A party against whom an assessment was made in 1865 for an
income tax, appealed therefrom to the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, who, Oct. 7, 1867, set it aside and ordered a new one,
which was made March 15, 1868. The sum thereby assessed, with
interest and penalty, was paid in installments. Suit to recover the
money so paid was brought Jan. 15, 1869.
Held that the
party had no right of action, inasmuch as he failed to sue within
six months from the date of the decision of the commissioner on the
appeal, and had taken no appeal from the second assessment.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiffs in error paid to the defendant, who was collector of
internal revenue, the sum of $32,074 under protest, and brought
their suit to recover the money on the ground that the tax, as
assessed, was illegal. It was assessed as income tax for the year
1864 against the female plaintiff, who was then a widow, named
Acklin. The tax originally assessed amounted to $99,726. From this
assessment Mrs. Acklin appealed to the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, who, on the 7th of October, 1867, rendered his decision
setting aside that assessment and directing the local assessor to
make a new one, and
Page 92 U. S. 86
giving him directions as to the principles on which it should be
made. On the fifteenth day of March, 1868, the new assessment was
made at the sum of $29,971.91. This sum, with interest and penalty,
was paid at three different times, as follows:
April 30, 1868 . . . . . . . . $ 3,799.00
July 25, 1868. . . . . . . . . 20,000.00
Oct. 29, 1868. . . . . . . . . 8,275.00
----------
$32,074.00
----------
The present suit for the recovery of the money so paid was
commenced by a writ of summons, issued Jan. 15, 1869.
The cause being transferred from the state court in which it was
commenced to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Middle
District of Tennessee, that court, on the trial, instructed the
jury that the nineteenth section of the act of July 13, 1866,
imposed a condition, without which the plaintiffs could not
recover, and was not merely a statute of limitation; and as
plaintiffs had not brought this suit within six months from the
decision of the commissioner on their appeal, and had taken no
appeal from the second assessment, made March 15, 1868, they had no
right of action.
The soundness of this construction of the statute is the only
question in the case.
The section under consideration, 14 Stat. 152, is as
follows:
"That no suit shall be maintained in any court for the recovery
of any tax alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed
or collected until appeal shall have been duly made to 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, and a decision of said
commissioner shall be had thereon unless such suit shall be brought
within six months from the time of said decision or within six
months from the time this act takes effect.
provided that
if said decision shall be delayed more than six months from the
date of such appeal, then said suit may be brought at any time
within twelve months from the date of such appeal. "
Page 92 U. S. 87
It is quite clear that this suit was not brought within six
months from the time of the decision of the commissioner on the
appeal of Mrs. Acklin. No appeal was taken at all from the second
assessment, under which the money was paid.
The argument of plaintiffs' counsel is that the appeal was taken
from the first assessment, and this is the only appeal necessary to
give them a right of action, which right they preserved by paying
the modified assessment under protest. As to the period of six
months prescribed by the statute within which the suit must be
brought, it is said that this is a mere statute of limitation, and
that the time under it cannot begin to run until the cause of
action accrued, which in this case was not until the money was
paid. It is insisted that plaintiffs were not in condition to bring
suit until the tax was paid, and that it could not have been
intended by Congress that the very short limitation of six months
should include any time before the money was paid, during which
they had no right of action.
Considered as a statute of limitation and nothing more, the
proposition is not without weight, but we think there are two
sufficient answers to it:
1. The assessment on which this money was paid was a different
assessment from the one upon which the appeal to the commissioner
was taken. That assessment was wholly set aside. The matter was
referred to the local assessor, with directions to make a new
assessment. The rules by which this new assessment was to be made
were prescribed for him, and differed materially from those which
governed the first assessment. The commissioner did not pretend to
modify the original, or to reduce it, and let it stand as so
modified or reduced. He did not even fix the amount to be assessed.
It was an entirely new and distinct assessment, based on different
principles, which resulted in a sum not one-third as large as the
assessment which had been set aside. From this assessment
plaintiffs had an undoubted right to appeal to the commissioner,
and urge any of the reasons which they now rely on to show that it
was illegal. They paid it without such appeal, and, in doing so, we
think they come within the provisions of the section which forbids
suit unless an appeal has been taken.
But suppose that the two assessments could be treated as one
Page 92 U. S. 88
transaction and that the appeal taken was sufficient to
authorize the action if the suit had been brought within six months
after the decision of the commissioner, we are still of opinion
that it cannot be maintained because it was not brought within that
time.
All governments in all times have found it necessary to adopt
stringent measures for the collection of taxes and to be rigid in
the enforcement of them.
These measures are not judicial, nor does the government resort,
except in extraordinary cases, to the courts for that purpose. The
revenue measures of every civilized government constitute a system
which provides for its enforcement by officers commissioned for
that purpose. In this country, this system for each state, or for
the federal government, provides safeguards of its own against
mistake, injustice, or oppression, in the administration of its
revenue laws. Such appeals are allowed to specified tribunals as
the lawmakers deem expedient. Such remedies, also, for recovering
back taxes illegally exacted, as may seem wise, are provided. In
these respects, the United States have, as was said by this Court
in
Nichols v. United
States, 7 Wall. 122, enacted a system of corrective
justice as well as a system of taxation in both its customs and
internal revenue branches. That system is intended to be complete.
In the customs department, it permits appeals from appraisers to
other appraisers, and in proper cases to the Secretary of the
Treasury, and if dissatisfied with this highest decision of the
executive department of the government, the law permits the party,
on paying the money required with a protest embodying the grounds
of his objection to the tax, to sue the government through its
collector and test in the courts the validity of the tax.
So also, in the internal revenue department, the statute which
we have copied allows appeals from the assessor to the commissioner
of internal revenue, and, if dissatisfied with his decision, on
paying the tax, the party can sue the collector, and if the money
was wrongfully exacted, the courts will give him relief by a
judgment which the United States pledges herself to pay.
It will be readily conceded from what we have here stated
Page 92 U. S. 89
that the government has the right to prescribe the conditions on
which it will subject itself to the judgment of the courts in the
collection of its revenues.
If there existed in the courts, state or national, any general
power of impeding or controlling the collection of taxes or
relieving the hardship incident to taxation, the very existence of
the government might be placed in the power of a hostile judiciary.
Dows v. City of
Chicago, 11 Wall. 108. While a free course of
remonstrance and appeal is allowed within the departments before
the money is finally exacted, the general government has wisely
made the payment of the tax claimed, whether of customs or of
internal revenue, a condition precedent to a resort to the courts
by the party against whom the tax is assessed. In the internal
revenue branch, it has further prescribed that no such suit shall
be brought until the remedy by appeal has been tried, and if
brought after this, it must be within six months after the decision
on the appeal. We regard this as a condition on which alone the
government consents to litigate the lawfulness of the original tax.
It is not a hard condition. Few governments have conceded such a
right on any condition. If the compliance with this condition
requires the party aggrieved to pay the money, he must do it. He
cannot, after the decision is rendered against him, protract the
time within which he can contest that decision in the courts by his
own delay in paying the money. It is essential to the honor and
orderly conduct of the government that its taxes should be promptly
paid and drawbacks speedily adjusted, and the rule prescribed in
this class of cases is neither arbitrary nor unreasonable. That
such was the intention of Congress in the sixteenth section is
further shown by the provision that even the delay of the
commissioner in deciding the appeal shall not enlarge the time for
suit beyond twelve months from the date of taking the appeal.
The objecting party can take his appeal. He can, if the decision
is delayed beyond twelve months, rest his case on that decision, or
he can pay the amount claimed and commence his suit at any time
within that period. So, after the decision, he can pay at once and
commence suit within the six months, or he can have such delays in
payment as he can obtain, and if
Page 92 U. S. 90
this carries him beyond the six months, it is his own fault, and
he should not complain.
Brown v.
Sauerwien, 10 Wall. 218;
Collector v.
Hubbard, 12 Wall. 1. We find no error in the
record.
Judgment affirmed.