ELBERT et ux. v. JOHNSON
No. 23, Docket 20646
Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
Nov. 25, 1947
164 F.2d 421
The foregoing story, if credited by the referee, as it evidently was, amply justified his findings of fact. The trustee seeks to cast doubt upon it by the fact that the corporate books showed a capital deficit of some $3,000 at the time the stock of the corporation was purchased by the claimants, and by citing the testimony of Alex Limbach, one of the claimants, who was called as a witness by the trustee. He testified that Walter Rich told him he was to have an interest in the corporation; that on September 18, 1944 he gave Rich a check for $3,000 and Rich did not say that this was to be a loan to the corporation or what it represented. He further testified that he had confidence in the Rich brothers and “made no inquiries regarding what they were doing or how they were doing it.” Evidently Limbach was content to let Rich determine what kind of interest in the enterprise his $3,000 should represent. Hence it is not particularly significant that Limbach did not know that Rich put it in as a loan. The other witness called by the trustee was Simon Quartin, a salesman of Quartin Specialty Box Co. This company was, and still is, a creditor of the bankrupt. About the middle of September 1944 Quartin was introduced to the Messrs. Rich at the bankrupt‘s office and was given a check signed by one of them for the balance then due his company. According to Quartin‘s testimony Mr. Eugene Rich said he was a wealthy man and that he and his associates were going to make the bankrupt a very large company. Quartin testified further: “He was telling me that there were nine friends that were putting $3,000 in and getting $3,000 of stock each, and that if the company needed any more money they could put out as much money as was needed into the company.” Later the Quartin Specialty Box Co. made further sales to the bankrupt on credit, but there is no direct testimony that it did so in reliance on the statements attributed to Rich by Quartin. Even if the referee gave credence to Mr. Quartin‘s testimony, which he was not necessarily required to do, the statements attributed to Mr. Rich were more in the nature of financial bragging than representations that the new owners had already made capital contributions. This testimony was not enough in our opinion to justify disregarding the highly credible story of attorney Marks, which the experienced referee accepted.
The order is reversed with instructions to reinstate the order of the referee allowing the claims of the appellants as general creditors of the bankrupt.
John F. X. McGohey, U.S. Atty., of New York City (John B. Creegan, Asst. U. S. Atty., of New York City, of counsel), for appellee.
Before L. HAND, SWAN and CHASE, Circuit Judges.
SWAN, Circuit Judge.
The present action was brought by the plaintiffs, a husband and wife who filed a joint income tax return for the taxable year ending October 31, 1938, to recover $18,600 with interest from March 17, 1944, being part of a deficiency assessment paid to the defendant on that date for their 1938 income taxes. Upon motion, the district court dismissed the complaint for lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter. The plaintiffs have appealed.
The facts alleged in the complaint to support the claim of overpayment of the plaintiffs’ 1938 income tax may be summarized as follows: On December 31, 1935 Mrs. Elbert executed a trust agreement, transferred $300,000 to the trustees (herself and her husband) to constitute the principal of a trust for the benefit of her ten year old daughter, and thereafter, on March 16, 1936, paid a federal gift tax thereon in the sum of $18,600. In November 1941 the Board of Tax Appeals held that the aforesaid trust was not a real gift for income tax pur-
The plaintiffs base their asserted right to offset the mistakenly paid gift tax against their income tax liability of a later year on Bull v. United States, 295 U.S. 247, 55 S.Ct. 695, 79 L.Ed. 1421. We may assume, without decision, that had they paid their 1938 tax without resorting to the Tax Court for a redetermination thereof, they could have established their right to recoupment in an action brought against the collector. But they did not do that. They resorted to the Tax Court before they brought the present action. This brought
It is urged that in addition to the exceptions specified in the statute, the court should read in another, namely, as to an overpayment in a prior year as to which the Tax Court lacks jurisdiction to allow credit against the deficiency for the taxable year in suit. To do so would, we think, conflict with the legislative purpose in enacting
It cannot be denied that the Tax Court did have jurisdiction to redetermine the plaintiffs’ income tax liability for the taxable year 1938; and it exercised that jurisdiction. Its decision determined finally, unless reversed upon appeal, the amount of the plaintiffs’ 1938 income tax. They seek to relitigate that issue because the Tax Court lacked power to allow as a credit against the 1938 income tax, by way of recoupment, the gift tax paid in 1936. But lack of power to allow such credit did not defeat the Tax Court‘s jurisdiction to redetermine the 1938 income tax liability. For reasons already stated we hold that
It is suggested that the court has jurisdiction over an action to recover the 1936 gift tax as distinguished from the action pleaded. If considered as an action to recover the gift tax, still jurisdiction of the district court does not appear. There is no allegation that the gift tax was paid to the defendant. The only allegation as to the defendant is that he was on March 17, 1944 and still is, collector of internal revenue for the third district of the state of New York. To whom or where the gift tax was paid is not stated.
Judgment affirmed.
L. HAND, Circuit Judge (concurring in the result).
The Board of Tax Appeals was without jurisdiction to allow the payment of the gift tax in 1936 as a credit against the deficiency assessed in 1938;1 but the plaintiffs’ unsuccessful attempt did not prejudice any other remedy which they had; one never loses one‘s actual remedies by resorting to one which in fact does not exist.2 Having failed to secure the credit they asked, they paid the tax assessed upon their 1938 income without deduction; and then in season filed with the Commissioner a claim preparatory to the action at bar, demanding a refund of part of the tax so paid in 1938; and later they began, also in season, the action at bar for the same relief. I think that the district court had jurisdiction over that action, although the complaint was subject to dismissal. It claimed as a refund a payment of the gift tax in 1938, and that was
Nevertheless I think that the court had jurisdiction over the action, as distinguished from the pleading. In spite of the plaintiffs’ mistaken legal theory, all the facts appeared which would have entitled them to a recovery of the gift tax; and under the freedom of amendment now available it does not seem to me that we should refuse them any relief open under the facts. If the action be understood to be for a refund of the gift tax paid in 1936,
However, the action, so understood, was barred by the statute of limitations, and the complaint was bad for this reason, unless Bull v. United States, supra,3 applied to the situation. That decision, as I understand it, permits a taxpayer without penalty to assert his version of a transaction, until it is finally decided against him. That is to say, if the transaction is susceptible of two interpretations, and the taxpayer has paid a tax which was required by the interpretation he puts upon it, he does not forfeit his right to a refund of that tax, because the statute of limitation has run against him before the courts have finally decided that his interpretation was wrong; the statute is tolled. I am not clear whether the plaintiffs’ action—amended as I would allow it to be amended—would be within the last decision of the Supreme Court;4 that is to say whether there were here two separate “transactions“; but I shall give the plaintiffs the benefit of the doubt, because even if there was only a single “transaction,” I think that they are not in a position to invoke Bull v. United States, supra.5
That decision granted a favor to enable a taxpayer honestly to contest deficiency assessments without forfeiting rights which would be his if he was wrong; but these plaintiffs were not engaged in an honest contest of their deficiency assessment. The Board decided, and upon this appeal it cannot be disputed, that they never made a gift at all; but that they executed false documents, purporting to create rights which the parties had privately agreed should not arise. These were intended as a screen, deliberately set up to bemuse the Treasury and allow the plaintiffs to escape taxes to which they should become liable. I would not toll the statute in favor of taxpayers engaged in such an effort; it is one thing so to arrange one‘s affairs as to reduce taxes as far as possible; everybody does that, and everybody is entitled to do so; but it is, toto coelo, a different thing to prepare a set of papers which as little represent what the parties have agreed upon as though they had been executed in jest. For these reasons I concur, except that I would modify the judgment so as to dismiss the complaint upon the merits, and not for defect of jurisdiction.
