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Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution

The Sixteenth Amendment (Amendment XVI) to the United States Constitution allows Congress to levy an income tax without apportioning it among the states on the basis of population. It was passed by Congress in 1909 in response to the 1895 Supreme Court case of Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. The Sixteenth Amendment was ratified by the requisite number of states on February 3, 1913, and effectively overruled the Supreme Court's ruling in Pollock.

The Sixteenth Amendment in the National Archives

Prior to the early 20th century, most federal revenue came from tariffs rather than taxes, although Congress had often imposed excise taxes on various goods. The Revenue Act of 1861 had introduced the first federal income tax, but that tax was repealed in 1872. During the late nineteenth century, various groups, including the Populist Party, favored the establishment of a progressive income tax at the federal level. These groups believed that tariffs unfairly taxed the poor, and they favored using the income tax to shift the tax burden onto wealthier individuals. The 1894 Wilson–Gorman Tariff Act contained an income tax provision, but the tax was struck down by the Supreme Court in the case of Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. In its ruling, the Supreme Court did not hold that all federal income taxes were unconstitutional, but rather held that income taxes on rents, dividends, and interest were direct taxes and thus had to be apportioned among the states on the basis of population.

For several years after Pollock, Congress did not attempt to implement another income tax, largely due to concerns that the Supreme Court would strike down any attempt to levy an income tax. In 1909, during the debate over the Payne–Aldrich Tariff Act, Congress proposed the Sixteenth Amendment to the states. Though conservative Republican leaders had initially expected that the amendment would not be ratified, a coalition of Democrats, progressive Republicans, and other groups ensured that the necessary number of states ratified the amendment. Shortly after the amendment was ratified, Congress imposed a federal income tax with the Revenue Act of 1913. The Supreme Court upheld that income tax in the 1916 case of Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., and the federal government has continued to levy an income tax since 1913.

Text

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.

Other Constitutional provisions regarding taxes

Article I, Section 2, Clause 3:

Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers ...[1]

Article I, Section 8, Clause 1:

The Congress shall have Power to lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States.

Article I, Section 9, Clause 4:

No Capitation, or other direct, Tax shall be laid, unless in proportion to the Census or Enumeration herein before directed to be taken.

This clause basically refers to a tax on property, such as a tax based on the value of land,[2] as well as a capitation.

Article I, Section 9, Clause 5:

No Tax or Duty shall be laid on Articles exported from any State.

Income taxes before the Pollock case

Until 1913, customs duties (tariffs) and excise taxes were the primary sources of federal revenue.[3] During the War of 1812, Secretary of the Treasury Alexander J. Dallas made the first public proposal for an income tax, but it was never implemented.[4] The Congress did introduce an income tax to fund the Civil War through the Revenue Act of 1861.[5] It levied a flat tax of three percent on annual income above $800. This act was replaced the following year with the Revenue Act of 1862, which levied a graduated tax of three to five percent on income above $600 and specified a termination of income taxation in 1866. The Civil War income taxes, which expired in 1872, proved to be both highly lucrative and drawing mostly from the more industrialized states, with New York, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts generating about 60 percent of the total revenue that was collected.[6] During the two decades following the expiration of the Civil War income tax, the Greenback movement, the Labor Reform Party, the Populist Party, the Democratic Party and many others called for a graduated income tax.[6]

The Socialist Labor Party advocated a graduated income tax in 1887.[7] The Populist Party "demand[ed] a graduated income tax" in its 1892 platform.[8] The Democratic Party, led by William Jennings Bryan, advocated the income tax law passed in 1894,[9] and proposed an income tax in its 1908 platform.[10] Proponents of the income tax generally believed that high tariff rates exacerbated income inequality, and wanted to use the income tax to shift the burden of funding the government away from working class consumers and to high-earning businessmen.[11]

Before Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., all income taxes had been considered to be indirect taxes imposed without respect to geography, unlike direct taxes, that have to be apportioned among the states according to population.[12][13]

The Pollock case

In 1894, an amendment was attached to the Wilson–Gorman Tariff Act that attempted to impose a federal tax of two percent on incomes over $4,000 (equal to $135,000 in 2022).[14] The federal income tax was strongly favored in the South, and it was moderately supported in the eastern North Central states, but it was strongly opposed in the Far West and the Northeastern States (with the exception of New Jersey).[15] The tax was derided as "un-Democratic, inquisitorial, and wrong in principle".[16]

In Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., the U.S. Supreme Court declared certain taxes on incomes, such as those on property under the 1894 Act, to be unconstitutionally unapportioned direct taxes. The Court reasoned that a tax on income from property should be treated as a tax on "property by reason of its ownership" and so should be required to be apportioned. The reasoning was that taxes on the rents from land, the dividends from stocks, and so forth, burdened the property generating the income in the same way that a tax on "property by reason of its ownership" burdened that property.

After Pollock, while income taxes on wages (as indirect taxes) were still not required to be apportioned by population, taxes on interest, dividends, and rental income were required to be apportioned by population. The Pollock ruling made the source of the income (e.g., property versus labor, etc.) relevant in determining whether the tax imposed on that income was deemed to be "direct" (and thus required to be apportioned among the states according to population) or, alternatively, "indirect" (and thus required only to be imposed with geographical uniformity).[17]

Dissenting in Pollock, Justice John Marshall Harlan stated:

When, therefore, this court adjudges, as it does now adjudge, that Congress cannot impose a duty or tax upon personal property, or upon income arising either from rents of real estate or from personal property, including invested personal property, bonds, stocks, and investments of all kinds, except by apportioning the sum to be so raised among the States according to population, it practically decides that, without an amendment of the Constitution—two-thirds of both Houses of Congress and three-fourths of the States concurring—such property and incomes can never be made to contribute to the support of the national government.[18]

Members of Congress responded to Pollock by expressing widespread concern that many of the wealthiest Americans had consolidated too much economic power.[19] Nonetheless, in the years after Pollock, Congress did not implement another federal income tax, partly because many Congressmen feared that any tax would be struck down by the Supreme Court.[20] Few considered attempting to impose an apportioned income tax, since such a tax was widely regarded as unworkable.[21]

Adoption

On June 16, 1909, President William Howard Taft, in an address to the Sixty-first Congress, proposed a two percent federal income tax on corporations by way of an excise tax and a constitutional amendment to allow the previously enacted income tax.

Upon the privilege of doing business as an artificial entity and of freedom from a general partnership liability enjoyed by those who own the stock.[22][23]

An income tax amendment to the Constitution was first proposed by Senator Norris Brown of Nebraska. He submitted two proposals, Senate Resolutions Nos. 25 and 39. The amendment proposal finally accepted was Senate Joint Resolution No. 40, introduced by Senator Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island, the Senate majority leader and Finance Committee Chairman.[24] The amendment was proposed as part of the congressional debate over the 1909 Payne–Aldrich Tariff Act; by proposing the amendment, Aldrich hoped to temporarily defuse progressive calls for the imposition of new taxes in the tariff act. Aldrich and other conservative leaders in Congress largely opposed the actual ratification of the amendment, but they believed that it had little chance of being ratified, as ratification required approval by three quarters of the state legislatures.[25]

On July 12, 1909, the resolution proposing the Sixteenth Amendment was passed by the Congress[26] and was submitted to the state legislatures. Support for the income tax was strongest in the western and southern states, while opposition was strongest in the northeastern states.[27] Supporters of the income tax believed that it would be a much better method of gathering revenue than tariffs, which were the primary source of revenue at the time. From well before 1894, Democrats, Progressives, Populists and other left-oriented parties argued that tariffs disproportionately affected the poor, interfered with prices, were unpredictable, and were an intrinsically limited source of revenue. The South and the West tended to support income taxes because their residents were generally less prosperous, more agricultural and more sensitive to fluctuations in commodity prices. A sharp rise in the cost of living between 1897 and 1913 greatly increased support for the idea of income taxes, including in the urban Northeast.[28] A growing number of Republicans also began supporting the idea, notably Theodore Roosevelt and the "Insurgent" Republicans (who would go on to form the Progressive Party).[29] These Republicans were driven mainly by a fear of the increasingly large and sophisticated military forces of Japan, Britain and the European powers, their own imperial ambitions, and the perceived need to defend American merchant ships.[30] Moreover, these progressive Republicans were convinced that central governments could play a positive role in national economies.[31] A bigger government and a bigger military, they argued, required a correspondingly larger and steadier source of revenue to support it.

Opposition to the Sixteenth Amendment was led by establishment Republicans because of their close ties to wealthy industrialists, although not even they were uniformly opposed to the general idea of a permanent income tax. In 1910, New York Governor Charles Evans Hughes, shortly before becoming a Supreme Court Justice, spoke out against the income tax amendment. Hughes supported the idea of a federal income tax, but believed the words "from whatever source derived" in the proposed amendment implied that the federal government would have the power to tax state and municipal bonds. He believed this would excessively centralize governmental power and "would make it impossible for the state to keep any property".[32]

Between 1909 and 1913, several conditions favored passage of the Sixteenth Amendment. Inflation was high and many blamed federal tariffs for the rising prices. The Republican Party was divided and weakened by the loss of Roosevelt and the Insurgents who joined the Progressive Party, a problem that blunted opposition even in the Northeast.[33] In 1912, the Democrats won the presidency and control of both houses of Congress. The country was generally in a left-leaning mood, with a member of the Socialist Party winning a seat in the U.S. House in 1910 and the party's presidential candidate polling six percent of the popular vote in 1912.

Three advocates for a federal income tax ran in the presidential election of 1912.[34] On February 25, 1913, Secretary of State Philander Knox proclaimed that the amendment had been ratified by three-fourths of the states and so had become part of the Constitution.[35] The Revenue Act of 1913, which greatly lowered tariffs and implemented a federal income tax, was enacted shortly after the Sixteenth Amendment was ratified.[36]

Ratification

According to the United States Government Publishing Office, the following states ratified the amendment:[37]

  1. Alabama: August 10, 1909
  2. Kentucky: February 8, 1910
  3. South Carolina: February 19, 1910
  4. Illinois: March 1, 1910
  5. Mississippi: March 7, 1910
  6. Oklahoma: March 10, 1910
  7. Maryland: April 8, 1910
  8. Georgia: August 3, 1910
  9. Texas: August 16, 1910
  10. Ohio: January 19, 1911
  11. Idaho: January 20, 1911
  12. Oregon: January 23, 1911
  13. Washington: January 26, 1911
  14. Montana: January 27, 1911
  15. Indiana: January 30, 1911
  16. California: January 31, 1911
  17. Nevada: January 31, 1911
  18. South Dakota: February 1, 1911
  19. Nebraska: February 9, 1911
  20. North Carolina: February 11, 1911
  21. Colorado: February 15, 1911
  22. North Dakota: February 17, 1911
  23. Michigan: February 23, 1911
  24. Iowa: February 24, 1911
  25. Kansas: March 2, 1911
  26. Missouri: March 16, 1911
  27. Maine: March 31, 1911
  28. Tennessee: April 7, 1911
  29. Arkansas: April 22, 1911, after having previously rejected the amendment
  30. Wisconsin: May 16, 1911
  31. New York: July 12, 1911
  32. Arizona: April 3, 1912
  33. Minnesota: June 11, 1912
  34. Louisiana: June 28, 1912
  35. West Virginia: January 31, 1913
  36. Delaware: February 3, 1913

Ratification (by the requisite 36 states) was completed on February 3, 1913, with the ratification by Delaware. The amendment was subsequently ratified by the following states, bringing the total number of ratifying states to forty-two[38] of the forty-eight then existing:

  1. New Mexico: (February 3, 1913)
  2. Wyoming: (February 3, 1913)
  3. New Jersey: (February 4, 1913)
  4. Vermont: (February 19, 1913)
  5. Massachusetts: (March 4, 1913)
  6. New Hampshire: (March 7, 1913), after rejecting the amendment on March 2, 1911

The legislatures of the following states rejected the amendment without ever subsequently ratifying it:

The legislatures of the following states never considered the proposed amendment:

Pollock overruled

The Sixteenth Amendment removed the precedent set by the Pollock decision.[40][41]

Professor Sheldon D. Pollack at the University of Delaware wrote:

On February 25, 1913, in the closing days of the Taft administration, Secretary of State Philander C. Knox, a former Republican senator from Pennsylvania and attorney general under McKinley and Roosevelt, certified that the amendment had been properly ratified by the requisite number of state legislatures. Three more states ratified the amendment soon after, and eventually the total reached 42. The remaining six states either rejected the amendment or took no action at all. Notwithstanding the many frivolous claims repeatedly advanced by so-called tax protestors, the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution was duly ratified as of February 3, 1913. With that, the Pollock decision was overturned, restoring the status quo ante. Congress once again had the "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".[42]

From William D. Andrews, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School:

In 1913 the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution was adopted, overruling Pollock, and the Congress then levied an income tax on both corporate and individual incomes.[43]

From Professor Boris Bittker, who was a tax law professor at Yale Law School:

As construed by the Supreme Court in the Brushaber case, the power of Congress to tax income derives from Article I, Section 8, Clause 1, of the original Constitution rather than from the Sixteenth Amendment; the latter simply eliminated the requirement that an income tax, to the extent that it is a direct tax, must be apportioned among the states. A corollary of this conclusion is that any direct tax that is not imposed on "income" remains subject to the rule of apportionment. Because the Sixteenth Amendment does not purport to define the term "direct tax," the scope of that constitutional phrase remains as debatable as it was before 1913; but the practical significance of the issue was greatly reduced once income taxes, even if direct, were relieved from the requirement of apportionment.[44]

Professor Erik Jensen at Case Western Reserve University Law School has written:

[The Sixteenth Amendment] was a response to the Income Tax Cases (Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.), and it exempts only "taxes on incomes" from the apportionment rule that otherwise applies to direct taxes.[45]

Professor Calvin H. Johnson, a tax professor at the University of Texas School of Law, has written:

The Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1913, was written to allow Congress to tax income without the hobbling apportionment requirement. ... Pollock was itself overturned by the Sixteenth Amendment as to apportionment of income ...[46]

From Gale Ann Norton:

Courts have essentially abandoned the permissive interpretation created in Pollock. Subsequent cases have viewed the Sixteenth Amendment as a rejection of Pollock's definition of "direct tax". The apportionment requirement again applies only to real estate and capitation taxes. Even if the Sixteenth Amendment is not viewed as narrowing the definition of direct taxes, it at least introduces an additional consideration to analysis under the Apportionment Clause. For the Court to strike an unapportioned tax, plaintiffs must establish not only that a tax is a direct tax, but also that it is not in the subset of direct taxes known as an income tax.[47]

From Alan O. Dixler:

In Brushaber, the Supreme Court validated the first post - 16th Amendment income tax. Chief Justice White, who as an associate justice had dissented articulately in Pollock, wrote for a unanimous Court. Upholding the income tax provisions of the tariff act of October 3, 1913, Chief Justice White observed that the 16th Amendment did not give Congress any new power to lay and collect an income tax; rather, the 16th Amendment permitted Congress to do so without apportionment ...[48]

Congress may impose taxes on income from any source without having to apportion the total dollar amount of tax collected from each state according to each state's population in relation to the total national population.[49]

In Wikoff v. Commissioner, the United States Tax Court said:

[I]t is immaterial, with respect to Federal income taxes, whether the tax is a direct or an indirect tax. Mr. Wikoff [the taxpayer] relied on the Supreme Court's decision in Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. ... but the effect of that decision has been nullified by the enactment of the 16th Amendment.[50]

In Abrams v. Commissioner, the Tax Court said:

Since the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment, it is immaterial with respect to income taxes, whether the tax is a direct or indirect tax. The whole purpose of the Sixteenth Amendment was to relieve all income taxes when imposed from [the requirement of] apportionment and from [the requirement of] a consideration of the source whence the income was derived.[51]

Necessity of amendment

In the late 19th century and early 20th century, many legal observers believed that the Supreme Court had erred in designating some income taxes as direct taxes. The Supreme Court had previously rejected the argument that income taxes constituted direct taxes in Springer v. United States (1881).[52] Some legal scholars continue to question whether the Supreme Court ruled correctly in Pollock,[53] but others contend that the original meaning of direct taxes did indeed include income taxes.[54]

Case law

The federal courts' interpretations of the Sixteenth Amendment have changed considerably over time and there have been many disputes about the applicability of the amendment.

The Brushaber case

In Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad, 240 U.S. 1 (1916), the Supreme Court ruled that (1) the Sixteenth Amendment removes the Pollock requirement that certain income taxes (such as taxes on income "derived from real property" that were the subject of the Pollock decision), be apportioned among the states according to population;[55] (2) the federal income tax statute does not violate the Fifth Amendment's prohibition against the government taking property without due process of law; (3) the federal income tax statute does not violate the Article I, Section 8, Clause 1 requirement that excises, also known as indirect taxes, be imposed with geographical uniformity.

The Kerbaugh-Empire Co. case

In Bowers v. Kerbaugh-Empire Co., 271 U.S. 170 (1926), the Supreme Court, through Justice Pierce Butler, stated:

It was not the purpose or the effect of that amendment to bring any new subject within the taxing power. Congress already had the power to tax all incomes. But taxes on incomes from some sources had been held to be "direct taxes" within the meaning of the constitutional requirement as to apportionment. [citations omitted] The Amendment relieved from that requirement and obliterated the distinction in that respect between taxes on income that are direct taxes and those that are not, and so put on the same basis all incomes "from whatever source derived". [citations omitted] "Income" has been taken to mean the same thing as used in the Corporation Excise Tax of 1909 (36 Stat. 112), in the Sixteenth Amendment, and in the various revenue acts subsequently passed. [citations omitted] After full consideration, this court declared that income may be defined as gain derived from capital, from labor, or from both combined, including profit gained through sale or conversion of capital.

The Glenshaw Glass case

In Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co., 348 U.S. 426 (1955), the Supreme Court laid out what has become the modern understanding of what constitutes "gross income" to which the Sixteenth Amendment applies, declaring that income taxes could be levied on "accessions to wealth, clearly realized, and over which the taxpayers have complete dominion". Under this definition, any increase in wealth—whether through wages, benefits, bonuses, sale of stock or other property at a profit, bets won, lucky finds, awards of punitive damages in a lawsuit, qui tam actions—are all within the definition of income, unless the Congress makes a specific exemption, as it has for items such as life insurance proceeds received by reason of the death of the insured party,[56] gifts, bequests, devises and inheritances,[57] and certain scholarships.[58]

Income taxation of wages, etc.

Federal courts have ruled that the Sixteenth Amendment allows a direct tax on "wages, salaries, commissions, etc. without apportionment".[59]

The Penn Mutual case

Although the Sixteenth Amendment is often cited as the "source" of the congressional power to tax incomes, at least one court has reiterated the point made in Brushaber and other cases that the Sixteenth Amendment itself did not grant the Congress the power to tax incomes, a power the Congress had since 1789, but only removed the possible requirement that any income tax be apportioned among the states according to their respective populations. In Penn Mutual Indemnity, the United States Tax Court stated:[60]

In dealing with the scope of the taxing power the question has sometimes been framed in terms of whether something can be taxed as income under the Sixteenth Amendment. This is an inaccurate formulation ... and has led to much loose thinking on the subject. The source of the taxing power is not the Sixteenth Amendment; it is Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution.

The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit agreed with the Tax Court, stating:[61]

It did not take a constitutional amendment to entitle the United States to impose an income tax. Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., 157 U. S. 429, 158 U. S. 601 (1895), only held that a tax on the income derived from real or personal property was so close to a tax on that property that it could not be imposed without apportionment. The Sixteenth Amendment removed that barrier. Indeed, the requirement for apportionment is pretty strictly limited to taxes on real and personal property and capitation taxes.

It is not necessary to uphold the validity of the tax imposed by the United States that the tax itself bear an accurate label. Indeed, the tax upon the distillation of spirits, imposed very early by federal authority, now reads and has read in terms of a tax upon the spirits themselves, yet the validity of this imposition has been upheld for a very great many years.

It could well be argued that the tax involved here [an income tax] is an "excise tax" based upon the receipt of money by the taxpayer. It certainly is not a tax on property and it certainly is not a capitation tax; therefore, it need not be apportioned. We do not think it profitable, however, to make the label as precise as that required under the Food and Drug Act. Congress has the power to impose taxes generally, and if the particular imposition does not run afoul of any constitutional restrictions then the tax is lawful, call it what you will.

The Murphy case

On December 22, 2006, a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit vacated[62] its unanimous decision (of August 2006) in Murphy v. Internal Revenue Service and United States.[63] In an unrelated matter, the court had also granted the government's motion to dismiss Murphy's suit against the Internal Revenue Service. Under federal sovereign immunity, a taxpayer may sue the federal government, but not a government agency, officer, or employee (with some exceptions). The Court ruled:

Insofar as the Congress has waived sovereign immunity with respect to suits for tax refunds under 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1), that provision specifically contemplates only actions against the "United States". Therefore, we hold the IRS, unlike the United States, may not be sued eo nomine in this case.

An exception to federal sovereign immunity is in the United States Tax Court, in which a taxpayer may sue the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.[64] The original three-judge panel then agreed to rehear the case itself. In its original decision, the Court had ruled that 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2) was unconstitutional under the Sixteenth Amendment to the extent that the statute purported to tax, as income, a recovery for a nonphysical personal injury for mental distress and loss of reputation not received in lieu of taxable income such as lost wages or earnings.

Because the August 2006 opinion was vacated, the Court of Appeals did not hear the case en banc.

On July 3, 2007, the Court (through the original three-judge panel) ruled (1) that the taxpayer's compensation was received on account of a nonphysical injury or sickness; (2) that gross income under section 61 of the Internal Revenue Code[65] does include compensatory damages for nonphysical injuries, even if the award is not an "accession to wealth", (3) that the income tax imposed on an award for nonphysical injuries is an indirect tax, regardless of whether the recovery is restoration of "human capital", and therefore the tax does not violate the constitutional requirement of Article I, Section 9, Clause 4, that capitations or other direct taxes must be laid among the states only in proportion to the population; (4) that the income tax imposed on an award for nonphysical injuries does not violate the constitutional requirement of Article I, Section 8, Clause 1, that all duties, imposts and excises be uniform throughout the United States; (5) that under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the Internal Revenue Service may not be sued in its own name.[66]

The Court stated that "[a]lthough the 'Congress cannot make a thing income which is not so in fact', ... it can label a thing income and tax it, so long as it acts within its constitutional authority, which includes not only the Sixteenth Amendment but also Article I, Sections 8 and 9."[67] The court ruled that Ms. Murphy was not entitled to the tax refund she claimed, and that the personal injury award she received was "within the reach of the Congressional power to tax under Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution" even if the award was "not income within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment".[68] See also the Penn Mutual case cited above.

On April 21, 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the decision by the Court of Appeals.[69]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Knowlton v. Moore 178 U.S. 41 (1900) and Flint v. Stone Tracy Co. 220 U.S. 107 (1911)
  2. ^ Hylton v. United States 3 U.S. 171 (1796)
  3. ^ Buenker, John D. 1981. "The Ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment". The Cato Journal. 1:1. PDF.
  4. ^ Baack, Bennet T. and Edward John Ray. 1985. "Special Interests and the Adoption of the Income Tax in the United States". The Journal of Economic History V. 45, No. 3. pp. 607-625.
  5. ^ "On This Day: Congress Passes Act Creating First Income Tax". Findingdulcinea.com. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  6. ^ a b Baack and Ray, p. 608.
  7. ^ "Socialist Labor Party Platform" (PDF). Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  8. ^ "Populist Party Platform, 1892". Historymatters.gmu.edu. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  9. ^ Bryan, William Jennings (1909). Speeches of William Jennings Bryan, pp. 159-179. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  10. ^ "1908 Democratic Party Platform". The American Presidency Project. July 7, 1908. from the original on January 20, 2022.
  11. ^ Weisman 2002, p. 137–138.
  12. ^ Commentary, James W. Ely, Jr., on the case of Springer v. United States, in answers.com, at [1].
  13. ^ "Again the situation is aptly illustrated by the various acts taxing incomes derived from property of every kind and nature which were enacted beginning in 1861, and lasting during what may be termed the Civil War period. It is not disputable that these latter tax laws were classed under the head of excises, duties, and imposts because it was assumed that they were of that character, although putting a tax burden on income of every kind, including that derived from property real or personal, since they were not taxes directly on property because of its ownership." Brushaber v. Union Pac. Railroad, 240 U.S. 1 (1916), at 15.
  14. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved May 28, 2023.
  15. ^ Baack and Ray, p. 610.
  16. ^ "Mr. Cockran's Final Effort" (PDF). The New York Times. January 31, 1894.
  17. ^ Read a description of the decision at the Tax History Museum 2010-08-14 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ "Justice Harlan's dissenting opinion in Pollock". Law.cornell.edu. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  19. ^ See the quotes from Theodore Roosevelt at the Tax History Museum 2010-08-14 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Weisman 2002, p. 177.
  21. ^ Jensen, Erik M. (2014). "DID THE SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT EVER MATTER? DOES IT MATTER TODAY?". Northwestern University Law Review. 108 (3): 804, 809–810.
  22. ^ "Special Message | The American Presidency Project". www.presidency.ucsb.edu. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
  23. ^ President Taft Presidential addresses. 1910. p. 166. Retrieved March 26, 2012 – via Internet Archive. june 16 1909 income tax.
  24. ^ Volume 36, Statutes at Large, 61st Congress Session I, Senate Joint Resolution No. 40, p. 184, approved July 31, 1909.
  25. ^ Weisman, Steven R. (2002). The Great Tax Wars: Lincoln to Wilson-The Fierce Battles over Money That Transformed the Nation. Simon & Schuster. pp. 228, 233–234. ISBN 0-684-85068-0.
  26. ^ Senate Joint Resolution 40, 36 Stat. 184.
  27. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 14, 2012. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  28. ^ Buenker, p. 186.
  29. ^ Buenker, p. 189.
  30. ^ Baack and Jay, p. 613-614.
  31. ^ Buenker, p. 184.
  32. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 14, 2012. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  33. ^ Buenker, pp. 219-221.
  34. ^ Adam Young, "The Origin of the Income Tax", Ludwig von Mises Institute, Sept. 7, 2004.
  35. ^ "FindLaw: U.S. Constitution: Amendments". FindLaw. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  36. ^ Weisman 2002, pp. 230–232, 278–282.
  37. ^ "Ratification of Constitutional Amendments". U.S. Constitution Online. Retrieved April 20, 2012..
  38. ^ See Senate Document # 108-17, 108th Congress, Second Session, The Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis and Interpretation: Analysis of Cases Decided by the Supreme Court of the United States to June 28, 2002, at pp. 33–34, footnote 8, Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, U.S. Gov't Printing Office (2004).
  39. ^ "Virginia House Opposes Federal Clause by 54 to 37", The Washington Post, March 8, 1910.
  40. ^ Boris Bittker, "Constitutional Limits on the Taxing Power of the Federal Government," The Tax Lawyer, Fall 1987, Vol. 41, No. 1, p. 3 (American Bar Association) (Pollock case "was in effect reversed by the sixteenth amendment")
  41. ^ "The Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution overruled Pollock ..." Graf v. Commissioner, 44 T.C.M. (CCH) 66, TC Memo. 1982-317, CCH Dec. 39,080(M) (1982).
  42. ^ Sheldon D. Pollack, "Origins of the Modern Income Tax, 1894-1913," 66 Tax Lawyer 295, 323-324, Winter 2013 (Amer. Bar Ass'n) (footnotes omitted; italics in original).
  43. ^ William D. Andrews, Basic Federal Income Taxation, p. 2, Little, Brown and Company (3d ed. 1985).
  44. ^ Boris I. Bittker, Martin J. McMahon, Jr. and Lawrence A. Zelenak, Federal Income Taxation of Individuals (2d ed. 2006) (emphasis added).
  45. ^ Erik M. Jensen, "The Taxing Power, The Sixteenth Amendment, And the Meaning of 'Incomes'", Oct. 4, 2002, Tax Analysts (footnotes not reproduced).
  46. ^ Calvin H. Johnson, "Purging Out Pollock: The Constitutionality of Federal Wealth or Sales Tax", Dec. 27, 2002, Tax Analysts.
  47. ^ Gale Ann Norton, "The Limitless Federal Taxing Power," Vol. 8 Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy 591 (Summer, 1985) (footnotes omitted).
  48. ^ Alan O. Dixler, "Direct Taxes Under the Constitution: A Review of the Precedents", Nov. 20, 2006, Tax Analysts.
  49. ^ "Findlaw: Sixteenth Amendment, History and Purpose of the Amendment". Caselaw.lp.findlaw.com. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  50. ^ Wikoff v. Commissioner, 37 T.C.M. (CCH) 1539, T.C. Memo. 1978-372 (1978).
  51. ^ 82 T.C. 403, CCH Dec. 41,031 (1984)
  52. ^ Jensen (2014), pp. 807–808.
  53. ^ Jensen (2014), pp. 800–801.
  54. ^ Jensen (2014), p. 809.
  55. ^ "As construed by the Supreme Court in the Brushaber case, the power of Congress to tax income derives from Article I, Section 8, Clause 1 of the Constitution, rather than from the Sixteenth Amendment; the latter simply eliminated the requirement that an income tax, to the extent that it is a direct tax, must be apportioned among the states." Boris I. Bittker, Martin J. McMahon, Jr. & Lawrence A. Zelenak, Federal Income Taxation of Individuals, ch. 1, paragr. 1.01[1] [a], Research Institute of America (2d ed. 2005), as retrieved from 2002 WL 1454829 (W. G. & L.).
  56. ^ 26 U.S.C. § 101.
  57. ^ 26 U.S.C. § 102.
  58. ^ 26 U.S.C. § 117.
  59. ^ Parker v. Commissioner, 724 F.2d 469, 84-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 9209 (5th Cir. 1984) (closing parenthesis in original has been omitted). For other court decisions upholding the taxability of wages, salaries, etc. see United States v. Connor, 898 F.2d 942, 90-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 50,166 (3d Cir. 1990); Perkins v. Commissioner, 746 F.2d 1187, 84-2 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 9898 (6th Cir. 1984); White v. United States, 2005-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 50,289 (6th Cir. 2004), cert. denied, ____ U.S. ____ (2005); Granzow v. Commissioner, 739 F.2d 265, 84-2 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 9660 (7th Cir. 1984); Waters v. Commissioner, 764 F.2d 1389, 85-2 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 9512 (11th Cir. 1985); United States v. Buras, 633 F.2d 1356, 81-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 9126 (9th Cir. 1980).
  60. ^ Penn Mutual Indemnity Co. v. Commissioner, 32 T.C. 653 at 659 (1959), aff'd, 277 F.2d 16, 60-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 9389 (3d Cir. 1960).
  61. ^ Penn Mutual Indemnity Co. v. Commissioner, 277 F.2d 16, 60-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶. 9389 (3d Cir. 1960) (footnotes omitted).
  62. ^ Order, Dec. 22, 2006, the ruling of Murphy v. Internal Revenue Service and United States, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
  63. ^ 460 F.3d 79, 2006-2 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 50,476, 2006 WL 2411372 (D.C. Cir. August 22, 2006).
  64. ^ (Murphy v. United States)
  65. ^ 26 U.S.C. § 61 (Murphy v United States, on rehearing)
  66. ^ Opinion on rehearing, July 3, 2007, Murphy v. Internal Revenue Service and United States, case no. 05-5139, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, 2007-2 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 50,531 (D.C. Cir. 2007)
  67. ^ Opinion on rehearing, July 3, 2007, p. 16, Murphy v. Internal Revenue Service and United States, case no. 05-5139, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, 2007-2 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 50,531 (D.C. Cir. 2007).
  68. ^ Opinion on rehearing, July 3, 2007, p. 5-6, Murphy v. Internal Revenue Service and United States, case no. 05-5139, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, 2007-2 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) ¶ 50,531 (D.C. Cir. 2007).
  69. ^ Denniston, Lyle (April 21, 2008). "Court to hear anti-dumping, sentencing cases". SCOTUSblog. Retrieved April 21, 2008.

External links

  • Official Transcript of the 16th Amendment
  • Sixteenth Amendment and 1913 tax return form
  • CRS Annotated Constitution: Sixteenth Amendment
  • Pollock Decision
  • Brushaber Decision
  • Stanton Decision

sixteenth, amendment, united, states, constitution, sixteenth, amendment, amendment, united, states, constitution, allows, congress, levy, income, without, apportioning, among, states, basis, population, passed, congress, 1909, response, 1895, supreme, court, . The Sixteenth Amendment Amendment XVI to the United States Constitution allows Congress to levy an income tax without apportioning it among the states on the basis of population It was passed by Congress in 1909 in response to the 1895 Supreme Court case of Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co The Sixteenth Amendment was ratified by the requisite number of states on February 3 1913 and effectively overruled the Supreme Court s ruling in Pollock The Sixteenth Amendment in the National ArchivesPrior to the early 20th century most federal revenue came from tariffs rather than taxes although Congress had often imposed excise taxes on various goods The Revenue Act of 1861 had introduced the first federal income tax but that tax was repealed in 1872 During the late nineteenth century various groups including the Populist Party favored the establishment of a progressive income tax at the federal level These groups believed that tariffs unfairly taxed the poor and they favored using the income tax to shift the tax burden onto wealthier individuals The 1894 Wilson Gorman Tariff Act contained an income tax provision but the tax was struck down by the Supreme Court in the case of Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co In its ruling the Supreme Court did not hold that all federal income taxes were unconstitutional but rather held that income taxes on rents dividends and interest were direct taxes and thus had to be apportioned among the states on the basis of population For several years after Pollock Congress did not attempt to implement another income tax largely due to concerns that the Supreme Court would strike down any attempt to levy an income tax In 1909 during the debate over the Payne Aldrich Tariff Act Congress proposed the Sixteenth Amendment to the states Though conservative Republican leaders had initially expected that the amendment would not be ratified a coalition of Democrats progressive Republicans and other groups ensured that the necessary number of states ratified the amendment Shortly after the amendment was ratified Congress imposed a federal income tax with the Revenue Act of 1913 The Supreme Court upheld that income tax in the 1916 case of Brushaber v Union Pacific Railroad Co and the federal government has continued to levy an income tax since 1913 Contents 1 Text 2 Other Constitutional provisions regarding taxes 3 Income taxes before the Pollock case 4 The Pollock case 5 Adoption 5 1 Ratification 6 Pollock overruled 6 1 Necessity of amendment 7 Case law 7 1 The Brushaber case 7 2 The Kerbaugh Empire Co case 7 3 The Glenshaw Glass case 7 4 Income taxation of wages etc 7 5 The Penn Mutual case 7 6 The Murphy case 8 See also 9 Notes 10 External linksTextThe 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 Other Constitutional provisions regarding taxesArticle I Section 2 Clause 3 Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union according to their respective Numbers 1 Article I Section 8 Clause 1 The Congress shall have Power to lay and collect Taxes Duties Imposts and Excises to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States but all Duties Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States Article I Section 9 Clause 4 No Capitation or other direct Tax shall be laid unless in proportion to the Census or Enumeration herein before directed to be taken This clause basically refers to a tax on property such as a tax based on the value of land 2 as well as a capitation Article I Section 9 Clause 5 No Tax or Duty shall be laid on Articles exported from any State Income taxes before the Pollock caseUntil 1913 customs duties tariffs and excise taxes were the primary sources of federal revenue 3 During the War of 1812 Secretary of the Treasury Alexander J Dallas made the first public proposal for an income tax but it was never implemented 4 The Congress did introduce an income tax to fund the Civil War through the Revenue Act of 1861 5 It levied a flat tax of three percent on annual income above 800 This act was replaced the following year with the Revenue Act of 1862 which levied a graduated tax of three to five percent on income above 600 and specified a termination of income taxation in 1866 The Civil War income taxes which expired in 1872 proved to be both highly lucrative and drawing mostly from the more industrialized states with New York Pennsylvania and Massachusetts generating about 60 percent of the total revenue that was collected 6 During the two decades following the expiration of the Civil War income tax the Greenback movement the Labor Reform Party the Populist Party the Democratic Party and many others called for a graduated income tax 6 The Socialist Labor Party advocated a graduated income tax in 1887 7 The Populist Party demand ed a graduated income tax in its 1892 platform 8 The Democratic Party led by William Jennings Bryan advocated the income tax law passed in 1894 9 and proposed an income tax in its 1908 platform 10 Proponents of the income tax generally believed that high tariff rates exacerbated income inequality and wanted to use the income tax to shift the burden of funding the government away from working class consumers and to high earning businessmen 11 Before Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co all income taxes had been considered to be indirect taxes imposed without respect to geography unlike direct taxes that have to be apportioned among the states according to population 12 13 The Pollock caseSee also Fuller Court and Second presidency of Grover Cleveland In 1894 an amendment was attached to the Wilson Gorman Tariff Act that attempted to impose a federal tax of two percent on incomes over 4 000 equal to 135 000 in 2022 14 The federal income tax was strongly favored in the South and it was moderately supported in the eastern North Central states but it was strongly opposed in the Far West and the Northeastern States with the exception of New Jersey 15 The tax was derided as un Democratic inquisitorial and wrong in principle 16 In Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co the U S Supreme Court declared certain taxes on incomes such as those on property under the 1894 Act to be unconstitutionally unapportioned direct taxes The Court reasoned that a tax on income from property should be treated as a tax on property by reason of its ownership and so should be required to be apportioned The reasoning was that taxes on the rents from land the dividends from stocks and so forth burdened the property generating the income in the same way that a tax on property by reason of its ownership burdened that property After Pollock while income taxes on wages as indirect taxes were still not required to be apportioned by population taxes on interest dividends and rental income were required to be apportioned by population The Pollock ruling made the source of the income e g property versus labor etc relevant in determining whether the tax imposed on that income was deemed to be direct and thus required to be apportioned among the states according to population or alternatively indirect and thus required only to be imposed with geographical uniformity 17 Dissenting in Pollock Justice John Marshall Harlan stated When therefore this court adjudges as it does now adjudge that Congress cannot impose a duty or tax upon personal property or upon income arising either from rents of real estate or from personal property including invested personal property bonds stocks and investments of all kinds except by apportioning the sum to be so raised among the States according to population it practically decides that without an amendment of the Constitution two thirds of both Houses of Congress and three fourths of the States concurring such property and incomes can never be made to contribute to the support of the national government 18 Members of Congress responded to Pollock by expressing widespread concern that many of the wealthiest Americans had consolidated too much economic power 19 Nonetheless in the years after Pollock Congress did not implement another federal income tax partly because many Congressmen feared that any tax would be struck down by the Supreme Court 20 Few considered attempting to impose an apportioned income tax since such a tax was widely regarded as unworkable 21 AdoptionSee also Presidency of William Howard Taft and Presidency of Woodrow Wilson This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message On June 16 1909 President William Howard Taft in an address to the Sixty first Congress proposed a two percent federal income tax on corporations by way of an excise tax and a constitutional amendment to allow the previously enacted income tax Upon the privilege of doing business as an artificial entity and of freedom from a general partnership liability enjoyed by those who own the stock 22 23 An income tax amendment to the Constitution was first proposed by Senator Norris Brown of Nebraska He submitted two proposals Senate Resolutions Nos 25 and 39 The amendment proposal finally accepted was Senate Joint Resolution No 40 introduced by Senator Nelson W Aldrich of Rhode Island the Senate majority leader and Finance Committee Chairman 24 The amendment was proposed as part of the congressional debate over the 1909 Payne Aldrich Tariff Act by proposing the amendment Aldrich hoped to temporarily defuse progressive calls for the imposition of new taxes in the tariff act Aldrich and other conservative leaders in Congress largely opposed the actual ratification of the amendment but they believed that it had little chance of being ratified as ratification required approval by three quarters of the state legislatures 25 On July 12 1909 the resolution proposing the Sixteenth Amendment was passed by the Congress 26 and was submitted to the state legislatures Support for the income tax was strongest in the western and southern states while opposition was strongest in the northeastern states 27 Supporters of the income tax believed that it would be a much better method of gathering revenue than tariffs which were the primary source of revenue at the time From well before 1894 Democrats Progressives Populists and other left oriented parties argued that tariffs disproportionately affected the poor interfered with prices were unpredictable and were an intrinsically limited source of revenue The South and the West tended to support income taxes because their residents were generally less prosperous more agricultural and more sensitive to fluctuations in commodity prices A sharp rise in the cost of living between 1897 and 1913 greatly increased support for the idea of income taxes including in the urban Northeast 28 A growing number of Republicans also began supporting the idea notably Theodore Roosevelt and the Insurgent Republicans who would go on to form the Progressive Party 29 These Republicans were driven mainly by a fear of the increasingly large and sophisticated military forces of Japan Britain and the European powers their own imperial ambitions and the perceived need to defend American merchant ships 30 Moreover these progressive Republicans were convinced that central governments could play a positive role in national economies 31 A bigger government and a bigger military they argued required a correspondingly larger and steadier source of revenue to support it Opposition to the Sixteenth Amendment was led by establishment Republicans because of their close ties to wealthy industrialists although not even they were uniformly opposed to the general idea of a permanent income tax In 1910 New York Governor Charles Evans Hughes shortly before becoming a Supreme Court Justice spoke out against the income tax amendment Hughes supported the idea of a federal income tax but believed the words from whatever source derived in the proposed amendment implied that the federal government would have the power to tax state and municipal bonds He believed this would excessively centralize governmental power and would make it impossible for the state to keep any property 32 Between 1909 and 1913 several conditions favored passage of the Sixteenth Amendment Inflation was high and many blamed federal tariffs for the rising prices The Republican Party was divided and weakened by the loss of Roosevelt and the Insurgents who joined the Progressive Party a problem that blunted opposition even in the Northeast 33 In 1912 the Democrats won the presidency and control of both houses of Congress The country was generally in a left leaning mood with a member of the Socialist Party winning a seat in the U S House in 1910 and the party s presidential candidate polling six percent of the popular vote in 1912 Three advocates for a federal income tax ran in the presidential election of 1912 34 On February 25 1913 Secretary of State Philander Knox proclaimed that the amendment had been ratified by three fourths of the states and so had become part of the Constitution 35 The Revenue Act of 1913 which greatly lowered tariffs and implemented a federal income tax was enacted shortly after the Sixteenth Amendment was ratified 36 Ratification According to the United States Government Publishing Office the following states ratified the amendment 37 Alabama August 10 1909 Kentucky February 8 1910 South Carolina February 19 1910 Illinois March 1 1910 Mississippi March 7 1910 Oklahoma March 10 1910 Maryland April 8 1910 Georgia August 3 1910 Texas August 16 1910 Ohio January 19 1911 Idaho January 20 1911 Oregon January 23 1911 Washington January 26 1911 Montana January 27 1911 Indiana January 30 1911 California January 31 1911 Nevada January 31 1911 South Dakota February 1 1911 Nebraska February 9 1911 North Carolina February 11 1911 Colorado February 15 1911 North Dakota February 17 1911 Michigan February 23 1911 Iowa February 24 1911 Kansas March 2 1911 Missouri March 16 1911 Maine March 31 1911 Tennessee April 7 1911 Arkansas April 22 1911 after having previously rejected the amendment Wisconsin May 16 1911 New York July 12 1911 Arizona April 3 1912 Minnesota June 11 1912 Louisiana June 28 1912 West Virginia January 31 1913 Delaware February 3 1913Ratification by the requisite 36 states was completed on February 3 1913 with the ratification by Delaware The amendment was subsequently ratified by the following states bringing the total number of ratifying states to forty two 38 of the forty eight then existing New Mexico February 3 1913 Wyoming February 3 1913 New Jersey February 4 1913 Vermont February 19 1913 Massachusetts March 4 1913 New Hampshire March 7 1913 after rejecting the amendment on March 2 1911 The legislatures of the following states rejected the amendment without ever subsequently ratifying it Connecticut Rhode Island Utah Virginia 39 The legislatures of the following states never considered the proposed amendment Florida PennsylvaniaPollock overruledThe Sixteenth Amendment removed the precedent set by the Pollock decision 40 41 Professor Sheldon D Pollack at the University of Delaware wrote On February 25 1913 in the closing days of the Taft administration Secretary of State Philander C Knox a former Republican senator from Pennsylvania and attorney general under McKinley and Roosevelt certified that the amendment had been properly ratified by the requisite number of state legislatures Three more states ratified the amendment soon after and eventually the total reached 42 The remaining six states either rejected the amendment or took no action at all Notwithstanding the many frivolous claims repeatedly advanced by so called tax protestors the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution was duly ratified as of February 3 1913 With that the Pollock decision was overturned restoring the status quo ante Congress once again had the 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 42 From William D Andrews Professor of Law Harvard Law School In 1913 the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution was adopted overruling Pollock and the Congress then levied an income tax on both corporate and individual incomes 43 From Professor Boris Bittker who was a tax law professor at Yale Law School As construed by the Supreme Court in the Brushaber case the power of Congress to tax income derives from Article I Section 8 Clause 1 of the original Constitution rather than from the Sixteenth Amendment the latter simply eliminated the requirement that an income tax to the extent that it is a direct tax must be apportioned among the states A corollary of this conclusion is that any direct tax that is not imposed on income remains subject to the rule of apportionment Because the Sixteenth Amendment does not purport to define the term direct tax the scope of that constitutional phrase remains as debatable as it was before 1913 but the practical significance of the issue was greatly reduced once income taxes even if direct were relieved from the requirement of apportionment 44 Professor Erik Jensen at Case Western Reserve University Law School has written The Sixteenth Amendment was a response to the Income Tax Cases Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co and it exempts only taxes on incomes from the apportionment rule that otherwise applies to direct taxes 45 Professor Calvin H Johnson a tax professor at the University of Texas School of Law has written The Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution ratified in 1913 was written to allow Congress to tax income without the hobbling apportionment requirement Pollock was itself overturned by the Sixteenth Amendment as to apportionment of income 46 From Gale Ann Norton Courts have essentially abandoned the permissive interpretation created in Pollock Subsequent cases have viewed the Sixteenth Amendment as a rejection of Pollock s definition of direct tax The apportionment requirement again applies only to real estate and capitation taxes Even if the Sixteenth Amendment is not viewed as narrowing the definition of direct taxes it at least introduces an additional consideration to analysis under the Apportionment Clause For the Court to strike an unapportioned tax plaintiffs must establish not only that a tax is a direct tax but also that it is not in the subset of direct taxes known as an income tax 47 From Alan O Dixler In Brushaber the Supreme Court validated the first post 16th Amendment income tax Chief Justice White who as an associate justice had dissented articulately in Pollock wrote for a unanimous Court Upholding the income tax provisions of the tariff act of October 3 1913 Chief Justice White observed that the 16th Amendment did not give Congress any new power to lay and collect an income tax rather the 16th Amendment permitted Congress to do so without apportionment 48 Congress may impose taxes on income from any source without having to apportion the total dollar amount of tax collected from each state according to each state s population in relation to the total national population 49 In Wikoff v Commissioner the United States Tax Court said I t is immaterial with respect to Federal income taxes whether the tax is a direct or an indirect tax Mr Wikoff the taxpayer relied on the Supreme Court s decision in Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co but the effect of that decision has been nullified by the enactment of the 16th Amendment 50 In Abrams v Commissioner the Tax Court said Since the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment it is immaterial with respect to income taxes whether the tax is a direct or indirect tax The whole purpose of the Sixteenth Amendment was to relieve all income taxes when imposed from the requirement of apportionment and from the requirement of a consideration of the source whence the income was derived 51 Necessity of amendment In the late 19th century and early 20th century many legal observers believed that the Supreme Court had erred in designating some income taxes as direct taxes The Supreme Court had previously rejected the argument that income taxes constituted direct taxes in Springer v United States 1881 52 Some legal scholars continue to question whether the Supreme Court ruled correctly in Pollock 53 but others contend that the original meaning of direct taxes did indeed include income taxes 54 Case lawThe federal courts interpretations of the Sixteenth Amendment have changed considerably over time and there have been many disputes about the applicability of the amendment The Brushaber case In Brushaber v Union Pacific Railroad 240 U S 1 1916 the Supreme Court ruled that 1 the Sixteenth Amendment removes the Pollock requirement that certain income taxes such as taxes on income derived from real property that were the subject of the Pollock decision be apportioned among the states according to population 55 2 the federal income tax statute does not violate the Fifth Amendment s prohibition against the government taking property without due process of law 3 the federal income tax statute does not violate the Article I Section 8 Clause 1 requirement that excises also known as indirect taxes be imposed with geographical uniformity The Kerbaugh Empire Co case In Bowers v Kerbaugh Empire Co 271 U S 170 1926 the Supreme Court through Justice Pierce Butler stated It was not the purpose or the effect of that amendment to bring any new subject within the taxing power Congress already had the power to tax all incomes But taxes on incomes from some sources had been held to be direct taxes within the meaning of the constitutional requirement as to apportionment citations omitted The Amendment relieved from that requirement and obliterated the distinction in that respect between taxes on income that are direct taxes and those that are not and so put on the same basis all incomes from whatever source derived citations omitted Income has been taken to mean the same thing as used in the Corporation Excise Tax of 1909 36 Stat 112 in the Sixteenth Amendment and in the various revenue acts subsequently passed citations omitted After full consideration this court declared that income may be defined as gain derived from capital from labor or from both combined including profit gained through sale or conversion of capital The Glenshaw Glass case In Commissioner v Glenshaw Glass Co 348 U S 426 1955 the Supreme Court laid out what has become the modern understanding of what constitutes gross income to which the Sixteenth Amendment applies declaring that income taxes could be levied on accessions to wealth clearly realized and over which the taxpayers have complete dominion Under this definition any increase in wealth whether through wages benefits bonuses sale of stock or other property at a profit bets won lucky finds awards of punitive damages in a lawsuit qui tam actions are all within the definition of income unless the Congress makes a specific exemption as it has for items such as life insurance proceeds received by reason of the death of the insured party 56 gifts bequests devises and inheritances 57 and certain scholarships 58 Income taxation of wages etc Federal courts have ruled that the Sixteenth Amendment allows a direct tax on wages salaries commissions etc without apportionment 59 The Penn Mutual case Although the Sixteenth Amendment is often cited as the source of the congressional power to tax incomes at least one court has reiterated the point made in Brushaber and other cases that the Sixteenth Amendment itself did not grant the Congress the power to tax incomes a power the Congress had since 1789 but only removed the possible requirement that any income tax be apportioned among the states according to their respective populations In Penn Mutual Indemnity the United States Tax Court stated 60 In dealing with the scope of the taxing power the question has sometimes been framed in terms of whether something can be taxed as income under the Sixteenth Amendment This is an inaccurate formulation and has led to much loose thinking on the subject The source of the taxing power is not the Sixteenth Amendment it is Article I Section 8 of the Constitution The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit agreed with the Tax Court stating 61 It did not take a constitutional amendment to entitle the United States to impose an income tax Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co 157 U S 429 158 U S 601 1895 only held that a tax on the income derived from real or personal property was so close to a tax on that property that it could not be imposed without apportionment The Sixteenth Amendment removed that barrier Indeed the requirement for apportionment is pretty strictly limited to taxes on real and personal property and capitation taxes It is not necessary to uphold the validity of the tax imposed by the United States that the tax itself bear an accurate label Indeed the tax upon the distillation of spirits imposed very early by federal authority now reads and has read in terms of a tax upon the spirits themselves yet the validity of this imposition has been upheld for a very great many years It could well be argued that the tax involved here an income tax is an excise tax based upon the receipt of money by the taxpayer It certainly is not a tax on property and it certainly is not a capitation tax therefore it need not be apportioned We do not think it profitable however to make the label as precise as that required under the Food and Drug Act Congress has the power to impose taxes generally and if the particular imposition does not run afoul of any constitutional restrictions then the tax is lawful call it what you will The Murphy case On December 22 2006 a three judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit vacated 62 its unanimous decision of August 2006 in Murphy v Internal Revenue Service and United States 63 In an unrelated matter the court had also granted the government s motion to dismiss Murphy s suit against the Internal Revenue Service Under federal sovereign immunity a taxpayer may sue the federal government but not a government agency officer or employee with some exceptions The Court ruled Insofar as the Congress has waived sovereign immunity with respect to suits for tax refunds under 28 U S C 1346 a 1 that provision specifically contemplates only actions against the United States Therefore we hold the IRS unlike the United States may not be sued eo nomine in this case An exception to federal sovereign immunity is in the United States Tax Court in which a taxpayer may sue the Commissioner of Internal Revenue 64 The original three judge panel then agreed to rehear the case itself In its original decision the Court had ruled that 26 U S C 104 a 2 was unconstitutional under the Sixteenth Amendment to the extent that the statute purported to tax as income a recovery for a nonphysical personal injury for mental distress and loss of reputation not received in lieu of taxable income such as lost wages or earnings Because the August 2006 opinion was vacated the Court of Appeals did not hear the case en banc On July 3 2007 the Court through the original three judge panel ruled 1 that the taxpayer s compensation was received on account of a nonphysical injury or sickness 2 that gross income under section 61 of the Internal Revenue Code 65 does include compensatory damages for nonphysical injuries even if the award is not an accession to wealth 3 that the income tax imposed on an award for nonphysical injuries is an indirect tax regardless of whether the recovery is restoration of human capital and therefore the tax does not violate the constitutional requirement of Article I Section 9 Clause 4 that capitations or other direct taxes must be laid among the states only in proportion to the population 4 that the income tax imposed on an award for nonphysical injuries does not violate the constitutional requirement of Article I Section 8 Clause 1 that all duties imposts and excises be uniform throughout the United States 5 that under the doctrine of sovereign immunity the Internal Revenue Service may not be sued in its own name 66 The Court stated that a lthough the Congress cannot make a thing income which is not so in fact it can label a thing income and tax it so long as it acts within its constitutional authority which includes not only the Sixteenth Amendment but also Article I Sections 8 and 9 67 The court ruled that Ms Murphy was not entitled to the tax refund she claimed and that the personal injury award she received was within the reach of the Congressional power to tax under Article I Section 8 of the Constitution even if the award was not income within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment 68 See also the Penn Mutual case cited above On April 21 2008 the U S Supreme Court declined to review the decision by the Court of Appeals 69 See alsoTax protester Sixteenth Amendment argumentsNotes Knowlton v Moore 178 U S 41 1900 and Flint v Stone Tracy Co 220 U S 107 1911 Hylton v United States 3 U S 171 1796 Buenker John D 1981 The Ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment The Cato Journal 1 1 PDF Baack Bennet T and Edward John Ray 1985 Special Interests and the Adoption of the Income Tax in the United States The Journal of Economic History V 45 No 3 pp 607 625 On This Day Congress Passes Act Creating First Income Tax Findingdulcinea com Retrieved March 26 2012 a b Baack and Ray p 608 Socialist Labor Party Platform PDF Retrieved March 26 2012 Populist Party Platform 1892 Historymatters gmu edu Retrieved March 26 2012 Bryan William Jennings 1909 Speeches of William Jennings Bryan pp 159 179 Retrieved March 26 2012 1908 Democratic Party Platform The American Presidency Project July 7 1908 Archived from the original on January 20 2022 Weisman 2002 p 137 138 Commentary James W Ely Jr on the case of Springer v United States in answers com at 1 Again the situation is aptly illustrated by the various acts taxing incomes derived from property of every kind and nature which were enacted beginning in 1861 and lasting during what may be termed the Civil War period It is not disputable that these latter tax laws were classed under the head of excises duties and imposts because it was assumed that they were of that character although putting a tax burden on income of every kind including that derived from property real or personal since they were not taxes directly on property because of its ownership Brushaber v Union Pac Railroad 240 U S 1 1916 at 15 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 Baack and Ray p 610 Mr Cockran s Final Effort PDF The New York Times January 31 1894 Read a description of the decision at the Tax History Museum Archived 2010 08 14 at the Wayback Machine Justice Harlan s dissenting opinion in Pollock Law cornell edu Retrieved March 26 2012 See the quotes from Theodore Roosevelt at the Tax History Museum Archived 2010 08 14 at the Wayback Machine Weisman 2002 p 177 Jensen Erik M 2014 DID THE SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT EVER MATTER DOES IT MATTER TODAY Northwestern University Law Review 108 3 804 809 810 Special Message The American Presidency Project www presidency ucsb edu Retrieved October 28 2020 President Taft Presidential addresses 1910 p 166 Retrieved March 26 2012 via Internet Archive june 16 1909 income tax Volume 36 Statutes at Large 61st Congress Session I Senate Joint Resolution No 40 p 184 approved July 31 1909 Weisman Steven R 2002 The Great Tax Wars Lincoln to Wilson The Fierce Battles over Money That Transformed the Nation Simon amp Schuster pp 228 233 234 ISBN 0 684 85068 0 Senate Joint Resolution 40 36 Stat 184 The Ratification of the Federal Income Tax Amendment John D Buenker PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 14 2012 Retrieved March 26 2012 Buenker p 186 Buenker p 189 Baack and Jay p 613 614 Buenker p 184 Arthur A Ekirch Jr The Sixteenth Amendment The Historical Background p 175 Cato Journal Vol 1 No 1 Spring 1981 PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 14 2012 Retrieved March 26 2012 Buenker pp 219 221 Adam Young The Origin of the Income Tax Ludwig von Mises Institute Sept 7 2004 FindLaw U S Constitution Amendments FindLaw Retrieved March 26 2012 Weisman 2002 pp 230 232 278 282 Ratification of Constitutional Amendments U S Constitution Online Retrieved April 20 2012 See Senate Document 108 17 108th Congress Second Session The Constitution of the United States of America Analysis and Interpretation Analysis of Cases Decided by the Supreme Court of the United States to June 28 2002 at pp 33 34 footnote 8 Congressional Research Service Library of Congress U S Gov t Printing Office 2004 Virginia House Opposes Federal Clause by 54 to 37 The Washington Post March 8 1910 Boris Bittker Constitutional Limits on the Taxing Power of the Federal Government The Tax Lawyer Fall 1987 Vol 41 No 1 p 3 American Bar Association Pollock case was in effect reversed by the sixteenth amendment The Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution overruled Pollock Graf v Commissioner 44 T C M CCH 66 TC Memo 1982 317 CCH Dec 39 080 M 1982 Sheldon D Pollack Origins of the Modern Income Tax 1894 1913 66 Tax Lawyer 295 323 324 Winter 2013 Amer Bar Ass n footnotes omitted italics in original William D Andrews Basic Federal Income Taxation p 2 Little Brown and Company 3d ed 1985 Boris I Bittker Martin J McMahon Jr and Lawrence A Zelenak Federal Income Taxation of Individuals 2d ed 2006 emphasis added Erik M Jensen The Taxing Power The Sixteenth Amendment And the Meaning of Incomes Oct 4 2002 Tax Analysts footnotes not reproduced Calvin H Johnson Purging Out Pollock The Constitutionality of Federal Wealth or Sales Tax Dec 27 2002 Tax Analysts Gale Ann Norton The Limitless Federal Taxing Power Vol 8 Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy 591 Summer 1985 footnotes omitted Alan O Dixler Direct Taxes Under the Constitution A Review of the Precedents Nov 20 2006 Tax Analysts Findlaw Sixteenth Amendment History and Purpose of the Amendment Caselaw lp findlaw com Retrieved March 26 2012 Wikoff v Commissioner 37 T C M CCH 1539 T C Memo 1978 372 1978 82 T C 403 CCH Dec 41 031 1984 Jensen 2014 pp 807 808 Jensen 2014 pp 800 801 Jensen 2014 p 809 As construed by the Supreme Court in the Brushaber case the power of Congress to tax income derives from Article I Section 8 Clause 1 of the Constitution rather than from the Sixteenth Amendment the latter simply eliminated the requirement that an income tax to the extent that it is a direct tax must be apportioned among the states Boris I Bittker Martin J McMahon Jr amp Lawrence A Zelenak Federal Income Taxation of Individuals ch 1 paragr 1 01 1 a Research Institute of America 2d ed 2005 as retrieved from 2002 WL 1454829 W G amp L 26 U S C 101 26 U S C 102 26 U S C 117 Parker v Commissioner 724 F 2d 469 84 1 U S Tax Cas CCH 9209 5th Cir 1984 closing parenthesis in original has been omitted For other court decisions upholding the taxability of wages salaries etc see United States v Connor 898 F 2d 942 90 1 U S Tax Cas CCH 50 166 3d Cir 1990 Perkins v Commissioner 746 F 2d 1187 84 2 U S Tax Cas CCH 9898 6th Cir 1984 White v United States 2005 1 U S Tax Cas CCH 50 289 6th Cir 2004 cert denied U S 2005 Granzow v Commissioner 739 F 2d 265 84 2 U S Tax Cas CCH 9660 7th Cir 1984 Waters v Commissioner 764 F 2d 1389 85 2 U S Tax Cas CCH 9512 11th Cir 1985 United States v Buras 633 F 2d 1356 81 1 U S Tax Cas CCH 9126 9th Cir 1980 Penn Mutual Indemnity Co v Commissioner 32 T C 653 at 659 1959 aff d 277 F 2d 16 60 1 U S Tax Cas CCH 9389 3d Cir 1960 Penn Mutual Indemnity Co v Commissioner 277 F 2d 16 60 1 U S Tax Cas CCH 9389 3d Cir 1960 footnotes omitted Order Dec 22 2006 the ruling of Murphy v Internal Revenue Service and United States U S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 460 F 3d 79 2006 2 U S Tax Cas CCH 50 476 2006 WL 2411372 D C Cir August 22 2006 Murphy v United States 26 U S C 61 Murphy v United States on rehearing Opinion on rehearing July 3 2007 Murphy v Internal Revenue Service and United States case no 05 5139 U S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 2007 2 U S Tax Cas CCH 50 531 D C Cir 2007 Opinion on rehearing July 3 2007 p 16 Murphy v Internal Revenue Service and United States case no 05 5139 U S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 2007 2 U S Tax Cas CCH 50 531 D C Cir 2007 Opinion on rehearing July 3 2007 p 5 6 Murphy v Internal Revenue Service and United States case no 05 5139 U S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 2007 2 U S Tax Cas CCH 50 531 D C Cir 2007 Denniston Lyle April 21 2008 Court to hear anti dumping sentencing cases SCOTUSblog Retrieved April 21 2008 External linksOfficial Transcript of the 16th Amendment Sixteenth Amendment and 1913 tax return form CRS Annotated Constitution Sixteenth Amendment Pollock Decision Brushaber Decision Stanton Decision Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution amp oldid 1199883707, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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