The Commissioner of Internal Revenue's longstanding ruling that
"traveling expenses" incurred in the pursuit of business "while
away from home," which are deductible under § 162(a)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1954, include the cost of meals only if
the trip requires sleep or rest,
held to achieve not only
ease and certainty of application, but also substantial fairness
and to be within the Commissioner's authority to implement the
statute in any reasonable manner. Pp.
389 U. S.
301-307.
369 F.2d 87, reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has long maintained that a
taxpayer traveling on business may deduct the cost of his meals
only if his trip requires him to stop for sleep or rest. The
question presented here is the validity of that rule.
Page 389 U. S. 300
The respondent in this case was a traveling salesman for a
wholesale grocery company in Tennessee. [
Footnote 1] He customarily left home early in the
morning, ate breakfast and lunch on the road, and returned home in
time for dinner. In his income tax returns for 1960 and 1961, he
deducted the cost of his morning and noon meals as "traveling
expenses" incurred in the pursuit of his business "while away from
home" under § 162(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.
[
Footnote 2] Because the
respondent's daily trips required neither sleep nor rest, the
Commissioner disallowed the deductions, ruling that the cost of the
respondent's meals was a "personal, living" expense under §
262, [
Footnote 3] rather than a
travel expense under § 162(a)(2). The respondent paid the tax,
sued for a refund in the District Court, and there received a
favorable jury verdict. [
Footnote
4] The Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Page 389 U. S. 301
Circuit affirmed, holding that the Commissioner's sleep or rest
rule is not "a valid regulation under the present statute." 369
F.2d 87, 90. In order to resolve a conflict among the circuits on
this recurring question of federal income tax administration,
[
Footnote 5] we granted
certiorari. 388 U.S. 905.
Under § 162(a)(2), taxpayers "traveling . . . away from
home in the pursuit of trade or business" may deduct the total
amount "expended for meals and lodging" [
Footnote 6] As a result, even the taxpayer who incurs
substantial
Page 389 U. S. 302
hotel and restaurant expenses because of the special demands of
business travel receives something of a windfall, for at least part
of what he spends on meals represents a personal living expense
that other taxpayers must bear without receiving any deduction at
all. [
Footnote 7] Not
surprisingly, therefore, Congress did not extend the special
benefits of § 162(a)(2) to every conceivable situation
involving business travel. It made the total cost of meals and
lodging deductible only if incurred in the course of travel that
takes the taxpayer "away from home." The problem before us involves
the meaning of that limiting phrase.
In resolving that problem, the Commissioner has avoided the
wasteful litigation and continuing uncertainty that would
inevitably accompany any purely case-by-case approach to the
question of whether a particular taxpayer was "away from home" on a
particular day. [
Footnote 8]
Rather than requiring "every meal-purchasing taxpayer to take pot
luck in the courts," [
Footnote
9] the Commissioner has consistently construed travel "away
from home" to exclude all trips requiring neither sleep nor rest,
[
Footnote 10] regardless
Page 389 U. S. 303
of how many cities a given trip may have touched, [
Footnote 11] how many miles it may
have covered, [
Footnote 12]
or how many hours it may have consumed. [
Footnote 13] By so interpreting the statutory phrase,
the Commissioner has achieved not only ease and certainty of
application, but also substantial fairness, for the sleep or rest
rule places all one-day travelers on a similar tax footing, rather
than discriminating against intracity travelers and commuters, who,
of course, cannot deduct the cost of the meals they eat on the
road.
See Commissioner v. Flowers, 326 U.
S. 465.
Any rule in this area must make some rather arbitrary
distinctions, [
Footnote 14]
but at least the sleep or rest rule avoids the obvious inequity of
permitting the New Yorker who makes a quick trip to Washington and
back, missing neither his breakfast nor his dinner at home, to
deduct the cost of his lunch merely because he covers more
miles
Page 389 U. S. 304
than the salesman who travels locally and must finance all his
meals without the help of the Federal Treasury. [
Footnote 15] And the Commissioner's rule
surely makes more sense than one which would allow the respondent
in this case to deduct the cost of his breakfast and lunch simply
because he spends a greater percentage of his time at the wheel
than the commuter who eats breakfast on his way to work and lunch a
block from his office.
The Court of Appeals nonetheless found in the "plain language of
the statute" an insuperable obstacle to the Commissioner's
construction. 369 F.2d 87, 89. We disagree. The language of the
statute -- "meals and lodging . . . away from home" -- is obviously
not self-defining. [
Footnote
16] And to the extent that the words chosen by Congress cut in
either direction, they tend to support, rather than defeat, the
Commissioner's position, for the statute speaks of "meals and
lodging" as a unit, suggesting -- at least arguably -- that
Congress contemplated a deduction for the cost of meals only where
the travel in question involves lodging as well. [
Footnote 17] Ordinarily, at least, only the
taxpayer who finds it necessary to stop for sleep or rest incurs
significantly higher living expenses as a direct
Page 389 U. S. 305
result of his business travel, [
Footnote 18] and Congress might well have thought that
only taxpayers in that category should be permitted to deduct their
living expenses while on the road. [
Footnote 19] In any event, Congress certainly recognized,
when it promulgated § 162(a)(2), that the Commissioner had so
understood its statutory predecessor. [
Footnote 20] This case thus comes within the settled
principle that
"Treasury regulations and interpretations long continued without
substantial change, applying to unamended or substantially
reenacted statutes, are deemed to have
Page 389 U. S. 306
received congressional approval and have the effect of law."
Helvering v. Winmill, 305 U. S. 79,
305 U. S. 83;
Fribourg Nav. Co. v. Commissioner, 383 U.
S. 272,
383 U. S.
283.
Alternatives to the Commissioner's sleep or rest rule are, of
course, available. [
Footnote
21] Improvements might be imagined. [
Footnote 22] But we do not sit as a committee of
revision to
Page 389 U. S. 307
perfect the administration of the tax laws. Congress has
delegated to the Commissioner, not to the courts, the task of
prescribing "all needful rules and regulations for the enforcement"
of the Internal Revenue Code. 26 U.S.C. § 7805(a). In this
area of limitless factual variations, "it is the province of
Congress and the Commissioner, not the courts, to make the
appropriate adjustments."
Commissioner v. Stidger,
386 U. S. 287,
386 U. S. 296.
The role of the judiciary in cases of this sort begins and ends
with assuring that the Commissioner's regulations fall within his
authority to implement the congressional mandate in some reasonable
manner. Because the rule challenged here has not been shown
deficient on that score, the Court of Appeals should have sustained
its validity. The judgment is therefore
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Since Mr. and Mrs. Correll filed a joint income tax return, both
are respondents here. Throughout this opinion, however, the term
"respondent" refers only to Mr. Correll.
[
Footnote 2]
"(a) In General. -- There shall be allowed as a deduction all
the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the
taxable year in carrying on any trade or business, including --
"
"
* * * *"
"(2) traveling expenses (including the entire amount expended
for meals and lodging) while away from home in the pursuit of a
trade or business. . . ."
§ 162(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C.
§ 162(a)(2) (1958 ed.).
[
Footnote 3]
"Except as otherwise expressly provided in this chapter, no
deduction shall be allowed for personal, living, or family
expenses."
§ 262 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C.
§ 262.
[
Footnote 4]
After denying the Government's motion for a directed verdict,
the District Judge charged the jury that it would have to
"determine under all the facts of this case whether or not" the
Commissioner's rule was "an arbitrary regulation as applied to
these plaintiffs under the facts in this case." He told the jury to
consider whether the meal expenses were "necessary for the employee
to properly perform the duties of his work."
"Should he have eaten them at his home, rather than . . . away
from home, in order to properly carry on this business or to
perform adequately his duties as an employee of this produce
company[?]"
"You are instructed that the cost of meals while on one-day
business trips away from home need not be incurred while on an
overnight trip to be deductible, so long as the expense of such
meals . . . proximately results from the carrying on the particular
business involved and has some reasonable relation to that
business."
Under these instructions, the jury found for the respondent. The
District Court denied the Government's motion for judgment
notwithstanding the verdict.
[
Footnote 5]
The decision below conflicts with that of the First Circuit in
Commissioner v. Bagley, 374 F.2d 204, but is in accord
with that of the Eighth Circuit in
Hanson v. Commissioner,
298 F.2d 391, reaffirmed in
United States v. Morelan, 356
F.2d 199, 208-210.
[
Footnote 6]
Prior to the enactment in 1921 of what is now § 162(a)(2),
the Commissioner had promulgated a regulation allowing a deduction
for the cost of meals and lodging away from home, but only to the
extent that this cost exceeded "any expenditures ordinarily
required for such purposes when at home." Treas.Reg. 45 (1920 ed.),
Art. 292, 4 Cum.Bull. 209 (1921). Despite it s logical appeal, the
regulation proved so difficult to administer that the Treasury
Department asked Congress to grant a deduction for the "entire
amount" of such meal and lodging expenditures.
See
Statement of Dr. T. S. Adams, Tax Adviser, Treasury Department, in
Hearings on H.R. 8245 before the Senate Committee on Finance, 67th
Cong., 1st Sess., at 50, 234-235 (1921). Accordingly §
214(a)(1) of the Revenue Act of 1921, c. 136, 42 Stat. 239, for the
first time included that language that later became §
162(a)(2).
See n 2,
supra. The section was amended in a respect not here
relevant by the Revenue Act of 1962, § 4(b), 76 Stat. 976.
[
Footnote 7]
Because § 262 makes "personal, living, or family expenses"
nondeductible,
see n
3,
supra, the taxpayer whose business requires no travel
cannot ordinarily deduct the cost of the lunch he eats away from
home. But the taxpayer who can bring himself within the reach of
§ 162(a)(2) may deduct what he spends on his noontime meal
although it costs him no more, and relates no more closely to his
business, than does the lunch consumed by his less mobile
counterpart.
[
Footnote 8]
Such was the approach of the Tax Court in
Bagley v.
Commissioner, 46 T.C. 176, 183,
vacated, 374 F.2d
204; of the Eighth Circuit in
Hanson v. Commissioner, 298
F.2d 391, 397, and evidently of the Sixth Circuit in this case,
see 369 F.2d 87, 90.
[
Footnote 9]
Commissioner v. Bagley, 374 F.2d 204, 207.
[
Footnote 10]
The Commissioner's interpretation, first expressed in a 1940
ruling, I.T. 3395, 1910-2 Cum.Bull. 64, was originally known as the
overnight rule.
See Commissioner v. Bagley, supra, at
205.
[
Footnote 11]
The respondent lived in Fountain City, Tennessee, some 45 miles
from his employer's place of business in Morristown. His territory
included restaurants in the cities of Madisonville, Engelwood,
Etowah, Athens, Sweetwater, Lake City, Caryville, Jacksboro, La
Follette, and Jellico, all in eastern Tennessee.
[
Footnote 12]
The respondent seldom traveled farther than 55 miles from his
home, but he ordinarily drove a total of 150 to 175 miles
daily.
[
Footnote 13]
The respondent's employer required him to be in his sales
territory at the start of the business day. To do so, he had to
leave Fountain City at about 5 a.m. He usually finished his daily
schedule by 4 p.m., transmitted his orders to Morristown, and
returned home by 5:30 p.m.
[
Footnote 14]
The rules proposed by the respondent and by the two
amici
curiae filing briefs on his behalf are not exceptional in this
regard. Thus, for example, the respondent suggests that §
162(a)(2) be construed to cover those taxpayers who travel outside
their "own home town," or outside "the greater . . . metropolitan
area" where they reside. One
amicus stresses the number of
"hours spent and miles traveled away from the taxpayer's principal
post of duty," suggesting that some emphasis should also be placed
upon the number of meals consumed by the taxpayer "outside the
general area of his home."
[
Footnote 15]
See Amoroso v. Commissioner, 193 F.2d 583.
[
Footnote 16]
The statute applies to the meal and lodging expenses of
taxpayers "traveling . . . away from home." The very concept of
"traveling" obviously requires a physical separation from one's
house. To read the phrase "away from home" as broadly as a
completely literal approach might permit would thus render the
phrase completely redundant. But, of course, the words of the
statute have never been so woodenly construed. The commuter, for
example, has never been regarded as "away from home" within the
meaning of § 162(a)(2) simply because he has traveled from his
residence to his place of business.
See Commissioner v.
Flowers, 326 U. S. 465,
326 U. S. 473.
More than a dictionary is thus required to understand the provision
here involved, and no appeal to the "plain language" of the section
can obviate the need for further statutory construction.
[
Footnote 17]
See Commissioner v. Bagley, 374 F.2d 204, 207, n.
10.
[
Footnote 18]
The taxpayer must ordinarily "maintain a home for his family at
his own expense even when he is absent on business,"
Barnhill
v. Commissioner, 148 F.2d 913, 917, and if he is required to
stop for sleep or rest, "continuing costs incurred at a permanent
place of abode are duplicated."
James v. United States,
308 F.2d 204, 206. The same taxpayer, however, is unlikely to incur
substantially increased living expenses as a result of business
travel, however far he may go, so long as he does not find it
necessary to stop for lodging. One
amicus curiae brief
filed in this case asserts that "those who travel considerable
distances such as [on] a one-day jet trip between New York and
Chicago" spend more for "comparable meals [than] those who remain
at their home base" and urges that all who travel "substantial
distances" should therefore be permitted to deduct the entire cost
of their meals. It may be that eating at a restaurant costs more
than eating at home, but it cannot seriously be suggested that a
taxpayer's bill at a restaurant mysteriously reflects the distance
he has traveled to get there.
[
Footnote 19]
The court below thought that,
"[i]n an era of supersonic travel, the time factor is hardly
relevant to the question of whether or not . . . meal expenses are
related to the taxpayer's business. . . ."
369 F.2d 87, 89-90. But that completely misses the point. The
benefits of § 162(a)(2) are limited to business travel "away
from home," and all meal expenses incurred in the course of such
travel are deductible, however unrelated they may be to the
taxpayer's income-producing activity. To ask that the definition of
"away from home" be responsive to the business necessity of the
taxpayer's meals is to demand the impossible.
[
Footnote 20]
In considering the proposed 1954 Code, Congress heard a taxpayer
plea for a change in the rule disallowing deductions for meal
expenses on one-day trips. Hearings on General Revision of the
Internal Revenue Code before the House Committee on Ways and Means,
83d Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 1, at 216-219 (1953); Hearings on H.R.
8300 before the Senate Committee on Finance, 83d Cong., 2d Sess.,
pt. 4, at 2396 (1954). No such change resulted.
In recommending § 62(2)(C) of the 1954 Code, permitting
employees to deduct certain transportation expenses in computing
adjusted gross income, the Senate Finance Committee stated:
"At present, business transportation expenses can be deducted by
an employee in arriving at adjusted gross income only if they are
reimbursed by the employer or if they are incurred while he was
away from home overnight. . . ."
"Because these expenses, when incurred, usually are substantial,
it appears desirable to treat employees in this respect like
self-employed persons. For this reason both the House and your
committee's bill permit employees to deduct business transportation
expenses in arriving at adjusted gross income even though the
expenses are not incurred in travel
away from home or not
reimbursed by the employer. . . ."
S.Rep. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 9 (1954) (emphasis added).
See also H.R.Rep. No. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 9
(1954).
And in discussing § 120 of the 1954 Code (repealed by 72
Stat. 1607 (1958)), which allowed policemen to exclude from taxable
income up to $5 per day in meal allowances, both the House and
Senate Reports noted that, under the prevailing rule, police
officers could deduct expenses
over the $5 limit of §
120 "for meals while
away from home overnight." H.R.Rep.
No. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., A40 (1954) (emphasis added); S.Rep.
No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., 191 (1954) (emphasis added). Thus,
Congress was well aware of the Commissioner's rule when it retained
in § 162(a)(2) the precise terminology it had used in
1921.
[
Footnote 21]
See n 14,
supra.
[
Footnote 22]
See, e.g., the 1963 proposal of the Treasury
Department, in Hearings on the President's 1963 Tax Message before
the House Committee on Ways and Means, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., pt.
1, at 98 (1963).
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE
FORTAS concur, dissenting.
The statutory words "while away from home," 26 U.S.C. §
162(a)(2), may not, in my view, be shrunken to "overnight" by
administrative construction or regulations. "Overnight" injects a
time element in testing deductibility, while the statute speaks
only in terms of geography. As stated by the Court of Appeals:
"In an era of supersonic travel, the time factor is hardly
relevant to the question of whether or not travel and meal expenses
are related to the taxpayer's business, and cannot be the basis of
a valid regulation under the present statute."
Correll v. United States, 369 F.2d 87, 89-90.
I would affirm the judgment below.