Zangerle v. Republic Steel Corp.

60 N.E.2d 52, 144 Ohio St. 506, 144 Ohio St. (N.S.) 529
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1945
DocketNo. 30071
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 60 N.E.2d 52 (Zangerle v. Republic Steel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zangerle v. Republic Steel Corp., 60 N.E.2d 52, 144 Ohio St. 506, 144 Ohio St. (N.S.) 529 (Ohio 1945).

Opinions

The auditor claims error in this case because the Board of Tax Appeals reduced the valuation of the land in question in the sum of $139,930, and the valuation of certain structures, aside from the question of their classification as realty or personalty, in a further sum. These reductions were evidently based on a difference in the appraisal of the property by witnesses who testified before the Board of Tax Appeals. This presents, not a question of law, but an issue of fact for the decision of the board, and this court cannot say that the finding of the board as to such items of valuation is unlawful or unreasonable. The contention of the auditor as to this ground of error is therefore overruled.

The only question remaining to be determined is whether the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals, to the effect that large portions of the equipment and machinery located on the lands of Standard Oil and used by it in the process of refining, are not fixtures and therefore not improvements on the land, but personal property assessable as such for taxation, was unreasonable or unlawful.

Whether property was classified for taxation purposes either as land and improvements thereon, or as *Page 512 personal property, was immaterial and of no consequence prior to 1931, because under Section 2, Article XII of the Constitution, all property was then taxed at a uniform rate and at its true value in money. However, in 1931, that section of the Constitution was amended so as to provide that lands andimprovements thereon shall be taxed by uniform rule according to value. By that amendment the former limitation of uniformity, as applied to the taxation of personal property, was removed. The General Assembly, pursuant to this constitutional amendment, in the same year adopted a classified property tax law including therein Section 5388, General Code (115 Ohio Laws, 564), which provides that, excepting asotherwise provided, personal property shall be listed and assessed at 70 per cent of the true value thereof in money. One of the exceptions to the general personal property classification for tax purposes above noted is that all engines, machinery, tools and implements of a manufacturer, of every kind and description, used or designed to be used in refining or manufacturing, except such as are legally regarded as improvements on land and so considered in arriving at the value of real property assessed for taxation, and except such as are used for the generation or distribution of electricity other than for the use of the person generating or distributing the same, shall be listed and assessed for taxation at 50 per cent of the true value thereof in money. See, also, Section 5386, General Code. The net result of this legislation is that engines, machinery, tools and implements, to be entitled to be listed for taxation at 50 per cent of their value, must be personal property.

It must be apparent that in the adoption of this legislation it was the purpose and intent of the General Assembly to give such manufacturers and refiners, and certain other classes of taxpayers, a tax advantage as *Page 513 to certain of their personal property not enjoyed by taxpayers generally, to the end that this preferential treatment would result in the production by such preferred taxpayers of a greater volume of property which, in turn, would become subject to taxation. While the purpose and effect of this legislation are not controlling, they should be given consideration and such weight as they deserve in approaching the problem now before the court.

It is the claim of the auditor that the machinery and equipment in question are annexed to the land in such manner as to become a part of it and therefore must be regarded as improvements on the land and be taxed as such under the uniform rule applicable to land.

On the other hand, Standard Oil claims that the constitutional provision that "land and improvements thereon shall be taxed by uniform rule according to value" does not apply to the taxation of the machinery, tanks, pipes and equipment which it owns and uses in refining, if they are so affixed to the land as to be removable without injury to the land or to such equipment; that its refining machinery and equipment serve a special purpose and are not so adapted to the use of the land as to be appropriate, usable or necessary in the enjoyment of the land if and when it is devoted to any other normal use and are, therefore, personal and not real property; and that such property is of such character and classification to wit, machinery used in manufacturing and refining, as to give it a preferential tax status under the laws of this state and assessable at 50 per cent of its true value.

Both parties rely on the legal doctrines announced in the century old, leading and universally approved case ofTeaff v. Hewitt, 1 Ohio St. 511, 59 Am. Dec., 634, as supporting their respective contentions. In deciding the instant case, this court may rely for authority *Page 514 on the case of Teaff v. Hewitt, supra, and the subsequent cognate cases decided by this court, in which the rules of law laid down by the court in that leading case have been consistently followed. The only controversy between the parties in this case arises in the application of the principles of that case to the facts in the instant case as presented by the record.

The case of Teaff v. Hewitt, supra, adopted the combined application of three requisites as the criterion of a fixture: (1) Actual annexation to the realty or something appurtenant thereto; (2) appropriation to the use or purpose of the realty with which it is connected; and (3) the intention of the party making the annexation to make the article a permanent accession to the freehold. That criterion will now be applied to the machinery and equipment under consideration in determining whether they are or are not fixtures and consequently whether they are or are not real property.

To determine the degree of annexation which will convert what was once a chattel into part and parcel of the real property to which it is attached, is a matter of much difficulty. Without discussing particular cases, the weight of authority seems to be that, while slight attachment to realty may be sufficient to give a chattel the character of a fixture, provided the other requisites of a fixture are present, as a general rule to give it such character it must be so attached that it loses its identity as a chattel or that it cannot be removed without injury to itself or to the freehold, apart from the reduced value of the freehold due to the abstraction of the thing removed. This requisite of the test does not furnish an exclusive criterion because some chattels, even though slightly attached to the realty and removable without injury to the realty or to the chattels themselves, are so definitely appropriated to and so necessary to the enjoyment of the realty to which *Page 515 they are attached that they must be regarded as fixtures.Teaff v. Hewitt, supra, pages 527, 528.

The record here under consideration discloses that while some of the machinery and equipment under consideration in this case are ponderous and rest upon heavy concrete foundations and are held in place by means of heavy bolts, all may be taken apart, dismantled, removed and reassembled without injury to such machinery and equipment and without injury to the realty upon which they are located.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 N.E.2d 52, 144 Ohio St. 506, 144 Ohio St. (N.S.) 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zangerle-v-republic-steel-corp-ohio-1945.