Court Opinion

ID: 9420210
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 22:53:23.06414+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:22:23.197981
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Douglas
dissenting in part.
The business involved in the Lichter case relates to profits realized during the fiscal year ending December 31, 1942. As to the amounts owed under these contracts, petitioners are entitled to a hearing in the District Court. For Congress did not require that class of contracts to be taken to the Tax Court. I think a close reading of the statutes, contained in Appendix III to the Court’s opinion, will bear me out.
*803Section 403 (e) (1) relates to orders of the Board and provides that they may be reviewed by the Tax Court. And § 403 (c) (1) provides that in the absence of the filing of such a petition with the Tax Court, the orders of the Board “shall be final and conclusive.”
But we are concerned here not with orders of the Board but with an order of the Secretary. Section 403 (e) (2) provides that those orders, too, may be taken to the Tax Court. But § 403 (e) (2) by its terms makes inapplicable those provisions of the 1943 amendment which are not made applicable as of April 28,1942, or to the fiscal years ending before July 1, 1943. Thus, § 403 (c) (6) limits subsection (c) “to all contracts and subcontracts, to the extent of amounts received or accrued thereunder in any fiscal year ending after June 30, 1943, whether such contracts or subcontracts were made on, prior to, or after the date of the enactment of the Revenue Act of 1943.” Hence it is clear that the provision of § 403 (c) (1) which makes the orders of the Board final and conclusive in absence of the filing of a petition with the Tax Court is not applicable here. Orders of the Secretary, at least as respects 1942 business, are therefore treated differently than orders of the Board. I conclude that the purpose was to leave contracts and contractors who fell in that category with the right of access to the courts which they had enjoyed prior to the Revenue Act of 1943. In those cases jurisdiction of the Tax Court may be invoked at the option of the petitioners.
Macauley v. Waterman S. S. Corp., 327 U. S. 540, is not opposed to this conclusion. For that case involved an order of the Board. Wade v. Stimson, 331 U. S. 793, involved an order of the Secretary and related to 1942 business: But the question in issue here was not raised there, as it is not in Alexander Wool Combing Co. v. United States, decided this day.