Bulten: 1. The USSC says of "includes", "enlargement ... is its exceptional sense". You say enlargement is its exceptional sense in Utah. Please provide any evidence for your proposition that in general, or in IRC, "includes also" is its normal sense.
The case you cited involved Utah state law. I do not know what Utah's legislature has done, I do not know the relevant case law in Utah and most importantly, I cannot imagine anything being less relevant to federal tax law than a case in which Utah state law is being interpreted. Again, I will not waste my time reading this case or the context in which it was decided. Give me something relevant and I will discuss it.
As for proof that the IRC uses include(s) in the sense of "includes also", please see IRC 7701(c), which specifically says so.
Bulten: 2. The USSC says noscitur a sociis is "to avoid ascribing to one word a meaning so broad that it is inconsistent with its accompanying words": i.e., that the phrase SFR does not annul the definition of the term SFR, as I claim it would if all ordinary SFRs are intended. You did not disagree because you did not answer.
Suppose that everything you argue on this is accurate (though not necessarily on point nor proving your conclusion). You seem to read that SFR means all ordinary SFRs, plus any 400sf+ 102in fixed-location manufactured homes which are not ordinary SFRs. However, if all ordinary 400sf+ SFRs plus all 400sf+ manufactured homes are defined as SFRs, the 400sf+ clause is redundant; ditto for the 102in clause, ditto for the fixed location. Using the meaning as "includes also", the definition could, without change of meaning, simply end "... includes any manufactured home." So either this definition is greatly redundant, or your meaning of "includes" is inconsistent. Please provide any escape from this difficulty logically.
As I have already addressed this, I will merely quote myself:
Investor: I believe that you jump to conclusions as pertains to IRC 25(e)(10). You assume that Congress considers manufactured homes, in general, to be within in the definition of “single family residence” and narrows the definition to exclude manufactured homes of less than a certain size. I am not convinced of this and believe that Congress did not consider manufactured homes to fall within the general definition of single family residences and was broadening the definition to include certain manufactured homes, specifically, those of a certain size or larger. Please note that some states treat manufactured homes like motor vehicles for purposes of title and lien perfection. This is not inconsistent with the definition of “include(s)” found in IRC 7701(c), nor is it inconsistent with the common English usage of “include(s)”.
Bulten: The ongoing relevance, of course, is the use of "includes" in such laws as 3121(e) and 3401(c). But I'm trying to build agreement on the general rules before we tackle that.
My point is, even if you are correct about these sections (which you are not), that would not eliminate your wages from Gross Income. So again I ask, what is your point?
Bulten: - Investor did not receive a formal warning and has not been added to the troll list.
- Investor is not against "know the law", but (presumably) against "understand the law as explained by CtC". (If on reflection you should come out and agree with the law, as explained by CtC, I would acquit you of this charge.)
You basically told me that I would be banned if I continued to post and disagree with the CtC position, even though I was as civil as one could be.