State v. Holly Sugar Corporation

116 P.2d 847, 57 Wyo. 272, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 31
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1941
Docket2185
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 116 P.2d 847 (State v. Holly Sugar Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Holly Sugar Corporation, 116 P.2d 847, 57 Wyo. 272, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 31 (Wyo. 1941).

Opinion

*276 Riner, Chief Justice.

This action arose in connection with the administration by the State Board of Equalization of the Selective Sales Tax Act of 1937, (Laws of Wyoming, 1937, Chapter 102.) The defendants declined to pay certain *277 amounts claimed by said Board to be due the State of Wyoming under said Act, and this action was brought by the commonwealth to recover these amounts, together with accrued penalties, interest and costs. The plaintiff below, appellant here, will usually be referred to hereinafter as “the State” or the “plaintiff”. The two respondents, defendants below, Holly Sugar Corporation and The Union Pacific Railroad Company, will be subsequently mentioned, the former as the “Sugar Company” and the latter as the “Railroad Company”. The action was prosecuted unsuccessfully in the district court of Laramie County, and the Attorney General of the State of Wyoming and his assistants have brought the case here for review by direct appeal.

The facts material to be considered may be outlined as follows: The action aforesaid was instituted to recover claimed taxes in certain amounts listed in plaintiff’s petition, upon the transportation of sugar beets, limerock and beet pulp carried by the Railroad Company for the Sugar Company, the transportation charges being paid by the latter to the former. These taxes are asserted to be due under Section 4 (b) of said Act, which, laying aside the language non-pertinent at present, reads:

“From and after the effective date of this Act, within the limitation herein set out, there is hereby levied and there shall be collected and paid:
“(b) An excise tax equivalent to two per cent. (2%) * * * * of the amount paid: (1) to carriers, * * * * for all transportation, * * * *.”

The two respondents assert that the amounts paid the Railroad Company for transportation must be regarded as wholesale sales and so exempt from taxation under certain provisions of the first and third paragraphs of Section 2 (f) of said Act, which respectively contain the following language:

“(f) Each purchase of tangible personal property *278 or product made by a person engaged in the business of manufacturing, compounding for sale, profit or use, any article, substance or commodity which directly enters into and becomes an ingredient or component part of the tangible personal property or product which he manufactures or compounds, or the furnished container, label, or the shipping case thereof, shall be deemed a wholesale sale and shall be exempt from taxation under this Act. * * * *
“For the purpose of this Act, all purchases of livestock, feeds for use in feeding livestock or poultry for marketing purposes, * * * * are deemed to be wholesale sales, exempt from taxation under this Act.”

Section 2 (1) of the Act aforesaid contains also this definition:

“(1) The term ‘tangible personal property’ means personal property which may be seen, weighed, measured, felt, touched, or is in any other manner perceptible to the senses.”

The cause was tried upon stipulated facts, and essentially these were: Between April, 1937, and September, 1939, inclusive, the Railroad Company transported and delivered to the Sugar Company certain shipments of sugar beets and limerock, for which the latter paid to the former, as above described, stated sums of money; that during that period beet pulp, a by-product created by the manufacture of sugar from sugar beets and used only for livestock feed, to employ the precise language of the agreed facts, “was loaded in railroad cars at the pulp press at the factory of the defendant Holly Sugar Corporation, near Torrington, Wyoming, and shipped to farmers and livestock feeders within the State of Wyoming; that the sugar beet pulp is sold at a fixed price and the cost of the transportation of the same is added to the price of the beet pulp and paid by the defendant, Holly Sugar Corporation, when shipped and later collected from the purchaser of said beet pulp; that said transportation charges are paid *279 by the defendant, Holly Sugar Corporation, for the convenience of the purchasers of said pulp; that all of the beet pulp hereinabove described was shipped to purchasers thereof and was used in feeding livestock for marketing purposes only; that the transportation of the said pulp was one of a series of acts necessary for the use of the same as livestock feed and the amounts paid for such transportation were actually a part of the cost of such pulp at the place where it was to be used as such livestock feed, and became a part of the actual cost of said livestock when marketed.” The amount thus paid by the Sugar Company to the Railroad Company for this transportation of the pulp was a stated sum of money. Two per centum upon these stated sums respectively was calculated and set forth, as were the amounts claimed by the State as penalties and interest.

It also appears from the stipulated facts that the Sugar Company is regularly engaged in the business of manufacturing sugar for sale, profit and use; that the limerock and sugar beets aforesaid were purchased by the Sugar Company and transported to its factory located near Torrington, Wyoming, for this manufacturing purpose, and that said limerock and sugar beets directly entered into and actually became an ingredient and component part of the refined sugar produced by the Sugar Company at its factory; that the transportation of these beets and limerock was one of the acts necessary to be performed to make sugar into marketable form and the amounts paid for such transportation “became a part of the actual cost of the sugar in its marketable form”.

The district court of Laramie County found generally for the Sugar Company and the Railroad Company and against the plaintiff, with other findings based upon the stipulated facts outlined above, and entered judgment for said defendants and respondents, and it *280 is this judgment which is now drawn in question by this appeal.

At this point it may be noted that the controversy now before us is the outgrowth of legislative statutory alterations of a law which was first considered by the State Legislature of Wyoming during its 1935 session. The disposition of the case at bar may properly be based upon a reasonable interpretation of those changes. Briefly the history of what was done may be stated as follows:

In the year last mentioned the State Legislature for the first time enacted what was known and usually cited as the “Emergency Sales Tax Act of 1935”. (Laws of Wyoming 1935, Chapter 74.) That Act, in Section 2 (f) thereof read:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 P.2d 847, 57 Wyo. 272, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holly-sugar-corporation-wyo-1941.