137 F.2d 522 | 2d Cir. | 1943
The defendant appeals from a judgment against him in an action to recover a deficiency in income tax assessed against him on November 22, 1930. The action was not begun until February 10, 1939, more than eight years afterwards, and, as the period within which to sue is limited to six years (§ 276(c) of the Revenue Act of 1928, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 276(c), it was barred unless the agreed facts tolled the statute of limitations. That is the only question.
On September 16, 1931, the defendant, whose property had substantially disappeared in the slump of 1929, made an offer to compromise his liability of over $90,000 by the payment of $250. This offer was in writing upon the usual Treasury form, to which was annexed a “waiver” declaring that “in the event of the rejection of the offer” the defendant extended “the statute of limitations * * * by the period of time (not to
Section 276(c) provided that the statute shall be tolled for whatever period the parties may agree to before the action is barred, including any second period agreed to before the first period has expired. Therefore, the first waiver extended the time from September 16, 1931, until the offer was rejected, but not later than September 16, 1933. That offer was never rejected. As we have said, the field agent’s recommendation was never acted upon; and his was not the “final action” provided for in the “waiver.” When the defendant became satisfied that his first offer would be rejected and raised the amount, it was either an amendment of the old offer, or a new offer. The defendant wishes to treat it as an amendment and arguendo we shall do so, for it makes no difference in the result. Although his letter of February 3, 1932, was written for another purpose, we shall also assume that it put that amendment into formal shape, and we shall finally assume — although that, as we shall show, is quite untrue- — that the general counsel’s letter of May 2, 1932, was an acceptance of the amended offer. None of these, nor all of them together, constituted a “rejection” of the first offer, and the “waiver” which had accompanied it was still in force on June 2, 1932, when the second “waiver” was executed; and that “waiver” in turn lasted until December 5, 1933. Thus, assuming with the defendant that the offer was then rejected, the whole period from September 16, 1931, to December 5, 1933, was tolled. If so, what remained of the total elapsed period between November 22, 1930, when the assessment was made, and February 10, 1939, when the action was brought, was less than six years.
The defendant in answer to this conclusion argues that the second waiver was without consideration, because if there was really only one offer — that of September 16, 1931 — amended at some time before May 2, 1932, and then accepted by the general counsel’s letter of that date, the Treasury could give no consideration for the second “waiver.” There are two answers to this. In the first place, a “waiver” is not a contract (Florsheim Bros. Dry Goods Co. v. United States, 280 U.S. 453, 466, 50 S.Ct. 215, 74 L.Ed. 542); it “is essentially a voluntary, unilateral waiver of a defense by the taxpayer.” Stange v. United States, 282 U.S. 270, 276, 51 S.Ct. 145, 147, 75 L.Ed. 335. As such, it needs no more consideration than does the acknowledgment of a debt in order to revive it after the statute has barred it. Second, the general counsel’s letter merely “approved for acceptance” the “tentative” offer, and expressly suspended final acceptance until the installments should be paid. This it did advisedly, for the counsel did not wish to let the time run against collection in case the defendant defaulted. Moreover, the Commissioner never accepted the offer at all; his letter of December 5, 1933, calling the counsel’s letter
Judgment affirmed.