delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе question presented in this case is whether expenses incurred by a taxpayer in the unsuccessful defense of a criminal prosecution may qualify for deduction from taxable income under § 162 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, which allows a deduction of “all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business
. ...”
1
The respondent Walter F. Tellier was engaged in the business of underwriting the public sale of stock offerings and purchasing securities for resale to customers. In 1956 he was brought to trial upon a 36-count indictment that charged him with violating the fraud section of the Securities Act of 1933
2
and the mail fraud statute,
3
and with conspiring to violate those statutes.
4
He was found guilty on all counts and was sentenced to pay an $18,000 fine and to serve four and a half years in рrison. The judgment of conviction was affirmed on appeal.
5
In his unsuccessful defense of this criminal prosecution, the respondent incurred and paid $22,964.20 in legal expenses in 1956. He claimed a deduction for that amount on his federal income tax rеturn for that year. The Commissioner disallowed the deduction and was sustained by the Tax Court.
There can be no serious question that the payments deducted by the respondent were expenses of his securities business under the decisions of this Court, and the Commissioner does not contend otherwise. In
United States
v.
Gilmore,
The Commissioner also concedes that the respondent’s legal expenses were “ordinary” and “necessary” expenses within the meaning of § 162 (a). Our decisions have consistently construed the term “necessary” as imposing only the minimal requirement that the expense be “appropriate and helpful” for “the development of the [taxpayer’s] business.”
Welch
v.
Helvering,
It is therefore clear that the respondent’s legal fees were deductible under § 162 (a) if the provisions of that section are to be given their normal effect in this case. The Commissioner and the Tax Court determined, however, that even though the expenditures meet the literal requirements of § 162 (a), their deduction must nevertheless be disallowed on the ground of public policy. That view finds considerable support in other administrative and judicial decisions. 8 It finds no support, how *691 ever, in any regulation or statute or in any decision of this Court, and we believe no such “public policy” exception to the plain provisions of § 162 (a) is warranted in the circumstances presented by this case.
We start with the proposition that the federal income tax is a tax on net income, not a sanction аgainst wrongdoing. That principle has been firmly imbedded in the tax statute from the beginning. One familiar facet of the principle is the truism that the statute does not concern itself with the lawfulness of the income that it taxes. Income from a criminal enterprise is tаxed at a rate no higher and no lower than income from more conventional sources. “[T]he fact that a business is unlawful [does not] exempt it from paying the taxes that if lawful it would have to pay.”
United States
v.
Sullivan,
With respect to deductions, the basic rule, with only a fеw limited and well-defined exceptions, is the same. During the Senate debate in 1913 on the bill that became the first modern income tax law, amendments were rejected that would have limited deductions for losses to those incurred in a “legitimate” or “lawful” trade or business. Senator Williams, who was in charge of the bill, stated on the floor of the Senate that
“[T]he object of this bill is to tax a man’s net income; that is to say, what he has at the end of the year after deducting from his receipts his expenditures or losses. It is nоt to reform men’s moral characters; that is not the object of the bill at all.
*692 The tax is not levied for the purpose of restraining people from betting on horse races or upon 'futures/ but the tax is framed for the purpose of making a man pаy upon his net income, his actual profit during the year. The law does not care where he got it from, so far as the tax is concerned, although the law may very properly care in another way.” 50 Cong. Rec. 3849. 9
The application of this princiрle is reflected in several decisions of this Court. As recently as
Commissioner
v.
Sullivan,
Deductiоn of expenses falling within the general definition of § 162 (a) may, to be sure, be disallowed by specific legislation, since deductions “are a matter of grace and Congress can, of course, disallow them as it chooses.”
Commissioner
v.
Sullivan,
The present case falls far outside that sharply limited and carefully defined category. No public policy is offended when a man faced with serious criminal charges employs a lawyer to help in his defense. That is not “proscribed conduct.” It is his constitutional right.
Chandler
v.
Fretag,
Congress has authorized the imposition of severe punishment upon those found guilty of the serious criminal offenses with which the respondent was charged and of which he was convicted. But we can find no warrant fоr attaching to that punishment an additional financial burden that Congress has neither expressly nor im *695 plicitly directed. 11 To deny a deduction for expenses incurred in the unsuccessful defense of a criminal prosecution would impose such a burden in a measure depеndent not on the seriousness of the offense or the actual sentence imposed by the court, but on the cost of the defense and the defendant’s particular tax bracket. We decline to distort the income tax laws to serve a purpose for which they were neither intended nor designed by Congress.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
Notes
“ (a) In general. — There shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in- carrying on any trade or business . . . .” 26 U. S. C. § 162.
48 Stat. 84, §17, as amended, 15 U. S. C. § 77q (a).
18 U. S. C. § 1341.
18 U. S. C. §371.
United States
v.
Tellier,
See Griswold, An Argument Against the Doctrine that Deductions Should Be Narrowly Construed as a Matter of Legislative Grace, 56 Harv. L. Rev. 1142, 1145; Wolfman, Professors and the “Ordinary and Necessary” Business Expense, 112 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1089, 1111-1112.
See Brookes, Litigation Expenses and the Income Tax, 12 Tax L. Rev. 241.
See
Sarah Backer,
1 B. T. A. 214;
Norvin R. Lindheim,
2 B. T. A. 229;
Thomas A. Joseph,
In challenging the amendments, Senator Williams also stated:
“In other words, you are going to count the man as having money which he has not got, because he has lost it in a way that you do not approve of.” 50 Cong. Rec. 3850.
Specific legislаtion denying deductions for payments that violate public policy is not unknown. E. g., Internal Revenue Code of 1954, § 162 (c) (disallowance of deduction for payments to officials and employees of foreign countries in circumstances where the payments would be illegal if federal laws were applicable; cf. Treas. Reg. §1.162-18); §165 (d) (deduction for wagering losses limited to extent of wagering gains). See also Stabilization Act of 1942, § 5 (a), 56 Stat. 767, 50 U. S. C. App. § 965 (a) (1946 ed.), Defense Production Act of 1950, §405 (a), 64 Stat. 807, as amended, c. 275, § 104 (i), 65 Stаt. 136 (1951), 50 U. S. C. App. § 2105 (a) (1952 ed.), and Defense Production Act of 1950, §405 (b), 64 Stat. 807, 50 U. S. C. App. §2105 (b) (1952 ed.) (general authority in President to prescribe extent to which payments violating price and wage regulations should be disregarded by government agencies, including the Internal Revenue Serviсe; see'Rev. Rui. 56-180, 1956-1 Cum. Bull. 94). Cf. Treas. Reg. § 1.162-1 (a), which provides that “Penalty payments with respect to Federal taxes, whether on account of negligence, delinquency, or fraud, are not deductible from gross income”; Joint Committe on Internal Revenue Taxation, Staff Study of Income Tax Treatment of Treble Damage Payments under the Antitrust Laws, Nov. 1, 1965, p. 16 (proposal that § 162 be amended to deny deductions for certain fines, penalties, treble-damage payments, bribes, and kickbacks).
Cf. Paul, The Use of Public Policy by the Cоmmissioner in Disallowing Deductions, 1954 So. Calif. Tax Inst. 715, 730-731: “. . . Section 23 (a)(1)(A) [the predecessor of § 162 (a)] is not an essay in morality, designed to encourage virtue and discourage sin. It ‘was not contrived as an arm of the law to enforce State criminal statutes . . . .’ Nor was it сontrived to implement the various regulatory statutes which Congress has from time to time enacted. The provision is more modestly concerned with ‘commercial net income’ — a businessman’s net accretion in wealth during the taxable year after due allowance for the operating costs of the business. . . . There is no evidence in the Section of an attempt to punish taxpayers . . . when the Commissioner feels that a state or federal statute has been flouted. The statute hardly operates ‘in a vacuum,’ if it serves its own vital function and leaves other problems to other statutes.”
