A contract with the United States for furnishing a quantity of
garments stipulated that the price payable to the contractor should
be increased to the extent of such subsequently imposed federal
taxes as are
"made applicable directly upon the production, manufacture, or
sale of the supplies covered by this contract and are paid by the
contractor on the articles herein contracted for. . . ."
Held not to obligate the United States in respect to
taxes subsequently imposed under the Agricultural Adjustment Act on
the processing of materials sold to the contractor and used in the
manufacture of the garments, for which taxes the processors were
reimbursed by the contractor pursuant to agreements between them.
P.
312 U. S.
36.
The taxes in question were not "directly" applicable to the
manufacture of the "supplies covered by this contract," nor "paid
by the contractor," within the meaning of the contract.
91 Ct.Cls. 75; 32 F. Supp. 141, reversed.
Certiorari, 311 U.S. 624, to review a judgment against the
United States in a suit upon a contract.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent seeks reimbursement from the United States of the
amounts paid to processors to compensate them for processing taxes
paid on cotton goods sold to respondent. The suit is based on a
contract between respondent and the United States, rather than on
Title
Page 312 U. S. 35
VII of the Revenue Act of 1936, 49 Stat. 1648, 1747, which
authorizes refunds to processors, under certain circumstances, of
processing taxes illegally collected under the Agricultural
Adjustment Act, 48 Stat. 31. The question is whether the "federal
taxes" clause of the contract obligates the United States to make
the reimbursement.
Prior to June 6, 1933, the War Department called for bids on a
contract to furnish a certain kind of mechanic's suit. On June 6,
1933, respondent submitted its bid, and on June 24, 1933, executed
a contract with the United States whereby respondent agreed to
furnish a specified number of the suits at a stated price. The
contract provided, in the "federal taxes" clause, that:
"Prices set forth herein include any Federal Tax heretofore
imposed by the Congress which is applicable to the material
purchased under this contract. If any sales tax, processing tax,
adjustment charge, or other taxes or charges are imposed or changed
by the Congress after the date set for the opening of the bid upon
which this contract is based and made applicable directly upon the
production, manufacture, or sale of the supplies covered by this
contract and are paid by the contractor on the articles or supplies
herein contracted for, then the prices named in this contract will
be increased or decreased accordingly. . . ."
To perform its contract with the United States, respondent
contracted to purchase cotton cloth, thread, and labels from
subcontractors who were liable, as processors, to pay any
processing taxes levied on the articles sold to respondent. At the
time these contracts were made, no taxes were in effect on the
processing of cotton, but, in anticipation of such taxes,
respondent and the subcontractors agreed that respondent would
reimburse them for any taxes they were required to pay on the
processing of goods sold to respondent, the taxes to be billed as a
separate item.
Page 312 U. S. 36
Thereafter, respondent received the goods covered by these
contracts and compensated the subcontractors for the taxes they
were later required to pay on the processing of the cotton. It has
performed its contract with the United States, and now claims that
the quoted provision obligates the United States to pay respondent
the amounts it has paid its subcontractors to compensate them for
the processing taxes they have paid. Because the Comptroller
General rejected its claim, respondent brought this suit in the
Court of Claims and obtained judgment. 32 F. Supp. 141. We granted
certiorari on October 14, 1940, to resolve the uncertainty as to
the correct construction of the "federal taxes" clause which
appears in a large number of government contracts. 311 U.S.
624.
The only question is whether the United States, in the "federal
taxes" clause, has agreed to pay respondent the amount respondent
paid its subcontractors to reimburse them for taxes paid on the
processing of the goods sold to respondent. We hold that it has
not.
We are of opinion that the "federal taxes" clause does not
obligate the United States to reimburse its contractor for taxes
which the latter has borne merely as a matter of contract with its
subcontractors. On the contrary, the fair import of the clause is
that the United States must make reimbursement only for such taxes
as the contractor has paid pursuant to an obligation imposed upon
him by the statute which exacts the tax.
The language of the clause is precise. It provides only for
reimbursement of those taxes which are "made applicable directly
upon the production, manufacture, or sale of the supplies covered
by this contract." The supplies "covered by this contract" are the
mechanics' suits, the completed articles furnished to the United
States. Since the clause further provides in exact language that
the tax must be "directly" applicable, we cannot agree that a tax
on the cloth, thread, and labels is a tax on the
Page 312 U. S. 37
"supplies covered by this contract."
Compare Telescope
Folding Furniture Co. v. United States, Ct.Cls. 31 F. Supp.
780, 784;
United States v. Glenn L. Martin Co.,
308 U. S. 62.
Moreover, the clause stipulates for reimbursement of taxes "paid
by the contractor." It is reasonable to conclude that this phrase
also contemplates payment of taxes to the United States in
consequence of an obligation imposed by statute upon respondent.
For while, in a sense, perhaps, respondent "paid" these processing
taxes, it is more accurate to say that they were "paid" by the
subcontractors, who merely shifted their burden to respondent as a
separate item of the contract price. The clause as a whole
indicates that this was the sense to be attributed to the phrase
quoted.
A contrary construction of the "federal taxes" clause introduces
difficulties not contemplated by the parties. It would force them
to trace the taxes back to the one upon whom the obligation first
rested, whether the subsequent transactions were simple or complex.
For, if it could be said in this case that the processing taxes
were imposed on the supplies covered by the contract and were paid
by the contractor, it would be immaterial how far the contractor
were removed from the original processor if the former could show
that the burden of the tax had been shifted as the processed
articles had changed hands and perhaps form. We can find nothing
which suggests that the parties intended to draft a clause that
would operate in such fashion.
We conclude that the quoted clause does not obligate the United
States to compensate respondent for taxes which were paid by its
subcontractors and were merely shifted to respondent pursuant to
their subcontract. The judgment of the Court of Claims is reversed,
and the cause is remanded with directions to dismiss the
petition.
Reversed.