税法中法定解释的实证研究

Jonathan H. Choi
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引用次数: 10

摘要

大量的学术文献考虑了机构应该如何解释法规。但很少有研究考虑到行政机关实际上是如何解释法规的,也没有人在实践中对行政机关和法院的方法进行实证比较。本文使用新创建的所有美国国税局(IRS)出版物的数据集以及现有的法院判决数据集进行了这样的比较。它应用自然语言处理、机器学习和回归分析来绘制方法趋势图,并测试特定当局是否发展了独特的法律解释文化。它发现,随着时间的推移,国税局越来越多地根据规范性政策(如公平和效率)制定规则,而不仅仅是根据相关法规的“最佳解读”(在任何解释理论下,如目的主义或文本主义)制定规则。此外,当国税局确实关注法规时,随着时间的推移,它变得更加目的性。相比之下,税务法院并没有变得更加规范,而是像大多数其他法院一样,遵循同样的文本主义趋势。但是,尽管税务法院已经变得更广泛的文本主义,但它比其他法院优先考虑不同的解释工具,比如雪佛龙的尊重和整体文本的解释标准。这表明每个权威都采用了自己的文本主义或目的主义风格。这些发现使有关税收例外主义和税务法院司法性质的文献复杂化。它们还为正在进行的关于司法服从和雪佛龙和斯基德莫尔服从等教义的未来的辩论提供了信息。最广泛地说,它们为现有的关于机关解释的理论文献提供了经验上的对照。
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An Empirical Study of Statutory Interpretation in Tax Law
A substantial academic literature considers how agencies should interpret statutes. But few studies have considered how agencies actually do interpret statutes, and none has empirically compared the methodologies of agencies and courts in practice. This Article conducts such a comparison, using a newly created dataset of all Internal Revenue Service (IRS) publications ever released, along with an existing dataset of court decisions. It applies natural language processing, machine learning, and regression analysis to map methodological trends and to test whether particular authorities have developed unique cultures of statutory interpretation. It finds that, over time, the IRS has increasingly made rules on normative policy grounds (like fairness and efficiency) rather than merely producing rules based on the “best reading” of the relevant statute (under any interpretive theory, like purposivism or textualism). Moreover, when the IRS does focus on the statute, it has grown much more purposivist over time. In contrast, the Tax Court has not grown more normative and has followed the same trend toward textualism as most other courts. But although the Tax Court has become more broadly textualist, it prioritizes different interpretive tools than other courts, like Chevron deference and holistic-textual canons of interpretation. This suggests that each authority adopts its own flavor of textualism or purposivism. These findings complicate the literature on tax exceptionalism and the judicial nature of the Tax Court. They also inform ongoing debates about judicial deference and the future of doctrines like Chevron and Skidmore deference. Most broadly, they provide an empirical counterpoint to the existing theoretical literature on statutory interpretation by agencies.
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