Pullan v. Kinsinger

20 F. Cas. 44, 11 Int. Rev. Rec. 197
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedJuly 1, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 44 (Pullan v. Kinsinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pullan v. Kinsinger, 20 F. Cas. 44, 11 Int. Rev. Rec. 197 (circtsdoh 1870).

Opinion

EMMONS. Circuit Judge.

The complainants, as they were required to do by section 6 of the act of July 20, 1808 (15 Stat. 126), gave notice that they would ferment seventy-two hours, and aver they actually employed all that time, but that the surveyors, in estimating the capacity of the distillery for purposes of taxation, unlawfully disregarded the period fixed in the notice, and assumed one of forty-eight hours only; that this resulted in their determining upon a false capacity, and provided for the assessor a fictitious basis of taxation. They aver that taxes have been paid in full upon all their actual production and all which can be produced while the period of seventy-two hours is employed. They claim, therefore, that the assessor, by taxing a theoretical production which they never have produced, has exceeded his jurisdiction, and the assessment being void, they are entitled to an injunction, notwithstanding the statute prohibiting its issue; that the inhibition does not apply when the proceedings are void.

The government claims the period mentioned in the notice is not obligatory upon the surveyors, but that it is their duty to fix upon the most profitable period of fermentation in order to ascertain the “true producing capacity” of the distillery, as directed by the statute; that when it is thus judicially ascertained and certified to the assessor, he must, as has been done, impose a tax of eighty per cent, of what might be produced had the distillery been run to its full capacity as declared by the survey. It further claims that the statute prohibiting an injunction applies; that both the surveyors and assessor had jurisdiction of the subject, and their proceedings are not nullities, although irregular and illegal.

In the circumstances of this contest it would be beneficial could the court express [45]*45an opinion upon tlie construction of the statute, accompanied by such reasons as would render it influential. But the wide differences at the argument in relation to facts material to its right interpretation render this impossible. The demurrers, therefore, will be sustained upon the ground solely that neither this court nor the state tribunal from which these causes were removed, have any right to restrain the collection of a federal tax assessed by an officer having jurisdiction of the subject, be it never so irregular or erroneous.

This condition of opinion, formed from full recent investigations of this subject in reference to a different tax, when at the bar, was at the opening of the cause announced to counsel. The argument, of far more than ordinary ability, although instructive and interesting, has not, so far as this case is concerned, materially changed it.

The accident of a judge's confidence in his opinion has but little to do with the propriety of judicial discussion. The circumstances attending this litigation, the strong feeling on the part of the complainants, and the fact that a state tribunal of the highest respectability and influence has granted restraining orders, would render a brief, unreasoned judgment improper.

Although nearly all which will be said is familiar to the experienced lawyer, yet from the probability that its reproduction here will bring it before those classes more immediately the subjects of this and similar laws, I deem it a duty to do what otherwise I should say was wholly unnecessary. If the argument seems extended, it is conceded that collateral circumstances, and not the condition of the law, warrant it.

I regret, now that I conclude to refer to a few books to justify my judgment, • that the learned counsel cited no decisions upon the first subject to be discussed. The complainant assumed that a clear violation of the statute, resulting in an excessive assessment, rendered the proceeding void, and so not a tax within the meaning of the inhibitory statute. Counsel for the government assumed as fully the jurisdiction of the assessor, and treated the degree of illegality as immaterial. Since the argument, I have been continuously engrossed in other judicial duties, and have been able to command but few hours for the examination of books. I am compelled, therefore, in order to comply with the request for an early decision, to refer to those which the accidents of former briefs render accessible. They are not, perhaps, the most applicable, and such in all cases as a better opportunity would have selected. .They do, however, illustrate the reasons upon which the decision rests, and are confidently referred to as in accord with a large and prevailing class of judgments to which they belong.

Section 19 of the act of July 13, 180(1, as amended in 18G7, provides “that no suit to restrain the assessment or collection of a tax shall be maintained in any court.”

If a statute authorizes an officer to assess generally, excepting in plain terms certain persons and things, and the persons and things are nevertheless taxed in violation of law, has not the officer so exceeded his power as to render his judgment void? Can it, in any sense applicable here, be said that he has jurisdiction of the subject? Courts, in reference to the same facts, have answered this difficulty according to the purpose for which the question is asked. If it comes from an officer executing a warrant fair on its face, the reply upholds the process and protects him, although the law forbade its issue. In these cases it is said the general subject of taxation, and the judicial duty of determining, either upon view or inquiry or evidence, who and what are within the law, is imposed upon the assessor; and an erroneous decision does not for all purposes render proceedings based upon it void. If an assessment made in the same circumstances is relied upon to divest a title through a tax sale it is declared to be invalid. Owing to the poverty of language, the same literal reason is given in both instances. The innocent officer is protected because the assessor has jurisdiction, and the title is void because he had none.

It is said a court of equity has not jurisdiction to decree damages, save as an incident; yet, if a defendant does not demur or object at the first opportunity, the jurisdiction is conceded. Here the term means something wholly different from its sense when we affirm that the same court has no jurisdiction to try a citizen for minder, or dissolve a corporation upon quo warranto. And this is not peculiar to a court of equity. It is an axiom in this department of the law, that consent cannot confer jurisdiction, and yet, without stopping to call it an exception, numerous decisions say that even silence will waive jurisdictional objections. If the power of special tribunals is made to depend upon preliminary proofs, and on writ of error it appears they are wanting, it is said they are jurisdictional facts, and a reversal follows. In the same class, if the record does not affirmatively show the error, and defendant has appeared, or the record comes collaterally in question, it is said, as jurisdiction appears without them, their proof will be presumed. [Hogg v. Water Co., 8 Cush. 69.] 2 Doughty v. Somerville & E. R. Co.. 1 Zab. [21 N. J. Law] 443; Road in Moore Tp., 5 Har. [17 Pa. St.] 2 116; Wight v. Warner. 1 Doug. (Mich.) 384; Kennett’s Petition. 4 Fost. [N. H.] 141; State v. Richmond, 6 Fost. [N. H.] 232; [10 Wash. 167;] 2 Malone v. Clark, 2 Hill, 657; Embury v. Conner, 3 Comst. [3 N. Y.] 511; Com. v. Henry, 7 Cush. 512; Little Miami R. Co. v. Perrin, 16 Ohio, 479.

Numerous judgments fail to indicate the [46]*46limitations with which they employ this general term.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 44, 11 Int. Rev. Rec. 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullan-v-kinsinger-circtsdoh-1870.