Payment of an illegal demand with full knowledge of the facts
rendering it illegal, without an immediate and urgent necessity
therefor or unless to release or prevent immediate seizure of
person or property, is a voluntary payment, and not one under
duress.
Affixing stamps required by the War Revenue Act of 1898 to the
manifest of a vessel in order to obtain the clearance required by
§ 417, Rev.Stat., without presenting any claim or protest to
the collector of internal revenue from whom the stamps are
purchased or to the collector of the port from
Page 200 U. S. 489
whom the clearance is obtained, is not a payment under duress,
but a voluntary payment, and the amount paid for the stamps cannot
be recovered either on the ground of the unconstitutionality of the
provisions of the War Revenue Act requiring the stamps to be
affixed or under the Act of May 12, 1900, providing for the
redemption of stamps used by mistake.
Chesebrough v. United
States, 192 U. S. 253,
followed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 200 U. S. 490
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in error filed a petition in the district court to
recover the amount paid by it for documentary stamps used on
manifests of cargoes on certain vessels bound to foreign ports, as
required by an Act of Congress approved June 13, 1898, entitled "An
Act to Provide Ways and Means to Meet War Expenditures, and for
Other Purposes."
The United States demurred to the petition on the ground
Page 200 U. S. 491
that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a claim
against it. The demurrer was overruled, and judgment entered for
the sum of $240, the amount of claim. 125 F. 320.
It appears from the opinion of the district court that the
constitutionality of the tax was alone submitted for decision, and
the court, upon the authority of
Fairbank v. United
States, 181 U. S. 283,
held that the tax was unconstitutional.
In the
Fairbank case, it was held that a stamp tax on
bills of lading imposed by the Act of June 13 was a tax on exports,
and therefore void. In the case at bar, the district court
observed
"that the essential character of the stamp tax on manifests was
that of a tax on exports in the same sense in which a stamp tax on
a bill of lading was a tax on exports."
The United States now concedes the correctness of this ruling,
but urges nevertheless that the judgment for defendant in error was
erroneous because, as is contended, the stamps were purchased and
affixed voluntarily and without protest. For this,
Chesebrough
v. United States, 192 U. S. 253, is
adduced as controlling. In that case, recovery was sought for the
price of stamps affixed to a deed in compliance with Schedule A of
the Act of June 13, 1898. The unconstitutionality of the act was
asserted by Chesebrough, but was not discussed by the Court. The
decision was based on the ground that the payment of the taxes was
voluntary. Chesebrough contended that section 7 of the act, which
made it a misdemeanor to omit to fix stamps to the instruments
enumerated, constituted such coercion as made the payment
involuntary; and, besides, that his vendee was unwilling to accept
the deed without the stamps required by the act, and that he "under
compulsion of said law," in order to receive the consideration for
his conveyance, to enable his deed to be recorded and received in
evidence, and to give a title free from doubt, purchased stamps
from the United States collector of internal revenue, and placed
them upon the deed.
What is the duress alleged in the case at bar? The averment of
the petition is:
"That, said act being in force, under compulsion and through
Page 200 U. S. 492
fear of criminal prosecution and in order to obtain clearance
papers, which could not have been procured without the delivery to
the collector of the port of New York of outward foreign manifests
of cargo, stamped as aforesaid, and without which clearance papers
the vessels hereinafter named would have been prevented from
sailing, or would have become liable for the penalty imposed by
section 4197 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, said
James E. Ward & Company, for and on behalf of your petitioner
and as such general agents, as aforesaid, purchased and affixed to
the said outward foreign manifests of cargo and cancelled internal
revenue documentary stamps of the United States of the face value
of two hundred and forty dollars ($240), as appears more fully by
the exhibit hereto annexed and made a part of this petition, and
marked 'Exhibit A,' which contains the name of the vessel, the date
of delivery to said collector of the outward foreign manifests of
cargo, the alleged tax on which is sought to be recovered, and the
face value of the documentary internal revenue stamp affixed
thereto."
It is alleged that the stamps were purchased from Walter H.
Stiner, a dealer in internal revenue stamps on various days
subsequent to January 1, 1900, and that Stiner purchased them from
the collector of internal revenue, and the proceeds thereof were
duly paid over to the United States.
In this case, as in the
Chesebrough case, the collector
was not informed at the time of the purchase of the particular
purpose for which the stamps were to be used, and no intimation was
given him, written or oral, that defendant in error claimed that
the law regarding such stamps was unconstitutional, and that it was
making the purchase under duress. And, expressing the principle to
be applied, the Court said, in the
Chesebrough case,
"even a protest or notice will not avail if the payment be made
voluntarily, with full knowledge of all the circumstances, and
without any coercion by the actual or threatened exercise of power
possessed, or supposed to be possessed, by the party exacting or
receiving the payment, over the person or property
Page 200 U. S. 493
of the party making the payment, from which the latter has no
other means of immediate relief than such payment."
Applying that principle to the allegation that Chesebrough's
vendee was unwilling to accept an unstamped conveyance, it was
said,
"if that constituted duress as between Chesebrough and his
building company, it was a matter with which the collector had
nothing to do. On the face of the petition, the purchase was purely
voluntary and made under mutual mistake of law, if the law were
unconstitutional."
It is, however, insisted that these observations are not
apposite to the case at bar. The coercion, it is contended, that
Chesebrough alleged was between him and some third party. In the
case at bar, the coercion was exerted "between the petitioner
[defendant in error] and the very authorities who demanded and
compelled the payment of the tax," through section 4197 of the
Revised Statutes of the United States. This section requires the
master or person in charge of any vessel bound for a foreign port
to deliver to the collector of the district a manifest, and upon
its delivery the collector shall grant a clearance for such vessel
and her cargo. It is provided:
"If any vessel bound to a foreign port departs on her voyage to
such foreign port without delivering such manifest and obtaining a
clearance, as hereby required, the master or other person having
the charge or command of such vessel shall be liable to a penalty
of five hundred dollars for every such offense."
We do not think this section makes a difference in the cases.
The destination of the stamps cannot affect the payment of the tax
which they represent. It may be more or less of an inducement to
submit to the tax, but who can determine the degree? The loss of a
purchaser, as in the
Chesebrough case, may be of much more
concern than the payment of the penalty for violating the
provisions of section 4197. Besides, whatever element of coercion
there was came from the United States, and it was not as immediate
in the case of the manifests as in the case of the deed. The
applicable principle is expressed in
Page 200 U. S. 494
the extract from the
Chesebrough case, which we have
given above. It is stated in
Railroad Company v.
Commissioners, 98 U. S. 541, and
quoted from that case in
Little v. Bowers, 134 U.S. at
134 U. S. 554,
as follows:
"Where a party pays an illegal demand with a full knowledge of
all the facts which render such demand illegal, without an
immediate and urgent necessity therefor, or unless to release his
person or property from detention, or to prevent an immediate
seizure of his person or property, such payment must be deemed
voluntary, and cannot be recovered back."
There was no such imminence in the duress charged by defendant
in error. It purchased the stamps of a dealer at various times. No
information was given to the collector of internal revenue of the
particular purpose, nor claim that the law was unconstitutional.
There was no claim of the collector of the port from whom the
clearances were asked that defendant in error was acting under the
restraint of the law, and yielding only to enable his ships to
depart to their destinations. All determining conditions therefore
are the same as in the
Chesebrough case.
2. It is, however, contended that, even though the stamps were
purchased without any duress or coercion, that, under the Act of
Congress of May 12, 1900, entitled "An Act Authorizing the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue to Redeem or Make Allowance for
Internal Revenue Stamps," the Commissioner must make allowance for
the stamps used by the petitioner, and, the Commissioner having
declined to do so, the defendant in error has a right of action
under the Tucker Act. The provision of the Act of May 12, relied
on, is as follows:
"That the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, subject to
regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury, may, upon
receipt of satisfactory evidence of the facts, make allowance for
or redeem such of the stamps, issued under authority of law, to
denote the payment of any internal revenue tax, as may have been
spoiled, destroyed, or rendered useless or unfit for the purpose
intended, or for which the owner may have no
Page 200 U. S. 495
use, or which, through mistake, may have been improperly or
unnecessarily used, or where the rates or duties represented
thereby have been excessive in amount, paid in error, or in any
manner wrongfully collected."
The argument is that, by this provision "the question of duress
or compulsion is taken entirely out of the case" because, in most
of the instances enumerated, "it is inconceivable that there should
be any protest or duress." And it is further alleged that the act
of 1900 was not considered in the
Chesebrough case. It
certainly does not follow that, because in some instances protest
or duress cannot exist, that they cannot exist in other cases, not
that the statute intended to destroy the difference between
voluntary and involuntary payment of taxes. In the
Chesebrough case, section 3220 of the Revised Statutes of
the United States was considered. It authorized the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue "to remit, refund, and pay back all taxes . . .
that appear to be unjustly assessed or excessive in amount,
or
in any manner wrongfully collected." The words in italics are
identical with those in the Act of May 12, which are relied on by
defendant in error. Commenting on section 3220, the Court said in
the Chesebrough case:
"It is argued that the provision of section 3220 for the
repayment of judgments against the collector rendered protest or
notice unnecessary for his protection; but it was clearly demanded
for the protection of the government in conducting the extensive
business of dealing in stamps, which were sold and delivered in
quantities, and without it there would not be the slightest vestige
of involuntary payment in transactions like that under
consideration. And we find no right of recovery, expressly or by
necessary implication, conferred by statute, in such
circumstances."
We therefore think that this case is governed by the
Chesebrough case, and on its authority judgment is
reversed and case remanded with directions to sustain the
demurrer.