
A QUESTION ABOUT ADMIRALTY AND SOME OBSERVATIONS OF OUR SITUATION
Larry Becraft
breach of the customs and navigation laws, a claim of the
United States for internal revenue taxes on the alcohol,
being a non-maritime claim, cannot be set up in the libel;
and to defer the presentation of such claim until after the
final decree adjudicating the right to the property, is
therefore not dilatory conduct. P. 533.
2. The basic tax imposed upon distilled spirits is not a
penalty; it is imposed irrespective of the legality of their
origin; the lien attaches when the spirits as such come into
existence, continues until the tax is paid, and is valid
against all transferees, without assessment, distraint, or
other administrative proceedings. P. 533.
3. One who claims that alcohol, admittedly not imported, is not
subject to tax, must prove payment of the tax. P. 533.
4. The United States, by seeking a forfeiture of distilled
spirits for violation of the customs and navigation laws, is
not estopped, through election of remedies, from claiming the
tax imposed upon the spirits by the internal revenue laws. P.
534.
5. An agreement by the United States, in a proceeding by libel
to forfeit distilled spirits, for a judicial sale of the
spirits "free and clear of all claims of any kind or
character," and transfer of all existing liens from property
to proceeds, does not waive a lien on the proceeds for
internal revenue taxes. P. 534.
6. The Circuit Court of Appeals, sitting in admiralty in a
proceeding to forfeit distilled spirits under the customs and
navigation laws, having sold the spirits free of liens and
transferred existing
Page 531
liens to the proceeds of sale, has jurisdiction to entertain
a petition of the Government for satisfaction out of such
money in custodia legis of its lien for internal revenue
taxes on the spirits. P. 535.
7. Denial of a claim by the United States for payment of
internal revenue taxes on distilled spirits out of the
proceeds of their sale in a proceeding by libel for breach of
the customs and navigation laws, held a final judgment for
the purposes of review in this Court, — cases denying review
of merely administrative proceedings under a decree are
inapplicable.
P. 536.
73 F.2d 1010, reversed.
petition by the United States that moneys in the custody of the
court below, proceeding from a judicial sale of alcohol in a
forfeiture suit, be paid into the Treasury in satisfaction of
internal revenue taxes.
Reed, Assistant Attorney General Morris, and Mr. George F.
Foley were on the brief, for the United States.
Samuel I. Kessler were on the brief, for respondent.
and Coast Guard officials acting together; and the United States
filed, in the federal court for New Jersey, a libel in admiralty
praying forfeiture for violation of the customs and navigation
laws. Rizzo, as claimant, filed an answer. A decree of forfeiture
was entered on the ground that the cargo was carried on a vessel
employed in a trade other than that for which she was licensed.
The Court of Appeals reversed, citing United States v.
Chambers, 291 U.S. 217. While the Government's petition for
Page 532
a rehearing, later denied, was pending, that court ordered, upon
application by Rizzo for sale of the alcohol, that it be sold,
"free and clear of all claims of any kind or character"; that the
proceeds be deposited in the registry; and that they "be
substituted in the place and stead of said 146,157 gallons of
alcohol, and that all further proceedings herein shall be against
said proceeds of sale."
confirming the sale, the court ordered (1) that the alcohol be
delivered to the purchaser free of all government taxes or tax
liens and customs duties; (2) that it "shall be treated by the
United States Government and any of its departments as tax paid,
irrespective of the lack of any stamp or tax certificate affixed
thereto on the respective containers in which said alcohol may be
deposited or contained"; and (3) that the proceeds of sale be
paid into the registry of the court. We denied a writ of
certiorari, sought on the ground that the Circuit Court of
Appeals lacked authority to include the provision regarding taxes
in its order of confirmation. 294 U.S. 709.
Appeals a petition asking that the proceeds of the sale be paid
into the Treasury of the United States in satisfaction of the
lien for taxes due on the alcohol; made proof that the taxes
exceeded the proceeds of the sale; and filed with the clerk
notices of levy and warrant for distraint. The court ruled that
the petition could not be entertained, because the Government had
failed to raise the question of taxes when it filed its libel but
had waited until after denial of certiorari to seek such relief.
Accordingly, the Court directed that the proceeds be paid to the
claimant or his assigns.[fn1] To review this order we granted
certiorari, a misconstruction of the statutes
Page 533
concerning tax liens and a departure from the usual course of
proceedings being charged.
the ground stated by the Court of Appeals. Nor could he well do
so. The claim for taxes, being non-maritime, could not have been
set forth in the libel.
Compare The Steamboat Orleans v.Phoebus, 11 Pet. 175, 182. To defer presenting the claims for
taxes until after the final decree adjudicating the right to the
property was not dilatory conduct. Obviously, there would have
been no occasion to proceed against the property for collection
of the tax if the alcohol had been declared forfeit to the United
States.
is a penalty imposed for violation of the National Prohibition
Act; hence uncollectible, because of the repeal of the Eighteenth
Amendment. United States v. Chambers, 291 U.S. 217. But this
tax is not a penalty. It is the basic tax upon distilled spirits
irrespective of their legal or illegal origin. United States v.
One Ford Coupe, 272 U.S. 321, 328; Various Items of Personal
Property v. United States, 282 U.S. 577, 579. A lien attaches
to alcohol "as soon as it is in existence as such" and continues
until the tax is paid. Rev. Stat. §§ 3248, 3251; Thompson v.
United States, 142 U.S. 471, 474. That lien is valid against
all transferees, without assessment, distraint or other
administrative proceedings. Alkan v. Bean, 1 Fed. Cas. No.
202, p. 418; United States v. Turner, 28 Fed. Cas. No.
16,548, p. 232.
been of domestic manufacture. His answer in the District Court
stated that it was not imported; and there is no showing that it
was. As the alcohol was subject to the tax, the burden rested
upon him to prove payment. Rev. Stat. § 3333, as amended. No
evidence to that effect was introduced. The contrary was
established.
Page 534
from collecting the tax, because it elected to seek forfeiture
for violation of the National Prohibition Act. But the Government
made no such attempt. The libel sought forfeiture on four
grounds. Three of them were for violation of provisions in the
Tariff Act of 1930, June 17, 1930, c. 497, 46 Stat. 590. The
fourth was for violation of the navigation laws. Rev. Stat. §
4377. The District Court decreed forfeiture on the fourth ground,
without passing on the other three. The petition presented to the
Circuit Court of Appeals has no relation to navigation or customs
laws. It states a claim based solely upon the internal revenue
laws. The present proceeding is thus founded on a right distinct
from, and entirely consistent with, the rights theretofore
asserted. Compare United States v. One Ford Coupe, 272 U.S. 321,
327, 333-334. No reference was made in the libel, and no
evidence was introduced in the District Court, with respect to
the tax due upon the domestic production of alcohol. There is no
basis for the contention that the United States is estopped by an
election of remedies. Compare Southern Pacific Co. v. Bogert,
250 U.S. 483, 490-491.
because its counsel agreed, when the terms of sale were framed,
that the proceeds should be answerable only to the causes of
forfeiture set forth in the libel and that any tax lien should be
waived. There was no such agreement. The notice of the "terms and
conditions under which the sale will be conducted" (to which
counsel for the Government is alleged to have consented) recited:
"3. The cargo of alcohol which is being sold is to be sold free
and clear of all claims of any kind or character." The order of
sale had provided that "all further proceedings herein shall be
against said proceeds of sale." Thus it was in the common form
authorized by Admiralty Rule 40, which is interpreted as
transferring all existing liens
Page 535
from property to proceeds. Compare The Lottawanna, 20 Wall.
201, 211, 221; Schuchardt v. Ship Angelique, 19 How. 239,
241. Since counsel did not agree to waive the tax lien on the
proceeds, and since the Court of Appeals made no finding of such
a waiver, we need not consider whether a United States Attorney
had authority to waive the Government's right. Compare Utah v.
United States, 284 U.S. 534, 545-546.
sitting in admiralty lacks jurisdiction to enforce the lien for
taxes. The argument is that collection of internal revenue taxes
must be effected in accordance with prescribed statutory methods;
and that the Act of February 26, 1926, c. 27, § 1115,
44 Stat. 117, and Rev. Stat. § 838 provide specifically for collection by
the Collector of Internal Revenue through proceedings specified.
But compare Rev. Stat. § 3213. The order of the appellate court
confirming the sale deprived the Government of two of the
statutory methods. First, the right to forfeit the alcohol even
after it had been transferred to a bona fide purchaser while in a
container not properly stamped. Act of January 11, 1934, c. 1,
Title II, § 206, 48 Stat. 317. Second, the right to collect the
taxes from the purchaser under the court's order, Rev. Stat. §
3334, as amended by Act of March 1, 1879, c. 125, § 5,
20 Stat. 340. But in ordering sale of the alcohol free of liens, the Court
of Appeals in effect provided, in accord with the common
practice, that existing liens should attach to the proceeds.
Compare Terre Haute & L. Ry. v. Harrison, 96 F. 907, 911.
These being in custodia legis, it was proper to petition that
they be applied towards satisfaction of the tax. Compare
Marshall v. New York, 254 U.S. 380, 384-385; In re Tyler,
149 U.S. 164, 182-183, 187. The practice prevails in admiralty as
in other courts. In Schuchardt v. Ship Angelique, 19 How.
239, 241, where proceeds of the sale of a mortgaged ship had been
paid into the registry,
Page 536
the Court, refusing to entertain a "libel simply to foreclose a
mortgage, or to enforce the payment of a mortgage," said: "As the
fund is in the custody of the admiralty, the application must
necessarily be made to that court by any person setting up an
interest in it. This application by petition is frequently
entertained for proceeds in the registry, in cases where a suit
in the admiralty would be wholly inadmissible." Admiralty
Rule 42; compare The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558, 582-583; The J.E.
Rumbell, 148 U.S. 1, 15. The practice prevails in appellate
courts as well as in courts of original jurisdiction. Compare In
re Antigo Screen Door Co., 123 F. 249, 251-252.
jurisdiction because the order appealed from does no more than
carry out another order not here for review. This is not true.
The United States seeks to enforce against property in the
possession of the Circuit Court of Appeals a right which had not
theretofore been litigated, and which was not barred by earlier
proceedings. If the Government had been a stranger to the
litigation it would have been entitled to intervene; compare
Savannah v. Jesup, 106 U.S. 563, 564-565; Krippendorf v.
Hyde, 110 U.S. 276, 282-283; Gumbel v. Pitkin, 113 U.S. 545,
547-548; 124 U.S. 131; and a denial of intervention would
have been reviewable as a final judgment; compare Central Trust
Co. v. Grant Locomotive Works, 135 U.S. 207, 224-225; Credits
Commutation Co. v. United States, 177 U.S. 311, 315-316;
Clark v. Williard, 292 U.S. 112, 117-119. Its right to have
the new issue adjudicated is not to be denied because it was
already a party to the suit. Compare In the Matters of Howard,
9 Wall. 175, 183. The cases which hold that merely administrative
proceedings under a decree may not be brought here for review
have no application. See Wynkoop, H., C. Co. v. Gaines,
227 U.S. 4. Compare Collins
Page 537
v. Miller, 252 U.S. 364, 370-371; Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.,
Petitioner, 129 U.S. 206.
in the registry after deducting the usual court charges.
Reversed.