delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе plaintiff’s petition alleges that it bought from the Addressograph-Multigraph Corporation one Model 4400 Automatic Speedaumat, or Speedaumailer, in 1948, and twо in 1949. It paid $36,000 for each machine, plus a $3,600 Federal excise tax imposed by Section 3406 (a) (6) of the Internal Eevenue Code as amended, on each machine. The taxes were paid to the vendor, which paid them to the Government. The taxes on the three machines thus amounted to $10,800.
The vendor, Addressograph-Multigraрh Corporation, filed a claim for refund of the taxes which it had collectеd from the plaintiff. The Commissioner of Internal Eevenue ruled that the tax should not have been calculated on the basis of 100 percent of the retail pricе, as it was calculated, but on
The Government moves to dismiss the plaintiff’s petition on the grounds that the plaintiff was not the taxpayer, and thеrefore has no right to sue for a refund. The tax imposed by Section 3406 (a) is imposed upon the manufacturer, producer, or importer. He will, if possible, add the amount of the tax to the selling price, and thus pass on the economic burden of the tax to the purchaser. But the purchaser is not liable for the tax, and is not the taxpayer. In Lash's Products Co. v. United States,
The phrase “passed the tax on” is inaccurate, as obviоusly the tax is laid and remains on the manufacturer and on him alone. * * * The purchaser does not pay the tax. He pays or may pay the seller more for the goods because of the seller’s obligation, but that is all.
See also Twentieth Century Sporting Club v. United States,
Section 3443 of the Internal Revenue Code provides for the refunding, in proper cases, of the manufacturer’s excise tax to the manufacturer, but only if he shows that he has not passed the tax on to a purchaser, or that he has repaid the tax to the purchaser or has the written consent оf the purchaser to his (the manufacturer’s) obtaining the refund. See also Treasury Rеgulations 46 (1940 ed.), Sec. 316.204, as renumbered by T. D. 5099, 1941-2 Cum. Bull. 267. Thus the statute makes careful provision that the manufacturer should not be unjustly enriched by obtaining a refund of a tax which he has passed on, but makes no provision for the obtaining of a refund by a purchaser who has borne the economic burden of the tax.
To permit purchasers, upon сlaims that they bore the economic burden of taxes imposed upon and рaid by their vendors, to sue for refunds would, probably, multiply tax litigation. We, of course, do not know why the plaintiff’s vendor, which had paid the tax and passed it on to the plаintiff, did not bring this suit for the benefit of the plaintiff and, perhaps, other of its customers. It may have thought that the claim had no merit. Whatever its reason, we think that, under the statutory рrovisions which we have recited, the plaintiff has no standing to sue.
The defendant’s motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s petition is granted. It is so ordered.
