1. The tax imposed by § 602 1/2 of the Revenue Act of 1934
upon the "first domestic processing" of designated oils applies to
the first domestic processing after the effective date of the Act,
even though there was domestic processing prior to that date. P.
320 U. S.
424.
2. The 1936 amendment of § 602 1/2 does not require a
different result. P.
320 U. S.
427.
3. This construction of § 602 1/2 is in accord with its
legislative history and its general purpose to promote the
interests of domestic oil producers. P.
320 U. S.
429.
130 F.2d 913 affirmed.
Certiorari, 319 U.S. 778, to review the affirmance of judgments,
37 F. Supp. 794, dismissing the complaints in two suits for the
recovery of taxes.
Page 320 U. S. 423
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two writs of certiorari were granted to review a judgment
of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit denying
recovery to the petitioner of taxes paid to the United States
aggregating $2,532,643.16. The issues in the two cases are
identical. Each case covers a separate period of time.
The suits were brought in the United States District of Delaware
under Judicial Code § 24(20). Recovery was there also denied.
We granted certiorari because of a conflict of decisions. 319 U.S.
778.
See Durkee Famous Foods, Inc. v. Harrison, 136 F.2d
303;
Loose-Wiles Biscuit Co. v. Rasquin, 95 F.2d 438;
Tasty Baking Co. v. United States, 38 F. Supp. 844;
Cincinnati Soap Co. v. United States, 22 F. Supp. 141.
The issue is narrow, and may be simply stated. In the Revenue
Act of 1934, § 602 1/2, 48 Stat. 763, an excise tax was levied
on the "first domestic processing" of certain foreign oils --
coconut, sesame, palm,
et cetera. [
Footnote 1] When the
Page 320 U. S. 424
Act was approved on May 10, 1934, this petitioner had on hand
large quantities of these oils which had gone through one or more
domestic processings. After the effective date, all of this oil was
subjected to further processing, upon which petitioner paid a tax,
recovery of which is here sought. The taxpayer urges that the
taxable event fixed by the statute is the first domestic
processing, without regard to when it occurs. The phrase is defined
by the statute as "the first use in the United States . . . of the
article" taxed. Since the effective date of the Act is May 10,
1934, the taxpayer concludes that, if the first use in this country
occurs after that date, it is a taxable event, and, if it occurs
before May 10, 1934, it is not a taxable event. The Government
reads the Act differently. To it, the Act imposes a tax on the
first domestic processing after the effective date of the Act,
regardless of the prior domestic processing. The litigants agree
that the section is not retroactive. The facts are not in
dispute.
The section in question does not make clear whether the "first
domestic processing" is the first which takes place in this country
or the first after the passage of the Act. The definition in §
602 1/2 does not aid the interpretation. "First use" may be first
after importation or first after the Act. The likelihood that tax
statutes look to the future, and not the past, indicates that
processings after the effective date were meant to be taxed.
Cf. Hassett v. Welch, 303 U. S. 303;
Shwab v. Doyle, 258 U. S. 529.
This likelihood does not depend upon any taxation of a past event,
but upon the reasonable probability that Congress would wish to tax
future processings. The insertion of the qualifying adjective
"first" was probably due to a desire to avoid accumulative taxes on
successive
Page 320 U. S. 425
processings. Treas.Reg. 48, Art. 1, as amended by T.D. 4695.
An examination of the general Congressional purposes intended to
be served by the Act will further aid in the resolution of this
dispute. This tax has been held by this Court to be a valid
exercise of the taxing power.
Cincinnati Soap Co. v. United
States, 301 U. S. 308,
301 U. S. 312.
But the legislative history cannot be read without reaching a
conviction that the advantages which would result to American
vegetable oil producers from the heavy tax on oils not produced in
the continental United States played a leading part in promoting
the legislation. [
Footnote 2]
Id., 301 U. S. 320.
The tax yielded substantial revenues, which were remitted to the
Philippine Government, since the Philippines were the source of
many of the products taxed.
A desire for equality among taxpayers is to be attributed to
Congress, rather than the reverse. Yet the omission by Congress of
a tax upon the first processing which followed the enactment of the
Act would give users of the oils who had treated them prior to the
Act a definite advantage over their competitors who had not done
so. The advantage would be slight if Congress had supposed the tax
would finally be borne by the consumer, rather than by the
manufacturer, but here, the purpose was to restrict the domestic
market for imported oils, and Congress probably would not intend
that manufacturers should find a market for the foreign oil at a
price enhanced by the full amount of the tax. Again, if
petitioner's argument is sound, the Congressional purpose to create
an advantage for domestic oil producers would be frustrated to the
extent that tax free foreign oils on hand could continue to compete
with the domestic produce. A major purpose of the legislation would
be temporarily defeated in part by freeing from the tax oil which
had received one domestic processing.
Page 320 U. S. 426
The Treasury promptly interpreted the Act to apply to all first
processings after its effective date. Treas.Reg. 48, Art. 1(1),
August 17, 1934. This action of the Treasury, with its wide
experience in tax matters, has weight in our conclusion,
notwithstanding the prompt challenge of the taxpayer and others
similarly situated.
United States v. American Trucking
Assns., 310 U. S. 534,
310 U. S.
549.
In reaching the conclusion that the "first domestic processing"
is the first after the passage of the Act, we do not disregard some
circumstances vigorously pressed upon us by petitioner which give
color to the opposite interpretation. The taxpayer points to the
fact that the phrase "first domestic processing" was used earlier
in § 9(a) of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of May 12, 1933,
48 Stat. 31, 35, which levied a similar processing tax upon the
first domestic processing of the basic agricultural commodities --
wheat, cotton, corn, hogs, rice, tobacco and milk -- and that. at
the time this tax was placed on foreign oils, a regulation of the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue was in effect which interpreted
the phrase as being the first domestic processing whenever it
occurred, and therefore as relieving a processor of the tax when
the first domestic processing took place prior to the effective
date of the A.A.A. Treas.Reg. 81, as amended, T.D. 4403, November
2, 1933.
The answer to this argument arises from the difference between
the two acts as to the taxation of floor stocks. Under the A.A.A.,
commodities which had undergone their first domestic processing
prior to the passage of the Act bore a corresponding floor stock
tax. 48 Stat. 40, § 16. A subsequent processing tax would have
created double taxation and an inequality among taxpayers which the
compensating floor stock tax had obviated. The exemption of
subsequent domestic processing by the Treasury Regulations was thus
compelled by the Act itself.
Cf. Treas.Reg. 82, Floor
Stocks under the A.A.A. No such provision
Page 320 U. S. 427
appears in the Revenue Act of 1934 or any later legislation
supplementing § 602 1/2. Phrases without definite legal
connotation which are alike take their meaning from their context.
The "first domestic processing" of the A.A.A. naturally refers to
the first in point of time to avoid double taxation, while the same
words in this Act just as naturally refer to the first after the
Act to avoid inequalities. Double taxation does not arise from the
later Act.
For a further point, petitioner calls attention to the action of
Congress in amending § 602 1/2 in the Revenue Act of 1936, 49
Stat. 1742, by adding fatty acids and salts derived from the taxed
oils with the proviso that the tax should not apply:
"
(1) with respect to any fatty acid or salt resulting
from
a previous first domestic processing taxed under this
section or upon which an import tax has been paid under
section 601(c)(8) of the Revenue Act of 1932, as amended, or
(2) with respect to any combination or mixture by reason
of its containing an oil, fatty acid, or salt with respect to which
there has been
a previous first domestic processing or
upon which an import tax has been paid under such section
601(c)(8)."
This amendment came from the Conference Committee without
comment. H.Rep. No. 3068, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 17. Its origin
was in the Senate. The purpose of the exemption was said to be "to
avoid double taxation." S.Rep. No. 2156, 74th Cong., 2d Sess.,
Title V. Petitioner's contention is that
"the Conference Committee wrote into the amendment two different
clauses, one of them . . . creating an exemption of mixtures and
combinations conditioned upon a 'previous first domestic
processing,' and the other creating an exemption of fatty acids and
salts conditioned upon their 'resulting from a previous first
domestic processing
taxed under this section.'"
Therefore, Congress is said by petitioner
Page 320 U. S. 428
to have recognized two classes of first domestic processings --
one taxed under the section, the other not taxed. In the absence of
some expression of such intention, however, beyond the words
quoted, we are not convinced that the difference in language was
meant to evidence a difference in meaning.
Cf. Haggar Co. v.
Helvering, 308 U. S. 389,
308 U. S. 400.
The careful provision requiring payments of applicable import taxes
under all conditions tends to the contrary conclusion. We think the
purpose of the 1936 amendment was to add new taxable articles, and
to make plain the purpose to free them from double taxation. If the
articles are not exempt from the 3-cent excise because of foreign
processing, we see no reason to exempt them because of domestic
processing prior to the Act.
Finally, we consider petitioner's argument that House Report
(Conference) No. 1385, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 30, manifests the
intention of Congress to tax only the "first domestic processing"
which occurs after the Act when there has been no previous domestic
processing prior to the Act. This report deals with the Revenue Act
of 1934. The Senate amended the section of the House bill which
taxed foreign oils by the addition of other foreign vegetable oils
and marine oils. The Conference accepted the amendment in regard to
the marine oils, but changed
"the point of imposition of the tax in the case of imported
whale oil, imported fish oil, and imported marine animal oil to the
importation, instead of the first domestic processing."
These were all the marine oils in the Senate amendment.
By the Conference amendment, these marine oils were placed in an
entirely different section, 602, of the Revenue Act of 1934. It
amended 601(c), Revenue Act of 1932, which imposed an excise tax on
the domestic producer or the importer of lubricating oils, grain
extracts, petroleum,
Page 320 U. S. 429
coal, lumber,
et cetera, by adding these marine oils to
the taxable articles. [
Footnote
3] Regulations treated marine oils upon the same basis as the
other taxed imports in the section. [
Footnote 4] Consequently, marine oils imported prior to
the Revenue Act of 1934 escaped taxation when eventually processed.
This inequality of treatment, under the Government theory, between
importations of vegetable oils and importations of marine oils
indicates, says the petitioner, that the Government is wrong, and
Congress intended to tax processing only when a prior domestic
processing, either before or after the Act, had not occurred. The
Conference change, says petitioner,
"was merely a shift of the tax on these particular oils from the
first processing after the entry (the point of imposition under
Section 602 1/2) to the entry itself."
But, though Congress may have been willing to defer protection
of American producers from marine oils, it nowhere indicated that
handlers of other oils already processed should obtain a trade
advantage through exemption.
We are confronted with an ambiguity of phrase which yields to
the intent of Congress as disclosed by the legislative history. In
such circumstances, we follow the general
Page 320 U. S. 430
purpose of the Act to promote the interests of domestic oil
producers through an excise tax.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
48 Stat. 763, Sec. 602 1/2. Processing Tax on Certain Oils.
"(a) There is hereby imposed upon the first domestic processing
of coconut oil, sesame oil, palm oil, palm kernal oil, or sunflower
oil, or of any combination or mixture containing a substantial
quantity of any one or more of such oils with respect to any of
which oils there has been no previous first domestic processing, a
tax of 3 cents per pound, to be paid by the processor. . . . For
the purposes of this section, the term 'first domestic processing'
means the first use in the United States, in the manufacture or
production of an article intended for sale, of the article with
respect to which the tax is imposed, but does not include the use
of palm oil in the manufacture of tin plate."
[
Footnote 2]
78 Cong.Rec. 2785, 2793, 2930, 3007, 6311-6316, 6380-6395, 7246,
7976.
[
Footnote 3]
48 Stat. 762, Sec. 602. Tax on Certain Oils.
"Section 601(c) of the Revenue Act of 1932 is amended by adding
at the end thereof a new paragraph as follows:"
"
* * * *"
"(8) Whale oil (except sperm oil), fish oil (except cod oil,
cod-liver oil, and halibut-liver oil), marine animal oil, and any
combination or mixture containing a substantial quantity of any one
or more of such oils, 3 cents per pound. The tax on the articles
described in this paragraph shall apply only with respect to the
importation of such articles after the date of the enactment of the
Revenue Act of 1934, and shall not be subject to the provisions of
subsection (b)(4) of this section (prohibiting drawback) or section
629 (relating to expiration of taxes)."
[
Footnote 4]
Treasury Department Bureau of Customs Circular Letter, No. 1202,
May 11, 1934; T.D. 45751; T.D. 47448.