DocketNumber: Docket No. 925-76
Judges: Featherston
Filed Date: 4/23/1979
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*135
Petitioner received a distribution under the "special reserve" provision of a life insurance contract which provided, in addition, for a $ 5,000 life insurance benefit. Under the policy, a portion of the premiums paid during the second through fifth years of the policy was credited to a special reserve account. The amount of the special reserve account was combined with amounts paid by other policyholders in a fund which was invested in common stocks. In the 20th year of the policy, a distribution was paid on each policy if the following conditions were met: the insured was then living, the policy was in full force on a premium paying basis, and all due premiums were paid.
*184 *137 Respondent alleges that there is a deficiency in the amount of $ 1,434.24 in petitioners' income tax for 1972. FINDINGS OF FACT At the time the petition was filed, the address of petitioners Ned W. Moseley and Mabel Bowman Moseley was Stuttgart, Ark. They filed their joint Federal income tax return for 1972 with the Director of the Regional Service Center, Austin, Tex. On or about February 12, 1951, Ned W. Moseley*138 (petitioner) purchased from Pyramid Life Insurance Co. of Little Rock, Ark. (Pyramid), a $ 5,000 special 20-payment life insurance policy, which called for an annual premium of $ 192.40 and contained many of the usual provisions in life insurance contracts. The policy provided for dividends which were to be funded and distributed in the following manner: (a) From the second through the fifth year of the policy, Pyramid would credit $ 96.20 of the annual premium to a special reserve, tontine account in the total amount of $ 384.80. (b) The amount of the special reserve would be combined in a special reserve fund with amounts paid by others who purchased the same kind of policy during the same year. The insurance company would invest the fund in common stock of certain listed companies. (c) All income from the common stock and accumulations attributable to stock splits, stock dividends, scrip dividends, purchase warrants, or rights to subscribe would be retained in the reserve and reinvested in additional stocks in the designated companies. Pyramid was authorized to sell any of the stock it *185 purchased and invest the proceeds in the stocks of other listed companies. (d) At*139 the end of the 20th calendar year after the date of the policy, a sum equal to the market value of all of the stocks in the special reserve would within 60 days be distributed by Pyramid as a dividend to the holders of the policies, issued during the calendar year 1951, for which the special reserve was set up, in which the persons named as insureds were then living, and whose policies were in full force on a premium paying basis, and on which all due premiums were paid. The dividend paid to the holder of each such policy would be in the proportion that the total amount set up in the special reserve for each policy bore to the total amount set up in the special reserve for all the then-remaining policies entitled to receive dividends from the special reserve. (e) Each policyholder had an option to receive the distribution described in (d) above after 10 years. If the option was exercised after 10 years, the policyholder had no right to the dividend distributed after 20 years. If not exercised after 10 years, the option expired; in that case, the policyholder had no right to receive distributions until the end of the 20th year. By a letter dated February 16, 1970, Pyramid informed*140 petitioner that the premium on the policy was paid until February 12, 1971, which was the date the policy officially became paid up in the face amount of $ 5,000. The letter further stated that the policy would remain in force throughout petitioner's lifetime with a right to surrender the policy for the cost value or to place a loan against it at any time. The letter also pointed out that the policy provided for a single distribution at the end of the 20th calendar year that the policy was in force and that if petitioner was living on December 31, 1971, this distribution would be made within 60 days following the end of the 20th calendar year, in other words, by March 1, 1972. By a letter dated February 15, 1972, Pyramid sent petitioner a check for $ 3,561.95 and stated that the check represented the 20th year special reserve distribution provided for in the policy. In addition, the letter stated that this check was the initial and final special reserve payment to which petitioner was entitled under the policy. *186 OPINION Under the terms of the Pyramid life insurance contract, petitioner received a payment of $ 3,561.95 in 1972. According to petitioner, the payment constituted*141 a refund of a portion of the aggregate premiums paid on the policy. Since the aggregate premiums, totaling $ 3,848, exceeded the amount of the payment, he argues, such payment is nontaxable under *142 In our view, the special reserve provisions are inseparable from the life insurance provisions of the policy. As we interpret the testimony of one of Pyramid's officials, the company did not offer for sale a policy which contained only the special reserve provisions. Petitioner could not, therefore, have purchased the special reserve benefits without the life insurance benefits. During the second through the fifth years of the policy, one-half of the annual premiums was credited to the special reserve account. Yet the policyholder acquired no vested rights in that account prior to his right to receive dividends at the *145 end of 20 years or, at his option, at the end of 10 years. At those times, the policyholder was entitled to receive dividends from the special reserve account only if the insured was then living, the policy was in full force on a premium paying basis, and all due premiums had been paid. The policy would not be in full force on a premium paying basis, and rights to special reserve dividends would be forfeited, if the holder exercised his option, available at any time after the end of the third year, to surrender the policy for its cash value, for paid-up insurance, or for extended term *188 insurance. Having paid all premiums credited to the special reserve account, the policyholder would nonetheless lose all rights to the special reserve distribution if he failed to pay any other premiums due under the policy. Thus the second and third conditions for the receipt of special reserve benefits relate to the status of the policy as a whole, a fact which underscores the interdependence of the special reserve and life insurance provisions. Furthermore, premiums credited to the special reserve account would not under specified circumstances be differentiated from other premiums. *146 Petitioner's policy did not cover the risk of death from suicide within 2 years from its date. If the insured committed suicide within 2 years, Pyramid was obligated to "return the premiums actually paid." The terms of the policy do not exclude from this refund of premiums any sum credited to the special reserve account. An examination of the policy provisions thus disproves respondent's argument that the special reserve and death benefit provisions constitute distinct and economically independent policies. Rather the two sets of rights were tied together under one contract. Hence, the term "aggregate premiums" in In support of his argument, respondent cites To bolster his argument, respondent observes that petitioner may at some time in the future surrender the policy for its cash value and, in computing his gain, offset the amount of premiums not allocable to the special reserve fund against the cash surrender value. This fact does not, however, strengthen respondent's case. As we view the issue in controversy, petitioner would, upon a future surrender of the policy, recognize gain in the amount by which the total cash surrender value plus the special reserve distribution received on February 15, 1972, exceeded the aggregate premiums paid. In other words, sustaining petitioner's position in this case will not provide for any unwarranted nonrecognition*149 of gain. If the policy were held until death, section 101(a) would eliminate recognition. Respondent has advanced no argument that these alternatives would contravene the legislative purpose of the statute. Having disposed of the case on this ground, we do not consider other arguments raised by the parties.
1. The statutory notice determined a deficiency of $ 925.89. Respondent amended the answer to reflect the increased amount.↩
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as in effect during the tax year in issue, unless otherwise noted.↩
3.
(e) Amounts Not Received as Annuities. -- (1) General rule. -- If any amount is received under an annuity, endowment, or life insurance contract, if such amount is not received as an annuity, and if no other provision of this subtitle applies, then such amount -- (B) if subparagraph (A) does not apply, shall be included in gross income, but only to the extent that it (when added to amounts previously received under the contract which were excludable from gross income under this subtitle or prior income tax laws) exceeds the aggregate premiums or other consideration paid. For purposes of this section, any amount received which is in the nature of a dividend or similar distribution shall be treated as an amount not received as an annuity.↩
4. Although the statutory language and accompanying committee reports deal mainly with contracts containing an annuity feature, S. Rept. 1622, to accompany H.R. 8300 (Pub. L. 591), 83d Cong., 2d Sess. 11-12 (1954), courts have assumed that taxation of gain realized on surrender or exchange of life insurance or endowment policies lacking such a feature is governed by
5. The Court also relied in part on the fact that the contracts were formally separate. There are, of course, situations in which two formally separate contracts are treated as one.
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