Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - TRADING WITH THE ENEMY › § 4333
The Alien Property Custodian must pay taxes on property or money he takes into custody. Holding or getting that property does not change whether federal, state, territorial, or local taxes apply for times before or after he took it. It also does not make Social Security Title II exemptions apply to work done for the U.S. government. The Custodian should pay any taxes tied to the property as soon as it is safe and in the United States’ interest, even if claims or lawsuits are pending. The former owner is not responsible for taxes that happen while the Custodian holds the property, unless the property is returned without the Custodian paying those taxes. Taxes should be paid from the property or from other property taken from the same former owner. No tax can be collected from the held property without the Custodian’s consent. If the Custodian transfers property (except under certain return rules), he may do so free of tax except for tax liens that existed when he took it; the sale proceeds count as the property for tax purposes. The IRS Commissioner, with the Treasury Secretary’s approval, will set rules for how to figure and pay these taxes. Time limits for tax assessments are paused while the property is held and for six months after, and no interest is paid on refunds for periods covered by that pause. “Tax” here includes many kinds of taxes and related penalties and interest, except penalties caused by the Custodian’s own wrongful acts. Any tax exemptions the Custodian already has still apply.
Full Legal Text
War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
50 U.S.C. § 4333
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73