DocketNumber: Docket No. 1278-67
Citation Numbers: 54 T.C. 402, 1970 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 198
Judges: Withey,Dawson,Tietjens,Tannenwald,Simpson,Sterrett
Filed Date: 3/3/1970
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*198
Motion is made to dismiss petitioner's petition in this Court under
*402 OPINION
The Commissioner has determined deficiencies in the income tax of petitioner for the following fiscal years ended October *403 31 in the following respective amounts: 1960, $ 86,555.92; 1961, $ 58,224.22; 1962, $ 71,054.91.
By his motion to dismiss, respondent has raised the issue of the propriety and legality of petitioner's filing of a petition herein*200 under
On December 12, 1966, respondent issued and served the notice of deficiency herein, having prior to that date made a jeopardy assessment.
On December 24, 1966, the plaintiffs in the State court action and appellees in the appellate court moved the lower court for further proceedings to again appoint a receiver. The lower court set January 5, 1967, for such further hearing, but no such further hearing was at any time held.
On March 13, 1967, the petition was filed herein.
The person who had been appointed receiver by the Dade County court was discharged as receiver on June 25, 1968.
Respondent contends that because the petition herein was filed subsequent to the appointment of a receiver by *202 the County Court, this Court is without jurisdiction and must dismiss the petition.
The issue thus presented has many ramifications, but we find it necessary to decide only the issue whether
*404 The legislative history
*204 There are, of course, many types of receiverships provided for under State and Federal statutes, but as we read
Here, in view of the appellate court reversal of the Order of the County Court appointing a receiver, it is as though the order had never come into existence.
Where a cause is reversed and remanded by the Supreme Court, with no specific direction, it is to be proceeded with in the court below as if the reversed decree had never been made. Having been reversed, such decree is in effect expunged from the record.
To like effect see
Respondent contends, however, largely upon the authority of
Furthermore,
We note also that the complaint filed in the County Court did not allege that petitioner was insolvent and did not pray for a receiver to liquidate its assets, but instead prayed for a receiver to marshall its assets and manage the business of petitioner during the pendency of *406 litigation regarding the issue of its control. Such was the nature of the court's order appointing a receiver. Assuming the validity of such appointment, at least until the date of its reversal, is a receiver exercising such authority, the kind of receiver referred to in
Dawson,
Once the conclusion is reached that there was no valid receiver, I think it is unnecessary to decide, as the majority does, whether this is "the kind of receiver" or "receivership proceeding" contemplated by the provisions of
There is a plausible suggestion that the juxtaposition in the statute of bankruptcy and receivership indicates an intendment to restrict receiverships to such proceedings as arise from insolvency or a desire to avoid threatened insolvency. But the language which was actually used seems to defy such restriction. The difficulty of expressing a meaning for the term which is narrower than its ostensible breadth and yet broad enough to fulfill such an assumed purpose is itself enough to argue against the restriction. It requires but a cursory examination of the subject of receiverships to realize the multitude of variations in proceedings to which the term may be aptly applied. Congress, with this information readily at hand, may be presumed to have used the broad term deliberately. The intention to restrict the application of the section to particular classes of receivership proceedings, such as those related to insolvency or those resembling bankruptcy or those resulting from adversary proceedings, could have been so much more clearly expressed that we are forced to believe that Congress rejected it. This Board of course has no power to adopt a construction*212 at variance with the meaning which the legislature apparently intended.
See and compare
*213
1.
2. See
3.
4. Cf.
1.
(a) Immediate Assessment. -- Upon the adjudication of bankruptcy of any taxpayer in any liquidating proceeding, the filing or (where approval is required by the Bankruptcy Act) the approval of a petition of, or the approval of a petition against, any taxpayer in any other bankruptcy proceeding, or