delivered the opinion of the Court.
This cause presents the same question as respects the return for taxation of. community income of a husband and wife, citizens of Arizona, as was presented in Poe v. Seaborn, ante, p. 101, affecting spouses who are citizens of the State of Washington.
Here Koch and his wife filed separate returns for 1927 each returning one-half of the community income; the Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed a deficiency on the theory that Koch alone should have returned the entire income; Koch paid under protest, and brought suit against the Collector in the District Court to recover the sum so paid. . The Collector demurred. Judgment went for plaintiff. The Collector appealed to the Circuit Court of Appeals, which certified questions to us. This Court ordered the entire record sent up.
. What we said in Poe v. Seaborn, supra, applies here, if under the law of Arizona, the wife’s interest in community property is, in legal effect, the same as ill Washington.
*121
The collector asserts that the Arizona law of community property closely resembles that of California (cf.
U. S.
v.
Robbins,
We have examined the statutes
*
and authorities cited, and have concluded that they present no significant differences from the Washington system. In
La Tourette
v.
La Tourette,
The Arizona Supreme Court has likened the community to a partnership.
Forsythe
v.
Paschal,
Enough has been said to show 'that our conclusion in Poe v. Seaborn, supra, holds here, and that the wife has such equal interest in community income as to entitle her to treat one-half thereof as her income, and file a separate return therefor under sections 210 (a) and 211 (a) of the •Revenue Act of 1926.
Perhaps we ought also to note that what is said in Poe v. Seaborn with respect to executive construction and legislative history applies in this case.
*122 For the reasons above given, and more fully stated in the opinion in Poe v. Seaborn, dhe judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
The applicable provisions (cited from the Revised Statutes of 19Í3 which were in force in 1927) are: Title 6, §§ 403-405, 865-869, 1102;. Title 8, §§ 2058-2062; Title 32, §§ 3848-3856, 3865-3869, 3881-3886; Act of February 10, 1921, Ariz. Session Laws, Regular, p. 6; Act of March 17,1919, Arizona Session Laws, Regular, p. 98.
