286 F. 841 | 1st Cir. | 1923
The plaintiff seeks to recover taxes paid under protest for the years 1916 and 1917, assessed upon net profits derived by plaintiff from the manufacture and sale of machine gun belts. The taxes were levied under the following provisions of the Revenue Act of September 8, 1916, 39 Stat. 781:
“Sec. 301 (1). That every person manufacturing * * * (d) firearms of any kind and appendages, including small arms, cannon, machine guns, rifles, and bayonets; * * * or (f) any part of any of the articles mentioned in * * * : Shall pay for each taxable year, in addition to the income tax imposed by Title I, an excise tax of twelve and one-half per centum upon the entire net profits actually received or accrued for said year from the sale or disposition of such articles manufactured within the United States. * * *
“(2) This section shall cease to be of effect at the end of one year after the termination of the present European War, which shall be evidenced by the proclamation of the President of the United States declaring such war to have ended.” Oomp. St. § 6336Mb.
and of section 214 of the Revenue Act of October 3, 1917, 40 St. 308:
“Sec. 214. * * * Subdivision (1) of section three hundred and one of such act of September 8, 1916, is hereby amended so that the rate of tax for the taxable year nineteen hundred and seventeen shall be ten per centum instead of twelve and one-half per centum, as therein provided.
“Subdivision (2) of such section is hereby amended to read as follows: ‘(2) This section shall cease to be of effect on and after January 1, 1918.’ ’’ Comp. St. 1918, § 6336Mbb.
These taxes were assessed subsequent to January 1, 1918. Two questions are involved:
(1) Whether section 214 of the Act of October 3, 1917, was an unqualified repeal of the prior act so that no such tax could be levied subsequent to January 1, 1918.
(2) Whether the machine gun belts were, as matter of law or as matter of mixed fact and law, parts or appendages of machine guns, within the meaning of section 301(1), supra.
Under section 304 (Comp. St. § 6336%e) manufacturers of such' articles were required to make sworn returns, not due until March 1, 1918, covering the business of the previous calendar year. The assessment, of course, was subsequent to these returns. Section 305 (Comp. St. § 6336%f). The construction claimed would nullify the clearly manifest purpose of Congress to assess such tax at the reduced rate of 10 per cent, for 1917; it would involve the absurdity of providing in the same section a 10 per cent, tax for 1917 and cutting off all such taxes for 1917. This contention cannot be 'sustained.
2. Were the machine gun belts parts or appendages of machine guns within the meaning of the act? The case was tried before a jury on agreed facts and evidence. There is little or no dispute about the facts. The Vickers gun belts are loaded with cartridges, and attached to the machine gun in such manner that in operation the cartridges are successively conveyed to the firing chamber of the gun and discharged. When the belt is thus emptied, it is removed, and another loaded belt is attached in its place. In use, each gun is supplied with a number of loaded gun belts sufficient to last throughout the firing anticipated. As they are emptied they are ordinarily sent back of the firing line to be reloaded. The belts are interchangeable, no particular belt being necessarily used with any particular gun. Many of the belts used are destroyed or abandoned, so that perhaps 50 times as many belts as guns are supplied for military operations. While it is physically possible to load a machine gun by hand with a single round, the gun cannot function as a rapid-firing machine gun except through use of the gun belt. Without the belt, the gun cannot be operated as a machine gun. A sample belt was submitted to the jury, also at the argument before this court, and its relation to the machine gun and to its operation was orally explained.
The court below submitted to the jury, on instructions not excepted to, the following question:
“Where the Vickers machine gun belts manufactured by the plaintiff appendages to the Vickers machine gun or parts thereof?”
“The jury find for the defendant. If as a matter of law the defendant is not entitled to a verdict, then the jury find for the plaintiff and assess damages in the sum of $6,037.69, and consent that this alternative verdict -may be entered with the same force and effect as if originally returned by them on order of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, or of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, or of the United States Supreme Court.”
Cf. Automatic Pencil Sharpener Co. v. Boston Pencil Pointer Co. (C. C. A.) 279 Fed. 40.
Plaintiff moved that a verdict be ordered in its favor. But the court entered judgment on the verdict for the defendant. The decision was right.
The circumstances under which this legislation was enacted and the manifest purpose of Congress “to include the whole subject of war munitions and war accessories in a common class” are adverted to by Judge Buffington in his opinion in Carbon Steel Co. v. Lewellyn, 258 Fed. 533, 535, 169 C. C. A. 473. We need not now elaborate on the views therein well expressed. The decision reached by that court was confirmed in 251 U. S. 501, 40 Sup. Ct. 283, 64 L. Ed. 375. Cofnpare, also, Worth Brothers v. Lederer, 251 U. S. 507, 510, 40 Sup. Ct. 282, 64 L. Ed. 377. In that case the court said, as to a contention at least as plausible as the one made by the plaintiff in the instant case:
“Congress did not intend to subject its legislation to such artificialities and make it depend upon distinctions so refined as to make a part of a shell not the taxable ‘part’ of the law.”
Compare Forged Steel Wheel Co. v. Lewellyn, 251 U. S. 511, 40 Sup. Ct. 285, 64 L. Ed. 380.
We find no error in the proceedings below. The judgment must be affirmed, with costs to the defendant in error in this court.