SteveSy wrote:
Do I decide the law for myself, yes I do, it’s my right.
Steve, you are, of course, delusional on that point. You do not have a “right” to decide for yourself what the law is, any more than I would have the right to decide for myself what the law is. You can decide for yourself what you BELIEVE the law is – but your belief is not determinative of what the law is. I know that you also reject the United States Supreme Court rulings upholding the constitutionality of the Federal income tax, and that’s why I’m rubbing it in once again. The following materials are adapted from material I posted in another place.
THE BRUSHABER CASE
Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, 240 U.S. 1, 36 S. Ct. 236 (1916). Again, the three main holdings in Brushaber:
-----1. The unapportioned income tax imposed by the Revenue Act of 1913 is not required to be apportioned, and is not unconstitutional.
-----2. The Revenue Act of 1913 does not violate the Fifth Amendment's prohibition against the government taking property without due process of law.
-----3. The Revenue Act of 1913 does not violate the uniformity clause of Article I, section 8 of the U.S. Constitution.
THE STANTON CASE
Stanton v. Baltic Mining Co., 240 U.S. 103 (1916). The Stanton case "was commenced by the appellant [John R. Stanton] as a stockholder of the Baltic Mining Company, the appellee, to enjoin [i.e., prevent] the voluntary payment by the corporation and its officers of the tax assessed against it under the income tax section of the tariff act of October 3, 1913." On a direct appeal from the trial court, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the lower court's decision, which had dismissed Stanton's motion (i.e., had rejected Stanton's request) for a court order to prevent Baltic Mining Company from paying the income tax.
Mr. Stanton argued that the tax law was unconstitutional and void under the Fifth Amendment in that the law denied "to mining companies and their stockholders equal protection of the laws and deprive[d] them of their property without due process of law." The Supreme Court rejected that argument.
Mr. Stanton also argued that the Sixteenth Amendment "authorizes only an exceptional direct income tax without apportionment, to which the tax in question does not conform" and that therefore the income tax was "not within the authority of that Amendment." The Court also rejected this argument.
Stanton v. Baltic Mining Co. is a leading case where the Court's ruling contradicts the tax protesters' argument that the income tax is unconstitutional. In this case, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the income tax under the 1913 Act under both the Fifth Amendment and the Sixteenth Amendment.
THE MERCHANTS' LOAN CASE
One argument repeatedly made by tax protesters is that the income of individuals is not taxable because income should mean only "corporate profits" or "corporate gain." This is the so-called ''Merchants' Loan'' argument, named after the case of Merchants’ Loan & Trust Company, as Trustee of the Estate of Arthur Ryerson, Deceased, Plaintiff in Error v. Julius F. Smietanka, formerly United States Collector of Internal Revenue for the First District of the State of Illinois, 255 U.S. 509 (1921).
The protesters' Merchants' Loan argument is essentially that "income" for Federal income tax purposes means ''only'' the income of a "corporation" -- not the income of a non-corporate taxpayer -- because the United States Supreme Court in that case, in discussing the meaning of "income," mentioned a statute enacted in 1909 that taxed the income of ''corporations''.
The Court in ''Merchants' Loan'' was specifically interpreting a 1916 statute imposing income taxes on ''individuals and estates'' (among other kinds of entities), and not the 1909 corporate tax statute. The taxpayer in ''Merchants' Loan'' was ''not a corporation'' but was the "Estate of Arthur Ryerson, Deceased." The Court was not presented with (and did not decide) any issue involving the taxability of "corporate profits" or "corporate gains" or any other kind of income except the gain on the sale of the stock by the "Estate of Arthur Ryerson, Deceased." The terms "corporate profit" and "corporate gain" are not found in the text of the Court’s decision in ''Merchants’ Loan''.
In ''Merchants' Loan'' the Supreme Court ruled that under the Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and the 1916 tax statute applicable at the time, a gain on a sale of stock by the estate of a deceased person is included in the income of that estate, and is therefore taxable to that estate for Federal income tax purposes.
Here are three United States Supreme Court cases repeatedly cited by tax protesters – three cases where, unfortunately, the Court UPHELD the Federal income tax as constitutional.
--Famspear
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet