Amy T. Critzer, an Eastern Cherokee Indian, was found guilty of four charges of willfully attempting to evade and defeat federal income taxes for the years 1967-1970 in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201. She was fined $10,000 and given a suspended sentence of three years conditioned upon her satisfying her civil tax liability. The government’s proof established that she failed to report a portion of her income derived from the operation of a motel and restaurant, and from the lease of two gift shops and some apartments. All of defendant’s businesses were located on land in which defendant had a “possessory holding” within the Eastern Cherokee Reservation in North Carolina. While the record amply supports the conclusion that the underreporting was intentional, the record also reflects that, concededly, whether defendant’s unreported income was taxable is problematical and the government is in dispute with itself as to whether the omitted income was taxable. We therefore reverse the judgments of *1161 guilt and direct defendant's exoneration from criminal liability.
I.
The question of whether defendant’s omitted income was taxable is a nice one, and one which we do not decide in these proceedings. The land from which the income was derived is held by the United States in trust for the Eastern Cherokee band under the Act of June 4, 1924, c. 253, 43 Stat. 376. 1 Under that Act, land can be conveyed — allotted—to individual Indians by the United States in fee simple, subject to restriction on alienation. However, no such conveyances to Eastern Cherokees have been made. 2 In the interim, defendant and others similarly situated have only a “possessory holding,” described as the right of an individual Cherokee Indian to use and occupy a parcel of undivided land under regulations of the Tribe and Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Section 21 of the 1924 Act provided, in pertinent part:
all restricted allotments and undivided property shall be exempt from taxation until the restrictions on the alienation of such allotments are removed or the title of the band to such undivided property is extinguished (emphasis added).
It is this statutory language and the provisions of the General Allotment Act of 1887, 24 Stat. 388, — as extended by the Joint Resolution of June 19, 1902, and the Act of February 14, 1923, 42 Stat. 1246, as and interpreted by the leading case of Squire v. Capoeman,
Notwithstanding the government’s present position on defendant’s obligation to report and pay taxes on the business and rental income previously described, the record is undisputed that in 1945, and again in 1963, defendant was advised by the local superintendent of the Bureau of Indian Affairs that she was not taxable for rental income from her possessory interest in band property. 4 Indeed, with commendable forthrightness, the government in the present appeal has included in its brief a statement of the Department of the Interior as trustee, inter alia, for Eastern Cherokee Indians indicating that it still *1162 stands by the advice given defendant. The statement reads:
[wjhile the issue is not free of all doubt, since there has been no definitive court holding, the Department of the Interior for legal and policy reasons believes that these possessory holdings are tax exempt to the same extent as trust and restricted allotments found on most other Indian reservations.....
Interior also believes that income from businesses conducted on tax exempt land, such as motels and restaurants, should be included in the principle of Squire v. Capoeman ....
The statement also elaborates on the statutes and court decisions leading to the conclusions quoted.
II.
We hold that defendant must be exonerated from the charges lodged against her. As a matter of law, defendant cannot be guilty of willfully evading and defeating income taxes on income, the taxability of which is so uncertain that even co-ordinate branches of the United States Government plausibly reach directly opposing conclusions. As a matter of law, the requisite intent to evade and defeat income taxes is missing. The obligation to pay is so problematical that defendant’s actual intent is irrelevant. Even if she had consulted the'law and sought to guide herself accordingly, she could have had no certainty as to what the law required.
It is settled that when the law is vague or highly debatable, a defendant — actually or imputedly — lacks the requisite intent to violate it. Perhaps the most dramatic illustration of this principle is found in the eases dealing with the taxability of embezzled funds. In C.I.R. v. Wilcox,
and (2) he had a continuing unqualified obligation to return them. Six years later, after a change in personnel, the Supreme Court held that money obtained by
extortion
was taxable income. Rutkin v. United States,
In light of the holding in
Ruthin,
the changed rationale, and the alignment of the new Justices, the tax exemption for
embezzled
funds created by
Wilcox
was subject to considerable doubt. Some commentators considered it effectively overruled. After
Ruthin,
courts of appeals made close distinctions to avoid following
Wilcox. See, e. g.,
Macias v. C.I.R.,
However, in James v. United States,
We believe that the element of willfulness could not be proven in a criminal prosecution for failing to include embezzled funds in gross income in the year of misappropriation so long as the statute contained the gloss placed upon it by Wilcox at the time the alleged crime was committed. Therefore, we feel that petitioner’s conviction may not stand and that the indictment against him must be dismissed.366 U.S. at 221-222 .
Thus, in the view of the plurality, “willfulness,” as a matter of law, could not be shown m a prosecution under § 7201 given the uncertain state of the law of the taxation of embezzlement income created by Wilcox. 5
Embezzlement cases reaching the federal courts after
James
where the operative facts occurred after
Wilcox
but before
James
lend strong support for our conclusion that pioneering interpretations of the tax law should not be sought or rendered in criminal prosecutions under § 7201, but rather in civil suits. Thus, in Geiger’s Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
James
undoubtedly prevented criminal prosecutions under § 7201 involving similar facts from ever being brought. However, at least two cases involving the somewhat novel question of embezzling prior to
James
but filing of returns thereafter have been the subject of appellate review.
See
United States v. Dawson,
We do not question that defendant may eventually be liable for the tax. The advice given by the Department of the Interior and its present position cannot estop the government from collection of revenues properly due; and when the question of defendant’s tax liability is squarely reached, the views of that department may not prevail. But, for the reasons set forth, it is our conclusion that the appropriate vehicle to decide this pioneering interpretation of tax liability is the civil procedure of administrative assessment, with judicial review in the Tax Court, or payment and a suit for refund in a district court, at the election of the taxpayer; not the prosecution, with attendant potential loss of freedom of one who is the ward of her government.
Reversed.
. Defendant is obliged to remit to the band twenty percent of the rent payable on a lease of an imprvoed possessory holding and thirty percent of the rent payable on a lease of an unimproved possessory holding. Whether the band pays taxes on its share is uncertain. Defendant asserts that it does not. In argument, counsel for the government disclaimed knowledge.
Notes
. A detailed history of the band and its land holdings is set forth in United States v. Wright,
. The Secretary of the Interior was first authorized to defer making allotments by the Act of March 4, 1931, 46 Stat. 1518, and then prohibited from making allotments by the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 984.
. Prior to argument, plaintiff moved to supplement the record with newly discovered evidence, i.e., copies of various tax forms and an affidavit. The evidence purportedly showed that the I.R.S. had refunded taxes paid by another Eastern Cherokee Indian on rental income from possessory holdings which were located across the street from two of defendant’s lots. Moreover, the neighboring Indian had been advised to seek the refund by the same I.R.S. agent who testified against defendant at her trial and who was well aware of the government’s position regarding the taxability of her income. We deny the motion because we can decide the case on the present record without the persuasive corroboration that the tendered evidence, if true, would supply.
. Though Justices Black and Douglas thought
Wileoos
rightly decided, they agreed with the three Justices of the plurality that, given the new determination that embezzled funds were taxable, it would “be good governmental policy” not to apply the new interpretation to “past conduct.”
. . . a criminal statute that is so ambiguous in scope that an interpretation of it brings about totally unexpected results, thereby subjecting people to penalties and punishments for conduct which they could not know was criminal under existing law, raises serious questions of unconstitutional vagueness.366 U.S. at 224 .
We think that in essence the views of the dissenting Justices on the point in issue support those of the plurality so that it may be fairly concluded that five of the Justices in James ruled for various reasons that, as a matter of law, criminal sanctions under § 7201 should not be applied.
. In civil non-fraud deficiency cases, the courts almost uniformly held that taxpayers similarly situated to James were taxable on embezzled funds.
See
United States v. Siano,
