Paul Jones & Co. v. Mayes

265 F. 365, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1118
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 10, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 265 F. 365 (Paul Jones & Co. v. Mayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Jones & Co. v. Mayes, 265 F. 365, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1118 (W.D. Ky. 1920).

Opinion

WALTER EVANS, District Judge.

This action grows out of section 304 of the Revenue Act of October 3, 1917 (40 Stat. 310 [Comp. St. 1918, Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 5986c]), which reads as follows :

“Sec. 304. That in addition to- the tax now imposed or imposed by this act on distilled spirits there shall be levied, assessed, collected, and paid a tax of 15 cents on each proof gallon and a proportionate tax at a like rate on all fractional parts of such proof gallon on all distilled spirits or wines hereafter rectified, purified, or refined in such manner, and on all mixtures hereafter produced in such manner, that the person so rectifying, purifying, refining,- .or mixing the same is a rectifier within the meaning of section thirty-two hundred and forty-four, Revised Statutes, as amended, and on all such articles in the possession of the rectifier on the day this act is passed: Provided, that this tax shall not apply to gin produced by the re-distillation of a pure spirit over juniper berries and other aromatics.”

Section 3244 of the Revised Statutes" (Comp. St. § 5971), so far as applicable, is as follows:

“Every person who rectifies, purifies,, or refines distilled spirits or wines by any -process other than by original and continuous distillation from mash, wort, or wash, through- continuous closed vessel and pipes, until the manufacture thereof is complete, and every wholesale or retail liquor dealer who has in his possession any still or leach tub, or who keeps any other apparatus for the purpose of refining in any manner distilled spirits, and every person who, without rectifying, purifying, or refining distilled spirits, shall, by mixing such spirits, wine or other liquor with any materials, manufacture any spurious, imitation, or compound liquors for sale, under the name of whisky, brandy, gin, rum, wine, spirits, cordials, or wine bitters, or [367]*367any other name, shall be regarded as a rectifier, and as being engaged in the business of rectifying: Provided, that any person who rectifies, purifies, refines, or manufactures as aforesaid less than five hundred barrels a year, counting forty gallons of proof spirits to the barrel, shall pay one hundred dollars: And provided, that nothing in this section shall be held to prohibit the purifying or refining of spirits in the course of original and continuous distillation through any material which will not remain incorporated with such spirits when the manufacture thereof is complete.”

In February, 1918, the collector of internal revenue of this district notified the plaintiff of the claim made in this case, and a short time subsequently, namely, in April, 1918, a tax on certain distilled spirits belonging to the plaintiff was levied. Later the Commissioner made the assessment. The claim of the government was based upon the proposition that the plaintiff had rectified 13,971.79 gallons of spirits. The tax assessed thereon was $2,095.76. That amount was paid by the plaintiff under protest to the defendant. Plaintiff made application to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for the refunding of the amount so paid under protest, hut its application was denied, and this suit was brought upon the state of facts thus presented, the amount sued for being $2,095.76, with interest thereon from date of its payment to the defendant. There is little real disagreement about the facts; the important question being whether they are sufficient to show that the plaintiff had rectified the spirits upon which the tax was assessed and paid.

We will endeavor later to find the essential facts as fully and accurately as possible. For present purposes, however, it will suffice to state that the plaintiff, a wholesale dealer during 1918, had a license, not only as a wholesale dealer, but also as a rectifier; Of course, under section 304 of the Act of October 3, 1917, the tax thereby laid on rectified spirits is to be paid. That is not disputed. The question here raised is whether the 13,971.79 gallons had been in fact rectified. The whisky in question had been put in bond after distillation, and in due course was afterwards taken out of the bonded warehouse upon the payment of the taxes then due thereon. Subsequently it was removed to the plaintiff’s wholesale establishment. While there under those circumstances it was subjected to the treatment which has brought about this litigation; the government claiming that that treatment was rectification, and the claimant contésting that claim. The plaintiff at his wholesale house had long used a Karl Kiefer filter; it providing a better means for filtering whisky than did the old-time hat filter. The latter, as well as the former had been used, by wholesale dealers in their whisky houses for many years, and had been so used without involving a claim by the government that it was rectifying up to a new ruling by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue made some time in 1919. The date of that ruling is left blank in the papers before us presented by the defendant, but it appears to have been about a year after the claim against the plaintiff originated. This Kiefer filter and its predecessor, the hat filter, had previously been freely used by wholesale dealers and by the plaintiff for the purposes presently to be stated, and exactly as it was used in this instance. It is’ insisted on one side and denied on the other that, though section-[368]*3683244 was then in force, no claim had been made by- the government officials that such use of that filter in the way shown was rectification until after the ruling of the Commissioner in 1919. That ruling, as stated in the brief for the defendant, was as follow's:

Distilled Spirits — Rectifier—Wholesale and Retail Liquor Dealers.
Use of Commonly Called “Hat Filter” Without Liability to Tax as a Rectifier Prohibited.
Treasury Department,
Office of Commissioner of -Internal Revenue,
Washington, D. C.
To Collectors of Internal Revenue and Others Concerned:
The straining of distilled spirits through cotton, cotton cloth, or any other material, for the purpose of removing therefrom particles of charcoal or any other extraneous matter whatsoever in the liquid, on the premises of a wholesale or retail liquor dealer, without payment by such dealer of special tax as a rectifier of distilled spirits, will not be permitted.
The use of what is commonly known as a “hat filter” by any such dealer without payment of special tax as a rectifier of distilled spirits is hereby prohibited, and all Treasury Decisions or parts of Treasury Decisions in conflict with this ruling are hereby expressly revoked.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
Approved 1919.
Secretary of the Treasury.

Under these circumstances the question presented to the court for determination is whether the statutes above copied support the government’s contention, as otherwise - the plaintiff would be entitled to recover.

The question is an interesting one. It has been ingeniously and ably argued, on both sides'.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 F. 365, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-jones-co-v-mayes-kywd-1920.