Crystal Spring Distillery Co. v. Cox

49 F. 555, 1 C.C.A. 365, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1212
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 49 F. 555 (Crystal Spring Distillery Co. v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crystal Spring Distillery Co. v. Cox, 49 F. 555, 1 C.C.A. 365, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1212 (6th Cir. 1892).

Opinion

Jackson, Circuit Judge.

The writ of error in this case is prosecuted to revise the judgment of the circuit court sustaining the demurrer .to the petition and dismissing plaintiff’s suit. The ease presented by the petition is in brief this: In 1886 and 1887 the plaintiff, as a distiller in the fifth district of Kentucky, entered for deposit in its bonded warehouse, under and in accordance with the internal revenue laws of the United States, from time to time, 108 packages of whisky, containing by the original gauge made at the date of said entry 4,936 gallons, or over 40 wine gallons to each package. At the respective dates of entering said packages for deposit in said warehouse, plaintiff', as required by law, gave bond, with surety, for the payment of the 90 cents gallon tax thereon due the United States throe years thereafter; that being the period under the law during which the whisky could remain in bond, unless its withdrawal was sooner required by the commissioner of the internal revenue. In the summer of 1888, before the expiration of the three years bonded period, the commissioner of internal revenue instructed the defendant, Cox, who was then and during the year 1888 a collector of internal revenue in and for the said fifth district of Kentucky, to require of the plaintiff the immediate withdrawal of said packages of whisky from the warehouse, and the payment of the 90 cents tax upon each gallon thereof, as ascertained by the original gauge made at the time of deposit, and without any allowance for losses occurring while in said warehouse, [556]*556Thereafter the commissioner of internal revenue, on July 1, 1888, made an assessment' against the plaintiff for the full sum of 90 cents per gallon on the 4,986 gallons of whisky as originally gauged, amounting to the sum of $4,442.40. This assessment was, in August, 1888, placed in the hand of defendant, as collector of the district, for enforcement and collection, and was paid by plaintiff in November, 1888, under protest and compulsion. From a regauge, made early in September, 1888, at plaintiff’s instance, but without authority or direction from the commissioner of internal revenue, it appeared that the loss from said 108 packages up to that time, or between the date of entry for deposit in warehouse and September 6, 1888, was, in the aggregate, 635 gallons. It is claimed in the petition that plaintiff was not properly chargeable with the tax of 90 cents per gallon on this 635 gallons of lost spirits, amounting to $571.50, which was included in the sum $4,442.40, which it was required to pay on the whole.4,936 gallons originally entered for deposit. Application to the commissioner of internal revenue to refund said sum of $571.50 as improperly taxed upon said 635 gallons of lost whisky having been refused, the plaintiff brought this suit against the defendant to recover said amount, with interest from November 24,1888. It appears from the petition that the action of the commissioner of internal revenue in requiring the withdrawal from warehouse of the 108 packages of distilled spirits was based on the excessive loss therein, and was had under the provision of section 4 of the act of May 28, 1880, (21 St. p. 146.) The plaintiff, in its petition, “states it to be the fact that, while the said losses from each and every one of said packages had been excessive when said instructions [for their withdrawal] were given, yet said losses occurred by the destruction of all of said spirits so lost by accidental casualties, viz., from wastage and injury to the barrels containing said spirits, caused by excessive and unusual heat in the summer of 1887, from abnormal evaporation from said packages, caused by said heat, and from undiscoverable worm-holes in the barrels containing said spirits, all without any fraud, collusion, or negligence of the plaintiff, who was the owner of all of the said spirits, and because of said fact the said commissioner of internal revenue was without power or authority lawfully to give the said instructions, [for withdrawal of the whisky,] or to make the said assessment of said taxes,” etc.

On the state of facts thus set forth the plaintiff sought to recover of •defendant said sum of $571.50, with interest, as having been illegally exacted of it on the 635 gallons of whisky, lost without its fault. The defendant interposed a general demurrer, which was sustained by the circuit court, and the petition dismissed, with costs. It is assigned for error that the court erred in sustaining said demurrer and in dismissing the suit. It is claimed for the plaintiff in error that the commissioner of internal revenue had no lawful jurisdiction, power, or authority to compel the withdrawal of the spirits and the payment of the tax thereon until fully three years has elapsed from the time the same were deposited in the warehouse; that, if mistaken in this, still, the plaintiff, being without fault, was entitled to an- allowance for the 635 gallons lost under the [557]*557facts stated; and that the $571.50 tax collected thereon was illegal, unlawful, excessive, and’unjust, and, having been paid under protest, may be recovered in this action. Whether the commissioner of internal revenue had the authority to require the withdrawal of. the whisky before the expiration of three years from date of entry in warehouse, and the payment of the tax thereon according to the original gauge when entered for deposit in the warehouse, without making any allowance for the 635 gallons lost while so deposited from the causes alleged in the petition, must be determined by reference to several sections of the internal reveenue law, which should be considered and construed together. By section 3248, Rev. St., distilled spirits are defined, “and the tax shall-attach to this substance [thus defined] as soon as it is in existence as such.” By section 3251, as amended by the act of March 3, 1875, (18 St. p. 339,) “there shall be levied and collected on all distilled spirits * * * a tax of ninety cents on each proof gallon, or wino gallon when below proof, to be paid by the distiller, owner, or persons having possession thereof before the removal from the distillery bonded warehouse.” By section 3293, as amended by the act of May 28, 1880, (21 St. p. 145,) it is required that the said distiller or owner shall at the time of making said entry [in warehouse] give his bond * * * conditioned that the principal named in said bond shall pay the tax on the spirits as specified in the entry, or cause the same to be paid, before removal from said distillery warehouse, and within three years from date of said entry.” The 90 cents per gallon tax being thus fixed on all distilled spirits as soon as the same is “in existence” and entered in bonded warehouse, it was provided by section3221, Rev. St., that the secretary of the treasury should have authority to make an allowance for certain losses of the spirits while in bond, as follows:'

“The secretary of the treasury, upon the production to him of satisfactory proof of the actual destruction by accidental fire or other casualty, and without any fraud, collusion, or negligence of the owner thereof, of any distilled spirits while the same remained in the custody of any officer of internal revenue in any distillery warehouse or bonded warehouse of the United States, and before the tax thereon has’been paid, may abate the amount of internal taxes accruing thereon, and may cancel any warehouse bond, or enter satisfaction thereon, in whole or in part, as the case may be.”

By the fourth section of the act of May 28, 1880, it is provided:

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Bluebook (online)
49 F. 555, 1 C.C.A. 365, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crystal-spring-distillery-co-v-cox-ca6-1892.