Brian Rookard wrote:
No, they realized the correct argument comes from Penn Mutual Indemnity Co. v. CIR, 277 F2d 16 ... a case which is 100% correct in noting that it doesn't matter what you call a tax ... you simply look at the substance of the tax and ask "is it a direct tax or indirect tax" ... you don't worry about whether Congress labeled the tax an "income tax" and whether or not what they actually taxed is "income" ... you look at what they actually taxed (whether technically "income" or not) and just ask whether they can tax it in this manner (uniformity v. apportionment).
Yes, and July 3, 2007 could go down as a bad day for tax protesters. Ironically, the original August 2006 Murphy decision, which a tax protester might have argued offered him or her a small bone with which to work, has been replaced by a July 2007 decision that is a very large bone -- stuck uncomfortably in the protester's throat.
Other courts in other circuits can say, hey, a personal injury recovery IS an "accession to wealth" and IS Sixteenth Amendment income -- we don't care what the DC circuit judges say. At the same time, those other circuits can also say, hey, but the DC Circuit IS correct on its Penn Mutual argument (so even if the recovery were not an accession to wealth, it would still be properly taxable as "income").
So, the law catches the tax protesters, no matter which way they turn.
--Famspear
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet