home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Software Vault: The Gold Collection
/
Software Vault - The Gold Collection (American Databankers) (1993).ISO
/
cdr20
/
fedzone.zip
/
CHAPTER1.TXT
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-01-21
|
12KB
|
363 lines
Chapter 1:
The Brushaber Decision
Historically, defensive federal officials have argued that
the 16th Amendment is constitutional because the Supreme Court of
the United States has said so. In the year 1916, the high court
issued a pivotal decision which is identified in the case law as
Brushaber vs. Union Pacific Railroad Company, 240 U.S. 1. It is
important to realize that the evidence impugning the ratification
of the 16th Amendment was not published until the year 1985.
This evidence was simply not available to plaintiff Frank R.
Brushaber when he filed his first complaint on March 13, 1914 in
the District Court of the United States for the Southern District
of New York. His complaint challenged the constitutionality of
the income tax statute which Congress had passed immediately
after the 16th Amendment was declared ratified. Specifically, he
challenged the constitutionality of the income tax as it applied
to a corporation of which he was a shareholder, i.e. the Union
Pacific Railroad Company. His challenge went all the way to the
Supreme Court, and he lost.
Ever since then, attorneys, judges and other officials of
the federal government have been quick to cite the Brushaber
case, and others which followed, as undeniable proof that the
16th Amendment is constitutional. With its constitutionality
settled by the Brushaber ruling, former Commissioner of Internal
Revenue Donald C. Alexander felt free, almost 60 years later, to
cite the 16th Amendment as the government's general authority to
tax the income of individuals and corporations. Consider the
following statement of his which was published in the official
Federal Register of March 29, 1974, in the section entitled
"Department of the Treasury, Internal Revenue Service,
Organization and Functions". His statement reads in part:
(2) Since 1862, the Internal Revenue Service has undergone
a period of steady growth as the means for financing
Government operations shifted from the levying of import
duties to internal taxation. Its expansion received
considerable impetus in 1913 with the ratification of the
Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution under which Congress
received constitutional authority to levy taxes on the
income of individuals and corporations.
[emphasis added]
What is not widely known about the Brushaber decision is the
essence of the ruling. Contrary to widespread legal opinion
which has persisted even until now, the Supreme Court ruled that
taxation on income is an indirect tax, not a direct tax. The
Supreme Court also ruled that the 16th Amendment did not change
or repeal any part of the Constitution, nor did it authorize any
direct tax without apportionment. To illustrate the persistence
Page 1 - 1 of 6
The Federal Zone:
of wrong opinions, on a recent vacation to Montana, I had
occasion to visit the federal building in the city of Missoula.
On the wall outside the Federal District Court, Room 263, a
printed copy of the U.S. Constitution is displayed in text which
annotates the 16th Amendment with the following statement:
This amendment modifies Paragraph 3, Section 2, of Article I
and Paragraph 4, Section 9, of Article I.
In light of the Brushaber decision, this statement is
plainly wrong and totally misleading. The text of the 16th
Amendment contains absolutely no references to other sections of
the Constitution (unlike the repeal of Prohibition). In his
excellent book entitled The Best Kept Secret, author Otto Skinner
reviews a number of common misunderstandings like this about the
16th Amendment, and provides ample support in subsequent case law
for the clarifications he provides. Interested readers are
encouraged to order Otto Skinner's work by referring to the
Bibliography (Appendix N).
The U.S. Constitution still requires that federal direct
taxes must be apportioned among the 50 States of the Union.
Thus, if California has 10 percent of the nation's population,
then California's "portion" would be 10 percent of any direct
federal tax. In the Brushaber decision, the Supreme Court
concluded that income taxes are excises which fall into the
category of indirect taxes, not direct taxes. From the
beginning, the U.S. Constitution has made an explicit distinction
between the two types of taxation authorized to the Congress,
with separate limitations for each type: indirect taxes must be
uniform across the States; direct taxes must be apportioned.
Writing for the majority in one of his clearer passages, Chief
Justice Edward Douglass White explained it this way:
[T]he conclusion reached in the Pollock Case did not in any
degree involve holding that income taxes generically and
necessarily came within the class of direct taxes on
property, but on the contrary recognized the fact that
taxation on income was in its nature an excise entitled to
be enforced as such ....
[Brushaber vs Union Pacific Railroad Co., 240 U.S. 1 (1916)]
[emphasis added]
Unfortunately for Justice White, most of the language he
chose to write the majority's opinion, and the resulting logic
contained therein, are tortuously convoluted and almost totally
unintelligible, even to college-educated English majors. In his
wonderful tour de force entitled Tax Scam, author Alan Stang
quips that Justice White:
... turned himself into a pretzel trying to justify the new
tax without totally junking the Constitution.
[page 45]
Page 1 - 2 of 6
The Brushaber Decision
Stang's book is a must, if only because his extraordinary
wit is totally rare among the tax books listed in the
Bibliography (Appendix N). Other legal scholars and experienced
constitutional lawyers have published books which take serious
aim at one or more elements of White's ruling. Jeffrey
Dickstein's Judicial Tyranny and Your Income Tax and Vern
Holland's The Law That Always Was are two excellent works of this
kind. Both authors focus on the constitutional distinctions
between direct and indirect taxes, and between the apportionment
and uniformity rules.
Dickstein does a masterful job of tracing a century of
federal court decisions, with an emphasis on the bias and
conflict among federal court definitions of the key word
"income". He exercises rigorous logic to demonstrate how the
Brushaber ruling stands in stark contrast to the important
Supreme Court precedents that came before and after it in time.
For example, after a meticulous comparison of Pollock with
Brushaber, Dickstein is forced to conclude that:
Justice White's indirect attempt to overturn Pollock is
wholly unpersuasive; he clearly failed to state a
historical, factual or legal basis for his conclusion that a
tax on income is an indirect, excise tax. It is clear that
Mr. Brushaber and his attorneys correctly stated the
proposition to the Supreme Court that the Sixteenth
Amendment relieved the income tax, which was a direct tax,
from the requirement of apportionment, and that the
Brushaber Court failed miserably in attempting to refute Mr.
Brushaber's legal position.
[Judicial Tyranny and Your Income Tax, page 60]
[emphasis added]
Dickstein also proves that an irreconcilable conflict exists
between the Brushaber decision and a subsequent key decision of
the Supreme Court, Eisner vs Macomber, 252 U.S. 189:
There is an irreconcilable conflict between the Brushaber
case, which holds the income tax is an indirect tax not
requiring apportionment, and the Eisner case, which holds
the income tax is a direct tax relieved from apportionment.
[Judicial Tyranny and Your Income Tax]
[footnote on page 141]
Going back even further in American history, Holland argues
persuasively that "income" taxes have always been direct taxes
which must be apportioned even today, Brushaber notwithstanding:
Page 1 - 3 of 6
The Federal Zone:
It results, therefore: ...
4. That the Sixteenth Amendment did not amend the
Constitution. The United States Supreme Court by unanimous
decisions determined that the amendment did not grant any
new powers of taxation; that a direct tax cannot be
relieved from the constitutional mandate of apportionment;
and the only effect of the amendment was to overturn the
theory advanced in the Pollock case which held that a tax on
income, was in legal effect, a tax on the sources of the
income. ...
6. [T]hat a General Tax on Income levied upon one of the
Citizens of the several States, has always been a direct tax
and must be apportioned.
[The Law That Always Was, page 220]
[emphasis in original]
There are, however, two additional lessons from the
Brushaber decision which have been entirely lost on most, if not
all of the authors who have published any analysis of this
important ruling. These are the dual issues of status and
jurisdiction, issues which it is my intention to elevate to the
level of importance which they have always deserved. An
understanding of status and jurisdiction places the Brushaber
ruling in a new and different light, and solves a number of
persistent mysteries and misunderstandings which have grown up
around an income tax law which now includes some 2,000 pages of
statute and 6,000 pages of regulations.
Obviously, without a comprehensive paradigm with which to
navigate such a vast quantity of legalese, particularly when this
legalese is only slightly more intelligible than White's verbal
pretzels, it is easy to understand why professors, lawyers,
CPA's, judges, prosecutors, defendants and juries consistently
fail to fathom its meaning. In the Republic envisioned by the
Framers of the Constitution, a sophisticated paradigm should not
be necessary for the ordinary layman to understand any law. In
and of itself, the need for a sophisticated paradigm is a
sufficient ground to nullify the law for being vague and too
difficult to understand in the first place. Nevertheless, the
remainder of this book will show that status and jurisdiction
together provide a comprehensive paradigm with sufficient
explanatory power not only to solve the persistent mysteries, but
also to provide vast numbers of Americans with the tax relief
they so desperately need and deserve.
# # #
Page 1 - 4 of 6
The Brushaber Decision
Reader's Notes:
Page 1 - 5 of 6
The Federal Zone:
Reader's Notes:
Page 1 - 6 of 6