DocketNumber: Docket No. 66375.
Citation Numbers: 1933 BTA LEXIS 910, 29 B.T.A. 635
Judges: Black
Filed Date: 12/26/1933
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
*910 RESTRICTED INDIANS - TAXABILITY OF INCOME FROM REINVESTED TAX EXEMPT FUNDS. - Petitioner is a full-blood restricted Creek Indian. The income from his tax exempt allotted lands is received and held in trust for him by the Superintendent of the Five Civilized Tribes. During the taxable year 1929, the superintendent also received and held in trust for petitioner certain income from the reinvestment of the tax exempt income.
*635 OPINION.
BLACK: This proceeding is for the redetermination of a deficiency in income tax for the calendar year 1929 in the amount of $167. The amended petition alleges that the amount of taxes in controversy is $269.59, which amount includes the original assessment of $102.59, and assigns two errors, as follows:
(a) The Commissioner erred in including as income for the year 1929 an amount of $3,117.50 received as interest on*911 a refund of income tax during the year 1929.
(b) The Commissioner erred in exacting any taxes from this petitioner for the year 1929.
*636 The facts were stipulated as follows:
Petitioner is a full-blood restricted Creek Indian, being enrolled opposite Creek Roll No. NB 1263.
His property, both real and personal, is restricted and under the direct supervision of the Superintendent of the Five Civilized Tribes, and under the direction and supervision of the Secretary of the Interior.
The income from petitioner's allotment is received and held in trust by the said Superintendent and invested by him under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior. The income interest from such investments is likewise received and held in trust as part of petitioner's restricted funds and property.
For the calendar year 1929 the Superintendent filed for petitioner an income tax return and the said Superintendent paid the tax shown thereon to be due for restricted funds of petitioner in his possession.
Included in petitioner's tax return for 1929 was an amount of $7,797.42 received by said Superintendent upon petitioner's restricted funds. There was also included in said*912 return an item of $8,351.75 received by the said Superintendent as interest on Liberty Bonds held by him as part of petitioner's restricted funds. Neither of these sums were subject to petitioner's demand.
During the year 1929, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue under authority of
Year | Tax | Interest |
1914 | $95.43 | $79.15 |
1915 | 858.24 | 637.60 |
1916 | 3,396.31 | 2,400.75 |
Total | $4,349.98 | $3,117.50 |
There was also refunded during 1929 interest computed according to law on said refunds in the amount of $3,117.50, said interest being paid to the said Superintendent for petitioner. This interest is part of petitioner's restricted funds and is not subject to his demand.
That the interest set forth in the paragraph just above has never been returned for income tax purposes by said Superintendent or petitioner.
The net income of petitioner as determined by respondent is shown in the statement attached to the deficiency notice as follows:
The records of this office disclose that you received $3,117.50 in the form*913 of interest on a refund of income tax during the year 1929. Interest paid on such refund is taxable income for the year in which received. Inasmuch as this office is unable to identify this item in your return, the amount has been included resulting in a deficiency of $167.00.
Net income reported on return | $16,149.17 | |
Add: | ||
Interest | 3,117.50 | |
Adjusted net income | $19,266.67 | |
Less: | ||
Interest on Liberty Bonds | $8,351.75 | |
Personal exemption | 3,500.00 | |
Credit for dependents | 400.00 | |
12,251.75 | ||
Balance subject to normal tax | $7,014.92 |
*637 The relationship between the Government and the "restricted" Indian is that of guardian and ward.
It is contended on behalf of petitioner that he is totally exempt from the Federal income tax on all the income involved in this proceeding because of his status as a full-blood restricted Creek Indian. The case of
She is a restricted full-blood Osage. Her property is under the supervising control of the United States. She is its ward, and we cannot agree that because the income statute, Act of 1918 (40 Stat. 1057), and Act of 1921 (42 Stat. 227), subjects "the net income of every individual" to the tax, this is alone sufficient to make the Acts applicable to her. Such holding would be contrary to the almost*915 unbroken policy of Congress in dealing with its Indian wards and their affairs. Whenever they and their interests have been the subject affected by legislation they have been named and their interests specially dealt with.
"But in the government's dealings with the Indians the rule is exactly the contrary. The construction, instead of being strict, is liberal; doubtful expressions, instead of being resolved in favor of the United States, are to be resolved in favor of a weak and defenseless people, who are wards of the nation, and dependent wholly upon its protection and good faith. This rule of construction has been recognized, without exception, for more than a hundred years, and has been applied in tax cases."
The Solicitor*916 General of the United States did not ask for a writ of certiorari in the
On the same day that the Tenth Circuit decided the
The Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari in the
It is further insisted that, since the royalties are not taxable so long as they remain in the hands of the government in trust for the tribe and undistributed to members, income derived by the individual member from this fund comes from an exempt source and must therefore also be held to be exempt. * * * Royalties received by the government from mineral leases of Indian lands have been held to be beyond a state's taxing power * * * on the ground that while in the possession of the United States they are a federal instrumentality, to be used to carry out a governmental purpose. It does not follow, however, that they cannot be subjected to a federal tax. The intent to exclude must be definitely expressed, where, as here, the general language of the act laying the tax is broad enough to include the subject matter. * * * But whatever may have been the liability of the fund to federal taxation while it remained in the hands of the government, it cannot properly be said that the share of it paid as royalties to the petitioner constituted in his hands an*918 instrumentality of the government and was therefore beyond the scope of the tax. * * * There is of section 213(a) of the Revenue Act of 1918.
The real test, therefore, it seems to us, of the applicability of the Federal income tax laws to the income of Indians is whether such income or the property which produces such income is specifically exempted from taxation, either in the tax statutes or other legislation dealing particularly with Indian affairs. This was the test applied by the Tenth Circuit in the two recent cases of
The court in the
We conclude, therefore, that the homestead remained restricted and exempt from taxation, and that the surplus allotment became freed of restrictions and subject to taxation from and after sixty days from May 27, 1908.
In the instant proceeding the respondent is not proposing to tax any income from petitioner's allotment. *919 Respondent in his brief *639 admits that the income of a restricted Indian from restricted lands is exempt from taxation, but contends that there is no provision of law or treaty which exempts income from
The source of the income which we are considering here is not the petitioner's homestead allotment, but is United States notes purchased and deposits made*920 with the income from the allotment. When that income was received for the petitioners by the Superintendent of the Five Civilized Tribes, it was separated from its nontaxable source and when invested became itself a new source of income, which is not protected from taxation either by the Revenue Act of 1918 or by prior acts of Congress under which the homestead allotment was made. We are therefore of the opinion that the interest on the Government notes and bank deposits involved herein is subjected to tax under the Revenue Act of 1918.
Our decision in the
* * * In this as in other Indian legislation, opportunity is afforded for their emancipation by imposing upon them duties as well as giving them the privileges of citizens and property owners, including the duty to pay taxes.
In a broad sense*922 all lands which the Indians are permitted to purchase out of taxable lands of the state in this process of their emancipation and assumption of the responsibility of citizenship, whether restricted or not, may be said to be instrumentalities in that process. But they are far less intimately connected with the performance of an essential governmental function than were the restricted allotted lands, and the accomplishment of their purpose obviously does not require entire independence of state control in matters of taxation. To hold them immune would be inconsistent with one of the very purposes of their creation, to educate the Indians in responsibility, and would present the curious paradox that the Secretary by a mere conveyancer's restriction, permitted by Congress, had rendered the land free from taxation and thus actually relieved the Indians of all responsibility. There are some instrumentalities which, though Congress may protect them from state taxation, will nevertheless be subject to that taxation unless Congress speaks. [Citations.] These lands we take to be of that character.
The principle thus announced as to lands and their taxability would appear to be just*923 as applicable to new acquisitions of personal property and the income therefrom. See also
Returning now to the
Counsel for petitioner emphasizes the fact that the income in question is held in trust by the superintendent and was not subject to petitioner's demand. This is of course true in all cases where there is a guardianship relationship. But the income itself is not exempt from taxation unless it is somewhere so provided. The respondent does not propose to subject the Liberty bond interest of $8,351.75 to the normal tax. Aside from*924 this item of income being exempt from the normal tax, the items of income here involved are not exempt by virtue of any provision in any treaty with the Indians, the
Reviewed by the Board.
Shaw v. Gibson-Zahniser Oil Corp. , 48 S. Ct. 333 ( 1928 )
McCurdy v. United States , 38 S. Ct. 289 ( 1918 )
Choate v. Trapp , 32 S. Ct. 565 ( 1912 )
United States v. Waller , 37 S. Ct. 430 ( 1917 )
Choteau v. Burnet , 51 S. Ct. 598 ( 1931 )