delivered the opinion of the court.
These two cases involve appeals by the Treasurer from judgments in favor ojf the taxpayer for refund of excise taxes paid under protest on machinery used to bottle beer and soft drinks. The question here is whether paragraph 27 of § 16 of the Internal Revenue Law (Act No. 85, Laws *917of P. R. 1925, p. 584) required payment of a 10% excise tax on tlie said machinery and the parts therefor. The taxpayer paid a 2% use tax pursuant to' § 16a on the majority of these articles 1 when they were brought into Puerto Rico. In 1942 the Treasurer- took the position that the 10% tax of paragraph 27 applied and demanded payment, which was made under protest, of the additional 8%, penalties and interest.
These articles were all brought here between 1938 and 1943. For the reasons stated in our opinion in Puerto Rico Ilustrado v. Buscaglia, Treas., ante, p. 870, we agree with the district court that the machinery herein was not taxable under paragraph 27 during those yearn.
We think it appropriate to add here, on the question of the administrative practice of the Treasurer, that the parties filed a written stipulation in the instant case to the effect that when these articles were brought into Puerto Rico, the Treasurer had “imposed” thereon only the 2% use tax provided by § 16a, in view of the fact that the “former judgment of the Treasury Department had been that machinery imported prior to July 12, 1941 paid only 2% pursuant to the said Section 16(a) ...”
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
Some of these articles were brought in after repeal of § 16 a.