Lead Opinion
On March 26, 1918, Oscar Frommel & Bro., a corporation, filed with the collector of internal revenue, its corporation income and profits tax return for the year 1917 showing a tax i due of $21,847.41. On June 27, 1919, an amended return was filed for that year showing a tax due in the sum of $104,-428.42. It had no taxable earnings for part' of the year subsequent to June 21,1917. An assessment was made on the original return (June 15, 1918) of $21,847.41 land on the amended return (July 29,1919) of $82,581.-01; the total tax assessed for the calendar year was $104,428.42. After demand for payment by the United States, an action was brought June 6,1922, to recover the taxes assessed, issue was (joined, by the service of an answer, the action was reached for trial and on April 3, 1925, judgment was entered by default against Oscar Frommel & (Bro-. for $146,760.34. Execution of this judgment was returned unsatisfied. On December 1, 1925, a suit was begun to recover from (the appel-lees the amount of the judgment. The an-' swers were filed and a motion was made to strike out the answers, and the appellees moved to dismiss the bill for failure to state a cause of action. The latter motion was granted, and the bill dismissed. The court below held that the action was one to collect the tax and was barred by the five-year period of limitations described in section 277 (a) (2) of the Revenue Act of 1924 [43 Stat. 253, 299 [26 USCA § 1057 note]). The fact thaD a judgment was obtained for the arrears of taxes was regarded below as not altering or changing the applicability of the statute.
Section 277 (a) (2) of the Revenue Act provides: “The amount of income,- excess-profits, and war-profits taxes imposed by the Act entitled ‘An Act to provide revenue,
The judgment obtained against the corporation, Oscar Fromm el & Bro., on April 3, 1925, was for the arrears of taxes — a debt. It was binding on the corporation only. The present suit is against the stockholders to recover the amount of the judgment because they have received by transfer the assets of the corporation and made it impossible to collect on the judgment obtained against the'corporation. The Oscar Frommel & Bro. Company was a New York corporation. Section 105, subd. 8,iof the New York Stock Corporation Law (Consol. Laws, e. 59), provides that a “corporation shall continue for the purpose of paying, satisfying and discharging any existing (liabilities or obligations, collecting and distributing its assets and doing all other acts required to adjust and wind up its business and affairs, and may sue j and be sued in its corporate name.” The bill alleges that the stockholders received, without giving consideration, the assets of the ( corporation. The corporation was not dissolved by any action authoritative in law. Under these circumstances, the assets received are regarded as a trust fund in the hánds of transferees for the payment of all debts and demands against the corporation, (and under proper proceedings such funds are applicable to the payment of outstanding indebtedness against the corporation. Pierce v. United States,
It is no answer to say that there had been a substantial liquidation of the firm of Oscar Frommel(& Bro. in July, 1917, and that there were sufficient assets left to enable it to pay the income tax which under the internal revenue laws then in existence would'be payable. United States v. Armstrong,
It has been held that, where judgment has not been first obtained and the action is one to collect a tax, and the resort to a judgment would be idle and useless, equity will interpose to prevent such useless circuity. United States v. Updike,
But (the result below deprives the United States of the right to proceed on its judgment which is valid and stands unchallenged. Section 280 of the Revenue Act of'1926 authorizes the collector to assess a tax against a transferee of the property of a taxpayer. The (appellant does not rely upon section 280
Decree 'reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
United States v. Updike,
I cannot think it a material difference that no judgment and 'execution had there gone against the corporation. Normally, these are conditions precedent to such a suit; they may be omitted only when they would be patently futile. But, when they are, the suit still remains one to subject voluntary transferees to the transferrer’s obligations; the procedural prerequisites do not change the nature of'the remedy. Hence I think that the suit at bar is one to collect a tax, if <a suit without judgment is such. While of course the Act of 1926 does not apply here, there were'limitations, indeed narrower limitations, in the earlier acts, with which eoncededly the Treasury has not here complied. These barred this suit as much as they would have barred a suit brought without judgment and execution.
While, perhaps, it should not be conclusive, a consequence of my 'brothers’ ruling seems to me worth notice. If they are right, it is always enough to toll the statute for'the Treasury to sue the corporation or other transferrer in season. Thereafter xt may at its leisure bring suit against the transferees, though it would be barred if it sued them'directly. The effect of the distinction we are making is to put it into the hands of the Treasury, by eschewing the short cut, indefinitely to extend the period of limitation. I cannot think that this is all that the Supreme Court meant in U. S. v. Updike, supra.
