delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Burk-Waggoner Oil Association is an unincorporated joint stock .association like those described in
Hecht
v.
Malley,
The Revenue Act of 1918, §§ 210, 211,218a, 224,335(c), provides in terms that individuals carrying on business in partnership shall be liable for income tax only in their individual capacity, and that the members of partnerships are taxable upon their distributive shares of the partnership income, whether distributed or not. It subjects corporations to income and excess profits taxes different from those imposed upon individuals. See §§ 210-213, and §§ 230,. 300. It provides in § 1: “ That when used in this Act— . . The term ‘ corporation ’ includes associations, joint-stock companies, and insurance companies.” By the common law of Texas a partnership's not an entity,
Glasscock
v.
Price,
The Burk-Waggoner Association contends that what is called its property and income were in law the property and income of its members; that ownership, receipt and segregation are essential elements of income which Congress cannot affect; that consequently income can be taxed by Congress without apportionment only to the owner .thereof; that the income of an enterprise when considered in its «relation to all others than the owners is not income within the purview of the Sixteenth Amendment; and that thus what is called the income of the Association can be taxed only to the partners upon their undistributed shares of the partnership profits; for otherwise such a distribution would neither enrich, nor segregate anything to the separate use of, a partner. The Association further contends that, while Congress may classify all recipients of income upon any reasonable basis for the purpose of imposing income taxes at different rates, or for other purposes connected with the levying and collection of such taxes, it cannot tax the income of the Association; for. that would make out of a business group, whose property under the law of the State is owned by the members individually, an entity capable of owning property and re'ceiving income; that to attempt this would constitute not classification but an unlawful invasion of the State’s exclusive power to regulate the ownership of property with
There is no room for applying the rule of construction urged in aid of constitutionality. It is clear that Congress intended to subject such joint stock associations to the income and excess profits taxes as well as to the capital stock tax. The definition given to the term “ corporation ” in § 1 applies to the entire Act. The language of the section presents no ambiguity. Nor is there any inconsistency between that section and §§ 218(a) and 335(c), which refer specifically to the taxation of partnerships. The term partnership as used in these sections obviously refers only to ordinary partnerships. Unincorporated joint stock associations, although technically partnerships under the law of‘many States, are not in common parlance referred to as such. They have usually a fixed capital stock divided into shares represented by certificates transferrable only upon the books of the company, manage their affairs by ;a board of directors and exec
The claim that the Act, if so construed, violates the Constitution is also unsound. It is true that Congress cannot make a thing income which is not so in fact. But the thing to which the tax was here applied is confessedly income earned in the name of the Association. It is true that Congress cannot convert into a corporation an organization which by the law of its State is deemed to bé a partnership. But nothing in the Constitution precludes Congress from taxing as a corporation an association which, although unincorporated, transacts its business as if it were incorporated. The power of Congress so to tax associations is not affected by the fact that,, under the law of a particular State, the association cannot hold title to property, .or that its shareholders are individually liable for the association’s debts, or that it is not recognized as a legal entity. Neither the conception of unincorporated associations prevailing under the local law, nor the relation under that law of the association to its shareholders, nor their relation to each other and to outsiders, is of legal significance as bearing upon the power of Congress to determine how and at what rate the income of the joint enterprise shall be taxed.
Affirmed.
