In the provision of the Act of 1916 (§ 1, Tit. I, Part II,
39 Stat. 756) adding the sum of 5% to delinquent income tax and
"interest" at the rate of 1% per month upon the tax from the time
it became due, the interest is not penal, but compensatory, and its
allowance, on a claim by the government against a bankrupt, is
therefore consistent with § 57-j of the Bankruptcy Act.
New York v. Jersawit, 263 U. S. 493,
distinguished. P
266 U. S.
307.
290 F. 947 reversed.
Certiorari to a judgment of the circuit court of appeals
affirming an order of the district court which, in turn, affirmed
an order of a referee in bankruptcy allowing the government's claim
for an income tax, but fixing the interest thereon at 6% per annum,
the legal rate in the state, in lieu of the 1% per month demanded
by the government.
Page 266 U. S. 306
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
The collector of internal revenue of the Second District of New
York filed a claim against the trustee in bankruptcy of J. Menist
Company, Inc., Edward H. Childs, in the sum of $2,421.75, plus 5%
penalty and 1% interest per month thereon until paid. The claim was
for an additional income tax for the year 1917.
The justification for the claim, as stated by the circuit court
of appeals, is: "Act of October 3, 1917 (40 Stat. 300, § 212),
making § 14a of the Act of September 8, 1916 (39 Stat. 756),
applicable to taxes under the 1917 act." By § 14a of Title I,
part 2 of the Act of 1916, it is provided that:
". . . To any sum or sums due and
Page 266 U. S. 307
unpaid after the fifteenth day of June in any year, or after one
hundred and five days from the date on which the return of income
is required to be made by the taxpayer, and after ten days' notice
and demand thereof by the collector, there shall be added the sum
of five percentum on the amount of tax unpaid and interest at the
rate of one percentum per month upon said tax from the time the
same becomes due."
As an element for consideration in connection with § 14a is
§ 57-j of the Bankruptcy Act. It reads as follows:
"Debts owing to the United States, a state, a county, a
district, or a municipality as a penalty or forfeiture shall not be
allowed except for the amount of pecuniary loss sustained by the
act, transaction, or proceeding out of which the penalty or
forfeiture arose, with reasonable and actual costs occasioned
thereby and such interest as may have accrued thereon according to
law."
The government withdrew its claim for 5% penalty, but urged its
claim for 1% interest.
The referee, however, decided that the cited provisions
"constituted a statutory characterization or definition, . . . "
not only as to the 5% penalty, but also in respect to the 1%
interest per month, and relieved the estate in bankruptcy from its
payment. He allowed the claim for $2,421.75, with interest at 6%
per annum to the date of payment.
The order was affirmed by the district court. This was affirmed
by the circuit court of appeals, and its action is now here for
review.
At the outset we are confronted with the difference between
penalty and interest. A penalty is a means of punishment; interest
a means of compensation. Bouvier defines it to be "a consideration
paid for the use of money or forbearance in demanding it when due."
This Court has declined to give it peremptory definition, and
construing statutes considered that it could
"safely decline
Page 266 U. S. 308
either to limit' the word 'debts' to 'existing dues, or to
extend its meaning so as to embrace all dues of whatever origin and
description."
Lane County v.
Oregon, 7 Wall. 71,
74 U. S. 79.
See also New Jersey v. Anderson, 203 U.
S. 483,
203 U. S. 493.
To what conclusion does like liberty of construction conduct in the
present case?
The imposition of a tax is certainly a function of government,
and creates an obligation, and the power that creates the
obligation can assign the measure of its delinquency -- the
detriment of delay in payment, and § 14a has done so in this
case, and explicitly done so. Five percentum penalty is the cost of
delinquency, and interest upon the amount due at 1% per month --
12% a year. There is no ambiguity in the declaration nor the
distinction made. Against their clearness and completeness §
57-j of the Bankruptcy Act is cited.
The government yields as to the 5% penalty. It resists as to the
1% interest. The circuit court of appeals considered that the 1%
was involved, as well as being in effect penalty and not saved by
its name, though it was imposed by the legislature and within the
legislative power, and notwithstanding that taxes are treated as
debts within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act.
In re
Sherwoods, 210 F. 754, 758;
Kaw Boiler Works v.
Schull, 230 F. 587.
The circuit court of appeals adjudged the tax in the present
case a debt and assigned against it interest at 6%, the court
considering that that interest was compensation for the
delinquency, anything in excess becoming penalty, and within the
prohibition of § 57-j. The court said:
"On the point at bar [1% interest as the price of the delay
being penalty], we are in accord with
In re Ashland, etc.,
229 F. 829, and hold that, there being no evidence of any injury or
damage to the government by the withholding of this tax, except
that which flows from the nonpayment of a just debt, anything in
excess of
Page 266 U. S. 309
the legal rate of interest is to be treated as a penalty, and
not allowed."
We are unable to concur. It makes the rate of interest that of a
particular locality, differing with the locality -- in New York, as
said by the government, 6%; in the Middle West, 8%, and on the
Pacific Coast, 10% -- and abridges or controls a federal statute by
a local law or custom, and takes from it uniformity of operation.
Besides, the federal statute is precise, and it is made peremptory
by the distinction between "penalty" and "interest," and if it may
be conceded that the use of the latter word would not save it from
condemnation if it were in effect the former, it cannot be conceded
that 1% per month -- 12% a year -- gives it that illegal effect,
certainly not against legislative declaration that is within the
legislative power, there being no ambiguity to resolve.
To this conclusion
New York v. Jersawit, 263 U.
S. 493, is not antagonistic. There, a statute of New
York was passed on which required "every domestic corporation" to
"annually pay in advance . . . an annual franchise tax" upon its
net income for the year next preceding, and provided that, if the
tax were not paid, the corporation should pay "in addition to the
amount of such tax . . . ten percentum of such amount, plus one
percentum for each month the tax . . . remains unpaid." This
liability the lower federal courts pronounced a penalty, and not to
be allowed. In that conclusion this Court concurred, and decided
that, being penalty, it was disallowed by Bankruptcy Act, §
57-j. And this not only because the one percentum was "more than
the value of the use of the money," but because it was added by the
statute to the 10% to make a single sum, and "must be treated as
part of one corpus, and must fall with that."
The tax in this case is one on income -- a burden imposed for
the support of the government. Interest is put upon it and so
denominated, distinguished from the 5% as penalty,
Page 266 U. S. 310
clearly intended to compensate the delay in payment of the tax
the detriment of its nonpayment, to be continued during the time of
its nonpayment -- compensation, not punishment.
Judgment reversed.