The Murphy Court:
Human Life has No Value
Saturday, July 12, 2008
By Phil Hart
If the courts want to be respected, they need to be respectable. And if
the courts are not respectable, the people will view them with contempt.
The case of Murphy v. The IRS, 460 F.3d 79 (D.C.
Cir. 2006) rehearing 493 F.3d 170 (D.C. Cir. 2007) allows us feel first
respect, and later, contempt for the court.
It has been a year since the Appellate Court for the District of Columbia
overturned their brilliant opinion in the Murphy Case, and gave us in
its place a mediocre one at best. Since then, Murphy’s attorneys
appealed to the Supreme Court, but the Supreme Court did not take up
the appeal.
Why the Appellate Court issued their mediocre opinion on July 3, 2007, the
day before Independence Day, I don’t know. Maybe it served as
a warning that we are indeed in trouble; for what was going on in the
colonies in 1776 is going on in America today. When you compare the
first opinion of the court given to us on August 22, 2006 with that
of the replacement ruling issued on July 3, 2007, it is clear that the
court was protecting the government on an unlevel playing field. It
is also clear that we have today in America the same “mock trials”
that Thomas Jefferson complained about in the Declaration of Independence.
So on this anniversary of the issuance of that mediocre ruling; let’s
take another look at the Murphy Case. And for those of you who have
not read my September 13, 2006 article, we will review the facts of the Murphy Case.
What is the “Murphy Court” and who is Murphy?
Marrita Murphy is a whistleblower who, in 1995, reported some environmental
problems at a New York Air National Guard base. Her whistleblower actions
got her fired and “blacklisted.” The entire ordeal was stressful
for Ms. Murphy and she sued her former employer. Lawyers from the National
Whistleblower Center (NWC) successfully prosecuted the case. On Dec.
11, 1995 an administrative law judge awarded Ms. Murphy $70,000--$45,000
for “emotional distress or mental anguish” and $25,000 for
“injury to professional reputation”. Murphy received her
award Oct. 25, 1999.
Reluctantly, Murphy reported the $70,000 compensatory award on her 2000 income tax
forms and paid tax on that “income”. She then filed for
a refund. The IRS had determined that Murphy’s award was subject
to being taxed as income even though her court-ordered award was intended
to make her, as a damaged party, “whole” again. No additional
punitive damages were awarded.
When Murphy appealed the IRS decision to tax the $70,000 award, the IRS did
not respond. So, on Jan. 16, 2003, Murphy sued the IRS in federal district
court claiming that the award of $70,000 she received for compensatory
damages was not taxable as “income.” The district court
ruled against Murphy who appealed to the United States Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia. On August 22, 2006, the “Murphy
Court” reversed the District Court by ruling that it is unconstitutional
for the IRS to tax compensation for damages as income. The Murphy Court
remanded the case back to the District Court with instructions that
“…the Government refund the taxes Murphy paid on her award
plus applicable interest.”
Several months later, the Appellate Court did something very strange. On Dec.
22, 2006, the court vacated (voided) the August 22, 2006 decision and
reheard the case on April 23, 2007. The reconvined Murphy Court subsequently
ruled on July 3, 2007, that compensation for damages is taxable as income.
Hence the importance of Murphy: For the first time in decades, a federal court
took a serious look at the definition of the word “income”
as it was used in the Sixteenth Amendment and ruled in favor of appellant
Murphy based upon an honest and correct analysis of the facts and history.
Then, several months later, a highly unusual maneuver was invoked to
reconvene the Murphy Court and, with no new evidence, the court invented
a variety of reasons why Murphy’s $70k award could have an excise
tax imposed on it, none of which are identified in any statute passed
by Congress.
A Perfect Storm
The landmark nature of Murphy is truly the result of a “perfect storm.”
Murphy retained her whistleblower lawyers to litigate the tax case against
the IRS even though they had no experience in tax litigation. The National
Whistleblower Center (NWC) lawyers’ lack of experience in tax
litigation worked in their favor. Rather than being legally biased on
the income tax issue, they instead took a fresh look at it. Murphy’s
lawyers questioned everything-- including the meaning of the word “income”
as it was used in the Sixteenth Amendment. They argued their case before
a panel of three appellate judges who normally don’t hear tax
cases and were likely more open minded when hearing income-tax related
arguments compared to courts that have already ruled on tax cases.
“Income”
and the Murphy Court
To determine what the word “income” means as it is used in
the Sixteenth Amendment, the Murphy Court’s first published decision
started at the beginning by determining what the framers of the Sixteenth
Amendment intended the word “income” to mean. The Murphy
Court quoted the U.S. Supreme Court: “…in defining ‘incomes,’
we should rely upon ‘the commonly understood meaning of the term
which must have been in the minds of the people when they adopted the
Sixteenth Amendment. ~Merchants’ Loan and Trust, Co.
v. Smietanka, 255 U.S. 509, 519 (1921).”
The Murphy Court also said, “The Sixteenth Amendment simply does not
authorize the Congress to tax as ‘incomes’ every sort of
revenue a taxpayer may receive. As the Supreme Court noted long ago,
the ‘Congress cannot make a thing income which is not so in fact.’”
~Burk-Waggoner Oil Ass’n v. Hopkins, 269
U.S. 110, 114 (1925).”
The Murphy Court was correct on all fronts. Congress derives its powers
from the Constitution, as authorized by We the People. If Congress could
change the meaning of words in the Constitution, then the whole principle
of “limited government” would fly out the window. The Murphy
Court also got it right when it opined, “The Government of the
United States is a government of limited powers: ‘Every law enacted
by Congress must be based on one or more powers enumerated in the Constitution.’”
~United States v. Morrison, 529 U.S. 598, 607
(2000).”
Of the definition of the word “income,” the Supreme Court said
long ago, “Congress cannot by any definition it may adopt conclude
the matter, since it cannot by legislation alter the Constitution, from
which alone it derives its power to legislate and within whose limitations
alone that power can be lawfully exercised.” ~Eisner
v. Macomber, 252 U.S. 189, 206 (1919).
In keeping with the previous cases, the Murphy Court said, “...it
would not be consistent with our constitutional government, and the
sanctity of property in our system, merely to rely upon the legislature
to decide what constitutes income.”
The Murphy Court responded appropriately to the arguments presented by Murphy’s
lawyers, who also starting at the beginning. They discovered that back
in the 1913 period, when the Sixteenth Amendment was purportedly ratified,
awards for personal injury type damages were considered a “return
of capital” and an attempt to make the injured party “whole.”
In making the injured party “whole,” such an award was considered
as restoring or returning something that had been damaged or stolen.
The analogy was made that the injury depleted Murphy’s “human
capital” just as fire damage or negligence would diminish the
value of a home. The cost of bringing the home back up to its condition
before the “injury” occurred would be restoring the home’s
capital in the same way as Murphy’s award was restoring her human
capital. The Murphy Court agreed.
The odd man out was the government. This is not surprising when one realizes
that the main source of all the confusion over the Sixteenth Amendment
is the government and its thousands of pages of confusing and often
subjective taxing statutes. The “follow the money” principle
is firmly in place here.
Direct v. Indirect Taxation
In an 1895 decision that angered the American People, the U.S. Supreme
Court called an income tax on the net income from investment a direct
tax in the Pollock Case. The genesis of the Sixteenth Amendment
was to nullify the theory upon which the Pollock Court declared the
income tax to be a direct tax; that being the idea that an income tax
on net income was the same as a tax on the underlying source of the
income. In other words, it was a tax on the underlying asset; it was
a tax on the source--so said the Pollock Court. With the ratification
of the Sixteenth Amendment, the Pollock Theory died.
With the Pollock Theory gone, the Sixteenth Amendment returned us to the
criteria for determining what constitutes a direct tax and an indirect
tax as laid down by the man who gave us those terms, Adam Smith.
Smith’s
book Wealth of Nations was the economic bible in the hands of every
one of the framers of the Constitution. The meaning of these terms can
be found in a 1909 quote from Senator (and future U.S. Supreme Court
Justice) George Sutherland (R-Utah) as he debated the Sixteenth Amendment.
“The most generally received opinion, however, is that by direct
taxes in the Constitution are those meant which are raised on the capital
or revenue of the people; by indirect, such as are raised on their expense...
it will not be improper to corroborate it by quoting the author from
whom the idea seems to have been borrowed. (Naming Doctor Smith’s
Wealth of Nations)” ~44 Congressional Record
2094 (1909).
Today the Sixteenth Amendment prohibits the Pollock Theory from being used
to categorize an income tax. Consequently, an income tax that meets
Smith’s criteria for a direct tax (i.e. taxes on wages, salaries,
and human capital) is a direct tax. An income tax that meets Smith’s
criteria for an indirect tax (i.e. taxes on business profits, investment
profits, or privileges) is an indirect tax.
Murphy’s attorneys argued that her award constituted only monies that “made
her whole.” The award was a return of her “human capital.”
Murphy’s attorney, David K. Colapinto, who successfully argued
the case, said of the government’s position, “The government
had the audacity to argue that non-wage compensatory damages for emotional
distress and loss of reputation can be taxed as income because the economic
value of human life is zero. The taxing of non-wage damages is highly
destructive and punishes whistleblowers and other civil rights plaintiffs
for prevailing in their cases.” See, whistleblowers.org
Colapinto's position is further buttressed by what some of the leading supporters
of the Sixteenth Amendment had to say. In 1909, while the income tax
was being debated, Senator Joseph Bailey (D-Texas) said, “I believe
that in earning an income by personal service every man consumes a part
of his principal, and that fact ought always to be taken in to consideration.
The man who has his fortune invested in securities may find in a hundred
years, if he spent his income, that fortune still intact, but the lawyer
or the physician or the man engaged in other personal employment is
spending his principal in earning his income. That fact ought under
every just system of income taxation to be recognized and provided against.”
~44 Congressional Record, 4007 (1909).
The author of the Sixteenth Amendment, Senator Norris Brown (D-Nebraska),
had this to say about the object of the income tax: “It is the
theory of the friends of the income-tax proposition that [income from]
property should be taxed and not individuals.” ~44 Congressional
Record 1570 (1909).
In the first modern tax case to be litigated after the Sixteenth Amendment
was purportedly ratified, the Supreme Court ruled in Brushaber
v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., 240 U.S. 1 (1916) that the
income tax was an excise tax (an indirect tax) even though both the
government and Brushaber argued that it was a direct tax exempted from
apportionment.
“In Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., Mr. Chief Justice White,
upholding the income tax imposed by the Tariff Act of 1913, construed
the Amendment as a declaration that an income tax is indirect, rather
than as making an exception to the rule that direct taxes must be apportioned.”
~The Income Tax and the Sixteenth Amendment,
29 Harvard Law Review 536 (1915-6).
Cornell Law Quarterly also weighed in on the Brushaber Case: “The
amendment, the court said, judged by the purpose for which it was passed,
does not treat income taxes as direct taxes but simply removed the ground
which led to their being considered as such in the Pollock case, namely,
the source of the income. Therefore, they are again to be classified
in the class of indirect taxes to which they by nature belong.”
~Ramon Siaca, The Federal Income Tax Law of 1913: Construction
of the Sixteenth Amendment, 1 Cornell Law Quarterly 298,
299 and 301 (1916).
Substance over Form
The legal doctrine of “substance over form” is based on the
notion that it is the “economic substance of a transaction that
matters where the economic substance varies from its legal form.”
And the substance of the Murphy Case is that Ms. Murphy was being compensated
“on account of personal physical injuries or physical sickness.”
There was no punitive component to Ms. Murphy’s award; it was
only to restore to her what had been previously lost.
Eyewitnesses to the April 23, 2007 Appellate Court rehearing reported that the oral
argument went off similar to how it had a year earlier. There were no
new arguments. In fact, Chief Judge Douglas Ginsburg chastised government
attorneys for claiming they needed a new hearing to present new arguments
when, in fact, none were offered. And even though no new arguments or
evidence were offered by government attorneys, the court somehow reversed
and ruled in the government’s favor.
The theory upon which the court based its reversal was that the “transaction”
was taxable as income. In other words, it was the passage of the award
money to Murphy that was being taxed, and the underlying purpose of
the transaction was irrelevant. The court also stated that rights could
be taxed and inferred that Murphy’s use of the court facilities
in obtaining her original $70,000 award was an activity upon which an
excise tax could be imposed. We might rephrase all of this and say,
“the substance is irrelevant, it is the form that matters.”
From Respectable to Contemptible
The Murphy Court was “respectable” when it ruled, based upon
the historical and evidentiary record, that Murphy’s award was
not taxable because such taxation would have been an unapportioned direct
tax not allowed by our Constitution. However, when the Murphy Court
suddenly vacated its “respectable” ruling and reversed itself
on July 3, 2007, while that published decision is voluminous, it contains
nothing worthy of our respect.
What we can conclude from the theories government used to justify reversing
Murphy v. The IRS is that our government functions
under the presumption that, “human capital has a zero-cost basis.”
Translated, the IRS, the U.S. Department of Justice, and now our judicial
branch of government believes that ‘human life has no value.’
Teddy Roosevelt said “The People are the makers of their own Constitution.”
President Roosevelt was right. We can be both the makers and the keepers
of our Constitution when enough of us who care about the Constitution
put our selves in positions where when can defend it. If you are one
of those, then go to law school and become an judge, run for office,
run for precinct officer for your local political party’s county
committee, volunteer to help worthy candidates, donate to incumbents
who are today defending the Constitution…. You country needs you
now.
Phil received a bachelor's degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Utah and a master's degree in Business Administration from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
In 2004, Phil Hart was elected by the Citizens of North Idaho to represent District 3 in the Idaho Legislature. District 3 encompasses the northern part of Kootenai County. Phil Hart is actively seeking re-election for the 2006 legislative term.
Phil has dedicated a significant amount of personal time for the past ten years in trying to resolve the constitutionality Income Tax. His efforts have resulted in the publication of his book Constitutional Income
, which is in its third edition. His book has been steadily covering ground across the United States. He also litigated the issue with the IRS and petitioned the Supreme Court.
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