DocketNumber: 8177
Judges: Hutcheson, Foster, Sibley, Hut-Cheson
Filed Date: 3/17/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/4/2024
This petition presents for review the adverse rulings of the Board in a proceed
(1) Whether personal property taxes paid by petitioner to the State of Texas during the years 1928, 1929, and 1930, respectively, under its laws, constituted deductible investment expenses within the meaning of section 203 (a) (5) of the Revenue Act of 1928 (26 U.S.C.A. § 203 and note).
(2) Whether petitioner realized interest income during the year 1928 in the amount of $27,364.26 on the foreclosure of a certain collateral loan No. 28 to one R. C. Toombs, or only $16,833.33.
(3) Whether the petitioner, which kept its books and made its returns on the cash receipts and disbursements basis for 1930, realized taxable income of $45,802.38 in that year within the meaning of section 203 (a) (2) of the Revenue Act of 1928 (26 U.S.C.A. § 203 note), on the receipt during the year 1930 of receiver’s certificates of the International Life Insurance Company in said amount.
(4) Whether petitioner, under the provision of section 203 (a) (2) of the Revenue Act of 1928, may include in its reserve funds required by law at the beginning of the tax year the reserve funds on policies of other insurance companies reinsured and acquired by purchase by petitioner after January first of the taxable year.
(5) If they may be, whether the allowance should be as of the beginning of the taxable year or as of the respective dates when the policies were reinsured or acquired.
The Personal Property Taxes.
Upon this question, these are the controlling facts: Petitioner is a life insurance' company, organized under the laws of the State of Texas. By the laws of that State, a domestic insurance company is required to pay taxes on its personal property. Under the statute the taxable value of its personal property is arrived' at by deducting from the total valuation of its assets, first the reserves and then the •assessed value of its real estate. Here this was arrived at by deducting the value of its assessed realty from its capital and surplus. Petitioner paid personal property taxes arrived at in that way as follows :
1928 ........................$66,565.54
1929 ..........:............. 62,894.21
1930 ........................ 94,178.47
During these years petitioner owned investments in an amount equal to its reserves, capital, and surplus. The point for decision is the narrow one, whether these taxes are deductible as investment expenses under section 203 (a) (5).
Respondent points out that deductions are matters of grace, and can be claimed and enjoyed only as granted, and that Congress has never authorized the deduction of taxes as expenses, but always as taxes. He insists that to impute to Congress in the face of that uniform practice an intent to allow tax deductions as investment expenses would be not to construe but to rewrite the statute. He enforces this posi
Interest Income for 1928.
This question presents little difficulty. In 1928 petitioner foreclosed upon, and sold, collateral pledged with it by Toombs, crediting the note with the full amount of the principal, and interest of $27,364.26. It returned this sum as interest collected in 1928, but contended before the Board that no part of it was received in that year. If nothing more appeared than this, clearly this interest item would be regarded as interest received and taxable in that year. Helvering v. Midland Mutual Life Insurance Co., 57 S.Ct. 423, 81 L.Ed. -, February 15, 1937. Petitioner, however, insists that though it credited that amount of interest on its bid, it because of court orders received interest only to the extent of $16,833.33. This contention is based on an order entered in July, 1930, in the receivership of International Life Insurance Company, whose stock it was that petitioner had held as collateral and sold, to the effect that interest on the loan should run only from January 23 to August 15, 1928. It insists that this order had the effect of actually reducing to that amount the interest petitioner claimed to have received. Respondent points out that whatever effect this order might have had on the taxing situation was nullified by another order entered in the same year directing issuance to petitioner of receiver’s certificates including an amount for interest of $27,364.26. We think it clear that taken as a whole the facts fully support the finding of the Commissioner and the conclusion of the Board.
$45,802.38 Interest Income for 1930.
This item of interest, like the one just preceding, arose in connection with the Toombs note and collateral. The precise question to be determined is whether by acceptance in 1930 of receiver’s interest-bearing certificates for $45,802.38 for accrued interest on the Toombs loan to thet date of the issuance of the certificates petitioner actually received that amount as interest. It contends that this amount was really not interest on the Toombs loan, but part of an amount arrived at in settlement and adjustment with the receiver of International of its claim upon 9,000 shares of stock in that company. Respondent,, insisting that petitioner accepted it as interest and returned it that way, points to-the calculation employed in arriving at the-amount of the certificates, and the fact that petitioner returned this sum as interest. He insists that the Board’s findings, are supported by his determination that this sum was collected as interest, and by the admissions of petitioner itself and that petitioner has failed to overthrow the conclusive effect of this determination and admission. We agree with respondent. We think it clear that the Board was right.
The Reserve Funds.
The contention pressed here is for a liberal, as opposed to a literal, construction of section 203 (a) (2), which reads, in part as follows: “(2) Reserve funds. An amount equal to the excess, if any, over the deduction specified in paragraph (1) of’ this subsection, 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.”
This construction is invoked because of the fact that after the beginning of the calendar year petitioner reinsured and acquired, by purchase agreements, all of the outstanding policies of three life insurance companies, one on March 5, 1929, one on. February 11, 1930, and one on March 12, 1930. In consideration of the assumption, agreement of the reinsurance contracts, the reinsured companies assigned to petitioner their interest in the premiums to be. paid on and their rights under the policies and contracts assumed, and reinsured, by petitioner, their interest in all policy - loans and premium notes, and also properties and securities equal in value to the-mean reserves on all of their outstanding-policy contracts in force at the time the reinsurance contracts took effect. Petitioner claims the right to treat these reserve • funds on hand on the first of the year with..
The decision of the Board was right. It is affirmed.
§ 203. (a) * * * (5). Investment expenses. Investment expenses paid during the taxable year: Provided, That if any general expenses are in part assigned to or included in the investment expenses, the total deduction under this paragraph shall not exceed one-fourtli of 1 per centum of the book value of the mean of the invested assets held at the beginning and end of the taxable year.
These include taxes as investment expenses along with cost of making, handling and protéeting investments, bad debts, losses, other accounts, and repairs on assets.