An action lies by the United States to recover the amount of a
stamp tax upon execution of a conveyance, payable under the War
Revenue Act of June 13, 1898, c. 448, 30 Stat. 448, 470, and the
penalties provided in such act for noncompliance therewith are not
exclusive of collection of the amount by suit.
A tax may or may not be a debt under a particular statute,
according to the sense in which the word is found to be used. But
whether the government may recover a personal judgment for a tax
depends upon the existence of the duty to pay for the enforcement
of which another remedy has not been made exclusive.
Whether an action for debt is maintainable depends not upon who
is plaintiff, or how the obligation was incurred, but the action
lies wherever there is due a sum either certain or readily reduced
to certainty.
Stockwell v. United
States, 13 Wall. 42.
Nothing in the nature of a stamp tax negatives
per se
either the personal obligation to purchase and affix the stamps or
the collection of the amount by action; nor do provisions for
penalties necessarily exclude personal liability.
Penalties may be provided to induce payment of the tax, and not
as a substitute for such payment, and it will not be presumed that
Congress intends by penalizing delinquency to deprive the
government of suitable means of enforcing the collection of
revenue.
This case comes here on certiorari. The action was brought by
the United States, in the district court of
Page 219 U. S. 251
the United States for the district of Colorado, against the
executors of the estate of Winfield Scott Stratton, deceased, to
recover the amount of stamp taxes claimed to be payable under the
War Revenue Act of June 13, 1898.
The plaintiff alleged that in May, 1899, Stratton had conveyed
to a corporation known as Stratton's Independence, Limited, certain
lands in the State of Colorado by deed reciting a consideration of
$4,850,000; that internal revenue stamps of the value of $4,850
were affixed to the deed, whereas the actual consideration of the
conveyance and the value of the lands was $9,733,000, and by reason
thereof there became due and payable to the United States from
Stratton a revenue tax amounting to $9,733, of which the sum of
$4,833 remained unpaid, internal revenue stamps therefor not having
been attached to the deed or cancelled; that the Collector of
Internal Revenue of the United States for the district of Colorado
had reported the facts to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, who
had determined that the sum of $9,733 should have been paid, and
demand for payment having been made and refused, the said
Commissioner had directed suit be instituted.
The district court sustained a general demurrer to the
complaint, and its judgment was affirmed by the circuit court of
appeals.
The applicable provisions of the War Revenue Act of June 13,
1898, chapter 448 (30 Stat. pp. 448-470; R.S. Supp. pp. 779-804),
are set forth in the margin, together with the amendment to §
13, made by the Act of March 2, 1901, chapter 806, 31 Stat. 941.
*
Page 219 U. S. 258
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented is whether an action lies by the United
States to recover the amount of a stamp tax payable under the war
revenue Act of 1898 upon the execution of a conveyance.
If the statute creates an obligation to pay the tax, and does
not provide an exclusive remedy, the action must be regarded as
well brought.
At common law, customs duties were recoverable by the Crown by
an information in debt or an exchequer information in the nature of
a bill in equity for discovery and account. These informations
rested upon the general principle
"that in the given case the common law or the statute creates a
debt, charge, or duty in the party personally to pay the duties
immediately upon the importation, and that therefore the ordinary
remedies lie for this, as for any other acknowledged debt due to
the Crown."
United States v. Lyman, 1 Mason, p. 499.
See
also Comyn's Digest (Title "Debt" A, 9); Bunbury's Reports,
*pp. 97. 223, 225. 262.
Applying this principle, it was held in the
Lyman case,
supra, and in
Meredith v. United
States, 13 Pet. 486, that the government was
entitled to maintain an action to recover duties upon imports as a
personal indebtedness of the importers. The duty to pay was there
derived from the language of the Act of April 27, 1816, c. 107 (3
Stat. p. 310), that "there shall be levied, collected, and paid"
the several duties mentioned, and in accordance with an
Page 219 U. S. 259
established rule of interpretation the charge of the duty on the
goods was taken to mean a personal charge against the owner. In the
case last cited, the Court, by Mr. Justice Story, said (p.
38 U. S.
493):
"The first question is whether Smith and Buchanan were every
personally indebted for these duties; or, in other words, whether
the importers of goods do, in virtue of the importation thereof,
become personally indebted to the United States for the duties due
thereon, or the remedy of the United States is exclusively confined
to the lien on the goods, and the security of the bond given for
the duties. It appears to us clear upon principle, as well as upon
the obvious import of the provisions of the various acts of
Congress on this subject, that the duties due upon all goods
imported constitute a personal debt due to the United States from
the importer (and the consignee for this purpose is treated as the
owner and importer), independently of any lien on the goods, and in
any bond given for the duties. The language of the Duty Act of the
27th of April, 1816, c. 107, 3 Stat. 310, under which the present
importations were made, declares that 'there shall be levied,
collected, and paid' the several duties prescribed by that act on
goods imported into the United States. And this is a common
formulary in other acts laying duties. Now, in the exposition of
statutes laying duties, it has been a common rule of
interpretation, derived from the principles of the common law,
that, where the duty is charged on the goods, the meaning is that
it is a personal charge on the owner by reason of the goods. So it
was held in
Attorney General v. _____, 2 Anst. 558, where
a duty was laid on wash in a still and it was said by the court
that, where duties are charged on any articles in a revenue act,
the word 'charged' means that the owner shall be debited with the
sum, and that this rule prevailed even when the article was
actually lost or destroyed before it became available to the owner.
Nor is there anything
Page 219 U. S. 260
new in this doctrine, for it has long been held that, in all
such cases, an action of debt lies in favor of the government
against the importer for the duties, whenever, by accident,
mistake, or fraud, no duties, or short duties, have been paid."
A similar rule has been applied in the case of internal revenue
taxes.
United States v. Washington Mills, by Clifford, J.,
2 Cliff. 601, 607;
Dollar Savings Bank v. United
States, 19 Wall. 227;
United States v. Pacific
Railroad, by Miller and Dillon, JJ., 4 Dill. 6;
United
States v. Tilden, by Blatchford, J., 9 Ben. 368.
In
Dollar Savings Bank v. United States, supra, an
action of debt was sustained to recover the amount of the internal
revenue tax imposed by the Act of July 13, 1866, 14 Stat. 138, c.
184, on the undistributed gains carried to the surplus funds of the
bank. It was objected that the act provided a special remedy for
the assessment and collection of the tax, and that no other could
be used. But the court, finding no prohibition of the remedy by
action, held the argument untenable, saying (pp.
86 U. S.
238-240):
"It must also be conceded to be a rule of the common law in
England, as it is in Pennsylvania and many of the other states,
that, where a statute creates a right and provides a particular
remedy for its enforcement, the remedy is generally exclusive of
all common law remedies."
"But it is important to notice upon what the rule is founded.
The reason of the rule is that the statute, by providing a
particular remedy, manifests an intention to prohibit other
remedies, and the rule therefore rests upon a presumed statutory
prohibition. It applies and it is enforced when anyone to whom the
statute is a rule of conduct seeks redress for a civil wrong. He is
confined to the remedy pointed out in the statute, for he is
forbidden to make use of any other. But, by the internal revenue
law, the United States are not prohibited from adopting any
remedies for the recovery of a debt due
Page 219 U. S. 261
to them which are known to the laws of Pennsylvania. The
prohibitions, if any, either express or implied, contained in the
enactment of 1866, are for others, not for the government. They may
be obligatory upon tax collectors. They may prevent any suit at law
by such officers or agents. But they are not rules for the conduct
of the state. It is a familiar principle that the King is not bound
by any act of parliament unless he be named therein by special and
particular words. The most general words that can be devised (for
example, any person or persons, bodies politic or corporate) affect
not him in the least, if they may tend to restrain or diminish any
of his rights and interests. He may even take the benefit of any
particular act, though not named. The rule thus settled respecting
the British Crown is equally applicable to this government, and it
has been applied frequently in the different states, and
practically in the federal courts. It may be considered as settled
that so much of the royal prerogatives as belonged to the King in
his capacity of
parens patriae, or universal trustee,
enters as much into our political state as it does into the
principles of the British constitution."
"It must, then, be concluded that the government is not
prohibited by anything contained in the Act of 1866 from employing
any common law remedy for the collection of its dues. The reason of
the rule which denies to others the use of any other than the
statutory remedy is wanting therefore in applicability to the
government, and the rule itself must not be extended beyond its
reason."
See also United States v. Stevenson, 215 U.S. p.
215 U. S.
197.
The statute in the
Savings Bank case contained a
provision (now in § 3213, Rev.Stat.) which expressly
authorized the bringing of an action. But the court also found a
sufficient basis for its judgment in the general power of the
government to collect by suit taxes that are due, where the statute
imposing the tax does not deny that remedy.
Page 219 U. S. 262
This point was presented, considered, and decided in the
determination of the cause, and the decision is nonetheless
authoritative because there was another ground for the ultimate
conclusion.
Railroad Co. v. Schutte, 103 U.S. p.
103 U. S. 143;
Union Pacific Co. v. Mason City Co., 199 U.S. p.
199 U. S.
166.
Neither
Lane County v.
Oregon, 7 Wall. 71, nor
Meriwether v.
Garrett, 102 U. S. 472,
relied upon by the defendants, involved the question. In the former
case it was held that the Acts of Congress of 1862 and 1863, making
United States notes a legal tender for debts, had no reference to
taxes imposed by state authority. The legal tender acts expressly
provided that the notes should be receivable for national taxes,
and the context forbade the conclusion that Congress intended to
include state taxes under the term "debts," and there was hence no
conflict with the statute of Oregon which required the taxes due
the state to be collected in coin.
In
Meriwether v. Garrett, supra, it was held that taxes
levied before the repeal of the charter of a municipality, other
than such as were levied in obedience to the special requirement of
contracts entered into under the authority of law, and such as were
levied under judicial direction for the payments of judgments
recovered against the city, could not be collected through the
instrumentality of a court of chancery at the instance of the
city's creditors. Such taxes could be collected only under
authority from the legislature.
A tax may or may not be a "debt" under a particular statute,
according to the sense in which the word is found to be used. But
whether the government may recover a personal judgment for a tax
depends upon the existence of the duty to pay, for the enforcement
of which another remedy has not been made exclusive. Whether an
action of debt is maintainable depends not upon the question who is
the plaintiff or in what manner the obligation was
Page 219 U. S. 263
incurred, but it lies whenever there is due a sum either certain
or readily reduced to certainty.
Stockwell v. United
States, 13 Wall. p.
80 U. S.
542.
Here, the tax was a stamp tax, but the language as clearly
imports the obligation to pay as did that of the statute before the
court in the
Meredith case,
supra. Section 6 of
the War Revenue Act of 1898 provided that there should be "levied,
collected, and paid" in respect of the instruments mentioned,
"by any person or persons or party who shall make, sign, or
issue the same, or for whose use or benefit the same shall be made,
signed, or issued, the several taxes or sums of money"
set forth in the schedule which followed. There is nothing in
the nature of a stamp tax which
per se negatives either
the personal obligation, otherwise to be derived from the words
imposing the tax or its collection by action. The stamp is to be
affixed to the instrument "to denote said tax." Sections 7, 13, 14.
Section 25 provided that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
should cause to be prepared
"for the payment of the taxes prescribed in this act suitable
stamps denoting the tax on the document, article, or thing to which
the same may be affixed."
The stamp is the evidence, and its purchase the convenient
means, of payment. When a statute says that a person shall pay a
given tax, it obviously imposes upon that person the duty to pay,
and this may be enforced through the ordinary means adapted to the
recovery of a definite sum due, unless that course is clearly
prohibited.
The objection was made in the
Savings Bank case,
supra, that the tax and not been assessed. The Court held,
however, that no other assessment than that made by the statute was
necessary in order to determine the extent of the bank's liability.
Following this rule, Judge Blatchford said in
United States v.
Tilden, 9 Ben. p. 386, where the action was brought to recover
unpaid taxes on income:
"The extent of the liability of the individual for
Page 219 U. S. 264
income tax is defined by the statute, equally with the extent of
the liability of the bank for the tax on undistributed earnings. In
each case, it is necessary, in an action of debt for the tax, to
resort to sources of information outside of the statute, to
ascertain the amount on which the percentum of tax fixed by the
statute is to be calculated. . . . The difference between the two
cases, in that respect, if there be any, will be, in every case,
one of degree merely, not of principle. The statute, in imposing
the percentum of tax on the income of the individual, makes a
charge on him of a sum which is certain for the purposes of an
action of debt, because it can be made certain through the action
of a judicial tribunal, by following the rules laid down in the
statute. That is the principle of the decision in the case of the
bank, and it controls the present case."
See also King v. United States, 99 U.S. p.
99 U. S. 233;
United States v. Erie R. Co., 107 U.S. p.
107 U. S. 23;
United States v. Philadelphia & Reading Railroad Co.,
123 U.S. p.
123 U. S. 114,
and
United States v. Snyder, 149 U.S. p.
149 U. S. 215.
The statute now before us fixes a tax of a specified amount,
according to the consideration or value of the lands conveyed.
It is insisted, however, that the provision for penalties
excludes the idea of a personal liability. Thus, it is made a
misdemeanor to sign or issue one of the described instruments to
which a stamp has not been affixed, punishable under § 7 by a
fine of not more than $100, and not exceeding $200 under § 10,
in the case of a bill or note. And under § 13, where there is
intent to evade the law, the offense is punished "by a fine not
exceeding $50, or by imprisonment not exceeding six months, or
both, in the discretion of the court." The unstamped instrument is
made inadmissible in evidence (§§ 7, 14), is not allowed
to be recorded (§ 15), and by the provision of § 13 is to
"be deemed invalid and of no effect."
Page 219 U. S. 265
But these penalties were provided in order to induce the payment
of the tax, and not as a substitute for payment. It cannot be
supposed that Congress intended, by penalizing delinquency, to
deprive the government of any suitable means of enforcing the
collection of revenue. In large transactions, as in the case at
bar, the fine which could be imposed would be much less than the
tax, and no reason is suggested why the government should forego
the collection of that which, under the statute, is its due.
Punishment by imprisonment, under § 13, is imposed only where
it can be shown that there was an "intent to evade the provisions"
of the act, and while this remedy is appropriate in such a case,
and is for the obvious purpose of discouraging evasion, it is
without application where, for any other reason, the tax has not
been paid, and thereby the government has lost its revenue. The
provision invalidating the instrument is likewise punitive. The
object was not primarily to deprive instruments of effect, but to
insure the discharge of the obligation to pay, and that obligation
would still be undischarged, even though, by reason of the
nonpayment, the instrument was deemed invalid.
It is insisted, however, that there is no provision for the
removal of the ban from the instrument in case the tax were
collected by suit, and that this shows the intention to bar the
latter remedy, for it is said that the purpose could not be to
destroy the effect of the instrument and at the same time to compel
the payment of the tax.
This argument proceeds upon a misconception of the statute. The
provision under which unstamped instruments are made invalid is
found in § 13, which also provides a method of validation on
making the prescribed payment. The portion of this section which
imposes the penalty is of comprehensive scope, and must be deemed
to include a conveyance of land, as well as the other instruments
within the purview of the statute. While the
Page 219 U. S. 266
language of the first proviso, in its original form,
specifically referred to "bonds, debentures, or certificates of
stock or of indebtedness," this was broadened by the amendment made
by the Act of March 2, 1901, chapter 806, 31 Stat. 941, so as to
embrace "any instrument, document, or paper of any kind or
description whatsoever mentioned in Schedule A of this Act." This
amendment, in extending an existing opportunity so as expressly to
include all instruments mentioned in the schedule, must be
construed to refer not only to instruments subsequently executed,
but to those as well which had been previously made or issued. No
different construction is required by the language of the statute,
the obvious policy of which was both to supply a measure of relief
from the punitive provision and at the same time to encourage the
payment of the tax. The provisos of the section as amended are as
follows:
"
Provided, That hereafter, in all cases where the party
has not affixed to any instrument the stamp required by law thereon
at the time of issuing, selling, or transferring the said bonds,
debentures, or certificates of stock or of indebtedness, or any
instrument, document, or paper of any kind or description
whatsoever mentioned in Schedule A of this Act, and he or they, or
any party having an interest therein, shall be subsequently
desirous of affixing such stamp to said instrument, or, if said
instrument be lost, to a copy thereof, he or they shall appear
before the collector of internal revenue of the proper district,
who shall, upon the payment of the price of the proper stamp
required by law, and of a penalty of ten dollars, and, where the
whole amount of the tax denoted by the stamp required shall exceed
the sum of fifty dollars, on payment also of interest at the rate
of six percentum, on said tax from the day on which such stamp
ought to have been affixed, affix the proper stamp to such bond,
debenture, certificate of stock or of indebtedness, or copy, or
instrument,
Page 219 U. S. 267
document, or paper of any kind or description whatsoever
mentioned in Schedule A of this Act, and note upon the margin
thereof the date of his so doing, and the fact that such penalty
has been paid, and the same shall thereupon be deemed and held to
be as valid, to all intents and purposes, as if stamped when made
or issued:
And provided further, That where it shall
appear to said collector, upon oath or otherwise, to his
satisfaction, that any such instrument has not been duly stamped at
the time of making or issuing the same, by reason of accident,
mistake, inadvertence, or urgent necessity, and without any willful
design to defraud the United States of the stamp, or to evade or
delay the payment thereof, then and in such case, if such
instrument, or, if the original be lost, a copy thereof, duly
certified by the officer having charge of any records in which such
original is required to be recorded, or otherwise duly proven to
the satisfaction of the collector, shall, within twelve calendar
months after the making or issuing thereof, be brought to the said
collector of internal revenue to be stamped, and the stamp tax
chargeable thereon shall be paid, it shall be lawful for the said
collector to remit the penalty aforesaid and to cause such
instrument to be duly stamped. And when the original instrument, or
a certified or duly proven copy thereof, as aforesaid, duly stamped
so as to entitle the same to be recorded, shall be presented to the
clerk, register, recorder, or other officer having charge of the
original record, it shall be lawful for such officer, upon the
payment of the fee legally chargeable for the recording thereof, to
make a new record thereof, or to note upon the original record the
fact that the error or omission in the stamping of said original
instrument has been corrected pursuant to law, and the original
instrument or such certified copy, or the record thereof, may be
used in all courts and places in the same manner and with like
effect as if the instrument had been originally
Page 219 U. S. 268
stamped:
And provided further, That in all cases where
the party has not affixed the stamp required by law upon any such
instrument issued, registered, sold, or transferred at a time when
and at a place where no collection district was established, it
shall be lawful for him or them, or any party having an interest
therein, to affix the proper stamp thereto, or, if the original be
lost, to a copy thereof. But no right acquired in good faith before
the stamping of such instrument, or copy thereof, as herein
provided, if such record be required by law, shall in any manner be
affected by such stamping as aforesaid."
Neither the punitive provision nor the means thus afforded to
escape it through a voluntary payment, indicate an intention to
deprive the government of the right to compel payment by action.
The party may pay the tax in the first instance, or he may
subsequently make payment as the statute provides, and thus render
the instrument effective. If he is unwilling or fails to avail
himself of this opportunity, why should he be heard to insist that,
because the instrument is made invalid he should escape payment of
what is due the government? In the face of the express requirement
of the statute that he shall pay the tax, there is no basis for the
contention that from the provisions affecting the validity of the
instrument should be implied an intent to prohibit the enforcement
or the tax by suit.
Further, as the obvious purpose is to validate the instrument in
case the prescribed payment is made, the satisfaction of a judgment
for the recovery of the tax must be deemed the equivalent of the
payment of the price of the stamps under the provisos above quoted.
Section 3216 of the Revised Statutes provides:
"All judgments and moneys recovered or received for taxes,
costs, forfeitures, and penalties shall be paid to collectors as
internal taxes are required to be paid."
If the case is not one within the second proviso permitting the
remission
Page 219 U. S. 269
of the penalty, the additional payment of ten dollars will be
required to meet the conditions of the first proviso. But, so far
as the tax is concerned, the person liable therefor, on satisfying
the judgment, will have the same right to have the instrument
stamped by the collector as though he had paid the taxes to the
officer without suit. Such a case would present no administrative
difficulty in accomplishing the intent of the statute.
We have examined the other statutory provisions to which our
attention has been called in support of the defense, and we find
none of controlling significance, or which, taken separately or
together, detract from the force of the provision imposing the
obligation to pay the tax, and deprive the government of the remedy
here sought.
We are also of opinion that the statute itself provides that
payment may be enforced by action. Section 31 makes "all
administrative, special, or stamp provisions of law, including the
laws in relation to the assessment of taxes not heretofore
specifically repealed," applicable to the act. Within
"administrative" provisions must be included those which relate to
the collection of the taxes imposed. For the administration of the
statute may well be taken to embrace all appropriate measures for
its enforcement, and there is no substantial reason for assigning
to the phrase which is used in the section quoted a narrower
interpretation. It therefore comprehends the authority conferred by
§ 3213 of the Revised Statutes in the following words:
". . . And taxes may be sued for and recovered in the name of
the United States, in any proper form of action, before any circuit
or District Court of the United States for the district within
which the liability to such tax is incurred, or where the party
from whom such tax is due resides at the time of the commencement
of the said action."
This provision authorizing suit, with the sanction of the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue (Rev.Stat. § 3214),
Page 219 U. S. 270
was originally enacted in 1866 (Act of July 13, 1866, c. 184, 14
Stat. p. 111), as an amendment of the Internal Revenue Act of June
30, 1864, c. 173 (13 Stat. 239), and included within its scope the
stamp taxes then in force. It must be deemed applicable also to the
taxes imposed by the Act of 1898.
Upon these grounds, we conclude that the United States was
entitled to maintain this action, and that the demurrer should have
been overruled. The judgment is therefore
Reversed.
*
"SEC. 6. That on and after the first day of July, eighteen
hundred and ninety-eight, there shall be levied, collected, and
paid, for and in respect of the several bonds, debentures, or
certificates of stock and of indebtedness, and other documents,
instruments, matters, and things mentioned and described in
schedule A of this Act, or for or in respect of the vellum,
parchment, or paper upon which such instruments, matters, or
things, or any of them, shall be written or printed by any person
or persons or party who shall make, sign, or issue the same, or for
whose use or benefit the same shall be made, signed, or issued, the
several taxes or sums of money set down in figures against the
same, respectively, or otherwise specified or set forth in the said
schedule. . . ."
"SEC. 7. That if any person or persons shall make, sign, or
issue, or cause to be made, signed, or issued, any instrument,
document, or paper of any kind or description whatsoever, without
the same being duly stamped for denoting the tax hereby imposed
thereon, or without having thereupon an adhesive stamp to denote
said tax, such person or persons shall be deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall pay a fine of not
more than one hundred dollars at the discretion of the court, and
such instrument, document, or paper, as aforesaid, shall not be
competent evidence in any court."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 13. That any person or persons who shall register, issue,
sell, or transfer, or who shall cause to be issued, registered,
sold, or transferred, any instrument, document, or paper of any
kind or description whatsoever mentioned in schedule A of this Act,
without the same being duly stamped, or having thereupon an
adhesive stamp for denoting the tax chargeable thereon, and
cancelled in the manner required by law, with intent to evade the
provisions of this Act, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor,
and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine not
exceeding fifty dollars, or by imprisonment not exceeding six
months, or both, in the discretion of the court, and such
instrument, document, or paper, not being stamped according to law,
shall be deemed invalid and of no effect:
Provided, That
hereafter, in all cases where the party has not affixed to any
instrument the stamp required by law thereon at the time of
issuing, selling, or transferring the said bonds, debentures, or
certificates of stock or of indebtedness, and he or they, or any
party having an interest therein, shall be subsequently desirous of
affixing such stamp to said instrument, or, if said instrument be
lost, to a copy thereof, he or they shall appear before the
collector of internal revenue of the proper district, who shall,
upon the payment of the price of the proper stamp required by law,
and of a penalty of ten dollars, and where the whole amount of the
tax denoted by the stamp required shall exceed the sum of fifty
dollars, on payment also of interest at the rate of six percentum
on said tax from the day on which such stamp ought to have been
affixed, affix the proper stamp to such bond, debenture,
certificate of stock or of indebtedness, or copy, and note upon the
margin thereof the date of his so doing, and the fact that such
penalty has been paid, and the same shall thereupon be deemed and
held to be as valid, to all intents and purposes, as if stamped
when made or issued:
And provided further, That where it
shall appear to said collector, upon oath or otherwise, to his
satisfaction, that any such instrument has not been duly stamped at
the time of making or issuing the same, by reason of accident,
mistake, inadvertence, or urgent necessity, and without any willful
design to defraud the United States af the stamp, or to evade or
delay the payment thereof, then and in such case, if such
instrument, or, if the original be lost, a copy thereof, duly
certified by the officer having charge of any records in which such
original is required to be recorded, or otherwise duly proven to
the satisfaction of the collector, shall, within twelve calendar
months after the making or issuing thereof, be brought to the said
collector of internal revenue to be stamped, and the stamp tax
chargeable thereon shall be paid, it shall be lawful for the said
collector to remit the penalty aforesaid, and to cause such
instrument to be duly stamped. And when the original instrument, or
a certified or duly proven copy thereof, as aforesaid, duly stamped
so as to entitle the same to be recorded, shall be presented to the
clerk, register, recorder, or other officer having charge of the
original record, it shall be lawful for such officer, upon the
payment of the fee legally chargeable for the recording thereof, to
make a new record thereof, or to note upon the original record the
fact that the error or omission in the stamping of said original
instrument has been corrected pursuant to law, and the original
instrument or such certified copy, or the record thereof, may be
used in all courts and places in the same manner and with like
effect as if the instrument had been originally stamped:
And
provided further, That in all cases where the party has not
affixed the stamp required by law upon any such instrument issued,
registered, sold, or transferred at a time when and at a place
where no collection district was established, it shall be lawful
for him or them, or any party having an interest therein, to affix
the proper stamp thereto, or, if the original be lost, to a copy
thereof. But no right acquired in good faith before the stamping of
such instrument, or copy thereof, as herein provided, if such
record be required by law, shall in any manner be affected by such
stamping as aforesaid."
The foregoing § (§ 13) was amended by the Act of March
2, 1901, chapter 806 (31 Stat. 941), by striking out the words
"schedule A of" in the fourth line of the section as above quoted,
and also by inserting in the first proviso after the words "bonds,
debentures, or certificates of stock or of indebtedness," the words
"or any instrument, document, or paper of any kind or description
whatsoever, mentioned in schedule A of this Act."
"SEC. 14. That hereafter no instrument, paper, or document
required by law to be stamped, which has been signed or issued
without being duly stamped, or with a deficient stamp, nor any copy
thereof, shall be recorded or admitted, or used as evidence in any
court until a legal stamp or stamps, denoting the amount of tax,
shall have been affixed thereto, or prescribed by law. . . ."
"SEC. 15. That it shall not be lawful to record or register any
instrument, paper, or document required by law to be stamped unless
a stamp or stamps of the proper amount shall have been affixed and
cancelled in the manner prescribed by law, and the record,
registry, or transfer of any such instruments upon which the proper
stamp or stamps aforesaid shall not have been affixed and cancelled
as aforesaid shall not be used in evidence."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 25. That the Commissioner of Internal Revenue shall cause
to be prepared for the payment of the taxes prescribed in this Act
suitable stamps denoting the tax on the document, article, or thing
to which the same may be affixed, and he is authorized to prescribe
such method for the cancellation of said stamps, as substitute for
or in addition to the method provided in this Act, as he may deem
expedient. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, with the approval
of the Secretary of the Treasury, is authorized to procure any of
the stamps provided for in this Act by contract whenever such
stamps cannot be speedily prepared by the Bureau of Engraving and
Printing; but this authority shall expire on the first day of July,
eighteen hundred and ninety-nine. That the adhesive stamps used in
the payment of the tax levied in schedules A and B of this Act
shall be furnished for sale by the several collectors of internal
revenue, who shall sell and deliver them at their face value to all
persons applying for the same, except officers or employees of the
internal-revenue service:
Provided, That such collectors
may sell and deliver such stamps in quantities of not less than one
hundred dollars of face value, with a discount of one percentum,
except as otherwise provided in this Act. And he may, with the
approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, make all needful rules
and regulations for the proper enforcement of this Act."
"
SCHEDULE A"
"
Stamp Taxes"
"
* * * *"
"Conveyance: Deed, instrument, or writing, whereby any lands,
tenements, or other realty sold shall be granted, assigned,
transferred, or otherwise conveyed to, or vested in, the purchaser
or purchasers, or any other person or persons, by his, her, or
their direction, when the consideration or value exceeds one
hundred dollars and does not exceed five hundred dollars, fifty
cents, and for each additional five hundred dollars or fractional
part thereof in excess of five hundred dollars, fifty cents."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 31. That all administrative, special, or stamp provisions
of law, including the laws in relation to the assessment of taxes,
not heretofore specifically repealed, are hereby made applicable to
this Act."