The provisions of the Revenue Act of 1924, §§ 1200(a),
1201(a), (b) for granting a 25 percent reduction of taxes imposed
under the Act
Page 285 U. S. 229
of 1921 upon taxpayers returning income for the calendar year
1923, and proportionate reductions where returns were made for
other fiscal periods beginning or ending in that calendar year, do
not apply to a partner making his individual return for the
calendar year 1924, even though the distributive share received by
him in that year was attributable in part to the 1923 portion of a
partnership fiscal year beginning in 1923 and ending in 1924. P.
285 U. S.
230.
52 F.2d 17 affirmed.
Certiorari, 284 U.S. 612, to review judgments affirming orders
of the Board of Tax Appeals sustaining income tax assessments. 18
B.T.A. 393.
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioners in these cases, members of a law partnership,
filed their individual tax returns for the calendar year 1924. The
partnership books were kept on the basis of a fiscal year, and the
partnership information return, filed in 1924, was for the fiscal
year ending April 30th of that year. As required by § 218(a)
of the Revenue Act of 1924, c. 234, 43 Stat. 253, 275, the
petitioners included in their individual returns their respective
shares of the partnership profits for the partnership year ending
in 1924. They thus returned, as 1924 income, partnership profits
attributable to eight months of the previous year.
Page 285 U. S. 230
In assessing the tax, the Commissioner rejected their claim
that, under the provisions of Title XII of the Revenue Act of 1924,
they were entitled to a reduction of 25 percent of the tax at 1923
rates on that portion of their respective shares of the partnership
income attributable to the eight months of the partnership year
which fell in the calendar year 1923, and found deficiencies
accordingly. The orders of the Board of Tax Appeals sustaining the
action of the Commissioner, 18 B.T.A. 393, were affirmed by the
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. 52 F.2d 17. This Court
granted certiorari to resolve a conflict between the decision below
and that of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in
White
v. Maddison, 45 F.2d 335.
The provisions of Title XII of the Revenue Act of 1924 embody a
comprehensive scheme for relieving taxpayers from the burdens of
the higher rates applicable to 1923 income under the 1921 Act. The
1924 Act reduced the rates, but became a law too late in the year
to make them readily applicable to income earned in the previous
year. Instead, it adopted the less scientific, but more convenient,
plan of a level reduction of 25% of the tax. In making it, Congress
was careful to limit the reduction to taxes on income returned for
1923. The applicable provisions are found in sections 1200(a) and
1201(a) and (b) of the 1924 Act.** Section 1200(a) authorized the
allowance to taxpayers
Page 285 U. S. 231
making a return of income for the calendar year 1923. Section
1201(a) and (b) granted it to taxpayers returning income for a
fiscal year beginning or ending in 1923, but only with respect to
the tax on so much of the income returned as was attributable to
income earned in the calendar year 1923.
Petitioners' claims for the allowance plainly are not
comprehended by the language of either section. They made their
returns on the calendar year basis, and were entitled to, and
presumably received, the allowance authorized by § 1200(a)
upon the tax on income returned for the calendar year 1923. But
this section does not authorize any reduction of the tax upon
income returned for the calendar year 1924, as was that of
petitioners. Section 1201(a) and (b) applies only to taxpayers
returning income for a fiscal year beginning or ending in 1923. The
petitioners, who made no such returns, were thus excluded from the
benefits of the 25% reduction of the tax on any part of their
income returned for the calendar year 1924 by the unambiguous
language of these sections.
See Crooks v. Harrelson,
282 U. S. 55,
282 U. S.
60-61.
They argue that the provisions of these sections applicable to
income returned for 1923 evidence a general purpose to allow the
reduction of tax upon any income attributable to that year. Hence,
despite the language of § 1201(b) restricting its benefits to
those returning income for taxation for some part of the year 1923,
they insist that it should be deemed to extend to taxes on
partnership income attributable to 1923, although, in
Page 285 U. S. 232
fact, income in 1924, and returned by the taxpayers as such in
their 1924 returns.
Even if there were room for construction of the words of the
statute, it is impossible to discern any such general purpose
underlying the 1924 Act as would support petitioners' contention.
There are two insuperable obstacles to the construction urged. The
first is the necessary effect of § 1200(a) when applied to
returns of taxpayers for the calendar year 1923. That section
authorizes a reduction of 25% of the taxes for 1923 upon all
income, including that derived from partnerships having a fiscal
year beginning in 1922 and ending in 1923. Thus applied, it allows
25% reduction of petitioners' 1923 tax, including that upon their
partnership income attributable to eight months of 1922. If, as
they insist, § 1201(b) is to be construed as permitting a like
reduction of the 1924 tax on partnership income attributable to the
last eight months of the calendar year 1923, which overlapped the
partnership year ending in 1924, petitioners, despite the careful
limitation of the reduction to taxes upon income for a single year,
would be entitled to a reduction of the tax on partnership income
for a period of more than a year -- in this case, twenty months --
eight months of 1922 and the full twelve months of 1923.
A second objection to the suggested construction of §
1201(b) is that, if the reduction for which it provides were
extended to the tax involved here, it would not necessarily result
in a return of 25% of the tax assessed, as is the obvious purpose
of the section. Section 1201(a) and (b) allow the 25% reduction on
that proportion of the tax for the entire year, computed at 1923
rates, which the period of the fiscal year falling within the
calendar year 1923 bears to the entire taxable year. As this is the
same basis on which the tax is computed under § 207(a) of the
1924 Act where the taxable year begins in 1923 and
Page 285 U. S. 233
ends in 1924, the reduction is exactly 25% of the tax
assessed.
A different method of computing the tax on a distributive share
of partnership income for a partnership fiscal year beginning in
1923 and ending in 1924 is prescribed by § 207(b) of the 1924
Act. Under that section, the tax computed for the fiscal year at
1923 rates is not, as under § 207(a), apportioned to the
number of months of the fiscal year which fall in the calendar year
1923. Instead, § 207(b) applies the 1923 schedule of rates to
the income apportioned to 1923, and the 1924 schedule to the income
apportioned to 1924. And, for purposes of the surtax, it places the
income from the partnership subject to the 1924 rates in the lower
brackets, and the income subject to the 1923 rates in the higher
brackets.
The difference in method of calculating the tax on the two
classes of income may produce different amounts of tax on the same
amount of income. The tax computed under § 207(a) upon income
of an individual taxpayer attributable to the first eight months of
a fiscal year ending April 30, 1924, would be exactly two-thirds of
the total tax, and it is to the two-thirds of this total to which
the 25% reduction is applied by § 1201(b). If applicable to
the present case, the reduction would likewise be allowed on
two-thirds of the tax for the entire year at 1923 rates. But the
tax calculated under § 207(b) on income derived from the
partnership for the same eight months of 1923 would be more than
two-thirds of the total tax for the year, because of the higher
rate of surtax applicable to the income attributed to 1923 than to
the income apportioned to 1924.
The reduction of the tax calculated as prescribed by §
1201(b) would accordingly not be 25% of the tax. The section, if
construed to extend the reduction to a tax computed as was the
petitioners,' would thus depart from the
Page 285 U. S. 234
obvious purpose and definite scheme of the 1924 Act to return
uniformly to taxpayers 25% of the tax on income of a single year.
Undoubtedly Congress might have included the tax on this income of
petitioners in its scheme for refunding taxes. Its failure to do so
is doubtless a consequence of the fact, already noted, that it did
make provision for reduction of the like tax on the income for the
corresponding months of 1922.
Assuming that petitioners can invoke the protection of the Fifth
Amendment to secure an equable share of a credit or refund of a tax
after it assessment, we can discern in this statute no want of due
process of law. The petitioners are within a defined class which
Congress clearly had power to select for purposes of a tax refund.
See La Belle Iron Works v. United States, 256 U.
S. 377,
256 U. S. 392;
Billings v. United States, 232 U.
S. 261,
232 U. S. 282;
Barclay & Co. v. Edwards, 267 U.
S. 442,
267 U. S. 450.
They cannot complain of the possibly unequal operation of the
statute on others less favorably situated.
Heald v. District of
Columbia, 259 U. S. 114,
259 U. S.
123.
Affirmed.
* Together with No. 470,
Stewart v. Burnet, Commissioner of
Internal Revenue.
**
"Sec. 1200. (a) Any taxpayer making return, for the calendar
year 1923, of the taxes imposed by Parts I and II of Title II of
the Revenue Act of 1921 shall be entitled to an allowance by credit
or refund of 25 percentum of the amount shown as the tax upon his
return."
"Sec. 1201. (a) Any taxpayer making return, for a period
beginning in 1922 and ending in 1923, of the taxes imposed by Parts
I and II of Title II of the Revenue Act of 1921, shall be entitled
to an allowance by credit or refund of 25 percentum of the same
proportion of his tax for such period (determined under the law
applicable to the calendar year 1923 and at the rates for such
year) which the portion of such period falling within the calendar
year 1923 is of the entire period."
"(b) Any taxpayer making return, for a period beginning in 1923
and ending in 1924, of the taxes imposed by Parts I and II of Title
II of this Act, shall be entitled to an allowance by credit or
refund of 25 percentum of the same proportion of a tax for such
period (determined under the law applicable to the calendar year
1923 and at the rates for such year) which the portion of such
period falling within the calendar year 1923 is of the entire
period."