The appeal involves an alleged overpayment of corporation excise taxes for 1909 and 1910 and consolidated suits for recovery begun over twenty-six years ago against McMaken, the then Collector of Internal Revenue at Toledo, Ohio. The petitions were filed October 16, 1912. McMaken is long since dead, his first administratrix is superseded by another, the two District Judges who participated in the proceedings are likewise deceased, the plaintiff has undergone a metamorphosis, and the record, disclosing long intervals of immobility by court and litigants, have made the problem presented to us difficult. We make no effort to apportion the blame for long delay and unnecessary complications, but proceed to a recital of facts thought to be material and legal contentions of appellant and the United States, which as intervenor challenges the appeal and moves its dismissal.
The appellant, then known as The Toledo Railways & Light Company, sought to recover as overpayments sums paid to the collector under protest. The defendant appeared through the United States Attorney for the District, entered a general denial, and asserted the taxes to have been collected under the authority of a certification by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
Another interval of six years elapsed. On December 26, 1928, orders were entered granting the motions -to vacate, but each limited “to the extent that said prior orders substituted Frank B. Niles personally as defendant herein for the original defendant William V. McMaken personally and that said prior order of substitution is hereby vacated to said extent and Georgie D. Mc-Maken, administratrix of the estate of William V. McMaken, deceased, is hereby instated as the defendant herein personally, but not as a representative of the United States. It is further ordered that this order shall not work to reconnect the United States with plaintiffs contention herein or to compel it to reassume the burdens involved from the filing of this suit. * * * ” Plaintiff immediately filed motions for judgment, and with the approval of the United States Attorney, they were entered upon the original record, but with the notation that they were judgments against Mc-Maken’s administratrix personally and not as a representative of the United States. Thereupon both parties to the suits filed motions for certificates of probable cause, with a stipulation that McMaken as Collector had collected the taxes in question in accordance with assessments made and certified by the Commissioner and that the money had be'en paid into the Treasury of the United States. These motions were presented on February 23, 1929, to the late Judge Hahn, then recently appointed District Judge, and were granted. On April 20, 1929, the United States intervened and moved in each case for an order vacating the order of February 23d and for a rehearing upon the. motions. Two years later in the one case, and four years later in the other, its motions were granted and the certificates vacated. Subsequently the death of Georgie D. McMaken was suggested and the cases were revived in the name of Myra McMaken Pickett as successor administratrix of McMaken’s estate. On June 6, 1934, the plaintiff filed new motions for certificates of probable cause and the United States on its own behalf moved to strike them from the files and to dismiss. Discussions followed at the suggestion of the court in efforts to reach an agreement as to the amount of the overpayments because of concessions that the judgments were not responsive to the stipulated facts. No agreement being reached, the late District Judge Killits denied the motions for certificates of probable cause and nunc pro tunc as of March 23, 1922, dismissed the petitions.
Upon this confusing and halting sequence of events the appellant challenges the nunc pro tunc" orders of dismissal as made too late, and the orders denying its motions for certificates of probable cause as beyond the scope of discretion. The District Court, it urges, had no power in 1936 to vacate judgments entered in 1928 when no extension of the term during which the judgments were entered had been sought or granted, but that the court should have modified the judgments to accord with the amounts overpaid in response to the stipulated facts and concessions of the interven- or; that it should have granted certificates of probable cause to the amount of the conceded liability, since the granting of such certificates under the provisions of T. 28, U.S.C. § 842, 28 U.S.C.A. § 842, when the Collector has acted under the direction of a proper officer of the Government and has paid the monies collected as taxes into the Treasury, is mandatory, and even if discretionary, the denial of them is an abuse of discretion when there is a showing of probable cause for the making of the collections. Upon behalf of the intervenor it is urged that the orders denying the motions for certificates of probable cause are orders
Construing the orders denying motions for certificates as final and appealable in respect to the intervenor, since through their instrumentality alone may the judgments against the collector or his estate be made a charge on the United States, and confining decision to them, we recognize a fundamental infirmity at the root of the appeal from such orders that makes it unnecessary to decide all, if any, of the controverted issues of law.
When upon motions of the appellant the successor collector was substituted for McMaken, the latter disappeared as a defendant in the cases. This proposition we think to be incontrovertible. To substitute, both in common parlance and in the definition of the lexicographers, is to put one person or thing in the place of another. Niles was instated as defendant in place of McMaken and the latter was eliminated. Decisions typified by New York Evening Post Co. v. Chaloner, 2 Cir.,
Suits against the collector for recovery of taxes collected are personal actions. Sage v. United States,
When Niles was substituted for Mc-Maken the statute of limitations for the recovery of taxes paid in 1909 and 1910 had run. McMaken, however, consented to the vacating of the order of substitution and to his reinstatement in the case, and so likewise did his estate. The statute of limitations may be waived, and insofar as the judgments thereafter sought were against MeMaken or his estate, without consequences to the United States, they may not now be challenged.
We are concerned, however, with procedure whereby a personal judgment against the collector is sought to be converted into a 'judgment which is in effect one against the Government. It has been held that in a suit against a collector for the recovery of a tax erroneously collected, the statute of limitations barring the suit may by failure to claim the benefit of it be waived (Retzer v. Wood, Collector,
As already indicated, Retzer v. Wood, supra, decides that the collector may waive the statute of limitations by failing -to plead it or bring it to the attention of the court as a defense at the trial. But the consequences of a judgment against the collector in obligation upon the United .States was not there considered, and there was no question before the court involving the issuance of a certificate of probable cause either under command of the statute or in the exercise of discretion. Be it noted also that the case was decided in 1883, when the Government was not suable as freely as how, and before the court had announced the doctrine that in certain circumstances the obligation to issue a certificate of probable cause is mandatory.
This leads us to analysis of the decision in Moore Ice Cream Co. v. Rose, supra, which proclaimed the doctrine. There it was said [
It may be argued from this that if we hold the collector powerless to waive a limitation upon the statutory obligation of the Government to pay a judgment against the collector, we perforce interpret Moore Ice Cream Co. v. Rose as overruling the doctrine of the Sage case, and the suit against the collector therefor being considered in effect, whatever its formal character, a suit against the United States, it did not abate by the substitution of Niles for MeMaken. We think this does not follow. The United States consenting to an obligation being imposed upon it may condition its consent to a formalism which includes even that “anomalous relic of bygone days” requiring the formal defendant in the District Court to be the collector and not the Government.
In the Moore case circumstances were such as called for no exercise of discretion. It was also the thought of The court that no situation calling for discretion could ever be presented where a collector has done no more than accept pay
Orders affirmed.
