Copilot: Is 26 U.S.C. 871(a) strictly a tax on aliens or can it also be a general privilege tax?

QUESTION 1:

How is it possible to distinguish whether alienage is the only privilege in I.R.C. 871(a) or whether it is a catchall for all privileges in a statutory context only?

ANSWER 1:

Here’s the clean, rigorous answer inside real statutory law, not the FTSIG ontology — because your question now asks:

How can we tell, in a statutory context only, whether §871(a) taxes only the privilege of alienage or whether it is a catch‑all excise on all federal privileges?

This is a statutory‑interpretation question, not an FTSIG‑ontology question. So the answer must come from:

  • the text of the statute,
  • the structure of Subtitle A,
  • canons of construction,
  • and judicial interpretation.

Let’s walk through the exact method lawyers use to distinguish these two possibilities.

1. Start with the statutory text: Who is the taxpayer?

The controlling text is:

“There is hereby imposed… on the amount received by a nonresident alien individual…” — I.R.C. §871(a)

The statute does not say:

  • “any person receiving federal benefits,”
  • “any person exercising federal privilege,”
  • “any person in public capacity,”
  • or anything resembling a catch‑all.

It says nonresident alien individual.

Statutory consequence

Under normal statutory interpretation:

§871(a) is limited to aliens. It is not a catch‑all for all federal privileges.

This is the first and strongest indicator.

2. Check whether the statute uses “privilege” language

§871(a) contains no privilege language.

Compare:

  • §7701(a)(26) (trade or business)
  • §3121(b) (employment)
  • §3401(c) (employee)
  • §1402(c) (self‑employment)

These sections contain capacity‑creating language.

§871(a) does not.

Statutory consequence

If Congress intended §871(a) to be a privilege tax, it would have used the same language it uses in other privilege‑based provisions.

It didn’t.

3. Check the structure of Subtitle A

Subtitle A divides taxpayers into:

  • U.S. persons (§1, §61, §7701(a)(30))
  • Aliens (§871, §872, §877A)

There is no structural category for:

  • “federal beneficiaries,”
  • “public persons,”
  • “privilege recipients,”
  • or “federal franchise participants.”

Statutory consequence

The structure of Subtitle A shows:

§871(a) is part of the alien‑taxation regime, not a privilege‑tax regime.

4. Check whether other federal benefits are routed through §871(a)

They are not.

Federal benefits (Social Security, VA, CSRS, FERS, etc.) are taxed under:

  • §86 (Social Security)
  • §61(a)(11) (pensions)
  • §72 (annuities)
  • §111 (disability)
  • §104 (injury compensation)

None of these cross‑reference §871(a) unless the recipient is an alien.

Statutory consequence

If §871(a) were a catch‑all privilege tax, Congress would not need:

  • §86
  • §72
  • §104
  • §111
  • §1401
  • §3101
  • §3401
  • etc.

But Congress did enact all of these.

That means:

§871(a) is not the catch‑all privilege tax. It is the alien‑tax provision.

5. Check judicial interpretation

Courts have repeatedly held:

  • §871(a) is an income tax, not a privilege tax.
  • It applies to nonresident aliens, not to U.S. nationals.
  • It is justified under the general taxing power, not the foreign commerce power.
  • It is not a tax on federal benefits.
  • It is not a tax on federal privileges.

Statutory consequence

Courts treat §871(a) as:

A source‑based income tax on aliens. Not a privilege‑based excise.

6. Apply the Whole‑Act Rule

The Whole‑Act Rule says:

Interpret a provision in harmony with the structure of the entire statute.

If §871(a) were a catch‑all privilege tax:

  • §1 would be redundant
  • §61 would be redundant
  • §86 would be redundant
  • §72 would be redundant
  • §1401 would be redundant
  • §3101 would be redundant
  • §3401 would be redundant

Congress does not write redundant statutes.

Statutory consequence

The Whole‑Act Rule forces the conclusion:

§871(a) is not a catch‑all privilege tax. It is the alien‑income provision.

Final Statutory Answer

Using statutory interpretation only, not FTSIG ontology:

§871(a) taxes only nonresident aliens.

It is not a catch‑all tax on all federal privileges.

Federal benefits are not routed through §871(a) unless the recipient is an alien.

The statute’s text, structure, and judicial interpretation all confirm this.

If you want, I can now show:

  • How to reconcile this statutory reading with the FTSIG ontology
  • How courts distinguish income taxes from privilege taxes
  • How to determine whether a federal benefit is taxable under §871(a)