64 Ct. Cl. 657 | Ct. Cl. | 1928
delivered the opinion of the
The plaintiff during all of the time involved in this case resided with his wife in New Orleans, and they were citizens of Louisiana. There was filed for him in his absence an income-tax return for the year 1917 and the tax shown thereon was paid in due course. This return, however, showed a greatly less tax than was actually due. Plaintiff, having learned this fact, directed another employee to make up and fije a tax return for the year 1918. This likewise failed to reflect the proper amount of taxes. Payment was made under this return. Coming back to the United States in 1919, the plaintiff employed an attorney in New Orleans .to get a correction of the returns and secure proper settlement oh account of the taxes due and the penalties that could be imposed under the statutes. As a result of the attorney’s efforts, plaintiff was permitted to file amended returns with
On or about the 24th day of September, 1921, plaintiff and his wife filed separate amended returns for the years 1917 and 1918 wherein the income above referred to was treated on the community-property basis; that is, that each of them owned one-half of such income. It appears that by Treasury Decision 3071 in September, 1920, and Treasury Decision
It is to be observed that the suit in this court for a refund of taxes rests upon section 3220, Revised Statutes, as amended (40 Stat. 1145), which authorizes a refund by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, subject to regulations by the Secretary of the Treasury, of taxes erroneously or illegally assessed or collected or excessive in amount or in any manner wrongfully collected. See also in this connection section 3226 as amended by the revenue act of 1924, 43 Stat. 343, and see section 252 of the revenue act of 1921, 42 Stat. 22Y, or other acts requiring refunds. This being a law of Congress within the meaning of that phrase in section 145, Judicial Code, the Court of Claims is authorized to award a judgment for the amount of the refund, which, under the facts, the commissioner should have allowed, provided he has rejected, or has failed within a stated period to pass upon, the application for a refund. See Rock Island case, 254 U. S. 141, affirming case 54 C. Cls. 22. Indeed, it
Upon the question of community property we think it must be conceded that in Louisiana the wife’s half interest in community property is a vested right as distinguished from a mere expectancy. Phillips v. Phillips, 160 La. Ann. 814; Arnett v. Reade, 220 U. S. 311; Warburton v. White, 176 U. S. 484. But when it comes, to earnings such as we find in this case, it is to be noted that the statute of Louisiana provides, art. 2404, that the husband is the head and master of the partnership or community of gains; he administers its effects, disposes of the revenues which they produce, and may alienate them by an onerous title without the consent and permission of his wife. Except for fraud, to her injury, she can not call him to account, and in that case the statute provides for suit against “ the heirs ” of the husband. Given this right of control and disposition without liability to account, is it to be said that when the husband returns the income from hi,s own labor for taxation and pays the tax properly assessable on such income he has done something illegal or wrongful, or that the tax has been in any manner erroneously collected from him? Having the right of disposition of this income, the authority to alienate it or even dissipate it, is it to be said he may not use a part of it to pay taxes due upon the whole? He did make the returnp as if the income were his own; he did pay the correct amount of taxes due according to the returns; he did these things voluntarily and he had a legal right to do them. The case of United States v. Robbins, 269 U. S. 315, is in point. That was a suit by executors to recover income taxes paid by the decedent for the year 1918, one of the years mentioned in the instant case. He had been required by the Treasury Department to return and pay the tax upon the whole in