Delaware R. v. Prettyman

7 F. Cas. 408, 17 Int. Rev. Rec. 99
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Delaware
DecidedOctober 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 408 (Delaware R. v. Prettyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaware R. v. Prettyman, 7 F. Cas. 408, 17 Int. Rev. Rec. 99 (circtdel 1872).

Opinion

BRADFORD. District Judge.

The bill filed is an injunction bill to restrain a United States collector and his deputies and agents from collecting a tax assessed as such by a United States assessor, under and by- virtue of divers acts of congress. Under the provisions of an act of congress approved July 13, 1SGG (14 Stat. 173), this suit is certified to the circuit court of the United States for the Delaware district, and is thus removed from the state tribunal in which it was commenced to this court, where it awaits an adjudication. The cause has been heard on bill, answer, exhibits, and certain facts admitted on both sides. The tax sought to be collected by the government, and resisted by the complainants, is one of 5 per cent., on certain interest money falling due and payable on the first day of July, 1870, on bonds theretofore given by the said complainants, and a further tax of five per cent, on certain -dividends of profits made by the said complainants, and falling due on the day and year last aforesaid. The payment of this tax is resisted on the ground (using the language of the bill) “that there is no authority in law for the assessment of the said taxes on the interest which was payable by the said company on the first day of July, 1870, or the dividend which was payable by the said company on the first day of July of the same year.” It is alleged by the answer that there is such authority to assess the taxes in question, and it is further alleged, and not disputed, that the taxes sought to be collected have been regularly assessed by the United States assessor of internal revenue, a.nd were transmitted to the collector of internal revenue, on his list of taxes for the month of September, 1870. to be by him collected. In addition, it is alleged by the answer in bar of this suit, that by virtue of a certain act of congress, jurisdiction of such injunction suit as the present, is forbidden to be exercised by any court, in these words, viz.: “No suit for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of tax shall be maintained in any court.” This act was approved March 2, 18G7 [14 Stat. 471], more than three years before the filing of this bill.

I conceive it altogether unnecessary to discuss the question of the authority of the assessor under the act of congress to assess the taxes referred to, as the case is disposed of on other grounds, which, in my mind, admit of no doubt.

The United States congress considered that the exigency of public affairs, in connection with the prompt collection of a large revenue, made it unsafe and impolitic to give to every tax-payer the summary remedy of injunction against its sworn officers when in the discharge of their official duties in the collection of the necessary means to support the government, and to make clear and positive that which it is believed on good legal authority rested in the power of the courts to do without the intervention of an act of congress, passed the act forbidding any court to maintain an injunction suit as [409]*409above recited. It is a mistake to say that this is a denial of right to the citizen. It is not a refusal to. hear his complaint or to give him a full opportunity in the usual course of law to redress his grievances, but it is a refusal to give him and all the tax-payers alike the extraordinary and summary process of injunction, by which all matters are brought to a stand-still, and the public finances locked up until the question ol' right is determined. Surely it should be no ground of complaint if the citizen’s right to this extraordinary and summary remedy has to yield to that view of the public welfare which is taken by the law-making power of the nation.

The case we are now considering is founded on an injunction bill filed in the court of chancery of the state of Delaware. The writ of injunction is not a mere incident ■of the bill, that is. merely ancillary to some main equitable purpose which the bill seeks to enforce, but it is its whole object and purpose, and when the injunction falls, there is nothing left for the bill to operate upon; and this not affected by the general prayer for relief. It is therefore pre-emin-ently a suit brought for the purpose of restraining the collection of tax, and for no •other purpose, and such a suit the act of congress says shall not be “maintained” in “any court” In the face of this act, which is unequivocal and conclusive in its terms, I do not see how this suit can be maintained. Suppose it to be true, that there was no authority of law to assess the taxes in question, as claimed by the complainants, and that upon judicial investigation it might be so determined, is an injunction bill the proper legal channel by which the complainants can reach this result? • Will a conviction in the mind of the court of the illegality or want of legality of the tax justify the court in maintaining this suit? This is the real question to be answered in this case. An illegal or unauthorized tax may in one sense be called no tax, and an assessment of such a tax may be in some cases void of any legal effect, and so not come within the operation of the United States statute. Such is contended by the complainants to be the character of the tax in question.

It is complained that the whole proceeding of assessing such tax is not only without authority, but an absolute nullity, which would make the collector a trespasser if he seized property under a warrant, and takes the case from the operation of the Act of congress. I consider that this question has already been settled both on principle and authority.

The plain purpose of the law was to prevent any person disputing the validity of a tax by injunction process, assessed by a United States assessor under the authority of an act of congress. Any defense to the payment of such a tax by this means, whether founded on irregularity, unconstitutionality, or want of authority to-impose such tax, is equally fatal to the purposes and intention of the law. The fair presumption is, that officers of the law, such as assessors and collectors of United States revenue, acting under the obligation of bond and oath, or affirmation, and receiving instructions from the commissioner of internal revenue, present, at least, a prima facie case of authorized taxation. It is within the range of possibility, however, that the tax may be such a clear and manifest violation of the law—something which is so clearly prohibited to- be taxed, or distinctly excluded from the subject matter of taxation, as that the assessor cannot be said to have any discretion or judgment in regard to assessing such a tax, and cannot be said to have jurisdiction of the matter. In such a case it has been agreed that the proceeding is a mere nullity, and will not afford thereafter a basis for any legitimate action to be taken thereon; and doubtless the act of congress would not apply. There is a wide difference between the case last supposed, however, and the one before the court. I think there is a rule which governs the case and is recognized by the courts as controlling the question of the applicability of the said act of congress.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 408, 17 Int. Rev. Rec. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-r-v-prettyman-circtdel-1872.