Singer Co. v. County of Kings

46 Cal. App. 3d 852, 121 Cal. Rptr. 398, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1817
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 7, 1975
DocketCiv. 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 46 Cal. App. 3d 852 (Singer Co. v. County of Kings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singer Co. v. County of Kings, 46 Cal. App. 3d 852, 121 Cal. Rptr. 398, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1817 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

*856 Opinion

FRANSON, J.

Statement of Case

Respondent filed claims with appellant for refund of ad valorem unsecured personal property taxes of $32,190.57 for the tax years 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968 and 1970. The claims alleged that appellant had illegally assessed and collected taxes on goods imported into this country by respondent and stored at its regional warehouse at Armona, California.

Appellant denied the claims, and respondent filed suit to recover the taxes. Appellant answered, denying that the goods were immune from taxation as imports and alleged as an additional defense that respondent’s claim for refund for the years 1965, 1966 and 1967 was barred by the statute of limitations.

The trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law and judgment in favor of respondent on all issues.

Facts

Respondent operates a regional warehouse at Armona in Kings County, California. The warehouse services two smaller warehouses in California and about 170 of respondent’s retail stores in California, Nevada, Hawaii and Arizona.

On the relevant tax dates, respondent’s warehouse contained merchandise manufactured in the United States (the property taxes paid by respondent on that merchandise are not in dispute) and between 5,000 and 10,000 cartons of imported items, all of which were brought into the United States by respondent for the purpose of sale to consumers througlh respondent’s retail outlets. The imported merchandise consisted of sewing machines manufactured in Scotland, Italy, France, Germany and Japan, home entertainment items, e.g., radios, phonographs, television sets and tape recorders manufactured in Japan, and wooden storage cabinets manufactured in Norway.

All of the imported sewing machines were manufactured by foreign subsidiary companies of respondent. The Japanese home entertainment *857 items and the Norwegian storage cabinets were manufactured by independent manufacturers in those countries. In the case of the sewing machines and the Norwegian storage cabinets, respondent was the importer of record for customs purposes; it controlled the products from the moment they left the factory until a retail sale was made in this country.

As to the Japanese home entertainment products, a Japanese trading company known as C. Itoh & Co., Ltd., served as an intermediary between respondent and the Japanese manufacturer; such a trading company was required by Japanese trade practices.

Itoh approached suppliers in Japan “with requirements given to them by the Singer Company, trying to find the products for the Singer Company.” Itoh had no discretion to dispose of the cartons to anyone other than Singer and its function “[was] merely to perform an accommodation service as an expert in Japanese law and customs formalities.” The manufacturing specifications prescribed by respondent were “very detailed” and all of the merchandise, from the time that it was shipped from the factory, was labeled with respondent’s name. At all times respondent rather than Itoh controlled the disposition of the merchandise. The trial court found that respondent was “the inducing and efficient cause of bringing into this country all of the foreign manufactured goods which pass through the Armona warehouse including the home entertainment items imported from Japan.”

The packaging and transportation of the goods from the factories overseas to respondent’s warehouse can be described as follows: all of the items were placed, at the factory, in rectangular cartons of heavy duty cardboard; protective inner packing, such as styrofoam or plastic sheeting, was placed inside the carton with the merchandise and the carton was sealed with glue, heavy sealing tape or staples. The packaging was in accordance with a longstanding commercial custom regarding this type of merchandise.

The cartons, weighing about 50 pounds each, were hauled overland from the factory by truck-trailer to a shipping port or airport for transportation to the United States. The cartons were loaded aboard ship by various means, depending upon the shipping company involved. Sometimes the cartons were taken out of the trailer and lifted by crane aboard ship on pallets, in slings or in nets. When this happened the individual cartons were stored loose aboard ship for the journey to this *858 country; this method was used for transporting the French and German sewing machines and, for a period of time, the Norwegian storage cabinets.

In some instances, the trailers in which the cartons were hauled from the factory were loaded, with their wheels removed, directly aboard ship by crane. This occurred if the shipping company happened to own the trailer. This method was used to ship the sewing machines from Italy, Scotland and Japan and also was used for the later shipment of storage cabinets from Norway.

Whenever the cartons were placed aboard ship in the trailers, the trailers, with wheels added in the United States, were used to haul the cartons to respondent’s warehouse. After the trailer was unloaded it was returned to the shipping company that owned it.

If the cartons were not placed aboard ship in a trailer, but were lifted aboard on pallets, slings or nets, when they reached the United States they were lifted out of the ship on pallets, slings or nets and were loaded into an American truck-trailer to finish their journey to the warehouse.

On the relevant tax dates, the imported merchandise in the Armona warehouse was in the sealed factory cartons with the exception of about eight to ten “master” cartons which at one time may have been opened to extract inner reshippable cartons of home entertainment items. The contents of these broken master cartons never represented more than $1,000 in full cash value and the property taxes on them would be only $15 per year. The trial court recognized the taxability of these items and deducted $75 from respondent’s refund claim.

While in the warehouse, the merchandise was stored on pallets or “slip sheets” in stacks separated by aisles. A slip sheet is a number of boxes which are bound together by bands. The cartons for any given model were grouped together in stacks separate from other models to facilitate inventoiy control and the filling of shipment orders. The outside of each carton' was marked to readily identify the model and country of origin. Although the cardboard cartons were not opened at the warehouse the bands on the slip sheets were broken when the warehouse received an order from New York. Based on this evidence, the trial court found that “the imported merchandise is clearly segregated in separate stacks from the other contents of the warehouse” and there “is no commingling of *859 imported and domestically manufactured goods within the Armona warehouse.”

No retail sales or retail deliveries were made from the warehouse. The retail stores placed their requests for merchandise with respondent’s New York headquarters which in turn told the warehouse what shipments to make.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Cal. App. 3d 852, 121 Cal. Rptr. 398, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-co-v-county-of-kings-calctapp-1975.