Epley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

183 F.2d 1020, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 883, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3964
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 1950
Docket13067
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 183 F.2d 1020 (Epley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 183 F.2d 1020, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 883, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3964 (5th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

Involving a deficiency in federal income and victory taxes fox the year 1943, assessed against the taxpayer, 1 a citizen of Louisiana and a veteran of World War Two, this appeal presents a single question of law for our decision.

This question is whether, under Sec. 6 (d) (1) of that act, 2 in computing the tax for 1943, for which the taxpayer was liable, “the increase in the tax for the taxable year 1943 under subsection 6(d) (1) of the Act, should be reduced by an amount equal to the amount by which the tax for the taxable year 1942 is increased by reason of the inclusion in the net income for the taxable year 1942 of the amount of the earned net income”, to-wit, the amount earned by petitioner as a lawyer in that year, or whether, as the Commissioner and Tax Court in turn-have determined, upon the purported authority of regulations 3 promulgated under the Current Tax Payment Act, it should be reduced by only one-half thereof.

*1022 Neither daunted nor dismayed by the action of the Commissioner and the Tax Court, the 'soldier taxpayer, firmly convinced of the justice of his cause and the rightness of his position, is 'here pressing with confidence for a reversal of their action.

He attacks as discriminatory, illegal, and void the regulations under which the Commissioner and the Tax Court grudgingly accorded him one-half instead of the full remedial relief the Congress had, in the Current Tax Payment Act, without discrimination as to any, accorded to al’l members of the armed forces in active service. He insists that the regulations are not in accordance with, indeed they are directly contrary to, the will of the Congress, and that the decision 'based upon them may not stand.

We agree with the taxpayer: that the statute he invokes is highly remedial; that its terms are intended to, they do, have uniform application to all soldiers; that nothing in it provides for or suggests according to “earned income” any different treatment in the cases of soldiers from community property states from that accorded to such income in non-community property states; that in the absence of language evidencing a different purpose, this highly remedial income tax act, “is to be interpreted so as to give a uniform application to a nation-wide scheme of taxation”; 4 and that in denying the full relief, extended by the statute to the soldier taxpayer, as the breadwinner for the family, in respect to income earned by 'his efforts in 1942, before he entered the service, the regulation is discriminatory, contrary to the statute, and void.

In McLarry v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 30 F.2d 789, the Commissioner and the Tax Court had determined that in returning her one-half of the marital community income for the year 1924, the wife was not entitled to report as “earned income” one-half of the amounts received as compensation for personal services rendered by 'her 'husband, a citizen of Texas. This court reversed, holding, in a well reasoned opinion; that the statute defining “earned income” as “wages, salaries, professional fees, and other amounts received as compensation for personal services actually rendered,” Revenue Act 1924, § 209(a), 26 U.S.C.A. Int. Rev. Acts, page 14, included all of the income so received, no matter by whom returned, and not one-half of it; and that petitioner and her husband, together members “of a Texas marital community,” and, therefore each entitled to return one-half of the community income, were together entitled to return not one-half but the whole of the “earned income”.

In Graham v. Commissioner, 95 F.2d 174, 175, the Ninth Circuit, agreeing with our holding, flatly rejected the claim of the Commissioner that there should be read into the phrase “personal services actually rendered”, the words “by the taxpayer”, saying, “This we decline to do. We think that, if Congress had intended such a limitation, it would have expressed that intent.”

The Commissioner, finding no such limiting provision, in the statute under construction here as he thought should be read into it, has undertaken to supply it by writing it out in his regulation. This he cannot do. His reliance, therefore, upon Sec. 6(h) 5 of the Act to support 'him 'here, will not sustain him. For while this subsection does provide, “This section shall be applied in accordance with regulations” (emphasis supplied), and, therefore, empowers the Commissioner to give effect to, and carry out, the will of Congress, it does not purport to, it does not, give the Commissioner the power, under the guise of regulation, to change the remedial purpose and effect of the law, and thus thwart that will.

The decisions from the Fifth and Ninth Circuits, supra, and the Treasury Regulations promulgated in acceptance thereof, on which the Commissioner relies as authority *1023 for, are authority against the regulations on which he relies here. They but gave full effect to the intention of the Congress embodied in the statute to “create a discrimination in favor of earned income” and to apply to “earned income” a different tax treatment from that applied to “unearned”. They but gave the statute the uniform nationwide application intended for it, without regard to whether the income was “earned” in community or non-community property states.

The fact that, in community property states, income earned by the personal services -actually rendered by the husband, when and as received as the result of the husband’s efforts, is income of the marital community and owned one-half by each, and is so returned, was not regarded as having, it did not have the effect the Commissioner contended for, of depriving part of the income earned by the husband’s efforts, of the preferential statutory treatment accorded to “earned income”. There the dominant purpose of the statute was to tax “earned income” differently from, that is more favorably than, “unearned income”, -and the statute containing no limiting language, the Commissioner’s efforts to limit it were unavailing.

Here, in recognition of the fact that the soldier, the normal earner of and for the family, had been taken away from that position, the dominant purpose of the statute was to reduce the burden on him of the “increase” provisions of Sec. 6(d) (1) by “an amount equal to the amount by which the tax for the taxable year 1942 * * * is increased by reason of the inclusion in the net income for the taxable year 1942 of the amount of earned net income” as defined in section 25(a) (4) [Revenue Act 1938, 52 Stat.466], 6 (Emphasis supplied).

Here, as was the case of the statute construed in the McLarry and Graham cases, this statute contains no language limiting the words “the amount of the earned net income” as the Commissioner would have them limited.

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Bluebook (online)
183 F.2d 1020, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 883, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epley-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1950.