SubVet wrote:
Please provide me a USSC decision that overrides Brushaber!
SubVet, you do not want to be citing
Brushaber.
When you read a court decision, you have to distinguish between what is called the "holding" (or holdings) in that case and the words that are called
obiter dicta (or just "dicta") -- essentially, "words said in passing."
A holding is essentially a summary statement of what the court actual ruled about
what the parties actually fought about.
By contrast, any words that sort of seem to be statements about "what the law is" but that do not constitute an actual court decision on something that the parties
actually fought about in that particular case are dicta, and are non-binding with respect to that case. Yes, they may be accurate statements of the law, and it's OK to quote those words (legal analysts do it all the time) - as long as you don't try to use those dicta to argue that those dicta somehow mean something else -- "something else" that the courts have already ruled (in either that case or in some other case) to be without merit.
The
Brushaber case deals with United States Supreme Court rulings on the Revenue Act of 1913, which was enacted after the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment. The United States Supreme Court in the
Brushaber case rendered three basic holdings, summarized as follows:
1. Federal income taxes are not required to be apportioned among the states by population (Frank Brushaber had argued that the unapportioned income tax was required to be apportioned and was therefore unconstitutional
for that reason -- and the Supreme Court ruled against him ON THAT VERY POINT.)
2. The federal income tax statute does not violate the Fifth Amendment's prohibition against the government taking property without due process of law. (Frank Brushaber had argued that the tax violated the Fifth Amendment prohibition, and the Court ruled against him ON THAT VERY POINT.)
3. The federal income tax statute does not violate the uniformity clause of Article I, section 8 of the U.S. Constitution. (Frank Brushaber had argued that the tax violated the uniformity clause, and the Court ruled against him ON THAT VERY POINT.)
No federal income tax has ever been apportioned among the states according to population.
The only federal income tax ever ruled to be unconstitutional
BECAUSE it was not apportioned was the 1894 tax on interest, dividends, and rent income (
Pollock decision, 1895). Even in
Pollock, the U.S. Supreme Court made clear that the 1894 taxes imposed on income from employments, occupations, etc., were
not required to be apportioned. And in 1913, the Sixteenth Amendment effectively overruled the
Pollock decision that had required that income taxes on interest, dividends, and rent income be apportioned. The only federal income taxes that have ever been required to be apportioned among the states by population were taxes on interest, dividends, and rent -- and that requirement was effective only from about 1894-1895 to early 1913.
Getting back to
Brushaber and your comment: We regulars here at Quatloos don't need to look for rulings in which the Supreme Court overruled its holdings in
Brushaber. And there are no such rulings. Furthermore, we like
Brushaber.
Brushaber is our friend.
Brushaber is snuggly and warm.
Brushaber rocks.
SubVet, you are a tax protester. You do not want to be citing cases like
Brushaber.
Brushaber is not your friend.
In fact, SubVet, you don't want to be citing court cases at all. Court cases are not your friends. Court cases are not snuggly and warm for you. This is your sad plight.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet