68 F.2d 750 | D.C. Cir. | 1933
This is a tax case in which the Commissioner is the petitioner. The respondent is the Continental Oil Company, and the proceeding involves its tax liability as transferee of the assets of Mutual Oil Company of Maine, Mutual Oil Company of Arizona, Mutual Refining & Producing Company, and Northwestern Oil Refining Company.
During the period January 1, 1920, to March 15, 1920, Mutual Oil Company of Maine owned all the capital stock of the three last above-mentioned companies. On March 15, 1920, Continental Company (respondent) acquired the entire capital of Maine, and the following March 15 (1921) Continental filed a consolidated return for itself and the other four companies for the
The Board of Tax Appeals held that this deficiency notice covered only the liability of Continental for the tax, if any, owing by Maine, and, since that company owed no tax, there was no transferee liability, and it accordingly determined no deficiency. We are asked to review and reverse this decision of the Board.
Section 274 (a) of the Revenue Act of 1926 (44 Stat. 55, tit. 26 USCA § 1048) makes it the duty of the Commissioner to send a notice of deficiency to a taxpayer by registered mail. The statute in this respect is sufficiently complied with if the form adopted by the Commissioner shall notify the taxpayer of the proposed deficiency. The statute apparently contemplates nothing more than that the notice, where a deficiency in respect ox tax is determined, shall be sent to the taxpayer of “such deficiency.” In the ease we are considering the Board was of opinion that the heading or summary of the statement, which we have set out in full above, was a notice to the effect that the deficiency in tax claimed was owing from Continental as transferee of Maine, and, aS Maine owed no tax, no deficiency could be found. In reaching this conclusion, the Board regarded the- Commissioner’s deficiency letter as an assertion of liability only against Maine as the holder of the shares of stock of its controlled companies and against Continental as transferee of the assets of Maine. But the quoted part of the Commissioner’s notice, which ax>pa.rently was the basis of the Board’s conclusion, was a mere summary or caption, and was followed by the further statement: “The records of this office indicate that the Mutual Oil Company of Maine transferred its assets, which consisted of the capital slock of the Mutual Oil Company of Arizona, the Mutual Refining and Producing Company, and the Northwestern Oil Refining Company as of March 15,1920, and was dissolved January 12,1921. The Mutual Oil Company of Arizona transferred its assets to you on December 31,1921, and was dissolved January 23, 39,22. The Mutual Refining and Producing Company and the Northwestern Oil Refining Company transferred their assets on April 30, 1921, to the Mutual Oil Company of Arizona and were dissolved on July 12, 1921, and August 7, 1922, respectively.” This in turn was followed by detailed statements of liability as to each of the companies named.
We have examined the deficiency letter filed by the Commissioner, together with an attached summary and schedules, and we have likewise examined the findings of fact. The deficiency letter notified Continental that the Commissioner proposed to assess liability for taxes against it not only as transferee of Maine but likewise as transferee of Mutual Oil Company of Arizona, Mutual Refining & Producing Company, and Northwestern Oil Refining Company, in respect to alleged deficiency in income and excess profits taxes for the period January 1, 1920, to March 15, 1920. Except for the caption to which we have referred, the notice is plain and unambiguous as to the purpose of the Commissioner and the grounds on which he relied to sustain it. Continental refused to consent to the proposed assessment, appealed to the Board, and in its petition stated the
As we have seen, there was inclosed with tbe Commissioner’s notice to tbe Continental Company (tbe notice of March 15, 1927) a statement with a beading in which tbe caption showed tbe claimed deficiency of tax to be primarily due by Maine and by the Continental as transferee of that company. This, as tbe Board correctly states, was not true, for there was no tax liability or deficiency of. any bind due by Maine for the period in question, and tbe Commissioner never claimed there was, for in tbe agreed statement of facts be admits that: “Tbe net loss of tbe Mutual O'il Company of Maine, which owned only tbe stocks of tbe Mutual Oil Company of Arizona, Northwestern Oil Refining Company, and Mutual Refining and Producing Company for tbe period from January 1, to March 15,1920, was the sum of $8,255.-02. ” It is perfectly obvious, therefore, in. view of this stipulation, the Commissioner never bad any purpose to assert a liability against Maine either on its own account or for account of tbe other companies whose stocks it owned. If, however, tbe deficiency letter of tbe Commissioner bad confined itself to tbe erroneous caption, it obviously would have been no notice at all, or at best an ineffective one, but, as has been said, tbe accompanying papers and schedules, part and parcel of it, contained precise and definite information as to tbe true and correct basis of tbe Commissioner’s claim, and Continental could not by any possibility have been misled by tbe caption or beading, and there can be no better evidence of this than tbe fact that its own petition to tbe Board and tbe agreed facts show beyond tbe slightest question that all parties understood tbe Commissioner was asserting a liability for taxation for tbe period in question against Continental as transferee of all tbe oil companies involved.
In this view we find nothing to sustain tbe statement by tbe Board that tbe Commissioner, because of tbe beading we have referred to, bad elected to regard tbe Maine Company as parent of tbe other three companies and as such solely responsible for tbe tax. Tbe entire record, as we read it, negatives this theory. Tbe form of tbe letter was in tbe circumstances sufficient for notice, and tbe position of tbe parties in tbe bearing was clearly stated and understood. Nor tbe error of tbe Board in treating tbe Commissioner’s deficiency letter as insufficient, tbe case will have to be remanded for further consideration and decision, since tbe real issue has never been decided by it.
But it is insisted by tbe Continental Company that we are without any jurisdiction to pass on tbe petition for review because of tbe failure of tbe government to apply for it within tbe six-month period allowed by tbe statute. Section 1001, Revenue Act 1926, c. 27, 44 Stat. 109, tit. 26 USCA § 1224 and note. Tbe Board’s decision was entered May 20, 1931. Tbe petition for review was not filed in this court until July 22, 1932. There was therefore a spread of fourteen months between tbe decision and tbe petition; but on November 16, 1931, within tbe six-month period allowed by tbe act for review, the Commissioner applied to tbe Board for a rehearing, and this petition the Board bad under consideration until April 18, 1932, and then denied.
Continental now takes tbe position that tbe decision of tbe Board became final on November 20, 1931, and that the' time -for filing tbe petition was not tolled by tbe filing of a petition for rehearing on November 16 and within tbe six-month period. On this point the question for decision is whether tbe filing of a petition for rehearing suspends tbe running of tbe time for filing tbe petition for review, and this involves tbe question whether or not tbe Board of Tax Appeals has tbe right and power, after tbe entry of its order, upon petition seasonably filed, to grant a rehearing. Tbe same question has been decided affirmatively by two courts of appeals. Griffiths v. Commissioner, 50 F.(2d) 782 (C. C. A. 7); and Burnet v. Coal Co., 62 F.(2d) 906 (C. C. A. 4). But Continental insists that both these cases were decided incorrectly. It says the Board possesses practically none of tbe characteristics of a court, that
The character, as well as the functions, of the Board of Tax Appeals, is dealt with at great length by the Supreme Court in. Old Colony Trust v. Commissioner, 279 U. S. 716, 49 S. Ct. 499, 73 L. Ed. 918, and no good purpose will be served in extending that discussion. It is enough that, on appeal to the Board from the Commissioner’s determination of deficiency, the Board exercises powers essentially judicial in their character. In these circumstances, it would be going very far to say that, having reached a decision and having entered an order of re-determination, it was without power on any account to reconsider the same. But whether it inherently has this power or not is of no consequence, for we think it was given the pow'er by the act of Congress creating it. Section 900 (h), 907, Aet 1924, section 1000, Aet 1926, as amended by section 601, Revenue Act 1928, tit. 26 TJSCA § 1219. Section 601 provides, in part, as follows: “The proceedings of the Board and its divisions shall he conducted in accordance witli such rules of practice and procedure (other than rules of evidence) as the Board may prescribe and in accordance with the rules of evidence applicable in courts of equity of the District of Columbia.”
Under the right to adopt rules of practice and procedure, there can be no doubt there is included the right to provide for the filing of a petition for rehearing, for the term “practice” embraces the manner in which a ease shall bo conducted and tried from its inception to conclusion, and, as used in statutes in relation to courts, covers the modo and manner of trial and the review of judgments, or, as stated by Bouvier, “tbe form, manner, and order of conducting and carrying on suits and prosecutions in the courts, through their various stages, according to the principles of law and the rules laid down by the respective courts.” As used by Congress, it means, we think, unquestionably the adoption of such rules as would facilitate the transaction of business in a proper and orderly maimer. As to this, see House Conference Report No. 356, Sixty-Ninth Congress, first session, page 53, on conference relating to the Revenue Aet of 1926, as follows : “The House bill denied the taxpayer a rehearing before the Board. The amendment [Senate] strikes out this provision in order to permit the rules of the Board to govern the. granting of a rehearing.”
But, in addition to claiming the Board had no right to adopt such a rule, it was said at the bar that no rules have been adopted. However, it clearly appears that the Board have regularly exercised the right to grant rehearings, and in a recent case in which the power was challenged (Garden City Co. v. Commissioner, 27 B. T. A. 1132) the Board reviews its consistent procedure in such matters, saying, in effect, that the power had been hitherto exercised in its discretion by universal consent. This practice was in itself a general rule, and, while we are in, accord with a suggestion made in the opinion in Burnet v. Coal Co., supra, that it is desirable more formal rules fixing tbe time and conditions under which applications for rehearing may ho made should be adopted and announced, we do not think failure to do this, in the circumstances shown here, is fatal to the exercise of the right.
In these circumstances, we think the motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction should be denied, and, for reasons stated in the forepart of this opinion, the ease must be remanded to the Board, with instructions to proceed in accordance with the views we have expressed.
Reversed and remanded.
Mr. Associate Justice YAN ORSDEL dissents.