David who got banned? Is it VanPelt?UGA Lawdog wrote:Neckbone:
I also hope that Steve comes back. With David banned from posting, we now lack a village idiot.
Neckbone
David who got banned? Is it VanPelt?UGA Lawdog wrote:Neckbone:
I also hope that Steve comes back. With David banned from posting, we now lack a village idiot.
The very same.Neckbone wrote:David who got banned? Is it VanPelt?UGA Lawdog wrote:Neckbone:
I also hope that Steve comes back. With David banned from posting, we now lack a village idiot.
Well, that's not true, because income taxes have ALWAYS taxed pay for labor.John J. Bulten wrote:Until 1935, there was no taxation of pay for labor to object to!
Helvering v. Gerhardt, 304 U.S. 405, 420 (1938).The challenged taxes laid under section 22, Revenue Act of 1932, c. 209, 47 Stat. 169, 178, 26 U.S.C.A. 22, are upon the net income of respondents, derived from their employment in common occupations not shown to be different in their methods or duties from those of similar employees in private industry. The taxpayers enjoy the benefits and protection of the laws of the United States. They are under a duty to support its government and are not beyond the reach of its taxing power. A nondiscriminatory tax laid on their net income, in common with that of all other members of the community, could by no reasonable probability be considered to preclude the performance of the function which New York and New Jersey have undertaken, or to obstruct it more than like private enterprises are obstructed by our taxing system.
I should have also added that the income tax at issue in the Pollock case in 1895 was also a tax on all gains, profits, and income, "whether said gains, profits, or income be derived from any kind of property, rents, interest, dividends, or salaries, or from any profession, trade, employment, or vocation carried on in the United States or elsewhere, or from any other source whatever...."LPC wrote:Well, that's not true, because income taxes have ALWAYS taxed pay for labor.John J. Bulten wrote:Until 1935, there was no taxation of pay for labor to object to!
No, COGS and basis are no deductions from gross income, they are necessary to the calculation of gross income. Only gains from the sale of property are income, not the full price received for it. Were that not so, the various attempts to extend the concept of COGS would not have required a constitutional analysis for rejection, only a statutory one.Sure, the distinction is relevant for purposes of separating out, for example, COGS, but we do that only because a deduction is allowed for COGS, and as everyone knows, deductions come after computation of income. Likewise, we subtract basis from the amount of money or FMV of property received in exchange for property separately from the computation of gross income only because there is a separate statute that lets us do that. The reduction is not built in to the definition of income; it is a separate step.
We are in perfect agreement on that. Bulten is aware that the Tax Court (with the 8th circuit affirming) has rejected the argument that cost of maintaining the "human machine" must be subtracted as if they were costs of goods sold. His wordplay appears to be an attempt to avoid those rejections.If there were a statute that said, "The amount of gross income received from wages and other compensation shall be reduced by the amount of any expenditure by the taxpayer in earning those wages"--or words to that effect--then and only then would the distinction Bulten is making resemble the legitimate distinction you are making. But there is no such statute. And even if there were, it wouldn't change the fact that gross income would include the full amount of wages, salaries, and other compensation.
Wrong. The reason there was no double taxation was not because the statute distinguished between "salaries" and "income derived from salaries". The reason was because in calculating the amount of income taxable under Section 90, a deduction was allowed by Section 91 for the salary that was taxable under Section 86. If the two concepts referred to different things, there would have been no need for the deduction.John J. Bulten wrote:...Sections 86 and 90 of the Revenue Act of 1862 taxed, respectively, government salaries, and income derived from salaries; taken together, since there was no double taxation nor redundancy, a statutory distinction was made between salary and income from salary.
Then it should be easy to document that Kennedy did or did not withhold tax on his laborers.CaptainKickback wrote:Old Man Kennedy (Joseph Sr.) was a greedy, manipulative and would have probably gladly used ANY loophool or VALID legal argument to reduce his taxes.
This explication of the law is quite old, but was not clearly and consistently demonstrable until the electronic code and CtC. However, there is a revenue ruling that addresses misapplications of this application of the law. If the application held no water, it would be easy to demonstrate that in the 1860s and 1910s everyone understood the law to apply generally to any pay for any laborer.CaptainKickback wrote:If John Bulten's theory actually held water, the IRS would have ALREADY produced Revenue Rulings to close that loophole.
But it can be no variation of a frivolous argument to hold that wages are what the law says they are, and that "includes" means what the law and regulations say it means. And if your view were right, it should be easy to document that laborers in 1913 filed tax returns as appropriate under your theory.CaptainKickback wrote:The wages are not wages (and the variations) argument is frivolous. Not a loophole, frivolous. Huge, huge difference.
Translation: I acted stupidly then but I'm not acting stupidly now.I've admitted that my being a nonfiler from 8/15/00 to 2/2/05 was a mistake, and have accepted the consequences of this mistake.