This is an action to recover manufacturer’s excise taxes alleged to have been erroneously paid. Taxpayer-appellee manufactures and installs custom made automobile seat covers. The disputеd taxes were paid during the three years 1948 through 1950. Appellee contends that at the time these taxes were paid a portion of his business was not subject to taxation. The court below agreed with taxpayer’s contentions аnd rendered judgment against the United States. We conclude that the disputed taxes were lawfully collected and reverse the result reached below.
Appellee’s sales during the years involved were about evenly divided between sales to dealers in new and used automobiles, and direct sales to retail owners of automobiles. Section 3403(c) of the 1939 Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 3403(c) imposes a tax on the sale of “parts or accessories” for automobiles, and the Commissioner of Internal Revenue has consistently held that all sales of seat covers to automobile dealers are within the purview of that section. See Masao Hirasuna v. McKenney, 9 Cir., 1957,
We confess to some difficulty in understanding this last provision of S.T. 944. As a matter of logic it appears difficult to demonstrate reliance upon a ruling that one need not pay taxes when one is seeking to recover tastes he paid. This is precisely the situation taxpayer finds himself in. Additionally, there is cleаr testimony in the record establishing that appellee did not become aware of any of the prior rulings until sometime in September, or later, in 1950. We conclude that appellee is unable to demonstrate reliance upon prior rulings. To prevail, therefore, he must show cause why S.T. 944 should not be enforced according to its terms.
We find no error in the construction placed upon Section 3403(c) by the Treasury Department in S.T. 944. This construction has been upheld by the Fourth and Fifth Circuits in two recent cases: United States v. Keeton, 4 Cir., 1956,
It is well settled that the Commissioner is permitted under Section 3791(b) of thе 1939 Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 3791(b), to nullify a prior ruling, based upon a mistake of law, by means of a new ruling having retroactive application. See Automobile Club of Michigan v. Commissioner, 1957,
We conclude that there has been no abuse of discretion in the present case.
Although my colleagues and I are in complete agreement with respect to the foregoing discussion and the result there reached, my colleagues are of the opinion that the judgment below should be reversed on a quite different ground, a ground that would not have required this discussion. They believe that, on the аuthority of Hammond-Knowlton v. United States, 2 Cir., 1941,
I believe there was jurisdiction. I would hold that when a taxpayer brings an action for refund against an individual Collector of Internаl Revenue he then has brought his action against the United States in every meaningful sense. Joining the United States as a named defendant here did not bring a new party within the jurisdiction of the district court. The Government was for all intents and purposes а party from the inception of the action against Hoffman, the nominal defendant. Hence the two-year bar is inapplicable. Taxes are paid to the Collector only because this individual is the designated officer оf the Government to receive the taxes, and the taxpayer knows the Collector is but a conduit through which the sums so collected reach the Treasury of the United States. Hence, under normal circumstances, the statute, 28 U.S.C.A. § 2006, prоvides that any judgment entered against a collector is to be paid out of the Treasury. The doctrine that an action against the Collector did not involve the Government was a fiction created by the courts in order to overcome the principle of sovereign immunity. However, as early as 1887 legislation existed which was construed to permit actions for tax refund to be brought directly against the Government. See discussion in Flora v. United States, 1958,
I differ from my colleagues in their interpretation of Hammond-Knowlton v. United States, supra. I believe that a careful reading of that opinion, particularly at pages 194-201, will reveal that this court there vigorously rejected exactly the argument which the Government has advanced in the present case and which my colleagues here accept.
3
For an interpretation similar to mine, see
Dell v.
American Export Lines, D.C.S.D.N.Y.1956,
The judgment below is reversed.
Notes
. The Commissioner’s power to retroactively correct earlier rulings would appear to bе severely limited when formerly approved pension plans are the subject of later disapproving rulings. See H. S. D. Co. v. Kavanagh, 6 Cir., 1951,
. It is dearly established that an action for tax refund cannot be maintained against a successor in office to the сollector to whom the taxes were paid. Smie-tanka v. Indiana Steel Co., 1921,
. United States v. Nunnally Inv. Co., 1942,
