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Ets-Hokin & Galvan, Inc. (formerly Ets-Hokin & Galvan) v. Commissioner.Ets-Hokin & Galvan, Inc. v. CommissionerDocket No. 89382.
United States Tax Court T.C. Memo 1962-136; 1962 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 173; 21 T.C.M. (CCH) 717; T.C.M. (RIA) 62136;June 1, 1962 Samuel Taylor, Esq., 1308 Balfour Bldg., San Francisco, Calif., Robert M. Winokur, Esq., Jesse Feldman, Esq., and Warren Wertheimer, Esq., for the petitioner. John O. Hargrove, Esq., for the respondent.OPPERMemorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
OPPER, Judge: Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's income tax as follows:
As a result of agreements by the parties, the only issue remaining for our consideration is whether*175 respondent properly determined that certain payments made by petitioner pursuant to a profit-sharing plan were not deductible in either the amount or year claimed.Year Deficiency 1955 $44,805.53 1956 24,193.55 1957 27,963.77 Findings of Fact
Some of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulations, including the facts appearing in the stipulated exhibits, are hereby found.
Petitioner is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of California with its principal office at San Francisco, California. Petitioner was incorporated in 1946 and filed its corporation income tax returns for the calendar years 1955 through 1957 with the district director of internal revenue in San Francisco, California. At all times material hereto petitioner kept its books and filed its tax returns on an accrual method and on the basis of a calendar year.
Petitioner and a predecessor partnership have been engaged continuously since 1920 in the electrical contracting business. Since 1925, the business has been operated through branches, which were, during the years here in issue, located in San Francisco, Monterey, Stockton, Wilmington, and San Diego. In addition, petitioner had branches in Oakland and San Mateo in 1955 and 1956, which were*176 subsequently merged into the San Francisco branch.
The profits [or losses] of petitioner's operations from 1949 through 1958 were as follows:
San Wilming- Year Francisco Stockton Monterey ton 1949 $14,261 $ 1,369 $ 8,684 [$ 30,663] 1950 45,399 11,893 8,941 14,357 1951 59,562 18,705 9,467 42,559 1952 5,145 41,127 19,836 3,960 1953 [37,842] 12,130 22,997 64,257 1954 14,657 7,879 25,374 87,787 1955 88,375 [21,401] 47,531 98,427 1956 43,714 5,668 46,594 163,347 1957 [38,819] 42,254 51,342 63,762 1958 [9,243] 26,398 51,398 116,978 Newport Year Beach San Diego Oakland Over-all 1949 [$ 40,835] [$ 35,654] [$ 13,979] [$ 96,817] 1950 Discontinued 31,269 5,622 106,237 1951 54,094 9,491 193,879 1952 81,031 14,123 165,223 1953 San Mateo 83,586 [19,905] 125,221 1954 $ 14,809 46,360 827 197,691 1955 [623] 98,057 [33,098] 277,268 1956 [101,847] 135,072 [22,137] 270,410 1957 Discontinued 285,093 Discontinued 403,631 1958 390,981 576,511 Although subject to supervision, branches were autonomous, acting*177 on their own responsibility in substantially all business activities. Each branch maintained a separate set of books and the results of their operations appeared separately in petitioner's annual reports.
Petitioner employed a manager or managers to supervise the operation of each of its branches. The managers were selected by petitioner's president and were subject to removal by him. Petitioner's corporate officers negotiated financing for the entire company. The branch managers, each having been made a vice president, had authority to sign contracts for petitioner. Since 1925, when petitioner's predecessor first operated through branches, branch managers and certain other key employees of each branch received bonuses based upon the profits, if any, of the branch in which they worked without regard to losses, if any, in other branches. These bonuses were a matter of individual negotiation between the employee and the petitioner.
During the taxable years, petitioner had four officers who exercised supervision over the entire company (hereinafter called corporate officers). They were: Louis Ets-Hokin, president; M. H. Lichtman, secretary-treasurer; Jeremy Ets-Hokin, vice president; *178 R. S. Lauter, vice president and general counsel. Louis Ets-Hokin, petitioner's president, was in voting control of petitioner at all times material hereto. R. S. Lauter and Jeremy Ets-Hokin are related to Louis Ets-Hokin. Salaries of the corporate officers were charged ratably among petitioner's branches according to the relative sales of each. The corporate officers also received bonuses based upon the over-all profits of petitioner. These bonus arrangements were also a matter of negotiated contract between the corporate officer and petitioner and were charged ratably among petitioner's profitable branches according to their relative profits.
At all times material hereto petitioner paid all branch managers and some estimators and superintendents basic salaries and bonuses based upon profits, if any, of the branch in which they worked. Salesmen received additional compensation in the event commissions exceeded salaries. In addition, at the discretion of branch managers, bonuses were paid at Christmas to other employees of the branches which had a profit for the year in amounts not exceeding a few hundred dollars each. Except for these discretionary bonuses, other employees of profit*179 branches received no bonuses during the years 1955 through 1957.
On December 29, 1955, petitioner duly adopted and executed a profit-sharing plan (hereinafter called the plan) to cover its salaried and clerical employees and a trust (hereinafter called the trust) to receive and manage petitioner's contributions (hereinafter called employer contributions) which were called for under the terms of the plan. The plan provided, in pertinent part, as follows:
ETS-HOKIN & GALVAN PROFIT SHARING PLAN
ARTICLE I DEFINITIONS
* * *
(e) The word "employer" shall mean [petitioner] * * *
(f) The words "Board of Directors" shall mean the Board of Directors of petitioner].
* * *
ARTICLE II ELIGIBILITY
A. To be eligible to participate as a member * * *
(2) The employee must be employed as a regular full time employee.
(3) The employee must be a salaried or clerical employee.
(4) The employee must have completed five or more years of continuous employment.
(5) The employee must have reached the age of twenty-five (25) years.
(6) Upon notification of eligibility by the company, the employee must make and file an application with the trustees to become a member.
*180 B. For the purpose of determining the length of service * * *
(2) Six months or more in any one annual period shall be considered as one year
* * *
ARTICLE III
EMPLOYER'S CONTRIBUTION A.
* * *
(3) In order to maintain and encourage the branch system of doing business established for many years by the employer, the employer's contribution will be computed separately for each branch; and the amount determined for each branch shall be contributed for the exclusive benefit of those members whose total compensation has been included in whole or in part in the expenses of that branch.
(4) For those branches whose sales for the five (5) preceding taxable years have averaged under one million dollars ($1,000,000), the employer shall contribute:
(a) A sum equal to five per cent (5%) of the total compensation paid to all the members of that branch, providing the profits of that branch exceed fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and are not over sixteen thousand dollars ($16,000).
[Clauses (b) through (k) provide for graduated employer contributions in the event of increased branch profits, up to 15 per cent when branch profits exceed $25,000.]
(5) For those branches*181 whose sales for the five (5) preceding taxable years have averaged over one million dollars ($1,000,000), the employer shall contribute:
(a) A sum equal to five per cent (5%) of the total compensation paid to all the members of that branch, provided the profits of that branch exceed thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and are not over thirty-two thousand dollars ($32,000).
[Clauses (b) through (k) provide for graduated employer contributions in the event of increased branch profits, up to 15 per cent when branch profits exceed $50,000.]
ARTICLE V
CREDITING OF [EMPLOYER'S] CONTRIBUTIONS
* * *
E. * * * The account of each member who shall be employed by [a] branch or branches for which a contribution has been made shall have his account credited with a proportionate amount of such contribution equal to the proportion that his total compensation paid for that branch for such year bears to the total compensation of all members of the branch of the employer by which said employee is employed for such year.
* * *
ARTICLE VI
VESTING
* * *
B. If a member's employment is terminated for any reason whatsoever prior to the completion of ten continuous years of*182 employment, the following rules shall apply:
(1) If the member should voluntarily leave the employment of the company for any reasons other than death, retirement or disability, he shall forfeit the full amount credited to his account.
* * *
C. If member's employment is terminated for any reason whatsoever after the completion of ten continuous years of employment, the following rules shall apply: * * *
(2) If a member's employment is terminated by his death, disability, retirement or discharge by the company * * *, the member shall be entitled to one hundred per cent (100%) of the amount credited to his account.
(3) If a member should voluntarily leave the employment of the company * * *, he shall receive 100% of the amount credited to his account.
* * *
H. For the purpose of determining * * * the credits to the accounts of the remaining members resulting from a forfeiture under this agreement
* * *
(4) The trustees shall divide the amount deemed forfeited by the departing employee among the remaining members of the branch in which the employee was last employed during his employment in the proportion that each member's total credits * * * bear to the*183 total credit of all members of that branch
* * *
Payments from the trust were to be made to appropriate employees "[upon] retirement, death or disability or termination of employment" except as otherwise provided in the plan.
Petitioner did not seek a letter of approval from respondent as to the plan, choosing instead to deduct its employer contributions in the appropriate years and include the details of the plan in its 1955 income tax return.
Other than the plan, peetitioner had no pension, stock bonus, profit-sharing, or annuity arrangement covering its salaried or clerical employees during the years here involved.
The following is a schedule of employee coverage and participation as to the plan in operation as it applied to (1) officers, stockholders, supervisory employees, and employees receiving total compensation in excess of $10,000 per annum (hereinafter called the prohibited group) and (2) petitioner's other salaried or clerical employees (hereinafter alternatively called the nonprohibited group or others).
*184Number of Employees Eli- Receiving gible to employer Covered partici- con- by plan pate tributions 1955 Total 93 34 28 Prohibited group 22 17 16 Others 71 17 12 1956 Total 100 39 31 Prohibited group 21 18 15 Others 79 21 16 1957 Total 98 41 27 Prohibited group 21 19 15 Others 77 22 12 Of those employees receiving employer contributions, 16 of 28 in 1955, 18 of 31 in 1956, and 14 of 27 in 1957 were from among the lowest-paid two-thirds of petitioner's eligible employees.
During 1955 through 1957, petitioner's eligible employees received the following compensation (salary plus bonus) and employer contributions:
1955 1956 1957 Corporate Officers Salary $ 67,320 $ 67,673 $ 65,180 Bonus 32,938 31,267 54,508 Employer contribution 13,914 12,343 15,733 Employer contribution as a percent of total compensation 13.9% 12.5% 13.2% Prohibited Group Other than Corporate Officers Salary $ 88,707 $106,297 $128,933 Bonus 163,298 188,747 298,809 Employer contribution 36,658 41,205 58,027 Employer contribution as a percent of total compensation 14.5% 14.0% 13.6% Others Salary $ 96,300 $122,150 $134,615 Bonus 6,938 1,445 300 Employer contribution 10,353 14,075 9,948 Employer contribution as a percent of total compensation 10.0% 11.4% 7.4% Allocation of contributions under petitioner's profit-sharing*185 plan within a branch was made ratably according to the total proportionate compensation of the employee. In every such instance, where a contribution was made it amounted to the maximum 15 percent of compensation.
The eligible corporate officers received, as their contribution under the plan, an aliquot part of the employer contribution to the employees of each profitable branch based upon that portion of the total compensation of those officers, both salary and bonus, which had been allocated to that branch. The corporate officers received no contribution for that part of their compensation allocated to nonprofitable branches.
In the years 1955 to 1957, inclusive, the following percentages of the number of petitioner's salaried or clerical employees had accounts in the trust which were nonforfeitable (i.e., vested):
During the years here in issue there were no forfeitures of past employer contributions under the plan. All participants whose employment terminated were paid the full amounts allocated to their respective accounts under the trust.Year Prohibited Group Others 1955 76.5% 41.2% 1956 88.9% 33.3% 1957 89.5% 54.5% Petitioner's branches*186 were located near naval bases and many of petitioner's employees in the category covered by the plan were wives of naval personnel and terminated their employment when their husbands were transferred to other naval bases. The following table summarizes the turnover of the 219 covered employees hired by petitioner during the years 1950 through 1954:
Calendar year of termination Number in relation termi- Number Percent to calendar nating remaining remaining year of during at end of at end of hiring period period period Year of hiring 103 116 53 % First year 60 56 25.6% Second year 14 42 19.2% Third year 6 36 16.4% Fourth year 10 26 11.9% Fifth year 10 16 7.3% Total termi- nating 203 On or about June 17, 1959, petitioner adopted a document entitled "Proposed Amendments to the Trust Agreement and Profit-Sharing Plan of Ets-Hokin & Galvan" and on March 15, 1960, petitioner adopted an "Amended Profit-Sharing Plan." These amendments made, among others, the following changes in the plan:
ETS-HOKIN & GALVAN, INC. AMENDED PROFIT-SHARING PLAN
(Effective January 1, 1959)
* * *
5. * * *
* * *
(c) Subparagraph*187 (3), of Paragraph A. of Article III of [the plan] is hereby amended to read as follows:
"(3) In order to establish the employer's contribution on the basis of its branch system of doing business, the amount of the employer's contribution shall be the aggregate of the amounts determined for each branch separately in accordance with the formula set forth in the following subparagraphs (4) and (5), based upon the separate profits of each branch, and the total compensation of members whose compensation has been included in whole or in part of the expenses of that branch; * * *"
* * *
(f) Paragraph E. of Article V of [the plan] is hereby amended to read as follows:
"E. * * * [The] trustees shall allocate * * * the employer's contribution for the taxable year among the accounts of members who are eligible * * * in proportion to their total compensation for the year."
In addition:
(a) Eligibility for participation was reduced from 5 years to 3 years of continuous service.
(b) Employees with less than 10 years of service who left the company voluntarily were to receive a proportionate amount of their profit-sharing account. This amount was 12 1/2 percent for each year*188 of continuous service starting with the third year and running through the ninth year.
(c) The 25-year age limit on eligibility was removed.
(d) Forfeitures were to be added to the annual employer contribution.
Although these amendments did not reduce petitioner's efficiency or profits, objections were raised by some employees of profitable branches that they were being required to carry other nonprofitable branches.
During the years here in issue, and pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, petitioner made contributions equal to 1 percent of its electrical worker payroll to the National Electrical Benefit Fund (hereinafter called the Fund), a qualified pension plan which covered petitioner's electrical workers. The electrical workers did not have individual shares in this fund.
Petitioner could not have included the electricians in the plan in addition to maintaining the payments it made to the Fund and have retained its competitive business position.
The total number of petitioner's employees as of the dates specified was as follows:
1955 1956 1957 March 15 437 531 515 June 15 439 593 514 September 15 505 495 490 December 15 511 572 465 *189 The total number of electricians employed by petitioner, as of the dates specified, for whom petitioner made contributions to the Fund was as follows:
1955 1956 1957 March 15 333 411 395 June 15 325 475 380 September 15 380 384 368 December 15 391 458 322 The number of salaried and clerical employees of petitioner, as of the dates specified, for whom petitioner made contributions to the trust was as follows:
1955 1956 1957 March 15 28 31 27 June 15 28 31 27 September 15 28 31 27 December 15 28 31 27 The percentages of petitioner's total employees, as of the dates specified, for whom contributions were made either to the Fund or to the plan were as follows:
1955 1956 1957 March 15 83% 83% 82% June 15 80% 85% 79% September 15 81% 84% 81% December 15 82% 85% 75% The Fund and the plan, when considered together, covered substantially all of petitioner's employees.
Petitioner made contributions to the trust as follows:
*190 All amounts deducted were actually paid not later than the time prescribed by law for filing the income tax return in which petitioner took the deduction.Year of Year of operation for which actual contribution made payment 1955 1956 1957 1955 $ 100.00 1956 60,824.76 1957 $63,036.95 1957 $29,028.99 1958 52,316.22 Amounts de- ducted by petitioner $60,924.76 $63,036.95 $81,345.21 Respondent determined that, of the amounts actually paid, $50,192.92 for 1956 and $57,330.50 for 1957 were nonforfeitable (i.e., vested) and allowed those amounts as deductions on petitioner's 1956 and 1957 returns, respectively. He disallowed the remaining amounts of $60,924.76, $12,844.03, and $24,014.71 for the years 1955, 1956, and 1957, respectively.
Opinion
Petitioner initiated a profit-sharing plan for its salaried and clerical employees and made contributions pursuant thereto for the years 1955 through 1957. Petitioner deducted the full amount of its contributions, and claims to be entitled to do so under section 404(a) of the 1954 Code. *191 The sections referred to are subject to the limitations of section 401, providing that:
SEC. 401. QUALIFIED PENSION, PROFIT-SHARING, AND STOCK BONUS PLANS
(a) Requirements for Qualification. - A trust * * * forming part of a * * * profit-sharing plan of an employer for the exclusive benefit of his employees or their beneficiaries shall constitute a qualified trust under this section -
* * *
(3) if the trust * * * [is] designated by the employer as constituting * * * [part] of a plan intended to qualify under this subsection which benefits either -
(A) 70 percent or more of all the employees, or 80 percent or more of all the employees who are eligible to benefit under the plan if 70 percent or more of all the employees are eligible to benefit under the plan, excluding in each case employees who have been employed not more than a minimum period prescribed by the plan, not exceeding 5 years, employees whose customary employment is for not more than 20 hours in any one week, and employees whose customary employment is for not more than 5 months in any calendar year, or
(B) such employees as qualify under a classification set up by the employer and found by the Secretary*192 or his delegate not to be discriminatory in favor of employees who are officers, shareholders, persons whose principal duties consist in supervising the work of other employees, or highly compensated employees [hereinafter, for brevity, referred to as the prohibited group]; and
(4) if the contributions or benefits provided under the plan do not discriminate in favor of employees who are * * * [the prohibited group].
The main thrust of respondent's contention that petitioner's profit-sharing plan does not qualify under the statute is that it is, in fact, and in operation, discriminatory in favor of petitioner's officers, stockholders, and supervisory and highly salaried employees. *193 This in turn requires us to determine whether petitioner was effectively forbidden to institute a profit-sharing plan which would conform with the statute, and at the same time continue the principal organizational structure of its traditional business operation. We think it would be unfortunate to conclude, unless the statute clearly compels it, that a long-established business custom must be abandoned in order to qualify a profit-sharing plan for the employees of that business, where, as here, the plan contains no prohibited discrimination within any separate branch. *194 and, conversely, many of the minor employees remained with petitioner for too short a time to come within reach of bonus status because, as our findings show, they had family obligations requiring them to leave. And, second, petitioner's business was operated under a branch organization which called for bonuses and employer contributions to be paid only to employees of profitable branches. It is this interplay of salary and bonus together with preferential treatment of profitable branches, *195 as being unreasonable. See
H.S.D. Co. v. Kavanagh, 191 F. 2d 831 (C.A. 6, 1951). The important fact is that, once the compensation is computed, contributions based upon it are a constant percent and thus do not discriminate.Ryan School Retirement Trust, 24 T.C. 127">24 T.C. 127 (1955);Volckening, Inc., 13 T.C. 723">13 T.C. 723 (1949).Determination of benefits according to a fixed percentage of wages should not be considered discriminatory even though it results in larger benefits to highly paid employees. * * *
H. Rept. No. 2333, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 51 (1942),
2 C.B. 372">1942-2 C.B. 372 , 413.The method of computing employer contributions for the corporate officers necessarily was distinct from that applying to employees whose work applied to only one branch. This is the consequence of petitioner's method of doing business, which attributed comprehensive company salaries proportionally to profitable and nonprofitable branches. But the officers' salaries attributable to nonprofitable branches did not form the base for employee contributions. And variation itself is not material, it must be discriminatory. *196 received employer contributions on their bonuses, as did all employees receiving them. And only that part of their salary which was allocated to profitable branches formed the base for employer contributions, a procedure which applied equally in operation and percentage to all other employees. In fact, the bonuses paid to petitioner's corporate officers were in a sense less favorable than the branch bonuses, since they were subject to deduction for any loss branches and only the net bonus was then used as the base for employer contributions.
Although the overriding aspect of discrimination may, as we interpret the legislative intent, fail to disqualify petitioner's plan, it is, of course, still subject to disqualification if it fails to conform to the specific requirements of the statute. Respondent's objections to the plan under consideration, in addition to his primary contention that it has resulted in*197 discriminatory employer contributions, also includes the contention that in two respects the plan violates the statutory requirements pertaining to general employee coverage.
Section 401(a)(3) and the regulations *198 In concluding that the plan contains the prohibited discrimination in coverage, respondent relies principally upon the 5-year eligibility requirement, pointing to the fact that only 17 of 71, 21 of 79, and 22 of 77 nonprohibited group employees were eligible for the years 1955, 1956, and 1957, respectively, as compared with 17 of 22, 18 of 21, and 19 of 21 for the prohibited group in the same years.
In testing the reasonableness of delayed eligibility requirements, we must consider "[all] of the surrounding and attendant circumstances" (
Sec. 1.401-1(b)(3), Income Tax Regs. ), including the rate of turnover among petitioner's salaried and clerical employees.Ryan School Retirement Trust, supra. Respondent had acknowledged that "a service requirement for eligibility long enough to exclude temporary employees may be satisfactory." PS No. 22, Sept. 2, 1944. Here, through circumstances largely beyond petitioner's control, *199 occur when short-term employees left, combine to justify a comparatively long eligibility requirement. Section 401(a)(3)(A), although not applicable here, specifically provides for delayed eligibility, not exceeding 5 years. There is hence persuasive evidence of a congressional recognition of the propriety of such a delay in the proper circumstances.Ryan School Retirement Trust, supra, 24 T.C. at 134 .*200 The remaining element to be considered as to coverage is whether the 10-year vesting period with its accompanying allocation of possible forfeitures constitutes the discrimination contemplated in section 401(a)(3)(B). While "[vesting] is not a requisite for qualification of a stock bonus, pension, or profit-sharing plan, * * * forfeitures resulting from a lack of vesting may effect discrimination * * *." PS No. 22, supra. A delayed vesting provision such as the one before us is not, however, inherently discriminatory. One similar to it was approved in the case of
Ryan School Retirement Trust, supra. Rev. Rul. 57-163, 1 C.B. 128">1957-1 C.B. 128 , 146, provides for "fully vested rights after a reasonable waiting period." In testing what is "reasonable," "[the] law is concerned not only with the form of a plan but also with its effects in operation."Sec. 1.401-1(b)(3) , Income Tax Regs. Cf.Time Oil Co., 26 T.C. 1061">26 T.C. 1061 (1956), remanded other grounds258 F. 2d 237 (C.A. 9, 1958). But in actual operation there have been no forfeitures.Petitioner's profit-sharing plan does not contain the discrimination in favor*201 of petitioner's officers, shareholders, supervisory employees, or highly compensated employees prohibited by the statute and thus constitutes a qualified profit-sharing plan.
The conclusion at which we have arrived makes it unnecessary to consider petitioner's alternate contentions that the union plan for petitioner's electrician employees can be combined with petitioner's clerical employee plan to qualify the whole under section 404(a)(3)(A); or that "integration" of social security benefits not contributed to by, but available to, all petitioner's employees demonstrates by itself lack of discrimination.
Sec. 1.401-3(e)(1), Income Tax Regs. To take account of an agreement between the parties,
Decision will be entered under Rule 50.
Footnotes
*. Does not include employees whose employment terminated prior to their becoming members of the plan.↩
1. SEC. 404. DEDUCTION FOR CONTRIBUTIONS OF AN EMPLOYER TO AN EMPLOYEES' TRUST OR ANNUITY PLAN AND COMPENSATION UNDER A DEFERRED-PAYMENT PLAN.
(a) General Rule. - If contributions are paid by an employer to or under a stock bonus, pension, profit-sharing, or annuity plan, or if compensation is paid or accrued on account of any employee under a plan deferring the receipt of such compensation, such contributions or compensation shall not be deductible under section 162 (relating to trade or business expenses) or section 212 (relating to expenses for the production of income) but if they satisfy the conditions of either of such sections, they shall be deductible under this section, subject, however, to the following limitations as to the amounts deductible in any year: ↩
2. SEC. 404. DEDUCTION FOR CONTRIBUTIONS OF AN EMPLOYER TO AN EMPLOYEES' TRUST OR ANNUITY PLAN AND COMPENSATION UNDER A DEFERREDPAYMENT PLAN.
(a) General Rule.
* * *
(3) Stock Bonus and Profit-Sharing Trusts. -
(A) Limits on Deductible Contributions. - In the taxable year when paid, if the contributions are paid into a stock bonus or profit-sharing trust, and if such taxable year ends within or with a taxable year of the trust with respect to which the trust is exempt under section 501(a), in an amount not in excess of 15 percent of the compensation otherwise paid or accrued during the taxable year to all employees under the stock bonus or profit-sharing plan.
* * *
(5) Other Plans. - In the taxable year when paid, if the plan is not one included in paragraph (1), (2), or (3), if the employees' rights to or derived from such employer's contribution or such compensation are nonforfeitable at the time the contribution or compensation is paid.↩
3. "[Section] 401(a)(5) specifies certain provisions which of themselves are not discriminatory. However, this does not mean that a plan containing these provisions may not be discriminatory in actual operation."
Sec. 1.401-1(b)(3), Income Tax Regs.↩ 4. Even respondent's agent was of the opinion that, within any branch, the plan was not discriminatory.
"Q. Mr. Gasparre, did you consider that there was any discrimination in favor of * * * [the prohibited group] within any particular branch?
"A. * * * Only as to eligibility and the vesting provisions stated in the plan."↩
5. Computation of employer contributions according to the branch organization seems to be authorized by
sec. 1.401-3(d)↩ . Income Tax Regs., permitting qualification of plans limited to employees "who are employed in certain designated departments."6. "Variations in contributions * * * may be provided so long as the plan, viewed as a whole * * *, with all its attendant circumstances, does not discriminate in favor of * * * [the prohibited group]."
Sec. 1.401-4(a)(2)(iii), Income Tax Regs.↩ 7. "If a plan fails to qualify under the percentage requirements of section 401(a)(3)(A), it may still qualify under section 401(a)(3)(B) provided always that (as required by section 401(a)(3) and (4)) the plan's eligibility conditions, benefits, and contributions do not discriminate in favor of * * * [the prohibited group]."
Sec. 1.401-3(b), Income Tax Regs.↩ 8. See
Estate of Harris Fahnestock, 2 T.C. 756">2 T.C. 756↩ (1943).9. SEC. 401. QUALIFIED PENSION, PROFITSHARING, AND STOCK BONUS PLANS.
(a) Requirements for Qualification. -
* * *
(5) A classification shall not be considered discriminatory within the meaning of paragraph(3)(B) or (4) merely because * * * it is limited to salaried or clerical employees. * * *↩
10. As our findings show, petitioner's branches were located near naval bases and many of petitioner's salaried and clerical employees were the wives of naval personnel who left when their husbands were transferred. ↩
11. Of 219 employees hired during the period 1950 through 1954, 36 were still employed after 3 years and only 16 remained for more than 5 years. ↩
12. The 5-year limitation in section 401(a)(3)(A) was referred to by the Senate Finance Committee as "excluding certain short service * * * employees." S. Rept. No. 1631, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 137 (1942),
2 C.B. 504">1942-2 C.B. 504↩ , 606.13. It is not clear that the full 5 years was a requirement of petitioner's program. Petitioner contends that eligibility really was 4 years or less although payment was not made unless the fifth year was completed. ↩
14. Even so, a vice president, an office manager, two managers, and an assistant manager of branches were excluded for all or a portion of the period.↩
Document Info
Docket Number: Docket No. 89382.
Citation Numbers: 21 T.C.M. 717, 1962 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 173, 1962 T.C. Memo. 136
Filed Date: 6/1/1962
Precedential Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020