Action to recover money paid under protest as a state income tax upon tips received by plaintiff-appellant while working as a waiter at the Biltmore Hotel, Los Angeles, during the year 1951. The sole question is whether a waiter’s tips may be taxed as income under the Personal Income Tax Law of this state. (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 17001 et seq.) The trial court answered that question in the affirmative. Plaintiff, as appellant, contends that tips are gratuities, gifts, and as such not taxable. The case was submitted upon stipulated facts; it appeared that plaintiff collected wages of $2,106.05 and received tips aggregating $1,573. There is nothing in the record to suggest that the employer received any portion of the tips or credited same on wages, or that appellant was required to report their receipt to his employer.
The applicable statute is section 17101, Revenue and Taxation Code. It says: “Gross income includes gains, profits, and income derived from salaries, wages, or compensation for personal service, of whatever kind and in whatever form paid, or from professions, vocations, trades, businesses, commerce, or sales, or dealings in property, whether real or personal, growing out of the ownership or use of or interest in such property; also from interest, rent, dividends, securities, or the transaction of any business carried on for gain or profit, or gains or profits and income derived from any source whatever.” The crucial phrases are “. . . gains, profits, and income derived from . . . compensation for personal service, of whatever kind and in whatever form paid ...” and “gains or profits and income derived from any source whatever. ’ ’
*358 This section is interpreted by Personal Income Tax Regulation 17101(b), which, so far as pertinent, is as follows: “Commissions paid salesmen, compensation for services on the basis of a percentage of profits, commissions on insurance premiums, tips, and pensions or retiring allowances paid by private persons or by the United States are income to the recipients; as are also marriage fees, baptismal offerings, sums paid for saying masses for the dead, and other contributions received by a clergyman, evangelist, or religious worker for services rendered. However, so-called pensions awarded by one to whom no services have been rendered, by either a taxpayer or taxpayer’s beneficiary, are mere gifts or gratuities and are not taxable.”
Our section 17101 of the statute is copied from section 22(a), Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.A. (1948 ed.) § 22(a) ), as it stood before the 1954 revision, with one immaterial departure. 1 And our regulation 17101(b) is in the same phrasing as Federal Income Tax Regulations 111, section 29.22(a)-2, down to and including the word “tips”; in other particulars it is substantially the same so far as the problem presented in this case is concerned.
The federal courts have declared that the statute (Int. Rev. Code, § 22(a)) uses broad language as an “effective means to indicate the purpose to include all items that are constitutionally income.”
(Commissioner of Int. Rev.
v.
Linde,
(C.C.A., 9)
And the use of the word “tips” in the regulation has been held to be permissible interpretation of the broad statutory language. The current of federal decisions is uniform in this
*359
direction.
Roberts v. Commissioner of Int. Rev.,
(C.C.A., 9)
In
United States
v.
Burdick,
(C.C.A., 3)
In
Williams
v.
Jacksonville Terminal Co.,
Where, as here, the federal and state tax statutes and regulátions are substantially identical, the interpretations and effect given them by the federal courts are highly persuasive. In
Holmes
v.
McColgan,
*361 California cases are not opposed to the federal rulings on this matter of tips.
Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
The fact that regulation 17101(b) (adopted pursuant to Rev. & Tax. Code Ann., § 19253) declares tips to be “compensation for personal services” strengthens the reasoning of the case of
Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com., supra.
“Although not necessarily controlling, as where
*362
made without the authority of or repugnant to the provisions of a statute, the contemporaneous administrative construction of the enactment by those charged with its enforcement and interpretation is entitled to great weight, and courts generally will not depart from such construction unless it is clearly erroneous or unauthorized. ’ ’
(Coca-Cola Co.
v.
State Board of Equalization,
California Drive-In Restaurant Assn.
v.
Clark,
Anders
v.
State Board of Equalization,
Herbert’s Laurel-Ventura, Inc.
v.
Laurel Ventura Holding Corp.,
The California decisions are not opposed to Roberts v. Commissioner of Int. Rev., supra, and other federal authorities above discussed, nor do they indicate any error in the administrative construction of the Personal Income Tax Law.
Appellant relies upon
Magruder
v.
Yellow Cab Co. of D. C., Inc.,
(4 C.C.A.)
As heretofore indicated the income tax laws reach out for whatever is constitutionally includable as income, the customary tip properly may be so classified and this has been done in California. There is but one further contention that requires consideration.
Appellant argues that regardless of the merits of the foregoing views when considered apart from sections 350, subdivision (e), and 356, California Labor Code, those enactments require a holding that tips cannot be treated or taxed as income. The pertinent portion of section 350 is as follows: “As used in this article, unless the context indicates otherwise: ...(e) ‘Gratuity’ includes any tip, gratuity, money, or part thereof, which has been paid or given to or left for an employee by a patron of a business over and above the actual amount due such business for services rendered or for goods, food, drink or articles sold or served to such patron.”
Section 356: “The Legislature expressly declares that the purpose of this article is to prevent fraud upon the public in connection with the practice of tipping and declares that this article is passed for a public reason and cannot be contravened by a private agreement. As a part of the social public policy of this State, this article is binding upon all departments of the State.” These sections do not stand alone. The heart of the statute is found in sections 351 and 352 *365 which provide: “ § 351. Every employer or agent who collects, takes, or receives any gratuity or a part thereof, paid, given to, or left for an employee by a patron, or who deducts any amount from wages due an employee on account of such gratuity, or who requires an employee to credit the amount, or any part thereof, of such gratuity against and as a part of the wages due the employee from the employer, shall keep posted in a conspicuous place at the location where his business is carried on, in a place where it can easily be seen by the patrons thereof, a notice, in lettering or printing of not less than forty-eight-point black-face type, to the following effect: (a) If not shared by the employees, that any gratuities paid, given to, or left for employees by patrons go to and belong to the business or employer and are not shared by the employees thereof, (b) If shared by the employees, the extent to which gratuities are shared between employer and employees.” “§ 352. The notice shall also state the extent to which the employees are required by the employer to accept gratuities in lieu of wages or the extent to which the employee is required to accept and credit gratuities against wages.”
It will be noted that this article 1 of chapter 3 does not relate to taxation; that its declared purpose is “to prevent fraud upon the public in connection with the practice of tipping.” These sections were considered in the California Drive-In Restaurant case, supra. The court observed on page 292 of 22 Cal.2d that “The purpose and object sought to be accomplished by legislation is an important factor in determining the legislative intent.” And, concerning these sections : “. . . the statute is concerned exclusively with tipping in respect to its relation to the public ...” (p. 292). Again: “The statute does not purport to cover the special field of tipping in regard to its effect on the minimum wage law. It is aimed at the protection of the public against fraud.” (P. 293.)
Not only is this portion of the Labor Code limited in its purpose as stated but it is specifically confined by its terms to operation within “this article.” Sections 350-356 constitute article 1 of chapter 3 of part 1, division 2 of the Labor Code. Division 2 covers “Employment Regulation and Supervision”; part 1 thereof treats of “Compensation”; chapter 3, of “Privileges and Perquisites,” of which article 1 embraces “Gratuities.” By no sound process of reasoning could this part of the code be deemed to be concerned with
*366
the tax status of tips. It is to be harmonized with the Revenue and Taxation Code
(People
v.
Darby,
People
v.
McEntyre,
Appellant’s counsel stresses the concluding sentence of section 356, which is: “As a part of the social public policy of this State, this article is binding upon all departments of the State.” He argues that the Franchise Tax Board is a department of the state and hence obligated to treat tips as gifts, thus precluding their taxation. The short and sufficient answer is that sections 350-356 are binding upon all departments of the state when operating within the field delineated by that article of the Labor Code, and only when there operating.
The inclusion of tips within the definition of income in regulation 17101(b) is a valid classification and the lower court correctly so ruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
Shinn, P. J., and Vallée, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
The text of the federal statute and regulation herein mentioned is set forth in a footnote on pages 191 and 192 of 10 A.L.R.2d.
The quoted language is taken from
California Drive-In Restaurant Assn.
v.
Clark,
This is also the holding in
Powers’ Case, 275
Mass. 515 [
