The defendant admits that plaintiff was not a social, athletic, or sporting club, and that its initiation fees and membership dues were not subject to tax, and that the amount sued for was illegally and erroneously collected.
The Treasury Department refused to refund this portion of the tax collectеd for the period subsequent to the period involved before this court in the case of Builders’ Club of Chicago v. United States,
Plaintiff contends that it was the taxpayer within the meaning of the statutes imposing the tax on club dues and the proper person to file a claim for refund and bring suit for the recovery of any tax in respect of which the claim was rejected, and that the regulation in question is invalid as an unauthorized exercise by the Commissioner of his authority to make all needful rules and regulations for the proper administration of the statute. We аgree with the position taken by plaintiff. From the time the tax on club dues was first imposed in 1917 until this regulation was issued, the club which collected the tax on its initiation fees and dues from its members, whom the statute provided should pay such tax to the club, has always been regarded as the taxpayer entitled to claim and secure the refund of any dues tax erroneously and illegally collected. The Treasury Department practice and the regulatiоns consistently so recognized the club as the proper person to claim and receive the refund, and the decisions of this and other cоurts held that the club was the taxpayer who pays the tax to the government and the one entitled to claim
*1022
or recover a tax illegally or erroneously paid or collected, and that such club is not merely a collecting agent for the United States. Alliance Country Club v. United States,
“The Treаsury Department recognizes and treats the club as the taxpayer, both as the proper party to pay the tax and also as entitled to recover the tax if the same has been illegally or erroneously paid. We are of the same opinion, and therefore think there is nothing in the contention of the Government that the plaintiff is not the proper party to bring this action.”
In that case the government relied upon and urged this court to follow the decision of the District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, in Shannopin Country Club v. Heiner,
A tax illegally collected from one who is required to return and pay the same does not belong to the government. The Treаsury Department may not retain it in the absence of legislative authority merely because it may believe that, if the amount collected is refunded to the person who returned and paid it, some portion of •the amount may not reach the hands of the persons who bore the burden of the tаx. If the Bureau could thus refuse to refund taxes illegally collected, the Treasury Department by a regulation could retain a great many taxes other than the tax on club dues which had been admittedly illegally collected, merely because the taxpayer had not shown that it had originally borne the burden of the tax. -The regulation involved in this case is based solely on that ground. A construction of a statute which produces a consequence opposed to thé spirit of the legislation is to be avoided if possible. The language of the act is to be read in- the light of its policy. The оnly authority conferred by the Rev
*1023
enue Acts upon the Commissioner is to make regulations to carry out the purposes of the act, not to amеnd it. Iselin v. United States,
Plaintiff is entitled to recover the amount of $1,318.55 claimed, with interest as provided by law, and judgment will be entered accordingly. It is so ordered.
BOOTH, Chief Justice, and WHALEY, WILLIAMS, and GREEN, Judges, concur.
