delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question is whether the obligation imposed upon sellers by a New York City sales tax (No. 20, Local Laws of New York City, 1934, as amended, No. 24, Local Laws of New York City, 1934), to pay a tax laid upon receipts from sales of personal property and collectible alternatively from the buyer or the seller is a “tax” entitled to priority of payment in. bankruptcy under § 64 of the Bankruptcy Act.
Petitioner, New York City, filed its claim against the estate of the bankrupt for taxes on sales of tangible property by the bankrupt during the five years.following January 10, 1934. In the proceeding before the referee it appeared that the bankrupt had failed to collect most of the taxes from its buyers as required by the applicable law, and that the sole issue was with respect to the right of the City to priority of payment of the City’s claim over those of general creditors. The District Court set aside the referee’s order allowing the priority arid the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed,
*285
Section 64 of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended June 22, 1938, 52 Stat. 840, 874, awards priority of payment, in bankruptcy, to “taxes legally due and owing by the bankrupt to the United States or any State or any subdivision thereof . . .” Whether the present obligation is a “tax” entitled to priority within the meaning of the statute is a federal question.
New Jersey
v.
Anderson,
As was pointed out in
New Jersey
v.
Anderson, supra,
491, the priority commanded by § 64 extends to those pecuniary burdens laid upon individuals or their property, regardless of their consent, for the purpose of defraying the expenses of government or of undertakings authorized by it. The particular demand for which the City now claims priority of payment as a tax is created and defined by state enactment. We turn to its provisions and to the decisions of the state courts in interpreting them, not to learn whether they have denominated the obligation a “tax” but to ascertain whether its incidents are such as to constitute a tax within the meaning of § 64. Cf.
Morgan
v.
Commissioner,
The present exaction is that which was considered, and its constitutionality sustained, in
McGoldrick
v.
Berwind-White Co.,
■ By § 8,- whenever either the seller or purchaser “shall fail to collect or pay over any tax and/or to pay any tax” imposed by the law, the City is authorized to bring an
*287
action for its recovery or, as an alternative remedy, the Comptroller is authorized to issue a warrant directed to the sheriff of the county, commanding him to levy upon and sell the real and personal property of the seller or the purchaser and apply the proceeds to the payment of the tax. In construing these provisions the New York Court of Appeals has held that while the Comptroller may proceed under § 2 to collect the tax from the purchaser if he has not paid it to the seller, see
Matter of Kesbec, Inc.
v.
McGoldrick,
The statute thus contains provisions which in its normal operation are calculated to enable the seller to shift the tax burden to, the purchaser, see
Matter of Kesbec, Inc.
v.
McGoldrick, supra,
297;
Matter of Merchants Refrigerating Corp.
v.
Taylor,
In New York City v. Goldstein, supra, we reversed per curiam, citing Matter of Atlas Television Co., supra, a decision of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit that a claim of the City for paymént of tax by the seller was not entitled to priority under § 64 of the Bankruptcy Act. The court below attributed our reversal to the circumstances that at that time, though not now, § 64 allowed priority to debts entitled to priority under state law, and to the decision of the state court in the Atlas case, that upon a general assignment for the benefit of creditors made under state law a claim against the seller for the sales tax was entitled to priority.. But in placing this interpretation upon our decision in the Goldstein case the court below overlooked the fact that the Court of Appeals ruled in the Atlas case that an ordinary debt due the state is not entitled to priority by state law, and it sustained the priority in that case only on the ground that the demand was for a tax, the unqualified duty to pay which was placed by the statute on the seller. This interpretation of the state statute was reaffirmed by that court in the Matter of Brown Printing Co., supra. For reasons already given, the duty imposed upon the seller by the taxing act thus construed is also a tax within the meaning of § 64 of the Bankruptcy Act.
Reversed.
