From April 1919 to April 1926, a taxpayer paid excise taxes on
certain sales and deducted the tax from income before calculation
of its income tax. In July 1926, it filed a claim for refund of the
excise taxes paid between 1922 and 1926 (refund of those paid
earlier being barred by the statute of limitations), brought suit,
obtained judgment, and received settlement in 1935. The
Commissioner treated the refund as income for 1935 and assessed
additional income and excess profits taxes. The taxpayer paid the
deficiency so assessed and sued for a refund, contending that the
refund of the excise taxes was not income, but that, if it were so
considered, the taxpayer should be permitted, as against the
additional tax caused by its inclusion, to recoup the amount of the
barred excise taxes which it had paid between 1919 and 1922.
Held:
1. The refund of the excise taxes was properly assessed as
income for 1935. P.
329 U. S.
298.
2. Refund of the excise taxes improperly paid between 1919 and
1922 being barred by the statute of limitations, they may not be
recouped in this proceeding against the income tax liability for
1935. Pp.
329 U. S.
299-303.
Page 329 U. S. 297
(a) Recoupment is in the nature of a defense arising out of some
feature of the transaction upon which a plaintiff's action is
grounded. It does not allow one transaction to be offset against
another, but only permits a transaction which is made the subject
of a suit by a plaintiff to be examined in all its aspects, and
judgment to be rendered that does justice in view of the one
transaction as a whole. P.
329 U. S. 299.
(b)
Bull v. United States, 295 U.
S. 247;
Stone v. White, 301 U.
S. 532, distinguished. P.
329 U. S.
300.
(c) To give the doctrine of recoupment the breadth here claimed
would seriously undermine the statute of limitations in tax
matters. P.
329 U. S. 302.
152 F.2d 521, reversed.
A taxpayer sued to recover income and excess profits taxes
assessed and paid on a refund in 1935 of excise taxes erroneously
paid between 1922 and 1926, claiming that the refund was not income
and that, if it were, he should be permitted to recoup other excise
taxes erroneously paid between 1919 and 1922. The District Court
gave judgment for the taxpayer.
57 F. Supp.
731. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 152 F.2d 521. This
Court granted certiorari. 327 U.S. 774.
Reversed, p.
303.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case represents an effort, thus far successful, to obtain
advantage by way of recoupment of a claim for tax refund long since
barred by the statute of limitations. The
Page 329 U. S. 298
facts of this singular situation are not in dispute. From April,
1919, to April, 1926, the Electric Storage Battery Company paid
excise taxes on the sale of storage batteries in the belief, shared
by the Government, that such sales were subject to tax. In July of
1926, the company asserted otherwise, and filed a refund claim. It
asked refund only of the part of the taxes which it had paid
between 1922 and 1926. Refund of the taxes paid earlier which the
company now seeks to recoup were then barred by the statute of
limitations, and no claim ever has been filed for their refund and
no action ever was begun for their recovery. Suit was brought,
however, against the Collector for refund of the taxes paid after
July, 1922; judgment therefor was obtained in the district court,
Electric Storage Battery Co. v. McCaughn, 52 F.2d
205; 54 F.2d 814, and affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals,
63 F.2d 715. The Government finally settled by refund of
$1,395,515.35, of which $825,151.52 represented tax and the balance
interest.
During the years that the refunded excise tax was being
collected, the taxpayer deducted it from income before calculation
of its income tax, thereby deriving substantial benefits. The
Commissioner therefore treated the refund as income for 1935, the
year in which it was received, and because of it assessed
additional income and excess profits taxes which with interest
thereon totaled 229,805.34. The taxpayer paid the deficiency, filed
claim for refund, and, after it was rejected sued the Collector. It
contended that the refund from the Government was not income to the
taxpayer, but that, if it were so considered, taxpayer should be
permitted, as against the additional tax caused by its inclusion,
to recoup the amount of the barred excise taxes which it had paid
between 1919 and 1922. Both courts below correctly held that the
refund was properly assessed as income.
57 F.
Supp. 731; 152 F.2d 521.
Cf. Security Flour Mills Co. v.
Commissioner, 321 U. S. 281;
Freihofer Baking Co. v. Commissioner, 151 F.2d 383. Both
have
Page 329 U. S. 299
held, however, that the income tax liability for 1935 should be
extinguished by recoupment of the 1919 to 1922 excise taxes. The
gravity of this holding to the administration of the tax laws led
us to grant certiorari.
Rothensies v. Electric Storage Battery
Co., 327 U.S. 774.
It is not contended that there is any statutory warrant for
allowing barred tax refund claims by way of recoupment or
otherwise. [
Footnote 1]
Authority for it is said to be found in case law, and taxpayer
relies chiefly on two decisions of this Court,
Bull v. United
States, 295 U. S. 247, and
Stone v. White, 301 U. S. 532. The
essence of the doctrine of recoupment is stated in the
Bull case; "Recoupment is in the nature of a defense
arising out of some feature of the transaction upon which the
plaintiff's action is grounded."
295 U. S. 295 U.S.
247,
295 U. S. 262.
It has never been thought to allow one transaction to be offset
against another, but only to permit a transaction which is made
subject of suit by a plaintiff to be examined in all its aspects,
and judgment to be rendered that does justice in view of the one
transaction as a whole.
The application in this general principle to concrete cases in
both of the cited decisions is instructive as to the limited scope
given to recoupment in tax litigation. In both cases, a single
transaction constituted the taxable event claimed upon and the one
considered in recoupment.
Page 329 U. S. 300
In both, the single transaction or taxable event had been
subjected to two taxes on inconsistent legal theories, and what was
mistakenly paid was recouped against what was correctly due. In
Bull v. United States, the one taxable event was receipt
by executors of a sum of money. An effort was made to tax it twice
-- once under the Income Tax Act as income to the estate after
decedent's death and once under the Estate Tax Act as part of
decedent's gross estate. This Court held that the amount of the tax
collected on a wrong theory should be allowed in recoupment against
an assessment under the correct theory. [
Footnote 2] In
Stone v. White, likewise, both
the claim and recoupment involved a single taxable event, which was
receipt by an estate of income for a period. The trustees had paid
the income tax on it but this Court held it was taxable to the
beneficiary. Assessment against the beneficiary had meanwhile
become barred. Then the trustees sued for a refund, which would
inure to the beneficiary. The Court treated the transaction as a
whole and allowed recoupment of the tax which the beneficiary
should have paid against the tax the Government should not have
collected from the trustees. Whatever may have been said indicating
a broader scope to the doctrine of recoupment, these facts are the
only ones in which it has been applied by this Court in tax
cases.
The Government has argued that allowance of the claim of
recoupment involved here would expand the holding in the
Bull case. The Circuit Court of Appeals agreed that, in
the
Bull case, "[t]he main claim and recoupment claim were
more closely connected than they are here."
Electric Storage
Battery Co. v. Rothensies, 152 F.2d 521, 524. But the court
nevertheless allowed the claim because it
Page 329 U. S. 301
considered that this Court had introduced the doctrine of
recoupment into tax law, and that it was "based on concepts of
fairness." 152 F.2d 521, 524. It said it saw no reason for narrowly
construing the requirement that both claims originate in the same
transaction. We think this misapprehends the limitations on the
doctrine of recoupment as applied to tax law, and it leads us to
state more fully reasons for declining to expand the doctrine
beyond the facts of the cited cases.
It probably would be all but intolerable -- at least Congress
has regarded it as ill-advised -- to have an income tax system
under which there never would come a day of final settlement and
which required both the taxpayer and the Government to stand ready
forever and a day to produce vouchers, prove events, establish
values, and recall details of all that goes into an income tax
contest. Hence, a statute of limitation is an almost indispensable
element of fairness, as well as of practical administration of an
income tax policy.
We have had recent occasion to point out the reason and the
character of such limitation statutes.
"Statutes of limitation, like the equitable doctrine of laches,
in their conclusive effects are designed to promote justice by
preventing surprises through the revival of claims that have been
allowed to slumber until evidence has been lost, memories have
faded, and witnesses have disappeared. The theory is that, even if
one has a just claim, it is unjust not to put the adversary on
notice to defend within the period of limitation, and that the
right to be free of stale claims in time comes to prevail over the
right to prosecute them."
Order of Railroad Telegraphers v. Railway Express
Agency, 321 U. S. 342,
321 U. S.
348-349.
"They are, by definition, arbitrary, and their operation does
not discriminate between the just and the unjust claim, or the
voidable [avoidable] and unavoidable delay. They have come into
Page 329 U. S. 302
the law not through the judicial process, but through
legislation."
Chase Securities Corp. v. Donaldson, 325 U.
S. 304,
325 U. S.
314.
As statutes of limitation are applied in the field of taxation,
the taxpayer sometimes gets advantages and at other times the
Government gets them. Both hardships to the taxpayers and losses to
the revenues may be pointed out. [
Footnote 3] They tempt the equity-minded judge to seek for
ways of relief if individual cases.
But if we should approve a doctrine of recoupment of the breadth
here applied, we would seriously undermine the statute of
limitations in tax matters. In many, if not most, cases of asserted
deficiency, the items which occasion it relate to past years closed
by statute at least as closely as does the item involved here.
Cf. Hall v. United States, 43 F. Supp. 130. The same is
true of items which form the basis of refund claims. Every
assessment of deficiency and each claim for refund would invite a
search of the taxpayer's entire tax history for items to recoup.
This case provides evidence of the extent to which this would go.
When this suit was brought in 1943, the claim pleaded as a
recoupment was for taxes collected over twenty years before, and
for over sixteen years barred by the statute.
Page 329 U. S. 303
That claims dead so long can be resurrected under this doctrine
is enough to show its menace to the statute of limitations -- at
least as to those taxpayers whose affairs, by accident or design,
take such shape that they can avail themselves of recoupment
remedies. Moreover, we have held that the Tax Court has no
jurisdiction to consider recoupment.
Gooch Milling and Elevator
Co. v. Commissioner, 320 U. S. 418.
Hence, the availability of the remedy would depend on diverting the
litigation to the district courts.
We cannot approve such encroachments on the policy of the
statute out of consideration for a taxpayer who for many years
failed to file or prosecute its refund claim. If there are to be
exceptions to the statute of limitations, it is for Congress,
rather than for the Courts, to create and limit them.
The judgment below is
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY is of the opinion, in which MR. JUSTICE BLACK
and MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE join, that the judgment below should be
affirmed. He believes that the claims for refund of the illegal
assessments exacted from 1919 to 1922 arise out of the same subject
matter as was involved in the Government's demand for additional
taxes for 1935, thereby making applicable the rule of
Bull v.
United States, 295 U. S. 247.
[
Footnote 1]
Indeed, the applicable provisions of the Revenue Act of 1928
seem to direct a result opposite to that asked by respondent.
Section 608 provides that
"A refund of any portion of an internal revenue tax (or any
interest, penalty, additional amount, or addition to such tax) made
after the enactment of this Act, shall be considered erroneous --
(a) if made after the expiration of the period of limitation for
filing claim therefor, unless within such period claim was filed. .
. ."
Section 609(b) provides, "A credit of an overpayment in respect
of any tax shall be void if a refund of such overpayment would be
considered erroneous under section 608." 45 Stat. 874, 875.
And
cf. McEachern v. Rose, 302 U. S. 56.
[
Footnote 2]
But the Court emphasized that refund of the incorrect tax was
not barred by the statute at the time the Government proceeded for
collection of the correct tax.
[
Footnote 3]
In American Light & Traction Co. v. Harrison, 142
F.2d 639, the court did not allow recoupment to the Government.
But, judiciously, it said,
"Although here a hardship on the Government results from the
taxpayer's inconsistency, the correlative provisions of this same
statute will, in the converse of the instant situation, work an
equal hardship on the taxpayer."
142 F.2d 639, 643. Whether or not the statute, §§ 608
and 609 of the Revenue Act of 1928, be taken to compel the
conclusion we reach in this case, the court's recognition that both
parties to taxation are affected impartially, though perhaps
harshly, by policy of repose has application here. It may easily be
overlooked, when the unfairness of the Government's retaining
incorrectly collected monies of respondent is stressed, that the
statute of limitations is primarily an instrument of fairness.