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Historical Perspectives on the Federal Income Tax
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6. IS TITLE 26 OF THE UNITED STATES CODE (INTERNAL REVENUE) LAW?
This question stems from the fact that some titles of the United States
Code (U.S.C.) have been enacted into what is called "positive law" and
others have not. Title 26, Internal Revenue, has not been enacted into
positive law.
The U.S.C. is divided into fifty titles. Of these fifty titles, twenty
and part of another have been enacted into positive law. If a title has
been so enacted, the text of that title constitutes legal evidence of the
laws in that title. If the title has not been so enacted, the title is
only prima facie evidence of the actual law. The courts could require proof
of the statutes underlying the title, which are the positive law when the
title has not been enacted into positive law.
The Office of Law Revision Counsel, which has the responsibility for
preparing titles for enactment into positive law, states that titles are
chosen for enactment into positive law on two bases. Some are chosen because
of congressional mandate that the laws be codified. Otherwise, the Office
of Law Revision Counsel prefers to select titles which cover areas of minimal
legislative activity. The tax laws do not meet either one of these criteria
The underlying statute, and in the case of the tax laws the positive
law, for the tax code is the Internal Revenue Code of 198630 as amended.
Title 26 of the U.S.C. Is an editorial codification of this act prepared
and published under the supervision of the House Judiciary Committee, pursuant
to statute31 The
CRS-10
courts, in short, have the discretion to recognize the IRC as the applicable
law, or require proof of the underlying Statute.32
29 Id.
30 Pub. L. 99-514,100 Stat. 2086, 99th Cong., 2nd Sess. (1986).
31 See, 1 U.S.C. 1 202.
32 Young v. IRS, 596 F.2d 141 at 149 (N.D. Ind. 1984).
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