During the taxable year 1932, the appellant had, and reported, net income of $17,160.35 derived other than from sales or exchanges of stocks and bonds held not more than two years. That is, to say, he had no income whatever from sales or exchanges of what are by section 101 of the Revenue Act of 1932 (47 Stat. 191) defined to be noncapital assets.’
During the same taxable period he sold stocks which were noncaрital assets within the definition of the above-mentioned section at a loss of $13,285. He claimed the right to deduct the loss so sustained from his net incоme derived as before stated, but the deduction was disallowed in accordance with the provisions of section 23 (r) of the 1932 Act (47 Stat. 183), limiting, with cеrtain exceptions not here pertinent, deductions for losses sustained from sales or exchanges of stock and bonds defined to be noncapital assets to the extent of the gains from such sales or exchanges. This denial of the deduction claimed resulted in the assessment and collection of the entire tax sought to be recovered in this suit since appellant, was allowed other deductions from net inсome which brought his net taxable income below the amount of the loss he was not permitted to deduct. ■
The sole question raised on this appeal is the validity of section 23 (r) of the 1932 Revenue Act. Appellant argues (1) that its effect is to cause a direct tax to be levied without apportionment contrary to article 1, section 9 of the Constitution; and (2) that the classification resulting is so unreasonable, arbitrary, and capricious as to violate the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment.
It will be well to note at the start that our scheme of income taxation provides for a method of computation whereby all receipts during the taxable period which are defined as gross income are gathered together and from the total are taken certain necessary items like cost of property sоld; ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in getting the so-called gross income; depreciation, depletion, and the like in order to reduce the amount computed as gross income to what is in fact income under 'the rule of Eisner v. Macomber,
The loss which the appellant tried to deduct from his unrelated income falls within the second class of deductions of which mention has been made, and so its limitation as in section 23 (r) was one which Congress could control in its sound discretion without in substance levying a direct tax without аpportionment. See Brushaber v. Union Pacific R. Co., supra.
There remains only the question whether Congress in passing section 23 (r) did so in the exerсise of its sound discretion as distinguished from taking mere arbitrary and capricious action which resulted in taxation so baseless in reason as to deprive those adversely affected of their property without due process in violation of the Fifth Amendment. This in turn depends upon whethеr the classification of stocks and bonds held by a taxpayer for more than two years as “capital assets” and other stocks and bonds as “non-capital assets” and permitting those who suffered losses in selling and exchanging the former deductions which are denied the latter is based on a difference which actually exists or whether those who sell or exchange stocks and bonds they have not held for more than twо years have been whimiscally deprived of an advantage given those who keep their stocks and bonds for more than that time.
It is common knowledge that stocks and bonds held for more than two years are more likely to have been acquired for investment than those turned ovеr sooner, and we think it reasonable for Congress so to classify between probable investment income and losses and probable speculative income and losses confining deductions for the second kind of losses to the extent of like gains while not so restricting losses of the former sort.
Permitting deductions for losses from transactions which may often be but one form of gambling only to the extent of like gains is not a limitation which will result in taxing as income that which is not, and we think it otherwise well within the bounds of reasonable action by Congress to curtail the effect of suсh losses upon the national revenue. It has much latitude in that respect. Compare Cohan v. Commissioner,
Judgment affirmed.
