The Volokh Conspiracy
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No Religious Exemption from Paying Taxes
The case involved a person who objected to his tax money being "used to facilitate abortion," but the principle applies to objections for any reason.
So the Ninth Circuit (Judges Marsha Berzon and Morgan Christen and District Judge Frederic Block (E.D.N.Y.)) held Monday in U.S. v. Bowman:
Appellant Michael Bowman appeals his conviction on four counts of willful failure to file a tax return …. Bowman argues that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act … required the dismissal of the operative indictment against him because of his religious belief that he must not contribute money used to facilitate abortions….
Both this Circuit and the United States Supreme Court have repeatedly rejected the proposition that a taxpayer may withhold tax money owed because taxes support expenditures the taxpayer finds objectionable: "Because the broad public interest in maintaining a sound tax system is of such a high order, religious belief in conflict with the payment of taxes affords no basis for resisting the tax." United States v. Lee (1982); Hernandez v. Comm'r (1989) ("[E]ven a substantial burden would be justified by the 'broad public interest in maintaining a sound tax system,' free of 'myriad exceptions flowing from a wide variety of religious beliefs.'") (citing Lee).
Bowman argues that Lee and Hernandez are preempted by RFRA, and that in any event, they are inapposite. He is mistaken on both counts. First, RFRA did not supersede Lee and Hernandez; to the contrary, it restored those cases. RFRA legislatively overturned Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith (1990), which itself overturned the balancing test at the heart of Lee and Hernandez. In so doing, RFRA reinstated the balancing test—and the vitality of Lee and Hernandez.
Bowman's attempt to distinguish Lee and Hernandez fares no better. He asserts that they are distinguishable because the expenditures objected to by the taxpayers in those cases—social security and national defense—are more compelling interests than that of abortion funding. He argues that because funding for abortion providers is a less compelling interest, taxation on that account fails the RFRA balancing test. Bowman's arguments are off the mark. The compelling government interest at issue here is not the funding of abortion providers; it is the administration of a manageable tax system, an interest that clears the balancing test's hurdle.
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Doesn’t this guy know about the Hyde Amendment?
Scumbag lawyer Rent seeking trumps all rights. I am not aware of any mainstream religion that prohibits the collection of taxes. Both sides of this dispute are annoying.
He was convicted of failing to file forms. If he were able to get out of paying taxes, the government might still require him to file forms.
A man who objected to tax money funding Vietnam filed a return showing no tax due. My memory says he was ultimately acquitted because it was obvious on the face of the return what he was doing. Under more modern regulations an administrative fine for a frivolous return could be imposed. (This is the billion dependents guy, whose name I can not find in 30 seconds of searching.)
US v. Snider, claim of 3 billion dependents on W-4 was not made with intent to defraud. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Snider
I recall a guy in Massachusetts -- I believe in the 1980s-- who refused to pay Federal income tax on pacifist grounds, that part of Federal income tax revenue went to support the military. The Feds came after him in civil court and successfully attached his house for payment. It was auctioned and a couple bought it. They were harassed for a while in their new home by activists, but eventually it faded away.
"Give to Ceasar what is Ceasar's, and to God what is God's. Whose name is on that coin?"
"In God we trust."
"Oh oh."
Floyd Wright, not a Vietnam protestor so must be a different guy. He wrote a book called "Become a Non-taxpayer and Save" based on the premise that "taxpayer" is defined as "someone who pays taxes" and that the income tax system is based on self declaration. You become a taxpayer when you fill in the little box at the bottom saying "taxes due". He fought and won, I want to say back in the 70s or 80s but he was also an accountant and it took him a lot of court time (and presumably money) to win.
I don't believe that he won.
From my cursory research, it appears that the government seized most of the book author, Floyd A. Wright's, assets, including his house, to satisfy his tax debt in the 90s (following a great deal of patently frivolous litigation). I don't think I'd characterize that as "winning" myself, although I suppose it beats Floyd B. Wright of Baltimore, who was sentenced to five years in prison for filing a false tax return in 2019.
No such tax protester has ever won in terms of not paying taxes. A few have beaten criminal charges by arguing that they were so crazy they honestly believed these theories, and it's only criminal to willfully violate the tax laws.
At one point in history, Americans' taxes were used to serve the public.
Then there was a time when Dems wanted to help some groups at others' expense.
And now Dems only talk about taxes when they want to punish Americans they’re mad at.
Seems like you're mixing up taxing and spending a bit there.
Not even a tiny bit.
https://legalinsurrection.com/2022/04/rhode-island-progressive-democrats-introduce-bill-to-impose-double-taxation-on-unvaccinated/
After about the year 2000, they stopped trying to justify taxes to get money to help people in need. Now they only mention taxes in the context of getting even with some Americans.
How were taxes used to serve the public, other than by spending them?
I would note that government spending is generally broadly based with criteria that includes red states as well as blue.
Taxes also deliberately scold the public for disfavored behavior, as with sin taxes.
Absolutely - sin taxes are very popular with the public, in fact!
Not the same as 'punish Americans [Dems are] mad at.'
The only example of that kind of explicitly partisan targeting is the SALT deduction. And it wasn't the Dems.
Not the same as 'punish Americans [Dems are] mad at.'
What the HELL do you think "sin" means???????
...You think sins are a Democratic thing?!
Is that what I said?
Do you think that these politicians tax these things out of love and support for them???
What's mixed up is thinking they are different - - - - - - - - - -
Thought the best argument was the guy who denied he had any income, as he was just trading his time/skill for money, and had no net profit. Believe he ended up in Lompoc (the Federal Prison, not the town)
From footnote 3 in Hobby Lobby:
The broader protection was the least restrictive means test. I suspect the appellant would also lose if that test were explicitly included.
I'd like to see someone arguing that the IRS's collecting taxes for the USAF and Space Force is ultra vires owing to their constitutional illegitimacy.
There are two problems with that. (At least!)
The first is that the constitution expressly provides for the power to raise and support armies.
The second is that the IRS doesn't collect taxes "for" those things; it collects taxes for filling the treasury. Congress decides what to do with the money in the treasury, but that's separate.
The theory, I believe, is that Congress has the power to " raise and support Armies" and to "provide and maintain a Navy", but that the Air Force (and, god help us, the Space Force) are neither armies nor navies, and thus aren't constitutionally authorized.
Needless to say, this argument isn't going anywhere as a practical matter, and even if it had merit this wouldn't be the vehicle to present it. Thinking about it right now, it also seems to me that the establishment of the Revenue Cutter Service in 1790 (years before the creation of the actual U.S. Navy) seems to be fairly compelling counterargument.
Who said armies had to be people on foot carrying guns? Are Jeeps disallowed? The Air Force used to be part of the army. Does a name change break that?
I'm sure that is the theory, but the claim that the Air Force isn't an army has no possible textual or logical support. The Air Force actually used to be a branch of the Army. There's no constitutional reason that one couldn’t split that Army into air power and land power. And each would continue to be an army. (The text of the constitution, as you note, expressly says "armies," contemplating the possibility of more than one.) The constitution does not require that they call it the Army Air Corps rather than the Air Force.
Yeah -- it is a really dumb argument. It is very similar to claims that the 1A protects only physically printed words, or that the 2A covers only muskets.
Might want to check your Navel, US Navy was born October 1775.
Wait a minute. You mean he didn't bother to point out that the flag in the courtroom had fringe around the edge or write his name IN ALL CAPITALS? No wonder he lost. Had he taken these two simple precautions he's have gotten off easily.
The price of ignorance I suppose.
Yes. He knows about that. I'm surprised he didn't bring that up too.
He has been using Jesus's Name improperly since he came to take The SAVIOR as a Tool, rather than his Blessing, and be grateful to give to Ceasar what is Ceasars and to God what is God's.
He proved that to me when he took a lover in our 14th year of marriage, AFTER I ruined my body with fertility drugs, got her pregnant immediately, abandoned me and later divorced me leaving me indigent and homeless for years because I don't have any luck collecting what the Oregon state judge signed the orders Michael came up with because I could not afford legal representation, as he was the bread winner and I have mental health disorders.
Yeah he seems to claim Jesus when it suits him. What would Jesus do for Michael Edward Bowman's ex wife... the 1st one! Not the lover mistress one after me.
Yeah, he got me hot under the collar now with this. Two decade's of telling me "good luck collecting", as he laughed.
It seems to that under strong Alito, there’s a case. Does government give exceptions and exemptions? Lots of them. So under strong Alito, this proves that taxes aren’t universally and neutrally enforced. If you can create an exemption for the various other things, you have to create one for religious objectors, too.
And I think this consequence illustrates some of the potential difficulties with strong Alito.
Alito is already on record as saying taxes meet strict scrutiny in Hobby Lobby.
Render unto Caesar ... that bastard.
🙂
That's exactly what I told him when he started all this zealous religious stuff... then he abandoned me married his pregnant lover and refuses to comply with the court order's the judge signed in our divorce. He 100% breached everything in the court orders. He still owes me from the divorce agreement he signed in 2001. Religious beliefs my behind!
If they only would've ask me some questions about "this guy".
I have suffered being homeless and living as an indigent adult owing two states now for public assistance and medical care, so if "anything" he owes that tax money for two states supporting me and caring for my mental health disorders stemming from his abuse for twenty years now. I am finally coming public where ever I can now. This is not slandering, this is me finally trying to stand up against a man who thinks he can do anything he wants to me and get away with it.
I am looking for a family law lawyer who will make him famous again by reinstating my marriage and then re-divorcing him. And taking him for what I could have gotten if I was that kind of person two decades ago.
I need help representing me in getting what he owes me.