A holder of common stock in a corporation which had but the one
class of stock outstanding received, in 1939, stock dividends
(based on earnings and profits subsequent to February 28, 1913) in
common stock identical with the stock on which they were declared.
The divided stock was in no way realized upon in 1939.
Held, upon consideration of the legislative history and
administrative construction, that Congress, by §§ 22(a)
and 115(f)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, did not intend to tax
such stock dividends, and that there is no occasion to reconsider
Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U. S. 189. Pp.
318 U. S. 372,
318 U. S.
404.
129 F.2d 321, affirmed.
Certiorari,
317 U. S. 19, to
review the affirmance of a decision of the Board of Tax Appeals
which reversed the Commissioner's determination of a deficiency in
respondent's income tax.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question in this case is whether the Acts of Congress and
the administrative regulations thereunder afford a basis on which
we may reconsider the decision in
Page 318 U. S. 372
Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U. S. 189, and
pass on the Government's request that it be overruled.
During the Calendar year 1939, respondent owned 101 shares of
common stock of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. Twice
during the year, that corporation made appropriate transfers from
earned surplus to its capital accounts, in amounts less than the
net accumulation of earnings and profits subsequent to February 28,
1913, and against them issued stock dividends. On June 15, 1939,
respondent received a dividend of 1.01 such shares having a fair
market value of $42.93. On December 15, 1939, she received a
further dividend of 1.53 shares, which had a fair market value of
$66.08. These dividends were in common stock identical with the
stock on which they were declared, which was the only stock
outstanding at the time they were made. The dividend stock was not
sold, redeemed, or in any way realized upon, and the taxpayer did
not include it as income in her return for 1939. The Commissioner
did so include it, and, on December 8, 1941, sent her a notice of
deficiency in the amount of $9.60. The Board of Tax Appeals
reversed his determination, and the Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Second Circuit affirmed on the authority of
Eisner v.
Macomber, supra. 129 F.2d 321. Because of the importance of
the question, we granted certiorari. 317 U.S. 619.
The tax is asserted under the general provision of § 22(a)
of the Internal Revenue Code that income includes "dividends,"
together with the specific provision of § 115(f)(1) that:
"A distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders in its
stock or in rights to acquire its stock shall not be treated as a
dividend to the extent that it does not constitute income to the
shareholder within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment to the
Constitution. [
Footnote 1]
"
Page 318 U. S. 373
Was Congress thereby saying that such a dividend as we have here
is not being taxed, in view of the
Eisner v. Macomber
decision, or was it saying that, regardless of that decision, it is
being taxed? Events which must be considered to determine which
Congress intended begin with the enactment of the Revenue Act of
1913, which taxed corporate "dividends" in general, but said
nothing of stock dividends in particular. [
Footnote 2] The Treasury attempted to tax them, and
this Court held that a dividend of common stock paid on stock of
the same kind was not income within the meaning of the Act,
intimating, however, that, as used in the Sixteenth Amendment,
"income" might have a wider scope.
Towne v. Eisner,
245 U. S. 418.
Congress had meanwhile provided that a "stock dividend shall be
considered income, to the amount of its cash value." [
Footnote 3] Under that Act, the Commissioner
asserted that a dividend in common stock paid on common stock
constituted income when received. This Court held it was not income
within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment, chiefly for the
reason that income had not been severed from capital or realized by
such a distribution.
Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.
S. 189. This decision was by a divided Court, Justices
Holmes and Brandeis each writing a dissenting opinion, in which,
respectively, Justices Day and Clarke joined. It was promptly and
sharply criticized. [
Footnote
4]
Page 318 U. S. 374
Although
Eisner v. Macomber dealt only with a dividend
of common stock to common stockholders, it was at once accepted as
the basis for a broader exemption. The Treasury ruled that receipt
of dividend stock generally was not income, and Congress provided
in § 201(d) of the Revenue Act of 1921, 42 Stat. 227, that
"[a] stock dividend shall not be subject to tax. . . ." [
Footnote 5] Treasury Regulations under
this statute and subsequent reenactments construed it as covering
all dividends paid in stock of the distributing corporation.
[
Footnote 6]
There the matter stood for nearly fifteen years, although, in
the meantime, this Court pointed out in reorganization cases that a
distinction existed between the type of stock dividend before it in
Eisner v. Macomber and one which gave the stockholder a
different stock, or different proportionate interests, than before.
United States v. Phellis, 257 U.
S. 156;
Rockefeller v. United States,
257 U. S. 176;
Cullinan v. Walker, 262 U. S. 134;
Weiss v. Stearn, 265 U. S. 242;
Marr v. United States, 268 U. S. 536.
Page 318 U. S. 375
Inaction did not mean, however, that persons who received stock
dividends were escaping all support of the revenues. Taxation was
only postponed, as it taxation of many securities taken in
corporate reorganizations, until sale or other realization has
occurred. Their proceeds, when realized, have always been taxable
as income. The Treasury had come to compute the postponed tax under
Regulations which, as to some classes of stock, apportioned the
cost basis between the old stock and the dividend stock in
accordance with their respective fair market values at the time the
stock dividend was issued. [
Footnote 7] March 30, 1936, this Court granted certiorari
in
Koshland v. Helvering, 298 U.
S. 441, in which the taxpayer challenged the validity of
the apportionment Regulations. 297 U.S. 702. She had owned certain
preferred stock, and had received a dividend of common shares
thereon. The preferred was thereafter redeemed, and the
Commissioner applied the allocation rule, which reduced the cost
basis of this old stock. This, of course, increased her gain on the
redemption of the old stock and added to her tax. She argued that
her dividend, notwithstanding
Eisner v. Macomber, to which
she gave a narrow reading, was constitutionally taxable as income
at the time received. The Court held unanimously and squarely that
the dividend in question did constitute income within the Sixteenth
Amendment, and in effect limited
Eisner v. Macomber to the
kind of dividend there dealt with. But it did not overrule that
decision or question its authority as to dividends such as we have
in this case. With two Justices dissenting, it struck down the
apportionment regulations as being beyond statutory
authorization.
Page 318 U. S. 376
While the Court was considering stock dividends in the
Koshland case, Congress was considering them in connection
with the pending Revenue Act for 1936.
On March 3, 1936, the President had suggested the enactment of a
tax upon the undistributed income of corporations. [
Footnote 8] On March 26, 1936, and while the
taxpayer's petition for certiorari in the
Koshland case
was pending, a Subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee
recommended that such a tax be enacted in lieu of the existing
capital stock, excess profits, and income taxes on corporations.
[
Footnote 9] It was thought by
some authorities that imposition directly upon shareholders of a
tax based on their
pro rata shares of corporate earnings
would be more satisfactory than the undistributed profits tax.
[
Footnote 10] Serious
consideration of this method, which had been employed in
Page 318 U. S. 377
earlier times, [
Footnote
11] was foreclosed by the belief that
Eisner v.
Macomber made it "impossible" to put into effect. [
Footnote 12]
Page 318 U. S. 378
The statements of members of Congress and of responsible
Treasury officials at the hearings and debates on the Act are at
variance with the present assertion of the Government that Congress
intended § 115(f)(1) to challenge or override the decision to
which it had in other sections of the Act accommodated itself.
At the hearings of the Congressional Committees, the proposed
tax was attacked as being a measure which would have the effect of
forcing the distribution by corporations of assets needed in their
business. Its supporters anticipated the decision of this Court in
the
Koshland case, and countered with statements that
dividends taxable as income to the shareholders -- which would have
the effect of avoiding the undistributed profits tax on the
corporation [
Footnote 13] --
could be declared and the undistributed profits tax avoided without
the necessity of distributing assets. [
Footnote 14] No testimony was given, however, that
dividends
Page 318 U. S. 379
such as we have in this case were legally taxable or intended to
be taxed. [
Footnote 15]
Page 318 U. S. 380
As reported by the House Ways and Means Committee and passed in
the House, § 115(f)(1) of the Bill provided:
"A distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders in
stock of the corporation or in rights to acquire stock of the
corporation shall be treated as a taxable dividend to the extent
that such distribution constitutes income to the shareholder within
the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution and
represents a distribution of earnings or profits accumulated after
February 28, 1913. [
Footnote
16]"
The Committee Report stated that:
"It is provided in Sec. 115(f) that stock dividends shall be
subject to tax to the extent that such dividends constitute income
to the shareholder within the meaning of the sixteenth amendment to
the Constitution. [
Footnote
17]"
The manager of the Bill, Congressman Vinson of Kentucky, stated
on the floor of the House, with reference to § 115(f)(1):
"In no sense is this an attack upon the
Eisner against
Macomber decision. There are many dividends received in stock
and stock rights that are distinguishable from the character of
stock dividends in the
Macomber case,
supra, and
are actual realized taxable income. As we see it, a stock dividend
that is not taxable is one in which the relative interest of each
shareholder of a corporation is unchanged in his stock ownership.
[
Footnote 18]"
He submitted a legal memorandum furnished by Arthur Kent,
Page 318 U. S. 381
Acting Chief Counsel of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, setting
forth cases dealing with the taxability of stock dividends, sixteen
of which, including
Eisner v. Macomber, had held stock
dividends nontaxable, and twelve of which had held that the
dividends were not true stock dividends, and thus were taxable.
This memorandum was in support of Kent's statement in response to
Congressman Vinson's questioning at the hearings before the House
Ways and Means Committee, to the effect that
"the constitutional immunity of the true stock dividend
recognized or declared in
Eisner v. Macomber does not
apply to all types and varieties of so-called stock dividends.
[
Footnote 19]"
Congressman Vinson called particular and favorable attention to
an article approving the decision in
Eisner v. Macomber,
published in the same month by Professor Magill, who had served as
Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Treasury in tax matters
and has also served as Undersecretary of the Treasury. [
Footnote 20] Congressman Vinson
reiterated his views on the following day in response to questions
by Congressman Treadway, leader of the opposition to the Bill.
[
Footnote 21]
Page 318 U. S. 382
The opinion of this Court in the
Koshland case was
announced on May 18, 1936, six days after the Senate Finance
Page 318 U. S. 383
Committee concluded its hearings. This Committee reported out
§ 115(f)(1) in the form in which it is found in the Act:
"A distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders in its
stock or in rights to acquire its stock shall not be treated as a
dividend to the extent that it does not constitute income to the
shareholder within the meaning of the sixteenth amendment to the
Constitution."
It stated in explanation of the change:
"This subsection of the House bill, under which stock dividends
are made taxable to the full extent permitted by the Constitution,
is retained by your committee except for changes made necessary by
virtue of the reported amendment of section 115(a) and in the
interest of greater clarity. [
Footnote 22]"
Senators Black and La Follette of the Senate Finance Committee
submitted a minority report recommending an increase in the
undistributed profits tax rates, and also that § 115(f)(1)
specifically adopt the the formula of the recently decided
Koshland case, for no apparent reason other than a belief
that, in its present form, it did not clearly have the effect of
taxing even the type of stock dividends which the Court held in
that case could be taxed.
To this end, they recommended that § 115(f)(1)
"Specifically provide that there shall be no undistributed
profits
Page 318 U. S. 384
tax on stock dividends which are taxable income for the
individual recipient because the stock 'gives the stockholder an
interest different from that which his former stockholdings
represented. [
Footnote
23]"
In debate on the floor of the Senate, Senator Black said
that:
"As all Senators know, until about 2 weeks ago, it was generally
believed that it was impossible to tax stock dividends as income of
the recipient of those stock dividends. About 2 weeks ago, however,
the Supreme Court of the United States rendered an opinion which
appeared in the Record, in which it decided if those stock
dividends were declared in a different type of stock than the stock
which was originally held by the owner, that those dividends did
constitute actual income taxable income, if you please -- in the
hands of the stockholder recipient."
"That being true, we have provided, in such manner as to avoid
any possible misunderstanding, that stock dividends declared in
such manner that they are taxable in the hands of the recipient
will be considered as distributed profits against which no
undistributed profits tax is imposed. [
Footnote 24]"
Senator Bone asked:
"Would it not be possible for corporations to evade the effect
of that kind of decision of the Supreme Court by distributing stock
of a character that would escape taxation?"
Senator Black answered
Page 318 U. S. 385
that they could, but that they would then be subject to the
undistributed profits tax. [
Footnote 25]
In response to a question by Senator Adams whether it would not
be possible to tax stockholders in corporations upon undistributed
corporate earnings, as partnerships were taxed upon undistributed
partnership earnings, Senator Black stated that this was
"impossible," [
Footnote 26]
but that,
"in order to achieve the same result, we have suggested a
proposal which imposes no corporate tax on undistributed profits if
the corporation declares a stock dividend of such nature as to be
taxable under the recent Supreme Court opinion. In that case, the
case of
Koshland against Helvering, the Court
distinguished clearly and unequivocally between a normal stock
dividend of the same kind and nature as the stock on which the
dividend was declared and a stock dividend of a distinctly
different nature from the stock on which the dividend was declared.
In order to carry out and obtain the full benefit of that, so that
we can permit every corporation, if it desires, to retain 100 cents
of every dollar in its treasury, if its stockholders wish, we have
provided that there shall not be one dollar of corporate
undistributed profit tax imposed upon that corporation if it
distributes its dividends in a stock dividend which is taxable in
the hands of the stockholders. [
Footnote 27]"
Senator La Follette said on the floor of Senate that,
"under all these measures -- under the House bill, under the
Senate committee bill, and under this amendment -- any corporation
desiring to retain 100 percent of its statutory net income free
from increased tax may do so by paying out to its stockholders a
dividend which is taxable under the sixteenth amendment. [
Footnote 28] "
Page 318 U. S. 386
Senator Robinson stated his approval of the proffered amendment,
but suggested that it be withdrawn and the matter taken up in
conference. The amendment was accordingly withdrawn, but was not
acted upon by the conference. [
Footnote 29]
The meaning of § 115(f)(1) was critical in the
administration both of the undistributed profits tax upon
corporations and of the income tax upon shareholders. This was not
its only importance, however. Like the earlier Revenue Acts, the
Revenue Act of 1936 contained provisions intended to cope with the
problem of evasion of income taxes by shareholders through failure
to distribute corporate income. [
Footnote 30] These provisions had been drafted to avoid
the limitations set upon Congressional power by
Page 318 U. S. 387
Eisner v. Macomber. It was generally believed that they
had failed, and would fail, fully to accomplish their purpose, and
that fully effective provisions would entail a challenge of the
authority of
Eisner v. Macomber. [
Footnote 31]
In this state of affairs, the Treasury issued Regulations which
plainly construed § 115(f)(1) not as repudiating
Eisner v.
Macomber by taxing stock dividends, but as exempting them and
adopting the existing decisions, including
Eisner v.
Macomber. Article 115-7 of Regulations 94, issued under the
Revenue Act of 1938, set forth references to the Court's decisions
in many cases, and said:
"A stock dividend does not constitute income if the new shares
confer no different rights or interest than did the old -- the new
certificates plus the old representing
Page 318 U. S. 388
the same proportionate interest in the net assets of the
corporation as did the old."
Three examples followed, the second relating to a dividend
identical with the one before us. The example concluded: "The stock
so distributed does not constitute a taxable stock dividend to the
shareholder." The Treasury also issued a statement of general
policy as to stock dividends, to the effect that it would allow a
dividends paid credit against the undistributed profits tax with
respect to stock dividends which were clearly taxable to
stockholders and refuse such credit with respect to stock dividends
which were "clearly nontaxable to the shareholder;" and where
taxability was a debatable question, it would tentatively allow a
dividends-paid credit if the corporation claiming the credit should
file proper waivers or agreements to protect the interests of the
Government pending final determination of the taxability to
shareholders of the distribution, either by closing agreement
executed by all shareholders or by a final adjudication in court.
[
Footnote 32]
Administration of § 115(f)(1) was undertaken and continued
upon the basis of this construction, and no effort was made to
obtain a different one. On the contrary, the Government, in this
Court, took the position that the meaning of § 115(f)(1) was
correctly stated by Congressman Vinson on the floor of the House as
quoted
infra, p. 7. [
Footnote 33]
Other agencies of the Government accepted this same view of the
meaning of the statute, authorizing the issuance by corporations
subject to their supervision of securities other than common stock
at variance with their usual policy and in order to permit the
corporations to
Page 318 U. S. 389
do what the Treasury assured them was necessary to avoid the
payment of undistributed profits taxes. [
Footnote 34]
The undistributed profits tax evoked a voluminous literature
which showed almost universal agreement with the correctness of the
Treasury's contemporaneous statement of the meaning of the statute.
[
Footnote 35]
We think if Congress had passed or intended to pass an Act
challenging a well known constitutional decision of this Court,
there would appear at least one clear statement of that purpose
either from its proponents or its adversaries. Not one
contemporaneous word in or out of Congress discloses the purpose
which the Government says we should find that this legislation
accomplished.
Against this background, it was proposed to incorporate an
undistributed profits tax in the pending Revenue Act for 1938. As
proposed and enacted, § 115(f)(1) was the same as in the 1936
Act. [
Footnote 36] Like
earlier Acts, the Revenue Act of 1938, as proposed and enacted,
contained provisions
Page 318 U. S. 390
intended to conform with the authority of
Eisner v.
Macomber, [
Footnote 37]
and it was attacked as embodying the principle
Page 318 U. S. 391
of forcing the distribution of needed corporate assets. The rate
of the undistributed profits tax was, however,
Page 318 U. S. 392
very materially lower than in the 1936 Act. [
Footnote 38] This would have had the effect
of diminishing the amount which would be collected from the
corporation as undistributed profits tax despite the declaration of
a nontaxable stock dividend. Despite these factors, again there was
not the slightest suggestion of the view that § 115(f)(1) had
made or had intended to make all stock dividends taxable; on the
contrary, there was continued recognition of the
Page 318 U. S. 393
authority of Eisner v. Macomber. [
Footnote 39] Section 115(f)(1) was reenacted while the
Treasury Regulation and rulings on its meaning stood unamended and
in their original form. [
Footnote 40]
The Treasury adhered to its earlier views of the meaning of
§ 115(f)(1) by repromulgating its former Regulation under the
Revenue Act of 1938 and under the Internal Revenue Code, [
Footnote 41] and it stood unamended
at the time of the receipt of the stock dividends here in question.
Congress, in 1939, enacted basis provisions incorporating the
language of § 115(f)(1). [
Footnote 42] It was not until November 15, 1940, and
after the receipt of the dividends here involved, that the Treasury
amended the Regulation, and then only by striking out all after the
first sentence. [
Footnote
43] This action followed the decision of this Court in
Helvering v. Brunn, 309 U. S. 461, on
March 25, 1940, which rejected the concept that taxable gain could
arise only when the taxpayer was able to sever increment from his
original capital. It preceded by ten days the decision in
Helvering v. Horst, 311 U. S. 112,
which held that there was no exemption from taxation where economic
gain is enjoyed "by some event other than the taxpayer's personal
receipt of money or property."
Id. at
311 U. S. 116.
Each of these decisions
Page 318 U. S. 394
undermined further the original theoretical bases of the
decision in
Eisner v. Macomber.
The Government says that the time has come when
Eisner v.
Macomber must be overruled, and that we should construe §
115(f)(1) as intended to tax the dividends here in question, and
thus to require reconsideration of that decision. It should be
observed that the question of the constitutional validity of
Eisner v. Macomber is plainly one of the first magnitude,
but this is not to say that it is presented in this case. Under our
judicial tradition, we do not decide whether a tax may
constitutionally be laid until we find that Congress has laid it.
Unless the tax asserted by the Commissioner has been authorized by
Congress, it fails of validity before we even reach the
constitutional question. To reach that question, we must decide
whether Congress intended by § 115(f)(1) to do what
Eisner
v. Macomber squarely held that it could not. We cannot find
that it did.
The Government cannot sustain its position on a literal reading
of § 115(f)(1). Unlike the Revenue Act of 1916, [
Footnote 44] it does not state that
all stock dividends are taxable. Instead, § 115(f)(1)
qualifies the generality of § 22(a) by providing that a
distribution made in shares of the corporation's stock
"shall not be treated as a dividend to the extent that it
does not constitute income to the shareholder within the
meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment. . . ."
(Italics supplied.) If the statute is to be literally read, use
of "does" instead of some word of futurity indicates that the time
of enactment or, at the latest, the time of receipt of the dividend
is the critical one for determining taxability. Under either view,
these dividends would not be taxable. The parties are agreed that,
for the purposes of this decision, the meaning of the Constitution
must be found in the decisions of this Court,
Page 318 U. S. 395
and, when these dividends were received,
Eisner v.
Macomber fixed the meaning contrary to the Government's
position.
The administrative and legislative history of the statute
squarely conflict with the Government's position in this case.
The Treasury Regulation issued under § 115(f)(1)
immediately after it was first enacted states in terms that the
statute was not intended to lay a tax on the facts of this case and
of
Eisner v. Macomber, and the Treasury advised taxpayers
by another ruling that some stock dividends were "clearly"
nontaxable. In
White v. Winchester Club, 315 U. S.
32,
315 U. S. 41, we
said that such
"substantially contemporaneous expressions of opinion are highly
relevant and material evidence of the probable general
understanding of the times and of the opinions of men who probably
were active in the drafting of the statute. [
Footnote 45]"
The statute was reenacted in its original form after having been
in force for two years, and after a long controversy centering
around the meaning of the statute which assumed throughout the
correctness of the administrative construction. This Court has
denied retroactive effects to amendments to valid Treasury
Regulations which have survived reenactment of the statute, even in
the absence of any affirmative indication that the subject matter
of the statute and Regulation was called to the attention of
Congress. [
Footnote 46] The
effect of reenactment in the absence of
Page 318 U. S. 396
such affirmative indications of agreement has been stated in
various and not entirely consistent terms. [
Footnote 47] This is a question we do not now
need to examine, for there are in this case many indications that
Congress was in complete
Page 318 U. S. 397
agreement with the Treasury on the question of the taxability of
the stock dividends here involved. We would think it unquestionable
that, in this case, the Treasury could not retroactively amend the
Regulation to the prejudice of the respondent except for the
Government's assertion that it should be disregarded upon the
authority of
Helvering v. Hallock, 309 U.
S. 106,
309 U. S. 121,
note 8, and that, in any event, under § 3791(b) of the
Internal Revenue Code, the Secretary or Commissioner must be held
to have authority in any case to make a retroactive amendment of a
Regulation.
The
Hallock case is clearly inapposite. There, it was
held that Treasury Regulations issued more than 11 years after the
enactment of the governing Revenue Act of 1926, [
Footnote 48] in submission to the decision
of this Court in 1935 of the
St. Louis Trust Co. cases,
296 U. S. 39,
296 U. S. 48, could
not prevent the Court from overruling those cases on facts entirely
antedating them. That Regulation did not purport to construe the
meaning of the statute, as did this one, but simply to acknowledge
a constitutional limit imposed by this Court upon the operation of
a previously enacted statute; it was not in effect when the
transactions involved were entered upon, and there had been no
reenactment of the statute while the Regulation was in force.
Nor do we concur in the Government's argument that the
legislative history of § 3791(b) of the Internal Revenue Code
requires reconsideration of our decision as to the effect of a
corresponding provision of the Revenue Act of 1928 in
Helvering
v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 306 U.
S. 110,
306 U. S. 116.
[
Footnote 49] We think that,
in the circumstances of this
Page 318 U. S. 398
case, the administrative construction in effect at the time of
the receipt of the stock dividends here in issue must be given
controlling effect.
Page 318 U. S. 399
We would be reluctant, in any event, to find that Congress
intended to hold the effect of § 115(f)(1) in abeyance until
the Treasury should decide that the time was ripe to challenge
Eisner v. Macomber and carry its challenge to this Court.
Such an intention would be a serious departure from the usual
policy of Congress to provide the taxpayers and tax gatherers with
a practical basis for the timely settlement of questions of
taxation arising each year. At the times of enactment, the problem
of delay in obtaining decisions of this Court was a matter of grave
concern to those concerned with the administration and furnishing
of the revenues. [
Footnote
50]
The Government's assertion that Congress intended to hold the
meaning of § 115(f)(1) in suspense until the termination of
years of litigation is in conflict with our recent decision in
Parker v. Motor Boat Sales Co., 314 U.
S. 244. There, we were called upon to construe §
3(a) of the Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Act, 44 Stat. 1424,
which made compensation payable only if "recovery for the
disability or death through workmen's compensation proceedings may
not validly be provided by State law." Its statement in such terms
was due to this Court's decision in
Southern Pacific Co. v.
Jensen, 244 U. S. 205, a
much criticized and somewhat impaired, but not overruled,
Page 318 U. S. 400
decision which held federal power exclusive and state
compensation laws forbidden in an area of "shadowy limits." The
Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Black, said,
"An interpretation which would enlarge or contract the effect of
the proviso in accordance with whether this Court rejected or
reaffirmed the constitutional basis of the
Jensen and its
companion cases cannot be acceptable. The result of such an
interpretation would be to subject the scope of protection that
Congress wished to provide, to uncertainties that Congress wished
to avoid."
Id. at
314 U. S. 248,
314 U. S.
250.
The Government urges that we read into the Congressional Act an
intent to tax these dividends because of considerations that we do
not think are entitled to any weight. It argues that the form of
§ 115(f)(1) is attributable to "embarrassment" which would
have been incident to a "frontal attack" on
Eisner v.
Macomber. There is ample ground to know that the prospect of
conflict in opinion with this Court on constitutional questions was
not sufficient so to mute the 74th and 75th Congresses. [
Footnote 51] This was as it should
be. There is no reason to doubt that this Court may fall into
error, as may other branches of the Government. Nothing in the
history or attitude of this Court should give rise to legislative
embarrassment if, in the performance of its duty, a
Page 318 U. S. 401
legislative body feels impelled to enact laws which may require
the Court to reexamine its previous judgments or doctrine.
[
Footnote 52] The Court
differs, however, from other branches of the Government in its
ability to extricate itself from error. It can reconsider a matter
only when it is again properly brought before it in a case or
controversy, and, if the case requires, as a tax case does,
[
Footnote 53] a statutory
basis for a case, the new case must have sufficient statutory
support.
And, if we were to assume Congressional "embarrassment" and take
it into consideration, we would also be required to weigh the many
other political factors which may have motivated the choice
employed in the language of § 115(f)(1). Those in favor of the
Bill may have believed that the adoption of existing decisions was
the
Page 318 U. S. 402
most that was politically possible; those who opposed it may
have thought it desirable as matter of tax policy to defer taxation
of the stock dividend until realization. [
Footnote 54] Needless to say, speculation upon such
factors has no place in the construction of Acts of Congress.
We are asked to make a retroactive holding that, for some seven
years past, a multitude of transactions have been taxable although
there was no source of law from which the most cautious taxpayer
could have learned of the liability. If he consulted the decisions
of this Court, he learned that no such tax could be imposed; if he
read the Delphic language of the Act in connection with existing
decisions, it, too, assured him there was no intent to tax; if he
followed the Congressional proceedings and debates, his
understanding of nontaxability would be confirmed; if he asked the
tax collector himself, he was bound by the Regulations of the
Treasury to advise that no such liability existed. It would be a
pity if taxpayers could not rely on this concurrent assurance from
all three branches of the Government. But we are asked to brush all
this aside and simply to decree that these transactions are taxable
anyway.
Page 318 U. S. 403
Nor is the effect on taxpayers the only consequence of accepting
such a proposal. It would unsettle tax administration and subject
the Treasury itself to many demands in ways that we cannot
anticipate and provide for. Many have sold dividend stocks and paid
the postponed tax at higher rates than if they had been taxed as is
now proposed. Many have paid on the sale of the original stock
because of allocation of part of the dividend to reduce the cost
base thereof. Many corporations have been refused deductions on
account of this type of stock dividend in computing their
undistributed corporate earnings tax which would become entitled to
them. Overhanging the whole effort to accommodate these past
transactions to a new retroactive law would be the statute of
limitations barring sometimes the Government and sometimes the
taxpayer, with capricious effects. To rip out of the past seven
years of tax administration a principle of law on which both
Government and taxpayers have acted would produce readjustments and
litigation so extensive we would contemplate them with anxiety. We
have recently held, as to another questioned decision of this
Court, that a long period of accommodations to an older decision
sometimes requires us to adhere to an unsatisfactory rule to avoid
unfortunate practical results from a change.
Davis v.
Department of Labor, 317 U. S. 249. We
think this another example of the same principle.
The Government acknowledges the hardship which would be incident
to the rule we are now asked to declare, and promises its
assistance in obtaining legislative correction. It says that:
"We are informed by the Treasury that it has no intention of
harassing taxpayers with respect to liability for past years, and
that, if
Eisner v. Macomber is overruled it intends
immediately to recommend to Congress legislation which would
relieve taxpayers of any unfair retroactive burden that might
result from such overruling. . . . "
Page 318 U. S. 404
Of course, if there were an adequate basis in statute and
regulation for the tax in question, it is difficult to understand
why its collection should be regarded as "harassing." This
assurance that, if we will but find that Congress has intended to
lay the tax, it will be asked to declare that it does not intend it
to be collected is hardly reassuring that the decision contended
for would be what Congress intended. Since it is acknowledged that
legislation would be required to adjust equities that are beyond
judicial power and to prevent our decision's being used to harass
taxpayers, we may well inquire why the legislation should not
precede the judicial decision. Why should we be asked to impose by
interpretation a tax which the Treasury intends to ask Congress to
lift?
We are unable to find that Congress intended to tax the
dividends in question, and, without Congressional authority, we are
powerless to do so. That being the case, we cannot reach the
reconsideration of
Eisner v. Macomber on the basis of the
present legislation and regulations.
The decision below is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE did not participate in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
53 Stat. 1, 9, 47. § 22(a) provides that "
Gross income'
includes gains, profits, and income derived from . . . dividends. .
. ."
§ 115(a) provides that "The term "dividend" . . . means any
distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders, whether, in
money or in other property. . . ." 53 Stat. 1, 46.
[
Footnote 2]
§ II B of this Act, 38 Stat. 114, 167, provided that "net
income . . . shall include gains, profits, and income derived from
. . . dividends. . . ."
[
Footnote 3]
§ 2(a) of the Revenue Act of 1916, 39 Stat. 756, 757.
[
Footnote 4]
Seligman, Implications and Effects of the Stock Dividend
Decision (1921) 21 Columbia Law Review 313; Warren, Taxability of
Stock Dividends as Income (1920) 33 Harvard Law Review 885;
cf. Powell, Constitutional Aspects of Federal Income
Taxation, in The Federal Income Tax (Columbia University Lectures,
1921) 51; Ballantine, Corporate Personalty in Income Taxation,
(1921) 34 Harvard Law Review 573; Powell, Income from Corporate
Dividends, (1922) 35 Harvard Law Review 363; Clark,
Eisner v.
Macomber and Some Income Tax Problems, (1920) 29 Yale Law
Journal 735.
But cf. Fairchild, The Stock Dividend
Decision, (1920) 5 National Tax Association Bulletin 208.
[
Footnote 5]
T.D. 3052, 3059, 3 Cum.Bull. 38; O.D. 732, 3 Cum.Bull. 39; O.D.
801, 4 Cum.Bull. 24; 42 Stat. 227, 228. The House Report stated
that this Act modified
"the definition of dividends in existing law by exempting stock
dividends from the income tax, as required by the decision of the
Supreme Court in
Eisner v. Macomber."
H.Rep. No. 350, 67th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 8, 9. The Senate
Report was to the same effect. S.Rep. No. 275, 67th Cong., 1st
Sess., p. 9.
[
Footnote 6]
See Article 1548, Treasury Regulations 62 (promulgated
under the Revenue Act of 1921), 65 (promulgated under the Revenue
Act of 1924) and 69 (promulgated under the Revenue Act of 1926);
Article 628, Treasury Regulations 74 (promulgated under the Revenue
Act of 1928) and 77 (promulgated under the Revenue Act of 1932);
Article 115-8 of Treasury Regulations 86 (promulgated under the
Revenue Act of 1934).
[
Footnote 7]
Article 1548, Treasury Regulations 62; Articles 1548, 1599,
Treasury Regulations 65 and 69; Articles 600, 628, Treasury
Regulations 74.
[
Footnote 8]
H.Doc. No. 418, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 2, 3.
[
Footnote 9]
H.R. Committee Print, March 26, 1936, 74th Cong., 2d Sess.,
Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936, House Ways and Means Committee,
74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 5-8.
[
Footnote 10]
See statement of Congressman Vinson, 83 Cong.Rec.
2780:
"After the decision of the Supreme Court in 1920, it was no
longer possible for us to impose a tax upon the shareholder with
respect to the undivided profits of a domestic corporation. We were
forced to adopt the system of levying a special penalty tax on the
corporation itself, which has been exceedingly difficult to enforce
in the courts and is nothing like as effective as if we could
ignore the corporation and tax the shareholders direct upon his
undistributed earnings in the profits of the corporation."
See also Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936, House Ways
and Means Committee, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 193, 745;
cf. Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936, Senate Finance
Committee, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 210, 211, 256, 257; H.Rep. No.
1860, 75th Cong., 3d Sess., pp. 2, 3; Report of the Subcommittee of
House Committee on Ways and Means, Proposed Revision of the Revenue
Laws, 75th Cong., 3d Sess., January 14, 1938, pp. 2, 3. For earlier
proposals,
see statement of Oliphant, General Counsel of
the Treasury, Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936, House Ways and
Means Committee, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 658;
id. at 820;
Martin, Taxation of Undistributed Corporate Profits (1936) 35
Michigan Law Review 44, 45
et seq.
[
Footnote 11]
The Revenue Act of 1864, 13 Stat. 218, 282, provided that
"gains and profits of all companies, whether incorporated or
partnership . . . , shall be included in estimating the annual
gains, profits, or income of any person entitled to the same,
whether divided or otherwise."
§ 117.
Compare 79 U. S.
Hubbard, 12 Wall. 1,
79 U. S. 17,
with Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.,
158 U. S. 601,
and Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U. S. 189,
252 U. S. 218,
252 U. S.
230-232.
See also 13 Stat. 480; 14 Stat. 5,
478; 16 Stat. 258.
[
Footnote 12]
Congressman Hill objected to a proposal that stockholders be
taxed like partners, on the ground that
Eisner v. Macomber
stood in the way. Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936, House Ways and
Means Committee, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 96, 97, 98. Congressman
Lewis stated:
"I do not know that it is fully understood by the public that
this roundabout device of compelling the distribution of the real
income of the corporation to its shareholders, so that the
shareholders may be called upon to pay taxes upon their income, is
due to a decision of a divided court. Some years ago, the Supreme
Court, in a sharp decision, determined that we could not do in the
United States with regard to earned dividends that were not
distributed what they do in other countries, especially in England
-- require the shareholder to pay his tax on his income just the
same whether his company had refused to distribute it or not."
"Now, if that decision of the Court should be reversed, what we
are doing here, or attempting to do, in order to reach the taxpayer
here, the method of our attempt, would not be necessary. Not ours
the fault of all this clumsiness and indirection of approach to a
necessary public object."
Id. at 193.
Later, he said:
"Of course, we cannot reach the net earnings of the corporation
as earnings of the individual stockholders until the earnings are
distributed as dividends."
Id. at 321.
See also id. at 745, 83 Cong.Rec.
3125.
In the Senate debates, Senator Black stated in response to a
question whether it was
"legally possible to say to each corporation, 'make a report of
the proportionate earnings of each stockholder,' as we would to a
partnership, and then let the stockholder make his return?"
that
"Unfortunately, that was done about 60 years ago, and while it
is my recollection that the Supreme Court itself sustained the act,
it later, by another divided opinion, changed its mind and struck
down the act as being in contravention of the Constitution. So that
it is impossible to tax the undistributed profits which remain in
the corporate treasury as a part of the individual incomes of the
stockholders."
80 Cong.Rec. 8813.
[
Footnote 13]
§ 27(f) of H.R. 12395, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., which became
§ 27(e) of the Revenue Act of 1936, 49 Stat. 1648, 1665.
[
Footnote 14]
In questioning Kent, Acting Chief Counsel of the Bureau of
Internal Revenue, at the House hearings, Congressman Vinson of
Kentucky said:
"in reference to the retention of the cash in the business by
the use of taxable stock dividends, I would like you to develop
that, because I think it is very interesting. I think that it will
allay a major portion of the fear that some folks have that in this
favored treatment of corporations declaring large percentages of
dividends the capital structure of a corporation would be in
danger, or that thereby it would not have the money for the rainy
day."
Kent replied:
"There have been several decisions recently -- I may say that
one of them has now reached the Supreme Court of the United States
-- that have taken the position that the constitutional immunity of
the true stock dividend recognized or declared in
Eisner v.
Macomber does not apply to all types and varieties of
so-called stock dividends; for instance, that, if the directors of
a corporation, instead of paying a large cash dividend to the
preferred shareholders of the corporation, see fit to give them
common stock instead, that dividend of common stock is taxable so
far as the constitution is concerned."
"I may say that, in a case which is pending before the Supreme
Court, there is a question also of the statutory interpretation,
but assuming, as I believe is a proper legal view of the case,
that, so far as the Constitution is concerned, there are types of
stock dividends that may be taxed under the Constitution, that it
would provide a loophole. Then also, of course, there is the
so-called optional stock dividend, in which the stockholder is
given the option of taking cash or taking stock. For any
shareholder who wishes to maintain his proportionate equity in the
enterprise, there is a very powerful incentive to take stock."
Congressman Vinson said:
"Such option is property that has a value and, in your opinion,
takes that entirely out of the stock dividend which was involved in
the case of
Eisner v. Macomber; is that right?"
Mr. Kent: "That is correct." Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936,
House Ways and Means Committee, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp.
592-593.
See also similar statements at the Senate hearings by
Haas, Director of Research and Statistics for the Treasury
Department, and Oliphant, General Counsel of the Treasury. Senate
Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936, Senate Finance Committee, 74th
Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 38, 909, 917, 918.
[
Footnote 15]
The Government calls attention to a memorandum submitted to the
Senate Finance Committee by Graham, Lecturer in Finance at Columbia
University, which stated that:
"The most suitable method of capitalizing reinvested earnings
and making them taxable to the stockholders would be through the
declaration of taxable dividends in common stock. While the
decision in
Eisner v. Macomber stands in the way of this
ideal arrangement, I believe that, in view of the different
philosophy of taxation embodied in the pending bill, this decision
might be overcome by treating such stock dividends as an
administrative vehicle for allocating earnings to the various
taxpayers."
Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936, Senate Finance Committee,
74th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 696. Graham did not testify at the
hearings, and it is not clear from this statement that he had
reference to a dividend of common stock on common stock.
Compare his later statement in The Undistributed Profits
Tax and the Investor, (1936) 46 Yale Law Journal 1, 6, note 17:
"Payments on common in additional common are, of course,
nontaxable."
Compare Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936,
House Ways and Means Committee, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 93
et
seq.
[
Footnote 16]
H.R. 12395, 74th Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 17]
H.Rep. No. 2475, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 10.
[
Footnote 18]
80 Cong.Rec. 6214-6215.
[
Footnote 19]
See note 14
supra.
[
Footnote 20]
Magill, Realization of Income through Corporate Distributions,
(1936) 36 Columbia Law Review 519.
[
Footnote 21]
"Mr. Vinson. The case of
Eisner against Macomber, as I
recall, involved a corporation with $1,000,000 common stock. There
was a declaration of a $500,000 stock dividend to the common
shareholders. The Court held, and I think correctly, that, where
each shareholder got his proportionate part of the new stock, there
was no change in his ownership in the corporation. That, in a
corporation with a million-dollar capital, the distribution of
another half million to the holders of the common stock made no
change in ownership. The shareholder who owned a share of stock
would own one and a half shares in the increased structure, and
therefore there was no change in the ownership so far as he and the
corporation were concerned."
"It has been evidenced throughout the years that there are
innumerable stock dividends that are taxable. The issuance of
stock, either common or preferred, or bonds, in payment of
dividends may change the proportion of ownership among the
shareholders. For instance, let us take this illustration: you
issue preferred stockholders common stock to satisfy dividends
declared to preferred stockholders. You have introduced additional
common stock. It is in the hands of persons other than the present
common stockholders; consequently there is a change in the
proportion of ownership in the common stockholders."
"The Supreme Court in one case laid down the rule that the
yardstick in respect of the taxability of stock dividends was the
character or kind of stock and the change in proportion of
ownership. I submitted in the Record yesterday a statement prepared
for me by Mr. Kent, Acting General Counsel of the Bureau of
Internal Revenue, setting forth decisions of the Supreme Court
where stock dividends were held to be nontaxable, and other cases
where the Supreme Court and the Board of Tax Appeals held that
stock dividends were taxable. In this connection, I pointed out
that, in the April volume of the Columbia University Law Review, a
gentleman in whom we have great faith and confidence, the Honorable
Roswell Magill, wrote a very comprehensive and illuminating article
on the taxability of stock dividends."
"Mr. Treadway . . ."
"As I recall it, in the present law, there was just one line,
115, which read 'stock dividends shall not be subject to tax.' That
is correct?"
"Mr. Vinson. That is right."
"Mr. Treadway. It has been stricken out in this bill, and you
are substituting therefor section (f), on page 107, of which the
gentleman has given a history."
"
* * * *"
"Mr. Vinson. The section to which I refer states that the only
stock dividends we seek to tax are those which are taxable income
within the sixteenth amendment."
"Mr. Treadway. The language stricken out, I may say, reads as
follows:"
" (b) Stock dividends: A stock dividend shall not be subject to
tax."
"That is the existing law, and has been the law most of the time
since the
Eisner against Macomber decision. In the next
tax bill after that decision, that language was included."
I understand the gentleman's explanation to be that the language
of the act was too broad. I do not mean too broad in the sense it
is not legal, but it goes further than the
Eisner against
Macomber decision.
"Mr. Vinson. That is correct."
"Mr. Treadway. The language now substituted for the stricken
language describes new stock dividends that can be taxed or what
portion of stock dividends under the sixteenth amendment can in the
future be taxed. Is that the right conception of the
intention?"
"Mr. Vinson. Well, we take the broad position that stock
dividends that are taxable income within the sixteenth amendment
are subject to taxation, and if they are not such stock dividends
and not any taxable income under the sixteenth amendment, they are
not subject to taxes."
80 Cong.Rec. 6309, 6310.
[
Footnote 22]
S.Rep. No. 2156, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 18, 19.
[
Footnote 23]
S.Rep. No. 2156, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., Pt. 2, p. 5, reprinted
together with the opinion of this court in the
Koshland
case, 80 Cong.Rec. 8526-8529. Their Report stated that:
"Under the opinion of the Supreme Court in
Koshland v.
Helvering, decided May 18, 1936, the Supreme Court decided
that stock dividends represented taxable income where they give
'the stockholder an interest different from that which his former
stockholdings represented.' It is therefore beyond any question of
doubt that, under our proposal, corporations would be able to
retain all money profits needed for carrying on their business
without any additional corporate tax."
[
Footnote 24]
80 Cong.Rec. 8811.
[
Footnote 25]
Ibid.
[
Footnote 26]
See footnote 12
supra.
[
Footnote 27]
80 Cong.Rec. 8813.
[
Footnote 28]
80 Cong.Rec. 9048.
See also id. at 9045, 9047.
[
Footnote 29]
80 Cong.Rec. 9052.
[
Footnote 30]
§ 102, 49 Stat. 1648, 1676, laid a graduated additional tax
upon the income of corporations other than personal holding
companies as defined in § 351, formed or availed of for the
purpose of preventing the imposition of the surtax upon their
shareholders or the shareholders of any other corporation, through
the medium of permitting earnings or profits to accumulate instead
of being divided or distributed.
§ 351, 49 Stat. 1648, 1732, laid a graduated surtax upon
income of personal holding companies.
Under the Revenue Acts of 1913, 1916, and 1918, if a corporation
was availed of for the purpose of evading taxation by accumulation
of gains and profits, the shareholders were taxed on their
pro
rata shares of income, whether or not distributed. 38 Stat.
166; 39 Stat. 758; 40 Stat. 1072.
§ 220 of the Revenue Act of 1921 employed instead a tax
against the corporation. 42 Stat. 227, 247. H.R.Rep. No. 350, 67th
Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 12, 13, stated in explanation of the change
that:
"Section 220 of the existing law provides that, if any
corporation is formed or availed of for the purpose of evading the
surtax upon its stockholders through the medium of permitting its
gains and profits to accumulate instead of being divided, the
stockholders shall be taxed in the same manner as partners. By
reason of the recent decision of the Supreme Court in the stock
dividend case (
Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U. S.
189), considerable doubt exists as to the
constitutionality of the existing law."
See also S.Rep. No. 275, 67th Cong., 1st Sess., p.
16.
See also § 220 of the Revenue Acts of 1924 and
1926, 43 Stat. 253, 277; 44 Stat. 9, 34; § 104 of the Revenue
Acts of 1928 and 1932, 45 Stat. 791, 814; 47 Stat. 169, 195, and
§§ 102 and 351 of the Revenue Acts of 1934, 48 Stat. 679,
702, 751.
The 1926 and subsequent Acts permitted the avoidance of tax on
the corporation by inclusion of undistributed corporate income in
the gross income of its shareholders.
[
Footnote 31]
Thus, Senator Black said on the floor of the Senate that
"It is a vain and an illusory hope to anticipate that the
Government of the United States will ever be able to prevent tax
avoidance on the part of corporate officials by the simple
expedient of charging and proving against them that they have
withheld a distribution of profits to avoid taxes."
80 Cong.Rec. 8811.
See also statement by Oliphant,
General Counsel of the Treasury, Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1936,
House Ways and Means Committee, 74th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 658, 659;
footnotes
10 and |
10 and S. 371fn12|>12,
supra;
cf. Report of Subcommittee of the House Committee on Ways and
Means, Tax Revision, 1938, January 14, 1938, 75th Cong., 3d Sess.,
pp. 20
et seq.; H.R.Rep. No. 1860, 75th Cong., 3d Sess.,
p. 53; 65 Cong.Rec. 8014
et seq.; Martin, Taxation of
Undistributed Corporate Profits, (1936) 35 Michigan Law Review 44,
50, 62.
[
Footnote 32]
I.T. 3037, Cum.Bull.1937-1, p. 90.
[
Footnote 33]
See Government's Brief in
Helvering v. Gowran,
302 U. S. 238, p.
20 (October, 1937).
[
Footnote 34]
The Greyhound Corporation-Issuance of Preference Stock, 1 M.C.C.
357; Mission Oil Co., 1 S.E.C. 940;
cf. International
Paper & Power Co., 2 S.E.C. 274; Southwestern Development Co.,
2 S.E.C. 930.
[
Footnote 35]
McLaren, Management of Capital Distributions under the Revenue
Act of 1936, (1936) 62 Journal of Accountancy, 334, 354-355;
Schulman, Undistributed Profits Tax after the
Koshland
case, (1936) 14 Tax Magazine 703, 705; Anderson, The Taxability of
Stock Dividends, (1937) 15 Tax Magazine, 74, 77; Graham, The
Undistributed Profits Tax and the Investor, (1936) 46 Yale Law
Journal 1, 6-7; Note (1936) 50 Harvard Law Review 332, 334;
cf. Hendricks, The Undistributed Profits Tax, (1936) 46
Yale Law Journal 19, 38-41.
In an article published in April of 1940, Surrey, Assistant
Legislative Counsel of the Treasury Department, later advanced the
contrary view. The Supreme Court and the Federal Income Tax, 35
Illinois Law Review 779, 794.
[
Footnote 36]
§ 115(f)(1), H.R. 9682, 75th Cong., 3d Sess.; 52 Stat. 447,
497.
[
Footnote 37]
§ 102, 52 Stat. 447, 483; § 401, 52 Stat. 447, 557
(similar to § 351 of the Revenue Act of 1936). The Revenue Act
of 1938, as proposed and enacted, contained a "consent dividends"
provision allowing shareholders to permit the corporation to avoid
the undistributed profits tax by consenting to include in their
returns amounts as though actual distributions had been made in
cash. § 28, 52 Stat. 447, 470-472.
See Report of
Subcommittee of House Committee on Ways and Means, Proposed
Revision of the Revenue Laws, 75th Cong., 3d Sess., Jan. 14, 1938,
pp. 18-20; H.R.Rep. No. 1860, 75th Cong., 3d Sess., pp. 24
et
seq.
The following colloquy between Alvord, representing the
Committee of Federal Finance, Chamber of Commerce of the United
States, and Congressman Lewis, took place at the House Hearings.
Hearings on the Revenue Act, 1938, House Ways and Means Committee,
pp. 505, 506:
"Mr. Lewis. Do you realize that these extra taxes on the
corporations as such, including the personal holding company and
the others, are due to the decision in
Eisner v.
Macomber?"
"Mr. Alvord. Yes."
"Mr. Lewis. I am just asking that by way of preface."
"Mr. Alvord. Yes, sir. I discussed that quite at length, I
think, back in 1936."
"Mr. Lewis. Unhappily, it is not being discussed at the present
time in the press as fully as it should be in order that the
procedure of the committee be fairly understood. You will recall,
of course, that, under that decision, a 5-to-4 decision, it was
held that, notwithstanding the general terms of the income tax
amendment, that tax on paid-up stock dividends was
unconstitutional."
"Now, before I go any further, I want to say that, certainly, so
far as I am concerned, there would be no support for any of these
extra taxes if that decision were reversed and the earned income of
shareholders in corporations were left subject to taxation, just as
the earned income of partners is subject to tax, although that
income may be plowed into the partnership business."
"Mr. Alvord. I think, if you will read my testimony back in
1936, you will find that I agree with you absolutely in principle.
But bear in mind that we have some very practical problems in
addition to consider."
"Mr. Lewis. Very well."
"Mr. Alvord. Because I do not think you can afford to exempt the
corporation entirely, for example, which the following of that
decision would require."
"Mr. Lewis. Now, of course, the general public wants to be fair
in this matter, and even your clients realize that the Government
of the United States must in some way secure revenues. I am a
little curious to know why voices as influential as yours, or
especially as the voice of your clients -- I read all their
reports, profit by them, I am glad to say -- have never been raised
asking a reversal of that decision so that we can go back and tax
shareholders normally as we do other individuals and partners."
"All this trouble we are discussing today will disappear in a
moment if that result is obtained."
"Mr. Alvord. I think, Mr. Lewis, I can explain to you fully why
that has not been done up to the present time. If I recall
correctly,
Eisner v. Macomber was decided in the late
spring of 1921, just while the 1921 act was under consideration,
just before it passed, whereupon a specific provision was written
into the statute saying that stock dividends escape taxes, and that
provision has stayed in the statute."
"Mr. Lewis. Yes."
"Mr. Alvord. It has been whittled down, it is true."
"Mr. Lewis. Yes. But the decision also carries a provision
against taxing even undistributed income to the shareholder."
Mr. Alvord. No; I do not think that is true, Mr. Lewis.
"Mr. Lewis. Well, that is the view of others, and that is the
view of the committee. If you will provide me a way by which the
shareholder in the corporation can be required to pay his taxes
like individuals and partners on earned income, I will promise you
my support in an effort to repeal all these extra tax
provisions."
"Mr. Alvord. Well, I think your position is almost unassailable
in that respect, Mr. Lewis."
"Mr. Lewis. Very well."
"Mr. Alvord. It is a position that many of us have taken for a
long time."
"Mr. Lewis. But will you hear this question in the spirit it is
put: do you not think the Government, under such circumstances, is
under a duty to try in some way to recoup itself for these lost
taxes in the shareholder group who would be subject to them? If we
are, isn't it natural that we should go to the corporation that is
shielding them, in most cases, of course, unintentionally, but
still go to the corporation and say: 'Now please distribute those
dividends so that we can get at this shareholder who is dodging his
burden under
Eisner v. Macomber?' Isn't that all very
natural, sir?"
Title II, § 201 of the Revenue Act of 1937 amended the
Revenue Act of 1936 by adding § 334, which provided for the
inclusion in the gross income of shareholders in foreign personal
holding companies the undistributed corporate income. The abuses
incident to the employment of this device had been brought out at
Hearings before a Joint Committee on Tax Evasion and Avoidance,
75th Cong., 1st Sess. The Committee Reports on the Bill cite the
practical necessity for this form of tax in support of its
constitutionality. H.R. Rep. No. 1546, 75th Cong., 1st Sess., pp.
13-14; Sen.Rep. No. 1242, 75th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 15, 16; Report
of the Joint Committee on Tax Evasion and Avoidance, House Doc. No.
337, 75th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 16-19.
See statement of
Congressman Vinson on the floor of the House, 81 Cong.Rec.
9035:
"The philosophy in regard to foreign personal holding companies
is based upon the inherent power in the Government to protect
itself from devices to avoid and evade its law. The Supreme Court
has said that the Congress has the power to regulate interstate
rates, and that it can regulate intrastate rates when such exercise
of power is to protect the plenary power over interstate rates. We
feel certain that the jurisdiction over American taxpayers and
income to our citizens, together with the power to protect our
revenues, are ample legal support for our position."
See also statement of Congressman Treadway, 81
Cong.Rec. 9024.
The foreign personal holding company tax was retained in the
Revenue Act for 1938, 52 Stat. 447, 545,
et seq.
[
Footnote 38]
See Report of Subcommittee of the House Committee on
Ways and Means, 75th Cong., 3d Sess., pp. 2
et seq.; H.R.
Rep. No. 1860, 75th Cong., 3d Sess., pp. 4-6; Sen.Rep. No. 1567,
75th Cong., 3d Sess., pp. 2-5; H.R. Rep. No. 2330, 75th Cong., 3d
Sess., pp. 1
et seq., 23.
[
Footnote 39]
See statement of Congressman Vinson of Kentucky on the
floor of the House, 83 Cong.Rec. 2780, and colloquy set forth in
footnote 37
supra.
[
Footnote 40]
52 Stat. 447, 497.
[
Footnote 41]
Article 115-7 of Regulations 101; § 19.115-7 of Regulations
103.
[
Footnote 42]
§ 214 of the Revenue Act of 1939, 53 Stat. 862, 872.
[
Footnote 43]
T.D. 5020, C.B.1940-2, p. 118, amending § 19.115-7 of
Regulations 103, promulgated under the Internal Revenue Code.
Amendment of Regulations 101 and 94 did not come until January
19, 1942, by T.D. 5110, Cum.Bull.1942-1, p. 160.
As amended, the Regulation read:
"A distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders in its
stock or in rights to acquire its stock shall be treated as a
dividend to the full extent that it constitutes income to the
shareholders within the meaning of the sixteenth amendment to the
Constitution."
[
Footnote 44]
See note 3
supra.
[
Footnote 45]
See also Edward's Lessee v.
Darby, 12 Wheat. 206,
25 U. S. 210;
United States v. Moore, 95 U. S. 760,
95 U. S. 763;
Fawcus Machine Co. v. United States, 282 U.
S. 375,
282 U. S. 378;
Norwegian Nitrogen Co. v. United States, 288 U.
S. 294,
288 U. S.
315.
[
Footnote 46]
Helvering v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 306 U.
S. 110;
cf. Helvering v. Wilshire Oil Co.,
308 U. S. 90;
Helvering v. Reynolds, 313 U. S. 428;
White v. Winchester Club, supra.
The problems in this field have evoked extensive commentary.
Paul, Use and Abuse of Tax Regulations in Statutory Construction,
49 Yale Law Journal 660, reprinted with some changes in Paul,
Studies in Federal Taxation, Third Series (1940), 420; Alvord,
Treasury Regulations and the Wilshire Oil Case, 40 Columbia Law
Review 252; Surrey, The Scope and Effect of Treasury Regulations
under the Income, Estate and Gift Taxes, 88 University of
Pennsylvania Law Review 556; Brown, Regulations, Reenactment, and
the Revenue Acts, 54 Harvard Law Review 377; Griswold, A Summary of
the Regulations Problem, 54 Harvard Law Review 398; Feller,
Addendum to the Regulations Problem, 54 Harvard Law Review
1311.
[
Footnote 47]
Helvering v. Winmill, 305 U. S. 79,
305 U. S.
83:
"Treasury regulations and interpretations long continued without
substantial change, applying to unamended or substantially
reenacted statutes, are deemed to have received congressional
approval and have the effect of law."
In
Helvering v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
306 U. S. 110,
306 U. S. 116,
it was said that:
"Since the legislative approval of existing regulations by
reenactment of the statutory provision to which they appertain
gives such regulations the force of law, we think that Congress did
not intend to authorize the Treasury to repeal the rule of law that
existed during the period for which the tax is imposed,"
and the question of the validity of prospective amendment was
left open. In
Helvering v. Wilshire Oil Co., 308 U. S.
90, the Court carefully examined the taxpayer's position
for equities and found it wanting, and, after citing the
Reynolds Tobacco case with approval, stated with reference
to the view that reenactment of a statute carried legislative
approval of its existing valid administrative construction,
that:
"It does not mean that a regulation interpreting a provision of
one act becomes frozen into another act merely by reenactment of
that provision, so that that administrative interpretation cannot
be changed prospectively through exercise of appropriate rulemaking
powers."
Id. at
308 U. S. 100.
Helvering v. Reynolds, 313 U. S. 428,
qualified the
Reynolds Tobacco case and distinguished it
on the ground that
"The transactions there in question took place at a time when a
regulation was in force which expressly negatived any tax
liability. The regulation remained outstanding for a long time, and
was followed by several reenactments of the statute. About five
years after the transactions in question took place, the prior
regulation was amended so as to impose a tax liability. There are
no such circumstances here."
Id. at
313 U. S.
432-433.
[
Footnote 48]
T.D. 4729, Cum.Bull.1937-1, p. 284.
[
Footnote 49]
Section 3791(b) of the Internal Revenue Code provides that:
"The Secretary, or the Commissioner with the approval of the
Secretary, may prescribe the extent, if any, to which any ruling,
regulation, or Treasury Decision, relating to the internal revenue
laws, shall be applied without retroactive effect."
This provision has been in its present form since § 506 of
the Revenue Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 680, 757, amended § 1108(a)
of the Revenue Act of 1926. It is the final statute of a series
intended to relieve the Treasury from the effect of the view that
its administrative rulings, like court decisions, must have
retroactive as well as prospective operation.
During and after the first World War. the Treasury had been
burdened with a great volume of tax business. Perfect consistency
in rulings was impossible, and the view that each change in
administrative construction must be given retroactive effect
deprived both the Government and the taxpayers of any assurance
that cases, once settled, would stay settled.
See
statement by Dr. Adams, Tax Adviser to the Treasury, Hearings,
Revenue Revision, House Ways and Means Committee, 67th Cong., 3d
Sess., pp. 38-40; H.R.Rep. No. 1035, 66th Cong., 2d Sess., p.
3.
To remedy this situation, Congress provided in § 1314 of
the Revenue Act of 1921, 42 Stat. 227, 314, that: "in case a
regulation or Treasury decision" should be reversed by a subsequent
"regulation or Treasury decision, and such reversal is not
immediately occasioned or required by a decision of a court of
competent jurisdiction," the subsequent regulation or decision
might be applied without retroactive effect. This provision was
carried into the Revenue Acts of 1924 and 1926. 43 Stat. 253, 340,
341, and 44 Stat. 9, 114. The 1928 Act expanded it to include cases
where the new Regulation or Treasury decision was occasioned or
required by a court decision. 45 Stat. 791, 874, § 605; S.Rep.
No. 960, 70th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 40. The Conference Committee
stated that:
"It is hoped that this provision will prevent the constant
reopening of cases on account of changes in regulations or Treasury
decision, and it is believed that sound administration properly
places upon the Government the responsibility and burden of
interpreting the law and of prescribing regulations upon which the
taxpayers may rely."
H.R.Rep. No. 1882, 70th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 22.
The Committee Reports state that § 506 of the Revenue Act
of 1934, now § 3791(b) of the Internal Revenue Code, was
intended to permit the Treasury to avoid inequities to persons who
had closed transactions in reliance upon "existing practice," and
that the
"amendment extends the right granted by existing law to the
Treasury Department to give regulations and Treasury Decisions
amending prior regulations or Treasury Decisions prospective effect
only, by allowing the Secretary, or the Commissioner, with the
approval of the Secretary, to prescribe the exact extent to which
any regulation or Treasury Decision,
whether or not it amends a
prior regulation or Treasury Decision, will be applied without
retroactive effect. The amendment, furthermore, permits internal
revenue rulings, as well as regulations or Treasury Decisions, to
be applied without retroactive effect."
(Italics supplied.) H.R.Rep. No. 704, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., p.
38; S.Rep. No. 558, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 48.
Thus, it appears that this legislation was intended to permit
escape from the retroactive effects of administrative action by the
Treasury, rather than to increase its power to make retroactive
rulings.
Cf. 69 Cong.Rec. 7881.
[
Footnote 50]
Traynor, Administrative and Judicial Procedure for Federal
Income, Estate, and Gift Taxes, 38 Columbia Law Review, 1393.
[
Footnote 51]
Thus, the Congress which first enacted § 115(f)(1) also
substantially reenacted provisions of the Municipal Bankruptcy Act
held unconstitutional in
Ashton v. Cameron County
District, 298 U. S. 513. It
did so after Chairman Summers of the Judiciary Committee in charge
of the Bill frankly stated on the floor of the Senate that it
implied certain proceedings which would be unconstitutional under
that decision. He went on to say, however, that it was not only the
right, but the duty, of Congress to present this question once more
to the Court, since the decision, if allowed to stand, had certain
consequences which he described and deplored. This history was
called to the attention of the Court, and the Act was sustained.
United States v. Bekins, 304 U. S. 27, 33
(argument of counsel -- omitted here).
[
Footnote 52]
Thus,
O'Malley v. Woodrough, 307 U.
S. 277, overruled
Miles v. Graham, 268 U.
S. 501, as to the constitutionality of taxation of
salaries of federal judges;
United States v. Darby,
312 U. S. 100,
657, overruled
Hammer v. Dagenhart, 247 U.
S. 251, as to Congressional power over labor in
manufacture;
West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 300 U.
S. 379, overruled
Adkins v. Children's
Hospital, 261 U. S. 525, and
Morehead v. Tipaldo, 298 U. S. 587, as
to power to enact minimum wage laws.
Compare also Wright v.
Vinton Branch, 300 U. S. 440,
with Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford,
295 U. S. 555, as
to farmer bankruptcy statutes;
Labor Board v. Jones &
Laughlin Corp., 301 U. S. 1,
with Schechter Corp. v. United States, 295 U.
S. 495, as to commerce power, and
United States v.
Darby, supra, and Sunshine Anthracite Coal Co. v. Adkins,
310 U. S. 381,
with Carter v. Carter Coal Co., 298 U.
S. 238, as to commerce power.
See also cases
cited by Mr. Justice Brandeis in
Burnet v. Coronado Oil &
Gas Co., 285 U. S. 393,
285 U. S.
406-408, notes 1 and 2.
[
Footnote 53]
Article I, § 8, cl. 1, of the Constitution provides
that
"The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties,
Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common
Defence and general Welfare of the United States. . . ."
Article I, § 7, cl. 1, provides that
"All bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of
Representatives, but the Senate may propose or concur with
Amendments as on other Bills."
[
Footnote 54]
The considerations which underlay the decisions in
Towne v.
Eisner and
Eisner v. Macomber may have had their
influence in the judgment of Congress itself.
Compare the
question put by Senator Bone to Senator Black, set forth,
supra, p.
318 U. S. 384.
Before the decision in
Eisner v. Macomber, the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts had held that stock dividends could
be taxed,
Tax Commissioners v. Putnam, 227 Mass. 522; but
the Massachusetts legislature had also specifically exempted them
from income taxation. Mass.Stat. 1920, c. 352, now G.L. c. 62,
§ 1(b). After the decision of
Eisner v. Macomber, the
Supreme Court of Wisconsin rejected its reasoning in
State ex
rel. Dulaney v. Nygaard, 174 Wis. 579, 183 N.W. 884, but,
since 1927, stock dividends have been exempted from income
taxation. Wis.Stat. § 71.02. In 1926, the New York legislature
adopted a provision retroactive to January 1, 1919, the effective
date of the first state income tax law, exempting all stock
dividends.
See People ex rel. Clark v. Gilchrist, 243 N.Y.
173, 153 N.E. 39.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
Eisner v. Macomber dies a slow death. It now has a new
reprieve, granted under circumstances which compel my dissent.
I
In 1936, Congress provided that stock dividends were taxable as
income when they constituted "income to the shareholder within the
meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution." [
Footnote 2/1] § 115(f)(1). That
statutory
Page 318 U. S. 405
provision is now rewritten so as to permit stock dividends to be
taxable when they constitute "income to the shareholder within the
meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution as construed
by
Eisner v. Macomber." That extraordinary result is
reached in the face of the plain language of the Act, and in face
of clear statements of its purpose made in Committee Reports. The
report of the House Ways and Means Committee (H.Rep. No.2475, 74th
Cong., 2d Sess., p. 10) stated that stock dividends were to be
taxable when they constituted "income to the shareholder within the
meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution." The report
of the Senate Finance Committee (S.Rep. No. 2156, 74th Cong., 2d
Sess., p. 18) contained the unequivocal statement that "stock
dividends are made taxable to the full extent permitted by the
Constitution." That purpose is now thwarted. Reliance is placed on
certain statements made by Mr. Vinson, who managed the bill on the
floor of the House. Yet the most that can be said is that his
statements in explanation of the bill were ambiguous. He stated, to
be sure, that the new provision was not to be
Page 318 U. S. 406
regarded "as an attack upon the
Eisner against Macomber
decision." 80 Cong.Rec. Pt. 6, p. 6215. But, in answer to an
inquiry from Mr. Treadway whether the new provision "describes new
stock dividends that can be taxed or what portion of stock
dividends under the Sixteenth Amendment can in the future be
taxed," he made the following statement:
"Well, we take the broad position that stock dividends that are
taxable income within the Sixteenth Amendment are subject to
taxation, and, if they are not such stock dividends and not any
taxable income under the Sixteenth Amendment, they are not subject
to taxes."
Id., p. 6310. I fail to see in that declaration even
any intimation that
Eisner v. Macomber, rather than the
Constitution, marked the reach of the new legislation. Furthermore,
a reading of the whole discussion on the floor of the House
indicates to me that his denial that the legislation made an
"attack" on Eisner v. Macomber fell far short of suggesting that
the House intended to foreclose this Court from reexamining
Eisner v. Macomber. If Congress had that purpose, the Act
hardly would have been phrased in terms which embrace the full
scope of the Sixteenth Amendment. To me, the disavowal of an intent
to "attack"
Eisner v. Macomber meant no more than a
disclaimer of any purpose to propose unconstitutional legislation.
Eisner v. Macomber is a decision of this Court. Under the
traditional conceptions of the place of judicial review in our
constitutional system, this Court, and only this Court, can change
the rule of that case in absence of an amendment to the
Constitution. Congress here was merely respecting that traditional
view. It wanted to go as far as it could. But it could have no idea
how far that would be until this Court spoke. No one could predict
whether this Court would overrule, modify, or sustain
Eisner v.
Macomber when the 1936 legislation came before
Page 318 U. S. 407
it. Indeed, when the 1936 bill passed the House, [
Footnote 2/2]
Koshland v.
Helvering, 298 U. S. 441,
which narrowed the application of
Eisner v. Macomber, had
not been decided by this Court. And
Helvering v. Gowran,
302 U. S. 238,
which somewhat extended the rule of the
Koshland case, was
not decided until after the 1936 Act was passed. But numerous
decisions by lower courts had made inroads on the
Eisner v.
Macomber doctrine. The rule of that case was in flux; a
process of erosion had set in, and none knew where that erosion
would cease. Accordingly, Congress drafted § 115(f) of the
1936 Act in the most flexible of terms. It used sweeping language
incorporating the full coverage of the Sixteenth Amendment, so that
those stock dividends would be taxed which this Court would permit
to be taxed. There are probably other ways in which the same idea
could have been phrased. But the one chosen is clear enough.
The only Treasury Regulations applicable to the taxable year in
question -- 1939 -- are Regulations 103. These were originally
promulgated on January 29, 1940. Sec.19.115-7 provided:
"A distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders in its
stock or in rights to acquire its stock shall be treated as a
dividend to the full extent that it constitutes income to the
shareholders within the meaning of the sixteenth amendment to the
Constitution."
That sentence was followed by the statement,
"The Supreme Court has pointed out some of the characteristics
distinguishing a stock dividend which constitutes income from one
which does not constitute income within the meaning of the
Constitution."
Then followed a summary of our decisions, ending with three
examples based on the
Koshland case,
Eisner v.
Macomber, and the
Gowran
Page 318 U. S. 408
case. On November 15, 1940, this regulation was amended by
striking out everything following the first sentence. This
regulation, however, even in its original form, did not and could
not foreclose inquiry into the validity of the decision in
Eisner v. Macomber. It did no more than state the
constitutional principles on which the decided cases rested. It
certainly did not indicate that the Treasury construed the statute
more narrowly than the Constitution itself. However that may be,
this Court, on more than one occasion, has refused to follow a
Treasury regulation which it felt to be "in the teeth" of the
statute.
Helvering v. Sabine Transportation Co., ante, p.
318 U. S. 306;
Helvering v. Credit Alliance Corp., 316 U.
S. 107. If this regulation be construed to narrow the
Act so as to tax only stock dividends permitted by
Eisner v.
Macomber, I would have less reluctance in striking it down
than I have had in other instances.
But there is said to be lack of wisdom in this interpretation of
the Act. It is argued that it would be disruptive of tax
administration. It is urged that a decision which now overruled
Eisner v. Macomber would be unfair, because it would be
retroactive. Those matters are none of our business. Every revenue
act which Congress has passed has a retroactive effect. It is
something on which taxpayers, of necessity, take their chances.
Milliken v. United States, 283 U. S.
15,
283 U. S. 23.
And many of the uncertainties in revenue acts necessarily are not
resolved until this Court passes on them years later. Here, there
is no possible basis for complaint. These stock dividends were
declared in 1939, three years after the Act making them taxable was
passed. Of course, the taxpayer, no more than Congress, could
predict what interpretation this Court would give the new statute.
Sec 115(f)(1), however, made the risks apparent. The fact that some
guessed wrong is wholly irrelevant to this litigation. Inequities
may result from a holding in 1943 that
Eisner v.
Page 318 U. S. 409
Macomber has not been the law since 1936. But the
relief against them lies with Congress. Our task ends if we erase
Eisner v. Macomber and give Congress a clean slate on
which to write. Then and only then can Congress design a tax system
treating stock dividends consistently. So long as Congress has to
guess whether or not this Court will overrule
Eisner v.
Macomber, any interim treatment which it gives stock dividends
may have to be readjusted after this Court speaks so as to remove
inequities which may have resulted.
II
I think
Eisner v. Macomber should be overruled. The
Sixteenth Amendment gives Congress the power "to lay and collect
taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived." As Mr. Justice
Brandeis stated in his dissent in
Eisner v. Macomber, 252
U.S. p.
252 U. S. 237,
that Amendment was designed to include "everything which by
reasonable understanding can fairly be regarded as income." Stock
dividends representing profits certainly are income in the popular
sense.
"From a practical common sense point of view, there is something
strange in the idea that a man may indefinitely grow richer without
ever being subject to an income tax."
Powell, Income From Corporate Dividends, 35 Harv.L.Rev. 363,
376. The wealth of stockholders normally increases as a result of
the earnings of the corporation in which they hold shares. I see no
reason why Congress could not treat that increase in wealth as
"income" to them. [
Footnote 2/3]
See Collector v.
Hubbard,
Page 318 U. S. 410
12 Wall. 1,
79 U. S. 18;
Helvering v. National Grocery Co., 304 U.
S. 282,
304 U. S. 288;
Powell, The Stock Dividend Decision and The Corporate Nonentity, 5
Nat.Tax Assoc.Bull. 201. The notion that there can be no "income"
to the stockholders in such a case within the meaning of the
Sixteenth Amendment unless the gain is "severed from" capital and
made available to the recipient for his "separate use, benefit and
disposal" (
Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.S., pp.
252 U. S. 207,
252 U. S. 211)
will not stand analysis. In cases like
Koshland v.
Helvering and
Helvering v. Gowran, where stock
dividends were held to be taxable as income, both the original
investment and the accumulations were retained by the company. Yet
those cases hold that stockholders may receive "income" from the
operations of their corporation though the corporation makes no
distribution of assets to them.
And see United States v.
Phellis, 257 U. S. 156;
Rockefeller v. United States, 257 U.
S. 176;
Cullinan v. Walker, 262 U.
S. 134;
Marr v. United States, 268 U.
S. 536. Other cases make plain that there may be
"income" though neither money nor property has been received by the
taxpayer. Benefits accruing as the result of the discharge
Page 318 U. S. 411
of the taxpayer's indebtedness or obligations constitute
familiar examples.
Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner,
279 U. S. 716;
Douglas v. Willcuts, 296 U. S. 1;
United States v. Hendler, 303 U.
S. 564. And increase in the value of property as a
result of improvements made by the lessee are taxable income to the
lesser even though the taxpayer could not "sever the improvement
begetting the gain from his original capital."
Helvering v.
Bruun, 309 U. S. 461,
309 U. S. 469.
The declaration of a stock dividend normally will not increase the
wealth of the stockholders. Its accrual will usually antedate that
event.
See Haig
et al., The Federal Income Tax
(1921) p. 8. For it is the accumulation of corporate earnings over
a period of time which marks any real accrual of wealth to the
stockholders. The narrow question here is whether Congress has the
power to make the receipt of a stock dividend based on earnings an
occasion for recognizing that accrual of wealth for income tax
purposes. Congress has done so through the formula of computing the
"income" to the stockholders at the "fair market value" of the
stock dividends received. Sec. 115(j). Whether that is the most
appropriate procedure which could be selected for the purpose may
be arguable. But I can see no constitutional reason for saying that
Congress cannot make that choice if it so desires. That is one way
-- though perhaps, at times, a crude one -- of measuring for income
tax purposes the wealth which normally accrues to stockholders as a
result of the earning of their corporation.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE MURPHY join in this
dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Sec. 115(a) defines "dividend" as follows:
"The term 'dividend' when used in this title [chapter] . . .
means any distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders,
whether in money or in other property, (1) out of its earnings or
profits accumulated after February 28, 1913, or (2) out of the
earnings or profits of the taxable year (computed as of the close
of the taxable year without diminution by reason of any
distributions made during the taxable year), without regard to the
amount of the earnings and profits at the time the distribution was
made."
Sec. 115(f)(1) is entitled "General Rule," and reads as
follows:
"A distribution made by a corporation to its shareholders in its
stock or in rights to acquire its stock shall not be treated as a
dividend to the extent that it does not constitute income to the
shareholder within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment to the
Constitution."
Sec. 115(j) sets forth the formula for valuation of dividends
other than cash dividends:
"If the whole or any part of a dividend is paid to a shareholder
in any medium other than money, the property received other than
money shall be included in gross income at its fair market value at
the time as of which it becomes income to the shareholder."
[
Footnote 2/2]
April 29, 1936. See 80 Cong.Rec. p. 6367. The
Koshland
case was decided by this Court on May 18, 1936.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Cf. the income tax of partners. Sec. 182 of the
Internal Revenue Code provides:
"In computing the net income of each partner, he shall include,
whether or not distribution is made to him . . . (c) His
distributive share of the ordinary net income or the ordinary net
loss of the partnership, computed as provided in section
183(b)."
A partner is chargeable with his allocable share of the
partnership earnings even where they could not be distributed to
him by reason of local law.
Heiner v. Mellon, 304 U.
S. 271,
304 U. S.
281:
"The tax is thus imposed upon the partner's proportionate share
of the net income of the partnership, and the fact that it may not
be currently distributable, whether by agreement of the parties or
by operation of law, is not material."
As stated by Mr. Justice Brandeis in his dissent in
Eisner
v. Macomber, 252 U.S. p.
252 U. S.
231:
"The stockholder's interest in the property of the corporation
differs not fundamentally, but in form only, from the interest of a
partner in the property of the firm. There is much authority for
the proposition that, under our law, a partnership or joint stock
company is just as distinct and palpable an entity in the idea of
the law, as distinguished from the individuals composing it, as is
a corporation. No reason appears why Congress, in legislating under
a grant of power so comprehensive as that authorizing the levy of
an income tax, should be limited by the particular view of the
relation of the stockholder to the corporation and its property
which may, in the absence of legislation, have been taken by this
court."