273 N.Y. 51 | NY | 1936
In April, 1936, Atlas Television Co., Inc., made an assignment for the benefit of creditors. The city of New York filed a claim for "taxes imposed pursuant to the provisions of Local Law No. 24 of the City of New York for the year 1934." The assignee allowed the claim but refused to accord it priority over claims *54 filed by other creditors. The court at Special Term held that the city was entitled to priority in the payment of its claims. The Appellate Division by a divided court held otherwise, but granted leave to appeal and certified the question: "In a general assignment for the benefit of creditors made pursuant to the statutes of this State, is the claim of the City of New York for sales taxes which the assignor was obligated under Local Law No. 24 of 1934 to pay to the Comptroller, entitled to a preference?"
No statute in express terms provides a general priority in favor of the State or of a governmental agency of the State in the payment of debts due from an insolvent debtor. Even without such statutory provision the State as the holder of the sovereign power has a preference over other debtors in insolvency proceedings. (Matter of Carnegie Trust Co.,
In the opinion at Special Term I wrote: "The power to tax is a sovereign power and the city in laying a tax is acting as part of the State under authority given it by the people of the State, and in the exercise of this power it is entitled, I think, to all the prerogatives enjoyed by the sovereign under our common law, and its right to a preference in the distribution of the assets of an insolvent corporation has been declared in Matter of theReceivership of Columbian Insurance Co., 3 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 242; and in Matter of Atlas Iron Construction Co.,
The Court of Appeals in affirming without opinion the decision in that case that upon the liquidation of an insolvent bank the city has no preference for moneys collected as taxes and deposited in the bank, has not necessarily approved of the assumption in my opinion that the city would have preference in the collection of a tax due from an insolvent corporation. The assignee does not, however, challenge the distinction pointed out in the Northern Bank case. It is supported by authority, and seems to rest in reason. A tax has been defined as "a statutory liability imposed upon all the inhabitants of the state defined as taxable, to the end that they may contribute their just share to the expenses of government." (Village of Charlotte v.Keon,
The city of New York was empowered by the Legislature to impose taxes for relief. (Laws of 1934, ch. 873.) Pursuant to that statute the local legislative body of the city passed "Local Law No. 24" (published as Local Law No. 25; Local Laws of 1934, pp. 164-175) which provides that "there shall be paid a tax of two per centum upon the amount of the receipts from every sale in the city of New York of (a) tangible personal property sold at retail," etc. (§ 2.) Concededly the insolvent assignor has sold property at retail, and has not paid any tax upon the receipts of the sales. It is the contention of the *56 assignee that even though the vendor of property is the person entitled to the "receipts from every sale," the tax is laid upon the purchaser, and that the vendor is required only to collect the tax as the collecting agent of the city and though required to pay to the city the amount of the tax, his liability is only that of an ordinary debtor.
The statute contains provisions which lend support to the respondent's contentions. It places obligations upon both vendor and purchaser and describes these obligations as follows:
"Upon each taxable sale or service the tax to be collected shall be stated and charged separately from the sale price or charge for service and shown separately on any record thereof, at the time when the sale is made or evidence of sale issued or employed by the vendor and shall be paid by the purchaser to the vendor, for and on account of the city of New York, and the vendor shall be liable for the collection or the service rendered; and the vendor shall have the same right in respect to collecting the tax from the purchaser, or in respect to nonpayment of the tax by the purchaser, as if the tax were a part of the purchase price of the property or service and payable at the time of the sale.
"Where a purchaser has failed to pay and a vendor has failed to collect a tax upon a sale or service, as imposed by this local law, then in addition to all other rights, obligations and remedies provided, such tax shall be payable by the purchaser directly to the comptroller and it shall be the duty of the purchaser to file a return thereof with the comptroller and to pay the tax imposed thereon to the comptroller within fifteen days after such sale was made or service rendered" (§ 2).
In a bankruptcy proceeding it has been held that the obligations so defined constitute a tax upon the purchaser and a debt of the vendor in the amount of money which he collected or should have collected from the purchaser and that the city is entitled to no preference in the payment *57
of that debt in bankruptcy proceedings of the debtor, since the city is entitled to no preference under the laws of the State of New York. (Matter of Lazaroff,
We might agree with that conclusion if the local law did not contain other provisions which indicate that the obligation imposed upon the vendor is in the nature of a tax. He must file a return of his receipts from sales. (§ 5.) The duty of payment tothe city is laid upon the vendor, not the purchaser. His liability is not measured by the amount actually collected from the purchaser but by the receipts required to be included in such return. (§ 6.) He must pay the tax even if failure to collect is due to no fault of his own. Indeed the city has insisted that a vendor is liable for a tax of two per cent upon the amount of his receipts even from sales within the amount, stated in regulations promulgated by the Comptroller pursuant to section 3 of the local law, upon which "no tax need be collected from the purchaser." (Queens Vending Corp. v. City of New York,
Whether the city is entitled to a priority depends upon whether its claim is that of the sovereign people, acting through the agency of the city, or is that of the city acting as a semi-private municipal corporation. Taxation is an attribute of sovereignty and the city acts as sovereign when it imposes an obligation upon its inhabitants to contribute to the expenses of government and when it collects that obligation. That is true no less if we denominate the obligation by some other term than a "tax," so long as it constitutes an obligation created by the sovereign to contribute to the expense of government. Distinctions resting solely in words should carry here no legal consequences. We must look to the substance of the obligation.
From that point of view it seems clear that the city is entitled to a priority. It has imposed a tax as sovereign and to meet a need which concerns the welfare of the *58 State. It has provided that the vendor of property must pay the tax to it. Though the vendor is required, at least in most cases, to collect the tax from the purchaser "for and on account of the city," the purpose of that provision is to place the incidence of the tax immediately on the consumer. The city can collect only from the vendor. The vendor's obligation to pay the tax is not measured by the amount collected nor dependent upon failure to exercise the diligence in collection which would be required of an agent. It is an obligation measured by the receipts of the vendor and created by the local law. If the city has no priority in collecting a claim founded upon this obligation, the other creditors of the vendor share in money collected by the vendor for payment to the city. Fine-spun distinctions are here out of place. The local law provides that the "vendor shall pay the tax" and the city is entitled as sovereign to priority for such payment.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that of the Special Term affirmed, without costs. The question certified should be answered in the affirmative.
CRANE, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, HUBBS, CROUCH, LOUGHRAN and FINCH, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly. *59