United States v. Bicket

24 F. Cas. 1141, 16 Int. Rev. Rec. 85
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 15, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 24 F. Cas. 1141 (United States v. Bicket) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bicket, 24 F. Cas. 1141, 16 Int. Rev. Rec. 85 (N.D. Ill. 1872).

Opinion

BLODGETT, District Judge.

This is an action upon a distiller’s bond in the penal sum of $101,000, signed by. the defendants William A. Bicket,- George A. Sellars and Benjamin Buckley, and conditioned for the performance by Bicket of all the provisions of the law in relation to the duties and business of a distiller at Lodi, in this district, and for the payment of all penalties and fines imposed upon him for the violation of any provisions of the la.w applicable to him as such distiller. It is averred on the part of the plaintiff, that Bicket did not faithfully observe all the provisions of the law in regard to the duties of a distiller, in that he did not pay the tax which accrued against said distillery and upon the highwines manufactured by him therein, for the months of January, February, March and April, following the date of said bond amounting in the aggregate to $49,060.31.

It appears from the evidence, in the case that the tax remaining unpaid is what is known as the deficiency tax, and the capacity tax on the distillery, and the barrel tax — the tax of fifty cents per gallon, the storekeeper’s salary, and the special tax having been paid. It also further appears that the government has issued a distress warrant which was levied upon the property of Bicket, and from the sale of the property thus levied upon, the sum of $20,635 has been made, leaving a balance of $28,424.96. Of this sum $5,242.19 is what is called the “deficiency tax.” that is to say, the tax which was assessed on the assumption that the distillery had produced 80 per cent, in highwines of its estimated capacity, it appearing that the difference in the tax between the actual product of the distillery and 80 per cent, of its estimated capacity amounts to this item of $5,242.19. In the decision rendered by my learned predecessor. Judge Drummond, some years since, upon the section of the statute under which this assessment is made (U. S. v. Singer [Case No. 16,292]), it was held that it could not have been the intention of congress to levy a tax upon wines which were not produced, which never had an existence, and that therefore if a distiller pays the gallon tax on the actual product of the distillery, he cannot be made liable for any larger amount to be assessed against its product, although he may fall short of producing 80 per cent, of the estimated capacity of the distillery, and following the rule laid down in that ease, I shall deduct at once from this assessment the $5,242.19 deficiency tax, which leaves a balance of $23,182.77 for the consideration of the court.

It is shown by the proof on the part of the defendant, that a large proportion of this tax is what is known as the “capacity tax” and defendants insist that it comes within the same general principle as the “deficiency tax,” and that the distiller ought not. to pay a “capacity tax” on a greater amount of high-wines than are actually produced. By the tenth section of the act of July 20, 1868 (15 Stat. 129), it is provided in substance that a survey shall be made by the assessor of each district, and some competent assistant, of the capacity of all distilleries within his district, and by the thirteenth section of the same act (15 Stat. 130), a tax of two dollars per day is imposed upon every distillery capable of mashing twenty bushels of grain in twenty-four hours, and a further tax of two dollars per day for every 20 bushels of additional mashing capacity of such distillery in excess of said first 20 bushels. It is urged on the part of the defendants in this case, that this distillery did not mash grain to the extent of the survey, and that therefore the capacity tax should be assessed in accordance with the quantity of grain actually mashed, and not in accordance with what the distillery was capable of mashing during the time it was in operation, and the counsel for defendants urged that the principle decided in the deficiency tax case should govern in regard to the capacity tax. But I am of the opinion that the capacity tax stands upon widely different grounds from the deficiency tax. The capacity tax seems to me to be a tax imposed in the nature of a license upon the distillery for the right- or privilege of distilling in that establishment. It is not a tax like the deficiency tax, upon the product of the distillery, but it is a tax upon each distillery according to its capacity to produce, and is to be determined, not by the actual product of the distillery, but by what it is capable of producing, according to the survey.

It is also urged in the same connection that the capacity tax is not rightly assessed, because the officers of the government, in making the estimate for the purpose of determining the capacity tax, have assumed the period of fermentation at forty-eight hours, when in fact Bicket for a part of the time at least, while this bond was in force, used a fermenting period of seventy-two hours. By the rules of the department of internal revenue promulgated some time in 1869 for the government of distilleries and the assessment of taxes thereon, it is provided that the capacity shall be estimated upon the basis of forty-eight hours’ fermentation; or, in other words, it is claimed for the defendants that this tax should be assessed upon the basis of the actual time used in fermentation, and that the court has a supervisory or controlling power over the assessment in this regard. [1143]*1143My understanding of the law is that when the officer whose duty . it is to make the survey of the distillery makes his return, which must be before the distiller starts in the business of distilling, and fixes the fermentation period shorter than the distiller is satisfied that he can comply with, he has a right to appeal to the commissioner of internal revenue for a .revision of the survey, and if he does not take an appeal; or if on taking an appeal the survey is sustained, then it seems to me his liability, so far as his capacity tax is concerned, is fixed. It falls into the same category of liabilities as the barrel tax, the special license tax, or any other fixed items which the distiller is bound to pay as a condition upon which he is to run his distillery, and it does not lie in the province of the court to revise the survey which is made by the officers of the government for the purpose of determining the capacity of the distillery. It is for the distiller to say after the survey whether he ean afford to run under the survey, and upon the conditions thus imposed upon him, and if he cannot afford it he must not undertake the business of distilling; if he can afford it, then he must comply with the law in that regard, because the law fixes the capacity tax upon the survey being made as inexorably as it does the special license tax or the barrel tax. It becomes a part of the license which the distiller must pay for operating his distillery. I therefore come to the conclusion that this ■capacity tax must be sustained, and that the objections founded upon the alleged overestimated capacity of the distillery, or the fact that the distillery used a longer fermenting period than that fixed by the survey, cannot be sustained by this court. The liability of the distiller for the payment of the tax was settled by the survey, and the court cannot revise it.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 1141, 16 Int. Rev. Rec. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bicket-ilnd-1872.