(after stating the facts as above). The bill discloses that prior to its dissolution the Stoughton Lumber Association was careful to have its 1919 business examined by a field man of the Internal Revenue Department to determine the amount of income tax for which the association might be liable, apparently with a view to avoiding the very difficulty which now presents itself, and that fact naturally enlists the sympathy of a court of equity but is deemed insufficient to constitute one of those exceptional cases which would make section 3224, Rev. St. (26 USCA § 154), inapplicable to a tax case, or section 604 of the Internal Revenue Act of 1928 (26 USCA § 2604) inapplicable to this ease if valid and otherIwise applicable. Complainant apparently has rеal estate which is unincumbered save for the lien of the claim here involved, and the court is unable to perceive why complainant could not, without difficulty, make a loan on the security of such real estate notwithstanding the existence of such lien if money so raised was applied to the extinguishment of the lien. Section 604 of the Revenue Act of 1928 is quite manifеstly a companion section to section 3224, Rev. St., and no doubt if the former section is valid and otherwise applicable, it limits the equitable jurisdiction of courts to enjoin the collection of a liability at law or in equity of a transferee of the assets of a taxpayer as effectively as the latter section did in the ease of a tax. Section 3224, Rev. St., has been applied in all its rigor in numerous cases, some of which are cited and reviewed in Graham v. Du Pont,
Section 604 of the Revenue Act of 1928 (26 USCA § 2604) provides, so far as material, that: “Ho suit shall be maintained in any court for the purрose of restraining the assessment or collection of (1) the amount of the liability, at law or in equity, of a transferee of property of a taxpayer in respect of any income, war-profits, excess-profits, or estate tax. *' * * ”
Manifestly the foregoing section is applicable by its terms to this suit notwithstanding it was passed after action was commenced. Smallwood et al. v. Gallardo,
Complainant strongly urges the reasoning and conclusions of Judge Dawson in Owensboro Ditcher & Grader Co. v. Lucas (D. C.)
It is true that in determining the liability “at law or in equity” of a transferee of a taxpayer, the taxing authorities exercise a power not exercised in determining and collecting a tax from a taxpayer. The determinatiоn of the taxing authorities, however, is not final, nor is it made so by the section in question. It is intended thereby to insure the government a сontinuance and uninterrupted revenue, leaving to the transferee the duty to pay and then sue to recover. It must be bоrne in mind that while the liability of a transferee may not be a tax liability in the ordinary sense, nevertheless it is a liability for a tax; in other words, the government is seeking to collect what is primarily a tax and continues to be a tax although, because of the inability to collect from the taxpayer proper, it seeks to require his transferee to pay. Prom the standpoint of the government the money sought in this case is as much an item of revenue as it would be were the proceedings to сollect directed toward' the Stoughton Lumber Association. Hence from its standpoint the same necessity exists for the сollection of tax liabilities resting upon transferees as exists in the case of taxpayers. As restated in Graham v. Du Pont,
In this view, it seems that section 604 may and should be given effect according tо its terms in the same manner as has section 3224, as a part of the “system of corrective justice, intended to be complete,” placing the transferee in the same category as a taxpayer in so far as he is required to first pay the tax liability and thereafter seek recovery back.
The motion to dismiss will be granted.
