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Historical Perspectives on the Federal Income Tax
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2. IS THE FEDERAL INCOME TAX A DIRECT OR INDIRECT TAX?
The most direct answer to this question is that, since the ratification
of the
Sixteenth Amendment, it makes no practical difference which classification
one
gives to the income tax. As stated above, the only distinction between
a direct
tax and an indirect tax is that the direct tax must be apportioned.
As discussed
below, the Sixteenth Amendment, without classifying
the income tax, empowers
Congress to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source,
without
apportionment. `
Prior to the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment, the question of
classification of the income tax was central to the determination as to
its constitutionality. In Pollock v. Farmers' Loan and Trust Company,5
the Supreme Court struck down the Income Tax Act of 1894.6 The 1894 Act
imposed a Federal income tax on:
the gains, profits, and income received in the preceding calendar year
by every citizen of the United States ...whether said gains, profits, or
income be derived from any kind of property, rents, interest, dividends,
or salaries, or from any
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profession, trade, employment, or vocation carried on in the United
States or elsewhere...,
After extensive examination of the history of the constitutional provisions
dealing with the Federal taxing power, the Court found that the Constitution
had sought to avoid the levy of a burdening tax on accumulations of property,
real or personal, except as subject to the "regulation of apportionment."
7 The Court concluded that a tax imposed on the rents or income
of real estate was not significantly distinct from a tax on the property
itself and was, therefore, a direct tax within the meaning of the Constitution.8
The Pollock Court did not, however, hold that all income taxes were
direct taxes. Rather, it held that although income taxes are generally
indirect taxes in the nature of excises (subject only to the rule of uniformity),
income taxes on the gains derived from investments in real or personal
property had so substantial an impact on the underlying assets that they
should be viewed as direct taxes falling on the property. In this
respect, the 1894 tax would have been valid to the extent that it was imposed
on "gains, profits, or income ...derived from... salaries, or from any
profession, trade, employment, or vocation..."9 Nonetheless, on rehearing
Pollock, the Court struck down the entire 1894 Act because it believed
that to void only the tax on income derived from investments in real and
personal property and leave the tax burden solely upon wages and other
forms of compensation income would be contrary to the congressional intent.10
Some uncertainty followed in the years after Pollock. The Court held
repeatedly that various taxes imposed by the Congress were indirect in
nature and could be levied without regard to the rule of apportionment.11
The Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified
in 1913, and provides that:
The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from
whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States,
and without regard to any census or enumeration.
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The Congress immediately took advantage of this perceived clarification
of its power and enacted another Federal income tax substantially similar
to the 1894 tax.12 The 1913 tax was imposed on:
gains, profits, and income derived from salaries, wages, or compensation
for personal service of whatever kind and in whatever form paid, or from
professions, vocations, businesses, trade, commerce, or sales, or dealings
in property, whether real or personal, growing out of the ownership or
use of or interest in real or personal property, also from interest, rent,
dividends, securities, or the transaction of any lawful business carried
on for gain or profit, or gains or profits and income derived from any
source whatever, including the income from but not the value of property
acquired by gift, bequest, devises or descent.
In 1916, the Supreme Court examined the new income tax in light of the
Sixteenth Amendment and the other constitutional provisions discussed above
and found that it was constitutional in its entirety. The review of the
1913 income tax came in Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad Company,13
in which a stockholder of the Union Pacific Railroad Company sought to
enjoin the corporation from paying the recently-imposed income tax on the
grounds that the tax was unconstitutional. The Supreme Court, in a decision
written by Chief Justice White, first noted that the Sixteenth Amendment
did not authorize any new type of tax, nor did it repeal or revoke the
tax clauses of Article 1 of the Constitution, quoted above. Direct taxes
were, notwithstanding the advent of the Sixteenth Amendment, still subject
to the rule of apportionment and indirect taxes were still subject to the
rule of uniformity. Rather, the Court found that the Sixteenth Amendment
sought to restrain the Court from viewing an income tax as a direct tax
because of its close effect on the underlying property.
The Court noted that the inherent character of an income tax was that
of an indirect tax, stating:
Moreover in addition the conclusion reached in the Pollock Case did
not in any degree involve the holding that income taxes generically and
necessarily came within the class of direct taxes on property, but on the
contrary recognized the fact that taxation on income was in the nature
an excise entitled to be enforced as such unless and until it was concluded
that to enforce it would amount to accomplishing the result which the requirement
as to apportionment of direct taxes was adopted to prevent, in which case
the duty would arise to disregard form and consider substance alone and
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hence subject the tax to the regulation as to apportionment which otherwise
as an excise would not apply to it.14
The language of the Sixteenth Amendment, the Court found in Bruahaber,
was solely intended to eliminate:
the principle upon which the Pollock Case was decided, that is, of determining
whether a tax on income was direct not by a consideration of the burden
placed on the taxed income upon which it directly operated, but by taking
into view the burden which resulted on the property from which the income
was derived since in express terms the Amendment provides that income taxes,
from whatever source derived, shall not be subject to the regulation of
apportionment.15
3 Act of August
6, 1861, $ 8, 12 Stat. 295.
4 United States
v. Ptasynski, 462 U.S. 74 (1988).
5 157 U.S.
429 (1895), rehearing 158 U.S. 601(1896).
6
28 Stat. 509 (1894).
7 167 U.S. at 681.
8 Id. at 683.
9 28 Stat. 609.
10 168 US. at 637.
11 See, Nicol v. Ames, 173 U.S. 509 (1899)
(tax on certain sales and exchanges of property); Knowlton v. Moore, 178
US 41(1900) (estate tax); and Patton v. Brady, 184 US. 609 (1902) (tax
on manufactured tobacco); Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., 220 US. 108 (1911)
(tax on corporate franchise).
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12 38 Stat.166.
13
240 U.S.1(1916).
14 Id. at 16-17.
15 Id. at 18.
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