De Ganay v. Lederer

239 F. 568, 1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 12, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 745, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1444
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 14, 1917
DocketNo. 3472
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 239 F. 568 (De Ganay v. Lederer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Ganay v. Lederer, 239 F. 568, 1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 12, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 745, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1444 (E.D. Pa. 1917).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This case was tried under, the provisions of the statutes by the court without the intervention of a jury. The main facts are few and not in dispute. There is but one question in the case, and that one of law. The formal findings of fact, which are necessary, are found in the answers to the requests submitted by the parties, leave to file which, together with requests for conclusions of law, after the views of the court upon the one question discussed at the argument had been made known to counsel, was allowed by the court.

[ 1 ] The plaintiff is a nonresident alien. She is the owner of property, the income from which is collected for her by the Pennsylvania Company as her agent or attorney in fact, or by whatever term the company is designated in its relations with her. The defendant' demanded the amount now sued for as the tax on this income directed to be levied and collected by section II of the act of October 3, 1913. The tax was paid under protest, and its return demanded in accordance with the provisions of the statutes on the subject. It is conceded that, if the sum paid was lawfully collectible, the plaintiff cannot recover, but otherwise is entitled to judgment. The collection is justified, if at all, by the provision of the act above cited. The pertinent provision is:

“The entire net income from all property owned and every business,” etc., “carried on in the United States by persons residing elsewhere.”

No other question than the proper construction of the statute is involved. It is admitted (at least arguendo) that Congress could have lawfully imposed this tax upon the income of plaintiff. The sole question is: “Has it done so by this act ?”

There is always a temptation,- in the discussion of questions of this kind, to wander into the domain of economics or invade the realm of metaphysics. A yielding to this temptation would result in a discussion which would be well-nigh interminable. Two or more supposititious cases as crude illustrations will speed us to the point. A nonresident alien is the owner of omnibusses, which are run as public conveyances; the line being operated for the owner by his employes and agents. The income derived therefrom is admittedly subject to the payment of the tax. The same line of omnibusses belongs to a corporation, the stock of which is owned by the same alien. The dividends are asserted not to be subject to the tax.

Take two other cases to which the same distinction applies: A nonresident alien owns real estate (assuming alien ownership was permissible). The yield in rentals is conceded to be subject to the tax. The same alien recovers the same sum from the same property in the form not of rentals (in the sense before expressed), but in the form of ground rent. It is, of course, not asserted that the income is not subject to the tax, because the latter form of property is itself real estate, but this illustrates the distinction made in its double aspect. The argument is that the tax is payable in the one case, but not in the other, because in the one case Congress has imposed tire [570]*570tax and in the other has not. The minor premise on which the argument proceeds is asserted, because Congress has seen fit to tax not income derived by an alien from property belonging to him (which might be beyond its reach, long as the arm of the taxing power is known to be), but only such property if in the United States.

The further assertion that property of this incorporeal, intangible kind is not here, but in the country in which the alien is domiciled, is backed by the maxim of the law that “personal property follows the person.” The admission that property, whether real or personal, owned by a nonresident alien, might be in this country, and, in consequence, be made taxable, by the act, enforces the argument because the distinction between the two kinds of property lays ground for the inference that Congress meant to tax the one and not the other.

The argument has more than plausibility; it has real force, not merely because of the language chosen by Congress in which to express its thought, but also because the considerations which may have moved Congress to make such a distinction are obvious. The distinction between a physical thing and the usufruct, or between what a corporation (assuming all its possession to be of the physical kind) and what a stockholder owns, is clear enough. The word “property” is used to designate not only the right of a person in or to a thing, but also is applied to the thing itself, at least when it can be visualized.. Property of the kind with which we are now concerned is not a thing' in any physical sense, but is an abstraction, a concept. The thought that it can have no abiding place other than that arbitrarily assigned to it by the quoted maxim appeals strongly to any one trained to think’ in terms of the principles of the law. The retort that the maxim is no maxim at all, but a mere fiction, is of no aid to us, because, granted that it be a fiction, there is no other fiction, and no maxim of the law which locates property of this kind elsewhere. As property of this kind’is merely a concept or a right, the truth is that it cannot be “in” any place other than the mind of the person to whom the right belongs. The phrase that the right of property is in a person, or in the owner, or even that it resides in him, is an allowable one. To ’give it any other abiding place requires the ipse dixit of the law. The quoted maxim really is a phrase which voices a principle of the law that, when the locus in quo of property of this kind is spoken of or becomes important to find, it is to be understood to be wherever the owner resides, and to be regarded as if it ha.d physical existence at that place.

The fictions which form part of the science of tire law have been the subjects of many a eulogy, and this is one which has been universally accepted and acted upon from time out of mind. ■ The accepted and conventional meaning of any expression used in a statute must, of course, yield to the legislative mandate; and it is urged that we must look in every law for what the lawmaker meant, and, when this is found, words which may before have been used in a different sense from' that in which he has used them must be given the meaning which he has attached to them. In this way, “white,” as it is argued, mav be even read to mean “black.”

[571]*571Resort has been had to the later act of Congress as expressive of the meaning sought, and as declarative of what was meant by the act’ of 1913. Resort is also had to the executive construction placed upon the act now under consideration.

It is further pressed upon our attention that it is proper to assume that Congress had in mind a practical purpose, and had no thought of an idle and fruitless enactment, and that when a law is open to two constructions, one of which is promotive of its main and general purpose, and the other wholly destructive of it, that construction should be accepted which gives the law real meaning and not one which emasculates it. This principle of construction is appealed to because of the statistical fact that a tax upon so-called investment and like sources of income would yield a substantial sum, but one confined to physical things would be negligible.

[2] These supports of the contention of the defendant are attacked by the answer that at least one, and the preferred, place in which to look for the meaning of Congress is the language employed to express that meaning.

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Bluebook (online)
239 F. 568, 1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 12, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 745, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-ganay-v-lederer-paed-1917.