delivered the opinion of the Court.
The respondent claims a refund of income taxes under the Revenue Act of 1926. The petitioner in one of the cases (No. 75) is the United States, a defendant in the court below. The petitioner in the other (No. 76) is the Collector of Internal Revenue- for the Fifth District cif New Jersey.
Since 1907, the taxpayer, respondent, has been the owner of the Creveling patent for an improvement in the electric lighting equipment of railway passenger cars. It brought suit in 1912 against the United States Light & Heating Company to restrain an infringement of the patent, and for an accounting of damages and profits. The suit was pending on February 25, 1913, the effective date of the Sixteenth Amendment, and on March 1, 1913, the effective date of the first statute enacted thereunder. Act of October 3, 1913, e. 16, 38 Stat. 114, 166, 168, 172, 174.
*
The accused infringer contested its liability for in
In May, 1926, the taxpayer filed its income tax return for 1925, showing a net income for that year of $1,473,-
In the suit against the United States the District Court found that the taxpayer’s claim for damages on account of so much of the infringement as had"occurred before March 1, 1913, had a “market value” on that date of $436,137.41, the profits of the infringer up to that time as reported by the Master. From this the court concluded that in the year 1925 there had been a deductible loss of the difference between $436,137.41 and the sum of $174,-040.62, a like proportion of the $200,000 actually recovered. The tax upon this difference ($262,096.79) was $34,072.58. The taxpayer received an award of judgment for that amount with interest.
The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit affirmed the judgments in both suits. 76 F. (2d) 133. To fix more precisely the taxable quality of contested and contingent choses in action belonging to a taxpayer before March 1, 1913, writs of certiorari issued from this court.
First. Congress intended, with exceptions not how important, to lay a tax upon the-proceeds of claims or choses in action for the recovery of profits, unless the right to such recovery existed unconditionally on March 1, 1913, the effective date of the first statute under the Sixteenth Amendment.
The tax imposed on the respondent was laid under the Revenue Act of 1926 (c. 27, 44 Stat. 9), which includes in gross income (§ 213 (a)) gains on profits “from any source whatever.” We have said of that Act that it reveals in its provisions an intention on the part of Congress to reach “pretty much every sort of income subject to the federal power.”
Helvering
v.
Stockholms Enskilda Bank,
Until July, 1915, the- existence of any liability was contested and uncertain. The amount remained contested and uncertain until'May> 1925, when there was a
We find no disclosure of that intention in the provisions of the statute, and none .in the history of other acts before it. The first statute following the Sixteenth Amendment laid a tax, as we have seen, on the entire net income “ accrued ” within each calendar year, the impost being coupled with a proviso that for the year 1913 what was to be taxed should be the entire net income “ accrued ” within that portion of the year from March 1 to the end. Definiteness of meaning was given to that and later acts by Treasury Regulations. Article 90 of Regulations 62,
The argument is pressed upon us that the claim collected by the respondent is to be viewed as one for damages rather than as one for profits, and that in the aspect of a claim for damages' it had a
“
market value ” ascertainable at the commencement of the suit and later. There are two reasons, if not more, why the argument must fail. In the first place, the respondent made an election to abandon any claim for damages and to confine itself to the profits received by the infringer. . The amount of these profits was unknown at the commencement of the
The case comes down to this: On February 28, 1913, the respondent had a contested claim for-profits which if prosecuted effectively would ripen into income. That claim would not have been capital if it had been acquired for the first time on March 1, 1913. It was not turned into capital because it had been acquired earlier.
Edwards
v.
Keith,
Second.
Congress was not restrained by express or implied restrictions of the -Federal Constitution from giving
In February,’ 1913, if our analysis of the facts is accurate, there was a contested' and contingent claim for profits, not fairly to be characterized as income for that year or earlier. In 1925, this inchoate and disputed claim became consummate and established... It was now something more than a claim. It was income fully accrued, and taxable as such. Till then the patentee had its capital, the patent, and an expectancy of income, or income, more accurately, in the process of becoming. Thereafter it had something different. No doubt the income thus accrued derived sustenance and value from the soil of past events. We do not identify the seed with the fruit that it will yield.
Income within the meaning of the ^Sixteenth Amendment is the fruit that is born of capital, not the potency of fruition. With few exceptions, if any, it is income as the word is known in the common speech of men.
Lynch
v.
Hornby, supra,
p. 344. When it is that, it may be taxed, though it was in the making long before.
MacLaughlin
v.
Alliance Ins. Co., supra,
at pp. 249, 250;
Taft
v.
Bowers,
Third. The taxpayer is not entitled to a .deduction on the basis of a difference between the value of the chose in action on March 1,1913, or at any other time and the proceeds of collection.
(a) At the time of the settlement, the amount of the infríngeos liability was contested as it had been before,, the outcome of the contest being uncertain as long as the appeal was pending. The respondent chose to forego a large portion , of the judgment in the belief that com
(b) The value of the chose in action, uncertain at the time of settlement, was even more uncertain in February, 1913. Unpredictable vicissitudes might reduce it to a nullity. The patent might be adjudged invalid. The infringer might become insolvent. In the earlier years as in the later ones the supposed profits of the business might have evaporated as the result of neglect or incapacity. Not till the report by the Master and its confirmation by the court could the recovery be estimated with even approximate correctness. Thebe is no contention by the respondent that the value of the judgment was greater at that time than it was a few months later at the date of the settlement in the face of an appeal.
The conclusion is inescapable that the acceptance of the settlement did not involve a loss of income, still less a loss of capital.
Fourth. The taxpayer is not entitled to a refund of the proportion of the settlement attributable to the profits of the infringer before the effective date of the Sixteenth Amendment.
This conclusion follows without need for elaboration from what has been said in this opinion as to the distinction between capital and income.
The judgments are
Reversed.
The claim of respondent was a valid one, constituting property prior to March 1, 1913. It not only had an ascertainable value at that time, but a value which was actually ascertained and found as.a fact by the' trial judge and affirmed by the court below. Since there is evidence in the record to support these concurrent findings, we are not at liberty to set them aside. The case clearly falls within the principle of
Doyle
v.
Mitchell Brothers Co.,
Notes
With reference to every corporation subject thereto, that act provides as follows: “The tax herein imposed shall be computed-upon its entire net income accrued within each preceding calendar year ending December thirty-first: Provided, however, That for the year ending ' December thirty-first, nineteen hundred and thirteen, said tax shall -be imposed upon its entire net income accrued within that portion of said year from-March first to December thirty-first, both dates inclusive, to be ascertained by taking five-sixths of its entire net income for said calendar year: , , . ” 38 Stat. 174.
