Sure he kept them for personal use all 100+ of them bahahahaha. He might have contended that but its obvious they weren't for personal use.The Operative wrote:Yet, Hylton v. U.S., 3 U.S. 171, says otherwise. Daniel Hylton owned carriages. He kept them for his personal use and he did not let them out for hire or for the conveyance of person for hire. Since he only used them for personal use, how does the tax on carriages not fall directly on the owner? Obviously, it does fall directly on the owner. Yet, all four justices that heard the case agreed that the tax was constitutional.SteveSy wrote:Certain taxes require apportionment. The reason was simple, a tax that directly falls on people should be apportioned according to representation.
Here's a quote from that case:
Clearly this justice did not think an income tax falls under the class of indirect taxes. People are assessed on an income tax. Look up "circuitous" in case you don't know what it means. In every other country that we could have derived the phrase direct tax from has labeled a tax on earnings as a direct tax. I guess we redefined the class different than the entire world without telling anyone who would be subject to it.Uniformity is an instant operation on individuals, without the intervention of assessments or any regard to states, and is at once easy, certain, and efficacious. All taxes on expenses or consumption are indirect taxes. A tax on carriages is of this kind, and of course is not a direct tax. Indirect taxes are circuitous modes of reaching the revenue of individuals, who generally live according to their income. In many cases of this nature the individual may be said to tax himself. I shall close the discourse with reading a passage or two from Smith's Wealth of Nations.
"The impossibility of taxing people in proportion to their revenue by any capitation seems to have given occasion to the invention of taxes upon consumable commodities; the state, not knowing how to tax directly and proportionally the revenue of its subjects, endeavors to tax it indirectly by taxing their expense, which it is supposed in most cases will be neatly in proportion to their revenue. Their expense is taxed by taxing the consumable commodities upon which it is laid out."