1. Dairies, engaged primarily in the collection, pasteurization,
and distribution of fresh milk, purchased and used electricity in
various ways in their general operations, including an undetermined
amount used in pasteurizing milk.
Held: electricity supplied to these dairies through
single meters, or through more than one meter but without
differentiation as to use, is sold for "commercial consumption"
(and not for industrial purposes), within the meaning of §
3411 of the Internal Revenue Code, and is taxable against the
vendor under that section. Pp.
336 U. S.
177-187.
2. The legislative history of this section indicates that the
term "commercial" was meant to apply to the nature of the business
in which the energy is consumed, and not to the specific purpose to
which each measurable unit of electricity is devoted. Pp.
336 U. S.
181-182.
3. The controlling factor in determining the applicability of
the tax is the general nature of the business carried on at a given
location. Pp.
336 U. S.
182-184.
4. Though the process of pasteurizing, separately viewed, may be
assumed to be industrial, the general nature of the business
conducted by the dairy plants here involved was essentially
commercial, notwithstanding the inclusion of pasteurization among
their many activities. Pp.
336 U. S. 184-185.
5. The conclusion here reached as to the applicability of the
tax is supported by the legislative history and the administrative
interpretation. Pp.
336 U. S.
181-187.
168 F.2d 285 affirmed.
Petitioner sued in the District Court for a refund of taxes
alleged to have been erroneously collected under § 3411 of the
Internal Revenue Code. The District Court denied recovery. 69 F.
Supp. 743. The Court of Appeals affirmed. 168 F.2d 285. This Court
granted certiorari. 335 U.S. 842.
Affirmed, p.
336 U. S. 187.
Page 336 U. S. 177
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, engaged in the business of supplying electric energy
to the public, seeks the refund of taxes paid by it pursuant to
§ 3411 of the Internal Revenue Code. That section, in
pertinent part, provides for a tax
". . . upon electrical energy sold for domestic or commercial
consumption . . . equivalent to 3 percentum [
Footnote 1] of the price for which so sold, to be
paid by the vendor under such rules and regulations as the
Commissioner, with the approval of the Secretary, shall prescribe.
[
Footnote 2]"
Note that the statute taxes energy for domestic or commercial
consumption. There is no provision for taxation of electrical
energy used for industrial purposes. [
Footnote 3]
The purchasers of the electric power here involved are 27 dairy
plants which are engaged primarily in the collection,
pasteurization, and distribution of fresh milk. The sole question
presented by the case is whether the use of electricity by these
dairies is commercial consumption
Page 336 U. S. 178
within the meaning of the statute, or industrial consumption, a
use not covered by the statute.
The functions of the dairy plants are sufficiently similar so
that they can be treated as one for the purpose of describing their
methods of operation. The plants are buildings equipped with
milk-handling machinery and facilities located either off the dairy
farms, or on the dairy farm itself as an activity apart from milk
production. Contracts for the purchase of raw milk are negotiated
with nearby farms. [
Footnote 4]
This milk is delivered in trucks of the producers or of the dairy
plant, as the case may be, to the plant, where it is received,
weighed, tested for butterfat content, cooled, and mixed and
standardized so as to achieve the proper butterfat content. Next,
it is pasteurized. Pasteurization consists of heating the milk to
143�-145� F., maintaining it at that level for about
thirty minutes, and then subjecting it to sudden cooling to a point
between 38� and 40� F. [
Footnote 5] The process is designed to kill pathogenic
bacteria without destroying the natural creaming properties or the
taste of the milk. Then the milk is drawn into bottles or cans
which have been washed, sterilized, and cooled. Finally it is
stored in refrigerated rooms to permit the cream line to form and
to await delivery. [
Footnote 6]
Most of it is delivered to customers in the dairy plant's trucks or
wagons. In some instances, a small proportion is sold at the plant
itself.
Page 336 U. S. 179
Electric power is employed by the purchasing dairy plants in a
number of ways. It is used to light the plants, including the
garage space for the collecting and distributing trucks. It drives
electric motors which pump refrigerants, deliver milk to and from
the pasteurizer and to the bottling machines, operate the
homogenizer, the bottling machine, the cream separator, and the
machinery used in washing, sterilizing, and conveying bottles. The
electricity used by some of the plants is measured through a single
meter, that of others through two or more meters, but in no case
are the meters so connected to the incoming power line as to enable
the energy supplied for one purpose to be differentiated from that
supplied for another. We do not have before us a situation where
pasteurization utilizes electrical energy that is measured by a
meter exclusively used for pasteurization.
Pasteurization is accomplished by the use of special equipment
designed for that purpose. Most of the electricity attributable to
the process is devoted to the ice machines which perform the rapid
cooling of the milk after the initial heating. Since the same
cooling units perform the cooling which is necessary before and
after pasteurization, however, the electricity which they consume
for pasteurization alone cannot be ascertained. Pasteurization
equipment, including the increased cooling equipment necessary
therefor, accounts for about 15 or 20 percent of the total cost of
plant equipment, excluding trucks and other vehicles. About
one-tenth of the cost of plant operation, excluding the cost of the
raw milk and costs attributable to distribution, is attributable to
pasteurization.
Petitioner paid the tax on electrical energy sold to the dairy
plants during the period from April, 1940, to July, 1943, and then
brought suit to recover it on the ground that such energy was sold
not for commercial, but for
Page 336 U. S. 180
industrial consumption. The United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Wisconsin held that the sales were for
commercial consumption within the meaning of the statute, and
therefore that the tax was valid. 69 F. Supp. 743. The United
States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit affirmed. 168 F.2d
285. It summarized its views as follows:
"We agree with [District] Judge Duffy that the wording and
legislative history of the Act make it clear that the predominant
character of the business carried on by a consumer of electrical
energy is what determines whether the electricity sold has been
sold for 'commercial consumption;' hence we are content to adopt
his opinion as that of this court."
168 F.2d at 286.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit had
held in
United States v. Public Service Co. of Colorado,
143 F.2d 79, that electrical energy sold to dairy plants operating
substantially as these was sold for industrial, rather than
commercial, consumption, and consequently was not taxable under
§ 3411. We granted certiorari in this case in order to resolve
the apparent conflict between circuits and to settle the meaning of
the statute as it applies to the business of this general type of
dairy plant. 335 U.S. 842.
The tax now embodied in § 3411 was originally imposed upon
the consumer of electricity by the Revenue Act of 1932, 47 Stat.
169, 266. This Act was amended in 1933 to make the burden of the
tax fall directly upon the vendor. 48 Stat. 254, 256. No change of
any significance for our purposes has occurred since the original
enactment of this provision.
Although the language of the section does not include the word
"industrial," it is clear from the legislative history that
"commercial" was used in contradistinction to
Page 336 U. S. 181
"industrial." [
Footnote 7]
While electricity sold for commercial consumption is taxed, that
sold for industrial consumption is not. Thus, our task resolves
itself to a determination of the category in which the consumption
of electricity by these dairy plants should be classified. We shall
not undertake the difficult, and here needless, task of general
definition which differentiates for this statutory clause between
industrial and commercial in other lines of business activity. That
is a problem primarily for the administrators of the section, with
knowledge of the specific and varying facts.
The legislative history indicates that the term "commercial" was
meant to apply to the nature of the business in which the energy is
consumed, and not to the specific purpose to which each measurable
unit of electricity is devoted. [
Footnote 8] Where it is delivered through a single meter
at one location, energy utilized to operate sewing machines
Page 336 U. S. 182
for a minor manufacturing unit,
e.g., shirts, in a
department store, would be deemed power sold for commercial
consumption, although it might fall within the industrial category
if sold to a consumer who did nothing but manufacture shirts. Since
any other interpretation of the section would entail the almost
insurmountable administrative difficulty of classifying all the
electricity sold to a plant according to the specific operations to
which such power was devoted by the consumer, the conclusion that
the controlling factor is the general nature of a business at a
location accords with the natural meaning to be given the words
employed by Congress to express its purpose.
The regulations interpret the section in line with the
legislative history. U.S.Treas.Reg. 46 (1940 ed.) § 316.190
(as amended by T.D. 5099), presently applicable, provides in
pertinent part:
"
Scope of tax. -- The tax imposed by section 3411(a) of
the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, applies, except as provided
hereinafter, to all electrical energy sold for domestic or
commercial consumption and not for resale."
"The term 'electrical energy sold for domestic or commercial
consumption' does not include (1) electrical energy sold for
industrial consumption,
e.g., for use in manufacturing,
mining, refining, shipbuilding, building construction, irrigation,
etc., or (2) that sold for other uses which likewise cannot be
classed as domestic or commercial, such as the electrical energy
used by electric and gas companies, waterworks, telegraph,
telephone, and radio communication companies, railroads, other
similar common carriers, educational institutions not operated for
private profit, churches, and charitable institutions in their
operations as such. However, electrical energy is subject
Page 336 U. S. 183
to tax if sold for consumption in commercial phases of
industrial or other businesses, such as in office buildings, sales
and display rooms, retail stores, etc., or in domestic phases, such
as in dormitories or living quarters maintained by educational
institutions, churches, charitable institutions, or others."
"Where electrical energy is sold to a consumer for two or more
purposes, through separate meters, the specific use for which the
energy is sold through each meter,
i.e., whether for
domestic or commercial consumption, or for other use, shall
determine its taxable status. Where the consumer has all the
electrical energy consumed at a given location furnished through
one meter, the predominant character of the business carried on at
such location shall determine the classification of consumption for
the purposes of this tax. [
Footnote
9]"
The last sentence of this regulation makes it clear that all
electrical energy furnished to a predominantly commercial
establishment through a single meter is subject to the tax although
portions of such energy are devoted to purposes which, considered
separately, might be classified as industrial. [
Footnote 10] While the regulation does not
deal with the point, we think it obvious from the last quoted
paragraph that, where the energy is furnished at a single location
through various meters, although none of them
Page 336 U. S. 184
is shown to carry current for predominantly industrial uses, the
same rule would be applied. The last sentence of the regulation
adds a qualification, however, which directs our attention not
necessarily to the nature of a business as a whole, but to the
nature as a whole of the activities carried on "at a given
location."
We accept the last sentence of the quoted regulation as proper
under the statute. [
Footnote
11] As applied to these plants, we think that the electricity
furnished by the petitioner was "sold for commercial consumption,"
and consequently was properly taxed. Admittedly the activities of
these consumers would be considered commercial if they did not
pasteurize the milk prior to its sale. Such business would
accurately be called the distribution of fresh milk. The butter and
cream extraction appears incidental. We are not dealing with a
"creamery" in the sense of a butter or cheese factory. We agree
with the courts below that the addition of pasteurization to the
other activities described above does not change the nature of the
dairy plants' business from commercial to industrial any more than
would the cooking of food for sale in a restaurant, or the cleaning
of raw food products prior to distribution or sale. The District
Court found that "pasteurization plays a minor part in the total
business of the dairies," and that "the predominant business of the
dairies here involved . . . is, and was, that of fluid milk dealers
and distributors." [
Footnote
12]
Page 336 U. S. 185
Petitioner argues that the test applied by the Court of Appeals,
"whether the predominant character of the enterprise carried on by
such consumer is commercial," is erroneous, and contrary to the
regulation in that it directs attention to the business as a whole,
rather than to the activities at a given location. While the
language quoted is susceptible to this criticism, the variation is
harmless, because the plant itself is the location or the focal
point of all the relevant activities of each of these consumers of
electricity. Pasteurization does not occur at a separate location,
but at the same plant where the milk is received, weighed, tested,
cooled, homogenized, separated, and bottled. The milk is brought to
this plant when purchased, and, from the plant, it is distributed
to customers. The fact that most of the sales or deliveries occur
off the premises does not alter the essential fact that all
activities occur in or pivot around the plant.
Thus, though pasteurizing, we assume, is processing, and though
processing, separately viewed, may be conceded to be industrial,
[
Footnote 13] we conclude
that the business conducted by these dairy plants is essentially
commercial. The contrary conclusion reached in
United States v.
Public Service Co. of Colorado, 143 F.2d 79, may be ascribed
to the fact that there, the court apparently looked to the use to
which the electrical energy was devoted, rather than to the nature
of the business at a given location. [
Footnote 14]
Page 336 U. S. 186
Rulings of the Bureau of Internal Revenue support our
conclusion. In 1932, S.T. 518 stated that,
"Electrical energy furnished for consumption by bottling works,
milk companies, or creameries engaged in the pasteurization and
bottling of milk, and in the manufacture of butter, buttermilk,
chocolate milk, and cottage cheese, is not furnished for domestic
or commercial consumption. . . . [
Footnote 15]"
Apparently, however, the Bureau intended this ruling to apply
only to those plants whose business was predominantly
pasteurization and the manufacture of milk by-products, because
S.T. 637, issued the following year, contained the following
statement:
"A dairy which obtains milk and converts it into use for retail
purposes is held to be engaged in a business commercial in
character. Electrical energy used in such operations will be
subject to tax. [
Footnote
16]"
In clarification of these two rulings, the Bureau explained:
"Electrical energy furnished a commercial dairy or milk company
which merely produces or purchases raw milk in bulk and pasteurizes
it for sale either in bulk or bottled quantities, whose activities
consist principally in the handling, distribution and sale of milk,
is also subject to the tax."
"It is only electrical energy that is furnished for direct
consumption by dairies which, in addition to pasteurizing and
bottling milk, are also engaged in all the essential manufacturing
processes necessary for the production of dairy products, such as
the
Page 336 U. S. 187
manufacturing of butter, cheese, and other dairy products, for
sale on the open market as an article of commerce, that is not
subject to the tax. [
Footnote
17]"
Thus, we hold that electrical energy supplied to these dairy
plants through single meters, or through more than one but without
differentiation as to use, is energy sold for commercial
consumption.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Amended by the Revenue Act of 1941, c. 412, 55 Stat. 687, 707,
§ 521(a) (19), to change the three percent tax to three and
one-third percent.
[
Footnote 2]
26 U.S.C. § 3411.
[
Footnote 3]
See infra, p.
336 U. S. 180
et seq.
[
Footnote 4]
A few of the consumers of electricity here involved produce
their own milk.
[
Footnote 5]
One of the plants pasteurizes by the so-called "flash method,"
heating the milk to 161� F. for 16 seconds and rapidly
cooling it to 32� F.
[
Footnote 6]
A minor proportion of the milk purchased by these plants is
manufactured into butter, cheese, or other byproducts. An
undisclosed amount of this milk is separated from the cream it
contains; some is also homogenized.
[
Footnote 7]
H. Conference Rep. No.1492, 72d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 22; Senator
Harrison, 77 Cong.Rec. 3212-14, 3215.
[
Footnote 8]
The legislative explanations treat of business consumers as
units, and do not differentiate as to use within the units.
Senator Harrison, Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee,
which reported the bill, said:
"I am telling Senators nothing new when I remind them that we
had a fight here in 1932 over the imposition of this tax. The
Senate imposed a 3-percent electric energy tax, and it was finally
adopted, to be collected from the consumer of electric energy. We
applied that only on domestic and commercial energy -- that is,
electric energy used in stores and dwellings that are classified as
commercial and domestic. There was no tax in the 1932 act imposed
upon energy employed in industry."
77 Cong.Rec. 3212-13.
Senator Couzens, a member of a subcommittee of the Senate
Finance Committee, which was constituted to consider the electrical
energy tax, said:
"I mean they eliminated that feature of the tax; they eliminated
the tax on electrical energy sold to manufacturing plants and left
the tax on electricity used commercially, that is, by stores, and
on electricity used for domestic purposes. . . ."
77 Cong.Rec. 3218.
[
Footnote 9]
This regulation was substantially the same in its earlier
versions. U.S.Treas.Reg. 42, Art. 40 (1932); T.D. 4342, XI-2
Cum.Bull. 495 (1932); T.D. 4393, XII-2 Cum.Bull. 322 (1933). The
quoted version, however, omitted the word "processing," which was
formerly included in the list of activities exemplifying industrial
consumption. We do not consider this deletion significant for
purposes of this case.
[
Footnote 10]
Cf. St. Louis Refrigerating & Cold Storage Co. v. United
States, 95 Ct.Cl. 694, 43 F. Supp. 476;
Fulton Market Cold
Storage Co. v. United States, 95 Ct.Cl. 710, 43 F. Supp.
485.
[
Footnote 11]
We do not intend by these words of limitation to approve or
disapprove other provisions. There are ambiguities in this section
of the regulation. In the second paragraph, without reference to
separate meters, it holds that energy used in the commercial phases
of an industrial business is taxable. The reverse would seem to
follow as to industrial phases of a commercial business. Yet the
third paragraph allows the avoidance of such a tax on industrial
use only by the employment of separate meters.
[
Footnote 12]
For state cases to the effect that this business is primarily
commercial,
see, e.g., City of Louisville v. Ewing Von-Allmen
Dairy Co., 268 Ky. 652, 105 S.W.2d 801;
People ex rel.
Empire State Dairy Co. v. Sohmer, 218 N.Y. 199, 112 N.E. 755;
City of Richmond v. Richmond Dairy Co., 156 Va. 63, 157
S.E. 728.
But see Michigan Allied Dairy Assn. v. State Board of
Tax Administration, 302 Mich. 643, 5 N.W.2d 516.
[
Footnote 13]
See note 9
supra.
[
Footnote 14]
"The electrical energy was not used in the commercial phase of
the dairying enterprise, but in the processing or industrial phase
of the enterprise."
143 F.2d 79, 82.
[
Footnote 15]
XI-2 Cum.Bull. 498 (1932).
[
Footnote 16]
XII-1 Cum.Bull. 409, 410 (1933).
[
Footnote 17]
Bureau Letter, dated May 13, 1933 (symbols MT: ST: BHF) (333
C.C.H. � 6266), 4 C.C.H. Standard Federal Tax Reporter
� 2633G.175 (1949).