January
2012There are laws that require government agencies to publish their structure, organization, and procedural rules. What follows is from the Code of Federal Regulations. (CFR)
26 CFR 601.602
Subpart F_Rules, Regulations, and Forms
Sec. 601.602 Tax forms and instructions.
(a) Tax return forms and instructions. The Internal Revenue Service develops forms and instructions that explain the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code and regulations. The Service distributes the forms and instructions to help taxpayers comply with the law. The tax system is based on voluntary compliance, and the taxpayers complete and return the forms with payment of any tax owed.
(b) Other forms and instructions. In addition to tax return forms, the Internal Revenue Service furnishes the public copies of other forms and instructions developed for use in complying with the laws and regulations. These forms and instructions lead the taxpayer step-by-step through data needed to accurately report information required by law.
In case you didn't get the point of the highlighted words:
On page 19 of the year 2010 Form 1040 instruction booklet you will find this instruction:
Income
Foreign-Source Income
You must report unearned income, such as interest, dividends, and pensions, from sources outside the United States unless exempt by law or a tax treaty. You must also report earned income, such as wages and tips, from sources outside the United States.
The cited words are in the step-by-step instructions, right after the instructions for line 6, and just before the instructions for line 7Line 7 is where the numbers shown in box 1 on a W-2 form are entered. A person gets a W-2 form by filling out a W-4 form. More about the W-4 form requirements later. .
In every Form 1040 instruction booklet I have looked at, there are no words stating: 'You must report earned income, such as wages and tips, from sources INSIDE the United States.'
Just as you should not read into the law, that which is not there; You should not read into the official instructions for complying with the law, that which is not there.
Stating the obvious:
On page 94 of the 2010 instructions you will find the Disclosure, Privacy Act, and Paperwork Reduction Act Notice. It states:
Our legal right to ask for information is Internal Revenue Code sections 6001, 6011, and 6012(a), and their regulations. They say that you must file a return or statement with us for any tax you are liable for.
This is also an instruction on how to comply with the income tax law.
It is an instruction in accordance with this law:
26 CFR 31.6011 (a)-10
§ 31.6011 (a)-10 Instructions to forms may waive filing requirement in case of no liability tax returns.
Notwithstanding provisions in this part which require that a tax return be filed, the instructions to the form on which a return of tax is otherwise required by this part to be made may waive such requirement with respect to a particular class or classes of no liability tax returns. Returns in a class for which such requirement has been so waived need not be made.
This Treasury decision is not adverse to any taxpayer. For this reason, it is found unnecessary to issue this Treasury decision with notice and public procedure under subsection (b) of section 553 of title 5 of the United States Code or subject to the effective date limitation of subsection (d) of that section.
[T.D. 8229, 53 FR 35811, Sept. 15, 1988]
I will specifically address the issue of income tax "liability" on a following page.
On page 8 of the year 2010 instruction booklet is a chart for determining if you are required to file a Form 1040 dependent upon whether your "gross income" is above the specified threshholds for each category. "Gross income" is annotated with a footnote which states:
**Gross income means all income you received in the form of money, goods, property, and services that is not exempt from tax, including any income from sources outside the United States or from the sale of your main home [...]
This is also an instruction on how to comply with the income tax law.
Also:
This is the law that defines exempt income.
Title 26 - Internal Revenue.
SUBCHAPTER A - INCOME TAX
PART 1 - INCOME TAXES. - Tax Based on Income from Sources within Or Without the United States.
§ 1.861-8T
Computation of taxable income from sources within the United States and from other sources and activities (temporary).
(d) Excess of deductions and excluded and eliminated items of income.
(2) Allocation and apportionment to exempt, excluded or eliminated income—
(ii) Exempt income and exempt asset defined—(A) In general. For purposes of this section, the term exempt income means any income that is, in whole or in part, exempt, excluded, or eliminated for federal income tax purposes. The term exempt asset means any asset the income from which is, in whole or in part, exempt, excluded, or eliminated for federal tax purposes.
Stating the obvious:
And this is the income that is not exempt from tax:
Title 26 - Internal Revenue.
SUBCHAPTER A - INCOME TAX
PART 1 - INCOME TAXES. - Tax Based on Income from Sources within Or Without the United States.
§ 1.861-8T
Computation of taxable income from sources within the United States and from other sources and activities (temporary).
(d) Excess of deductions and excluded and eliminated items of income.
(2) Allocation and apportionment to exempt, excluded or eliminated income—
(iii) Income that is not considered tax exempt. The following items are not considered to be exempt, eliminated, or excluded income and, thus, may have expenses, losses, or other deductions allocated and apportioned to them:
(A) In the case of a foreign taxpayer (including a foreign sales corporation (FSC)) computing its effectively connected income, gross income (whether domestic or foreign source) which is not effectively connected to the conduct of a United States trade or business;
(B) In computing the combined taxable income of a DISCDomestic International Sales Corporation or FSCForeign Sales Corporation and its related supplier, the gross income of a DISC or a FSC;
(C) For all purposes under subchapter N of the Code, including the computation of combined taxable income of a possessions corporation and its affiliates under section 936(h), the gross income of a possessions corporation for which a credit is allowed under section 936(a); and
(D) Foreign earned income as defined in section 911 and the regulations thereunder (however, the rules of § 1.911-6 do not require the allocation and apportionment of certain deductions, including home mortgage interest, to foreign earned income for purposes of determining the deductions disallowed under section 911(d)(6)).
Oh
what a tangled web we weave,
When first we practice to deceive.
Attributed to Sir
Walter Scott.
Not only is this mealy-mouthedmealy-mouthed
adj. Unwilling to state facts or opinions simply and directly.
WORD
HISTORY: One does not hear the word mealy-mouthed today as much as one
could, since the unwillingness to state facts or opinions directly
seems a perennial condition of leaders and their underlings in all
walks of life. It would be singularly appropriate if a man who was
noted for not being mealy-mouthed had helped give us this word. The
term does perhaps come to us from an expression such as German Mehl im
Maule behalten, “to carry meal in the mouth, that is, not to
be direct in speech.” The expression occurs in the writings
of Martin Luther, who was willing to speak his mind. In English we find
recorded the terms mealmouth (1546) and meal-mouthed (1576) around the
same time that we find mealymouthed (around 1572), but only
mealy-mouthed has survived, fortunately for us, as it seems there will
always be a need for it.
Source:
American Heritage Electronic Dictionary
law written to deceive, the path through the body of law to find this
particular law is convoluted. The history of the
prior incarnations of this law evidence a deliberate attempt to hide
the truth. (This might explain why you never knew about this until now.)
Stating the obvious:
The IRS can only enforce tax collection on income it knows about. If the law does not require information about certain compensation to be reported to the IRS, then it must follow that the IRS is not required to collect tax on that compensation.
The truth IS as simple as shown on this page.
You can get your verification copy of the 2010 form 1040 instruction booklet from the IRS website: www.irs.gov 1.4 mb.
Other years can be downloaded from the IRS.GOV website. These files are all bigger than 1.0 mb.
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-prior/i1040gi--2010.pdf