A claim for a tax refund giving notice that, in the assessment
of excess profits, items have been erroneously omitted from
invested capital, and praying for a special assessment under §§
327(a) and 328, Revenue Act of 1918 on the ground that invested
capital cannot be determined in the ordinary way, is amendable,
after the period for filing original claims has expired, by adding
an alternative prayer that, if the special assessment be denied,
the omitted items may be restored to invested capital and the tax
be recalculated on that basis.
United States v. Henry Prentiss
& Co., 288 U. S. 73;
United States v. Factors & Finance Co., 288 U. S.
89. P.
289 U. S.
33.
60 F.2d 944 reversed.
Certiorari, 288 U.S. 594, to review a judgment of the Circuit
Court of Appeals which affirmed a judgment of the District Court
rejecting a claim for refund of income and excess profits
taxes.
Page 289 U. S. 29
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
The controversy to be determined presents another phase of a
problem which has been much considered by the court in opinions
recently announced.
United States v. Memphis Cotton Oil
Co., 288 U. S. 62;
United States v. Henry Prentiss & Co., 288 U. S.
73;
United States v. Factors & Finance Co.,
288 U. S. 89. There
is need once again to decide whether a claim for the refund of a
tax has been presented by the taxpayer in such a form as to be
subject to amendment after a claim wholly new would be barred by
limitation.
The petitioner Bemis Bros. Bag Company, having made payment of
excess profits taxes for 1918 and 1919, filed its claims for refund
with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The claims contained a
request for a special assessment under §§ 327 and 328 of the
Revenue Act of 1918, and in support of the request annexed a
statement under oath which had been filed with a like claim as to
the taxes of another year.
By the statement thus annexed, the right to the relief demanded
is placed upon three grounds which are not to be confused.
The first is that the case is one "where the Commissioner is
unable to determine the invested capital" in the ordinary way. This
is the ground covered by § 327(a) of the applicable statute.
The second is that the case is one
"where a mixed aggregate of tangible and intangible property has
been paid in for stock or for stock and bonds and the Commissioner
is unable satisfactorily to determine the respective
Page 289 U. S. 30
values of the several classes of property at the time of
payment, or to distinguish the classes of property paid in for
stock and for bonds, respectively."
This is the ground covered by § 327(c).
The third is that the case is one where
"the tax, if determined without the benefit of this section
[327] would, owing to abnormal conditions affecting the capital or
income of the corporation, work upon the corporation an exceptional
hardship evidenced by gross disproportion between the tax computed
without the benefit of this section and the tax computed by
reference to the representative corporations specified in §
328."
This is the ground covered by § 327(d).
The taxpayer, in presenting its claims to the Commissioner,
submitted facts and arguments in support of each of the three
grounds.
To show that the invested capital had been inaccurately
determined, and could not be accurately determined by resort to the
usual methods, the taxpayer stated,
inter alia, that the
value of printing plates and patterns had been erroneously omitted,
and that, owing to the loss of vouchers and the changes wrought by
the lapse of time, the value of these items could not be measured
with complete precision, though it was susceptible even then of
being fixed approximately. An estimate of the value was included in
the claims.
To show that the case was one of a mixed aggregate of tangibles
and intangibles paid for in stock, with the value of the several
elements not subject to accurate division, the taxpayer made a
statement of the corporate history and structure.
To show that there were abnormal conditions that would bring
about injustice if the computation of the tax were to be made
according to the usual method, and this though the invested capital
were to be accurately determined, the taxpayer made a statement of
the inequalities
Page 289 U. S. 31
between its position and that of other corporations engaged in a
like business.
Grounds Nos. 1 and 2 gave notice to the Commissioner that the
taxpayer's invested capital had been erroneously assessed, and
charged him with a duty to inquire into the error and to give
appropriate relief.
United States v. Factors & Finance Co.,
supra. If he found that items had been omitted, but that he
was unable to ascertain their value with reasonable accuracy, he
might resort to § 328, and order the tax to be assessed in
accordance with a special method. If he found that there had been
omissions, but that he was able to his own satisfaction to identify
and appraise them, he would learn in the process that there had
been an undervaluation of invested capital, and that the assessment
of the tax was correspondingly erroneous.
Ground No. 3 is independent of the others, and has a different
origin and meaning.
"A demand for a special assessment in accordance with § 327(d)
of the statute of 1918 is not a challenge to any act of the
Commissioner in the valuation of invested capital. On the contrary,
the valuation of invested capital is irrelevant if the special
method is accepted. The very basis of the application for the use
of such a method is the presence of abnormal conditions whereby an
unfair and disproportionate burden will be laid upon the taxpayer
if invested capital is to be reckoned according to the statutory
definition (§§ 325, 326), and the profits of the taxpayer subjected
to a tax accordingly. Let the new method be adopted, and the value
of the invested capital ceases to be a factor in the process."
United States v. Henry Prentiss & Co., supra.
The Commissioner notified the taxpayer in October and November,
1926, that there was no evidence before him sufficient to justify
relief under § 327(d) on the ground of abnormal conditions in the
business of the
Page 289 U. S. 32
claimant as compared with that of others. He seems to have
overlooked the fact that the taxpayer was claiming relief also
under subdivisions (a) and (c). A protest promptly followed the
delivery of the notice, and with the protest went an amended claim.
In this amended claim, there was no change of importance, unless
importance be attached to the form of the relief demanded. The
request for a computation in accordance with § 328 was accompanied
by a request for relief in the alternative. In the event of a
denial of a special assessment, the taxpayer now demanded that the
items "improperly eliminated from invested capital should be
restored to invested capital, and the excess profits tax
recalculated on that basis." The Commissioner ordered another
hearing, and considered the claim anew. Upon reconsideration, he
held that there had been an undervaluation of invested capital in
1918 and 1919, with the result that the taxes for the one year had
been overpaid in the sum of $14,054.18, and for the other in the
sum of $9,073.15. After thus finding an error in the assessment, he
dismissed the claims for refund on the ground that their form as
first presented was defective, and that the amendment came too
late.
Cf. United States v. Memphis Cotton Oil Co., supra.
In a suit by the taxpayer to recover the moneys overpaid, the
District Court gave judgment for the government, and the Court of
Appeals affirmed. 60 F.2d 944. The case is here on certiorari.
We held in
United States v. Henry Prentiss & Co.,
supra, that, after the period of limitation, a claim for a
special assessment under § 327(d) may not be turned by amendment
into one for the reaudit of invested capital and for the
reassessment of the tax accordingly. The two proceedings, it was
pointed out, are essentially diverse. The one is nonjusticiable,
invoking as it does an administrative and discretionary
jurisdiction. The other is akin to a
Page 289 U. S. 33
judicial inquiry, reexamining an earlier determination for error
of fact or law. The one
"assumes adherence to the statute in the valuation of invested
capital and counts upon extraordinary conditions as justifying a
claim that the statute is oppressive."
The other, rejecting that assumption, is a demand for a new
audit. The distinction between a special assessment under
subdivision (d) and a claim for like relief under subdivisions (a)
and (c) becomes apparent when the
Prentiss case is
compared with another case decided the same day. In
United
States v. Factors & Finance Co., supra, there had been a
general claim for refund without statement of the grounds. The
taxpayer tried to turn it by amendment into a claim for a special
assessment under § 210 of the Revenue Act of 1917. The amendment
was upheld. We pointed out, in upholding it, that "§ 210 of the Act
of 1917 is the precursor of § 327(a) of the Act of 1918, and is not
at all the analogue of § 327(d)." Under § 210 of the earlier act,
as under § 327(a) of the later act, there is a challenge to the
valuation of invested capital which opens up the whole subject for
revision and readjustment.
We think procedural analogies and administrative practice
sustain the contention of the petitioner that the claim as amended
does not differ in matter of substance from the claim as first
presented.
1. If we look to the analogy of pleadings in a lawsuit, the
conclusion is not doubtful. The claim as first presented gives
notice to the Commissioner that assets of great value have been
omitted from invested capital. It tells him what those assets are,
and even estimates their value, though imperfectly and roughly.
There is no failure to make disclosure of the substance of the
grievance, no dearth of information as to the facts that should be
the prelude to inquiry. What is subject to criticism is this, and
nothing more -- that the claim is niggardly, and hence
Page 289 U. S. 34
defective in its prayer for relief. It asks for a special
assessment under §§ 327 and 328. It should have asked for this and,
in the alternative, that invested capital be reexamined and
increased. But, for the purpose of determining the limits of
permissible amendment, a change of the legal theory of a suit, "a
departure from law to law," is no longer accepted as a test of
general validity.
United States v. Memphis Cotton Oil Co.,
supra, and cases there cited. Still weaker is a test derived
from the prayer for relief, the mere demand for judgment. The rule
is now general that, at a trial upon the merits, the suitor shall
have the relief appropriate to the facts that he has pleaded,
whether he has prayed for it or not.
* Cf.
Equity Rules 19 and 22. A claim for refund is not a pleading, and
analogies borrowed from the forms and methods of a lawsuit will be
applied to these administrative remedies "in due subordination to
differences of end and aim."
United States v. Memphis Cotton
Oil Co., supra. Even so, they will have their place of
influence, which may turn out to be controlling, if differences of
end and aim are obscure or indecisive.
2. In this case, administrative practice reinforces the
suggestions of procedural analogies, and bids us follow where they
point.
When a claim such as the one in controversy is submitted to a
Commissioner, there is only one way in which it is possible for him
to deal with it. He must look into the omitted items and determine
their effect upon the assessment he has made. If he finds that
items have been omitted, and that, by reason of their nature, they
make it impossible for him to determine the value of the capital,
he will order a special assessment, for there will be nothing else
to do. If he finds that they have been omitted, but
Page 289 U. S. 35
that he is able to appraise them, he will have learned in the
course of the investigation, that the assessment is erroneous in a
determinable amount. Justice will then require that it be changed
to that extent. In amending the claim by a prayer for alternative
relief, a taxpayer is not forcing the inquiry into an unexplored
territory, into strange and foreign paths. He is asking the
Commissioner to take action upon discoveries already in the making
or perhaps already made. There is no transfiguring amendment, such
as we found in the
Prentiss case, with its attempted
change from a discretionary to a justiciable remedy. There is an
adaptation of the relief to a case already proved.
The brief for the government describes the division of functions
between one section and another of the Bureau of Internal Revenue.
A claim which appears on its face to be one for a special
assessment is sent to the Special Assessment Section. A claim for
the revaluation of invested capital is sent to a section of the
Field Audit Review Division. From this it ensues, we are told, that
claims may be handled by different persons, and to some extent in
different ways, according to the end in view. More than that must
be shown to make out the contention that the substantial identity
of the claim will be changed by this amendment. Whatever the
distribution of labor may be between one division and another, it
is impossible for any of them to pass upon a claim under § 327(a)
without also passing upon the question whether the valuation of the
invested capital is wrong, and, if so, whether, in a determinable
or an indeterminable amount. Once let it be ascertained that the
amount is determinable, and all that follows is an incident. At
that point, discovery has gone on to such a stage that the
Commissioner may not rid himself of the duty of pressing forward to
the end. He cannot in good conscience be satisfied with less. There
may be need to take the case out
Page 289 U. S. 36
of one section and transfer it to another before revision will
be complete. All this is quite irrelevant when once a wrong is
brought to light. There can be no stopping after that, until
justice has been done.
The judgment is
Reversed.
* For a summary of the decisions, see Clark on Code Pleading, p.
184.