DocketNumber: Docket No. 5750-89
Judges: BUCKLEY
Filed Date: 7/16/1992
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
*428 Decision will be entered for respondent.
Ps late filed their 1986 Federal income tax return on which they reported wage and interest income, but claimed that as members of the Mohawk Nation and the Six-Nation Iroquois Confederacy they were exempt from Federal income tax.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
BUCKLEY,
At all relevant times, petitioners were members of the Mohawk Nation and resided at the reservation. The Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora Nations comprise the Iroquois Confederacy of the Six Nations, also known in their language as the Haudenosaunee. We sometimes hereafter refer to the people of these nations collectively as the Iroquois or Haudenosaunee. The lands reserved to the Iroquois are located in upstate New York and stretch across the Canadian border.
The Mohawk people are a matriarchal society. The elder mothers of the Mohawk Nation are the ultimate overseers of the affairs of the people. They choose the people who are to lead and represent each of the three Mohawk clans as chiefs. The three Mohawk clans are Wolf, Bear, and Turtle, and membership therein is determined at birth based upon family lineage. The clan mothers also choose the persons who are to act as faith-keepers, i.e., spiritual leaders and organizers of Mohawk ceremonies.
Clan *431 chiefs preside over important events such as marriages and funerals. They serve as representatives of the Mohawk people on the Mohawk Council of Chiefs as well as on the Grand Council of the Six Nations which meets annually at Onondaga, New York. They also travel worldwide to attend international conferences of the United Nations as Iroquois/Haudenosaunee representatives.
The Haudenosaunee issues its people passports for foreign travel. At least one such passport of a Mohawk chief has been recognized and honored by the governments of the United States, Switzerland, and Colombia. Mohawks traverse the U.S.-Canadian border on reservation lands free from interference by immigration and customs officials of either country. At most, they may be asked to identify themselves as Mohawks by showing an I.D. card issued by the Haudenosaunee.
The traditions, history, and ways of the Iroquois nations have been orally passed down from generation to generation through the clan mothers, chiefs, and faith-keepers. The Iroquois refer to this as the "oral tradition". In addition, Native American artifacts crafted by the Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) which are known as wampum belts serve to memorialize*432 certain aspects of the oral tradition considered significant by the Iroquois people. A wampum belt is crafted by stringing rows of various colored beads made from shells into specific patterns. Each unique pattern documents the Iroquois understanding of a specific historical event such as a treaty agreement.
One such wampum belt, the Two Row Wampum (Kaswanta), was created in the seventeenth century. The Two Row Wampum depicts two parallel rows of dark colored beads on a background of lighter colored beads extending the length of the belt. It represents the Iroquois understanding of a treaty agreement reached with the Dutch in the early 1600s. The two rows signify the two peoples, Iroquois and Dutch, coexisting peacefully and maintaining separate ways of life free from interference from the other. The Iroquois refer to this as the "chain of friendship". Petitioners' position is that the treaty agreement represented by the Two Row Wampum was incorporated impliedly in each of the treaty agreements upon which they rely.
The confederacy of the Six Nations or Iroquois entered into a treaty agreement with the United States in the year 1794 at Canandaigua, New York. That treaty *433 has become known as the Treaty of Canadaigua or the Treaty of the Six Nations, Nov. 11, 1794, 7 Stat. 44. The preamble to the Treaty states that the conference with the Six Nations was "for the purpose of removing from their minds all causes of complaint, and establishing a firm and permanent friendship with them". With respect to the lands reserved to certain of the Six Nations, the Treaty states in articles II and III that the United States acknowledges those lands to be the property of those nations and that the United States "will never claim the same, nor disturb [those nations] or either of the Six Nations, nor their Indian friends residing thereon and united with them, in the free use and enjoyment thereof".
Also in 1794, the United States and Great Britain entered into the Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, better known as the Jay Treaty, Nov. 19, 1794, 8 Stat. 116, T.S. 105. Article 3 of the Jay Treaty discusses the imposition of import duties upon goods carried between the United States and the British territories to the north (now Canada). It states in part:
No Duty of Entry shall ever be levied by either Party on Peltries brought by Land, or Inland Navigation*434 into the said Territories respectively, nor shall the Indians passing or repassing with their own proper Goods and Effects of whatever nature, pay for the same any Impost or Duty whatever. But Goods in Bales, or other large Packages unusual among Indians shall not be considered as Goods belonging bona fide to Indians.
Following the War of 1812, the United States and Great Britain negotiated the Treaty of Peace and Amity, also known as the Treaty of Ghent, Dec. 24, 1814, 8 Stat. 218, T.S. 109. The ninth article of the Treaty provides:
The United States of America engage to put an end immediately after the ratification of the present Treaty to hostilities with all the Tribes or Nations of Indians with whom they may be at war at the time of such ratification and forthwith to restore to such Tribes or Nations respectively all the possessions, rights and privileges which they may have enjoyed or been entitled to in one thousand eight hundred and eleven previous to such hostilities. * * *
During 1986, petitioner husband worked for the Reynolds Metals Company in New York State as a plant mechanic and received compensation in the amount of $ 30,332.31. Petitioner wife worked for the*435 Mohawk Indian Housing Corporation during 1986 as its executive director and received compensation in the amount of $ 18,427.20. Petitioners reported these amounts as income on their 1986 return along with $ 31.03 of interest income. However, they reported no taxable income and no tax. They attached to their return (filed on May 1, 1987) an affidavit declaring an exemption from tax signed by petitioner husband. The affidavit asserts an exemption grounded, inter alia, on the 1794 Treaty of the Six Nations, the Jay Treaty, the Treaty of Ghent, and the U.S. Constitution. It states in conclusion:
The Six Nations, the Tribes, Bands, Communities, Families, the individual Indians and those united with them are exempt from taxation by the Department of the Treasury - Internal Revenue Service. Therefore, I, Glenny A. Lazore [petitioner husband] and the Indian of the Mohawk Nation - Six Nation Iroquois Confederacy, solemnly declare that I am exempt from taxation by the Department of the Treasury Internal Revenue Service. This declaration is based upon existing Federal Treaties, Agreement, and Statues [sic] authorizing the exemption of an Indian from payment of Federal income tax.
*436 In her notice of deficiency respondent determined that the compensation and interest received by petitioners during 1986 is includable in taxable income under section 61(a). Petitioners reassert in their petition that they are exempt from paying Federal income tax. They concede, however, that if we decide they are subject to Federal income taxation, the computation of tax deficiency in the statutory notice is correct; they make no concessions respecting the determined additions to tax.
OPINION
As a congressional act of general application, the Internal Revenue Code applies equally to members of the Mohawk Nation as to all others. In
Referring to whether certain income of a member of the Creek tribe was taxable under the Code, the Court stated: "The general terms of the taxing act include the income under consideration, and if exemption exists it must derive plainly from agreements with the Creeks or some Act of Congress dealing with their affairs."
In the oft cited case of
Doubtful expressions are to be resolved in favor of the weak and defenseless people who are the wards of the nation, dependent upon its protection and good faith. Hence, in the words of Chief Justice Marshall: "The language used in treaties with the Indians should never be construed to their prejudice. If words be made use of, which are susceptible of a more extended meaning than their plain import, as connected with the tenor of the treaty, they should be considered as used only in the latter sense." * * *
Since the decision in
Petitioners argue that, when read together and considered in light of the historical evidence presented to the Court, the language used in the 1794 Treaty of the Six Nations, the Jay Treaty, and the Treaty of Ghent can be reasonably construed to exempt them from the Federal income tax. They alternatively argue that the U.S. Constitution exempts them from the*440 Federal income tax, since they are "Indians not taxed" as that term is used in Article I and the
Respondent contends that the issue has already been decided by this Court in her favor. She cites the following:
We address petitioners' constitutional argument first. Petitioners contend that at the time the Constitution was drafted its framers recognized*441 the various Indian tribes as politically separate from the United States, and that by referring to the category of "Indians not taxed", the framers intended, so long as the tribes remained outside of the polity of the United States, to place them out of reach of the Federal Government's taxing authority. Petitioners presented evidence in support of their claim that the Iroquois people have remained outside the polity of the United States. The Iroquois continue to reside on the lands reserved to them by treaty; they have retained their own cultural ways of life and system of self-governance; they move freely across the U.S.-Canadian border on reservation lands; and their passports are accepted by at least some foreign governments. Petitioners do not consider themselves citizens of the United States.
While these factors suggest, at least to some degree, that the Iroquois are recognized as an autonomous people, petitioners point to no authority for their contention that by using the term "Indians not taxed" the framers of the Constitution intended to exempt from the taxing power of the United States those Indians remaining outside the polity of the United States. They rely solely*442 upon the conclusion to that effect drawn by their expert witness. Although we acknowledge the witness as a qualified expert on the history of the Iroquois, we do not accept his legal conclusions as to the meaning of the Constitution. Petitioners also quote from
Petitioners' argument has been previously considered by this and other courts. The constitutional reference called into question by petitioners is merely --
an apportionment provision designed to establish the method of computing the number of representatives for each State and determine apportionment of direct taxes among the States. The phase "Indians not taxed," when viewed in context, is clearly descriptive, describing the fact that some Indians are not taxed by the State in which they reside and should, therefore, be excluded from enumeration of its population.
See also
Petitioners' further argument is that an exemption from the Federal income tax is to be found in the above mentioned treaties. The language from those treaties upon which petitioners rely has been excerpted and set forth above in our findings of fact. Petitioners provide a historical backdrop to the signing of these treaties. From the early 1600s, the Iroquois and the newly arrived Dutch settlers forged a chain of friendship which the Iroquois commemorated through the Two Row Wampum. The Iroquois understood their relationship with the European settlers to be one in which the two peoples coexist peacefully and separately, without interference by one into the other's way of life. The Iroquois continue to this day to live their separate way of life and in many respects are viewed as an autonomous people. Petitioners argue that this evidence sheds light *444 on the Iroquois understanding of the subject treaty agreements. They maintain that the Iroquois understood the agreements to mean that their lives would not be infringed upon in any way by the United States. Although no income tax existed at the time of the signing of the treaties, we hear petitioners to say that the imposition of an income tax is prohibited by the treaties as an infringement upon their way of life.
The Jay Treaty does in fact make reference to a limited prohibition on taxation of the Iroquois. Under the Article 3 provision cited by petitioners, Iroquois crossing what is not the U.S.-Canadian border are not required to pay any impost or duty upon their goods or effects to either the United States or Great Britain. Petitioners argue that, at the time of the signing of the treaty, such a tax was an important source of revenue to the United States and is analogous to the contemporary Federal income tax. The cited provision also states, however, that with respect to large quantities of goods carried by Indians, such goods shall not be considered as belonging to Indians and therefore will be subject to duty.
We think it clear that the intended effect of the cited*445 Jay Treaty provision was to allow the Iroquois to freely traverse the border without interference so long as they were not carrying goods in commerce. Petitioners have demonstrated that to this day they are free to cross the border without unnecessary interference. However, this is not to say that a broad tax exemption was contemplated; the provision clearly does not exempt goods carried by the Iroquois where the apparent purpose is for trading in commerce.
The various treaty agreements upon which petitioners rely have been considered in conjunction with the substantial historical and other evidence presented by petitioners. In so considering the evidence and treaties, we are mindful of the rule of construction that the language in a treaty or statute is to be construed favorably towards Indians. Even so, we are unable to construe the language of these treaties as a restriction on the taxing authority of the United States to impose a tax not yet in existence. See
We hold that petitioners are not exempt from paying Federal*446 income taxes.
Respondent also determined that petitioners are subject to additions to tax for late filing of their return and for negligence.
We have held that the late filing of a return constitutes negligence under
1. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year at issue. Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Respondent's notice of deficiency cites
Superintendent of Five Civilized Tribes v. Commissioner ( 1935 )
Bentley L. Holt and Bonnie J. Holt v. Commissioner of ... ( 1966 )
William H. Hoptowit v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1983 )
harry-dillon-sr-faye-dillon-silas-v-cross-millie-cross-silas-a ( 1986 )
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones ( 1973 )
Harry H. Karmun and Alice G. Karmun v. Commissioner of ... ( 1984 )
Thelma Horton Clark v. United States ( 1978 )
Gary M. Emmons and Martha C. Emmons v. Commissioner of ... ( 1990 )
Roger A. Jourdain and Margaret E. Jourdain v. Commissioner ... ( 1980 )
Hayes Big Eagle (1), Ruby Bolton (2), and Charles Whitehorn ... ( 1962 )
Federal Power Commission v. Tuscarora Indian Nation ( 1960 )