This is a petition to review an order of the Tax Court, which dismissed for want of jurisdiction the taxpayer’s petition for redetermination of deficiencies in income, declared value excess profits, and excess profits taxes for the years 1941 to 1944. The taxpayer a Delaware corporation, was formally dissolved in accordance with the laws of Delaware on December 31, 1944. After a series of conferences between the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and those charged with winding up the corpo-’ rate affairs, the Commissioner, on December 30, 1947, one day short of three years from the date of dissolution, issued a final notice of deficiency, advising the taxpayer *539 that within ninety days it might file its petition for redetermination with the Tax Court. This the taxpayer did on February 25, 1948, well within the ninety day period, but the Tax Court dismissed the petition •on the theory that the taxpayer had ceased to exist under Delaware Law, and accordingly there was no proper party petitioner before the court.
Section 2074, of the Revised Code of Delaware of 1935, Delaware Corporation Law, § 42, provides as follows: “All corporations, whether they expire by their own limitation, or are otherwise dissolved, :shall nevertheless be continued for the term of three years from such expiration or dissolution bodies corporate for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits by or against them, and of enabling them gradually to settle and close their business, to dispose of and convey their property, and to divide their capital stock but not for the purpose of continuing the business for which said corporation shall have been established ; provided, however, that with respect to any action, suit, or proceeding begun or commenced by or against the corporation prior to such expiration or dissolution and with respect to any action, suit or proceeding begun or commenced by the corporation within three years after the date of such expiration or dissolution, such corporation shall only for the purpose of such actions, suits or proceedings so begun or commenced be continued bodies corporate beyond said three-year period and until any judgment, orders, or decrees therein shall be fully executed.”
The Tax Court, without citation of Delaware authority, took the view that the action of the Commissioner in sending final notice of deficiency within three years after dissolution was administrative merely and did not constitute the beginning of an “action, suit, or proceeding” against the corporation within the meaning of the Delaware statute, and that the taxpayer’s petition for redetermination, although a proceeding on behalf of the corporation, was ineffective because filed more than three years after dissolution.
In our opinion, the petition should have been entertained. Statutes of this type are broadly remedial and should be liberally construed in order to permit a dissolved corporation to resist any claim made against it within three years after the date of dissolution. Such has been the construction of the Delaware statute in the courts. Eastman, Gardiner & Co. v. Warren, 5 Cir.,
The issuance of the Commissioner’s notice of deficiency under Section 272 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 272, is the first formal step in the assessment and collection of an additional tax without which payment of the tax cannot be enforced. It suspends' the collection of the tax for ninety days and is a necessary preliminary to the petition for review which the taxpayer may file with the Tax Court within that period. If the petition is filed, the Tax Court acquires jurisdiction and the collection of the tax remains in abeyance until the court has affirmed, modified or rejected the Commissioner’s determination. We think that these several steps may fairly be regarded as parts of an integral administrative proceeding, and that it cannot be said that the proceeding does not begin until the
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jurisdiction of the Tax Court is invoked. The court merely takes the final administrative step as “an independent agency in the Executive Branch of the Government.” Internal Revenue Code § 1100, 26 U.S.C.A. § 1100; Goldsmith v. United States.,
270
U.S. 117,
Irrespective of the Delaware statute, the petition of the taxpayer should be entertained, notwithstanding its corporate dissolution, • because it is clearly in harmony with the procedure which Congress has devised for the ascertainment and enforcement of additional tax liability. The federal government is not subject to the limitations of state statutes in such matters, but may impose taxes upon associations or entities whose existence is not recognized by state authority. In Burk-Waggoner Oil Ass’n v. Hopkins,
Again, in Coast Carton Co. v. C. I. R., 9 Cir.,
In the exercise of this power, Congress has provided in Section 272(k) of the Internal Revenue Code that notice of a tax deficiency, if mailed to a taxpayer at his last known address, shall be sufficient even if the taxpayer is a corporation whose existence has terminated.
1
This statute itself is sufficient to justify a tax determination against the taxpayer in this case and appropriate steps to enforce the liability, re
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gardless of the provisions of the Delaware state law. The existence of the defunct corporation for tax purposes is thereby recognized; and it may not be supposed that it was the purpose of Congress to authorize the Commissioner to assert such a liability against a dissolved corporation by Section 272 (k), and at the same time to deny to such a corporation the right of review which is accorded to “any taxpayer” by Section 272(a). We are not in accord with the authorities which hold that the right of a dissolved corporation to invoke the jurisdiction of the Tax Court depends upon the law of the state of incorporation rather than upon the federal law. See Pelican Oil & Gasoline Co. v. Commissioner, 5 Cir.,
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
A similar provision is found in § 311 (e) of the Internal Revenue Oode, 26 U.S.C.A. § 311(e), with respect to notice to the transferees of the property of the taxpayer.
