delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff, a New Jersey corporation, owns and operates a railroad in Cuba. In March, 1917, it made return of its income for 1916; and, in due time, paid the tax assessed
An act of the Congress of the Republic of Cuba of July 5, 1906, authorized the President to contract with one or more companies for the construction and operation of certain lines qf railroad on designated routes between places specified. The- Republic granted a subsidy up to $6,000 per kilometer, payable in six annual instalments, to the companies constructing and maintaining in use the specified lines. Any. company having such a contract was entitled to receive subsidies for that part of the railroad con-, strueted after the passage of the act, as well as' for the
An act of. June 1, 1914, added to the law of 1906 an article which provided that the subsidy per kilometer for the construction of a railroad from Casilda to Placetas del Sur should be 6,000 pesos for a part and 12,000 pesos for the rest of the distance. June 30, 1915, in accordance .with that act, the President of the Republic and plaintiff made a contract for the construction of the railroad. It bound the company to carry public correspondence free of charge on the lines of this railroad, to carry small produce for 50 per cent, of the tariff, and to allow telegraph and telephone stations to be established by the government alongside the railroad. And there was handed over to the plaintiff certain land, buildings, construction and equipment then in the possession of the State, which theretofore had been acquired and built in an earlier effort to complete that line. The subsidy payment in 1916 was $54,000.
All the subsidy payments under both contracts were credited to a suspense account and, June 30, 1916, were transferred to the surplus account, and were used for
The power given Congress by the Sixteenth Amendment is to “ lay and collect taxes on incomes from whatever source derived.” Defendant insists that the subsidy payment made in 1916 was taxable under the Revenue Act of 1916, which imposes an annual tax of two percentum “upon the total net income received . . . from all sources by every corporation” (c. 463, 39 Stat. 765); that the payments made in 1913, 1914 and 1915 were taxable under the Income Tax Law of October 3, 1913, c. 16, 38 Stat. 114, 172, which imposes an annual tax of one per centum “ upon the entire net income arising or accruing from all sources . . . to very, corporation”, and that the payments made in 1911 And 1912 were taxable under the Corporation Excise Tax Law of August 5, 1909, § 38, c. 6, 36 Stat. 11, 112, which provides that “ every corporation . . . shall be subject to pay annually a special excise tax with respect to the carrying on or doing business by such corporation . . . equivalent to one per centum upon the .entire net income . . . from all sources.” Defendant insists that the subsidies were merely payments in advance on account of transportation service, later to be performed by the plaintiff for the government, and therefore are to be deemed income and taxable as such.
In respect of these subsidy payments, the meaning of “ income ” as used in the Corporation Excise Tax Law of -1909 is not to be distinguished from the meaning of thé same word as used in the Income Tax Law of 1913 and the Revenue Act of 1916.
Merchants’ Loan & Trust Co.
v.
Smietanka,
The Sixteenth Amendment, like other laws authorizing or imposing taxes, is to be taken as written and is. not to be extended beyond the meaning clearly indicated by the languAge used. The Cuban laws and contracts are similar
Judgment affirmed.
