Textile Dye Works, Inc. v. Secretary of the Treasury

95 P.R. 692
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 14, 1968
DocketNo. R-66-350
StatusPublished

This text of 95 P.R. 692 (Textile Dye Works, Inc. v. Secretary of the Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Textile Dye Works, Inc. v. Secretary of the Treasury, 95 P.R. 692 (prsupreme 1968).

Opinion

Mr. Jüsticé Rigau

delivered the opinion óf thé Court.-

■ -; This -case deals -with the manner in: which the legislation, whose' purpose is to promote the economic development of. the country, shoüld -be 'construed.'

Appellants are two domestic companies and to both the Government of Puerto Rico granted industrial-tax-exemption; Appellants paid, under protest, the amounts of $2,-307.47 and $2,984.29 for excises in connection with certain machinery imported by. them to be used in their operations, and after taking the necessary steps they' appealed to the Superior Court for reimbursement. As the two ■ cases raise the- same question, they were consolidated. Appellants appeal- to us from an adverse judgment in said court. . .

In its judgment the Superior Court sets forth the following, as part of the facts stipulated by the.parties:

[694]*694“Plaintiffs’ business includes the dyeing, fixing, compacting by steam, and finishing the yarn of knit sweaters. When the knit sweater is received by the plaintiffs, it is not commercially marketable; its size is too large, it contains chemicals from the processes of weaving and spinning; it has the natural color of the yarn; when touched it feels greasy and lacks stability in size and form.
“Plaintiffs process three kinds of yarns,' the dyeing of which requires different selection of chemicals and separate processes to obtain a marketable product. The three yarns are wool, nylon, and orlon. Each of the processes is as follows:
“(a) Wool. Wool is a natural fiber which is treated-with acid dyes, which react chemically with the wool in a reversible1 [sic] chemical reaction.. Furthermore, when the wool is knitted, it is stiff and hard. It must be processed to make the yarn loose and soft.
“(b) Nylon. The nylon .which is processed is a textured nylon yarn. Nylon is a thermoplastic material, that is, under heat and pressure it takes a shape which cannot be altered. The sweaters are placed in a heater under a 80 pound pressure and heated ata temperature of 265° F. to compact the yarn, eliminate the shrinkage, increase its resistance to shrinkage, produce a softer texture, and permit the stabilization of color in the dyeing process. This process is also irreversible.
“(c) Orion. Orion is a chemical called acrylic polymer. This yarn is dyed at temperatures over 180° F., it shrinks and more body is given to the yarn during the dyeing process.”

What is copied above gives an idea of appellants’ manufacturing operations. We do not believe it is necessary to copy all the stipulations of the parties. It might be convenient to add the following, which was also stipulated:

“The physical changes in size, texture, and stability of the yarn are entirely irreversible without destroying the article.”, ..

Appellants are right. Their operations are of a manufacturing nature. They are not merely “service” operations as defendant believes. If these materials and clothing articles [695]*695were not subjected to the chemical treatment partly described in the preceding paragraphs, said materials would only be semiprocessed and could not be used by the consumer and, therefore, would not be saleable. Considering the matter from a historic point of view we must realize that our industrialization is at its early stages^ We are in the process of learning. In Pennsylvania, a state which already has industrial tradition, a case very similar to the one at bar was decided. There also existed — already in 1885 — a law that granted certain industrial tax exemptions. Defendant’s manufacturing operations in that case were the same or very similar to those of appellants herein. The Court concluded that defendant was engaged in a manufacturing process and that the exemption was applicable to it. Commonwealth v. Quaker City Dye Works Co., 5 Pa. C.C. 94. Said case was cited with approval in Commonwealth v. Littlewood & Sons, 44 Pa. C.C. 310. In Pennsylvania, an industrialized state, there seems to be no doubt on this particular.

The process to which appellants subject these materials and semiprocessed articles is a necessary and indispensable process which intervenes with the raw materials at a stage between the beginning and the completion of the manufacturing process of said articles. That process falls squarely within the letter and spirit of the law. The exemption claimed by appellants is the one authorized by § 46(b) (1) (a) of the Excise Act.2 Said section provided, insofar as pertinent, [696]*696that any of the following articles shall be exempt from tax when used in a manufacturing plant:.

“(a) machinery or-equipment used in the factory stage of production, relating to the processing of materials between the beginning and the completion of the manufacturing process-including the assemblage or integration of taxable articles under section 4004 of this title.” (Italics ours.)

. Notice the wide range that the lawmaker sought to give the law, since he even included the assemblage of articles which, in the ■ absence of express provision of law, would not be properly, considered manufacturing. Likewise, in defining the term “manufacturer,” the legislature in that same law which we are construing and applying herein provided that “manufacturer” means “any. person engaged in the manufacture of any article, including assemblers or integrators of articles.” Section 4 of the Act, 13 L.P.R.A'. § 4004 (1). Is this perhaps because the lawmaker, whom we presume to bé an intellectually cultivated person,3 does, not know what to fabricate and to manufacture'mean? Certainly'not. It is because the tax exemption' on articles' which are used in the manufacturing processes are intended to provide an incentive foh the establishment of manufacturing plants in Puerto Rico, because this country, on account of its very high population density, cannot depend solely on the agricultural production with its limited territory4 to create ánd maintain the proper standard of living for its inhabitants.5 The economic problems of Puerto Rico, including those of industrialization as well as "the use of its land, must be considered in the light of our géographic and population reality. We must keep in mind [697]*697those' conditions when we are requested- to apply to our economic reality jurisprudence originated in other States. Puerto Rico is one of the most densely populated countries in the world, approximately 700 inhabitants per square mile. On the other-.hand, there are states like Montana, Wyoming, and Nevada,-which have less than five inhabitants per square mile, and there are 28 states which have less than 100 inhabitants per square mile. The United States has, as a whole, only 50 inhabitants per square mile.6

With the foregoing in mind, it is easy to understand that the industrial tax exemptions granted by the Government of Puerto Rico should not be interpreted as the former tax exemptions which were privileges, for which reason their restrictive interpretation was beneficial to the public interest. On the contrary, the industrial tax exemptions should be interpreted in consonance with their creative purpose.

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95 P.R. 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/textile-dye-works-inc-v-secretary-of-the-treasury-prsupreme-1968.