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Historical Perspectives on the Federal Income Tax
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3. WHAT DOES THE COURT MEAN WHEN IT STATES THAT THE INCOME TAX
IS IN TAE NATURE OF AN EXCISE TAX?
An excise tax is a tax levied on the manufacture, sale, or consumption
of a commodity or any of various taxes on privileges often assessed in
the form of a license or fee. In other words, it is a tax on doing something
to property or on the privilege of holding some property or doing some
act, not a tax on the property itself. A sales tax is a clear example of
an excise tax. The tax is not on the property directly, but rather it is
a tax on the transaction.
When a court refers to an income tax as being in the nature of an excise,
it is merely stating that the tax is not on the property itself, but rather,
it is a fee for the privilege of receiving gain
from the property. The tax is based upon the amount of the gain, not on
the value of the property.
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