DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 657-64, 658-64
Judges: Tannenwald,Raum,Dawson,Hoyt,Simpson
Filed Date: 9/30/1966
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*35
Mutual Insurance Company Other Than Life -- Interest on Guaranty Fund Certificates --
*842 The Commissioner determined deficiencies in income tax as follows:
Year | Deficiency |
1957 | $ 6,192.54 |
1958 | 3,741.49 |
1959 | 4,555.51 |
1960 | 1,341.77 |
1961 | 5,617.21 |
1962 | 10,257.76 |
*36 The issue for decision is whether the Commissioner erred in disallowing for each year a deduction of $ 35,000 as interest paid on indebtedness within
FINDINGS OF FACT
The petitioner was incorporated under the laws of Rhode Island. It maintains its books and files its returns on a calendar year basis. Its returns for the years here involved were filed with the district director of internal revenue at Providence, R.I.
*843 The petitioner writes fire and other insurance, not including life, and has qualified to transact business as a mutual insurance company in 30 States of the United States and Puerto Rico.
It established and maintains a guaranty fund of $ 500,000 in order to qualify and do business in the various States and to write policies without contingent liability or contingent premium which would render its policyholders liable to assessment under its charter. Many mutual insurance companies maintain a similar fund.
Insurance authorities of the States require this kind of a fund to be designated as surplus on the insurer's annual statements. An insurance company, in order to do business in a State, must have surplus in regard to policyholders in an*37 amount related to the kind and amount of insurance to be written. It may be in the form of accumulated surplus or a guaranty fund. Losses to policyholders and expenses of the company are payable before payments on the guaranty fund.
The petitioner had issued and outstanding during the tax years, 500 guaranty fund certificates, each in the principal amount of $ 1,000. From 235 to 293 of those certificates were held during the tax years by owners who were neither policyholders nor directors of the petitioner. $ 35,000, or 7 percent, was paid as interest on the guaranty fund certificates in each tax year, was deducted on the return as interest under
The certificate holders and the policy owners each had the right to elect 6 of the 12 directors of the petitioner. All of the directors were policy owners during the tax years.
Interest of not more than 10 percent or less than 7 percent was payable on the certificates if sufficient net profits or unused or unabsorbed premiums were left after payment of expenses and losses and provision*38 for a reserve for reinsurances.
The guaranty fund could be used to pay losses if the corporation had exhausted its assets, including members' liability but exclusive of uncollected premiums.
The certificates had no fixed maturity date or retirement sinking fund. The company had the obligation to pay only the principal amount and the option to retire all outstanding certificates in whole at $ 1,000 each or in part at any time or from time to time, if it had a sufficient surplus remaining thereafter.
A certificate could be sold, assigned, or transferred under certain stated limiting circumstances and conditions.
All stipulated facts are incorporated herein by this reference.
*844 The payment of $ 35,000 in each tax year to the holders of the guaranty fund certificates were payments of interest and as such were deductible by the petitioner for Federal income tax purposes.
OPINION
This taxpayer, like at least 135 other mutual companies, was required by law to have available reserve funds in order to do business in 30 States of the United States and Puerto Rico. It had to borrow money for that purpose. The usual methods, such as bank and other secured loans, were not available *39 to it and it attracted lenders, in part, by offering 7-percent interest. It thus obtained the use of $ 500,000 and for the use of that borrowed money it agreed to pay and paid interest amounting to $ 35,000 every year thereafter, including 2 years in which it operated at a loss. The maximum which the lenders could receive on each guaranty fund certificate was $ 1,000 of principal and annual interest of 7 percent. No tax benefit or avoidance scheme was involved. There is no reason to disregard the form of the transactions and there is no difference between the form and the substance of those transactions.
The decided cases strongly tend to support the allowance of the deductions claimed herein. No two cases in this general field have facts exactly alike (cf.
The Commissioner argued in the
The Court in the
The taxpayer in
We distinguished
The Commissioner here contends that the guaranty fund certificates did not represent a genuine debtor-creditor relationship. He does not argue that they were like common or preferred stock or that they represented an equity interest in the company. He does not say what he thinks they were. They did not represent an equity interest. The *846 cases relied upon by the Commissioner are distinguishable on their facts. Cf.
Each case must be decided on its own facts.
Tannenwald,
The certificates were in form a promise to pay money advanced and the semiannual payments were designated as "interest." But it is clear that we are not bound thereby in determining the proper treatment of such payments under the Federal income tax*45 laws. See
Many of the terms of the certificates depart from the standards normally considered sufficiently indicative of an indebtedness to justify the deduction of periodic payments in respect thereof as interest. The semiannual payments herein are to be made only if the net profits or unused or unabsorbed premiums (after all expenses and losses and a reserve for reinsurance) are sufficient. *46 the certificate holders *847 have important voting rights, namely, to elect one-half the board of directors.
The cases in this area which might be considered as supporting petitioner's position are clearly distinguishable.
There is no doubt that, under State law, the guaranty fund was essential to petitioner's underwriting activities. The parties admit that the certificates were issued in order to meet the legal requirements of the various States in which petitioner properly conducted its insurance business. Such being the case, the required semiannual payments of interest quite properly might be considered a *48 normal business expense and, other things being equal, deductible on that basis. But other things are not equal. Petitioner is a member of a special species under the income tax laws. As a mutual insurance company, it has been entitled to special treatment since 1921. See 8 Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation sec. 44.01
Having reached this conclusion, it becomes necessary to deal with petitioner's alternative assertion that, if the certificates are not "indebtedness" and the semiannual payments are not "interest" within the meaning of
1. The certificate holders also had voting rights in the
1. On the face of the certificates, it is not clear whether the "interest" payments were cumulative.↩
2. In
3. In view of the fact that the instant case involves taxable years prior to that date, we do not have before us the question of the includability of the payments herein in such category by reason of the fact that the establishment of the guaranty fund was a prerequisite to the conduct of petitioner's insurance business in various States.↩
4. Interestingly enough, the application of sec. 831 to petitioner would appear to produce operating losses with a consequent overpayment of taxes during the taxable years.↩