any attempt to make it function would result in the loss of all the raw materials in the manufacturing operation and the contamination of both the product and the environment.

(emphasis added). We overrule the Comptroller’s first point of error.

The Exemption

In its second point of error, the Comptroller contends that the district court improperly interpreted the exclusion in Code section 151.318(c)(2) by finding that the piping at issue was not used as intraplant transportation equipment. As a threshold matter, we address the burden of proof. We have recently considered the exemption in Code section 151.318(g). See Sharp v. Tyler Pipe Indus., Inc., 919 S.W.2d 157, 161 (Tex.App.—Austin 1996, no writ h.). In Tyler Pipe, the taxpayer argued that its sand molds were used in the manufacture of pipe and therefore qualified for the exemption. The Comptroller disagreed, arguing that the sand molds were not used in actual manufacturing. Id. at 159.

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924 S.W.2d 429, 1996 WL 312032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-chevron-chemical-co-texapp-1996.