I have two real simple questions for you, John:John J. Bulten wrote:Lawman, your "numerous places in the IRC" apply only for their own chapters or scopes, not for purposes of Chapter 24.
If you were to follow the logic that "When the statute says [term] 'employee' it means a [common-word] Employee" in Chapter 22, it would apply to the clause in 3231(b) that says "The term 'employee' includes an officer of an employer"; and the term "employee" would include all workers, and all workers would be subject to Railroad Retirement. Same for natty's logic that "any person who reasonably fits the meaning of [common-word] 'employee' is not excluded."
There is no law that places ordinary workers within the meaning of 3401(c) "employee". ["No law" would mean no statutes nor court decisions, and neither is correct.] Only fuzzy, easily-deceived, subject-to-correction thinking does that. [And, of course, you include in "fuzzy thinkers" all federal court judges who have ever addressed the issue, all legal and tax scholars, and every one of the million or so other people who disagree with you. Count me in as a "fuzzy thinker", please.] The statutes, canons of construction, and rules of logic do not. You describe this sloppy, inaccurate thinking as "normal" thinking: well, the IRS counts on such "normal" thinking.
Natty, the same applies. It is not possible to assign variables logically so as to yield the result you want. First, your assignment of A is ambiguous: the thing being defined is "employee for Chapter 24 purposes" (X), not "employee for Webster's purposes" (what you want A to be). But either way your result does not follow.
If A is employee for Chapter 24 purposes, then your conclusion is valid that X = A + B: Employee for Chapter 24 purposes means employee for Chapter 24 purposes and government/corporate workers.
If A is employee for Webster's purposes as you want, then there is no law stating X = A, or A includes B. The law states only that X includes B. As to 7701, what is "not excluded" from X is "others otherwise within the meaning of the term defined (that term being 'employee for Chapter 24 purposes')"; what is not excluded is simply "all other 'employees for Chapter 24 purposes'". So X, once again, includes government/corporate workers and any other "employees for Chapter 24 purposes".
But at no point does the law state that common workers are "others otherwise withing the meaning of" Chapter 24 employees. Those "not excluded" (i.e. those additionally included) are limited to "others otherwise within the meaning". That means that "others NOT otherwise within the meaning" are NOT in the additionally included class.
1. Why does no reputable legal or income tax scholar, Congressional Representative, federal judge agree with your "unassailable logic".
2. Why don't high income folks with high tax liabilities use the CtC logic you espouse to avoid income taxes?
Just curious,
Neckbone
P.S. Aren't you intentionally obfuscating the issue by mixing Chapter 22 and 24 together? I thought the Chapter 24 definition only applies to Chapter 24. Am I wrong?