Appendix G
Deceptive IRS Code Words
Reader's Notes:
Deceptive IRS Code Words:
"Income", "Person",
"Taxpayer", "Shall", and "Must"
Learn to Decipher the Internal Revenue Code and IRS
Publications
The Internal Revenue
Code (IRC) is a masterpiece of deception designed to mislead Citizens into
believing that individuals are subject to federal income tax. The Code was written by attorneys for the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and contains a series of directory statutes
using the word "shall", with provisions that are requirements
for corporations, but not for individuals.
Even members of Congress are generally unaware of the deceptive legal
meanings of certain terms that are consistently used in the IRC. These terms have legal definitions for use
in the IRC that are very different from the general understanding of the
meaning of the words.
Lack of
knowledge of these legal definitions causes misunderstanding by uninformed Citizens
who are confused as to the correct interpretation of both the IRC and the true
meaning of the tricky wording in IRS instructional publications and news
articles. However, when you understand
the legal definitions of these terms, the deception is easily recognized and
the limited application of the Code becomes clear. This understanding will help you to see that filing income tax
forms and paying income taxes must be voluntary acts for most Americans because
the United States Constitution forbids the federal government to impose any tax
directly upon individuals.
"INCOME"
Most people mistakenly
believe all moneys they receive, such as wages, salaries, and tips, are
"income". However, for years,
IRS publication #525, entitled "Taxable and Nontaxable Income", has
acknowledged that wages and salaries are NOT "income". Publication #525 states: "Wages and salaries are the main SOURCE
of income for most people." In the
court decision of Graves v. People of the State of New York ex rel O'Keefe, 59 S.Ct.
595 (1939), the United States Supreme Court ruled that a source of
income is not income, and the source is not subject to income tax. In that decision, the Court stated: "A tax on income is not economically or
legally a tax on its source."
However, wages, salaries, commissions, and tips (sources) are
considered to be "income" for an individual when he lists them as
"income" on an IRS tax return form.
When he signs the tax form under penalty of perjury, he has made a voluntary
oath that his wages, salary, commissions, and tips listed on the return are
"income" and that he is subject to the tax.
In the still
standing decision of Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, 240
U.S. 1, the United States Supreme Court ruled that the federal income tax is an
excise tax under the Sixteenth Amendment (the income tax amendment). The Court explained that THE INCOME TAX
CANNOT BE IMPOSED AS A DIRECT TAX (A TAX ON INDIVIDUALS OR ON PROPERTY)
because the United States Constitution still requires that all direct taxes
must be apportioned among the States.
"Apportioned" means that a direct tax is laid upon the State
governments in proportion to each State's population. The Court ruled that income tax can be constitutional only as an
indirect (excise) tax -- that is, a tax on profits earned by corporations or
privileges granted by government. In
other words, said the Supreme Court, in order for there to be
"income", there MUST be profits or gains received in the exercise
of a privilege granted by government.
As an example, a lawyer is granted the government privilege of being an
officer of the government court when he represents clients in litigation.
At law, labor
is property. In fact, the Supreme Court
has identified labor as man's most precious property. Therefore, the exchange of one's labor for wages or salary (which
are also property) is considered by law to be an exchange of properties of
equal value in which there is NO gain or profit. Such a property exchange of equal value cannot be taxed because
there is no profit or gain. Also, one
who works in an ordinary occupation is not a recipient of any privilege granted
by government, because he is merely exercising his constitutionally guaranteed
right to work and earn an living.
Courts have repeatedly ruled that no tax may be placed upon the exercise
of rights. Their reasoning was
sensible. If the exercise of rights
could be taxed, government could destroy them by excessive rates of taxation.
Items that
the law includes in "income" are described in Code sections listed
under the title of "Items Specifically Included in Gross Income",
which covers Sections 71 through 86. Nowhere
in these sections and nowhere else in the Code is there any mention of
wages, salaries, commissions, or tips as being "income". For example, to deceive and intimidate
waitresses into declaring their tips to be income is a double fraud. First, tips are gifts, not wages. According to the IRC, gifts are not subject
to income tax. In fact, even if tips
were considered to be wages, they would still not be "income" and
would not be subject to an income (excise) tax unless one enters them as
"income" on a tax return form.
"PERSON"
People
generally consider the term "person" to mean an individual only. But, IRC Section 7701, entitled
"Definitions", includes a corporation, a trust, an estate, a
partnership, an association, or company as being a "person". All of these legal entities are
"persons" at law, so it is legally correct but very misleading when
the federal income (excise) tax on corporations is described by the deceptive title of
"Personal Income Tax".
This misleading description leads most people to believe that it means a
tax on individuals.
The legal
term "person" has an even more restricted definition when used
in IRC Chapter 75, which contains all the criminal penalties in the Code. In Section 7343 of that Chapter, a
"person" subject to criminal penalties is defined as:
...
[A]n officer or employee of a corporation, or a member or employee of a
partnership, who, as such officer, employee or member, is under a
duty to perform the act in respect of which the violation occurs.
An individual who is not in such a capacity is not
defined as a "person" subject to criminal penalties. Unprivileged individuals, who do not impose
the income (excise) tax upon themselves by filing returns, are not subject to
the tax and they are not "persons" who can lawfully be subjected
to criminal charges for not filing a return or not paying income tax.
Sections of
the Code relating to the requirements for filing returns, keeping records, and
disclosing information state that those sections apply to "every person
liable" or "any person made liable". These descriptions mean "any person who is liable for
the tax". They do not state or
mean that all persons are liable.
The only persons liable are those "persons" (legal entities
such as corporations) who owe an income (excise) tax, and are therefore subject
to the requirements of the IRC. If you
substitute the word "corporation" for the term "person" (a
corporation is a person at law) when reading the Code or other articles and
publications relating to income tax, the true meaning of the Code becomes more
apparent.
A TAX PAYER IS NOT A "TAXPAYER"
The deceptive
term "taxpayer" is a legal term created by combining the words
"tax" and "payer".
The general understanding of the term's meaning is different from its
legal definition in the IRC. Section
7701(a)(14) gives the legal definition of the term "taxpayer" in
relation to income tax. It states: "The term 'taxpayer' means any person
subject to any internal revenue tax."
(All internal revenue taxes are excise taxes.) Note that the section does not say that all persons
are "taxpayers" subject to internal revenue tax. Corporations are "taxpayers", for
they are "persons" subject to an internal revenue (excise) tax.
The term
"taxpayer" is used extensively throughout the IRC, in IRS
publications, news articles, and instructional literature as a verbal trap to
make uninformed Citizens believe that all individuals are subject to federal
income tax and to the requirements of the IRC.
These materials state that "taxpayers" are required to file
returns, keep records, supply information, etc. Such statements are technically correct, because
"taxpayers" are those legal "persons" previously described
that are subject to an excise tax, but unprivileged individuals are not
"taxpayers" within the meaning of the IRC.
The confusion
about the meaning of the term leads most people to mistakenly assume that they
are "taxpayers" because they pay other taxes such as sales taxes and
real estate taxes. Those people are tax
payers, not "taxpayers" as defined in the IRC. When they read articles and publications
related to income tax, describing the legal requirements for
"taxpayers", they erroneously believe that the term applies to them
as individuals. It is very important to
understand that the IRC requirements apply to IRC-defined "taxpayers"
only, and not to unprivileged individuals. Corporations and other government‑privileged legal entities
are "taxpayers under the Internal Revenue Code"; unprivileged individuals are not, unless
they voluntarily file income tax returns showing they owe taxes, thus legally
placing themselves in the classification of "taxpayers". Because of its legal definition, the term
"taxpayer" should never be used in relation to income tax,
except to describe those legal entities subject to a federal excise tax.
"SHALL" means "MAY"
In general
use, the word "shall" is a word of command with a mandatory
meaning. In the IRC, "shall"
is a directory word that has a mandatory meaning when applied to
corporations. The IRC contains a series
of directory statutes using the word "shall" in describing the
actions called for in those sections of the law. The provisions of these directory statutes are requirements
for corporations, because corporations are created by government and,
consequently, are subject to government direction and control. Since corporations are granted the privilege
to exist and operate by government-issued charters, they do not have the
constitutionally guaranteed rights of individuals. This government-granted privilege legally obligates corporations
to make a "return" of profits and gains earned in the exercise of
their privileged operations when directed to do so by law. This is why the tax form is called a
"return".
However,
directory words in the Code merely imply that individuals are required
to perform certain acts, but directory words are not requirements for
individuals when a mandatory interpretation of the directory words would
conflict with the constitutionally guaranteed rights of individuals. Courts have repeatedly ruled that in
statutes, when a mandatory meaning of the word "shall" would create a
constitutional conflict, "shall" must be defined as meaning
"may". The following are
quotes from a few of these decisions.
In the decision of Cairo & Fulton R.R. Co. v. Hecht, 95 U.S.
170, the U.S. Supreme Court stated:
As
against the government the word "shall" when used in statutes, is to
be construed as "may," unless a contrary intention is manifest.
In the decision of George Williams College v. Village
of Williams Bay, 7 N.W.2d 891, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin stated:
"Shall"
in a statute may be construed to mean "may" in order to avoid
constitutional doubt.
In the decision of Gow v. Consolidated Coppermines
Corp., 165 Atlantic 136, the court stated:
If
necessary to avoid unconstitutionality of a statute, "shall" will be deemed
equivalent to "may" ....
Sections 6001
and 6011 of the IRC are cited in the Privacy Act notice in the IRS 1040
instruction booklet in order to lead individuals to believe they are required
to perform services for tax collectors.
Note the use of the word "shall" in the following sections of
the Code:
Section 6001 states:
Every
person liable for any tax imposed by this title, or for the collection
thereof, shall keep such records, render such statements, make such
returns, and comply with such rules and requirements as the Secretary may from
time to time prescribe.
Section 6011 states:
When
required by regulations prescribed by the Secretary any person made liable for any tax imposed by this title, or for
the collection thereof, shall make a return or statement according to
the forms and regulations prescribed by the Secretary.
Note that
Sections 6001 and 6011 apply to "every person liable" and "any
person made liable", but not to "individuals". However, THERE IS NO SECTION IN THE IRC
THAT MAKES INDIVIDUALS LIABLE FOR PAYMENT OF INCOME TAX because any law
imposing a federal tax on individuals would be unconstitutional, for it would
violate the taxing limitations in the U.S. Constitution which prohibit direct
taxation of individuals by the federal government. People are often confused when reading the Code because, under
Subtitle A, Chapter 1, which covers income taxes, Part 1 of Subchapter A has
the misleading title of "Tax on Individuals". The title is misleading because Part 1 imposes
the tax on "income", but contains no requirement for individuals to
pay it. But an individual becomes a
"person liable" for the tax when he files an income tax form, thereby
swearing that he is liable for (owes) the tax.
The Privacy
Act notice in the instruction booklet for IRS Form 1040 also shows that
disclosure of information by individuals is not required. The notice states:
Our
legal right to ask for information is Internal Revenue Code sections 6001 and
6011 and their regulations.
The IRS does not say that those sections require
individuals to submit the information;
those sections only give the IRS the authority to ask for it.
Section 6012 states:
Returns
with respect to income taxes under Subtitle A shall be made by the
following: (1)(A) Every individual having for the taxable year gross which equals or
exceeds the exemption amount ...."
Subsections (2) through (6) list corporations, estates,
trusts, partnerships, and certain political organizations as also being subject
to this section.
Any
requirements compelling unprivileged individuals to keep records, make returns
and statements, or to involuntarily perform any other services for tax
collectors, would be violations of constitutionally guaranteed rights.
The Thirteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution forbids compelling individuals to
perform services involuntarily. The
Amendment states:
Neither
slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as punishment for crimes whereof the
party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or
any place subject to their jurisdiction.
The Fourth
Amendment in the Bill of Rights of the United States Constitution states that
the people's right to privacy of their papers shall not be violated by government. To compel individuals to disclose
information taken from their papers would violate this right.
The Fifth
Amendment in the Bill of Rights protects the right of individuals not to be
required to be witnesses against themselves.
To compel individuals to disclose information by submitting statements
or information on a tax return form, all of which could be used against them in
criminal prosecutions, would violate their Fifth Amendment right.
These
examples show some constitutional conflicts that would result from defining the
word "shall" as meaning "is required to". Thus, "shall" in the above
mentioned statutes must be interpreted as meaning "may". Consequently, for individuals, keeping
records, making statements, and making returns are clearly voluntary
actions that are not required by law.
"HAVING" INCOME
According to
the wording of Section 6012 previously discussed, it is a directory statute
which pertains to the filing of income tax returns, and applies only to those
individuals "having income".
Since the word "having" has no deceptive legal definition in
the Code, its legal meaning is the same as its customary meaning in general
use. Although dictionaries define the
word "have" as meaning "possess" or "hold in one's
possession", the IRS fraudulently misinterprets "having income"
as meaning "receiving gross receipts" when applying Section 6012 to
individuals.
To better
understand the meaning of "having income", consider this
example: If during one year a
corporation receives ten million dollars (gross receipts) from the sales of its
products, and has expense items of nine million dollars, the corporation has a
profit (income) of one million dollars.
When tax liabilities are determined at the end of the year, the
corporation has (possesses) an increase in its assets (a gain) of one million
dollars. But, if the corporation's
expenses equalled its gross receipts, it would then have (possess) no profit or
gain (income) and it would owe no income tax.
Now, consider
another example: If during one year an
individual receives fifteen thousand dollars in wages (gross receipts) from the
sale of his labor, and has expenses of fifteen thousand dollars to sustain
himself and his family, he then has (possesses) no increase in assets. Although he has (possesses) nothing more
than he had at the beginning of the year, IRS agents consider him as
"having income" of fifteen thousand dollars. IRS agents ignore the fact that his wages
were not income according to their own publications!
"MUST" means "MAY"
Most people
have never studied the IRC and their understanding of the law is generally
based on hearsay, newspaper articles and IRS instructional materials. These instructions make frequent use of the
deceptive word "must" in describing the things that the IRS wants you
to do, because "must" is a forceful word that people mistakenly
believe to mean "are required".
Very few people realize that "must" is a directory word
similar to "shall" and that, in IRS instructions to the public, it
means "may", the same as the word "shall".
In the legal
definition of the word "must" in Black's Law Dictionary, it states:
...
[I]t is often used in a merely directory sense, and consequently is a
synonym for the word "may" not only in the permissive sense of that
word, but also in the mandatory sense which it sometimes has.
Because of
the constitutional conflicts explained earlier in this article, the word
"must", similar to the word "shall", cannot have a
mandatory meaning for individuals. It
therefore means "may" when used in IRS instruction publications.
The IRS
instructions for Form 1040 state that you "must" file a return if you
have certain amounts of income. IRS
withholding instructions state that employers "must" withhold money
from paychecks for income tax, "must" withhold social security tax
(an income tax also), and "must" send to the IRS any W-4 withholding
statement claiming exemption from withholding, if the wages are expected to
usually exceed $200 per week. An
understanding of the legal meaning of the word "must" exposes the
deception by the IRS and makes it clear that the actions called for are voluntary
actions for individuals that are not required by law. If these actions were required by law, the instructions would not
use the word "must", but would say that the actions were
"required".
FREE SOVEREIGN CITIZENS
Prior to the
American Revolution, the American colonists were subjects of the English Kings
and were subject to their orders and edicts.
But, according to the Declaration of Independence and the United States
Constitution, the Citizens of our country are free sovereign individuals. They are not subjects of government, nor are
they subject to mandatory direction or control by the federal government. Except for duties such as military draft and
jury duty, the federal government has no authority to require unprivileged
individuals to perform services for government.
There is no
section in the IRC requiring individuals to pay income tax or file income tax
returns, because the federal government has no constitutional authority to
impose any tax directly upon individuals or to require them involuntarily to
keep records, make statements, make returns, or perform any acts for the
convenience of federal tax collectors.
But, if an individual files a return, his voluntary action of signing
the form, thereby swearing under penalty of perjury that he owes the tax, is an
acknowledgement under oath that he is subject to the tax (a
"taxpayer") and is therefore subject to the directory statutes of the
IRC.
The reader
should remember the legal definitions of the various terms and the information
about the rights of Citizens presented in this article whenever he reads the
IRC and other materials relating to income tax in order to better understand
the correct meaning of whatever they read.
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