Walker v. Commissioner

37 T.C. 962, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 189
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1962
DocketDocket No. 84875
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 37 T.C. 962 (Walker v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Commissioner, 37 T.C. 962, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 189 (tax 1962).

Opinion

PjeRCe, Judge:

The respondent determined a deficiency in income tax against the petitioners for the calendar year 1955 in the amount of $521; and also an addition to tax under section 6651(a) of the 1954 Code, in the amount of $130.25, because of the petitioners’ delay in filing a return for said year.

The issues to be decided are:

(1) Where a “noncompetent” American Indian, who was born on and lived on an Indian reservation and acted as the elected treasurer of the tribal community, received by reason of his services as such treasurer, a distribution or payment of $4,200 out of the Government-trusteed tribal funds derived directly from the tribal lands of the reservation, did the amount so distributed or paid to said Indian constitute taxable income under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 ?

(2) Should an addition to tax be imposed for the delay of said Indian and his wife in the filing of an income tax return, solely with respect to the amount so distributed or paid ?

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The petitioners, Freeman P. Walker (hereinafter called Walker) and Bernice Walker, are husband and wife. They are full-blooded American Indians who were born on, and now live on, the Gila River Indian Reservation near Tucson, Arizona. They are so-called “non-competent” Indians, because a “certificate of competency” has not been issued to either of them by the Secretary of the Interior of the United States.

The Gila River Indian Reservation includes approximately 371,000 acres of land, located on the Gila River in southwestern Arizona; and more than 5,000 Indians live thereon. Title to all the lands of the reservation is in the United States, which holds the same in trust for the use and benefit of the Indians living thereon. Most of such Indians belong to the Pima Tribe; but others belong to the Maricopa Tribe which is a smaller group. 'In the operation and administration of the reservation, these two tribes are regarded as a single unit; and accordingly, the term “tribe” as hereinafter used, has reference to both groups as though they were members of a single tribe.

The lands comprising the Gila River Indian Reservation are of two classes: (1) Portions of the lands from which small plots of 10 or more acres have been set aside and made the subject of restricted “allotments” for the use and occupancy of individual Indians; and (2) so-called “tribal lands” which have not been allotted to particular Indians, but which are held by the Government for the use and benefit of the tribe as a whole. Of the 371,000 acres comprising the reservation, about 27 percent thereof was “allotted” land; and the remaining 73 percent thereof was included in the so-called “tribal lands.” In the instant case, we are concerned only with funds which had their source in receipts and revenues that the tribe as a whole derived directly from said “tribal lands,” and which the Government thereafter held in trust for the use and benefit of the tribe.

The principal activity of most of the Indians on the reservation was farming. Those Indians who had been “allotted” particular parcels, usually worked on such parcels if they were irrigable; and most of the other Indians who either had no allotted parcels or whose parcels were arid, worked on the common “tribal lands,” where they raised cotton, barley, and other crops.

Ultimate control over the management and operation of the reservation was vested in the Secretary of the Interior; and prior to 1938, these functions were handled directly by agents and representatives of the Bureau of Indian Affairs of the Interior Department. In 1934 however, Congress enacted the so-called Wheeler-Howard Act (Act of June 18,1934, 48 Stat. 984, 25 U.S.C. 461 et seq.), which made provision for the organization of Indians residing on reservations, into membership corporations operating under charters to be issued by the Secretary of the Interior, in order—

to enable tribes and tribal members to become self-sufficient by tbeir own efforts in lines of endeavor congenial to native tastes and talents, and to make possible the transfer to the organized tribes of responsibility for services hitherto performed by the Federal Government.[1]

In 1936 the Indians residing on the Gila River Indian Reservation, acting pursuant to the provisions of the Wheeler-Howard Act, organized themselves into a tribal community, and adopted a proposed constitution and proposed bylaws. Thereafter in 1937, the Secretary of the Interior (after having approved such organizational steps) issued to such Indians a charter for a community corporation, under the name of “The Gila River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community of the Gila River Reservation.” Such charter was to become effective upon ratification by a majority vote of the adult Indians living on the reservation. This ratification was effected in 1938; and at all times since, said tribal community has been operated by the Indians as a means toward their attaining the above-mentioned objectives of the Wheeler-Howard Act.

In the operation of said tribal community, the Gila River Reservation was divided into 7 voting districts. The Indians residing in these districts elected a total of 17 representatives who served as members of the community council; and these council members, in turn, elected the officers of the community who included a governor, a lieutenant governor, a secretary, and a treasurer. Such council members and officers thereafter exercised many of the functions of administering the reservation, which had prior to the organization of the community been exercised directly by officials of the Bureau of Indian Affairs.

Following the organization and incorporation of said tribal community, title to all reservation lands (both tribal and allotted) continued as before to be in the United States Government which held the same in trust for the use and advancement of the Indian residents. And, as regards the so-called tribal lands which were used by the Indians in common, substantially all the receipts and revenues produced therefrom were, after the creation of the community as before, covered into the United States Treasury where they were held in trust for subsequent appropriation and disbursement for the benefit of the Indians on the reservation. The community council and officers were, however, given a large measure of responsibility for deciding and recommending how such receipts and revenues from the tribal lands should be disbursed and used.

During the year 1955, the amount of the receipts and revenues derived from the tribal lands on the Gila Indian Reservation — all of which were devoted to the use and benefit of the members of the tribe— was approximately $340,000. This amount consisted principally of proceeds from sales of cotton and barley grown by the Indians on said tribal lands; but it included also smaller amounts received from leases to non-Indian farmers, and from such other miscellaneous sources as fees from the granting of rights-of-way for telephone lines, buslines, and pipelines. Rone of such receipts and revenues arose from reinvestments of the amounts derived directly from the land, except one small item representing repayment with 3-percent interest of a $35 loan made to an Indian student.

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Bluebook (online)
37 T.C. 962, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-commissioner-tax-1962.