People ex rel. Weber & Heilbroner, Inc. v. Graves

249 A.D. 49, 291 N.Y.S. 354, 1936 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5030
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 11, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 249 A.D. 49 (People ex rel. Weber & Heilbroner, Inc. v. Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Weber & Heilbroner, Inc. v. Graves, 249 A.D. 49, 291 N.Y.S. 354, 1936 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5030 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Heffernan, J.

In this proceeding petitioner is asking us to review a final determination of respondents, denying its application for a refund of certain retail sales taxes. On the argument counsel for the respective parties requested the court to disregard technical objections and to decide the issue on the merits. We are complying with that request.

The question of law presented is Whether a trustee in bankruptcy operating, under an order of the bankruptcy court, the business of a bankrupt corporation and selling tangible personal property at retail, is subject to the sales tax imposed by article 17 of the Tax Law (added by Laws of 1933, chap. 281), in a case where the corporation, if conducting the business itself, Would have been subject to such tax.

Petitioner contends that the statute imposing a retail sales tax did not include a trustee in bankruptcy. Respondents, assert that it did.

On January 16, 1933, petitioner, the corporate name of which at that time was X Shops, Inc., was adjudicated a bankrupt and one Sinclair was appointed as trustee in bankruptcy of its estate by the United States District Court with authority to carry on and continue its business of selling at retail men’s wearing apparel and haberdashery. It appears that the trustee conducted the business of the estate until January 24, 1934, on which date the United States District Court confirmed a composition upon petitioner’s estate and upon the same day the trustee, by an instrument in writing, assigned to petitioner all the assets in his hands as such trustee.

In its petition for the order of certiorari petitioner alleges that during the time when the trustee in bankruptcy was conducting the business he filed sales tax returns and paid to the State retail sales taxes for that period amounting to the sum of $13,241.25. In this respect petitioner is clearly mistaken. Practically the entire amount of the tax in question covered periods of time when petitioner and not the trustee was conducting the business. That is not very material, however, in view of the fact that our decision is predicated on other grounds.

[51]*51At the time of the imposition and payment of the taxes involved in this proceeding section 391 of the Tax Law imposed upon every person ” a tax of one per centum upon the receipts from sales at retail of tangible personal property during the period commencing May 1, 1933, and ending June 30, 1934. That section further provided, in part: The burden of proving that a sale of tangible personal property was not a sale at retail shall be upon the person who made it, unless such person shall have taken from the purchaser a certificate * * * to the effect that the property was purchased for resale. For the purpose of the proper administration of this article and to prevent evasion of the tax hereby imposed it shall be presumed that all receipts are subject to the tax until the contrary is established.”

Section 390 of the Tax Law as it then existed defined the word person ” as follows:

“ When used in this article:
(a) The word ‘ person ’ includes an individual, copartnership, society, association, joint stock company, corporation and any combination of individuals.”
By chapter 394 of the Laws of 1935 the quoted portion of that statute was amended to read:
“ When used in this article:
“ (a) The word person ’ includes an individual, copartnership, society, association, joint stock company, corporation and any combination of individuals and also an executor, administrator, receiver, trustee or other fiduciary.”

The Legislature made this amendment retroactive to April 19, 1933, which is the effective date of the original enactment of article 17 of the Tax Law.

Petitioner strenuously urges that the term “ person,” defined by section 390 of article 17 of the Tax Law, prior to the 1935 amendment of such section, does not include a trustee in bankruptcy, and that consequently such an official was immune from the payment of retail sales taxes. In taking this position petitioner finds consolation and support in the case of Matter of Flatbush Gum Co., Inc. (73 F. [2d] 283). In that case the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit had before it the question as to whether a receiver in bankruptcy was subject to the provisions of sections 390 and 391. The court held that a receiver in bankruptcy did not come within the definition of person ” subject to the tax. The court, after reviewing the legislative definition of the term “ person ” as contained in the statute said: Its failure to include a receiver in this enumeration was, we think, highly significant, and indicates an intention to permit such sales to be made by a receiver [52]*52tax free. . Indeed, the tax being laid upon ‘ the privilege of selling/ being imposed upon ' every person/ and person being defined as above indicated, it is clear that a taxable sale is but the exercise of the privilege of selling by a person within the statutory definition. An intention to tax retail sales made by receivers must be indicated by words which may reasonably be accepted to disclose it before courts may construe the statute to mean that for the coverage of taxing acts it is not to be extended by implication.” Concluding its opinion the court said: “ The principle that taxation by implication is not favored controls this appeal and leads us to the conclusion that the statute does not reach the sale made by this receiver.” Certiorari in this case was denied by the United States Supreme Court. (Matter of Flatbush Gum Co., Inc., sub nom. New York v. Arnold, 294 U. S. 713.)

Petitioner has also called to our attention Reinecke v. Gardner (277 U. S. 239), upon which it relies. In that case the question involved was whether the Excess Profits Tax Law of 1917 imposing a tax on corporations, partnerships and individuals engaged in trade or business included a trustee in bankruptcy. The United States Supreme Court held that it did not and said: The title made no mention of executors, receivers, trustees or persons acting in a fiduciary capacity, and contained no language corresponding to the quoted provision of Title I, § 4, extending the additional income tax to 1 the same incomes ’ taxed by § 10 of the Act of 1916. A tax imposed on corporations alone does not extend to a trustee in bankruptcy of a corporation.”

The decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals in Flatbush Gum Co., Inc. (supra), is not binding upon the courts of this State. The construction of State statutes is primarily a matter for the State courts. As this court said in People ex rel. Rice v. Graves (242 App. Div. 128; affd., 270 N. Y. 498; certiorari denied by the United States Supreme Court, 298 U. S. 683) the decisions of Federal courts not involving the construction of the Constitution or laws cf the Federal government have only persuasive force in our courts on a similar set of facts, but are not to be regarded as binding precedents. The correct interpretation of section 390 of the Tax Law is still an open question to be decided by our own tribunals. We feel compelled to reject the construction which the Circuit Court of Appeals placed upon that section in the

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Bluebook (online)
249 A.D. 49, 291 N.Y.S. 354, 1936 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-weber-heilbroner-inc-v-graves-nyappdiv-1936.