Under § 1019 of the Revenue Act of 1924, which
provides:
"Upon the allowance of a credit or refund of any internal
revenue tax erroneously or illegally assessed or collected, . . .
interest shall be allowed and paid on the amount of such credit or
refund at the rate of 6 percentum per annum from the date such tax
. . . was paid to the date of the allowance of the refund, or in
case of a credit, to the due date of the amount against which the
credit is taken . . . ,"
held:
1. Interest runs to the date on which the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue signs the authorization to the Disbursing Clerk of
the Treasury, directing him to pay the refund.
Girard Trust Co.
v. United States, 270 U. S. 163. P.
271 U. S. 348.
2. Where an excessive income tax is paid in installments,
interest does not begin running upon payments in excess of
installments due until the payments exceed the total tax due.
Revenue Act, 1918, §§ 250(a)(b), 252. P.
271 U. S.
351.
3. The provision of § 1019 that, "in case of a credit,"
interest is to be allowed "to the due date of the amount against
which the credit is taken" relates to a credit properly allowed of
a
Page 271 U. S. 349
"tax erroneously or illegally assessed or collected," and has no
application to excess payments of quarterly installments which the
government was entitled to treat as an advance payment of later
installments under the provisions of § 250. P.
271 U. S.
353.
55 App.D.C. 376 reversed.
Certiorari to a judgment of the court of appeals of the District
of Columbia which affirmed a judgment granting the writ of mandamus
to compel the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to compute and allow
interest on income tax refunds.
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1920, Margaret Murphy, testatrix of respondents, paid without
protest to the Collector of Internal Revenue at Philadelphia the
sum of $88,956.92 as income tax for the year 1919. On May 18, 1923,
a claim was filed with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue for a
refund of $35,054.85 as an overpayment of her taxes for 1919. On
May 19, 1924, the Commissioner signed a "schedule of overassessment
and allowance of abatement, credit and refund" in the amount
claimed, and gave certain instructions to the Collector with
respect to it. On a statement from the Collector that the amount
claimed was subject to refund, the Commissioner, on August 12,
1924, signed an authorization to the Disbursing Clerk of the
Treasury to pay to respondents the refund demanded, with interest
computed from November 18, 1923 (six months after the filing of the
claim for refund, as provided by § 1324 of the Revenue Act of
1921, which he deemed applicable)
Page 271 U. S. 350
to May 19, 1924, the date on which the Commissioner signed the
schedule of overassessment.
Respondents protested the amount of interest allowed and
demanded that it be computed on the excess of each quarterly
payment from the date when it was made, in 1920, to August 12,
1924, the date upon which the Commissioner signed the authorization
to the disbursing clerk. Upon the refusal of the Commissioner to
allow this claim, respondents petitioned the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia for a writ of mandamus to compel him to
compute and allow the interest demanded. The Commissioner, the
petitioner here, filed an answer, to which the respondents
demurred. The Supreme Court of the District sustained the demurrer
and granted the writ, and, upon appeal, the Court of Appeals
sustained the judgment, modifying it in only one particular, not
important to the decision in this case. This Court granted
certiorari. 269 U.S. 545.
The government having expressly waived the point made below that
mandamus will not lie, only two questions are presented for
consideration here. One is the date from which, the other is the
date to which, interest allowed on the refund should be computed.
Since the certiorari was allowed, the second question has been
decided by this Court in
Girard Trust Co. v. United
States, 270 U. S. 163. In
that case, we held that the date of allowance of the refund, and
therefore the date to which interest should be computed under
§ 1019 of the Revenue Act of 1924, c. 234, 43 Stat. 253, 346,
is the date on which the Commissioner signed the authorization to
the Disbursing Clerk of the Treasury directing him to pay the
refund. The court below therefore correctly held that interest
should be computed to that date, which was August 12, 1924, and
that, as this date was subsequent to the enactment of § 1019
of the Revenue Act of 1924, the allowance of interest must be in
accordance with that
Page 271 U. S. 351
section, and not § 1324 of the Act of 1921, which had been
repealed. Hence, we are not concerned with the ruling of the
Commissioner, applying the 1921 Act, that interest ran only from
six months after filing of the claim for refund, because it was
based on his erroneous conclusion as to the date when the refund
was "allowed."
The question remaining for decision is from what date interest
on the refund is to be computed, under § 1019 of the Act of
1924, which provides:
"Upon the allowance of a credit or refund of any internal
revenue tax erroneously or illegally assessed or collected, . . .
interest shall be allowed and paid on the amount of such credit or
refund at the rate of 6 percentum per annum from the date such tax
. . . was paid to the date of the allowance of the refund, or in
case of a credit, to the due date of the amount against which the
credit is taken. . . ."
The respondents contend that, as each of the quarterly
installments paid by the taxpayer was in excess of one-fourth of
the proper amount of the tax for the year, interest allowed on the
refund should have been computed, as the court below held, on the
excess of each quarterly payment, from the date on which it was
paid. But the government argues that such an excess quarterly
payment is not a "tax erroneously or illegally assessed or
collected" within the meaning of § 1019 if, when it is made,
any part of the proper tax for the year has not been paid; that
such overpayment becomes a "tax erroneously or illegally assessed
or collected" only when the amount paid, added to the previous
quarterly payments, exceeds the whole tax due for the year. In
support of this position, it relies on §§ 250 and 252 of
the Revenue Act of 1918, c. 18, 40 Stat. 1057, in force when the
tax was paid. Section 250(a) provides (p. 1082):
"That . . . the tax shall be paid in four installments,
Page 271 U. S. 352
each consisting of one-fourth of the total amount of the tax. .
. ."
"The tax may, at the option of the taxpayer, be paid in a single
payment instead of in installments. . . ."
Subdivision (b) of § 250 provides (p. 1083):
"As soon as practicable after the return is filed, the
Commissioner shall examine it. If it then appears that the correct
amount of the tax is greater or less than that shown in the return,
the installments shall be recomputed. If the amount already paid
exceeds that which should have been paid on the basis of the
installments as recomputed, the excess so paid shall be credited
against the subsequent installments, and if the amount already paid
exceeds the correct amount of the tax, the excess shall be credited
or refunded to the taxpayer in accordance with the provisions of
§ 252."
Section 252 provides (p. 1085):
"That if, upon examination of any return of income made pursuant
to this act . . . , it appears that an amount of income . . . tax
has been paid in excess of that properly due, then, notwithstanding
the provisions of § 3228 of the Revised Statutes, the amount
of the excess shall be credited against any income, war-profits, or
excess profits taxes, or installment thereof, then due from the
taxpayer under any other return, and any balance of such excess
shall be immediately refunded to the taxpayer. . . ."
By § 250(a), the payment of the whole tax in a single
payment is expressly made optional with the taxpayer, and any
payment in excess of the correct amount of a quarterly installment
is by § 250(a) to be treated as a payment on account of the
whole tax. It is clear that a taxpayer who, anticipating the
required quarterly installments, pays the entire tax in one payment
is not entitled to interest or a discount on the anticipated
installments as upon a "tax erroneously or illegally assessed or
collected" under § 1019 of the Act of 1924.
Page 271 U. S. 353
We think that, under any reasonable interpretation of §
1019, the payment of a lesser amount which is in excess of the
required quarterly installments must stand on the same footing.
Under §§ 250 and 252 of the Act of 1918, there is no
provision for a refund to the taxpayer of any excess payment of a
quarterly installment when the whole tax for the year has not been
paid. Read together, these sections show that the mere overpayment
of an installment is treated as a payment on account of the tax
which is assessed for that year, and is not a "tax erroneously or
illegally assessed or collected" within the meaning of the refund
provisions of § 1019 of the Act of 1924, and so is not subject
to its provisions regulating the allowance of interest. Payments in
excess of the total amount of the tax, then and subsequently made,
are subject to refund or credit under the provisions of §
1019, and interest must be allowed on them at the rate of 6 percent
from the date of payment.
The provision of § 1019 that, "in case of a credit,"
interest is to be allowed "to the due date of the amount against
which the credit is taken" relates to a credit properly allowed of
a "tax erroneously or illegally assessed or collected," and has no
application to excess payments of quarterly installments which the
government was entitled to treat as an advance payment of later
installments under the provisions of § 250.
The judgment below was erroneous insofar as it allowed interest
on payments made prior to September 27, 1920, on which date the
total amount of the installments paid first exceeded the total
amount of tax due by the sum of $12,815.62. Interest should have
been allowed on that amount from that date, and on the full amount
of the fourth installment from December 13, 1920, when it was
paid.
Judgment reversed with costs to the respondent.