Provisions of the Revenue Act of 1951, 26 U.S.C. §§ 3285-3294,
levy an occupational tax of $50 per year on persons engaged in the
business of accepting wagers; require such persons to register with
the Collector of Internal Revenue, and penalize failure to pay the
tax and to register.
Held:
1. The tax is a valid exercise of the federal taxing power, and
is not unconstitutional as an infringement by the Federal
Government on the police powers reserved to the states by the Tenth
Amendment. Pp.
345 U. S.
23-31.
(a) The fact that the tax has a regulatory effect upon wagering,
and brings about a result that is beyond the direct legislative
power of Congress, does not render it invalid. Pp.
345 U. S.
26-31.
(b) The registration requirements are valid as in aid of a
revenue purpose. Pp.
345 U. S.
31-32.
2. The tax provisions do not contravene the privilege against
self-incrimination guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment. Pp.
345 U. S.
31-33.
(a) The privilege against self-incrimination relates only to
past acts, not to future acts that may or may not be committed. P.
345 U. S.
32.
(b) Under the registration provisions, a person subject to the
tax is not compelled to confess to acts already committed; he is
merely informed that, in order to engage in the business of
wagering in the future, he must fulfill certain conditions. Pp.
345 U. S.
32-33.
3. The statute is not violative of the Due Process Clause on the
ground that the classification is arbitrary because some wagering
transactions are excluded, nor on the ground that the statutory
definitions are vague. Pp.
345 U. S. 33-34.
105 F.
Supp. 322 reversed.
An information charging appellee with willful failure to pay the
occupational tax imposed by 26 U.S.C. § 3290 and to register
therefor, as required by 26 U.S.C. § 3291, was dismissed by the
District Court on the ground that
Page 345 U. S. 23
the statute was unconstitutional.
105 F.
Supp. 322. The Government appealed directly to this Court under
18 U.S.C. § 3731.
Reversed, p.
345 U. S.
34.
MR. JUSTICE REED delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue raised by this appeal is the constitutionality of the
occupational tax provisions of the Revenue Act of 1951, [
Footnote 1] which levy a tax on persons
engaged in the business of accepting wagers, and require such
persons to register with the Collector of Internal Revenue. The
unconstitutionality of the tax is asserted on two grounds.
Page 345 U. S. 24
First, it is said that Congress, under the pretense of
exercising its power to tax has attempted to penalize illegal
intrastate gambling through the regulatory features of the Act, 26
U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 3291, and has thus infringed the police power
which is reserved to the states. Secondly, it is urged that the
registration provisions of the tax violate the privilege against
self-incrimination, and are arbitrary and vague, contrary to the
guarantees of the Fifth Amendment.
The case comes here on appeal, in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §
3731, from the United States District Court
Page 345 U. S. 25
for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, where an information
was filed against appellee alleging that he was in the business of
accepting wagers and that he willfully failed to register for and
pay the occupational tax in question. Appellee moved to dismiss on
the ground that the sections upon which the information was based
were unconstitutional. The District Court sustained the motion on
the authority of our opinion in
United States v.
Constantine, 296 U. S. 287. The
court reasoned that, while "the subject matter of this legislation
so far as revenue purposes is concerned is within the scope of
Federal authorities," the tax was unconstitutional in that the
information called for by the registration provisions was
"peculiarly applicable to the applicant from the standpoint of law
enforcement and vice control," and therefore the whole of the
legislation was an infringement by the Federal Government on the
police power reserved to the states by the Tenth Amendment.
United States v. Kahriger, 105 F.
Supp. 322, 323.
The result below is at odds with the position of the seven other
district courts which have considered the matter, [
Footnote 2] and, in our opinion, is
erroneous.
In the term following the
Constantine opinion, this
Court pointed out in
Sonzinsky v. United States,
300 U. S. 506, at
300 U. S. 513
(a case involving a tax on a "limited class" of objectionable
firearms alleged to be prohibitory in effect and "to disclose
unmistakably the legislative
Page 345 U. S. 26
purpose to regulate, rather than to tax"), that the subject of
the tax in
Constantine was "described or treated as
criminal by the taxing statute." The tax in the
Constantine case was a special additional excise tax of
$1,000, placed only on persons who carried on a liquor business in
violation of state law. The wagering tax with which we are here
concerned applies to all persons engaged in the business of
receiving wagers, regardless of whether such activity violates
state law.
The substance of respondent's position with respect to the Tenth
Amendment is that Congress has chosen to tax a specified business
which is not within its power to regulate. The precedents are many
upholding taxes similar to this wagering tax as a proper exercise
of the federal taxing power. In the
License
Tax Cases, 5 Wall. 462, the controversy arose out
of indictments for selling lottery tickets and retailing liquor in
various states without having first obtained and paid for a license
under the Internal Revenue Act of Congress. The objecting taxpayers
urged that Congress could not constitutionally tax or regulate
activities carried on within a state. 5 Wall. at
72 U. S. 470.
The Court pointed out that Congress had "no power of regulation,
nor any direct control." 5 Wall. at
72 U. S.
471-472, over the business there involved. The Court
said that, if the licenses were to be regarded as by themselves
giving authority to carry on the licensed business, it might be
impossible to reconcile the granting of them with the Constitution.
5 Wall at
72 U. S.
471.
"But it is not necessary to regard these laws as giving such
authority. So far as they relate to trade within State limits, they
give none, and can give none. They simply express the purpose of
the government not to interfere by penal proceedings with the trade
nominally licensed, if the required taxes are paid. The power to
tax is not questioned, nor
Page 345 U. S. 27
the power to impose penalties for nonpayment of taxes. The
granting of a license, therefore, must be regarded as nothing more
than a mere form of imposing a tax, and of implying nothing except
that the licensee shall be subject to no penalties under national
law, if he pays it."
5 Wall. at
72 U. S.
471.
Appellee would have us say that, because there is legislative
history [
Footnote 3] indicating
a congressional motive to suppress wagering, this tax is not a
proper exercise of such taxing power. In the
License Cases,
supra, it was admitted that the federal license "discouraged"
the activities. The intent to curtail and hinder, as well as tax,
was also manifest in the following cases, and, in each of them, the
tax was upheld:
Veazie Bank v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 533 (tax on paper money issued by
state banks);
McCray v. United States, 195 U. S.
27,
195 U. S. 59
(tax on colored oleomargarine);
United States v. Doremus,
249 U. S. 86, and
Nigro v. United States, 276 U. S. 332 (tax
on narcotics);
Sonzinsky v. United States, 300 U.
S. 506 (tax on firearms);
United States v.
Sanchez, 340 U. S. 42 (tax
on marihuana).
Page 345 U. S. 28
It is conceded that a federal excise tax does not cease to be
valid merely because it discourages or deters the activities taxed.
Nor is the tax invalid because the revenue obtained its negligible.
Appellee, however, argues that the sole purpose of the statute is
to penalize only illegal gambling in the states through the guise
of a tax measure. As with the above excise taxes which we have held
to be valid, the instant tax has a regulatory effect. But,
regardless of its regulatory effect, the wagering tax produces
revenue. As such, it surpasses both the narcotics and firearms
taxes which we have found valid. [
Footnote 4]
It is axiomatic that the power of Congress to tax is extensive,
and sometimes falls with crushing effect on businesses deemed
unessential or inimical to the public welfare, or where, as in
dealings with narcotics, the collection of the tax also is
difficult. As is well known, the constitutional restraints on
taxing are few. "Congress cannot tax exports, and it must impose
direct taxes by the rule of apportionment and indirect taxes by the
rule of uniformity."
License Tax Cases, supra, 5 Wall. at
72 U. S. 471.
[
Footnote 5] The remedy for
excessive taxation is in the hands of Congress, not the courts.
Veazie Bank v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 533,
75 U. S. 548.
Speaking of the creation of the Bank of the United States as an
instrument for carrying out federal fiscal policies,
Page 345 U. S. 29
this Court said in
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S.
423.
"Should Congress, in the execution of its powers, adopt measures
which are prohibited by the Constitution, or should Congress, under
the pretext of executing its powers, pass laws for the
accomplishment of objects not entrusted to the Government, it would
become the painful duty of this tribunal, should a case requiring
such a decision come before it, to say that such an act was not the
law of the land. But where the law is not prohibited, and is really
calculated to effect any of the objects entrusted to the
Government, to undertake here to inquire into the degree of its
necessity would be to pass the line which circumscribes the
Judicial Department and to tread on legislative ground. This Court
disclaims all pretensions to such a power."
The difficulty of saying when the power to lay uniform taxes is
curtailed, because its use brings a result beyond the direct
legislative power of Congress, has given rise to diverse decisions.
In that area of abstract ideas, a final definition of the line
between state and federal power has baffled judges and
legislators.
While the Court has never questioned the above-quoted statement
of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall in the
McCulloch case, the
application of the rule has brought varying holdings on
constitutionality. Where federal legislation has rested on other
congressional powers, such as the Necessary and Proper Clause or
the Commerce Clause, this Court has generally sustained the
statutes, despite their effect on matters ordinarily considered
state concern. When federal power to regulate is found, its
exercise is a matter for Congress. [
Footnote 6] Where Congress has employed the
Page 345 U. S. 30
taxing clause a greater variation in the decisions has resulted.
The division in this Court has been more acute. Without any
specific differentiation between the power to tax and other federal
powers, the indirect results from the exercise of the power to tax
have raised more doubts. This is strikingly illustrated by the
shifting course of adjudication in taxation of the handling of
narcotics. [
Footnote 7] The tax
ground in the
Veazie Bank case, supra, recognized that
Page 345 U. S. 31
strictly state governmental activities such as the right to pass
laws were beyond the federal taxing power. [
Footnote 8] That case allowed a tax, however, that
obliterated from circulation all state bank notes. A reason was
that "the judicial cannot prescribe to the legislative departments
of the government limitations upon the exercise of its acknowledged
powers." 8 Wall. at
75 U. S. 548.
The tax cases cited above in the third preceding paragraph followed
that theory. It is hard to understand why the power to tax should
raise more doubts because of indirect effects than other federal
powers. [
Footnote 9]
Penalty provisions in tax statutes added for breach of a
regulation concerning activities in themselves subject only to
state regulation have caused this Court to declare the enactments
invalid. [
Footnote 10]
Unless there are provisions, extraneous to any tax need, courts are
without authority to limit the exercise of the taxing power.
[
Footnote 11] All the
provisions of this excise are adapted to the collection of a valid
tax.
Nor do we find the registration requirements of the wagering tax
offensive. All that is required is the filing of names, addresses,
and places of business. This is quite general in tax returns.
[
Footnote 12] Such data are
directly and intimately
Page 345 U. S. 32
related to the collection of the tax, and are "obviously
supportable as in aid of a revenue purpose."
Sonzinsky v.
United States, 300 U. S. 506, at
300 U. S. 513.
The registration provisions make the tax simpler to collect.
Appellee's second assertion is that the wagering tax is
unconstitutional because it is a denial of the privilege against
self-incrimination as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.
Since appellee failed to register for the wagering tax, it is
difficult to see how he can now claim the privilege, even assuming
that the disclosure of violations of law is called for. In
United States v. Sullivan, 274 U.
S. 259, defendant was convicted of refusing to file an
income tax return. It was assumed that his income "was derived from
business in violation of the National Prohibition Act." 274 U.S. at
274 U. S.
263.
"As the defendant's income was taxed, the statute, of course,
required a return.
See United States v. Sischo,
262 U. S.
165. In the decision that this was contrary to the
Constitution, we are of opinion that the protection of the Fifth
Amendment was pressed too far. If the form of return provided
called for answers that the defendant was privileged from making,
he could have raised the objection in the return, but could not on
that account refuse to make any return at all."
274 U.S. at
274 U. S.
263.
Assuming that respondent can raise the self-incrimination issue,
that privilege has relation only to past acts, not to future acts
that may or may not be committed. 8 Wigmore (3d ed., 1940) §
2259(c). If respondent wishes to take wagers subject to excise
taxes under § 3285,
supra, he must pay an occupational tax
and register. Under the registration provisions of the wagering
tax, appellee is not compelled to confess to acts already
committed; he is merely in formed by the statute that, in order
Page 345 U. S. 33
to engage in the business of wagering in the future, he must
fulfill certain conditions. [
Footnote 13]
Finally, we consider respondent's contention that the order of
dismissal was correct because a conviction under the sections in
question would violate the Due Process Clause because the
classification is arbitrary and the statutory definitions are
vague. [
Footnote 14] The
applicable definitions are 26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 3285(b), (d) and
(e). [
Footnote 15] The
arbitrariness is said to arise from discrimination because some
wagering activities are excluded. The Constitution does not require
that a tax statute cover all phases
Page 345 U. S. 34
of a taxed or licensed business. [
Footnote 16] Respondent predicates vagueness of the
statute upon the use, in defining the subject of the tax, of the
description "engaged in the business" of wagering and "usually" in
§ 3285(b)(2). We have no doubt the definitions make clear the
activities covered and excluded.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 3285:
"(a) Wagers."
"There shall be imposed on wagers, as defined in subsection (b),
an excise tax equal to 10 percentum of the amount thereof."
"
* * * *"
"(d) Persons liable for tax."
"Each person who is engaged in the business of accepting wagers
shall be liable for and shall pay the tax under this subchapter on
all wagers placed with him. Each person who conducts any wagering
pool or lottery shall be liable for and shall pay the tax under
this subchapter on all wagers placed in such pool or lottery."
"(e) Exclusions from tax."
"No tax shall be imposed by this subchapter (1) on any wager
placed with, or on any wager placed in a wagering pool conducted
by, a parimutuel wagering enterprise licensed under State law, and
(2) on any wager placed in a coin-operated device with respect to
which an occupational tax is imposed by section 3267."
26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 3290:
"A special tax of $50 per year shall be paid by each person who
is liable for tax under subchapter A or who is engaged in receiving
wagers for or on behalf of any person so liable."
26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 3291:
"(a) Each person required to pay a special tax under this
subchapter shall register with the collector of the district
--"
"(1) his name and place of residence;"
"(2) if he is liable for tax under subchapter A, each place of
business where the activity which makes him so liable is carried
on, and the name and place of residence of each person who is
engaged in receiving wagers for him or on his behalf; and"
"(3) if he is engaged in receiving wagers for or on behalf of
any person liable for tax under subchapter A, the name and place of
residence of each such person."
26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 3294:
"(a) Failure to pay tax."
"Any person who does any act which makes him liable for special
tax under this subchapter, without having paid such tax, shall,
besides being liable to the payment of the tax, be fined not less
than $1,000 and not more than $5,000."
"
* * * *"
"(c) Willful violations."
"The penalties prescribed by section 2707 with respect to the
tax imposed by section 2700 shall apply with respect to the tax
imposed by this subchapter."
[
Footnote 2]
United States v. Smith, 106 F.
Supp. 9;
United States v. Nadler, 105 F.
Supp. 918;
United States v. Forrester, 105 F.
Supp. 136;
United States v. Robinson, 107 F. Supp.
38;
United States v. Arnold, Jordan and Wingate, No.
478 (D.C.E.D.Va. Sept. 18, 1952);
United States v. Penn,
111 F. Supp. 605 (1953);
Combs v. Snyder, 101 F.
Supp. 531,
aff'd, 342 U.S. 939.
[
Footnote 3]
There are suggestions in the debates that Congress sought to
hinder, if not prevent the type of gambling taxed.
See 97
Cong.Rec. 6892:
"Mr. HOFFMAN of Michigan. Then I will renew my observation that
it might if properly construed be considered an additional penalty
on the illegal activities."
"Mr. COOPER. Certainly, and we might indulge the hope that the
imposition of this type of tax would eliminate that kind of
activity."
97 Cong.Rec. 12236:
"If the local official does not want to enforce the law and no
one catches him winking at the law, he may keep on winking at it,
but when the Federal Government identifies a law violator and the
local newspaper gets hold of it and the local church organizations
get hold of it and the people who do want the law enforced get hold
of it, they say, 'Mr. Sheriff, what about it? We understand that
there is a place down here licensed to sell liquor.' He says, 'Is
that so? I will put him out of business.'"
[
Footnote 4]
One of the indicia which appellee offers to support his
contention that the wagering tax is not a proper revenue measure is
that the tax amount collected under it was $4,371,869, as compared
with an expected amount of $400,000,000 a year. The figure of
$4,371,869, however, is relatively large when it is compared with
the $3,501 collected under the tax on adulterated and process or
renovated butter and filled cheese, the $914,910 collected under
the tax on narcotics, including marihuana and special taxes, and
the $28,911 collected under the tax on firearms transfer and
occupational taxes. (Summary of Internal Revenue Collections,
released by Bureau of Internal Revenue, October 3, 1952.)
[
Footnote 5]
But see the argument for defendant in the
Child
Labor Tax Case, 259 U. S. 20, 30.
[Omitted in electronic version.]
[
Footnote 6]
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 427,
upheld the creation of a bank under the necessary and proper
clause.
Veazie Bank v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 533,
75 U. S. 548,
depends partly on the alternate ground of the federal power to
provide money for circulation.
In re Rapier, 143 U.
S. 110,
143 U. S. 111,
the use of the mails by papers that advertised the Louisiana
Lottery was barred.
The Lottery Case. 188 U.
S. 321, approved the same result through the commerce
power. That power was enough to bar transportation of pictures of
prize fights,
Weber v. Freed, 239 U.
S. 325; to seize contraband eggs after shipment had
ended,
Hipolite Egg Co. v. United States, 220 U. S.
45,
220 U. S. 56,
and to bar transportation of women for immoral purposes,
Caminetti v. United States, 242 U.
S. 470. While, in
United States v. Butler,
297 U. S. 1,
297 U. S. 68,
297 U. S. 73, a
use of a tax for regulation was disapproved, an enactment that
resulted in regulation under the Commerce Clause met judicial
favor. Mulford v. Smith,
307 U. S. 38,
307 U. S.
47; Wickard v. Filburn,
317 U.
S. 111;
Hill v. Wallace, 259 U. S.
44,
259 U. S. 67,
and
Trusler v. Crooks, 269 U. S. 475,
based on taxation, held taxes that regulated the grain markets were
unconstitutional as an interference with state power. In
Board
of Trade v. Olsen, 262 U. S. 1,
262 U. S. 4,
regulations based on the Commerce Clause were upheld. The departure
from this line of decisions in
Hammer v. Dagenhart,
247 U. S. 251, was
reversed in
United States v. Darby, 312 U.
S. 100,
312 U. S.
115-124, where we said:
"Whatever their motive and purpose, regulations of commerce
which do not infringe some constitutional prohibition are within
the plenary power conferred on Congress by the Commerce
Clause."
312 U.S. at
312 U. S.
115.
"The power of Congress over interstate commerce . . . extends to
those activities intrastate which so affect interstate commerce or
the exercise of the power of Congress over it as to make regulation
of them appropriate means to the attainment of a legitimate end,
the exercise of the granted power of Congress to regulate
interstate commerce."
312 U.S. at
312 U. S.
118.
[
Footnote 7]
United States v. Jin Fuey Moy, 241 U.
S. 394,
241 U. S. 402;
United States v. Doremus, 249 U. S.
86;
Linder v. United States, 268 U. S.
5;
Nigro v. United States, 276 U.
S. 332.
[
Footnote 8]
Cf. New York v. United States, 326 U.
S. 572,
326 U. S. 582,
326 U. S.
587-588.
[
Footnote 9]
Cf. McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. at
17 U. S.
422.
[
Footnote 10]
Child Labor Tax Case, 259 U. S. 20,
259 U. S. 34,
259 U. S. 38;
Hill v. Wallace, 259 U. S. 44,
259 U. S. 63,
259 U. S. 70;
United States v. Constantine, 296 U.
S. 287.
[
Footnote 11]
But see Linder v. United States, 268 U. S.
5,
268 U. S. 18;
Trusler v. Crooks, 269 U. S. 475.
[
Footnote 12]
26 U.S.C. § 2011
et seq., require registration by
tobacco manufacturers, dealers and peddlers of the "name, or style,
place of residence, trade, or business, and the place where such
trade or business is to be carried on." 26 U.S.C. § 2810, requires
the possessor of distilling apparatus to register "the particular
place where such still or distilling apparatus is set up . . . the
owner thereof, his place of residence. . . ."
See also 26
U.S.C. § 3270.
[
Footnote 13]
Cf. Davis v. United States, 328 U.
S. 582,
328 U. S. 590;
Shapiro v. United States, 335 U. S.
1,
335 U. S. 35;
see E. Fougera & Co. v. City of New York, 224 N.Y.
269, 281, 120 N.E. 642.
[
Footnote 14]
These defenses are open under the demurrer to facts alleged in
the indictment and the judgment of dismissal although the opinion
of the District Court relied only upon usurpation of state police
power by the federal enactment.
United States v. Curtis-Wright
Corp., 299 U. S. 304,
299 U. S. 330.
Compare United States v. Beacon Brass Co., 344 U. S.
43.
[
Footnote 15]
26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) § 3285,:
"(b) Definitions."
"For the purposes of this chapter --"
"(1) The term 'wager' means (A) any wager with respect to a
sports event or a contest placed with a person engaged in the
business of accepting such wagers, (B) any wager placed in a
wagering pool with respect to a sports event or a contest, if such
pool is conducted for profit, and (C) any wager placed in a lottery
conducted for profit."
"(2) The term 'lottery' includes the numbers game, policy, and
similar types of wagering. The term does not include (A) any game
of a type in which usually (i) the wagers are placed, (ii) the
winners are determined, and (iii) the distribution of prizes or
other property is made, in the presence of all persons placing
wagers in such game, and (B) any drawing conducted by an
organization exempt from tax under section 101, if no part of the
net proceeds derived from such drawing inures to the benefit of any
private shareholder or individual."
[
Footnote 16]
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis, 301 U.
S. 548,
301 U. S.
584.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, concurring.
I concur in the judgment and opinion of the Court, but with such
doubt that, if the minority agreed upon an opinion which did not
impair legitimate use of the taxing power, I probably would join
it. But we deal here with important and contrasting values in our
scheme of government, and it is important that neither be allowed
to destroy the other.
On the one hand, the Fifth Amendment provides that no
person"shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness
against himself." This has been broadly construed to confer
immunity not only "in any criminal case," but in any federal
inquiry where the information might be useful later to convict of a
federal crime. Extension of the immunity doctrines to the federal
power to inquire as to income derived from violation of state penal
laws would create a large number of immunities from reporting which
would vary from state to state. Moreover, the immunity can be
claimed without being established -- otherwise one would be
required to prove guilt to avoid admitting it. Sweeping and
undiscriminating application of the immunity doctrines to taxation
would almost give the taxpayer an option to refuse to report, as it
now gives witnesses a virtual option to refuse to testify. The
Fifth Amendment should not be construed
Page 345 U. S. 35
to impair the taxing power conferred by the original
Constitution, and especially by the Sixteenth Amendment, further
than is absolutely required.
Of course, all taxation has a tendency proportioned to its
burdensomeness to discourage the activity taxed. One cannot
formulate a revenue-raising plan that would not have economic and
social consequences. Congress may and should place the burden of
taxes where it will least handicap desirable activities, and bear
most heavily on useless or harmful ones. If Congress may tax one
citizen to the point of discouragement for making an honest living,
it is hard to say that it may not do the same to another just
because he makes a sinister living. If the law-abiding must tell
all to the tax collector, it is difficult to excuse one because his
business is law-breaking. Strangely enough, Fifth Amendment
protection against self-incrimination has been refused to business
as against inquisition by the regulatory power,
Shapiro v.
United States, 335 U. S. 1, in what
seemed to me a flagrant violation of it.
See dissenting
opinion,
id. at
335 U. S. 70.
But here is a purported tax law which requires no reports and
lays no tax except on specified gamblers whose calling in most
states is illegal. It requires this group to step forward and
identify themselves not because they, like others, have income, but
because of its source. This is difficult to regard as a rational or
good faith revenue measure, despite the deference that is due
Congress. On the contrary, it seems to be a plan to tax out of
existence the professional gambler whom it has been found
impossible to prosecute out of existence. Few pursuits are entitled
to less consideration at our hands than professional gambling, but
the plain unwelcome fact is that it continues to survive because a
large and influential part of our population patronizes and
protects it.
Page 345 U. S. 36
The United States has a system of taxation by confession. That a
people so numerous, scattered and individualistic annually assesses
itself with a tax liability, often in highly burdensome amounts, is
a reassuring sign of the stability and vitality of our system of
self-government. What surprised me in once trying to help
administer these laws was not to discover examples of
recalcitrance, fraud or self-serving mistakes in reporting, but to
discover that such derelictions were so few. It will be a sad day
for the revenues if the good will of the people toward their taxing
system is frittered away in efforts to accomplish by taxation moral
reforms that cannot be accomplished by direct legislation. But the
evil that can come from this statute will probably soon make itself
manifest to Congress. The evil of a judicial decision impairing the
legitimate taxing power by extreme constitutional interpretations
might not be transient. Even though this statute approaches the
fair limits of constitutionality, I join the decision of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concurs,
dissenting.
The Fifth Amendment declares that no person"shall be compelled
in any criminal case to be a witness against himself." The Court
nevertheless here sustains an Act which requires a man to register
and confess that he is engaged in the business of gambling. I think
this confession can provide a basis to convict him of a federal
crime for having gambled before registration without paying a
federal tax. 26 U.S.C. (Supp. V) §§ 3285, 3290, 3291, 3294. Whether
or not the Act has this effect, I am sure that it creates a
squeezing device contrived to put a man in federal prison if he
refuses to confess himself into a state prison as a violator of
state gambling
Page 345 U. S. 37
laws.
* The coercion of
confessions is a common but justly criticized practice of many
countries that do not have or live up to a Bill of Rights. But we
have a Bill of Rights that condemns coerced confessions, however
refined or legalistic may be the technique of extortion. I would
hold that this Act violates the Fifth Amendment.
See my
dissent in
Feldman v. United States, 322 U.
S. 487,
322 U. S.
494-503.
* In Pennsylvania, where this defendant is accused of having
gambled, such conduct is a crime punishable by "separate or
solitary" imprisonment. Purdon's Pa.Stat.Ann., 1945, Tit. 18, §§
4601, 4602, 4603.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, dissenting.
The Court's opinion manifests a natural difficulty in reaching
its conclusion. Constitutional issues are likely to arise whenever
Congress draws on the taxing power not to raise revenue, but to
regulate conduct. This is so, of course, because of the
distribution of legislative power as between the Congress and the
State Legislatures in the regulation of conduct.
To review in detail the decisions of this Court, beginning with
Veazie Bank v.
Fenno, 8 Wall. 533, dealing with this ambivalent
type of revenue enactment, would be to rehash the familiar. Two
generalizations may, however, safely be drawn from this series of
cases. Congress may make an oblique use of the taxing power in
relation to activities with which Congress may deal directly, as
for instance, commerce between the States. Thus, if the dissenting
views of Mr. Justice Holmes in
Hammer v. Dagenhart,
247 U. S. 251,
247 U. S. 277,
had been the decision of the Court, as they became in
United
States v. Darby, 312 U. S. 100, the
effort to deal with the problem of child labor through an assertion
of the taxing power
Page 345 U. S. 38
in the statute considered in
Child Labor Tax Case,
259 U. S. 20, would
by the latter case have been sustained. However, when oblique use
is made of the taxing power as to matters which substantively are
not within the powers delegated to Congress, the Court cannot shut
its eyes to what is obviously, because designedly, an attempt to
control conduct which the Constitution left to the responsibility
of the States, merely because Congress wrapped the legislation in
the verbal cellophane of a revenue measure.
Concededly the constitutional questions presented by such
legislation are difficult. On the one hand, courts should
scrupulously abstain from hobbling congressional choice of
policies, particularly when the vast reach of the taxing power is
concerned. On the other hand, to allow what otherwise is excluded
from congressional authority to be brought within it by casting
legislation in the form of a revenue measure could, as so
significantly expounded in the
Child Labor Tax Case,
supra, offer an easy way for the legislative imagination to
control "any one of the great number of subjects of public
interest, jurisdiction of which the states have never parted with.
. . ."
Child Labor Tax Case, at
259 U. S. 38, I
say"significantly" because Mr. Justice Holmes and two of the
Justices who had joined his dissent in
Hammer v.
Dagenhart, McKenna, and Brandeis, JJ., agreed with the opinion
in the
Child Labor Tax Case. Issues of such gravity
affecting the balance of powers within our federal system are not
susceptible of comprehensive statement by smooth formulas such as
that a tax is nonetheless a tax although it discourages the
activities taxed, or, that a tax may be imposed although it may
effect ulterior ends. No such phrase, however fine and well-worn,
enables one to decide the concrete case.
What is relevant to judgment here is that, even if the history
of this legislation as it went through Congress
Page 345 U. S. 39
did not give one the libretto to the song, the context of the
circumstances which brought forth this enactment -- sensationally
exploited disclosures regarding gambling in big cities and small,
the relation of this gambling to corrupt politics, the impatient
public response to these disclosures, the feeling of ineptitude or
paralysis on the part of local law enforcing agencies --
emphatically supports what was revealed on the floor of Congress,
namely, that what was formally a means of raising revenue for the
Federal Government was essentially an effort to check if not to
stamp out professional gambling.
A nominal taxing measure must be found an inadmissible intrusion
into a domain of legislation reserved for the States not merely
when Congress requires that such a measure is to be enforced
through a detailed scheme of administration beyond the obvious
fiscal needs, as in the
Child Labor Tax Case, supra. That
is one ground for holding that Congress was constitutionally
disrespectful of what is reserved to the States. Another basis for
deeming such a formal revenue measure inadmissible is presented by
this case. In addition to the fact that Congress was concerned with
activity beyond the authority of the Federal Government, the
enforcing provision of this enactment is designed for the
systematic confession of crimes with a view to prosecution for such
crimes under State law.
It is one thing to hold that the exception, which the Fifth
Amendment makes to the duty of a witness to give his testimony when
relevant to a proceeding in a federal court, does not include the
potential danger to that witness of possible prosecution in a State
court,
Brown v. Walker, 161 U. S. 591,
161 U. S. 606,
and, conversely, that the Fifth Amendment does not enable States to
give immunity from use in federal courts of testimony given in a
State court.
Feldman v. United States, 322 U.
S. 487.
Page 345 U. S. 40
It is a wholly different thing to hold that Congress, which
cannot constitutionally grapple directly with gambling in the
States, may compel self-incriminating disclosures for the
enforcement of State gambling laws merely because it does so under
the guise of a revenue measure obviously passed not for revenue
purposes. The motive of congressional legislation is not for our
scrutiny, provided only that the ulterior purpose is not expressed
in ways which negative what the revenue words on their face express
and which do not seek enforcement of the formal revenue purpose
through means that offend those standards of decency in our
civilization against which due process is a barrier.
I would affirm this judgment.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, while not joining in the entire opinion,
agrees with the views expressed herein that this tax is an attempt
by the Congress to control conduct which the Constitution has left
to the responsibility of the States.