OPINION OF THE COURT
The appellant Frank E. Rickel (“the taxpayer”) 1 received $80,000 from his former employer in 1983 and $25,000 in 1984 pursuant to a settlement of his Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”) lawsuit. This appeal requires us to decide whether the United States Tax Court properly determined that one-half of this settlement represented taxable income. Because we conclude that the entire settlement amount is excludable under 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2) 2 , we will reverse the order of the Tax Court.
I.
The relevant facts of this case are not contested. The taxpayer was employed by Malsbary Manufacturing Company (“Mals-bary”), Uniontown, Pennsylvania, as a general sales manager. In March 1979, when the taxpayer was 56 years old, the position of president opened up at the company. Despite the taxpayer’s qualifications and past suggestions from company officials that the taxpayer would be considered for the post, the company hired a much younger individual as president.
Subsequently, the new president told the taxpayer that he wanted someone younger for the position of general sales manager. The taxpayer was thereafter relieved of his position in favor of a 37 year old individual, placed on partial pay, and eventually discharged on December 31, 1979.
After receiving a right to sue letter from the EEOC, the taxpayer brought suit in federal court against Malsbary and its parent, Carlisle Corporation (“Carlisle”), alleging a violation of the ADEA, 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634 (1982). The taxpayer’s amend *657 ed complaint contained the following prayers for relief:
A. Order defendants jointly and/or severally to employ the plaintiff as President of Malsbary; or in the alternative to reinstate plaintiff to his former or a comparable position;
B. Order the defendants jointly and/or severally to pay back wages, benefits and other compensations found by the Court to be due plaintiff, together with interest thereon from the date when such amount became due;
C. Grant a judgment requiring defendants jointly and/or severally to pay appropriate back wages and an equal sum as liquidated damages, to plaintiff who has been adversely affected by the unlawful employment practices described herein;
D. Award counsel for plaintiff reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses;
E. Award any further relief which is appropriate and proper under the circumstances.
App. at 58-59.
The taxpayer’s action was tried before a jury in a bifurcated trial. The jury first heard evidence on the issue of liability. After the testimony, four interrogatories were submitted to the jury for their consideration:
(1) Was plaintiff ... qualified in April 1979 for the position of President of Malsbary ... ?
(2) Was age a determinative factor in the decision not to promote the plaintiff?
(3) Was plaintiff ... qualified in August 1979 for the position of General Sales Manager of Malsbary ... ?
(4) Was age a determinative factor in the decision to discharge the plaintiff from his job as General Sales Manager?
App. at 86.
While the jury was deliberating, the parties reached a settlement. The specific terms of the settlement depended upon the jury’s answers to the interrogatories. When the jury answered all the questions affirmatively, the defendants were obligated to pay the taxpayer $80,000 immediately and $25,000 during each of the next four years. The settlement agreement did not allocate the settlement amount among the taxpayer’s various prayers for relief.
Carlisle made the first payment of $80,-000 in 1983, and paid $25,000 during each of the succeeding four years. 3 Only the receipt of $80,000 in 1983 and $25,000 in 1984 are at issue in this appeal. Carlisle did not withhold Federal income or Social Security tax from any of the payments. The taxpayer neither reported the $80,000 or the $25,000 as gross income nor disclosed these amounts on his 1983 and 1984 tax returns.
In a statutory notice of deficiency, the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue (“Commissioner”) determined that the entire amount of $105,000 was taxable income. The Commissioner argued that the settlement proceeds represented either back pay or punitive damages, both of which the Commissioner asserted were taxable items of income. The taxpayer petitioned the Tax Court seeking a redetermi-nation of the deficiency.
After a trial, the Tax Court found that one-half, i.e. $40,000 in 1983 and $12,500 in 1984, of the settlement was taxable income. The Court found that the other half of the settlement was excludable under § 104(a)(2). In addition, the Tax Court also denied the taxpayer’s motion for reasonable litigation costs. This appeal followed. We have jurisdiction over taxpayer’s appeal pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7482(a).
II.
The Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”) states that “[ejxcept as otherwise provided ..., gross income means all income from whatever source derived_” 26 U.S.C. § 61(a). Accordingly, any accession to wealth is presumed to be gross income, unless the taxpayer can demonstrate that the accession fits into one of the specific exclusions created by other sections of the IRC.
Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass
*658
Co.,
The exclusion at issue here is § 104(a)(2) which reads in relevant part: “gross income does not include ... the amount of any damages received (whether by suit or agreement and whether as lump sums or as periodic payments) on account of personal injuries or sickness_”
4
Since the appropriate question to ask for purposes of § 104(a)(2) is whether the damages were received on account of personal injuries,
Threlkeld v. Commissioner,
Unfortunately, neither the statute, Treasury regulations nor legislative history provides much guidance.
Id.
However, it is judicially well-established that the meaning of “personal injuries” in this context encompasses both nonphysical as well as physical injuries.
Bent v. Commissioner,
Consequently, the Tax Court has long held that “[i]f a taxpayer receives a damage award for a physical injury, which almost by definition is personal, the entire award is excluded from income [under § 104(a)(2) ] even if all or part of the recovery is determined with reference to the income lost because of the injury.”
Threl-keld,
Compensation [in the physical injury context] for loss of earnings is excluda-ble even though the lost earnings would have been taxable if earned. Suppose, for example, that a taxpayer is tortiously injured, sues, and settles for $5,000, which is allocated $1,000 for pain and suffering, $2,000 for medical expenses, and $2,000 for wages lost prior to the settlement. Under § 104(a)(2), the entire $5,000 is tax exempt. Of course, if the taxpayer had not been injured and had actually earned the $2,000 in wages, that money would have represented an addition to gross income. Injured taxpayers who recover lost earnings are better off, in terms of taxes, than they would have been if they had not been injured.
Id.
However, the Tax Court has long treated claims for nonphysical personal injuries quite differently. In the nonphysical injury context, before deciding the tax consequences of an award or settlement, the Tax Court has mounted an initial inquiry to determine whether each of the components of the injury are personal or nonpersonal.
Threlkeld,
The different treatment of physical and nonphysical personal injuries has sometimes led to tortured analyses and arbitrary results. Finally, in
Roemer v. Commissioner,
The Tax Court determined that the taxpayer had not proven that the damages were in compensation for personal losses, e.g., personal embarrassment or damage to his personal reputation, rather than injury to the taxpayer’s business or professional reputation, i.e., economic loss, and therefore the entire amount was taxable. Id. The Roemer court disagreed, noting that the only distinction found in § 104(a)(2) was between personal and nonpersonal injuries, not physical and nonphysical injuries. Id. at 697. The court explained further that:
Th[e taxpayer’s] injury ... should not be confused with the derivative consequences of the defamatory attack, i.e., the loss of reputation in the community and any resulting loss of income. The nonpersonal consequences of a personal injury, such as a loss of future income, are often the most persuasive means of proving the extent of the injury that was suffered. The personal nature of an injury should not be defined by its effect.
Id. at 699. Since defamation was a personal injury under California law, the court held that all the compensatory damages received by the taxpayer as a result of the injury were “excludable from gross income under § 104(a)(2), as would be the compensatory damages received on account of any personal injury.” Id. at 700.
After
Roemer
was decided the full Tax Court, in
Threlkeld v. Commissioner,
The Court of Appeals [in Roemer] viewed the problem of recoveries for defamation from the proper perspective. Section 104(a)(2) excludes from income amounts received as damages on account of personal injuries. Therefore, whether the damages received are paid on account of “personal injuries” should be the beginning and the end of the inquiry. To determine whether the injury complained of is personal, we must look to the origin and character of the claim, and not to the consequences that result from the inquiry.
Id. at 1299 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
Admitting that the question of interpretation presented by the language of § 104(a)(2) presents “conceptual challenges” and that focusing on the nature of the taxpayer’s injury rather than the consequences flowing from it will be difficult, the Tax Court explained however that:
this [approach] is no more difficult in most cases than the type of inquiry previously required by the line of cases, culminating in [the Tax Court decision in] Roemer, which distinguished the nature of the consequences resulting from a claim. Furthermore, the approach that we will now apply in all cases, whether the injury claimed is personal, more accurately reflects the inquiry required by the plain meaning of the statute. Exclusion under section 104 will be appropriate *660 if compensatory damages are received on account of any invasion of the rights that an individual is granted by virtue of being a person in the sight of the law.
Threlkeld,
In
Bent v. Commissioner,
Recently, this Court extended the analysis of
Roemer
and
Bent
both to a retaliatory discharge claim under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) and a wrongful discharge claim under state law.
Byrne v. Commissioner,
the Commissioner’s argument ... that the settlement is taxable because it was intended, at least in part, to compensate [the taxpayer] for lost wages due to her wrongful firing. The relevant inquiry, as the Tax Court noted, is whether the settlement was received on account of personal or non-personal injuries, not whether the damages compensate the taxpayer for economic losses. To the extent that the Commissioner argues that because the settlement was intended to compensate [the taxpayer] for economic losses it is therefore compensating her for non-personal injuries, we find this argument to have been explicitly rejected in Bent, and we reject it again here.
Id. at 214.
We are asked now to extend
Byrne
to a different type of discrimination claim, i.e. age discrimination. The Tax Court in the instant case concluded that half of the taxpayer’s settlement was taxable income and that half was excludable under § 104(a)(2). In its opinion, the Tax Court found that the taxpayer’s ADEA suit consisted of claims for both wage-related damages and liquidated damages.
Rickel v. Commissioner,
The taxpayer argues that the Tax Court erred in finding that the taxpayer’s ADEA action consisted of one-half personal injury, tort type claims and one-half non-personal injury, contract type claims. He argues that under our decision in Byrne the entire settlement amount should be ex-cludable as compensation for a personal injury. We agree and find that the Tax Court failed to properly apply the analysis adopted by this Court — and, indeed, the analysis the full Tax Court itself has adopted in Threlkeld — to determine whether settlement proceeds are excludable from gross income under § 104(a)(2).
We note that the Tax Court correctly stated the approach to be applied, under Threlkeld, to resolve a § 104(a)(2) problem: “[t]o determine whether the damages received were paid on account of personal injuries ... we must look to the nature of the claim and not to the consequences that result from the injury.” Id. at 516. The Tax Court at one point even characterized correctly the nature of the taxpayer’s age discrimination claim as the assertion of a personal injury, tort type right. Id. at 522.
However, the Tax Court then slipped into the old analysis previously abandoned by the full Tax Court in
Threlkeld,
i.e., “mounting] an inquiry to determine whether the components of the [taxpayer’s discrimination] injuries for which the [settlement was] made are personal or [economic].”
Threlkeld,
Furthermore, we are confident that the Tax court correctly characterized age discrimination as more analogous to a personal injury tort than a breach of contract claim. We characterized the taxpayer’s action in Byrne, under the FLSA’s antidis-crimination provision, as asserting a personal injury, tort type right because:
such a suit alleges the violation of a duty owed the plaintiff by the defendant employer which arises by operation of the Act. This duty is independent of any duty an employer might owe his employee pursuant to an express or implied employment contract; it arises by operation of law. Thus, the statutory claim seeks to remedy a statutory violation that the law has defined as wrongful.
Byrne,
Like the antidiscrimination provision of the FLSA, the duty of an employer to refrain from discriminating against employees on the basis of their age arises by operation of a statute. Society has made the moral and economic determination that as a matter of law it will not abide such discrimination. Such a duty arises even in the absence of a written employment contract and despite the existence of either contrary terms in such a contract or conflicting common law employment-at-will principles. 11
Moreover, we do not believe that the ADEA, and federal employment discrimination statutes in general, are usefully viewed as a Congressional attempt to rewrite the terms of employment contracts. For one thing, nothing in the statutes suggests or hints at such an intention. Cf. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2 (1982) (speaking in terms of “unlawful employment practices for an employer”). But more importantly the scope of these statutes goes beyond the mere employer-employee context, protecting individuals from various forms of discrimination even if they are not yet in a contractual relationship, e.g., refusal to hire contexts. See, e.g., 29 U.S.C. § 623(a) (1982); 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a) (1982). 12
We are strengthened in our conclusion by courts in other jurisdictions that have characterized an action to redress discrimination in the workplace as a tort claim for personal injuries whether the discrimination was based on race,
see Goodman v. Lukens Steel Co.,
Thus, focusing on the nature of the claim, we are convinced that the taxpayer’s discrimination suit under the ADEA was analogous to the assertion of a tort type right to redress a personal injury. By discriminating against the taxpayer on the basis of his age, Malsbary invaded the rights that the taxpayer “is granted by virtue of being a person in the sight of the law.”
Threlkeld,
We find some additional support for this view in the legislative history of Congress’ recent amendment to § 104(a)(2) in the 1989 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, ■103 Stat. 2379 (1989), which added the provision that: “Paragraph (2) shall not apply to any punitive damages in connection with a case not including physical injury or physical sickness.” This action is significant to our analysis because the original bill introduced in the House of Representatives would have limited the § 104(a)(2) exclusion to cases involving physical injury or physical sickness. As the House Ways and Means Committee explained the bill, “some courts have held that the exclusion applies to damages in cases involving employment discrimination,” but that the “committee believes that such treatment is inappropriate where no physical injury or sickness is involved.” H.R.Rep. No. 247, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. 1354-55,
reprinted in,
1990 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin.News 2824-25. The Senate bill contained no such amendment to § 104(a)(2). In its final conference bill, Congress chose to implicitly endorse the courts’ expansive interpretation of § 104(a)(2) to encompass nonphysical injuries and merely circumscribe the scope of the exemption as to only one type of remedy, i.e., punitive damages, and not other types of remedies typically available in employment discrimination cases, such as back pay. H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 386, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. 622-23,
reprinted in,
1990 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 3225-26.
Cf. Lorillard v. Pons,
Of course, it might be troubling to some that a successful plaintiff in an ADEA suit will make out better, vis-a-vis federal income tax liability, than if the plaintiff had not been discriminated against in the first place. Although this concern is understandable, we note that we are simply following the Treasury regulation that injects into the analysis tort and contract concepts. Moreover, the successful ADEA plaintiff is being treated no better (or worse now) than the typical tort victim who suffers a physical injury.
See supra
p. 658. We see no reason to treat one personal injury victim any differently than another.
See Miller v. Commissioner,
*665 III.
The taxpayer in this case also argues that should we reverse the Tax Court and hold that the entire settlement is ex-cludable from gross income under § 104(a)(2), we should also reconsider the Tax Court’s decision not to award the taxpayer reasonable litigation expenses under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. § 7430. Since we have reversed the Tax Court we have also considered this additional issue. However, we do not believe the taxpayer is entitled to expenses under the IRC.
In order to recover reasonable litigation expenses under § 7430, the taxpayer must establish that he was the “prevailing party.” 26 U.S.C. § 7430(a). The statutory definition of “prevailing party” is a party who both (1) “establishes that the position of the United States in the civil proceeding was not substantially justified,” 26 U.S.C. § 7430(c)(2)(A)(i) 17 , and (2) “has substantially prevailed with respect to the amount in controversy” or “has substantially prevailed with respect to the most significant issue or set of issues presented,” 26 U.S.C. § 7430(c)(2)(A)(ii)(I), (II). We do not believe that the taxpayer has established requirement (1).
The Commissioner’s principal position throughout these proceedings has been that one-half of the settlement figure was for back pay and one-half was for liquidated damages, and that both types of damages were taxable. The Commissioner argued that back pay was taxable income because it was paid on account of a nonper-sonal injury. Although we have rejected that argument here, given that the Commissioner prevailed in the Tax Court on the issue, that
Byrne
had not yet been decided by this Court, the inconsistency we have found in the Tax Court’s approach to this issue,
see supra
n. 5, and the assumption by many courts that such back pay awards are taxable,
see supra
note 15 and accompanying text, we think that the Commissioner’s position could be deemed as reasonably supported in the case law.
See, e.g., Smith v. United States,
We believe that the Commissioner’s position that the portion of the settlement it
*666
viewed as liquidated damages was taxable is more problematic. The Commissioner argued that under the ADEA liquidated damages are punitive and, as such, are taxable income under § 61, citing
Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co.,
Unlike the FLSA, liquidated damages are not generally available to plaintiffs under the ADEA. To recover such, the plaintiff must establish that the employer willfully violated the Act. 29 U.S.C. § 626(b) (1982). In discussing the statute’s willfulness standard, the Supreme Court has noted that the “legislative history of the ADEA indicates that Congress intended for liquidated damages to be punitive in nature.”
Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Thurston,
Moreover, it was not unreasonable for the Commissioner to have interpreted
Glenshaw Glass
as standing for the proposition that all punitive damage awards are includable in gross income. Although the court in
Glenshaw Glass
was apparently considering only whether treble damages under the antitrust laws were taxable under the IRC, its language was much broader: “Damages for personal injury are by definition compensatory only. Punitive damages, on the other hand, cannot be considered a restoration of capital for taxation purposes.”
Glenshaw Glass,
Thus, we hold that the Commissioner’s position that back pay and liquidated damages under the ADEA represent taxable income was substantially justified. Therefore, we will affirm the Tax Court’s decision to deny the taxpayer’s application for reasonable litigation expenses.
IV.
To summarize, we disagree with the Tax Court that half of the taxpayer’s settle *667 ment is taxable income. Because age discrimination is analogous to a personal injury tort, all damages caused by that injury are excludable under § 104(a)(2). However we do agree with the Tax Court that the taxpayer is not entitled to reasonable litigation expenses since the Commissioner’s position that the entire settlement amount represented taxable income was substantially justified. Costs taxed against the appellee.
Notes
. Mildred E. Rickel appears to be a party solely because she signed the joint income tax returns which are in dispute in this appeal.
. While § 2 of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 redesignated the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, the taxable years and the significant underlying events in this case antedate the 1986 Act. Therefore, unless otherwise noted, all references to the tax code will be to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.
. Malsbary went out of business in 1986.
. The Tax Court has given the term "on account of" in § 104(a)(2) its common meaning of "for the sake of,” "by reason of,” or "because of,"
Miller v. Commissioner,
.As in
Roemer, Threlkeld
dealt with a taxpayer’s recovery as a result of a defamation suit. However, as appears clear from the portion of the opinion quoted above, the new approach of the Tax Court was meant to have a more general applicability.
See Metzger v. Commissioner,
. After Bent was decided, the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed the previously discussed Tax Court decision in Threlkeld:
We agree with the Ninth and the Third Circuits that the nonpersonal consequences of a personal injury, such as a loss of future income are often the most persuasive means of proving the extent of the injury that was suffered, and that the personal nature of an injury should not be defined by its effect. Injury to a person’s hand or arm is a personal injury. This is so even though it may affect a person’s professional pursuits. All income in compensation of that injury is excludable under section 104(a)(2). Similarly, the injury to taxpayer's reputation in this case was a personal injury. This is so even though it affected his professional pursuits. All income in compensation of that injury is excludable under section 104(a)(2).
Threlkeld v. Commissioner,
. Section 15(a)(3) of the FLSA states that it shall be unlawful for any person
(3) to discharge or in any other manner discriminate against any employee because such employee has filed any complaint or institut *661 ed or caused to be instituted any proceeding under or related to this chapter, or has testified or is about to testify in any such proceeding, or has served or is about to serve on an industry committee; ...
29 U.S.C. § 215(a)(3) (1982).
. The Tax Court rejected the Commissioner’s argument that liquidated damages under the ADEA should be treated as punitive damages. Id. at 521. The Commissioner has not appealed this decision.
. Thus, to the extent that the Commissioner, in spending an inordinately large part of his brief attempting to establish that at least half of the settlement comprised payment for back pay, is arguing that "because the settlement was intended to compensate [the taxpayer] for economic losses it is therefore compensating [him] for non-personal injuries, we find this argument to have been rejected in
Bent
[and
Byrne
] and we reject it again here” for the
third
time.
Byrne,
. Moreover, we also held in Byrne that a discharge in violation of a clear mandate of public policy in New Jersey, i.e., against discrimination, involves the assertion of a claim for damages for injury of a personal nature, for purposes of the IRC, rather than for economic loss. Id. at 216.'
. Likewise, the ADEA, in adopting from the FLSA the very same remedial provisions that were at issue in
Byrne,
provides in some cases for liquidated damages in an amount equal to the plaintiffs demonstrable compensatory damages, supporting the conclusion that the statutory remedy for age discrimination exists to redress an act that the law defines as "wrongful.”
See Byrne,
. In addition, we can find no good reason to hold that the provisions of the ADEA are implied contractual terms, while holding that the provisions of the FLSA are not.
. We do not believe that
Rogers v. Exxon Research & Eng'g Co.,
. As Justice O’Connor explained in the analogous context of a Title VII action:
Like the common law of torts, the statutory employment "tort” created by Title VII has two basic purposes. The first is to deter conduct which has been identified as contrary to public policy and harmful to society as a whole.... The second goal of Title VII is "to make persons whole for injuries suffered on account of unlawful employment discrimination."
Price Waterhouse v.
Hopkins, - U.S. -,
. Similarly, in fashioning an appropriate award under Title VII, some courts have decided that back pay is taxable income.
See, e.g., Johnston v. Harris County Flood Control Dist.,
. Contrary to the Commissioner’s view, we do not believe that the holding in
Thompson v. Commissioner,
. Prior to the 1986 amendments, the IRC required a plaintiff to show that the government’s position was "unreasonable” in order to be considered a “prevailing party.” "The change [of language from ‘unreasonable’ to 'not substantially justified’] apparently came about as part of an unsuccessful effort by the Senate Finance Committee to make section 7430 conform to the prevailing interpretation of the Equal Access to Justice Act ... by requiring the government to prove that its position
was
substantially justified.”
Smith v. United States,
. We re-emphasize that the Commissioner has not appealed this decision so all we are deciding here is whether the Commissioner's position was substantially justified, not its validity.
. It is true that in September of 1989, the Tax Court decided that punitive damages were ex-cludable under 104(a)(2) if received on account of personal injuries.
Miller v. Commissioner,
We note also that Congress has now amended § 104(a)(2), limiting the holding of Miller to punitive damages recovered on account of physical personal injuries. See supra pp. 663-64.
