DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 30045, 32987.
Citation Numbers: 13 B.T.A. 758, 1928 BTA LEXIS 3191
Judges: Lansdon, Milliiien, Agree
Filed Date: 10/3/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*3191 A contingency reserve for anticipated excessive mortality losses and possible losses in reserves invested, which was maintained by petitioner in addition to a reserve of the net value of outstanding policies is not a reserve required by law within the meaning of section 245(a)(2) of the Revenue Act of 1921.
*758 The respondent has determined deficiencies in income taxes for the years 1923 and 1924 in the respective amounts of $2,219.56 and $3,295.74. Only parts of the deficiencies are in controversy. The petitioner alleges error on the part of the respondent in the following respects:
(1) Disallowance in computing net income under section 245(a)(2) of the Revenue Act of 1921 of petitioner's claim to have included as a reserve required by law a fund maintained during each of the years to provide against anticipated excessive mortality losses and possible losses in reserves invested;
(2) Disallowance in computing net income for the year 1924 of petitioner's claim to have included as a reserve required by law a fund maintained*3192 to meet the surrender value of outstanding accident policies;
(3) Disallowance of a deduction for real estate expenses;
(4) Disallowance of a loss sustained through foreclosure on real estate; and
(5) Disallowance of deduction for taxes paid by petitioner on real estate owned by it.
At the hearing petitioner expressly abandoned the last three allegations of error, leaving for determination the question of the proper deductions from gross income on account of reserves. The proceedings were consolidated for hearing and decision.
*759 FINDINGS OF FACT.
The petitioner is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Nebraska, with its principal place of business at Lincoln. During the taxable years it was a stock, legal reserve, life insurance company, writing life, health and accident insurance. Its capital and reserves were invested in United States bonds, State and municipal bonds, and farm mortgages, as required by the laws of the State of Nebraska and other States in which petitioner operates.
Petitioner's annual statements disclose that a "mortality fluctuation fund" was set up as a reserve in addition to a reserve of the net value of its outstanding*3193 policies in the following amounts, $70,000 for 1921, $100,000 for 1922, $118,000 for 1923, and $125,000 for 1924. In 1921 when this fund was first established the petitioner had a large part of its reserve funds invested in farm mortgages. Farm values had greatly depreciated, with the result that many of the farm mortgages held by petitioner were represented by farm values much less than when the investment had been made. Also, petitioner anticipated increased mortality losses as a result of the influenza epidemic.
In 1925 the Insurance Commissioner of Nebraska charged off $60,109.88 of petitioner's "mortality fluctuation fund" to replace losses in investments of its reserves and to compensate for the decrease in value of certain real estate on which petitioner had loaned a part of its reserves.
The parties have stipulated that for the year 1924 there should be added to the reserves allowed by the respondent the sum of $22,837.30, which is an additional reserve maintained for the surrender value of accident policies issued by petitioner.
OPINION.
LANSDON: Section 245(a)(1) and (2) of the Revenue Act of 1921 provides:
That in the case of a life insurance company the*3194 term "net income" means the gross income less -
(1) The amount of interest received during the taxable year which under paragraph (4) of subdivision (b) of section 213 is exempt from taxation under this title;
(2) An amount equal to the excess, if any, over the deduction specified in paragraph (1) of this subdivision, of 4 per centum of the mean of the reserve funds required by law and held at the beginning and end of the taxable year, plus (in case of life insurance companies issuing policies covering life, health, and accident insurance combined in one policy issued on the weekly premium payment plan, continuing for life and not subject to cancellation) 4 per centum of the mean of such reserve funds (not required by law) held at the beginning and end of the taxable year, as the Commissioner finds to be necessary for the protection of the holders of such policies only.
*760 The only issue remaining to be determined in this proceeding is whether the contingency reserve maintained by petitioner was a reserve required by law within the meaning of the above quoted section.
Sections 7745, 7746, 7748 and 7749 of the Compiled Statutes of Nebraska (1922) grant to the Department*3195 of Trade and Commerce, of which the insurance department is a division, general supervisory powers over insurance companies. Sections 7744, 7830, and 7858, pertaining to life insurance companies and the maintenance of reserves, provide in part as follows:
§ 7744.
§ 7830.
§ 7858.
Pursuant to section 7858, above quoted, petitioner has set up on its annual statements, in addition to its regular reserve, a "mortality fluctuation fund" in an amount equal to 10 per cent of the net value of its policies. It contends that this is a reserve required by the State of Nebraska inasmuch as the Insurance Commissioner orally directed*3197 that it be maintained. The testimony in support of the allegation that the fund was maintained at the direction of the Insurance Commissioner is not impressive, but admitting that fact, we are of the opinion that it is still not a reserve required by law, within the meaning of the Revenue Act. Section 7858 permits additional reserves with the object of protecting the citizens of Nebraska against loss through insolvency of insurance companies. Abundant caution is exercised to maintain insurance companies in *761 a strong financial position. The Revenue Act on the other hand considers reserves in computing the taxable income of the insurance companies and is not primarily concerned with the solvency of the company.
"Reserve funds" as used in the Act has a technical meaning which includes those funds reserved to meet the policy obligations at maturity. The calculation of the reserve is a distinctly actuarial function and being the amount theoretically necessary for reinsuring the risks, is sometimes termed "reinsurance fund" or "reinsurance reserve." As applied to a policy the term means "value" or "valuation"; that part of the assets of the company which, according to*3198 a specified table of mortality, must be set apart to meet or mature the company's obligation to insured. New Standard Dictionary, "Reserve"; Bouvier's Law Dictionary, "Reserve"; ; ; .
Insurance writers define the legal or required reserve as follows:
Riegel and Lowman (Prentice-Hall). Insurance Principles and Practices, p. 97:
CALCULATION OF THE RESERVE. - * * * It is necessary to assume a mortality table and an expected rate of interest, the American Experience Table of Mortality is the one generally employed and three and one-half per cent is the usual interest rate assumption. Taking these as the bases of calculation, the present value of all future death claims is estimated and there is deducted the present value of all future premium payments. * * * And possibly here is the best point at which to give a definition of the
Richards - Insurance, p. 20:
Reserve is that portion of the premiums of a policy with interest thereon which is required to be set aside as a fund for the payment of the policy when it becomes due.
See also Biddle - Insurance, § 66; Huebner - Principles of Life Insurance.
"Reserve" is defined in , which was an action by the beneficiary to recover the face value of a policy on which premiums had been paid for four years, the fifth annual payment being in default. The question presented was whether the reserve less any indebtedness due the company was sufficient to provide paid-up insurance to a date beyond that of the insured's death. At page 783 the court stated:
[4] The net value of a policy is provided for by section 653, Kentucky Statutes, and is but another name for "reserve", and means that part of the annual premiums paid by the insured which, according to the American Experience Table of Mortality, must be set apart to meet or mature the company's obligations to the insured. This net value, or reserve, can always be *762 determined with mathematical precision; *3200 and, among those at all familiar with insurance and the technique of that business there is no dispute as to how the net value of a policy is determined. The net value of a policy on any given date is its actual value on that date, its reserve. Hence, when the isured failed to pay his premium on December 17, 1907, under the terms of his contract, he was entitled to extended insurance for such time as the reserve, or net value of the policy, would have carried $2,500, when applied as a single premium, according to the company's published tables. * * *
The decision of the Supreme Court in , is based upon a similar conception of "reserve funds":
4. A number of policyholders died during the calendar year, but their deaths were not reported before it terminated. The Superintendent of Insurance required the Company to set aside a special fund to meet these unreported losses, and it claimed that this was an addition to the reserve fund required by law. We think this claim was properly rejected by the Commissioner, although the courts below held otherwise. *3201 , and , pointed out that "the net addition, if any, required by law to be made within the year to reserve funds", does not necessarily include whatever a state official may so designate; that "reserve funds" has a technical meaning. It is unnecessary now to amplify what was there said. The item under consideration represented a liability and not something reserved from premiums to meet policy obligations at maturity.
, is a case in which an action was brought to recover taxes for the years 1910 and 1911 on the ground that there should have been deducted from gross income certain amounts held as a reserve against accrued but unpaid losses.
The Insurance Commissioner of the State of Pennsylvania had required plaintiff and similar companies to return each year as an item among their liabilities the net amount of unpaid losses and claims. The following discussion of the court is particularly applicable in the instant case:
The act of Congress, on*3202 the other hand, deals with reserves not particularly in their bearing upon the solvency of the company, but as they aid in determining what part of the gross income ought to be treated as net income for purposes of taxation. There is a specific provision for deducting "all losses actually sustained within the year and not compensated by insurance or otherwise." And this is a sufficient indication that losses in immediate contemplation, but not as yet actually sustained, were not intended to be treated as part of the reserve funds; that term rather having reference to the funds ordinarily held as against the contingent liability on outstanding policies.
In , the Supreme Court held that "reserve funds" so denominated by a state statute or officer do not necessarily constitute "reserves required by law." The court overruled in part , where it had been held that a fund denominated "loss claims reserve" maintained pursuant to the requirements of the Insurance Department of Pennsylvania constituted a reserve required by law, *3203 stating at page 203:
Upon a re-examination of the record it becomes plain that we misapprehended the opinion and ruling of the lower court; also that the reason advanced to support our conclusion is insufficient. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue had refused to allow the deduction claimed because of addition to the reserve for unpaid loss claims (except liability claims - the net addition to which reserve was allowed). The Court of Claims, in a perplexing opinion, approved the Commissioner's action. The finding that the Insurance Department of Pennsylvania, pursuant to statute, had at all times since and including 1909 required claimant to keep on hand, as a condition of doing business in the state, "assets as reserves sufficient to cover outstanding losses", without more, was not sufficient to justify the deduction of the reserve as one required by law to be maintained, within the meaning of the Act of Congress. This had been announced by
The fund herein involved was maintained to provide against possible losses in reserves invested and anticipated excessive mortality losses due to the influenza epidemic. That the losses anticipated would*3204 result was speculative. Future liability on outstanding policies, on the other hand, is relatively certain and it is this liability for which a reserve is required. The "legal" or "required" reserve is computed by the use of a mortality table, usually the American experience Table of Mortality, which is based on experience over a long period of years and which contemplates application over a long period of years. This table thus takes into account periodical epidemics of the past and thereby makes an allowance for such epidemics in the future. The record does not establish that the reserve of the net value of outstanding policies was insufficient to meet the increased death rate caused by the influenza epidemic. The anticipation of loss in reserves invested resulted from a shrinkage in farm values on which loans had been made at 50 per cent of the actual value. During the years herein involved no loss was actually sustained.
We are of the opinion that petitioner's "mortality fluctuation fund" is not a reserve required by law within the meaning of section 245(a)(2) of the Revenue Act of 1921.
Pursuant to the stipulation entered into by the parties, there should be added*3205 to the reserves allowed by the respondent for the year 1924 the sum of $22,837.30, which was an additional reserve maintained for the surrender value of accident policies issued by petitioner.
Reviewed by the Board.
SMITH, MILLIKEN, and VAN FOSSAN agree with the result.