Standard Oil Co. v. Zangerle

30 Ohio Law. Abs. 144, 15 Ohio Op. 429, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1136
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMarch 2, 1939
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Ohio Law. Abs. 144 (Standard Oil Co. v. Zangerle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Oil Co. v. Zangerle, 30 Ohio Law. Abs. 144, 15 Ohio Op. 429, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1136 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

OPINION

By LAUSCHE, J.

In the within action the plaintiff is seeking to procure a reversal of an order of the Tax Commission of Ohio in which the Commission determined that certain properties of plaintiff were to be taxed as real estate and not as personal property. The controversy had its origin when the auditor of Cuyahoga County, in making his realty assessments included therein the land, the buildings, and in addition thereto the-structures, engines, machinery, tanks, piping, stills, pumps, bubble towers, cracking coils and other property of the plaintiff except the machinery and tools used in what is known as the box factory, can factory, print shop and machine shop which the auditor assessed as personal property. In making his assessment the auditor placed a valuation of $1,166,030.00 on the land exclusive of the improvements thereon, and a valuaT tion of $6,844,000 on the property classified by the auditor as improvements on the land.

The Standard Oil Company, claiming that not only the valuation placed upon the properties but also the inclusion of the machinery, equipment, tanks, etc., into the classification of “improvements on land” was not in conformity with the provisions of the statute, complained, to the Cuyahoga County Board of Revision. In this complaint the Standard Oil Company took the position- and -offered testimony in support thereof that the true valuation.' of the land exclusive of improvements was $991,125.00 instead of $1,166,030.00 and therefore prayed for a reduction in the valuation of the land in the sum of $174,905.00; and with reference to,the improvements on the land exclusive of the- land itself, the Standard Oil Company .claimed that, the auditor erroneously included into the classification of property known as “improvements on the land” personal property of the value of $3,189,244.00, and furthermore assessed the actual legal improvements in excess of their true value. The complainant the Standard Oil Company in [146]*146substance requested that its property consisting of the land and improvements thereon be assessed at a value of $3,641,231.00 instead of $8,010,030, and that the residue of the property, in its opinion having a value of $3,189,244.00 be taxed as personalty.

The Cuyahoga County Board of Revision sustained the valuation and. classification made by the county auditor. Thereafter in pursuance to §5610, GC, The Standard Oil Company appealed to the Tax Commission and upon consideration of the evidence that was offered before the Cuyahoga County Board of Revision and additional evidence received by the Tax Commission, it made an entry reducing the valuation of both the land and the improvements thereon from $8,010,030.00 to $6,830,475.

The conclusion reached by the Tax Commission of Ohio on the valuations was strictly in accord with the contentions advanced by the Standard Oil Company. The Commission, however, rejected the complaint of the company regarding the error allegedly committed by the auditor, and the Board of Revision in the allocation of certain property into the category of “improvements on land” instead of personal property.

It is to this judgment of the Tax Commission of Ohio that the Standard Oil Company is prosecuting error in pursuance to §5611-1 and 5611-2, GC.

The category into which property was assigned either as land, improvements thereon, or personal property prior to 1931 for the purposes of taxation, except for procedural methods, was of no consequence, because all property, real or personal, prior to that year was by law taxed according to its true value. However, in 1931, Art. XII, Sec. 2, of the Ohio Constitution was amended by abolishing the rule requiring all property to be assessed on a uniform basis. The amendment provided as follows:

“Land and improvements thereon shall be taxed by uniform rule according to' value.” ■ ■

In the same year, 1931, the legislature in pursuance to the Constitutional amendment passed the classified tax law which provided that personal property should in general be assessed at 70% of its true value; and that certain types of property used in manufacturing and refining should be assessed at 50% of its true value. Among other provisions requiring property to be listed at 50% of its true value was the following:

“All engines, machinery, tools and implements of a manufacturer used or designed to be used in refining or manufacturing.”

It isr the claim of the plaintiff (a) that the constitutional provision, “land and improvements thereon, shall be taxed by uniform rule according to value” does not control the taxation of machinery, tanks, pipes and equipment used in refining, even though such articles have been so affixed to the land as to become a part thereof; (b) that from a reading of the provisions of §§5322, 5325, 5385, 5386 and 5388, GC, in connection with each other, it is obvious that the legislature declared that certain property used in refining or manufacturing, even if permanently annexed to the realty must be assessed on the basis of 50% of its true valuation; (c) that the property involved as the subject matter of this litigation is in fact personalty and therefore’under any interpretation of the law must be assessed as personal property.

On the other hand the defendant takes the position (a) that under the amended constitutional provision those properties permanently annexed to the land so as to become a part thereof must be treated as improvements on the land and therefore taxed on the basis of a uniform rule applicable to land, and (b) that the sections' just hereinbefore mentioned, when read in relation with- each other, establish that the legislature did not authorize the assessment of fixtures used in manufacturing- or refining at- 50% of their true value, and (c) that if the legisla[147]*147ture by said sections did provide for the taxation of articles, which by reason of their affixation to the land became a part thereof at 50% of their true valuation, that such act of the legislature was unconstitutional and void.

It is indeed manifest that the proper allocation of the property of the plaintiff is important for the classification into which the property is placed will determine whether it is to be assessed at 100% or 50% of its true value. Moreover if the property is determined to come within the category of land or improvements thereon, then according to law it shall be evaluated only once in every six years, while if it is allocated to the category other than land and improvements thereon then it shall be evaluated each year enabling the Standard Oil Company to avail itself of the depreciated value resulting from wear and tear, obsolescence and other depreciating influences.

No controversy exists between the parties hereto with regard to the classification of the land, buildings, lighting and plumbing equipment, elevators, sprinkler systems, walls, stacks, paving, foundations, fences, bridges, tunnels, culverts, main water lines, tracks, trestles, main electric power transmission lines, and such other items as are generally appurtenant to land, neither is there any dispute with regard to tools and other equipment such as lathes, millers, planers and other machinery situated in what, is known as the box factory, can factory,, print shop and machine shop, which have all been classified as personal property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Ohio Law. Abs. 144, 15 Ohio Op. 429, 1939 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-v-zangerle-pactcompl-1939.