Van Dyk v. Department of Revenue

702 P.2d 472, 41 Wash. App. 71
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 25, 1985
Docket7719-1-II
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 702 P.2d 472 (Van Dyk v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Dyk v. Department of Revenue, 702 P.2d 472, 41 Wash. App. 71 (Wash. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

Worswick, C.J.

The Washington State Department of Revenue appeals a judgment ordering a refund of use taxes assessed against V. R. Van Dyk, doing business as Inland Foundry Company, on the value of coke used in the manufacture of iron products. Van Dyk cross-appeals, contending the refund should have been larger. We affirm.

Van Dyk operates an iron refinery. He manufactures gray and ductile iron products from scrap iron, coke, and other ingredients, by melting and refining the scrap in a large cupola. At the beginning of the process, a bed of coke is ignited in the bottom of the cupola by propane torches and blasts of air. As the bed heats up, charge ingredients—scrap iron, limestone, and more coke—are added. As the mixture is fired, the scrap iron melts and mixes with the carbon from unburned coke present in both the bed and the charge.

The coke is about 92 percent carbon. As it burns, the carbon unites with oxygen in the air in a chemical reaction. The carbon does not chemically react through contact with any of the ingredients of the final products. Instead, some of the carbon, while retaining its original chemical identity, mixes with the molten scrap iron. This carbon itself becomes a necessary ingredient of the final products. About 4 percent of the total carbon in the coke becomes an ingredient of gray iron, and about 13 percent inheres in ductile iron. The rest is burned.

Van Dyk paid use taxes on the coke until 1976, when he decided to dispute validity of the tax. The Department conducted an audit in December of 1979, and ordered Van Dyk to pay the disputed taxes. He then petitioned the Department for a refund of taxes paid in 1975 and 1976, and for a reversal of the 1979 assessment. After administrative hearings, the petition was denied. Van Dyk paid the *73 disputed taxes and in 1980 filed this action for a refund and for declaratory relief in superior court (RCW 82.32.180).

The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Van Dyk for the relief requested. It also granted the Department's cross motion for partial summary judgment, limiting the refund to taxes paid during the 4 years prior to the calendar year in which this action was filed. RCW 82.32.060; RCW 82.32.180.

The Department contends that Van Dyk is subject to the tax under RCW 82.12.020 because the law does not favor him with an exemption. We disagree.

Use taxes are imposed on any person who uses an item of tangible personal property as a consumer. RCW 82.12.020. Consumer is defined by RCW 82.04.190. 1 The tax applies in the absence of a statutory exemption. Van Dyk claims exemption under RCW 82.04.190(l)(c), which reads as follows:

[Consumer means any person who uses an article of tangible personal property other than for the purpose] of consuming such property in producing for sale a new article of tangible personal property or a new substance, of which such property becomes an ingredient or component or as a chemical used in processing, when the primary purpose of such chemical is to create a chemical reaction directly through contact with an ingredient of a new article being produced for sale;

This provision creates two distinct exemptions which, for convenience, we will call the ingredients exemption and the chemicals used in processing exemption. Van Dyk's coke does not qualify for the chemicals used in processing exemption because it does not chemically react with any ingredient of the final product. Northwest Steel Rolling Mills, Inc. v. Department of Rev., 40 Wn. App. 237, 698 P.2d 100 (1985). However, it does undergo a chemical reaction with the air by burning. Because of this, the Department contends, it is a chemical and can only qualify for exemption as a chemical used in processing. Because it does *74 not so qualify, argues the Department, it cannot be exempt. The Department's position, simply stated, is that a chemical that undergoes any chemical reaction during the manufacturing process cannot be an ingredient. So stated, the proposition refutes itself.

The Department contends that Pacific Northwest Alloys, Inc. v. State, 49 Wn.2d 702, 306 P.2d 197 (1957), being the closest factually to this case and not having been overruled, is controlling. We disagree. In Pacific, the taxpayer manufactured ferrosilicon, the components of which are iron and silicon. It used a furnace heated by an electric current passed among three carbon electrodes that protruded about 5 feet into the raw materials in the furnace. As the materials heated, some underwent a chemical reaction creating silicon. Part of the carbon from the electrodes entered into the same reaction, while an undetermined amount oxidized and was wasted. The silicon then united with iron in the materials to form ferrosilicon. The taxpayer argued that the electrodes, which were completely consumed in the process, were exempt from use taxes as chemicals used in processing. The court disagreed because the primary purpose of the electrodes was to generate heat rather than to enter into the silicon-forming reaction. In so holding, the court considered only the chemicals used in processing exemption.

The Department argues that Pacific is authority for the proposition that a chemical cannot fall under the ingredients exemption. We cannot read the case this way, for it is apparent that only the chemicals used in processing exemption was considered. See Pacific Northwest Alloys, Inc., 49 Wn.2d at 704-05.

The Department next contends that its own regulation, WAC 458-20-113, is controlling. 2 The coke, it argues, is *75 used for dual purposes, both as a chemical and as an ingredient, and the regulation imposes a primary purpose test to determine whether such an article is to be taxed. Because Van Dyk's coke is used primarily to create a nonexempt chemical reaction (combustion) rather than to provide an ingredient (carbon), under the regulation it would be taxable. We agree that the regulation would require this result. We do not agree that it is controlling.

The Department asserts that, because the regulation has existed in essentially its present form since 1936, it has the force of law because of legislative acquiescence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
702 P.2d 472, 41 Wash. App. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-dyk-v-department-of-revenue-washctapp-1985.