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Historical Perspectives on the Federal Income Tax
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13. DOES THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE HAVE AUTHORITY TO OPERATE
OUTSIDE OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (SEAT OF GOVERNMENT ACT QUESTIONS)?
Questions concerning the authority of the Internal Revenue Service to
operate outside of the District of Columbia generally are premised upon
an incorrect reading of the requirements of the Seat of Government Act.73
The Act provides:
All offices attached to the seat of government shall be exercised in
the District of Columbia, and not elsewhere, except as otherwise expressly
provided by law.74
This Act was first enacted in 1790 for the purpose of centralizing the
national government.75 The Act did not (and does not) require that
a department or agency only have authority within the seat of government,
but rather that the department or agency be physically located at the seat
of government. The same
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Congress which passed the Act set up districts for the collection of
tariffs and taxes located outside the seat of government.76
The Department of the Treasury is an office attached to the seat of
government.77 The IRS is a part of the Department of the Treasury.78
Therefore the IRS must have its office in the District of Columbia unless
otherwise expressly provided by law. The IRS does have its national headquarters
within the District of Columbia.
There are several provisions of law which expressly authorize the IRS
to operate outside of the District of Columbia. Two of the more general
such authorizations are found in sections 7621 and 7803 of the Internal
Revenue Code. The first of these provides for the establishment by the
President of internal revenue districts throughout the States for the purpose
of administering the tax laws.79 In the second, the Secretary of
the Treasury is authorized to employ such number of persons as the Secretary
deems proper for the administration and enforcement of the tax laws and
to designate and determine the posts of duty of such persons inside and
outside of the District of Columbia.80
73 4 U.S.C. § 71--78.
74 4 U.S.C § 72.
75 Ch. 28, 1 Stat 130, lst Cong., 2nd Sess. (July 16, 1790). The Act
established Philadelphia as the temporary seat of government until the
first Monday in December of 1800 when the seat of government would become
the District of Columbia.
76 See, Ch. 35, 1 Stat. 145, lst Cong., 2nd Seas. (August 4,1790).
77 See, 31 U.S.C. § 301(a).
78 See, 26 U.S.C § 7802.
79 26 U.S.C. § 7621.
80 26 US.C. § 7803.
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