delivered the opinion of the Court.
During federal control of railways that of petitioner was operated by the Director General under the act of March 21, 1918. 1 Pursuant to the Transportation Act, 1920, 2 the Government relinquished the property March 1, 1920; petitioner accepted the provisions of § 209 3 of the act, and consequently received for the six months *288 period commencing March 1, 1920, an allowance awarded by the Interstate Commerce Commission to make good the guaranty embodied in that section. The company omitted this sum from taxable income returned for the year 1920. After audit the Commissioner of Internal Revenue added the amount to the petitioner’s income and assessed a resulting additional tax, which was paid under protest. Upon rejection of a claim for refund, suit was brought in the Court of Claims to recover the portion of the tax attributable to the inclusion of the guaranty payment, petitioner asserting that the amount received was a subsidy or gift and therefore not income within the Sixteenth Amendment of the Constitution or § 213 of the Revenue Act of 1918. 4 Recovery was denied. This court granted certiorari.
By the terms of § 209 of the Transportation Act railroad companies which, like petitioner, had made contracts with the Director General for annual compensation during federal control, were guaranteed an operating income for the ensuing six months of not less than one-half the amount of such compensation. A minimum operating revenue was also assured to carriers not having such contracts, which had been under federal control or adversely affected thereby. Payment was conditioned on the carrier’s acceptance of the provisions of the section, one of which w.as the agreement that if operating revenue for the period should exceed the guaranteed amount the excess should be paid into the Treasury. Petitioner signified its acceptance.
The statute in terms guarantees a “
minimum operating income ”
for six months after relinquishment of federal control. The situation in which the railroads of the country were as a result of war-time Government opera
*289
fcion is well described in
United States
v.
Guaranty Trust Co.,
The sums received under the act were not subsidies or gifts, — that is, contributions to the. capital of the-railroads, — and this fact distinguishes cases such as
Edwards
v.
Cuba Railroad Co.,
In a proper sense these payments constituted income to the carrier not exempt from taxation under the Sixteenth Amendment or the Revenue Act of 1918. The Court of Claims was right in denying the claim and the judgment must be
Affirmed,
