Our Changing Constitution by Charles Wheeler Pierson
page 73 of 147 (49%)
page 73 of 147 (49%)
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_Knowlton v. Moore_,[2] and met with general approval. The answer to the
question of what constitutes a direct tax within the meaning of the Constitution, given by the Supreme Court in 1895 in the Income Tax cases,[3] met with a different reception. The decision upset long-settled ideas, disarranged the federal taxing system, aroused popular resentment, and ultimately led to the enactment of the Sixteenth Amendment. [Footnote 1: Farrand, "Records of the Federal Convention," Vol. II, p. 350.] [Footnote 2: 178 U.S., 41.] [Footnote 3: _Pollock v. Farmers Loan & Trust Co._, 157 U.S., 429.] The question had arisen early in the life of the Republic in the case of _Hylton v. United States_, decided in 1796.[1] This litigation involved the validity of a tax on carriages which had been imposed by Congress without apportionment among the states. Alexander Hamilton argued the case before the Supreme Court in support of the tax. The Court adopted his view and sustained the tax, holding that it was a tax on consumption and therefore a species of excise or duty. The Justices who wrote opinions expressed doubt whether anything but poll taxes and taxes on land were "direct" within the meaning of the Constitution. That point, however, was not necessarily involved and was not decided, though later generations came to assume that it had been decided. [Footnote 1: 3 Dallas, 171.] The tax on carriages was soon repealed and many years elapsed before the |
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