The Court held that income derived from the sale of cattle raised on tribal lands by a Native American ward of the Federal Government is subject to Federal income taxation, as no treaty or Act of Congress exempts such income from taxation.
Excerpt
Petitioner Bentley, a noncompetent ward of the Federal Government and a tribal Indian, raised cattle on tribal lands by authority of a permit issued by the tribe. He had acquired the cattle with a loan obtained pursuant to a \rehabilitation\ program operated by the tribe for its members through a grant by the Federal Government. Petitioner disposed of the cattle in 1958 and contended that the income derived therefrom was exempt from Federal income taxation. Held, the absence of any provision in a treaty or Act of Congress exempting from taxation income so derived results in its taxation. Squire v. Capoeman, 351 U.S. 1 (1956), distinguished.
What This Ruling Means
**What Happened**
In this 1965 case, a Native American man named Bentley, who was a ward of the federal government, raised cattle on tribal land with permission from his tribe. He had bought the cattle using money from a federal rehabilitation loan program designed to help tribal members. When Bentley sold the cattle in 1958, he argued that the income from the sale should be exempt from federal income taxes because of his status as a tribal member and federal ward.
**What the Court Decided**
The court ruled against Bentley, deciding that his income from selling the cattle was subject to federal income tax. The court found that there was no specific treaty or federal law that exempted this type of income from taxation, despite Bentley's special status as both a tribal member and federal ward.
**Why This Matters for Workers**
This ruling clarifies that income earned from business activities is generally taxable, even when the worker has special legal status or the income comes from government-assisted programs. Workers should understand that income from selling goods or services is typically subject to federal taxes unless there's a specific law or treaty that creates an exemption.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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