Eliot Nat. Bank v. Gill

218 F. 600, 134 C.C.A. 358, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 407, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1576
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 21, 1914
DocketNo. 1058
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 218 F. 600 (Eliot Nat. Bank v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eliot Nat. Bank v. Gill, 218 F. 600, 134 C.C.A. 358, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 407, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1576 (1st Cir. 1914).

Opinion

DODGE, District Judge.

The facts in this case were agreed, and are fully stated in the opinion below (210 Fed. 933).

[1] The plaintiff bank, in making its returns of taxable net income required by the Corporation Tax I,aw, was entitled by the provisions of that act to deduct from its gross income “all sums paid by it within the year for taxes imposed under the authority * * * of any state.” It deducted, in each of the three years here in question, the taxes assessed upon the shares of its capital stock under the authority of provisions of the Massachusetts statutes then in force, and thereafter paid by it to the city of Boston, as required by the provisions referred to. If it had the right under the Corporation Tax Law to make these deductions, it is now entitled to recover them from the defendant collector. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue disallowed them, and assessed them to the bank upon a return by him of their amount. The additional assessment thus made has been paid under protest.

The Massachusetts statutes provided, in substance, that all shares of stock in banks within the state should be assessed to the owner, whether resident or nonresident, in the municipality wherein the bank was located; that persons appearing from the books at a stated time to be owners should be deemed the owners of the shares; that every bank should pay the tax so assessed, or be liable for it, with 12 per cent, interest; that the shares should be subject to the tax paid by the bank; and that the bank should have a lien for such payment upon the shares and all the shareholders’ rights and property in the corporate property. There were other provisions requiring the taxes thus collected from the bank to be credited by the state tax commissioner to the respective municipalities wherein the shareholders resided, and making any claims to exemption in respect thereof by a shareholder, if valid, recoverable from the municipality to which he belonged.

The Corporation Tax Law permits the deduction from gross income of certain payments of other kinds made within the year by the corporation. All these, however, as they are described in that statute, are payments by the corporation in diminution of its corporate income as such, being payments to discharge liabilities incurred solely on its own account, and not to discharge liabilities for which others would be ultimately responsible. But the payment which the laws of Massachusetts require a bank to make as above is of taxes plainly not assessed upon it or its property; and besides giving it a lien for the amount paid upon the shares in respect of which the taxes are assessed, the [602]*602provisions of the Massachusetts laws are such as result in rúaldng the respective shareholders liable to the bank for the amount of taxes paid in respect of their shares. We agree with the District Court that such payments made by the bank in compliance with the laws of Massachusetts would have been recoverable from the respective shareholders, because made for their benefit, upon the contract necessarily implied from the circumstances of the payments. The above lien and right of recovery distinguish such payments in their nature from the other payments which the Corporation Tax Daw allows to be deducted in ascertaining taxable net income. They also, in connection with the provisions in the state laws for assessment to the shareholders, for credit to the municipalities whereof they are residents, and for settlement of any questions of exemption with the respective municipalities, make it impossible to say that the tax is one imposed upon the bank. Though payment of such taxes is a duty imposed upon the bank, it cannot be said that the taxes are imposed either upon it or its property. The taxes are imposed upon the shareholders and their property, and the payment is by the bank only as their representative.

We fully agree with the District Court that the Corporation Tax Daw, in permitting the deduction of “taxes imposed” from the gross income of a corporation, must be understood to mean taxes imposed upon the corporation. We cannot so interpret the language as to make it include taxes imposed upon the shareholders as above, even though the corporation is required to make the payment on their behalf.

[2] It is contended on the bank’s behalf that, even if the deductions made were not authorized by the Corporation Tax Law, the Commissioner was without power on March 1, 1913, to make, as he did, the additional assessments for the amount of those deductions which it has paid under protest and now seeks to recover back from the collector.

There, is no claim that the deductions made by the bank in its returns for 1909, 1910, and 1911 were dishonestly made. That they were honest is undisputed, although, as we hold, they were incorrect. They were not fraudulent, though false in the sense of being incorrect; nor were they false in any other sense. They have not been so treated by the Commissioner, who, in making his additional assessments, did not add the penalties directed by the act in case of returns fraudulently false.

The Commissioner’s discovery of the facts regarding these deductions was made within, three years after March 1, 1910, the year wherein the first of the three returns, afterward found erroneous, namely, that for 1909, was due, and his assessment of the amount of the deductions was made March 1, 1913. In the case of “false or fraudulent” returns, the fifth subdivision of section 38 of the act gives the Commissioner power “upon the discovery thereof, at any time within three years after said return is due,” to make an additional assessment. We agree with the District Court that this language does not prevent the making of the assessment after, if the discovery has been within, the three years, and that in any case March 1, 1913, was within the three years.

[603]*603The question whether the Commissioner ever had power to make additional assessments in such a case as this depends upon the question whether “false or fraudulent,” in that clause of the fifth subdivision which authorizes the assessment of additional taxes upon discovery within three years after the original return, is to be taken as meaning only such returns as are fraudulently false, or as including also such returns as are false only in the sense of being incorrect. _

_ It is true that “false or fraudulent” is used but four times in all the Corporation Tax Law, and may be taken on each of the other three occasions to mean “false and fraudulent.” The first instance is in the fifth subdivision of section 38, where the language is:

“And in ease of any return made with false or fraudulent intent, he [the Commissioner] shall add one hundred per centum of such tax.”

The next instance is later in the same subdivision, and occurs in the clause with which we are immediately concerned, providing that assessments are to be made and the several corporations notified on or before June 1st in each successive year, and payment made on or before June 30th “except in cases of refusal or neglect to make such return, and in cases of false or fraudulent returns,” in which cases the Commissioner is to make the additional assessment upon discovery within three years.-

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Bluebook (online)
218 F. 600, 134 C.C.A. 358, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 407, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eliot-nat-bank-v-gill-ca1-1914.