155 N.E. 669 | NY | 1927
Plaintiff bought from the defendant large quantities of sweet cider. The price was to be 14 1/2 cents per gallon subject to a stated discount, plus the manufacturer's war tax of 10 per cent, which was to be paid in full without discount. For 157,210 gallons bought between November 8, 1920, and August 13, 1921, the payment was $27,514.55, of which $2,501.33 was for the tax. Defendant, the manufacturer, after collecting the amount of the tax from the plaintiff, paid it over to the Federal government. In 1922 came a ruling of the courts that sales of sweet cider were not subject to any tax whatever (Monroe Cider Vinegar Fruit Co. v. Riordan, *353 280 Fed. Rep. 624; Casey v. Sterling Cider Co., 294 Fed. Rep. 426). The Treasury Department and manufacturers generally had misconstrued an act of Congress (Internal Revenue Act of February 4, 1919, § 628-A) whereby a tax of ten per cent was levied upon sales of unfermented grape juice and "other soft drinks." Defendant demanded and obtained a refund of the taxes thus unlawfully collected. The question is whether the money thus refunded by the government is held by the defendant to its own use or to the use of the plaintiff who is suing to get the money back.
We think the plaintiff must prevail. This is not a case where the item of the tax is absorbed in a total or composite price to be paid at all events. In such a case the buyer is without remedy, though the annulment of the tax may increase the profit to the seller (Moore v. Des Arts,
The contract, therefore, in effect was this and nothing more, that whatever moneys were necessary for the payment of a tax would be furnished by the buyer. Annulment of the tax after the sale and the delivery of an invoice, but before the payment of the price, would have extinguished the seller's right to exact payment from its customer of the added 10 per cent. Payment, if then exacted, would have been no longer payment for a tax, but payment for something else. By the same token, annulment at a later date, when followed by the refund of the tax and the undoing of the whole transaction between the seller and the government, leaves the money applicable to the same use as if the invalidity of the impost had been declared at the beginning.
The argument has been made that such a holding, if accepted, will lead by logical extension to an untenable conclusion. We are asked whether a like remedy would be thought to be available, if the tax were still enforcible and the seller had omitted to make payment to the government. But the situation thus supposed has only a remote analogy to the situation now at hand. The buyer has no interest, while the tax is an outstanding liability, in the application of the money. The controversy in such circumstances is solely between taxpayer and government. The buyer's duty would remain to supply the promised funds whereby the seller could discharge a continuing obligation. Here there is no obligation, either actual or pretended.
We think the judgment for the plaintiff is well sustained by the decisions (Friend v. Rosenwald,
The documents and the course of dealing establish so clearly the nature of the transaction that there remains nothing to be tried (O'Meara Co. v. Nat. Park Bank of N.Y.,
The judgment should be affirmed with costs.
POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS, LEHMAN and KELLOGG, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.