80 F.2d 24 | 9th Cir. | 1935
This is an action by the United States on a bond given on February 24, 1931, by the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland to the collector of internal revenue to secure the payment of two overdue installments of the internal revenue tax on income, due from the Heilman Investment Company for the calendar year 1929; the tax not having been paid. Judgment was rendered for the defendant on demurrer, from which the government appeals.
The total tax was $235,920.30, the third installment of $58,980.07 was due September 15, 1930, and the fourth installment of the tax was due December 15, 1930. The collector was demanding payment and the taxpayer requested an extension of time to September 15, 1931. This extension was granted in consideration of the execution of the bond in question for the sum of $135,000, running to the United States as obligee, wherein it was agreed that the appellee, hereinafter called the “Surety Company,” would pay the tax in the event that the Heilman Investment Company failed to do so. Having thus secured the desired extension, the taxpayer has failed to pay the tax, and the Surety Company defends upon the ground that the collector had no authority to grant the extension, and therefore that the extension was not effective, and consequently that there was no consideration for the bond although the collector in fact refrained from any attempt to enforce the tax until after September 15, 1931. The complaint herein was filed August 22, 1932.
The contention of the Surety Company, sustained by the trial court is based upon section 56 (c) of the Revenue Act of 1928, c. 852, 45 Stat. 791 (26 USCA § 56 and note), which authorizes the Commissioner of internal Revenue to “extend the time for payment of the amount determined as the tax by the taxpayer, or any installment thereof, for a period not to ’ exceed six months from the date prescribed for the payment * * * thereof.” That this provision limits the power of the Commissioner in the granting of extensions is not questioned. The appellee contends that this limitation also applies to the collector of internal revenue who is charged with the duty of collecting the tax after the tax roll leaves the hands of the Commissioner, or, rather, its contention is that the collector has no power to extend the time for the collection of the tax because he is charged with the duty of immediate collection, citing 26 USCA §§ 2, 14, 34, 102, 103, 104, and 2056, in support of this contention. Appellee states: “The underlying fallacy in appellant’s entire position as set forth in its brief * * * is that the Collector of Internal Revenue has the power in the exercise of his own discretion to grant extensions of time for the payment of income taxes for such period as he may determine.”
The validity of a bond given to a collector of internal revenue to secure the payment of a tax then due in consideration of further time to pay the tax has been repeatedly sustained. In a late case by this court we sustained such a bond. Hughson v. United States (C. C. A.) 59 F.(2d) 17, citing Roberts Sash & Door Co. v. United States (Ct. Cl.) 38 F.(2d) 716, 717, affirmed 282 U. S. 812, 51 S. Ct. 185, 75 L. Ed. 727; United States v. John Barth Co., 279 U. S. 370, 49 S. Ct. 366, 73 L. Ed. 743. It is contended by the appellant and conceded by the appellee that officers of the United States may take bonds voluntarily given, and that such bonds are valid common law obligations. We quote from appellee’s brief as follows: “We are entirely in accord with the first statement that the United States, or an officer thereof, may, notwithstanding the absence of statutory authority, take a bond voluntarily given, as a common law obligation,” subject, it contends, to the exception that the act
This rule was followed by, District Judge Gibson in United States v. Clark (D. C.) 3 F. Supp. 375, where it was claimed that under the Revenue Act of 1921 the extension of time that could be granted by the collector was eighteen months from November 23, 1921.
District Judge Strum, in Coleman v. United States (D. C.) 5 F. Supp. 548, sustained the validity of such a bond given by the taxpayer to avoid a sale of property seized by the collector under distraint warrant. ■ A very recent case by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, written by Judge Sibley, Maryland Casualty Co. v. United States, 76 F.(2d) 626, holds that a bond given to the Commissioner of . Internal Revenue for an, extension of time to pay a tax is a good common-law bond, although the time given, was beyond that authorized by statute, and the bond was not authorized by statute, except in case of a deficiency assessment (and for the purpose of the decision it was assumed that the tax was not a deficiency tax).
The appellee cites a number of decisions by state courts dealing with bonds given to various state officers such as tax collector: Hardesty v. Price, 3 Colo. 556; Packard v. Tisdale, 50 Me. 376; County Treas. Cass County v. Beck & Co., 76 Iowa, 487, 41 N. W. 200; Renfro v. Heard, 14 Ala. 23, 48 Am. Dec. 82; Hodsdon v. Wilkins, 7 Greenl. (7 Me.) 113, 20 Am. Dec. 347; Prewitt v. Garrett, 6 Ala. 128, 41 Am. Dec. 40; Cole Adm’r v. Parker, 7 Iowa, 167, 71 Am. Dec. 439; Tobacco Inspector Wright v. Gardner, 98 Ky. 454, 33 S. W. 622, 35 S. W. 1116; Jailor, Moore v. Allen and Grant, 3 J. J. Marsh. (26 Ky.) 612. These bonds were held illegal upon the ground that they were predicated upon an agreement of the officer in question to 'violate his duty in the premises. While a contract of a federal officer to shirk his duty in consideration of a bond might he held void on the same principle, the federal courts from an early date have assumed that an 'officer in the exercise of his duties might exact a bond in favor of the United States not required by statute and that such a bond was valid.. Over one hundred years ago (1831) the Supreme Court said: “A question has been made * * * how far a bond voluntarily given to the -United States, and not prescribed by law, is a valid instrument, binding upon the parties in point of law; in other words, whether the United States have, in their political capacity, a right to enter into a contract, or to take a bond in cases not
Judgment reversed.