Irwin v. Gavit
Irwin v. Gavit
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to recover taxes and perialties exacted by the Collector under the Income. Tax Act of October 3, 1913, e. 16, Section II, A. subdivisions 1 and 2; B. D. and
The question is whether the sums received by the plaintiff under the will of Anthony N. Brady in 1913, 1914 and 1915, were, income and taxed. The will, admitted to probate August 12, 1913, left the residue of the estate in trust to be divided into six equal parts, the income of one part to be applied so far as, deemed proper by the trustees to the education and support of the testator’s granddaughter, Marcia Ann Gavit, the balance to be divided into two equal parts and one of them to be paid to the testatpr’s son-in-law, the plaintiff, in equal quarter-yearly payments during his life. But on the granddaughter’s reaching the age of twenty-one or dying the fund went over,-so that, the granddaughter then being six years old, it is said, the plaintiff’s interest could not exceed fifteen years. The Courts below held that the payments received were property acquired by bequest, were not income and wére not subject to tax.
The statute in Section II, A, subdivision 1, provides that there shall be levied a tax “ upon the entire net income arising or accruing from all sources in the preceding calendar year to every citizen of the United States.” If these payments properly may be called income by the common understanding of that word and the statute has failed to hit them it has missed so much of the general purpose that it expresses at the start. Congress intended to use its power to the full extent. Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U. S. 189, 203. By B. the net income is to include ‘gains or profits and income derived from any source whatever, including the income from but not the value of property acquired by gift, bequest, devise ór descent.’
The Courts below went on the ground that the gift to the plaintiff was a bequest and carried no interest in the corpus of the.fund. We do not regard those considerations as conclusive, as we have said, but if it were material a gift of the income of a fund ordinarily is treated by equity as creating an interest in the fund. Apart from technicalities we can perceive no distinction relevant to the question before us between a gift of the fund for life and a gift of the income from it. The fund is ap
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
By the plain terms of the Revenue Act of 1913, the value of property acquired by gift, bequest, devise, or descent is not to be included in net income. Only the income derived from such property is subject to the tax. The question, as it seems to me, is really a very simple one. Money, of course, is property. The money here sought to be taxed as income was paid to respondent under the express provisions of. a will. It was a gift by will, — a bequest. United States v. Merriam, 263 U. S. 179, 184. It, therefore, fell within the precise letter of the statute; and, under well settled principles, judicial inquiry may go no further. The taxpayer is entitled to the
The property which respondent acquired being a, bequest, there is no occasion to ask whether, before being handed over to him, it had been carved from the original corpus of, or from subsequent additions to, thé estate. The corpus of the estate was not the legacy which respondent received, but merely the source which gave rise to it. The money here sought to be taxed was not the fruits of a legacy; it was the legacy itself. Matter of Stanfield, 135 N. Y. 292, 294.
With the utmost respect for the judgment of my brethren to the contrary, the opinion just rendered, I think without warrant, searches the field of argument and inference for a meaning which should be found only in the strict letter of the statute.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Irwin, Former Collector of Internal Revenue, v. Gavit
- Cited By
- 406 cases
- Status
- Published