This is a suit under the Tucker Act (28 U.S.C.A. § 41 (20) to recover 1918 taxes in the sum of $7,432.75 erroneously paid after collection was barred by the statute of limitations. As incidental to the judgment sought, the complaint prayed that a compromise agreement executed between the taxpayer and the commissioner be set aside. Consequently, the action was transferred from the law side of the court and heard on the equity side. From an order directing that the complaint be dismissed on the merits, and from the judgment entered pursuant thereto, the plaintiff, Staten Island Hygeia Ice & Cold Storage Co, has appealed.
In June, 1919, the taxpayer filed its tax return for the year 1918 and duly paid the tax thereby shown to be due. Thereafter, in May, 1924, an additional tax of $5,303.83 was assessed. This sum, together with part of the interest accruing thereon at 12 per cent, per annum from the date of assessment, was paid in installments between May 20, 1926, and March 28, 1928, and further payments of interest were made on August 14, 1928, and January 18, 1929. All these payments were made after the time for legal collection, which expired on January 25, 1925, though neither the taxpayer nor the collector of internal revenue knew that the statute had run. Such was the construction given it in Russell v. United States,
There can be no question — indeed, it is conceded — that the plaintiff would be entitled to recover under section 607 of the Revenue Act of 1928, 45 Stat. 874, 26 U.S.C.A. § 1670 (a) (2) and note, except for the compromise agreement. In September, 1929, a deputy collector of internal revenue made a demand upon the taxpayer for payment of a delinquency penalty of $268.19 and additional interest of $260.86 for failure to pay the 1918 taxes on time, and suggested that his demand *70 could be settled for $25. He presented a paper, saying, “Sign that paper and that will clear you.” The taxpayer thereupon paid him $25 and signed the paper without reading it. It was an offer of compromise on the usual, form and was thereafter accepted by the. commissioner and approved by the Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to section 3229 of the Revised Statutes (26 U.S.C.A. § 1661 and note). By its terms the taxpayer expressly compromised the claim “for failure to pay 1918 additional taxes on time” and waived “any and all claims ‘to refunds or over-payments” to which he might be entitled and “the benefit of any statute of limitations affecting the collection of the liability sought to be compromised.” Unless it can be set aside, it is a bar to the present suit. Holding that the compromise concluded the plaintiff, the District Court dismissed the complaint on the merits.
The taxpayer seeks to avoid the compromise (1) as unauthorized by the statute; (2) on the theory that both parties acted under a mutual mistake, namely, that the additional tax was collectible for six years after the assessment, instead of five years after the return, as Russell v. United States decided; and (3) on the ground that this mistake was induced on the part of the taxpayer by misrepresentations of government agents. In July, 1927, the taxpayer had written a letter to the collector asking whether the government was barred from collecting the 1918 tax. No direct reply to this letter was received, but on February 18, 1928, a person describing himself as “Chief Field Deputy” of the collector wrote the taxpayer concerning its additional taxes for 1918 arid subsequent years, and concluded his letter with the statement: “We have gone very carefully into the matter and you are advised that all of the above tax is legally due. We make this statement lest you may have a misapprehension as to one or two of the older items.” All but '$1,000 of the payments in question were made subsequent to the receipt of this letter, in reliance upon it, and under threat of distraint if the sums demanded were not paid. It was also relied' upon when the compromise offer was made. Although the above-quoted statement that the tax was due was a misrepresentation of the law, it was innocently made, since the Russell Case had not then been decided. This decision came down about nine months later. In the Treasury Decisions issued on January 24, 1929, the Secretary of the Treasury caused to be published a copy of the Russell opinion “for the information of internal revenue officers and others concerned.” Consequently the plaintiff argues that the deputy collector who procured the compromise offer in September, 1929, was charged with knowledge that collection of the sums then demanded was barred by the statute, and that his misrepresentation that they were owing cannot be deemed innocently made. Throughout the period under review the taxpayer consulted no lawyer, accountant, or tax expert concerning its 1918 tax liability.
The taxpayer’s first argument, that the compromise agreement is void because it was executed subsequent to January 1, 1929, and when collection of the compromised tax was barred by the statute of limitations, is based on section 278 (f) of the Revenue Act of 1926, added by section 506 (b) of the Revenue Act 1928 (45 Stat. 870). This reads as follows: “(f) Any agreement which would be within the provisions of subdivision (c) or (d) of this section but for the fact that it was executed after the expiration of the period of limitation extended by such agreement, shall be valid and effective according to its terms if entered into after the enactment of the Revenue Act of 1928 and before January 1, 1929.” An agreement of compromise, however, is not an agreement “which would be within the provisions of subdivisions (c) or (d).” They relate respectively to waivers extending the period for assessment and collection. Even if subdivision (f) could be construed to invalidate the express waiver of the statute of limitations contained in the compromise offer, it would leave untouched the compromise of tax liability and the waiver of “all claims to refunds or overpayments.” Compromise agreements are authorized by R.S. § 3229 (26 U.S.C.A. § 1661 and note). This contains no requirement that the compromise must be executed before the tax is barred by the statute of limitations, and it would be quite unjustifiable to find in section 278 (f) an expression of congressional intent to add such a condition.
It is further argued that if no liability exists, there is no claim to be compromised; that R.S. § 3229 (26 U.S.C.A. § 1661 and note) presupposes the existence of such a claim and authorized a compromise only in that' event. Expressions in the opinion in Big Diamond Mills
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Co. v. United States,
If the compromise is to be set aside, it must be because the parties acted under a mutual mistake, or because the agreement was obtained ^ under circumstances which make it inequitable for the government to enforce it. The compromise was made on the assumption that the sums previously paid had been legally collected and that the penalty and additional interest presently demanded were still collectible. This assumption was erroneous. Were it a mutual mistake of fact, undoubtedly the plaintiff should recover. Morgan v. United States,
For the foregoing reasons we think it was error to dismiss the complaint
Judgment reversed.
