State Department of Assessments & Taxation v. Consolidation Coal Sales Co.

855 A.2d 1197, 382 Md. 439, 2004 Md. LEXIS 472
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 3, 2004
Docket135, Sept. Term, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 855 A.2d 1197 (State Department of Assessments & Taxation v. Consolidation Coal Sales Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Department of Assessments & Taxation v. Consolidation Coal Sales Co., 855 A.2d 1197, 382 Md. 439, 2004 Md. LEXIS 472 (Md. 2004).

Opinion

BATTAGLIA, J.

In this case, we must determine whether Consolidated Coal Sales Company (hereinafter “CCSC”) is entitled to a manufacturer’s exemption from personal property taxation pursuant to Maryland Code, Section 7-225 of the Tax-Property Article (1985, 2001 Repl.Vol.), which excludes storage, shipping, and receiving facilities from receiving the exemption. After deciding that CCSC is a storage, shipping, and receiving facility and that CCSC’s “blending” activities do not constitute “manufacturing” as it is defined by Section l-101(r) of the Tax-Property Article, the Tax Court concluded that CCSC does not qualify for the exemption. We agree with the Tax Court and hold that CCSC is ineligible for the manufacturer’s exemption.

I. Introduction

A. Facts

In light of the fact that the parties base their arguments on whether a procedure called “blending” constitutes “manufacturing” for the purposes of the manufacturing exemption, we shall review in detail the coal production and shipping process at issue in this case.

*442 In the Port of Baltimore, CCSC, a subsidiary of Consol Energy, Inc. (hereinafter “Consol”), operates a terminal that receives, stores, and ships coal to domestic and international markets on behalf of coal producers, coal brokers, and utilities. The majority of the coal that CCSC receives is extracted from Consol’s Bailey Mine Complex in southwestern Pennsylvania, which covers more than two hundred and seventy-five square miles and is the world’s largest underground mining complex.

The coal extracted from the Bailey Mine Complex is processed by the Bailey Central Preparation Plant before it is sent to facilities such as CCSC or sold directly to customers. Processing consists of “sizing,” “cleaning,” and “blending” the raw coal. Sizing occurs when raw coal, which can consist of a mass as large as a basketball, is crushed to form roughly uniform two-inch squares. The cleaning process removes rock, wood, and other extraneous materials from the raw coal that generally comprise 25 percent of the raw coal or approximately 25 tons of matei’ial for every 100 tons of raw coal that is cleaned at the Bailey plant. After the coal is cleaned, it then is dried using mechanical processes described by its engineers as “gravity dewatering” and “thermal dewatering.”

Once the coal is sized, cleaned, and dried, it undergoes a sophisticated “blending” process while still at the Bailey Central Preparation Plant. Because coal consists of different and measurable amounts of BTU, ash, and sulphur, blending is necessary in order to create a coal product containing specific amounts of those materials that meet customers’ needs. CCSC describes blending as “the taking of large quantities of coals of different chemical components and processing those component coals in such a way that the composite, when complete, meets the customer’s requirements throughout.” Utilities, for example, prefer coal having low sulphur levels because of environmental restrictions related to sulphur emissions.

Using equipment estimated to be worth approximately one hundred million dollars, the blending process at the Plant utilizes “nuclear analytical devices” to measure the sulphur *443 content of the coal material. Based on these measurements, the coal is sorted into five different storage bins. Each bin contains coal having the same quality and stores 30,000 tons of coal. The quality of coal in a bin varies somewhat each day, however, depending on what coal seam is being mined at that time. According to one Consol manager, “[t]oday it might be 1.1 to 1.2 sulphur, because that’s what [you’re] producing.... Tomorrow it’s another.” In addition, within each bin, the coal is broken into ten “increments,” with each increment reflecting a sulphur amount between the sulphur content limits of that bin.

Although all the coal at the Bailey Central Preparation Plant is blended at the plant to meet customer specifications, the blended coal still may be “incompatible]” with a customer’s requirements because the instruments predicting the quality of the coal being currently mined from a seam are “only so accurate.” Because the Bailey Plant has limited storage space, it utilizes the CCSC terminal in Baltimore, “a facility that can receive material on demand in order to keep [Bailey] operating.” Therefore, in addition to serving as a shipping facility, the CCSC terminal also operates, in part, as a storage facility to “take[ ] up ... the slack” when the Bailey mine produces coal that falls below customer requirements.

CCSC receives the majority of its coal by railway. When the coal arrives at CCSC, the trains are brought to its “dumper facility,” which is located in the “thaw shed.” The thaw shed contains large heaters used to heat the rail cars in cold weather in order to remove and separate frozen coal from the sides of the rail cars. The “dumper” then empties the rail cars by turning them upside down, and the coal is discharged across what is called a “grisly,” which screens from the coal unwanted material such as rocks that may get into the coal during transit.

After the screened coal moves through the grisly, it then moves into “hoppers,” which collect and control the rate of the coal and discharge onto a conveyor belt. The coal then leaves the thaw shed area and is conveyed on a belt to “Transfer *444 Point # 1,” a housing station where samples of the coal sometimes are taken in order to be tested at a laboratory off-site. From this point, the coal is moved on conveyor belts directly to a shipping vessel or to “Transfer Point #2,” a meeting point for two more conveyor belts that take the coal either to the stockpiles or to a “surge bin,” a large storage bin. Coal taken to the stockpiles is moved through “stacker re-claimers,” large machines that have “bucket wheels” that both stack the coal for storage purposes and reclaim the coal when it is to be shipped. The coal is stored in different stacks based on its grade.

When coal is reclaimed, it can be mixed with other grades of coal as it is sent back down the conveyor belt and loaded into either the surge bin or onto a shipping vessel. According to CCSC, this remixing process constitutes a continuation of the blending process that began at the Bailey Plant. The remixing of inventory allows CCSC to combine coal of different sulphur and ash content in order to create a different average sulphur content for a cargo load in order to meet a customer’s specifications. When mixed, the chemical content of the coal remains the same, although the average chemical content of a load may change. A typical CCSC cargo contains a mix or “blend” of coal from three to six stockpiles.

B. Administrative History

CCSC filed personal property tax returns with the Maryland State Department of Assessments and Taxation (hereinafter “SDAT”) for the machinery and equipment at its Baltimore facility for the 1997-1999 tax years. CCSC did not report any of its personal property as manufacturing property and stated that the nature of its business in Maryland was “exportation of coal.” According to SDAT, CCSC’s personal property, based on its returns, was assessed as follows:

Tax Year

Date of Assessment Notice

5/20/97

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Supervisor of Assessments of Montgomery County v. Lane
112 A.3d 952 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2015)
Classics Chicago, Inc. v. Comptroller of Treasury
985 A.2d 593 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2010)
Siegel v. Comptroller of Maryland
974 A.2d 941 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2009)
Comptroller of Treasury v. Johns Hopkins University
973 A.2d 256 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2009)
Frey v. Comptroller of the Treasury
965 A.2d 923 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2009)
F.D.R. Srour Partnership v. Montgomery County
964 A.2d 650 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2009)
Supervisor of Assessments v. STELLAR GT
961 A.2d 1119 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2008)
F.D.R. Srour Partnership v. Montgomery County
944 A.2d 1149 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2008)
Comptroller of the Treasury v. Colonial Farm Credit, ACA
918 A.2d 514 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
855 A.2d 1197, 382 Md. 439, 2004 Md. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-assessments-taxation-v-consolidation-coal-sales-co-md-2004.