1. A claim for a tax refund which has been seasonably filed, but
which fails to conform to Treasury Regulations in that it omits to
state the grounds upon which the refund is demanded, may be amended
by specifying the grounds at any time before the claim in its
original form has been finally rejected, though it be after the
time when a wholly new claim would be barred by limitation. Pp.
288 U. S. 69,
288 U. S. 71,
et seq.
So
held under § 1318, Rev. Act of 1921, as amended
March 4, 1923, which provides that no suit for recovery shall be
maintained in any court until a claim for refund has been duly
filed with the Commissioner "according to the provisions of law in
that regard and the regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury
established in
Page 288 U. S. 63
pursuance thereof," where the regulation required that "all the
facts relied upon in support of the claim should be clearly set
forth under oath" and where the claim, originally exhibiting only
the taxpayer's statement of amounts of net income, tax, previous
payments, and overpayment was amended, before its final rejection
on that ground, so that it set forth in detail the facts showing
overassessment as they had been revealed by the Bureau's own
investigation.
2. Rulings as to what amendments of pleadings may (or may not)
by relation avoid the bar of an intervening limitation, and as to
what, in that connection, is but a revised statement of the same
cause of action and what the substitution of a new one, furnish
helpful analogies, though subordinate to administrative
considerations, in determining the effect of an amendment of a
claim for refund before the Commissioner. P.
288 U. S.
67.
3. To give effect by relation to the amendment here in question
harmonizes with the Commissioner's practice of reauditing returns
when refunds are claimed (
Lewis v. Reynolds, 284 U.
S. 281), and particularly with his action in
entertaining the original claim (instead of rejecting it promptly
for defect of form), examining completely the taxpayer's business,
and announcing that the overassessments so found would be
rectified. P.
288 U. S.
69.
4. The function of a statute limiting the time within which
claims may be presented is to give protection against stale
demands; the function of a regulation making provision as to the
form of claims is to facilitate research; the line dividing the two
functions should be kept a sharp one. P.
288 U. S.
71.
5. Notice by the Deputy Commissioner to a taxpayer that his
claim for refund would be rejected and that the rejection would be
officially announced in a schedule to be approved thereafter,
held not a final rejection. P.
288 U. S.
72.
75 Ct.Cls.195, 59 F.2d 276, affirmed.
Certiorari to review a recovery of overpayments of income
taxes.
Page 288 U. S. 64
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent, the plaintiff in the court below, brought suit
against the United States in the Court of Claims to recover
overpayments of income taxes for the years 1922 and 1923. The
government opposed recovery upon the ground that the claims filed
with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for the refund of the tax
were too general and indefinite to comply with the provisions of
the statutes and regulations, and that amendment came too late. The
Court of Claims gave judgment in favor of the taxpayer. 59 F.2d
276. A writ of certiorari brings the case here.
The central question in the controversy can be stated in a
sentence: may a claim for a tax refund which has been seasonably
filed, but which fails to state the grounds upon which the refund
is demanded, be amended by specifying the grounds at any time
before the claim in its original form has been finally rejected,
though it be after the time when a wholly new claim would be barred
by limitation?
The respondent made and filed its income tax returns for 1922
and 1923 in accordance with the statute. It paid the last
installment of the earlier tax on December 7, 1923, and the last
installment of the later one on December 6, 1924. Claims for refund
of overpayments were filed in June, 1927, within the time
prescribed by law.
In the refund claim for 1922, there was a statement of the
amount of the tax paid ($25,626.25), a statement of the correct
amount due ($24,296.56), a statement that there had been overpaid
in error $1,329.69, and a request for refund of that amount with
interest as provided by law, or such greater amount as might be
legally refundable. Attached to the claim was the following
summary
Page 288 U. S. 65
of the method of computation: net income, $194,372.46; 12 1/2
percent, $24,296.56; previously paid, $25,626.25; overpaid,
$1,329.69. There was no other specification of supporting facts or
reasons.
In the refund claim for 1923, the claimant followed the same
form that was used for 1922, but with appropriate changes of the
figures. The overpayment was stated to be $1,813.39, and there was
a request for the return of that amount or of any greater amount
due.
Upon receipt of these claims, the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, in order to pass upon the merits, made an investigation
and an audit of the claimant's books and records for 1922 and 1923
through a duly appointed agent. The agent reported to the
Commissioner that there had been overassessments for both years;
the excess being fixed at $1,660.70 for 1922 and $4,835.76 for
1923. Thereupon a deputy commissioner notified the taxpayer in
writing under date of October 13, 1928, that its refund claims had
been considered, that the taxes had been readjusted in accordance
with the new audit, and that the overassessments for the two years
would be made the subject of certificates of overassessment, which
would be transmitted in due course through the office of the
appropriate collector. Nothing further was said or done as to the
matter till January 26, 1929, when the same deputy commissioner who
had signed the notice last mentioned transmitted to the taxpayer
another notice that the claims were defective in form in that they
failed to satisfy the requirements of the Treasury Regulations.
After quoting the pertinent provisions, he stated: "Since the
information on file with the claims does not meet the requirements"
of the regulations,
"and the claims do not indicate [
i.e., apart from the
investigations of the Revenue Agent] that the taxes have been
illegally assessed, they will be rejected. The rejection will
officially appear in a schedule to be approved by the
Commissioner."
Thereupon the claimant,
Page 288 U. S. 66
protesting that an amendment was unnecessary, filed a new claim
with the Commissioner on April 2, 1929, in which the facts were set
forth in detail. The Commissioner gave final notice of rejection on
October 23, 1929, placing his ruling on the ground that the claims
as first presented were defective and irregular. In this suit by
the taxpayer, the Court of Claims has given judgment for the moneys
overpaid.
Statutes make it necessary that claims for the refunding or
crediting of any internal revenue tax erroneously or illegally
assessed or collected shall be presented to the Commissioner within
a prescribed period of time, and prohibit allowance of the claims
if these conditions are not satisfied. Revenue Act of 1926, §
284(b). Statutes also provide that no suit or proceeding shall be
maintained in any court for the recovery of such a tax
"until a claim for refund or credit has been duly filed with the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue according to the provisions of law
in that regard, and the regulations of the Secretary of the
Treasury established in pursuance thereof."
Revenue Act of 1921, § 1318, as amended by Act of March 4, 1923,
c. 276. During the period of these transactions, there had been
promulgated under the Revenue Act of 1921 and was continuously in
force a Treasury regulation which provides as follows:
"Claims by the taxpayer for the refunding of taxes and penalties
erroneously or illegally collected shall be made on Form 843. In
this case, the burden of proof rests upon the claimant. All the
facts relied upon in support of the claim should be clearly set
forth under oath."
Treasury Regulations 62, art. 1036. [
Footnote 1]
The claim for refund filed with the Commissioner in June, 1927,
was not subject to rejection on the score of
Page 288 U. S. 67
the time of its submission. As to this, the parties are agreed.
Indefinite and general it was, and hence, until amended or
supplemented, an inadequate compliance with the Treasury
requirement that the facts relied upon in support of a claim are to
be stated under oath. Beyond doubt, it might have been rejected as
irregular while its form was uncorrected. This is far from saying
that there was the presentation of a new claim, and not the
perfecting of an old one when the gaps were filled thereafter.
[
Footnote 2]
Both the government and the taxpayer invoke analogies suggested
by pleadings in a lawsuit. The general rule is said to be that an
amendment of a pleading will take effect by relation, and thus
relieve against the bar of an intervening limitation if the
identity of the cause of action is still substantially the same,
but that the limitation will prevail if under the guise of an
amendment there is the substitution of a new cause of action in
place of another wholly different.
Baltimore & O.S.W. R.
Co. v. Carroll, 280 U. S. 491;
Seaboard Air Line Ry. v. Renn, 241 U.
S. 290,
241 U. S. 293;
Harriss v. Tams, 258 N.Y. 229, 242, 179 N.E. 476. The
analogy is helpful, yet it will confuse, instead of helping, if we
do not insist at the beginning upon a definition of our terms, or
at least a recognition of their shifting meanings. A "cause of
action"
Page 288 U. S. 68
may mean one thing for one purpose and something different for
another. [
Footnote 3] It may
mean one thing when the question is whether it is good upon
demurrer, and something different when there is a question of the
amendment of a pleading or of the application of the principle of
res judicata. Cf. Chicago R.I. & P. Ry. Co. v.
Schendel, 270 U. S. 611,
270 U. S. 617;
Baltimore S.S. Co. v. Phillips, 274 U.
S. 316,
274 U. S. 321.
At times and in certain contexts, it is identified with the
infringement of a right or the violation of a duty. [
Footnote 4] At other times and in other
contexts, it is a concept of the law of remedies, the identity of
the cause being then dependent on that of the form of action or the
writ. [
Footnote 5] Another
aspect reveals it as something separate from writs and remedies,
the group of operative facts out of which a grievance has
developed. [
Footnote 6] This
Court has not committed itself to the view that the phrase is
susceptible of any single definition that will be independent of
the context or of the relation to be governed. Nonetheless, it has
fixed the limits of amendment with increasing liberality. A change
of the legal theory of the action, "a departure from law to law,"
has at times been offered as a test.
Union Pacific Ry. Co. v.
Wyler, 158 U. S. 285,
158 U. S. 295.
Later decisions have made it clear that this test is no longer
accepted as one of general validity. Thus, in
Missouri, Kansas
& Texas Ry. Co. v. Wulf, 226 U. S. 570,
plaintiff suing in her individual capacity under a Kansas statute
for her son's death, was allowed to amend to sue as administratrix
under the
Page 288 U. S. 69
Federal Employers' Liability Act after the statute of
limitations would have barred another action. In
New York
Central & H. R. Co. v. Kinney, 260 U.
S. 340, there was in substance the same ruling. In
Friederichsen v. Renard, 247 U. S. 207, a
cause of action by a defrauded buyer to set aside a contract was
turned into a cause of action to recover damages for deceit.
"Of course, an argument can be made on the other side, but when
a defendant has had notice from the beginning that the plaintiff
sets up and is trying to enforce a claim against it because of
specified conduct, the reasons for the statute of limitations do
not exist, and we are of opinion that a liberal rule should be
applied."
New York Central & H. R. Co. v. Kinney, supra, p.
260 U. S. 346.
[
Footnote 7]
With this background of analogy, we reach the specific problem
that calls for answer here. The respondent filed a claim for taxes
overpaid, a claim for money had and received to his use by the
agents of the government. The identity of the cause of action may
be said in one aspect to depend upon the mere fact of overpayment,
the existence of a net balance owing to the taxpayer after the
ascertainment of all items of debit and of credit. In another
aspect, it may be said to depend upon the identity of the items
illegally exacted, and hence upon the particular grounds that
determine illegality. Choice between these meanings must avoid a
doctrinaire adherence to abstract definitions. It must keep in view
the realities of administrative practice, for its effect will be to
regulate the conduct of administrative officers. Definitions and
analogies borrowed from pleadings in a lawsuit will have their
place and recognition, but in due subordination to differences of
end and aim. Viewing the problem thus, we must say whether a
statement by the taxpayer of supporting facts
Page 288 U. S. 70
and reasons is to be assimilated to a bill of particulars
explanatory of a claim, or is something so essential that there can
be no claim without it.
Our decision in
Lewis v. Reynolds, 284 U.
S. 281, goes far to point the answer. The court there
ruled that, upon a claim for the refund of a tax because of the
disallowance of a particular deduction, the Commissioner might
sustain the result by the disallowance of another deduction, and
this though the time had gone by within which he would have been at
liberty, if a claim had not been filed, to make a new assessment.
The court applied the analogy of a common law action for money had
and received.
"The ultimate question presented for decision upon a claim for
refund is whether the taxpayer has overpaid his tax. This involves
a redetermination of the entire tax liability."
No matter though the claim for refund be specific and limited,
the Commissioner is at liberty to audit the return afresh and to
strike a new balance as the facts may then appear. Commonly,
though, it seems, not always, a general audit will be necessary, or
will be at least a wise precaution, whether the claim is broad or
narrow, if the government is to have the benefit of any
compensating adjustments. [
Footnote
8] There is little doubt that this conception of duty and of
prudence has had recognition and emphasis in administrative
practice.
The practice is portrayed in action in the pages of this record.
We are there informed in a striking way of the actual procedure
where a notice, general in its terms, is not rejected at the
beginning for irregularity of form, but is considered on the
merits. At once upon the filing of the claim for refund, there was
an order for the complete examination of the business of the
taxpayer, to the end
Page 288 U. S. 71
that the net amount of its tax liability might be reported to
the Bureau. Every claim put forward in its amended notice has been
investigated, every fact alleged in its behalf has been verified
and found. The files of the Bureau contain the report of an
examiner informing his superior that the tax has been overpaid, and
the files of the taxpayer contain an official notice that the
overassessment is recognized and that justice will be done. Of a
sudden at the end, the discovery is made that the inquiry is mere
futility because the notice starting it in motion has departed in
form from the requirements of a rule.
In the light thus supplied by the practice of the Bureau and the
analogy of pleadings, the way is cleared for a conclusion. The line
of division must be kept a sharp one between the function of a
statute requiring the presentation of a claim within a given period
of time and the function of a regulation making provision as to
form. The function of the statute, like that of limitations
generally, is to give protection against stale demands. The
function of the regulation is to facilitate research. The
Commissioner has the remedy in his own hands if the claim as
presented is so indefinite as to cause embarrassment to him or to
others in his Bureau. He may disallow the claim promptly for a
departure from the rule. If, however, he holds it without action
until the form has been corrected, and still more clearly if he
hears it, and hears it on the merits, what is before him is not a
double claim, but a claim single and indivisible, the new
indissolubly welded into the structure of the old.
The cases in this Court are not at all at variance with the
conclusion now arrived at, though they leave the problem open.
Tucker v. Alexander, 275 U. S. 228,
holds that it is within the power of the Commissioner to waive the
objection that the supporting facts or reasons have not been stated
in the claim.
United States v. Felt &
Tarrant
Page 288 U. S. 72
Co., 283 U. S. 269,
holds that a defective claim for refund will not supply a basis for
a suit against the government when there has been neither waiver by
the Commissioner nor amendment by the taxpayer.
Bonwit Teller
& Co. v. United States, 283 U. S. 258,
holds that a letter from the taxpayer, accompanied by a form of
waiver requested by the Bureau, will be the equivalent of a notice
of claim if the Commissioner has so treated it.
The cases in the lower federal courts may not be wholly
harmonious as to the extent to which amendments are allowable after
the running of the statute, but there is general agreement that the
applicable analogy is to be found in the rules governing the
amendment of a pleading.
McKesson & Robbins, Inc. v.
Edwards, 57 F.2d 147;
Art Metal Construction Co. v. United
States, 47 F.2d 558;
Lancaster Cotton Mills v. United
States, 59 F.2d 270;
Lehigh & Wilkes Barre Coal Co. v.
United States, 38 F.2d 637.
Cf. Peruna Co., 11 B.T.A.
1180, 1189; Sevier v. Commissioner, 14 B.T.A. 709, 716.
One other question, less general in its significance, is yet to
be considered. An argument is made that, at the time of this
amendment, the claim had been finally rejected and the proceeding
thereby ended. If so, it was too late.
McKesson & Robbins
v. Edwards, supra; Solomon v. United States, 57 F.2d 150. When
correction is thus postponed, there is no longer anything to amend,
any more than in a lawsuit after the complaint has been dismissed.
We think the matter was still
in fieri. True, the deputy
commissioner had given notice to the taxpayer that the claims would
be rejected, and that the rejection would be officially announced
in a schedule to be approved thereafter. No reason is apparent why,
at any time before such approval, the Commissioner or his deputy
was not at liberty to recall the first announcement, and dispose of
the case otherwise.
Michel v. United States,
Page 288 U. S. 73
37 F.2d 38,
rev'd, but on other grounds, 282 U. S. 282 U.S.
656. We are not now considering what the practice ought to be if
there were need to open the proceeding for the submission of other
evidence extrinsic to the claims themselves. Neither in the record
nor in the argument do we find a suggestion of that need. Long
before the amendment, the Commissioner had ascertained the facts
and had even notified the taxpayer of the justice of its claims and
of the ruling of the Bureau that adjustments would be made
accordingly. The dismissal of the claims, when finally announced,
was for defects of form only. The defects had been corrected, and
the dismissal may not stand.
We find it unnecessary to determine whether the conduct of the
Commissioner in investigating the claims upon their merits and
reporting to the claimant the result of his inquiry was a waiver of
defects of form which would call for the return of overpayments
though no amendment had been offered.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
A later regulation, different in form, is applicable to claims
filed on or after May 1, 1929. Treasury Decision 4265, Cumulative
Bulletin VIII-1, p. 110.
[
Footnote 2]
Official statistics indicate that
"eight-five 20/100 percent of all the overassessments are
attributable to clerical or bookkeeping adjustments or to causes
beyond the control of either the Treasury or the taxpayer -- that
is, to adjustments after the payment of taxes based upon causes
which could not fairly be considered prior to the payment."
Refunds and Credits of Internal Revenue Taxes, Report of the
Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation, 1929, pursuant to §
710 of the Revenue Act of 1928, H.Doc. No. 43, Supplement to Part
II, p. 29.
Cf. H.Doc. No. 478, 71st Cong., 2d Sess.
(1930). These statistics, covering adjustments of taxes under the
act of 1928, give support to the conclusion that, in determining
the application of a statute of limitations, the word "claim"
should be interpreted with reasonable liberality.
[
Footnote 3]
The uncertainties of the phrase have been well developed by Dean
Clark with full citation of the decisions in his treatise on Code
Pleading, pp. 75-87, 501-508.
[
Footnote 4]
Clark, Code Pleading, p. 81, and cases there cited; Pomeroy,
Code Remedies (4th ed.) § 347.
[
Footnote 5]
Clark,
supra, p. 502, and cases there cited.
[
Footnote 6]
Clark,
supra, pp. 83, 84, 505, and cases there
cited.
[
Footnote 7]
Other cases are collected by Clark,
supra, pp. 504,
505.
[
Footnote 8]
Compare Report of the Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxation, 1928, pursuant to § 1203 of the Revenue Act of
1926, vol. III, pp. 25, 30.