1. A contract for the sale of material to the United States
contained the following provision:
"Prices bid herein include any federal tax heretofore imposed by
the Congress which is applicable to the material on this bid. Any
sales tax, duties, imposts, revenues, excise or other taxes which
may hereafter (the date set for the opening of this bid) be imposed
by the Congress and made applicable to the material on this bid
will be charged to the Government and entered on invoices as a
separate item."
Held, that the United States was not entitled to
recover from the contractor processing taxes imposed by the
Agricultural Adjustment Act, which taxes
Page 323 U. S. 107
were "applicable" to the material within the meaning of the
contract, but which, because subsequently adjudged invalid, were
never collected from the contractor.
United States v. Kansas
Flour Mills Corp., 314 U. S. 212,
distinguished. P.
323 U. S.
110.
2. Generally the United States as a contractor is to be treated
as other contractors, and a contract which it draws is not to be
judicially revised because it may have been improvident. P.
323 U. S. 111.
101 Ct.Cls. 85 affirmed.
Certiorari, 322 U.S. 725, to review a judgment denying an offset
to a claim against the United States.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the Court of Claims to recover an
overpayment of income taxes made by respondent. The United States
conceded that the amount claimed was owed. But the Comptroller
General, pursuant to his power under § 305 of the Budget and
Accounting Act of 1921, 42 Stat. 20, 31 U.S.C. § 71, settled
and adjusted the claim by offsetting against it an amount which he
concluded respondent owed the United States under a contract. Since
the latter claim equaled the overassessment on the income taxes,
the Comptroller General refused to authorize a refund to
respondent. This suit followed. The Court of Claims denied the
offset and entered judgment for respondent in the amount claimed,
with interest. 53 F. Supp. 717. The case is here on a petition for
a writ of certiorari [
Footnote
1] which we
Page 323 U. S. 108
granted because of an asserted conflict of the decision below
with
United States v. American Packing & Provision
Co., 122 F.2d 445 and
United States v. Kansas Flour
Corp., 314 U. S. 212.
The contract under which the claim against respondent was
asserted was made in November, 1935. Respondent agreed to supply
rice to the Navy Department at the bid prices specified in the
contract. A typical price provision listed 290,000 pounds of rice
at a unit price (per pound) of .046�, or a total price of
$13,340. The contract contained the following provision:
"Prices bid herein include any federal tax heretofore imposed by
the Congress which is applicable to the material on this bid. Any
sales tax, duties, imposts, revenues, excise or other taxes which
may hereafter [the date set for the opening of this bid] be imposed
by the Congress and made applicable to the material on this bid
will be charged to the Government and entered on invoices as a
separate item."
Respondent made the required deliveries to the United States and
received the full price specified in the contract. Respondent was
the first domestic processor of the rice, and accordingly paid the
processing taxes imposed by the Agricultural Adjustment Act, 48
Stat. 31, 7 U.S.C. §§ 609, 611, from April 1, 1935, until
September 20, 1935. Before paying the processing tax on the rice
processed for the month of October, 1935, respondent obtained an
injunction against its collection. The tax was held invalid in
United States v. Butler, 297 U. S. 1, decided
January 6, 1936. Consequently, respondent never paid the processing
taxes on the rice supplied to the United States under the November,
1935, contract. [
Footnote
2]
Page 323 U. S. 109
The tax was a federal tax "applicable" to the rice within the
meaning of the contract.
United States v. Glenn L. Martin
Co., 308 U. S. 62,
308 U. S. 65.
Its amount was known, and the vendor was responsible by regulation
for its payment.
United States v. Kansas Flour Mills Corp.,
supra, p.
314 U. S. 214.
It is therefore arguable that the vendor fixed the bid price to
provide a margin of profit after payment of those taxes for which
it was responsible, that the price was designed to offset
pro
tanto the amount of the taxes, and that, if they were not
paid, the price should be reduced. That is the position taken by
the United States, and it relies on the following statement in
United States v. Kansas Flour Mills Corp., supra, pp.
314 U. S.
216-217:
"In the contracts in question, the Government did not buy for
resale. Unless it received the tax, it suffered a definite
disadvantage. Its purpose, as shown by the contracts, was to
balance the tax element in the price paid with the tax collected.
The Government, which could not pass on the tax on resale, was thus
protected not against a fall in the market price, but against a
loss in its tax revenues."
But we were there only answering the argument that, since the
vendor did not undertake to pay the tax, the rule in private
contracts should be followed, and no readjustment of the price made
where the tax was not paid. The difference between the cases was
that, in the latter situation, the vendee presumably passed on the
tax, while the United States did not, since it did not buy for
resale. The vital fact in
United States v. Kansas Flour Mills
Corp. was the provision in the contract for an up or down
revision of the price in
Page 323 U. S. 110
case of a change in the processing tax by Congress. It provided
that, if a processing tax was thereafter "imposed or changed by the
Congress," the contract price was to be "increased or decreased
accordingly." It was held that the decision in
United States v.
Butler and its recognition in the Revenue Act of 1936 amounted
to a downward change calling for a decrease in the contract price.
314 U.S. p.
314 U. S. 217.
There is no such provision in the present contract. The clause that
the bid prices includes "any Federal tax heretofore imposed by the
Congress which is applicable to the material" must be read in the
context of this particular contract. When it is so read, a result
different from that reached in
United States v. Kansas Flour
Mills Corp. is indicated.
The present contract provides for payment by the United States
of sales and other taxes thereafter imposed by Congress and made
applicable to the rice. But, while it makes that provision for
upward readjustment of the price, it provides for no downward
revision in case of subsequent changes in any tax. That silence
gains added significance here in view of the fact that, at the time
the contract was made, the payment of these processing taxes was
being hotly contested, and the litigation resulting in
United
States v. Butler, supra, was well under way. The inference is
strong, therefore, that the parties intended the price to be firm
except as it might be increased through the imposition of new
taxes. The provision for the inclusion of applicable taxes provides
a formula for determining the price to be billed. Since the tax in
question could not, by the terms of the contract, be billed to the
United States, there was no overcharge. If the contractor lawfully
avoids payment of a tax, he reduces his cost and increases his
profit. But, in absence of a provision which authorizes it, the
reduction of cost is hardly the basis of a refund to the United
States. As the Court of Claims points out, it is hard to see how
the vendor could be required
Page 323 U. S. 111
to pay the United States any savings which it made as a result
of reductions in tariff duties. Yet the difference between them and
other taxes under this contract is not apparent. Although there
will be exceptions, in general, the United States, as a contractor,
must be treated as other contractors under analogous situations.
When problems of the interpretation of its contracts arise, the law
of contracts governs.
Hollerbach v. United States,
233 U. S. 165,
233 U. S.
171-172;
United States v. Bethlehem Steel
Corp., 315 U. S. 289,
315 U. S.
298-299. We will treat it like any other contractor, and
not revise the contract which it draws on the ground that a more
prudent one might have been made.
United States v. American
Surety Co., 322 U. S. 96.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK dissents.
[
Footnote 1]
See Act of February 13, 1925, § 3(b), 43 Stat.
939, amended by the Act of May 22, 1939, 53 Stat. 752, 28 U.S.C.
§ 288(b).
[
Footnote 2]
Respondent did, however, pay an unjust enrichment tax of
$72,072.30 on account of being relieved of the processing tax.
See Title III of the Revenue Act of 1936, 49 Stat. 1648,
1734. It was computed and assessed upon the basis of inclusion of
units involved in this suit. If those units had been excluded, the
unjust enrichment tax would have been reduced by $1,706.59. If
respondent is required to reduce its price by the amount of the
unpaid processing tax, it is not subject to the unjust enrichment
tax on these transactions.
See United States v. Kansas Flour
Mills Corp., supra, p.
314 U. S. 216,
note 6. The United States concedes that, if it prevails, the
respondent is entitled to recover $1,706.59.