delivered the opinion of the Court..
These cases involve the question of the effect' and validity of section 611, which is to be read ;n connection
No. 36,
Graham et al.
v. Goodcell, is typical of this group of cases. On March 22, 1918, petitioners filed their partnership income and .excess-profits tax returns for the year 1917 and paid the taxes thereby shown to, be due. Additional taxes were assessed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue in January, 1920. The petitioners filed a claim for the abatement of this assessment on February 11, 1920, and the Commissioner rejected the claim on December 27, 1922. Under section 250 (d) of the Revenue Act of 1921 (c. 136, 42 Stat. 227, 265), the five-year period for the collection of the taxes for 1917 expired-■on March 22, 1923. The Collector served notice and demand for payment on November- 19, 1924, threatening distraint, and on November 29, 1924, and December 3, 1924, the petitioners paid the additional taxes under protest. On September 25, 1925, they filed a claim for refund upon the ground that the taxes were collected after the statute of limitations had run. The claim was
There are variations in the other cases, but the determining features are the same. A claim in abatement was filed and collection was delayed; the collection was made after the statute of limitations had run, and before the enactment of the Act of 1928. In some of the cases, the suit to recover the amount paid was brought after, and in other cases before, the Act of 1928 became a law, on May 29, 1928. The suits were either in the Court of Claims against the United States, or in the District Courts of the United States against the Collector, either individually or officially, or in both capacities. In all these cases the decisions below were in favor of the Government
2
and writs of certiorari were issued by this Court.
3
First. As to the construction of the statute. Section 607 provides that a tax assessed or paid after the expiration of the period of limitation applicable thereto shall be considered an “ overpayment ” and shall be credited or refunded to the taxpayer, if claim therefor is duly filed. Section 611 enacts a qualification by providing that in stated circumstances the payment of the tax shall not be considered an overpayment under the provisions of section 607. These circumstances are (a) an assessment of the tax within the time applicable thereto and before June 2, 1924, (b) the filing of a claim in abatement, (c) the stay of the collection of any part of the tax, and (d) the payment of such part of the tax before, or within one year after, the enactment of the Act of 1928.
The occasion for this legislation, and the general purpose of the Congress in enacting it, are apparent. The
■ The petitioners urge, that section 611, read in its relation to section 607, was intended to apply only prospectively, that is, to action to be taken by the Treasury Department on refund .claims filed after the enactment of the Act. Stress is laid upon the language of section 6.07 that a-payment made after the expiration of the period of limitation “ shall be considered ” an overpayment and “shall.be credited or refunded” if claim therefor “is filed.” But section 611 was manifestly intended to operate retroactively according to its terms. That is, it expressly applied to internal revenue taxes which had been assessed prior to June 2, 1924, and within the period of limitation applicable to the assessment. The section
We are also of the opinion that the statute embraces involuntary payments. The argument of the petitioners points to the provision of section 611 which made it applicable not only to payments before the enactment but to those within one year thereafter. It is said that the latter must be voluntary payments, and that the Treasury Department so construed the statute, as the statute did not purport to authorize collections after the period of limitation had expired. 7 ' But the statute also applied to payments which had been made in the past.' • The concern of the Congress lay with the fact that- payments had been made after the statute of limitations had run and with the particular situation of taxpayers where claims in abatement had been filed and the collection stayed: Section -611 was to prevent refunding the money if collection had thus been postponed. That situation existed where, after the expiration of the period of limitation, payifient had been compelled, and the statute made no exception of. such payments. The practice of collecting taxes by distraint, and the mistaken view of the law that the statute of. limitations had not barred collection in that manner, had exposed the Treasury to demands which it was the intention of the legislation to defeat.
- In most of the eases now under review, it appears that the claim in abatement was-rejected -after the expiration of - the period of limitation for collection: In No. 36,
Graham,
v.
Goodcell,
however, the claim in abatement was rejected in December, 1922, and the period of limitation did not expire until March, 1923. It is urged that, for • this reason, that case falls outside the purview of section 611. ' The statute makes no such exception, and we áre not warranted in implying one. The claim in abatement had -been filed and was pending for nearly three years.
It is further insisted on behalf of the petitioners-that sections 607 and 611 relate solely to administrative action and not to judicial proceedings. In support of this argument, an elaborate analysis of the revenue acts is presented in order to establish the meaning of the statutory words
“
credit and refunds ” and “ overpayment ” and the aptness of their reference to administrative proceedings. It is not necessary to review this analysis, for there can be no doubt that these words do have appropriate reference to action in the course of administration. But it does not follow that by the use of these words the statute is limited to such action. There is no basis for. the suggestion that there were questions involved of such a character as to make it appropriate to submit them to the exclusive judgment of the Commissioner.
11
" The question was not as to the merits of the tax but simply as to the existence of certain facts of time and procedure. These facts were matters of record, easily ascertained and definite in character. It would be anomalous that the right of the taxpayer to obtain a refund from the Department, to which he was under obligation to resort (R. S. 3226, U. S'. C: Tit. 26, sec. 156), should be denied, while the right to recover by suit the same amount under exactly the same circumstances should remain unaffected. In the attempt to explain this anomaly, it is said that the provision was inserted because of a distrust of administrative refunds.
12
But section 611 contains no exception
In this,view, it is not material whether the suit was brought by the taxpayer before or after section 611 was enacted. The validity of the statute with respect to its effect upon existing causes of action is a distinct question. So far as the ^ construction of the statute is concerned, it is apparent that the mere pendency of the suit was not made a criterion of the right to recover. Nor is there any warrant for making a distinction in this respect between suits which had been brought against the collector individually and those pending against the United States.
There is also, a contention that section 611. does not apply when -the tax was paid by the credit of the amount of art overpayment for another taxable year. But the application of a credit against an assessment at a time when collection was barred must be regarded as an erroneous collection, and we see no reason for taking such a Case out of the statute.
,
Second. As to the question of repeal.
It is insisted that section 611 was repealed on the same, day that it was enacted. This effect is ascribed to section 3 of the Act of May 29, 1928, c. 901, 45 Stat. 986, 996. That section amended section 3220 of the Revised Statutes which contained provisions as to the refunding of taxes erroneously or illegally collected. Section 3220 had been amended
Third.
As
to the validity of section 611.
This is not a case of an attempt retroactively to create- a liability in relation to a transaction as to which no. liability had previously attached.
14
There is no question here as to the original liability of the taxpayers. The tax was a valid one, and the fact that the taxpayers had been indebted to the Government for the amount which was subsequently collected is not now open to dispute. Delay in collection had followed upon the taxpayers’ request for a' consideration of their claim that the tax should be abated,- and, in the mistaken belief on the part of the administrative authorities that the statute of limitations did not bar collection by the appropriate proceeding of distraint, the delay had been continued until after the statute had run. On the discovery of the mistake, as pointed out by the decision of this Court, the Congress sought to prevent a refund of the amount thus collected. The question is whether these circumstances remove the case from the operation of the general rule that it is not consistent with due process to take away from a private party a right to recover the amount that is due when the act is passed.
Steamship Company
v.
Joliffe,
In
United States
v.
Heinszen & Company,
Another illustration is found in
Tiaco
v.
Forbes,
The doctrine of the
Heinszen
case,
supra,
was left' unquestioned in
MacLeod
v.
United States,
It is apparent, as the result of the decisions, 'that a distinction is made between a bare attempt of the legislature retroactively to create liabilities for transactions which, fully consummated in the past, are deemed to leave no ground for legislative intervention, and the case of a curative statute aptly designed to remedy mistakes and defects in the administration of government' where the remedy can be applied without injustice. Where the asserted vested right, not being linked to any substantial equity, arises from the mistake of officers purporting to administer the law in the name of the Government, the legislature is not prevented from curing the defect in administration simply because the effect may be to destroy causes of action which would otherwise exist.
17
“
The
Having reached this conclusion, it is not necessary to consider the authority of the Congress to withdraw the consent of the United States to be sued. See
United States
v.
Heinszen & Company, supra,
at p. 391. The argument of the Government in this respect is not adequate to dispose of the controversy. Some of the present suits were brought against the collector individually and were based upon the right to recover as against him by reason of'his illegal acts. Such an action is personal and not against the United States.
Sage
v.
United States, 250
U. S. 33, 37;
Smietanka
v.
Indiana Steel Company,
• The objection to section 611 upon the ground that it is arbitrary and capricious in its classification, and' hence offends, the Fifth Amendment, is without merit. The broad discretion of the Congress in the exercise of its ’constitutional power as to ■ taxation
(Brusháber
v.
Union Pacific Railroad Company,'
In some of the cases under review, it is insisted that section 611 does not preclude the recovery óf interest, upon the ground that the interest had not been assessed and therefore lay outside the prohibition of the statute. But it does not appear that there was any statutory requirement that interest as such should be assessed, and the valid denial of the right to recover the principal should be deemed to apply also to the interest.
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Court of Claims: No. 104, Oak Worsted Mills v. United States, 36 Fed. (2d) 629, 38 Fed. (2d) 699, 68 Ct. Cls. 539; No. 105, Taft Woolen Co. v. United States,, 38 F. (2d) 704, 69 Ct. Cls. 764; No. 323, Second National Bank of Saginaw v. United States, 40 Fed. (2d) 129, 69 Ct. Cls. 745; No. 337, Boston Pressed Metal Co. v. United States, 42 Fed. (2d) 312, 70 Ct. Cls. 272.
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit: No. 463, Reeves v. Anderson, 43 Fed. (2d) 679; District Court, sub nom. Regla Coal Co. v. Bowers, 37 Fed. (2d) 373; No. 529, Jennings v. Anderson, 43 Fed. (2d) 683.
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit: No. 565, Wright & Taylor, Inc. v. Lucas, 45 F. (2d) 75; District Court, 34 Fed. (2d) 328.
In No. 519, Eastern Equities Corporation v. United States, there had been no hearing in the Circuit Court of. Appeals for the First Circuit when the writ of certiorari was granted; District Court, sub nom. American Glue Co. v. United States, 42 Fed. (2d) 235.
1. T. 1446, Cumulative Bulletin,1-2, July-December, 1922, p. 218. See Stange v. United States, ante, p. 270.
See
Toxaway Mills
v.
United States,
61 Ct. Cls. 363, reversed on confession of error (March 12,1927),
Section 611 as it appeared in the bill introduced in the House of Representatives provided not only for the retention of the moneys paid, but also that, in similar circumstances, amounts not yet paid might be collected within a year after the new enactment. The Committee on Ways and Means in its report on the bill stated: “Sec.,611. Collections in Cases in which Claims in Abatement were filed. Prior to the enactment of the Revenue Act of 1924 it was the administrative practice to assess immediately additional taxes determined to be .due. Upon the assessment, taxpayers were frequently permitted to file claims in abatement with the collector and thus delay the collection until the claim in abatement could be acted upon. If this practice had not been followed, undue hardship undoubtedly would have been imposed upon the taxpayer.- It was supposed that there was no limitation upon the collection by distraint of the amount ultimately determined to be due. However, the Supreme Court has recently held in a case in which the period for assessment expired prior to the enactment of the 1924 Act, that the period for collection was limited to -five years from the date on which the return was filed. Decisions upon claims in abatement are being made every day. Amounts have been paid, are being paid, by the taxpayer even though the statute of limitations may
The Finance Committee of the Senate opposed the provision of section 611 (70th Cong., 1st Sess., Sen. Rep. 960, p. 42). In conference, an amendment was adopted (70th Cong., 1st Sess., H. R. Rep. No. 1882, pp. 6, 7, 22, 23), with the result that section 611 was enacted in its present form, that is, with the provision eliminated as to the collection of amounts not yet paid.
Mimeograph 3360,.July 27, 1928; Cum'lative Bulletin VII-2, pp. 82, 85.
See also Act of October 3, 1917, c, 63, see. 205- (b), 40 Stat. 305; Revenue Act of 1924, c. 234, sec. 279 (a), 43 Stat. 300; Revenue Act of 1926, c. 27, sec.-279 (f), 44 Stat. 60; Revenue Act of 1928, c. 852, see. 273 (f) (g) (b), 45 Stat. 855.
R. S., section 3220; Treasury Department Regulations No'. 14, Revised, p. 14; Regulations'No.- 33, Art. 261; Regulations No. 45, Art. 1032; Regulations No. 62, Art. 1032; Regulations No. 65, Art. 1281.
See-Nóte 6, supra,
Compare
Fong Yue Ting
v.
United States,
149 U.
S.
698, 714, 715;
United States
v.
Babcock,
See Revenue Act of 1928, see. 710, 45 Stat., p. 882.
See also,
Smith
v.
The People,
See
Nichols
v.
Coolidge,
See
De Lima
v.
Bidwell,
Lincoln
v.
United States; Warner, Barnes and Company, Limited,
v.
United States,
In
United States
v.
Heinszen & Co.,
“As the law stood before- later statutes a collector was liable personally for duties mistakenly collected, if the person charged gave notice, at the time,, of his intention to sue, and warning not to pay over the amount to the Treasury.
Elliott
v.
Swartwout,
See Note 7.
