This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court holding that appellee was entitled to recover for the overpayment of taxes. The facts are set out in our opinion on a prior appeal, Hammond-Knowlton v. Hartford Connecticut Trust Co., 2 Cir.,
Appellee, when she began her suit in 1933, was not unreasonable in believing that on the basis of Moore Ice Cream Co. v. Rose,
If the suit were between private persons, it might well be regarded as having originally been brought against a defendant, sued in the wrong capacity, so as not to preclude an amendment, rectifying that error, filed after the statute had run.
*194
Missouri, Kansas & Texas R. Co. v. Wulf,
We are, however, here confronted with two barriers to such a conclusion: First, in the suit as originally begun, service was not formally had upon the United States, as defendant. Second, the amount for which plaintiff originally sued was in excess of the amount of $10,000, for which suit can be maintained against the United States in the federal District Court. In dealing with cases involving either of these factors, the decisions of the Supreme Court have, at times, been ungenerous to the citizen; in such cases the attitude is that the United States, as sovereign, being immune from suit, except with its consent, the courts must insist that, when it gives such consent, attaching conditions thereto, it is fatal not to comply literally with those conditions. True, the Supreme Court indicated strongly in Moore Ice Cream Co. v. Rose,
As above noted, the first obstacle to appellee’s success is the fact that her suit, as originally begun, was not against the United States but against the Collector. The government asserts the doctrine that such a-suit is “personal” to the Collector, and is not against the United States. The historic purpose of that doctrine, devised by the courts, was to do justice to -taxpayers who, at one time, could not directly sue the government to recover wrongful exactions by its officers. A review of that doctrine’s history is instructive:
Early in American jurisprudence, cases arose where a citizen sued an officer of the State or of the United States, alleging that the defendant, acting pursuant to air unconstitutional statute, had invaded or threatened to invade the citizen’s individual legal rights, as, for instance, through seizure, by a distress warrant, of his personal property to collect a tax, or by the taking of his land, or the like. On the facts, it appeared that the government would benefit from the officer’s conduct; therefore, had the defendant been the officer of a private corporation, the suit could have been brought against it as the real party in interest. There-was the rub; the government could not be sued without its consent, and it had withheld its consent.
3
4
At first blush, that absence of consent seemed to be an impassable barrier to any such action. That obstacle, however, was easily and frequently surmounted by a doctrine plainly devised to avoid injustice to the citizen: The Supreme Court repeatedly held that, if the government officer’s conduct, regarding him as a private citizen, would constitute an invasion of the citizen’s individual legal rights, then the action would be considered as one brought against the defendant not as an officer but as a private person; if, then, he could show that he was acting in accordance with a valid statute, the suit was at an end because it was a suit against a non-consenting government and must fail; but, if he could not prove that he was acting pursuant to a valid statute, then it was held that he had no defense and must answer personally for his misconduct as an individual, notwithstanding that the government was, in fact, the real party in interest. See e.g. Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. Co.,
But the Supreme Court has also held that if and when a State or the United States has waived its immunity from suit, then, in such a proceeding against its officer, he will be regarded as a formal party and the government as the real party in interest, with the result that a judgment against the officer will be res judicata in a subsequent suit, involving the same issues, in which
*196
the citizen and the government are both formally made parties. Gunter v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.,
But, when, in the early cases, suits were first brought by citizens against Collectors of the United States to recover taxes paid but not due by law, the United States had not consented to be sued for such grievances. Had the Collector levied a distress warrant, such a suit could have been maintained against him for committing, as an individual, an actionable wrong invading the citizen’s right, and the Collector, because he collected an unlawful tax, would have been. unable to assert as a defense that he was lawfully acting as a government officer pursuant to statute. So, it was held that, where actually or impliedly threatened with such a levy, the citizen, if he paid the exaction under protest, could maintain a suit against the Collector, as an individual, for money wrongfully and involuntarily paid under compulsion, although the Collector had paid the collected funds to the Treasury. Elliot v. Swartwout,
Included in such legislation was a statute, enacted in 1863, 12 Stat. 741, § 12
7
, which provided that, when judgment is procured against “a collector or other officer of the revenue for * * * the recovery of any money exacted by or paid to him and by him paid into the Treasury, in the performance of his official duty, and the court certifies” either (1) “that there was probable cause for the act done by the collector or other officer, or (2) that he acted under the directions of the Secretary of the Treasury, or other proper officer of the Government, no execution shall issue against such collector or other officer, but the amount so recovered shall, upon final judgment, be provided for and paid out of the proper appropriation from the Treasury.” In United States v. Sherman,
Nevertheless, in Sage v. United States,
Congress had provided, in 1924, Revenue Act 1924, § 1014, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev. Acts, page 128, that a suit against the Collector for recovery of taxes unlawfully collected might be brought, regardless of whether the tax had been paid under protest, and made that provision retroactive. In Moore Ice Cream Co. v. Rose,
Accordingly, it is only in the unusual case — where the Collector is not acting under explicit instructions from his superior officers, i. e. where he had merely “probable cause for acting” — that, prior to the entry of the judgment against him, it cannot be foretold that any such judgment will inevitably be one against the Government; in the usual case, the suit, from its inception, is patently, in substance, a suit for *198 recovery against the United States; in other words, the statement — made in the earlier Sage, Smietanka, Goodcell and Bankers Pocahontas cases — that the suit against the Collector is personal, has apparently, in the light of the Moore Ice Cream case, only a limited meaning, i. e., it relates solely to cases where the Collector, in collecting the tax, was not doing a purely ministerial act pursuant to explicit instructions. 9
In Tait v. Western Maryland R. Co.,
Even assuming that the court in the Tait case meant more, its statement, above quoted,
10
was, at most, dictum. So regarding it, it has been criticized by two of the ablest commentators on tax law
11
; for, it is suggested, if the Collector is an inferior of the United States, so also is the Commissioner; the Collector is no less the government’s “official agent” than the Commissioner; he is no less “in privity” with the Commissioner and the United States than they with him; and yet a decision involving the Commissioner furnishes a basis for res judicata in a suit against the United States in the Court of Claims or in the District Court sitting as a Court of Claims; Continental Petroleum Co. v. United States, 10 Cir.,
It shocks the conscience that the government of the United States may be able, on the basis of such a vestige or shadow of a shadow of a once virile rule, to defeat the just claim of a citizen. The payment of *199 taxes is notoriously irksome, but the reflective citizen is glad to pay taxes lawfully assessed because he knows that such exactions are the necessary cost of a society without which he could not exist. When, however, a sum has been collected unlawfully under the guise of a tax, and its repayment is concededly a matter of both justice and of legal right, to block that repayment, merely because of a rule of law which once had substance but no longer has — merely because, in passing, the Supreme Court has reiterated language which no longer has any substantial meaning — is to provoke justified dissatisfaction 'with government.
The old fiction that the suit against the Collector is personal was, as we have noted, contrived to do justice to a citizen suing to recover taxes. That fiction is, as Mr. Justice Cardozo recognized, no longer useful. Judge Soper has observed that such a suit “is a kind of John Doe action, allowed in part by statutory implication, in part by statutory direction, which, by an amiable fiction 12 to take the place of formal consent, though in name against the collector, is in substance and effect * * * against the United States”. 13 Bentham said of legal fictions that they “are no more necessary to justice than is poison to sustenance * * *. Fictions are falsehoods, and the judge who invents a fiction ought to be sent to jail”. 14 Such strictures are surely excessive. 15 Wise students of legal and other types of thinking have demonstrated that fictions are frequently indispensable thought contrivances; they have been called “conceptual shorthand”, “short-cuts”, “useful lies”, “ingenious abbreviations”, “psychological pulleys”, “figures of thought”, “the algebra of the law”, “necessary scaffoldings of thought”. 16 But those same students agree that a fiction becomes a dangerous instrumentality, if not used with constant lively awareness that it does not correspond to the realities, that it is essentially metaphorical, and that it must not be pressed beyond the point of usefulness. With special reference to legal fictions, it should not be forgotten that the Supreme Court has said that “fictions of law shall not be permitted to work any wrong”; 17 that “a fiction * * * is not allowed to obscure the facts, when the facts become important”; 18 that “legal fictions have an appropriate place in the administration of the law” but only “when they are required by the demands of convenience and justice”; 19 and that “while fictions are sometimes invented to realize the judicial conception of justice” they are to be avoid *200 ed when “unrelated to reality”. 20 Certainly the ghostly fiction of the suit against the Collector as “personal” has little or no utility today; devised to do justice to the citizen, it should not he employed as an instrument of unfairness directed against him. So to employ it, is to do not justice, but injustice, according to law. We have here an instance of what Mr. Justice Holmes 21 called “a conflict between logic and common sense — the one striving to carry out fictions to consistent results, the other restraining and at last overcoming that effort when the results became too manifestly unjust”. 22 We may take pride that the judicial process in the United States has moved far in the direction of common sense and more substantial justice since the early years of the last century when Bowen said that the English courts “seemed constantly occupied in the discussion of the merest legal conundrums which bore no relation to the merits of any controversies except those of pedants”. 23 The fiction which we are here considering has become one of those remnants of legal pedantry which occasion public reproach. To perpetuate such traps for the unwary litigant is not worthy of a mature judicial system. In most instances, to be sure, changes in a settled legal rule should be left to the legislature. When, however, a rule is not statutory, but a rule of judiciary law, and when no person will be injured by its alteration but, on the contrary, the modification will plainly serve the ends of justice to our citizens, it would seem appropriate that (especially when, as now, the time of the national legislature is fully occupied with matters of the gravest concern) the courts themselves should do the needful. Lord Mansfield once wrote to his friend, the actor, Garrick, that “a judge on the bench is now and then in your whimsical situation between tragedy and comedy; inclination drawing one way, and a long string of precedents the other”. 24 In such circumstances, a court should hesitate before ignoring precedents. But the posture of the courts in this matter is not that described by Mansfield; the pertinent precedents the Supreme Court has seemingly, in substance, already repudiated, giving them, of recent days, what, at most, appears to be a perfunctory acknowledgment, as if addressed to a once valued but now superannuated aide.
Moreover, even if the fiction is still sufficiently alive to function in a limited way, vis-á-vis res judicata, that does not at all mean that it has effect when, as here, the very different question arises of “relation back” by amendment of pleadings. The rule in the federal courts as to “relation back” is exceedingly liberal; and, for purposes of that rule, the authorities as to res judicata are not controlling. In United States v. Memphis Cotton Oil Co.,
Here, as in the Wulf case (thus cited with approval), it is essential to give such
*201
notice of “the specified conduct complained of”, but when it is given, “the reasons for the statute of limitations do not exist”. New York Central & H. R. R. Co. v. Kinney,
It is urged, however, that appellee is barred on the ground that, if she had originally named the United States as defendant, she could not have maintained her suit, as the amount which she then demanded exceeded the so-called “jurisdictional” limit of $10,000 fixed by the Tucker Act 26 in such suits when brought in the District Court. The argument is advanced that, in such circumstances, as the court would have been without “jurisdiction”, the doctrine of “relation back” is inapplicable. At first glance, that argument runs foul of the Wulf case, supra; there, recovery in the action, as originally begun, could not have been had, and, absent an amendment, the suit would probably have been dismissed on demurrer for want of “jurisdiction”, because the ad damnum was $40,000, while the Kansas statute limited recovery to $10,000; yet an amendment stating allegations which, for the first time, seemed to confer “jurisdiction” — since there was no such limit as to amount under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq.— was approved by the Supreme Court 27 , although, if the amendment had been treated as the commencement of a new suit, the action would have been foreclosed by the statute of limitations. In other words, although in the Wulf case, the suit as begun seemingly gave the court no “jurisdiction”, that fact did not make inefficacious an amendment, filed after the statute had run, which first conferred such “jurisdiction”. It is also to be noted that if, in the Wulf case, the suit, as originally begun, had gone to judgment for the defendant on demurrer, because of the excessive amount demanded by the plaintiff under the Kansas statute, such a judgment could not have been pleaded as res judicata in a suit subsequently begun by the plaintiff under the federal statute; yet the amendment effectively related back.
The court in the Wulf case,
However, there is a factor here which was not present in the Wulf case: There the Kansas statute created a cause of action against a private person. But here the defendant is a sovereign government; unless by statute it consents, a suit against it is a nullity. And there are many cases in which the Supreme Court has most narrowly construed statutes conferring such consents. Thus, in Finn v. United States,
But in the supposed case, and here, the difficulty is, it would seem, more grave than a failure, in the ordinary case, to allege “jurisdictional” facts; it is something apparently regarded by the Supreme Court as more serious, i. e., as a failure to comply with a condition of the sovereign’s waiving its immunity from suit. The seriousness of such a failure is shown by Mellon v. Arkansas Land & Lumber Co.,
Such cases might conceivably be differentiated from the Wulf case, supra, on the ground that in that case the defect was that the plaintiff had sued in the wrong capacity — that being a remediable error— whereas the failure to sue a
defendant
in his proper capacity is irremediable after the statute has run. Cf. Fitzpatrick v. Pitcairn,
The difficulty here, however, is not thus limited in scope. The Mellon decision did not seem to turn on the point that the service was of a character which would be held defective in a suit against an ordinary defendant, but rather on the point that the citizen had not literally complied with a condition attached to the sovereign’s consent to be sued. In United States v. Davis,
*204
To be sure, the Supreme Court, with particular reference to a suit against a Collector, seemed, in Moore Ice Cream Co. v. Rose, supra, to have deviated from its attitude of extremely strict construction of statutes waiving the sovereign’s immunity. There (in rejecting a narrow construction of the amendment to the statute eliminating the condition to suit for recovery of taxes that they must have been paid under protest) Mr. Justice Cardozo, speaking for the court, said (
We face the fact, however, that when a conflict arose between a decision which followed the generous spirit of Moore Ice Cream Co. v. Rose, supra, and one which applied a more rigid canon of statutory construction, the Supreme Court approved the latter decision, and thus indicated that the liberality of the Moore Ice Cream case must be cautiously applied. 33 We do not, therefore, feel free to hold that appellant is not barred by the statute of limitations.
Were we thus free, we would do so, for such a decision in favor of the taxpayer would not involve any dangerous ignoring of precedents. “If the Courts were to apply to the decision of substantially the same case one principle today and another tomorrow, men would lose rights they already possessed,” wrote Dicey. 34 That statement succinctly summarizes those arguments for adhering to precedents which command the respect of all intelligent lawyers, and which persuade courts to be reluctant to revise retrospectively an established rule of judiciary law, even when it is not all that it should be. But such an argument loses its meaning if advanced against the rejection of a precedent, not born of any statute, when no man will lose any pre-existing rights because of that change, the only consequences of which will be to injure the vested interest of a few lawyers in their acquired knowledge of a formulation that no longer has any reasonable excuse for existence and to deprive the government of funds which unjustly enrich it. 35 To stand by former decisions, now regarded as unfortunate, may be appropriate when men who may have acted upon them will suffer loss, if they be altered; to do so when, demonstrably, there can be no such reliance, is to indulge in mere legal aestheticism. The judiciary owes the government, of which it is a branch, no obligation to keep alive a rule whose only function is to enable that government to retain moneys which it has unlawfully taken from its citizens. There are profound reasons why, generally, the courts should conservatively interpret statutes relaxing the government’s *205 immunity from liability for acts of its officers. That insulation is not, in this country, a derivative of the maxim that “the King can do no wrong” 36 , but is founded upon wise considerations of policy (United States v. Shaw, supra) which dictate that the federal government should determine for itself which acts of its officials shall make it legally liable 37 . Accordingly, an intention to strip off wide portions of that insulation should not lightly be imputed to Congress. As, however, Congress is the legislative branch of a democratic government which does not claim to be the equivalent of a despotic monarch who can do no wrong, its intention, as it relates to a citizen in the peculiarly unfortunate plight of the taxpayer in this case 38 might be interpreted as other than excessively stingy. 39 But, for reasons above indicated, such an interpretation must be left to the Supreme Court.
Our mandate on the earlier appeal was interpreted by the trial judge as permitting the amendment so as to save taxpayer’s cause of action. Assuming that that implication of the mandate was the law of the case, yet, if it was seriously incorrect, it does not bind us. Cf. Messinger v. Anderson,
For the same reason, it is arguable that we are now at liberty to rectify any error in our earlier decision and that we erred in holding on the prior appeal that the suit, as begun against the Col *206 lector, could not be maintained, since that point (as appears from the record on the first appeal) was not made on behalf of the Collector in the District Court, having been first raised in this court on the first appeal after the statute of limitations had barred a claim against the United States. 41 But, apart from the fact that appellee, by her subsequent amendment, after certiorari was denied, acquiesced in that ruling (which might not prevent rectification now), there is this difficulty: The error was of so serious a character that it could be first raised on appeal 42 , especially in litigation which, in substance, must be founded upon the government’s consent. 43
It may be that the particular facts of this case (i. e. that the taxpayer was misled by the decisions as they stood in 1933 when he began his action, into believing he could maintain his suit against the Collector, and the fact that the defect in his action was first raised in this court on the earlier appeal when the statute had already run) may induce the Supreme Court to apply the rule of R. F. C. v. Prudence Group,
As we are constrained to decide against appellee, because of the running of the statute of limitations, it is unnecessary for us to consider whether or not the District Court, on the evidence before it on the second trial, correctly held that the claim for refund was timely filed with the Commissioner.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed.
Notes
A point noted by appellee in her petition for rehearing on the former appeal.
The Court there said that “an overpayment in cash cannot be realistically distinguished from an overpayment by credit in determining the liability of the Collector.”
Lowe Bros. v. United States, supra; cf. United States v. Piedmont Mfg. Co., supra.
In the case of a State, the 11th Amendment stood in the way, absent the State’s consent.
The individual
right
of
the
citizen which, is invaded must be of “a recognized character”; Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co.,
If the state is an indispensable party to the relief sought, the suit cannot lie, e.g. if the object of the suit is to compel specific performance of the state’s control, or to compel an officer to pay money out of the state treasury, Louisiana v. Jumel,
In Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. Co., supra, the court said (
Cf. the related cases where a citizen seeks, by a suit against a government officer, to have the courts determine the constitutionality of a statute (or whether the officer has violated a valid statute) ; the courts refuse to consider such questions — because there is no “case or controversy” — unless the citizen first shows that, were there no statute involved, the conduct of the officer, regarded as a private person, has invaded or will invade the citizen’s individual rights, of a recognized character; in the absence of such a showing there is damnum absque injuria; Massachusetts v. Mellon,
Of course, the cases here being discussed are of a different character from those brought to compel an official to perform a plain ministerial duty; Board of Liquidation v. McComb,
Now found, with immaterial verbal changes, in 28 U.S.C.A. § 842.
The court also said
See dissenting opinion of Judge Whitaker in Nunnally Inv. Co. v. United States, Ct.Cl.,
And a similar statement in Sunshine Anthracite Coal Co. v. Adkins,
Paul, Selected Studies in Taxation, 2d series, 1938, 104, 126; Griswold, Res Judicata in Federal Tax Cases, 46 Yale L.J. (1937) 1320, 1340-1347.
Cf. Tyler v. United States,
Anniston Mfg. Co. v. Davis, 5 Cir.,
Bentham, Works (1843 Ed.) Vol. 6, p. 582; cf. Vol. 2, p. 466, Vol. 7, p. 283.
Bentham, in other writings, showed his appreciation of the value of fictions in certain thought areas; see Ogden’s article in Psyche, July 1928, p. 4. But he was apparently unwilling to admit their validity in legal thinking; see Frank, Law and the Modern Mind, 321— 322.
Jeremiah Smith joined with Bentham: “The use of fiction”, he asserted, “tends not only to impair, in a general way, reverence for truth; but also to diminish the respect which would otherwise be felt for the law itself. * * * We believe that, at the present day, the use of fiction in law should be entirely abandoned. * * * If a legal truth, then its continued use can result only in evil. If, on the other hand, it represents — in part at least — some clumsily concealed legal truth, then it is capable of being translated into the language of truth, and we should adopt Mr. Bentham’s remedy— ‘Burn the original, and employ the translation in its stead.’ In short, we would entirely discard the use of fiction phrases and fiction reasons.” Surviving Fictions, 27 Yale L.J. (1917), 147, 154.
See Tourtoulon, Philosophy in the Development of Law, 293-296 ; 383-399; 644 ff; Vaihinger, The Philosophy of “As If”, passim; cf. Oohen, On the Logic of Fictions, 20 The Journal of Philosophy, 477; and see comments on those writings in Frank, Law and the Modern Mind, 37-41; 312-322.
Story, J., in United States v. Nineteen Hundred and Sixty Bags of Coffee, 8 Cranch. 398, 415,
Holmes, J., in Blackstone v. Miller,
Helvering v. Stockholms Enskilda Bank,
Curry v. McCanless,
Agency, Collected Legal Papers (1920) 81, 101; cf. The Eugene F. Moran,
To padfy the logicians, that statement should be slightly altered: the vice is not in the logic but in such obsession with logic as to cause blindness with respect to the major premise.
“At a moment when thé pecuniary enterprises of the kingdom were covering the world, when railways at home and steam upon the seas were creating everywhere new centres of industrial and commercial life, the common law courts of the realm seemed constantly occupied in the discussion of the merest legal conundrums which bore no relation to the merits of any controversies except those of pedants, and in the direction of a machinery that belonged to the past.” Bowen, L. J. quoted in Holdsworth, History of English Law, I (1922) 645.
12 Holdsworth, op. cit. 555.
See Clark, Code Pleading, 505, cited with approval in United States v. Memphis Cotton Oil Co., supra, 288 U.S. at pages 68, 69,
28 U.S.C.A. § 41(20).
See a subsequent discussion of the case in New York Cent. & H. R. R. Co. v. Kinney,
It thus distinguished its earlier decision in American Railroad Co. v. Birch,
There is no unanimity in the State courts as to related questions under state statutes; cf. Davis v. Jerrell,
In the sense that the court should dismiss such a suit on its own motion, and that the defect cannot be waived by the parties.
Cf. Chicot County Drainage District v. Baxter State Bank,
Cf. Hackner v. Guaranty Trust Co., 2 Cir.,
Lowe Bros. Co. v. United States,
Law and Opinion in England During the Nineteenth Century, 2d Ed. 1914, 367.
To respect precedents to the point of refusing to alter such a rule is to make plausible Swift’s excessive condemnation of lawyerdom: “It is a maxim among lawyers”, said his Gulliver, “that whatever has been done before may legally be done again, and they therefore take special care to record all the decisions formerly made' against common justice and the general reason of mankind. These, under the name of precedents, they produce as authorities to justify the most iniquitous opinions, and the judges never fail of directing accordingly.”
Langford v. United States,
For the history of that maxim, see Holdsworth, History of English Law,II, 3d Ed. 1923, 252-256; II, 464-469; IV (1924) 200-217; VI (1924) 3-122, 267; X (1938) 651-654, and Borchard’s excellent study, Government Responsibility in Tort, 34 Vale L.J. (1924), I, 129, 229; 36 Yale L.J. (1926) I, 757,1039.
As to the States, there was, of course, no immunity prior to the enactment of the 11th Amendment. Chisholm v. Georgia, supra.
Borchard, supra, appears incorrectly to interpret Mr. Justice Holmes’ position in The Western Maid,
Holmes’ position in The Western Maid, supra, was that, no matter what may be the history or justification for or moral objections to the government’s immunity from suit, to the extent that it exists, no one has a legal right against the government and it has committed no legal wrong. Cf. Holmes, His Book Notices and Uncollected Letters and Papers (1936), edited by Shriver, p. 204.
It is idle chatter to speak of a legal wrong for which there is no legal redress; a so-called legal right without a legal remedy is — as the taxpayer in the case before us knows to his sorrow — of no practical value, being but a shabby mythical entity like the “grin without a cat” which Lewis Carroll’s Alice, justifiably, could not understand, for it is comprehensible only to those who dwell in Wonderland. In the world of common sense, all that Borchard can mean is that there may be moral indignation at the want of a legal remedy; if that moral indignation influences Congress to grant such a remedy, then, for the first time, a legal right will exist, but the moral indignation which may be a causative factor in the creation of that legal right should not be confused with it.
His grievance is of a “recognized character” and, were there consent to be sued, a “case or controversy” would exist. Muskrat v. United States; Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co.; Alabama Power Co. v. Ickes, and related cases cited supra.
Cf. L. Hand, J., in Heil v. United States, D.C.,
That the Supreme Court denied certiorari with respect to our decision on the earlier appeal did not, it would seem, make the implication of our remanding the case the law of the case as established by the Supreme Court so that we are not at liberty to change it now. Cf. Hamilton-Brown Shoe Co. v. Wolf Brothers & Co.,
Cf. Retzer v. Wood,
United States v. Atkinson,
Compare United States v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,
Of course, to say that, for these purposes, the suit against the Collector, which was before us on the prior appeal, was a suit, in substance, against the United States, involves, pro tanto, a rejection of the fiction that such a suit is “personal”.
A majority of the court there held that “the failure to comply with statutory requirements * * * is not necessarily a jurisdictional defect”, and that such requirements will be relaxed where a party has been misled by the decisions; two of the justices, concurring, held that “in rare instances” the “broad power to make such disposition of the case as justice requires” should be used to cure “even jurisdictional defects”.
