Harkins v. Williard

146 F. 703, 77 C.C.A. 129, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4141
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 1906
DocketNo. 653
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 146 F. 703 (Harkins v. Williard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harkins v. Williard, 146 F. 703, 77 C.C.A. 129, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4141 (4th Cir. 1906).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Circuit Judge.

This case arose from the seizure by H. S. Harkins, collector of internal revenue, Fifth district of North Carolina, on March 10, 1902, of three packages of spirits as forfeited to the United States for violation of the internal revenue laws, at grain distillery No. 651, of C. S. Pitts, Winston-Salem, N. C. Tax on these spirits, amounting to $127.16, was paid March 10, 1902, but spirits were seized same day before attachment of stamps. Seizure was made for violations discovered March 4, 1902'. Defendant in error, Williard, loaned distiller Pitts the tax money, purchased the stamps himself, but they were issued in the name of Pitts, the distiller, and was to have spirits when withdrawn in payment of a debt owed by Pitts. Pitts died in July, 1902, intestate, and no administrator was ever appointed. Unattached stamps remained in the hands of Williard, and in January, 1903, he made application to the commissioner of internal revenue for their redemption, which application was rejected for several reasons, the principal one of which was that Williard was not a proper party in interest. Suit was then brought in the state court and removed to the Circuit Court of the United States at Greensboro, and at April term, 1905, a judgment for $127.16 with interest was obtained.

Upon the foregoing facts the court below charged the jury, among other things, as follows:

“(1) It appears in this case, from undisputed evidence, that $127.10 was paid by Mr. Williard to the defendants. As this was Mr. Williard’s money, he is the real party in interest, and is entitled to maintain the action.
“(2) In no view of the case was it right or lawful to receive money from Mr. Williard in payment of the taxes due on property already forfeited. The government had no right to receive this money after the forfeiture of the property.”

It is contended by the plaintiff in error that the court erred in submitting these instructions to the jury, and that the same were not warranted by the law governing this case.

In order to correctly determine the merits of this controversy, it is necessary to decide whether the plaintiff below had the right to institute an action against the collector of internal revenue for money which he had paid for the distiller Pitts as tax due the government on certain casks of spirits. Prior to 1894, the law in relation to taxes [705]*7056n distilled spirits was as follows: “That the distiller, owner or .person having possession” of the spirits could pay the tax on the same. On that date, however (Act. Aug. 27, 1894, c. 349, § '18, 28 Stat. 563 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2109]), the law was so amended so as to read:

“Tlint the tax herein imposed shall be paid by 1lio distiller of the spirits on or before tlieir removal from the distillery or place of storage, except in case of removal therefrom without payment of tax as provided by law.”

The statute as amended clearly limits the payment of tax and the receipt of the stamps therefor to the distiller ami contains no provision which authorizes the recognition of any other person for that purpose. The stamps that were issued to the distiller were only evidence of the fact that the tax had been paid, and, inasmuch as the spirits had passed into the possession of the government as forfeited property, the fact that they were not attached to the casks can have no bearing upon the questions involved herein. Where taxes are paid and stamps are attached to casks of spirits in case of forfeiture, both stamps and tax (for which stamps are receipts) are forfeited.

Section 3334 of the Revised Statutes [U. S. Comp. St. .1901, p. 2183], which relates to this subject, reads as follows:

"All distilled spirits forfeited to the United Hiatos, sold by order of court, or under process of distraint, sliall be sold subject to tax ; and ilic purchaser sliall immediately, and before he takes possession of said spirits, pay the tax thereon. And any distilled spirits heretofore condemned, and now in the possession of the United States, shall be sold as herein provided. If any tax-paid stamps are affixed to any cask or package so condemned, such stamps sliall be obliterated and destroyed by the collector or marshal after forfeiture, and before such sale.”

Thus it will be seen that the law provides for the forfeiture of the stamps as well as the property, and requires the destruction of the stamps which were originally attached thereto as evidence of the payment of the tax. It also requires the purchaser at the sale to pay the taxes and affix stamps thereto in order to authorize the removal of the spirits. 1 f the taxes are paid at the time of forfeiture, then the government has no further claim against the distiller for taxes, but the proceeds of a sale of property thus forfeited to the government on account of violations of the internal revenue laws belongs exclusively to the government and cannot he applied to the payment of tax. For instance, forfeited spirits, tax-paid or otherwise, in case of forfeiture and sale, belong to the government, and even though there should be an excess arising from such sale, if the tax on the property forfeited has not been paid, the distiller and the sureties are liable for the tax. In the case of United States v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. (D. C.) 144 Fed. 866, Judge Platt held that the proceeds of forfeited spirits could not he applied to the payment of taxes thereon; that if taxes are paid both spirits and taxes are forfeited, and the sureties on the distiller’s bond were liable for all taxes aside from the forfeiture. The court said:

“If the distiller had paid the taxes, the liquor would have been forfeited, tax and all. The property has disappeared under the forfeiture, but the taxes remain unpaid, and the sureties are responsible. It is not thought [706]*706that the lien moon the property can be said to continue upon the proceeds after the property has been forfeited and sold.”

Primarily the distiller is liable for the taxes due on the spirits distilled, and, in case of default, his sureties are also jointly liable for the same. - Nevertheless, in that event the tax must be paid in the name of the distiller, and the stamp, which is in the nature of a receipt, can only be issued to him.

in pursuance of the provision of the law in regard to the payment of taxes by the distiller, the defendant in error paid the tax in question on the 10th day' of March, 1902, but before the stamps were attached to the packages by the gauger, as required by law, all of the casks of spirits were seized on account of violations of the internal revenue laws which had been discovered on the 4th day of March, 1902. The payment of the tax under these circumstances by the defendant in error was as much the act of the distiller as if he had in person handed the money to the collector. This is true because the law provides that only the distiller shall have the right to pay the tax on distilled spirits. Therefore, when the defendant in error paid the tax, he acted as the a'gent of the distiller, and the fact that the receipts for the amount paid were issued in the name of the distiller clearly negatives the contention that the defendant in error had any lawful claim to the same.

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176 F. 885 (Fourth Circuit, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
146 F. 703, 77 C.C.A. 129, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harkins-v-williard-ca4-1906.