La Follette v. United States

173 F. Supp. 388, 4 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5557, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3129
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedMay 28, 1959
DocketNo. 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 173 F. Supp. 388 (La Follette v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Follette v. United States, 173 F. Supp. 388, 4 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5557, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3129 (S.D. Cal. 1959).

Opinion

HALL, District Judge.

In this suit for refund the government relies upon the doctrine of equitable recoupment, and the facts which are detailed and complicated are not in dispute and will be adverted to only as needed.

There is no contention of fraud or evasion or concealment on the part of the plaintiffs.

The crucial question is whether or not the government was bound to proceed by suit to collect an erroneous refund made by its check on October 21, 1953, and cashed by the plaintiffs on December 19, 1953, within the two-year period of limitation (1939 Internal Revenue Code, Section 3746(a), 26 U.S.C. § 3746(a), [389]*389now 26 U.S.C. § 6532(b)), or may, after the expiration of that period, viz., on September 25, 1957, without suit, levy for the refund on an assessment made on August 1, 1952.

This in turn depends upon whether or not the assessment of August 1, 1952, was valid or whether or not it had been “satisfied”1 prior to the date of the levy.

This makes it necessary to advert to some of the facts in this “comedy of errors” by the Internal Revenue Bureau. On January 28,1952, plaintiffs filed their income tax return for the year 1951 showing an overpayment of tax in the sum of $582.50 and requested a refund for that amount. Before the March 15, 1952, deadline for filing the 1951 return plaintiffs discovered that they had made a mistake, and on March 5, 1952, filed an amended return showing no refund due but an underpayment of tax of $80.92 and paid that sum to the Collector of Internal Revenue on that date.

About May 1, 1952, the Collector apparently acting on the original income tax return, without regard to the amended return, sent the plaintiffs a refund check in the sum of $582.50, which was returned to the Collector of Internal Revenue, uncashed by the plaintiffs, on or about May 15, 1952. The acknowledgment of the receipt of that check was made by the Collector on September 19, 1952. In the meanwhile, disregarding the amended return, the Collector’s Office made an audit of the first tax return filed on January 20, 1952, and discovered the same mistake that the plaintiffs had discovered and corrected by filing an amended return and paying the additional tax on March 5, 1952. The Collector, on July 14, 1952, gave notice of a mathematical error in the amount of tax due, which was the same amount (plus 4 cents) which the plaintiffs had figured and paid with the amended return on March 5, 1952. On the basis of that audit the Collector on August 1, 1952, made an assessment of $663.46 additional tax due. At that time there was no tax due from the plaintiffs; at that time they had returned and never had cashed the refund erroneously mailed to them. There was thus no tax due, which the Collector could have found out by having recourse to the amended return.

On August 6, 1952, the plaintiffs wrote a letter explaining the erroneous refund, the fact that they had mailed it back and sent in 4 cents in coin, being the difference between plaintiffs’ calculations on their March 5, 1952, return and the Collector’s calculations of July 14, 1952, on the original January 28, 1952, return. In spite of the fact that the Internal Revenue Service acknowledged receipt of the refund check erroneously mailed to the plaintiffs in the sum of $582.50, the Collector, nevertheless, on September 29, 1952, again made demand for the return of that refund which the Collector had already received, less the credit of $80.92 paid on the amended return of March 5, 1952. As if things were not fouled up enough, the Collector had another audit made as of December 30, 1952, which showed that there was no deficiency in income tax and nothing owing by the plaintiffs whatsoever. But the story does not end there. Without any request on the part of the plaintiffs, the Collector on or about October 21, 1953, sent the plaintiffs a notice of adjustment and refunded them this time a total of $649.76. This check the plaintiffs kept and cashed on December 19, 1953. And there the matter lay until January 3, 1956, when the plaintiffs received a notice of adjustment by abatement of the assessment in full. Nothing then happened until September 25, 1957, when the Collector levied on plaintiff’s salary as a school teacher in the school system of the County of Fresno, getting by the first levy the sum of $79.79. Thereafter, on October 4, 1957, the plain[390]*390tiffs paid the balance of the assessment of $693.30 for the 1951 taxes. Prior to September 15th, the Collector, on or about June 17, 1957, made what he referred to as a reversal of the abatement which had been previously credited on January 3, 1956.

At the time of the assessment on August 1, 1952, the plaintiffs owed nothing in taxes and they did not have any money which belonged to the government. They had returned the check erroneously sent as a refund which apparently was not cleared in the government’s books until September 11, 1953, although, as indicated, receipt of the check by the Collector was acknowledged on September 19, 1952. In any event, it is clear that they owed absolutely nothing to the government on August 1, 1952, at the time of the assessment. The assessment was, therefore, void.

But, even assuming that the assessment was valid there can be no doubt but that the tax liability of plaintiffs for income taxes for the year 1951 was fully satisfied on September 11, 1953, when the government canceled the first refund check in the sum of $582.50. Neither side owed either anything then. And under the plain terms of the 1939 Internal Revenue Code, Section 3671, the assessment was then satisfied and the Collector had no right thereafter to make any levy on it.

It was not until after the liability was thus fully satisfied and the lien discharged that the government on October 21, 1953, made its refund check, unrequested by plaintiffs, in the sum of $649.76 which, as indicated above, was cashed on December 19, 1953. Clearly, therefore, any liability which the plaintiffs had to the government was not on account of any underpayment of taxes for the year 1951 but was for a refund which was erroneously made in 1953, and is governed by the terms of the 1939 Internal Revenue Code, Section 3746(a) (now rephrased as 26 U.S.C. § 6532(b)), which fixes a two-year statute of limitations for the recovery of such erroneous refund. That section reads as follows: “(a) Refunds after limitation period. Any portion of an internal revenue tax (or any interest, penalty, additional amount, or addition to such tax) refund of which is erroneously made, within the meaning of section 3774, may be recovered by suit brought in the name of the United States, but only if such suit is begun within two years after the making of such refund.”

The effort to collect by the levy made on September 25, 1957, was beyond the two-year limit after the refund, the effective date of which was when the plaintiffs cashed the check on December 19, 1953.

The government’s claim that it is entitled to recoupment or equitable set-off and that the plaintiffs take nothing because they have not showed a “better right” to the money than the defendant is based upon a series of cases which need not be analyzed but which stem from and follow Champ Spring Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
173 F. Supp. 388, 4 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5557, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-follette-v-united-states-casd-1959.