G. L. Smith, D/B/A Snuffy Smith Motor Company v. United States

319 F.2d 776
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 9, 1963
Docket20170_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 319 F.2d 776 (G. L. Smith, D/B/A Snuffy Smith Motor Company v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G. L. Smith, D/B/A Snuffy Smith Motor Company v. United States, 319 F.2d 776 (5th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

LEONARD P. MOORE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court granting the Government’s motion for summary judgment and holding that the taxpayer, appellant here, was liable for the excise tax imposed by Section 4061 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 on sales of used cars imported by appellant from Germany and that the tax so imposed should not have been computed under Section 4216(b) (1) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.

Taxpayer is the owner of a sole proprietorship known as Snuffy Smith Motor Company which, during the period here involved, was a duly licensed automobile dealer handling only used or second-hand cars. During the fourth quarter of 1959, taxpayer sold ten used Volkswagen automobiles which had been manufactured in Germany by a German company, sold there to various individuals, and eventually purchased and imported into this country by taxpayer.

Prior to the shipment of the cars to this country, taxpayer had them put through a process in Germany known as “Americanizing”, which consisted, among other things, of the installation of a speedometer that registered in miles rather than kilometers and of sealed beam headlights. Upon importation into the United States, taxpayer paid the appropriate customs duty. Subsequently, he sold three of the ten ears to dealers for resale and the remaining seven to individuals. Each such sale was the first sale of the respective vehicle in the United States.

Taxpayer was not an authorized Volkswagen dealer. During the times here material, authorized dealers did not have a sufficient supply of new Volkswagens to *778 meet the demand and taxpayer was able successfully to import and sell used Volkswagens.

In connection with the above ten sales, the Internal Revenue Service assessed a manufacturers excise tax against taxpayer in the amount of $1,399.70. This liability was computed by taking, with respect to sales to other dealers, %ith of the price for which the particular vehicle was sold and, with respect to the sales to individuals, %ith of the average price of the sales to dealers. Following denial of a claim for refund, taxpayer filed the instant suit in the district court.

Taxpayer contends that the manufacturers excise tax should not have been imposed on sales of used cars that are the products of Germany, first, because the tax is properly levied only on the first sale prior to, or at the time of, delivery to the first consumer and, second, because imposition of the tax on such sales is a failure to accord “national treatment” to the products of Germany as required by the Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation with Germany.

Section 4061, 1 in terms, applies to sales of automobiles by manufacturers, producers or importers and fails to specify different treatment for used or second-hand vehicles. 2 A predecessor 3 of the present statute, however, was construed by the Supreme Court, in a related context, to apply only to first or initial sales by one of the above-enumerated classes and not to subsequent sales of the same article. Indian Motocycle Co. v. United States, 283 U.S. 570, 51 S.Ct. 601, 75 L.Ed. 1277 (1931).

Following this decision, the Government did not attempt to impose this tax on sales by importers of second-hand vehicles originally manufactured and sold in the United States. 4 This administrative construction of the statute remained in force until 1951 when the Bureau of Internal Revenue issued a sales tax ruling 5 holding that the sale in the United States by an importer of an article, which had previously been shipped out of the United States tax free, was a taxable sale.

The validity'of this ruling came before the Sixth Circuit in United States Truck Sales Co. v. United States, 229 F.2d 693 (1956). That court, after an extensive review of the legislative history of the predecessor of section 4061, 6 held that the tax is imposed only on the initial sale in the United States and that since the articles in question had been sold once before in the United States, even though that sale was exempt from taxation because made to the United States Government, the tax could not be levied on the second sale in the United States by the importer.

The facts now presented to us do not match exactly the patterns of previously decided cases. However, the purpose and intent of section 4061 is to impose a tax on the initial sale made in the *779 United States by a manufacturer, producer or importer. In our view, this construction more fully comports with the legislative purpose to provide “a comprehensive and convenient mode of reaching all first or initial sales,” Indian Motocycle Co. v. United States, supra, 283 U.S. at 574, 51 S.Ct. 601, 75 L.Ed. 1277, while avoiding the possibility that the same article would be subject to the excise tax more than once. 7 *Since the sales in question were the first sales of these articles in the United States, they are subject to the tax. 8 United States Truck Sales is not authority at variance with this determination. In that case, exemption from the tax which otherwise would have been imposed on the first sale was based upon the tax-exempt character of the purchaser, i. e., the Government.

Taxpayer contends that if the sales of these used Volkswagens are so subject to the tax, its imposition is a failure to accord “national treatment” to the products of Germany as required by the Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation with Germany. 9 Article XVI of that treaty provides:

“1. Products of either party shall be accorded, within the territories of the other Party, national treatment and most-favored-nation treatment in all matters affecting internal taxation, sale, distribution, storage and use.”

Article XXV defines “national treatment” as follows:

“1. The term ‘national treatment’ means treatment accorded within the territories of a Party upon terms no less favorable than the treatment accorded therein, in like situations, to nationals, companies, products, vessels or other objects, as the case may be, of such Party.”

Taxpayer reads the United States Truck Sales case, supra, to hold that an' importer’s sales of used cars of United States origin are not subject to the tax. From this he reasons that imposition of the tax on an importer’s sales of used cars of German origin violates the treaty because it affords less than “national treatment” to the products of Germany. This argument must fail because it rests on the erroneous premise that the criterion of taxability is the origin of the goods involved.

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Bluebook (online)
319 F.2d 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-l-smith-dba-snuffy-smith-motor-company-v-united-states-ca5-1963.