Michigan Cent. R. Co. v. Slack
This text of 17 F. Cas. 262 (Michigan Cent. R. Co. v. Slack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The assessor of internal revenue for the third district in Massachusetts, in accordance with the provisions of the act of March 2, 1867 (13 Stat. 480), after a return had been made by the treasurer of the Michigan Central Eailroad Company, re-assessed the company on sundry items not returned by them for assessment, and which, under advice of counsel, the treasurer had, in good faith apparently, supposed were Dot subject to the tax. There was no Concealment on the part of the company or the treasurer, as the facts upon which the assessor made his re-assessment were obtained by him from the reports of the company, which were publicly printed and widely distributed.
After examining the items on which the reassessment was made, I see no reason to doubt the legality of any of the. items except the one of $1,722.93, assessed as tax on the surplus fund of the company for the year, after deducting operating expenses and interest account, and dividends, and contributions to the sinking fund, and other items properly to be deducted from the gross earnings, before determining the amount on hand as surplus earnings for the year. But, in arriving at the result, the assessor omitted to deduct the tax already paid by the company on passengers and mails. Deducting this amount, there would be no surplus beyond that on which the company had already paid the tax. The re-assessment was for $12,-772.09, which included the sum of $1,722.93 on surplus, for which the company was not legally liable on the re-assessment; and, by direction of the commissioner of internal revenue, an additional sum of $12,772.09 was assessed and collected, as a penalty for a false and fraudulent return. This penalty was illegally collected, for two reasons: First, the penalty is for the gross sum of $12,772.09, being one hundred per cent on $12,772.09, when $1,722.93 should be deducted, leaving only $11,049.16 to be re-assessed, and a like sum to be added as penalty; namely. a penalty of $11,049.16, instead of a penalty of $12,772.09. The penalty being in one sum, and bad in part, is bad in the whole. [263]*263Second, the evidence shows that the assessor did not determine that the omission was false and fraudulent, and therefore adjudge the penalty to have been incurred. He added the penalty only on the order of his superior officer, and not as the result of his own finding upon the facts of the case. He appears to have arrived at the conclusion that the omission was not false and fraudulent; and I see no reason to doubt the correctness of his conclusion. The act of adjudging the omission to have been false and fraudulent was a quasi judicial act, to be performed by the assessor himself; and as he never so adjudged it, but only added the penalty under orders from his superior officer, the penalty was not legally added, and was not collected by authority of law. Judgment for the plaintiff for the two sums of $12,772.00 and $1,722.93, with interest from the date of payment.
[For a similar case between the same parties, see Case No. 9,527a.]
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17 F. Cas. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-cent-r-co-v-slack-circtdma-1873.