174 F. 388 | 2d Cir. | 1909
We are of the opinion that the action was commenced in time. Section 3226 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2088) provides that no suit shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any internal revenue tax alleged to have been erroneously assessed or collected “until appeal shall have been duly made to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue * * * and a decision of the Commissioner has been had therein: Provided, that if such decision is delayed more than six months from the date of such appeal, then the said suit may be brought, without first having a decision of the Commissioner, at any time within the period limited in the next section.” Section 3221 provides that no suit referred to in the preceding section “shall be maintained in any court, unless the
It is manifest that ‘without the proviso above quoted no cause of action could accrue in such a suit until a decision of the Commissioner has been rendered. The 2 years’ period commences to run from the promulgation of the decision. The statute, with the proviso.omitted, declares a positive prohibition against the commencement of a suit rintil the decision is rendered, whether it be delayed 6 months or 6 years or 20 j^ears from the date of the appeal. That such a statute would be grossly unfair to the citizen is obvious, for it would make the Commissioner an absolute dictator and would prevent all redress in case that official neglected or refused to act. To prevent such a denial of justice the proviso was inserted in-the interest of the aggrieved party. It provides that he may after 6 months bring his suit without waiting longer for the decision. In other words he may, if he likes, treat the failure to decide as an adverse decision. • If the contention of the defendant in error be correct the lawmakers should have used the word “must” and not “may.” Indeed, if the intention were as contended it would have been best expressed by a provision that the cause of action should accrue 6 months from the date of the appeal unless the Commissioner sooner decides the controversy, and then at the date of the decision.
We think Congress intended to give the appellant the right to wait for the decision of the Commissioner, especially if he has reason to believe that it will be in his favor. Congress could not have intended to offer him the alternative of losing his claim or else commencing an expensive litigation which prevents a decision which may sustain his contention and for which he is entirely willing to wait. A construction which compels the claimant, upon pain of forfeiting all his rights, to sue within 2 years and 6 months from the appeal to the Commissioner and while that official is duly considering the questions involved, seems to us unreasonable.
On the other hand the interpretation which we place upon the statute provides a simple, fair and workable plan which preserves the rights of both parties. Certainly the government which holds the money cannot, from a pecuniary point of view, be injured by the delay. If, however, the Commissioner thinks otherwise he has the remedy in his own hands, he has but to decide the controversy and the period of limitation will immediately begin. It seems to us unseemly to make a suit compulsory against a government official when the regularly constituted authorities are examining the questions at issue in due course and maj*- render a decision which will make a suit unnecessary; especially so when the party who has been deprived of his money is not complaining of the delay.
The practice as we construe the statute is plain and simple. The party whose property has been, as he thinks, wrongly taken by the collector appeals to the Commissioner. If the latter official renders a decision against him he must bring suit within 2 years from the date ■of such decision. But the decision may be unreasonably delayed and the claimant may thus be deprived of- the use of his money for an
We think the foregoing views are sustained by the Supreme Court in Arnson v. Murphy, 109 U. S. 238, 3 Sup. Ct. 184, 27 L. Ed. 920, and Wright v. Blakeslee, 101 U. S. 174, 25 L. Ed. 1048. In Arnson v. Murphy the Supreme Court, having under consideration a statute similar in all essential particulars to the one in hand, uses the following language:
“It appears to ns quite plain, from the reading of the statute, that no action arises to the claimant, in such cases, until after a decision against him' by the Secretary of the Treasury: and that his suit against the collector is oarred unless brought within 9() days after an adverse decision upon liis appeal ; hut, with the proviso, that if such decision is delayed more than !)<) days after the date of his appeal, it is at the claimant’s option either to sue, pending the appeal, treating the delay as a denial, or to wait until decision is in fact made, and then sue within 00 days thereafter. It cannot he that he is obliged, in case for any reason a decision at the Treasury Department is delayed beyond the appointed time, to treat the delay as an adverse decision, and to bring his suit while the matter is still sub judice. There is no language in the act requiring such a conclusion, it is inconsistent with the terms actually employed, and is not founded on any sufficient reason.”
The judgment is reversed.