Famspear wrote:No, the IRS has NOT ruled that "the withholding was not tax and the payments were not income."
These are the authoritative conclusions of a closed official administrative proceeding. What should I call them for short, if not a ruling?
Famspear wrote:The gross amount of you receive or constructively receive as compensation for services you perform is includible in your gross income for the year received or constructively received.
The remainder of your post claims my language is meaningless by responding with other language which I find meaningless. Do you mean that compensation is gross income? Or does the law mean (as I believe) that "income derived from compensation" is gross income?
In 1913, pay for work was not income in itself. To rephrase,
my first request is for you to show any case from the 1910s where pay for work was authoritatively held to be income in itself.
(Banjo alludes to the law as using the word "wages"; but as I said I'm looking for early cases where that law demonstrably meant pay for work in itself. Joey alludes to a number of later cases which show that pay for work is income when some nexus like SS is attached; but as I said I'm looking for discussions of pay for work in itself, and I've already posted numerous cases on its nontaxability.)
Famspear (emphasis added) wrote:Here's the law:
-----"Except as otherwise provided in this subtitle, gross income means all income from whatever source derived, including (but not limited to) the following items:
(1) Compensation for services, including fees, commissions, fringe benefits, and similar items [ . . . ]"
--from 26 USC 61(a).
There's nothing there about anything "deriving" anything else.
Sources derive income: verbum sap. Now,
my second request is for you to show any statutory change in the meaning of "income derived from compensation". Does the code no longer say the tax is imposed on income derived from compensation, as the statute did more clearly in 1913?
Either there was some laborer in the 1910s who made more than the exemption and paid the tax, or there wasn't. Either the meaning of the statute was changed by amendment, or it wasn't. These are two very simple concepts to understand and seek evidence for. But in both cases my thorough search has turned up no evidence. And until such counterexample appears, the conclusion remains unshakable that pay for work, in itself, is not income in 2007. The attempt to brush this conclusion away with evidence other than one of these two counterexamples is an attempt to admit and excuse an unenacted illegality.