Rockland R. Snyder (Snyder) appeals the final determination of the Indiana Department of State Revenue (Department) denying his protest challenging the constitutionality of Indiana’s adjusted gross income tax on his wages for the 1993, 1994 and 1995 tax years. While Snyder raises various issues, the Court finds one to be dispositive: whether wages are income for purposes of calculating Indiana’s adjusted gross income tax.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Snyder, an Indiana resident, filed individual income tax returns for the 1993, 1994 and 1995 tax years. In each return, Snyder acknowledged having received wages but declared that his wages did not constitute income. Additionally, Snyder claimed refunds for all state income taxes withheld by his employer. The Department subsequently assessed Snyder for each year’s unpaid taxes. Thereafter, Snyder protested the entire amount of state adjusted gross income tax owed for each year and the Department’s refusal to grant him a refund. The Department conducted an administrative hearing on February 23, 1998. On April 27, 1998, the Department issued a Letter of Findings denying Snyder’s protest.
*488 Snyder filed an original tax appeal with this Court on June 22, 1998. He filed a motion for summary judgment on November 9, 1998. The Department filed its response to Snyder’s summary judgment motion, together with its own cross motion for summary judgment, on December 4, 1998. On December 7, 1998, Snyder filed a response to the Department’s cross motion for summary judgment. The Court heard arguments regarding the parties’ respective motions on January 8,1999.
Additional facts will be supplied where needed.
ANALYSIS AND OPINION
Standard of Review
This Court reviews the Department’s final determinations de novo and is not bound by either the evidence presented or the issues raised at the administrative level.
See
Ind.Code Ann. § 6-8.1-5-1(h) (West 1989
&
Supp.1999);
Thomas v. Indiana Dep’t of State Revenue,
Discussion
Although he admits that that the Indiana Constitution authorizes the General Assembly to impose an income tax, Snyder nevertheless claims that Indiana’s individual income tax statutes do not define an individual’s wages as income. Specifically, Snyder contends that, for purposes of computing his adjusted gross income, Indiana has adopted the definition of gross income used in the Internal Revenue Code. According to Snyder, that definition only includes wages as a “source” of income and not as “income” itself. As the Court explains infra, Snyder’s position lacks merit.
As this Court noted in
Richey v. Indiana Department of State Revenue,
“The constitutional legitimacy of the general assembly’s decision to tax income is beyond dispute. The right to tax is a crucial attribute of sovereignty.”
To support his argument that wages are sources of income and not just income, Snyder relies heavily upon two United States Supreme Court
cases
— Eisner
v. Macomber,
In
Eisner,
the Supreme Court considered whether the Sixteenth Amendment permitted Congress to tax as income a taxpayer’s stock dividend made against accumulated profits of the issuing corporation.
2
The Court in
Eisner
defined income as the “gain derived from capital, from labor, or from both combined.”
In
Glenshaw Glass,
the Court addressed whether money received as exemplary damages for fraud or as the punitive two-thirds portion of a treble-damage antitrust recovery is subject to the federal gross income tax pursuant to I.R.C. § 22(a)(1954). Section 22(a), a predecessor to I.R.C. § 61(a), defined gross income in part to include “gains, profits, and income from salaries, wages, or compensation for personal service ... of whatever kind and in whatever form paid, or ... gains or profits and income derived from any source whatever.” The Court initially observed that it “has frequently stated that this language was used by Congress to exert in this field ‘the full measure of its taxing power.’ ”
Glenshaw Glass,
Neither
Eisner
nor
Glenshaw Glass
stands for the proposition that wages are not income.
Eisner
merely concluded that stock dividends are not income within the meaning of the Sixteenth Amendment because the taxpayer received no separate asset from the company for his own individual use and benefit.
See Eisner,
In addition, a vast number of authorities stand for the proposition that wages are income. Wages, by common definition, constitute payment for employment services and not sources of income.
See, e.g.,
Black’s Law Dictionary 766, 1573 (7th ed.1999) (defining “income” as “payment that one receives ... from employment” and “wage” as “Payment for labor or services”); WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW Int’l DICTIONARY 1143, 2569 (1981) (defining income as “a gain or recurrent benefit that is usu. measured in money and ... derives from capital, labor, or a combination of both” and “wage” as “a pledge or payment ... by an employer esp. for labor or services”). Moreover, the federal courts have consistently viewed wages as income.
See United States v. Connor,
This Court, in fact, has previously considered whether payments for labor are separate and distinct from the labor performed. In
Thomas v. Indiana Department of Revenue,
Indiana relies upon the Internal Revenue Code’s definitions for gross and adjusted gross income. Even so, in ascertaining whether Snyder is liable for his unpaid state adjusted gross income taxes, this Court is not obligated to adopt the federal courts’ interpretations of income under I.R.C. § 61(a). However, their interpretations are certainly persuasive in this matter. Common definition, an overwhelming body of case law by the United States Supreme Court and federal circuit courts, and this Court’s opinion in Thomas all support the conclusion that wages are income for purposes of Indiana’s adjusted gross income tax. 3
CONCLUSION
The Court finds that the material facts in this case are undisputed and that, as a matter of law, Snyder’s wages are subject to the State of Indiana’s adjusted gross income tax. Snyder has demonstrated no entitlement to relief. Therefore, the Court DENIES his motion for summary judgment. Moreover, the Court AFFIRMS the Department’s final determination in this matter in all respects and GRANTS the Department’s cross motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. Both parties correctly note that the definition of gross income as found in Ind.Code Ann. § 6-2.1-1-2 (West 1989), which provides that gross income means “all the gross receipts a taxpayer receives ... from [among other things] trades, businesses, or commerce,” does not apply in resolving the issues raised in this case. The definition is inapplicable because the term “taxpayer,” for the purpose of imposing the gross income tax, does not include "individuals” per se.
See
Ind.Code Ann. § 6-2.1-1-16 (West 1989 & Supp.1999) (amended 1993 and 1997). Rather, a "taxpayer” includes any one of several listed legal entities, social organizations, persons acting in official capacities or “other group or combination acting as a unit.”
Id.
In contrast, the adjusted gross income tax applies to both individuals and corporations.
See Richey,
. The Sixteenth Amendment, ratified in 1913, provides: "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.”
. In addition to claiming that wages are “sources” of income and not income, Snyder maintains that the federal constitution prohibits Congress from subjecting the "source” of an individual's income to an income tax. To support this position, Snyder relies upon the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad Co.,
