Justice Souter
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Sections 301 and 316(a) of the Internal Revenue Code set the conditions for treating certain corporate distributions as returns of capital, nontaxable to the recipient. 26 U. S. C. §§ 301, 316(a) (2000 ed. and Supp. V). The question here is whether a distributee accused of criminal tax evasion may-claim return-of-capital treatment without producing evidence that either he or the corporation intended a capital return when the distribution occurred. We hold that no such showing is required.
I
“[T]he capstone of [the] system of sanctions ... calculated to induce ... fulfillment of every duty under the income tax law,”
Spies
v.
United States, 317
U. S. 492, 497 (1943), is 26 U. S. C. § 7201, making it a felony willfully to “attemp[t] in any manner to evade or defeat any tax imposed by” the Code.
One element of tax evasion under § 7201 is “the existence of a tax deficiency,”
Sansone
v.
United States,
380 U. S. 343, 351 (1965); see also
Lawn
v.
United States,
355 U. S. 339, 361 (1958),
which the Government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt, see
ibid.
(“[0]f course, a conviction upon a charge of attempting to evade assessment of income taxes by the filing of a-fraudulent return cannot stand in the absence of proof of a deficiency”).
Any deficiency determination in this case will turn on §§ 301 and 316(a) of the Code. According to § 301(a), unless another provision of the Code requires otherwise, a “distri
button of property” that is “made by a corporation to a shareholder with respect to its stock shall be treated in the manner provided in [§ 301(c)].” Under § 301(c), the portion of the distribution that is a “dividend,” as defined by § 316(a), must be included in the recipient’s gross income; and the portion that is not a dividend is, depending on the shareholder’s basis for his stock, either a nontaxable return of capital or a gain on the sale or exchange of stock, ordinarily taxable to the shareholder as a capital gain. Finally, § 316(a) defines “dividend” as
“any distribution of property made by a corporation to its shareholders—
“(1) out of its earnings and profits accumulated after February 28, 1913, or
“(2) out of its earnings and profits of the taxable year (computed as of the close of the taxable year without diminution by reason of any distributions made during the taxable year), without regard to the amount of the earnings and profits at the time the distribution was made.”
Sections 301 and 316(a) together thus make the existence of “earnings and profits”
the decisive fact in determining the tax consequences of distributions from a corporation to a shareholder with respect to his stock. This requirement of “relating the tax status of corporate distributions to earnings and profits is responsive to a felt need for protecting returns of capital from tax.” 4 Bittker & Lokken ¶ 92.1.1, at 92-3.
II
In this criminal tax proceeding, petitioner Michael Boulware was charged with several counts of tax evasion and
filing a false income tax return, stemming from his diversion of funds from Hawaiian Isles Enterprises (HIE), a closely held corporation of which he was the president, founder, and controlling (though not sole) shareholder. At trial,
the United States sought to establish that Boulware had received taxable income by “systematically diverting] funds from HIE in order to support a lavish lifestyle.” 384 F. 3d 794, 799 (CA9 2004). The Government’s evidence showed that
“[Boulware] gave millions of dollars of HIE money to his girlfriend . . . and millions of dollars to his wife . . . without reporting any of this money on his personal income tax returns. . . . [H]e siphoned off this money primarily by writing checks to employees and friends and having them return the cash to him, by diverting payments by HIE customers, by submitting fraudulent invoices to HIE, and by laundering HIE money through companies in the Kingdom of Tonga and Hong Kong.”
Ibid.
In defense, Boulware sought to introduce evidence that HIE had no retained or current earnings and profits in the relevant taxable years, with the consequence (he argued) that he in effect received distributions of property that must have been returns of capital, up to his basis in his stock. See § 301(c)(2). Because the return of capital was nontaxable, the argument went, the Government could not establish the tax deficiency required to convict him.
The Government moved
in limine
to bar evidence in support of Boulware’s return-of-capital theory, on the grounds of “irrelevance] in [this] criminal tax case,” App. 20. The Government relied on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
United States
v.
Miller,
545 F. 2d 1204 (1976), in which that court held that in a criminal tax evasion case, a diversion of funds may be deemed a return of capital only after “some demonstration on the part of the taxpayer and/or the corporation that such [a distribution was] intended to be such a return,”
id.,
at 1215. Boulware, the Government argued, had offered to make no such demonstration. App. 21.
The District Court granted the Government’s motion, and when Boulware sought “to present evidence of [HIE’s] alleged over-reporting of income, and an offer of proof relating to the issue of. . . dividends,”
id.,
at 135, the District Court denied his request. The court said that “[n]ot only would much of [his proffered] evidence be excludable as expert legal opinion, it is plainly insufficient under the Miller case,”
id.,
at 138, and accordingly declined to instruct the jury on Boulware’s return-of-capital theory. The jury rejected his alternative defenses (that the diverted funds were nontaxable corporate advances or loans, or that he used the moneys for corporate purposes), and found him guilty on nine counts, four of tax evasion and five of filing a false return.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed. 470 F. 3d 931 (2006). It acknowledged that “imposing an intent requirement creates a disconnect between civil and criminal liability,” but thought that under
Miller,
“the characterization of diverted corporate funds for civil tax purposes does not dictate their characterization for purposes of a criminal tax evasion charge.” 470 F. 3d, at 934.
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Justice Souter
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Sections 301 and 316(a) of the Internal Revenue Code set the conditions for treating certain corporate distributions as returns of capital, nontaxable to the recipient. 26 U. S. C. §§ 301, 316(a) (2000 ed. and Supp. V). The question here is whether a distributee accused of criminal tax evasion may-claim return-of-capital treatment without producing evidence that either he or the corporation intended a capital return when the distribution occurred. We hold that no such showing is required.
I
“[T]he capstone of [the] system of sanctions ... calculated to induce ... fulfillment of every duty under the income tax law,”
Spies
v.
United States, 317
U. S. 492, 497 (1943), is 26 U. S. C. § 7201, making it a felony willfully to “attemp[t] in any manner to evade or defeat any tax imposed by” the Code.
One element of tax evasion under § 7201 is “the existence of a tax deficiency,”
Sansone
v.
United States,
380 U. S. 343, 351 (1965); see also
Lawn
v.
United States,
355 U. S. 339, 361 (1958),
which the Government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt, see
ibid.
(“[0]f course, a conviction upon a charge of attempting to evade assessment of income taxes by the filing of a-fraudulent return cannot stand in the absence of proof of a deficiency”).
Any deficiency determination in this case will turn on §§ 301 and 316(a) of the Code. According to § 301(a), unless another provision of the Code requires otherwise, a “distri
button of property” that is “made by a corporation to a shareholder with respect to its stock shall be treated in the manner provided in [§ 301(c)].” Under § 301(c), the portion of the distribution that is a “dividend,” as defined by § 316(a), must be included in the recipient’s gross income; and the portion that is not a dividend is, depending on the shareholder’s basis for his stock, either a nontaxable return of capital or a gain on the sale or exchange of stock, ordinarily taxable to the shareholder as a capital gain. Finally, § 316(a) defines “dividend” as
“any distribution of property made by a corporation to its shareholders—
“(1) out of its earnings and profits accumulated after February 28, 1913, or
“(2) out of its earnings and profits of the taxable year (computed as of the close of the taxable year without diminution by reason of any distributions made during the taxable year), without regard to the amount of the earnings and profits at the time the distribution was made.”
Sections 301 and 316(a) together thus make the existence of “earnings and profits”
the decisive fact in determining the tax consequences of distributions from a corporation to a shareholder with respect to his stock. This requirement of “relating the tax status of corporate distributions to earnings and profits is responsive to a felt need for protecting returns of capital from tax.” 4 Bittker & Lokken ¶ 92.1.1, at 92-3.
II
In this criminal tax proceeding, petitioner Michael Boulware was charged with several counts of tax evasion and
filing a false income tax return, stemming from his diversion of funds from Hawaiian Isles Enterprises (HIE), a closely held corporation of which he was the president, founder, and controlling (though not sole) shareholder. At trial,
the United States sought to establish that Boulware had received taxable income by “systematically diverting] funds from HIE in order to support a lavish lifestyle.” 384 F. 3d 794, 799 (CA9 2004). The Government’s evidence showed that
“[Boulware] gave millions of dollars of HIE money to his girlfriend . . . and millions of dollars to his wife . . . without reporting any of this money on his personal income tax returns. . . . [H]e siphoned off this money primarily by writing checks to employees and friends and having them return the cash to him, by diverting payments by HIE customers, by submitting fraudulent invoices to HIE, and by laundering HIE money through companies in the Kingdom of Tonga and Hong Kong.”
Ibid.
In defense, Boulware sought to introduce evidence that HIE had no retained or current earnings and profits in the relevant taxable years, with the consequence (he argued) that he in effect received distributions of property that must have been returns of capital, up to his basis in his stock. See § 301(c)(2). Because the return of capital was nontaxable, the argument went, the Government could not establish the tax deficiency required to convict him.
The Government moved
in limine
to bar evidence in support of Boulware’s return-of-capital theory, on the grounds of “irrelevance] in [this] criminal tax case,” App. 20. The Government relied on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
United States
v.
Miller,
545 F. 2d 1204 (1976), in which that court held that in a criminal tax evasion case, a diversion of funds may be deemed a return of capital only after “some demonstration on the part of the taxpayer and/or the corporation that such [a distribution was] intended to be such a return,”
id.,
at 1215. Boulware, the Government argued, had offered to make no such demonstration. App. 21.
The District Court granted the Government’s motion, and when Boulware sought “to present evidence of [HIE’s] alleged over-reporting of income, and an offer of proof relating to the issue of. . . dividends,”
id.,
at 135, the District Court denied his request. The court said that “[n]ot only would much of [his proffered] evidence be excludable as expert legal opinion, it is plainly insufficient under the Miller case,”
id.,
at 138, and accordingly declined to instruct the jury on Boulware’s return-of-capital theory. The jury rejected his alternative defenses (that the diverted funds were nontaxable corporate advances or loans, or that he used the moneys for corporate purposes), and found him guilty on nine counts, four of tax evasion and five of filing a false return.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed. 470 F. 3d 931 (2006). It acknowledged that “imposing an intent requirement creates a disconnect between civil and criminal liability,” but thought that under
Miller,
“the characterization of diverted corporate funds for civil tax purposes does not dictate their characterization for purposes of a criminal tax evasion charge.” 470 F. 3d, at 934. The court held the test in a criminal case to be “whether the defendant has willfully attempted to evade the payment or assessment of a tax.”
Ibid.
Because Boulware “‘presented no concrete proof that the amounts were considered, intended, or recorded on the corporate rec
ords as a return of capital at the time they were made,’ ” id., at 935 (quoting
Miller, supra,
at 1215), the Ninth Circuit held that Boulware’s proffer was “properly rejected ... as inadequate,” 470 F. 3d, at 935.
Judge Thomas concurred because the panel was bound by
Miller,
but noted that
“Miller
— and now the majority opinion — hold that a defendant may be criminally sanctioned
for
tax evasion without owing a penny in taxes to the government.” 470 F. 3d, at 938. That, he said, not only “indicate[s] a logical fallacy, but is in flat contradiction with the tax evasion statute’s requirement ... of a tax deficiency.”
Ibid,
(internal quotation marks omitted).
We granted certiorari, 551 U. S. 1191 (2007), to resolve a split among the Courts of Appeals over the application of §§ 301 and 316(a) to informally transferred or diverted corporate funds in criminal tax proceedings.
We now vacate and remand.
III
A
The colorful behavior described in the allegations requires a reminder that tax classifications like “dividend” and “return of capital” turn on “the objective economic realities of a transaction rather than ... the particular form the parties employed,”
Frank Lyon Co.
v.
United States,
435 U. S. 561, 573 (1978); a “given result at the end of a straight path is not made a different result ... by following a devious path,”
Minnesota Tea Co.
v.
Helvering,
302 U. S. 609, 613 (1938).
As for distributions with respect to stock, in economic reality a shareholder’s informal receipt of corporate property “may be as effective a means of distributing profits among stockholders as the formal declaration of a dividend,”
Palmer
v.
Commissioner,
302 U. S. 63, 69 (1937), or as effective a means of returning a shareholder’s capital, see
ibid.
Accordingly, “[a] distribution to a shareholder in his capacity as such . . .
is subject to §301 even though it is not declared in formal fashion.” B. Bittker & J. Eustice, Federal Income Taxation of Corporations and Shareholders ¶ 8.05[1], pp. 8-36 to 8-37 (6th ed. 1999) (hereinafter Bittker & Eustice); see also Gardner, The Tax Consequences of Shareholder Diversions in Close Corporations, 21 Tax L. Rev. 223, 239 (1966) (hereinafter Gardner) (“Sections 316 and 301 do not require any formal path to be taken by a corporation in order for those provisions to apply”).
There is no reason to doubt that economic substance remains the right touchstone for characterizing funds received when a shareholder diverts them before they can be recorded on the corporation’s books. While they “never even pass through the corporation’s hands,” Bittker
&
Eustice ¶ 8.05[9], at 8-51, even diverted funds may be seen as dividends or capital distributions for purposes of §§301 and 316(a), see
Truesdell
v.
Commissioner,
89 T. C. 1280 (1987) (treating diverted funds as “constructive” distributions in civil tax proceedings). The point, again, is that “taxation is not so much concerned with the refinements of title as it is with actual command over the property taxed — the actual benefit for which the tax is paid.”
Corliss
v.
Bowers,
281 U. S. 376, 378 (1930); see also
Griffiths
v.
Commissioner,
308 U. S. 355, 358 (1939).
B
Miller’s
view that a criminal defendant may not treat a distribution as a return of capital without evidence of a eor
responding contemporaneous intent sits uncomfortably not only with the tax law’s economic realism, but with the particular wording of §§ 301 and 316(a), as well. As those sections are written, the tax consequences of a “distribution by a corporation with respect to its stock” depend, not on anyone’s purpose to return capital or to get it back, but on facts wholly independent of intent: whether the corporation had earnings and profits, and the amount of the taxpayer’s basis for his stock. Cf.
Truesdell
v.
Commissioner,
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Action on Decision 1988-25, 1988 WL 570761 (Sept. 12, 1988) (recommendation regarding acquiescence), IRS Non Docketed Service Advice Review, 1989 WL 1172952 (Mar. 15,1989) (reply to request for reconsideration) (“[Ijntent is irrelevant. . . . [E]very distribution made with respect to a shareholder’s stock is taxable as ordinary income, capital gain, or not at all pursuant to section 301(c) dependent upon the corporation’s earnings and profits and the shareholder’s stock basis. The determination is computational and not dependent upon intent”).
When the
Miller
court went the other way, needless to say, it could claim no textual hook for the contemporaneous intent requirement, but argued for it as the way to avoid two supposed anomalies. First, the court thought that applying §§301 and 316(a) in criminal cases unnecessarily emphasizes the exact amount of deficiency while “completely ignoring] one essential element of the crime charged: the willful intent to evade taxes . . . .” 545 F. 2d, at 1214. But there is an analytical mistake here. Willfulness is an element of the crimes charged because the substantive provisions defining tax evasion and filing a false return expressly require it, see § 7201 (“[a]ny person who willfully attempts . . . ”); § 7206(1) (“[w]illfully makes and subscribes . . . ”). The element of willfulness is addressed at trial by requiring the Government to prove it. Nothing in §§ 301 and 316(a) as written (that is, without an intent requirement) relieves the Government of this burden of proving willfulness or impedes it from doing
so if evidence of willfulness is there. Those two sections as written simply address a different element of criminal evasion, the existence of a tax deficiency, and both deficiency and willfulness can be addressed straightforwardly (in jury instructions or bench findings) without tacking an intent requirement onto the rule distinguishing dividends from capital returns.
Second, the
Miller
court worried that if a defendant could claim capital treatment without showing a corresponding and contemporaneous intent,
“[a] taxpayer who diverted funds from his close corporation when it was in the midst of a financial difficulty and had no earnings and profits would be immune from punishment (to the extent of his basis in the stock) for failure to report such sums as income; while that very same taxpayer would be convicted if the corporation had experienced a successful year and had earnings and profits.” 545 F. 2d, at 1214.
“Such a result,” said the court, “would constitute an extreme example of form over substance.”
Ibid.
The Circuit thus assumed that a taxpayer like Boulware could be convicted of evasion with no showing of deficiency from an unreported dividend or capital gain.
But the acquittal that the author of
Miller
called form trumping substance would in fact result from the Government’s failure to prove an element of the crime. There is no criminal tax evasion without a tax deficiency, see
supra,
at 424,
and there is no deficiency owing to a distribution (re
ceived with respect to a corporation’s stock) if a corporation has no earnings and profits and the value distributed does not exceed the taxpayer-shareholder’s basis for his stock. Thus the fact that a shareholder distributee of a successful corporation may have different tax liability from a shareholder of a corporation without earnings and profits merely follows from the way §§301 and 316(a) are written (to distinguish dividend from capital return), and from the requirement of tax deficiency for a § 7201 crime. Without the deficiency there is nothing but some act expressing the will to evade, and, under § 7201, acting on “bad intentions, alone, [is] not punishable,”
United States
v.
D’Agostino,
145 F. 3d 69, 73 (CA2 1998).
It is neither here nor there whether the.
Miller
court was justified in thinking it would improve things to convict more of the evasively inclined by dropping the deficiency requirement and finding some other device to exempt returns of capital.
Even if there were compelling reasons to extend
§ 7201 to cases in which no taxes are owed, it bears repeating that “[t]he spirit of the doctrine which denies to the federal judiciary power to create crimes forthrightly admonishes that we should not enlarge the reach of enacted crimes by constituting them from anything less than the incriminating components contemplated by the words used in the statute,”
Morissette
v.
United States,
342 U. S. 246, 263 (1952) (opinion for the Court by Jackson, J.) (footnote omitted). If §301, § 316(a), or § 7201 could stand amending, Congress will have to do the rewriting.
C
Not only is
Miller
devoid of the support claimed for it, but it suffers the demerit of some anomalies of its own. First and most obviously, §§ 301 and 316 are odd stalks for grafting a contemporaneous intent requirement, given the fact that the correct application of their rules will often become known only at the end of the corporation’s tax year, regardless of the shareholder’s or corporation’s understanding months earlier when a particular distribution may have been made. Section 316(a)(2) conditions treating a distribution as a constructive dividend by reference to earnings and profits, and earnings and profits are to be “computed as of the close of the taxable year . . . without regard to the amount of the earnings and profits at the time the distribution was made.” A corporation may make a deliberate distribution to a shareholder, with everyone expecting a profitable year and considering the distribution to be a dividend, only to have the shareholder end up liable for no tax if the company closes out its tax year in the red (so long as the shareholder’s basis covers the distribution); when such facts are clear at the time the reporting forms and returns are filed,
the shareholder
does not violate § 7201 by paying no tax on the moneys received, intent being beside the point. And since intent to make a distribution a taxable one cannot control, it would be odd to condition nontaxable return-of-capital treatment on contemporaneous intent, when the statute says nothing about intent at all.
The intent interpretation is strange for another reason, too (a reason in some tension with the Ninth Circuit’s assumption that an unreported distribution without contemporaneous intent to return capital will support a conviction for evasion). The text of § 301(a) ostensibly provides for all variations of tax treatment of distributions received with respect to a corporation’s stock unless a separate provision of the Code requires otherwise. Yet
Miller
effectively converts the section into one of merely partial coverage, with the result of leaving one class of distributions in a tax status limbo in criminal cases. That is, while § 301(a) expressly provides that distributions made by a corporation to a shareholder with respect to its stock “shall be treated in the manner provided in [§ 301(c)],” under
Miller,
a distribution from a corporation without earnings and profits would fail to be a return of capital for lack of contemporaneous intent to treat it that way; but to the extent that distribution did not exceed the taxpayer’s basis for the stock (and thus become a capital gain), § 301(a) would leave the distribution unaccounted for.
It is no answer to say that § 61(a) of the Code would step in where § 301(a) has been pushed out. Although § 61(a) defines gross income, “[e]xcept as otherwise provided,” as “all income from whatever source derived,” the plain text of § 301(a) does provide otherwise for distributions made with respect to stock. So using § 61(a) as a stopgap would only sanction yet another eccentricity: § 301(a) would be held not to cover what its text says it “shall” (the class of distribu
tions made with respect to stock for which no other more specific provision is made), while § 61(a) would need to be applied to what by its terms it should not be (a receipt of funds for which tax treatment is “otherwise provided” in § 301(a)).
The implausibility of a statutory reading that either creates a tax limbo or forces resort to an atextual stopgap is all the clearer from the Ninth Circuit’s discussion in this case of its own understanding of the consequences of Miller’s rule: the court openly acknowledged that “imposing an intent requirement creates a disconnect between civil and criminal liability,” 470 F. 3d, at 934. In construing distribution rules that draw no distinction in terms of criminal or civil consequences, the disparity of treatment assumed by the Court of Appeals counts heavily against its contemporaneous intent construction (quite apart from the Circuit’s understanding that its interpretation entails criminal liability for evasion without any showing of a tax deficiency).
Miller
erred in requiring a contemporaneous intent to treat the receipt of corporate funds as a return of capital, and the judgment of the Court of Appeals here, relying on
Miller,
is likewise erroneous.
IV
The Government has raised nothing that calls for affirmance in the face of the Court of Appeals’s reliance on
Miller.
The United States does not defend differential treatment of criminal and civil cases, see Brief for United States 24, and it thus stops short of fully defending the Ninth Circuit’s treatment. The Government’s argument, instead, is that we should affirm under the rule that before any distribution may be treated as a return of capital (or, by a parity of reasoning, a dividend), it must first be distributed to the shareholder “with respect to . . . stock.”
Id.,
at 19 (internal quotation marks omitted). The taxpayer’s intent, the Government says, may be relevant to this limiting condition, and Boul
ware never expressly claimed any such intent. See
ibid.
(“[I]ntent is . . . relevant to whether a payment is a ‘distribution... with respect to [a corporation’s] stock’ ”); but see Tr. of Oral Arg. 44 (“[J]ust to be clear, the Government is arguing for an objective test here”).
The Government is of course correct that “with respect to . . . stock” is a limiting condition in § 301(a). See
supra,
at 424-425.
As the Government variously says, it requires that “the distribution of property by the corporation be made to a shareholder because of his ownership of its stock,” Brief for United States 16; and that “ ‘an amount paid by a corporation to a shareholder [be] paid to the shareholder in his capacity as such,”’
ibid,,
(quoting 26 CFR §1.301-l(c) (2007); emphasis deleted).
This, however, is not the time or place to home in on the “with respect to ... stock” condition. Facts with a bearing on it may range from the distribution of stock ownership
to conditions of corporate employment (whether, for example, a shareholder’s efforts on behalf of a corporation amount to a good reason to treat a payment of property as salary). The facts in this case have yet to be raked over with the stock ownership condition in mind, since
Miller
seems to have pretermitted a full consideration of the defensive proffer, and if consideration is to be given to that condition now, the canvas of evidence and Boulware’s proffer should be made by a court familiar with the whole evidentiary record.
As a more specific version of its “with respect to ... stock” position, the Government says that the diversions of corporate funds to Boulware were in fact unlawful, see Brief for United States 34-37; see also n. 5,
supra,
and it argues that §§301 and 316(a) are inapplicable to illegal transfers, see Brief for United States 34—37; see also
D’Agostino,
145 F. 3d, at 73 (“[T]he 'no earnings and profits, no income’ rule would not necessarily apply in a case of
unlawful
diversion, such
as embezzlement, theft, a violation of corporate law, or an attempt to defraud third party creditors” (emphasis in original)); see also n. 8,
supra.
The Government goes so far as to claim that “[t]he only rational basis for the jury’s judgment was a conclusion that [Boulware] unlawfully diverted the funds.” Brief for United States 37.
But we decline to take up the question whether an unlawful diversion may ever be deemed a “distribution . . . with respect to [a corporation’s] stock,” a question which was not considered by the Ninth Circuit. We do, however, reject the Government’s current characterization of the jury verdict in Boulware’s case. True, the jurors were not moved by Boulware’s suggestion that the diversions were corporate advances or loans, or that he was using the funds for corporate purposes. But the jury was not asked, and cannot be said to have answered, whether Boulware breached any fiduciary duty as a controlling shareholder, unlawfully diverted corporate funds to defraud his wife, or embezzled HIE’s funds outright.
V
Sections 301 and 316(a) govern the tax consequences of constructive distributions made by a corporation to a shareholder with respect to its stock. A defendant in a criminal tax case does not need to show a contemporaneous intent to treat diversions as returns of capital before relying on those sections to demonstrate no taxes are owed. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is vacated, and the ease is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.