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)