Famspear wrote:Now, Steve, read the next sentence, where the Court states:
We find it more appropriate to analyze this case based upon the precedents and therefore to ask whether the tax laid upon Murphy's award is more akin, on the one hand, to a capitation or a tax upon one's ownership of property, or, on the other hand, more like a tax upon a use of property, a privilege, an activity, or a transaction, see Thomas, 192 U.S. at 370. Even if we assume one's human capital should be treated as personal property, it does not appear that this tax is upon ownership; rather, as the Government points out, Murphy is taxed only after she receives a compensatory award, which makes the tax seem to be laid upon a transaction. See Tyler v. United States, 281 U.S. 497, 502 (1930) ("A tax laid upon the happening of an event, as distinguished from its tangible fruits, is an indirect tax which Congress, in respect of some events ... undoubtedly may impose"); Simmons v. United States, 308 F.2d 160, 166 (4th Cir. 1962) (tax upon receipt of money is not a direct tax); cf. Penn Mut., 277 F.2d at 20. Murphy's situation seems akin to an involuntary conversion of assets; she was forced to surrender some part of her mental health and reputation in return for monetary damages. Cf. 26 U.S.C. §1033 (property involuntarily converted into money is taxed to extent of gain recognized).
First, I would like to clarify what I said in the other thread where you attempted to make fun of me.
We adopted our basic principles of law from other countries, namely England. To most that would seem like a logical conclusion. However, we have people like you that dismiss this common sense fact so you can pretend your position is reasonable. The term "Direct tax" is not something the founders invented or thought of on their own. They obviously adopted the term from somewhere else. That type of tax includes the earnings of a working man in every single country we could have adopted that term from. Now, you may claim that we are not every other country and I would agree. However, considering taxes were hotly contested by the anti federalists it's a little unreasonable to assume the founders slipped in a well known term in to the constitution that no longer puts a general income tax under the guise of a direct tax but instead under a perpetual tax that isn't tied directly to representation, in other words not apportioned throughout the States..
Why didn't anyone mention this modification to the term direct tax when direct taxes we so despised back then. Why didn't anyone speak up when the people who were there at that time stated it was a direct tax? What you are implying is the founders were involved in some conspiracy to deceive the people in to accepting a constitution with a bogus protection in it. All direct taxes were to be apportioned throughout the states to insure such taxes were equal to representation. They were so secret about it they never documented this change, nor even mentioned it to anyone and the only people capable of discovering this modified term are modern day Federal Jurists which, through osmoses I presume, incorporate it into their knowledge base because they aren't relying on anything known to exist. I mean come ooooon... You see the quotes from people who where there who said it was a direct tax and you know you can't find anyone who said it wasn't. You know that every other country identifies it and has identified it as a direct tax for centuries..to most people that would be an indication something is amiss. Ohh, but not you, facts will not stand in your way, no sir! Your facts are solid, you have something written by some guy who was appointed by the people demanding the money to rely on. Who, remarkably, never supports his/her theories with anything verifiable.
Now, the the case above.....
I will not challenge it based on court cases or historical facts because that would presume its worthy of such a challenge.
The theory that a mere transaction of any sort is taxable by an indirect tax is, shall we say laughable. Do you honestly believe the people who wrote the constitution or who finally gave in to compromise (the anti federalists), accepted all transactions of any sort fell under the guise of an indirect tax? That defies common sense on its face. Nothing whatsoever supports this nonsense in any document written by anyone involved in the creation of the constitution. Such a tax destroys all the reasons to apportion direct taxes. Everyone is and was involved in some sort of monetary transaction even back then. Such a power would put the federal government in the pockets of every citizen in the U.S. from the beginning on a perpetual basis.The direct tax clause could always be avoided by taxing a transaction instead of the property or the person via a capitation tax. To argue the government had this power from the beginning is absurd on its face, no one would have ratified the constitution had that been known. The government was to be very limited, with limited powers....what the court speaks of turns the intent on its head.
Show me as many cases as you like.....they are just people, they have no special magical powers nor are they touched by god. They are obviously out to help the government take money from the people and it doesn't matter if their reasoning is logical, sensible, laughable or even factual. I'm waiting for a case that tires to reason the moon is made of green cheese so you can proudly show me how I'm wrong about the moon in some future argument.
Oh and btw, the court got it wrong about the death tax. It's not passed along nor is it any of the other nonsense they used to try and shoot down Murphy...they need to reread some older SC cases. The reason the federal government can even tax it is because the transfer of property on death is a creature of State law, its not a tax on the "event" of death. It's a privilege granted by the State created under State law.