Joy Floral Co. v. Commissioner

7 B.T.A. 800, 1927 BTA LEXIS 3096
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJuly 29, 1927
DocketDocket No. 8986.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 7 B.T.A. 800 (Joy Floral Co. v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joy Floral Co. v. Commissioner, 7 B.T.A. 800, 1927 BTA LEXIS 3096 (bta 1927).

Opinion

[803]*803OPINION.

Phillips:

The first contention of the petitioner is that the consents or waivers filed in 1924 and 1925 are invalid for the reason that they were filed after the period within which the Commissioner could make assessments for the year 1919 had expired and were without consideration.

The Revenue Act of 1918, under which the taxes for 1919 became due, provided that except in the case of false or fraudulent returns with intent to evade tax, the amount of the tax due should be determined and assessed within five years after the return was due or was made, and no suit or proceeding for the collection of any tax should be begun after the expiration of five years from such dates. The [804]*804Revenue Act of 1921 contained a similar provision, adding: “ unless both the Commisioner and the taxpayer consent in writing to a later determination, assessment, and collection of the tax.” The Revenue Act of 1924 provided that such taxes should be assessed within five years with the further provision that—

Seo. 278. (c) Where both the Commissioner and the taxpayer have con-' sented in writing to the assessment of the tax after the time prescribed in section 277 for its assessment the tax may be assessed at any time, prior to the expiration of the period agreed upon.

There can be no question that at the time the consents were executed, the time within which the tax might have been assessed or collected had expired. Counsel for the petitioner argues: (1) Such expiration of the statute of limitations operated to extinguish the liability of the petitioner; (2) a waiver can not create a right to impose a tax already barred by the law creating the tax; and (3) there was no consideration for the waivers.

In Campbell v. Holt, 115 U. S. 620, the Supreme Court had before it substantially similar questions with respect to indebtedness between individuals. In that case, after the statute of limitations had expired on the debt in question, a new constitution was adopted by the State of Texas, setting up a different statute of limitations in civil suits. The defendants insisted that the bar of the statute, being complete and perfect, could not be taken way. In its opinion the court said:

The action is based on contract. It is for hire of the negroes used by the father, and for the money received for the land of his daughter, sold by him. The allegation is of indebtedness on this account, and the plea is that the action is barred by the statute of limitations. It is not a suit to recover possession of real or personal property, but to recover for the violation of an implied contract to pay money. The distinction is clear, and in the view we take of the case, important.
By the long and undisturbed possession of tangible property, real or personal, one may acquire a title to it, or ownership, superior in law to that of another, who may be able to prove an antecedent and, at one time,' paramount title. This superior or antecedent title has been lost by the laches of the person holding it, in failing within a reasonable time to- assert it effectively; as, by resuming the possession to which he was entitled, or asserting his right by suit in the proper court. What the primary owner has lost by his laches, the other party has gained by continued possession, without question of his right. This is the foundation of the doctrine of prescription, a doctrine which, in the English law, is mainly applied to incorporeal hereditaments, but which, in the Roman law, and the codes founded on it, is applied to property of all kinds.
Mr. Angelí, in his work on Limitations of Actions, says that the word limitation is used in reference to “ the time which is prescribed by the authority of the law (auotoritate legis, 1 Oo. Litt. 118) during which a title may be acquired to property by virtue of a simple adverse possession and enjoyment, or the time at the end of which no action at law or suit in equity can be maintained; ” and in the Roman law it is called Proescriptio.
[805]*805“ Prescription, therefore (he says), is of two kinds — that is, it is either an instrument for the acquisition of property, or an instrument of an exemption only from the servitude of judicial process.” Angelí on Limitations, §§ 1, 2.
# * s}: * * * sj<
It may, therefore, very well be held that, in an action to recover real or personal property, where the question is as to the removal of the bar of the statute of limitations by a legislative act passed after the bar has become perfect, such act deprives the party of his property without due process of law. The reason is, that, by the law in existence before the repealing act, the property had become the defendant’s. Both the legal title and the real ownership had become vested in him, and to give the act the effect of transferring this title to plaintiff, would be to deprive him of his property without due process of law.
But we are of opinion that to remove the bar which the statute of limitations enables a debtor to interpose to prevent the payment of his debt stands on very different ground.
A case aptly illustrating this difference in the effect of the statute of limitations is found in Smart v. Baugh, 3 J. J. Marsh. 364, in which the opinion was delivered by Chief Justice Robertson, whose reputation as a jurist entitles his views to the highest consideration. The action was detinue for a slave, and the defendant having proved his undisturbed possession of the slave for a period of time which would bar the action, but having failed to plead the statute of limitations, the question was whether he could avail himself of the lapse of time. “The plea (said the court) is non detinet in the present tense, and under this plea anything which will show a better right in the defendant than in the plaintiff may be admitted as competent evidence. The plea puts in issue the plaintiff’s right. Five years uninterrupted adverse possession of a slave not only bars the remedy of the claimant out of possession, but vests the absolute legal right in the possessor. Therefore, proof of such possession may show that the claimant has no right to the slave and cannot recover. Consequently it would seem to result, from the reason of the case, that the adverse possession may be proved under the general issue.” Answering the objection that in assumpsit and other actions the statute to be available must be pleaded, and by analogy should be pleaded in that case, he says: “ The same reason does not apply to assumpsit, because the statute of limitations does not destroy the right in foro eonsoientioe to the benefit of assumpsit, but only bars the remedy if the defendant chooses to rely on the bar. Tvme does not pay the debt, but time may vest the right of property.” Again he says: “ This is perfectly true in detinue for a slave, because, in such a case, the lapse of time has divested the plaintiff of his right of property, and vested it in the defendant . . . But it is not so in debt, because the statute of limitations does not destroy nor pay the debt.” “This (he says) has been abundantly established by authority ... A debt barred by time is a sufficient consideration for a new assumpsit.

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Joy Floral Co. v. Commissioner
7 B.T.A. 800 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 B.T.A. 800, 1927 BTA LEXIS 3096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joy-floral-co-v-commissioner-bta-1927.