Lead Opinion
OPINION.
The consideration of the question whether the damages received for libel and slander are taxable as income must proceed not so much according to the refinements of economists, Lynch v. Turrish,
The petitioner cites some of these decisions for the statement therein contained that income is the gain derived from capital or labor or both, including profit from the conversion of capital assets, and that nothing else answers the description. Whether this description of income is to be regarded as exclusive of everything not clearly within its terms, so that both the Sixteenth Amendment and the statute (which is said to be the fullest exercise of the constitutional power, Eisner v. Macomber,
This we think is not such a case, but is on the other hand one which in no event involves income. So far as the evidence shows, the amount which petitioner received was wholly by way of general damages for the personal injury suffered by reason of the defamatory statements made. It was compensation for injury to his personal reputation for integrity and fair dealing, including, as the record indicates, the injury'to his health. This is the ordinary basis for compensatory damages, Childers v. San Jose Mercury Printing & Publishing Co.,
There is some support for this reasoning in the dictum of the Chief Justice in United States v. Supplee-Biddle Hardware Co.,
* * * Life insurance in such a ease is like that of fire and marine insurance, a contract of indemnity. Central Bank of Washington v. Hume,128 U. S. 195 . The benefit to be gained by death has no periodicity. It is a substitution of money value for something permanently lost, either in a house, a ship, or a life. Assuming without deciding that Congress could call the proceeds of such indemnity, income, and validly tax it as such, we think that in view of the popular conception of the life insurance as resulting in a single addition of a total sum to the resources of the beneficiary, and not in a periodical return, such a purpose on its part should be express, as it certainly is not here.
If compensation for the loss of a life is not taxable as income unless expressly provided, compensation for the injury to personal reputation should similarly require an exjiress provision.
Alimony has been held not to be taxable income, Gould v. Gould,
The amount of $306.41, so far as the evidence shows, was interest, and so is expressly within statutory gross income. The amount of $112,500 was properly omitted by petitioner, and as to it the Commissioner is reversed.
Judgment will be entered on 15 days’’ notice, under Rule 50.
