Smith v. State ex rel. Collector of Revenue

100 So. 2d 524, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 506
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 1958
DocketNo. 20971
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 So. 2d 524 (Smith v. State ex rel. Collector of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. State ex rel. Collector of Revenue, 100 So. 2d 524, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 506 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

The question presented is easily stated though not so easily answered. It is simply whether the plaintiff, Carl T. Smith, Jr., is a manufacturer, or is merely engaged in the business of buying dry beans in large quantities and, after cleaning and packaging them, selling them at wholesale. If he is merely a wholesaler, then he is liable for an occupational license tax in accordance with the provisions of LSA-R.S. 47:351. If he is a manufacturer, then, under the provisions of LSA-R.S.. 47:396 subd. E, he is exempted from the obligation of paying an occupational license tax.

The Collector of Revenue of the State of Louisiana assessed against Carl T. Smith, Jr., a license tax for the years 1952 through 1955. He appealed to the Board of Tax Appeals which maintained the assessment. Under authority of LSA-R.S. 47:1434, he then filed in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans a petition for review of the finding of the Board of Tax Appeals and that Court, after a hearing, dismissed his suit, maintaining the assessment of the license tax. The matter is now before us on appeal by plaintiff.

The record is made up almost entirely of the transcript of the hearing which was had before the Board of Tax Appeals, and we turn to that transcript to ascertain the nature of the business of Smith.

He describes his business as follows:

“ * * * We buy these beans in truck load and car load lots from sources throughout the country where they are grown, and assemble them in New Orleans. From the hundred pound bags that they come in we run these ■ beans through a process which consists of running them through a gravity separator that separates the beans by weight. In other words, if. there are rocks and beans in them you are able to take out the split beans and any nails or cigarette butts or anything that happens to get in them when they are sacked in the areas where they are grown. We further run these beans through a polishing process which is the same kind of equipment that is used in a rice mill to take the husk off, except instead of having an abrasive steel brush that the rice people use, we use a soft leather and synthetic rubber brush to polish the beans to take off the film of dirt that is on the beans. From that process they go into our packag[526]*526ing operation and I can show you a couple of pictures of these machines that packages the beans.”

He then exhibited photographs of the machines in question. These photographs indicate a rather complicated mechanical process for the cleaning and sorting of the beans, and the making and filling of the bags. Smith stated that his process “changes those beans from something the Food Drug (Act) wouldn’t let us sell unless we did run them through those cleaning processes.” He showed that he processes and packages several different varieties of dry beans, and he stressed the fact that the capital which is required in his business is invested to the extent of about 75% in the machines which clean and sort the beans and which make and fill the bags, and that the cost of making the bags and packaging the beans represents between 25 and 35 per cent of the cost of the finished product. About ten employees are employed and about half of them are engaged in operating the above referred to machines.

He further stated that, if he did not make the bags himself, it would be necessary that he buy them from a manufacturer and that this would add to the cost of his business.

It is further shown that, in the process of cleaning, sorting and preparing beans for sale, some are split or otherwise broken, some are immature, and some are small; that this process eliminates all of these broken beans and that they are packaged and sold as hog food.

On behalf of the Collector of Revenue, it is contended that Smith is merely buying the beans in large quantities and selling the same beans in smaller bags and thus his business cannot be termed as manufacturing but merely constitutes the selling of beans at wholesale.

Smith, on the other hand, contends that he buys large quantities of beans which, in the condition in which they are bought, are not suitable for human consumption, and that by his mechanical process, together with the labor which is attendant on that process, he manufactures an article which is suitable for human consumption, and that he thus actually manufactures the finished product which he sells to wholesale houses and other distributors.

The question of what is a manufacturing business has been considered many times by the Courts of this State. In State v. Magnolia Packing Co., 213 La. 661, 35 So.2d 422, 423, our Supreme Court directed attention to the fact that, ever since the adoption of the Constitution of 1879, “it has been the public policy of this State to exempt manufacturers from payment of occupational license taxes.”

In that case, the Magnolia Packing Co. case, the defendant operated a meat packing plant. It bought cattle and hogs on the hoof and slaughtered, cleaned and dissected them, and then sold some of the meat at wholesale, and from other parts processed it into lard, sausage, ham, bacon, hides, and other by-products. Apparently a large portion of its products was merely meat. In other words, as to that portion of its business it might be said that it was merely the “buyer of meat on the hoof,” and the seller of meat to wholesalers after it had been processed into a condition suitable for human comsumption. The Court then stated that the question arises “as to whether the Legislature intended to exempt those who, in connection with a manufacturing enterprise, engage in pursuits of a non-manufacturing nature.” The Court then held that the defendant was a manufacturer and therefore exempt from liability for an occupational license tax since 35% of its gross receipts resulted from its manufacturing operations. It is proper to state, however, that the Court followed this statement with a further statement. Referring to the Magnolia Packing Co., it said:

“In truth, its entire operations are so interwoven with manufacturing that it would be indeed difficult to say that [527]*527any part thereof can be rightfully separated from the whole.”

In a footnote the Court directed attention to many cases in which businesses were held to he manufacturing and to others in various businesses which were held to be not manufacturing, and directed special attention to its earlier decision in City of New Orleans v. Ernst & Co., 35 La.Ann. 746, in which it had held a rice miller to be a manufacturer, stating that a manufacturer is “one who is engaged in the business of working raw materials into wares suitable for use, who gives new shapes, new qualities, new combinations to matter which has already gone through some artificial process.” The Court said:

“A manufacturer prepares the original substance for use in different forms. He makes to sell, and stands between the original producer and the dealer, or first consumers, depending for his profit on the labor which he bestows on the raw material.”

In the case at bar there is nothing to contradict the testimony of Smith that, in the processing of beans, he uses machines which it is shown are practically identical with the machines used in the processing of rice.

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100 So. 2d 524, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-ex-rel-collector-of-revenue-lactapp-1958.