Washburn v. City of New Orleans

43 La. Ann. 226
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1891
DocketNo. 10,710
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 La. Ann. 226 (Washburn v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washburn v. City of New Orleans, 43 La. Ann. 226 (La. 1891).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This is an injunction suit, seeking to restrain the City of New Orleans ana the State from selling plaintiff’s property for the delinquent property taxes of 1887 and 1888, on the ground that the same is exempt from taxation under the 207th article of the •Oonstitution, which declares that there shall be exempt from taxation and license for a period of ten years from the adoption of this Oonstitution, the capital, machinery, and other property employed in ■the manufacture of textile fabrics, leather, shoes, harness, saddlery, hats, flour, machinery, agricultural implements and furniture, and other articles of wood, marble or stone; soap, stationery, ink and paper,” etc.

His representations are that during those years he was the owner •of a saw and planing mill situated in the sixth district of the Oity •of New Orleans, which was assessed at the aggregate valuation of $17,300; and that he was the owner of a box factory situated in the first district of said city, which was in those years assessed at the aggregate valuation of $2200.

With regard to the former plaintiff alleges “that more than three-fourths of the material which is sawed, resawed and received in said mill is planed, edged and dressed; and that when it leaves said mill it is ready for immediate use by the consumer or manufacturer.

“ That the greater portion of said planed and dressed lumber and material was, during the years 1887 and 1888, used by petitioner in his box manufactory and otherwise; and that the remainder thereof was used by other parties in the manufacture of articles of wood;” and not more than “ one-fourth of the lumber and material which leaves •said mill, and whiqh is sawed therein, leaves it in a rough, un[229]*229dressed, unfinished condition, not ready '■for immediate use by the manufacturer or consumer.” Brief, p. 8.

He therefore avers that three-fourths of the property, movable and immovable, that is employed and used in said mill is exempt from taxation.

With regard to the latter, he alleges that it was during those years exclusively engaged in the manufacture of wooden and paper boxes, and that the whole was exempt from taxation and license.

He alleges a previous legal tender, made to the legal representatives of the State and city, of the amount of State and city taxes due on the one-fourth interest in the saw mill and planing mill and appurtenances, namely, on one-fourth of $17,800, and that same was refused and a seizure made of the real estate, which was assessed.

The District Judge decreed the assessment of the box factory null to the extent of one-half of its assessed value, and reduced it to $1100, and to that extent declared it exempt from State and city license and taxation; and he decreed the assessment of the saw and planing mill null to the extent of three-fourths of its assessed value, and reduced it to $4825, and to that extent declared it exempt from State and city license and taxation.

From this judgment the City of New Orleans alone appeals, and in this court plaintiff and appellee filed an answer, requesting an amendment of the judgment in his favor, so as to exempt from license and taxation his box factory in its entirety.

I.

The assessments of plaintiff’s saw. and planing mill are as follows, to-wit:

The assessment is just the same for each of the years — 1887 and 1888.

From the evidence it appears that the saw mill cuts lumber from saw logs, and then a portion of it is cut into suitable shapes and sizes for boxes and put into bundles. These are called shoots. Of these a large portion is sent to the plaintiff’s box factory on Maga[230]*230zine street, where these pieces are put together and made into boxes. Many of the shooks are shipped in car load lots for sale. . Shooks are boxes knocked down, not nailed up. About three-fourths of the property of the saw and planing mill is devoted to this business exclusively. A statement of the whole business for the years 1887 and 1888 are in evidence, and they are as follows, to-wit:

The statement for 1887 shows that of the sum total of business done by the saw and planing mill, only $14,558 was realized from the sale of lumber in its crude state, and for sawing logs sent to the mill by othei;, people. The correctness of this statement is fully borne out by the testimony of witnesses.

The contention of the City Attorney is that this property of the plaintiff was not employed in the manufacture of “articles of wood ” in the sense of the 207th article of the Constitution; in other words, that “ shooks” are not such articles of wood as the framers of the constitutional article intended to exempt from taxation.

The District Judge was of opinion that “ shooks are articles of wood ready for use by the consumer, who has but to put them in boxes. They need no further 'manipulation or labor on them as shooks, precisely as is the ease of sashes, windows and blinds, which also require as such no further manipulation or labor, but must nevertheless be put up for use.”

He arrived at this conclusion from what was said by us in Carre vs. City, 41 An. 996, in the determination of a similar question, and which was predicated on Martin vs. New Orleans, 38 An. 398, in which sashes, doors and blinds were declared exempt, as being within constitutional intendment.

In the Carre case we said: “The articles of wood mentioned in the article of the Constitution are, therefore, those which like furniture were intended for separate use, and are ready for use by the [231]*231purchaser without further manipulation or labor on them, namely, which are complete in themselves.”

The great similarity between shooks and sashes, doors and blinds, that the District Judge suggests is apparent. True, shooks are not wooden boxes; but they are “articles of wood;” articles cut by machinery from sawed planks, and fashioned into shapes and sizes ¡suitable for making boxes, by the simple process of nailing them together.

We think the view he entertained was correct. But as the testimony shows that of the total output one-fourth of the material was in its crude form, and therefore not ai-tieles of wood, which are exempt, the judge correctly apportioned the exempt property at three-fourths of the value assessed, and reduced the assessment of the saw and planing mill to one-fourth. The proof satisfies us that fully three-fourths of “ the capital, machinery and other property ” of plaintiff’s saw and planing mill was employed in 1887 and 1888 in the manufacture of articles of wood within the meaning of the Constitution, and to that extent same is and was exempt from property taxation for and during those years.

II.

Plaintiff’s box factory was assessed for the years 1887 and 1888 as follows, viz:

This factory was exclusively engaged in the manufacture of paper boxes, wooden boxes and cigar boxes during those years.

The statements in the record show that there were manufactured at this establishment each year paper boxes of the aggregate value ol $8000. The District Judge entertained the opinion and held that as this establishment did npt manufacture paper, but out of paper-manufactured by others paper boxes

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Bluebook (online)
43 La. Ann. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washburn-v-city-of-new-orleans-la-1891.