DocketNumber: Docket No. 21113-87
Citation Numbers: 93 T.C. 330, 1989 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 125, 93 T.C. No. 29
Judges: Wells,Chabot,Korner,Shields,Clapp,Swift,Jacobs,Gerber,Wright,Parr,Williams,Ruwe,Colvin,Ruwe,Chabot,Swift,Jacobs,Gerber,Wright,Parr,Williams,Wells,Whalen,Hamblen
Filed Date: 9/13/1989
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*125
In 1979 and 1982, P commenced civil actions for defamation. In 1983, the first action was tried, and a jury awarded P $ 500,000 in compensatory damages and $ 450,000 in punitive damages. After the verdict, P and the defendants in both actions settled P's claims. In 1983, P received $ 525,000 (after payment of costs and attorneys' fees) pursuant to the settlement agreement.
*331 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency of $ 249,106 and an addition to tax pursuant to section 6661 *127 resided in Westminister, Maryland, when she filed her petition.
On or about March 28, 1979, petitioner commenced an action (the first action) by filing a declaration (the declaration) in the Superior Court of Baltimore City. The declaration named Cary Wellington, Sidney Rapkin, Publication Press, Inc. (Publication Press), and Graphic Arts Finishing Co. (Graphic Arts), as defendants. According to the declaration, Publication Press and Graphic Arts had employed petitioner as personnel manager. Mr. Wellington was chairman of the boards of both corporations, while Mr. Rapkin was the financial vice president of the corporations.
The declaration alleged a conspiracy by the defendants to accuse petitioner of embezzlement so that a bribery scheme could be concealed. Publication Press and Graphic Arts (collectively, the companies) provided printing services to various Government agencies. The companies had difficulty making timely delivery of printed material to the agencies. Sometime in 1977, the companies began paying Government employees bribes for undated or backdated receipts for printed material. Through early 1979, the companies paid approximately *128 $ 38,000 in bribes. Around March 1979, the *332 defendants decided to shield themselves from responsibility for the bribery scheme by firing petitioner and accusing her of embezzling the $ 38,000. The companies fired petitioner on March 23, 1979.
Count I of the declaration alleged that Mr. Wellington accused petitioner of embezzlement in the presence of Mr. Rapkin and two other employees of the companies. Mr. Wellington made the accusation the day petitioner was fired. Counts II through VIII of the declaration alleged that Mr. Wellington told various employees of the companies that petitioner had been terminated for embezzlement.
Counts IX and X of the declaration alleged that Mr. Rapkin made similar allegations respecting petitioner to various employees of the companies.
Count XI of the declaration alleged that Mr. Wellington and Mr. Rapkin told the Internal Revenue Service that petitioner had received embezzlement income from the companies.
Count XII of the declaration alleged that the companies had made a claim on petitioner's fidelity bond, claiming a loss because of petitioner's embezzlement. Count XIII of the declaration alleged that the defendants had engaged in "extreme*129 and outrageous conduct" that resulted in petitioner's emotional distress.
On or about November 30, 1982, petitioner commenced a second action (the second action). She filed a declaration (the second declaration) in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. The second declaration named the Continental Insurance Co. (Continental), The Glen Falls Insurance Co. (Glen Falls), Underwriters Adjusting Co. (Underwriters), Barry Bach, William Butler, David Gischel, Publication Press, and Graphic Arts as defendants.
According to the second declaration, Glen Falls was the liability insurer for the companies. Continental was the corporate parent of Glen Falls, while Underwriters was another Continental subsidiary and adjusted claims against Glen Falls (collectively, Glen Falls, Continental, and Underwriters are referred to as the insurance company defendants). Mr. Bach served as an attorney for Underwriters. Mr. Butler was the deliveryman for the companies who paid the bribes for undated and backdated receipts.
*333 Petitioner's second declaration alleged that the insurance company defendants knew that the companies lacked a meritorious defense to the first action and that the insurance*130 company defendants therefore conspired to defame petitioner so that her testimony at trial would be less credible. The second declaration also alleged that the insurance company defendants hired Mr. Butler to discredit petitioner.
Count I of the second declaration alleged that Mr. Butler told a group at "Shinberg's Bar" that petitioner had "unchaste" relations with the "Cash brothers." The Cash brothers were independent contractors who built skids and pallets for the companies. Mr. Butler also told the group that petitioner had assisted the Cash brothers in overcharging the companies. Count II of the second declaration alleged that Mr. Butler made similar allegations in the companies' warehouse.
Count III of the second declaration alleged that Mr. Butler told another employee of the companies, Mr. Gischel, that petitioner had forged receipts for the delivery of skids and pallets from the Cash brothers. Count IV of the second declaration alleged that Mr. Gischel repeated the statement alleged in Count III to Mr. Newcomer, whose name had allegedly been forged by petitioner.
Count V of the second declaration alleged that various defendants had been negligent in employing Mr. Butler*131 to investigate petitioner's first action.
Count VI of the second declaration alleged that defendants' extreme and outrageous conduct resulted in emotional distress to petitioner.
Petitioner's first action went to trial, and on October 6, 1983, a jury awarded petitioner $ 950,000, consisting of $ 500,000 in compensatory damages and $ 450,000 in punitive damages. No portion of the jury award was attributable to Count XIII of the first declaration, i.e., petitioner's claim for the intentional infliction of emotional distress.
After the jury award, petitioner and the defendants in both actions entered into settlement negotiations. The parties reached agreement. On or about November 22, 1983, petitioner signed a general release discharging all defendants in both actions from liability, in exchange for *334 $ 900,000 (the settlement proceeds). Petitioner filed an order of satisfaction in the first action and dismissed the second action. In December 1983, petitioner received $ 525,000 of the settlement proceeds (the net settlement proceeds), after petitioner's attorneys had deducted legal fees and costs of $ 375,000 from the settlement proceeds.
We must *132 decide whether the net settlement proceeds
*133 Whether damages received through settlement of litigation are excluded under section 104(a)(2) depends upon the
We find that the defendants paid petitioner the settlement proceeds with the intent of satisfying petitioner's claims for defamation. All but two of the counts in both the first and second*134 declarations allege defamation. One count in the first declaration alleged the intentional infliction of emotional distress, but none of the jury award in the first action was attributable to that count. The second declaration also contained one count alleging the intentional infliction of emotional distress. Yet, in light of the outcome of the first action, we believe the defendants' intent in settling both the first and second actions was to satisfy their liabilities for defamation.
Defamation is an action for personal injury in Maryland.
In asserting that section 104(a)(2) does not exclude the net settlement proceeds from gross income because the proceeds represent compensation for damage to professional reputation, respondent relies upon our holding in
While this Court examined the pleadings and proof before the State court to determine whether the damages awarded *336 to the taxpayer were a substitute for lost business profits, the Ninth Circuit rejected the relevancy of this inquiry, reasoning that although personal injury may result in both personal and economic consequences, it remains personal*136 injury for purposes of section 104(a)(2). The Ninth Circuit's inquiry focused upon the nature of the taxpayer's claim.
In
In
Respondent next argues that section 104(a)(2) does not exclude punitive damages from gross income and that all of *338 the net settlement proceeds are taxable because petitioner failed to establish the portion of the net settlement proceeds which represents excludable compensatory damages. We reject respondent's argument because the statutory language excludes from gross income both compensatory and punitive damages received on account of personal injuries.
Section 104(a)(2) excludes from gross income "any damages received * * * on account of personal injuries." Congress enacted the predecessor of section 104(a)(2) as section 213(b)(6) of the Revenue Act of 1918. Pub. L. 65-254, 40 Stat. 1057, 1066. By that time, the availability of punitive or exemplary damages had long been established. Note, "Exemplary Damages in the Law of Torts,"
In
The starting place in the construction of any statute is with the language of the statute itself. The clear import of "any damages received * * * on account of personal injuries" would*142 seem to express clearly the Congressional intent to exclude wrongful death proceeds -- regardless of *339 whether those proceeds are classified as compensatory or punitive -- from gross income. * * * [
At one time, the Commissioner also viewed the statute as free of ambiguity.
Section 104(a)(2) excludes from gross income "the amount of
In
Finally, revenue rulings represent only the Commissioner's position on specific factual situations rather than substantive authority (
Recently, in
The regulations state: "In addition to the items enumerated in section 61(a), there are many other kinds of gross income. For example, punitive damages such as treble damages under the antitrust laws and exemplary damages for fraud are gross income."
We are mindful that statutes excluding items from gross income are to be narrowly construed.
Including punitive damages within the ambit of section 104(a)(2) does not produce an absurd result. Punitive damages have served as a means of compensating plaintiffs for intangible harm and for costs and attorneys' fees. W. Prosser and W. Keeton,
The legislative history provides no sound basis for disregarding the plain meaning of the statute. The House Report to the Revenue Act of 1918 offered the following justification for the exclusion: "Under the present law it is doubtful whether * * * damages received on account of such injuries or sickness, are required to be included in gross income." H. Rept. 767, 65th Cong., 2d Sess. 9-10 (1918),
Our holdings make it unnecessary to address the section 6661 addition to tax determined by respondent.
Accordingly,
*148
*342 Ruwe,
The very purpose of section 104(a)(2) is to exclude from income amounts which would otherwise have been taxed. The fact that*150 punitive damages represent an accession to wealth and therefore would normally be included in gross income is no reason to preclude the application of section 104(a)(2). Indeed, even certain compensatory damages would seem to be includable in taxable income as an accession to wealth were it not for the existence of section 104(a)(2). For *343 example, compensatory damages for personal injury are frequently measured by the injured party's lost future earnings. Such future earnings would have been accessions to wealth and would clearly have been taxable. Even respondent agrees that compensatory damages, that are determined by reference to lost future income, are excludable under section 104(a)(2).
By adopting the position expressed in the majority opinion, we avoid producing totally different results under section 104(a)(2), depending upon the characterization of tort damages under various State laws. For example, in
Adoption of respondent's position would likely produce substantial litigation over the proper characterization of damages resulting from settlements of personal injury actions. Undoubtedly, most personal injury actions are settled prior to trial. It would be reasonable to assume that both plaintiff and defendant would normally seek to avoid characterizing any part of the settlement as punitive damages. The plaintiff's reasons are obvious given the potential tax implications illustrated by this*152 case. Likewise, it is hard to imagine scenarios where a defendant would affirmatively wish to characterize any portion of damages as punitive since such a characterization indicates that the defendant's actions were egregious. In the event that the settling parties fail to distinguish between compensatory and punitive damages in their settlement agreement or respondent disputes the parties' characterization of damages *344 as compensatory, respondent's position would require a factual determination of which portion of the damages is excludable under section 104(a)(2). That factual determination would probably require presentation of the operative facts regarding the personal injury -- the very same type of litigation the parties hoped to avoid by their settlement. I do not think that Congress intended to require such difficult factual determinations when it adopted the very broad language of section 104(a)(2), excluding from income "the amount of
Chabot, Swift, Jacobs, Gerber, Wright, Parr, Williams, and Wells,
Whalen, *153
As the Supreme Court stated in
are
The same is true under Maryland law.
Thus, in summary, the amount paid to satisfy petitioner's claims for punitive damages was paid "on account of" the tort-feasor's culpable conduct, not petitioner's personal injuries. *154 Accordingly, it should be included in petitioner's income under section 61(a) as an accession to her wealth, rather than excluded as compensation which makes her personal injuries whole.
In this case, petitioner filed law suits in the State of Maryland seeking both compensatory and punitive damages. She asserted claims for compensatory damages based upon allegations that the defendants had made false and untrue statements about her, and claims for punitive damages based upon allegations that the statements were made "maliciously" and "with reckless disregard for the truth." In settlement of all of her claims, she received a lump-sum payment, after attorney's fees, of $ 525,000. This settlement payment is fully taxable, unless it qualifies under section 104(a)(2) as an amount paid "on account of personal injuries."
Whether any portion of this payment is "on account of personal injuries," and therefore*155 nontaxable, depends on the nature of each claim made and settled. E.g.,
It has often been stated that State law creates legal interests and rights, but Federal statutes determine when and how they shall be taxed.
We find that the use of the terms "damages" and "personal injury" *156 by Congress necessarily implies that the exclusion under sec. 104(a)(2) depends, to some degree, upon classification under State law. This is confirmed by use of the term "tort or tort type rights" in the regulations under sec. 104(a)(2).
In analyzing petitioner's claim for compensatory damages for defamation, the majority looks to Maryland law and concludes that "defamation is an action for personal injury in Maryland." (Majority opinion at .) As authority for its conclusion, the majority cites
Turning to petitioner's claim for punitive damages, however, the majority fails to analyze the nature of her claim under Maryland law. If it had done so, it would have found that under*157 Maryland law petitioner's claim for punitive damages is not an adjunct to or substitute for compensatory damages, but represents an entirely different claim based upon different proof and a different theory than her claim for compensatory damages. The difference between the two is summarized as follows:
Compensatory damages are such as will compensate the injured party for the injury sustained, and nothing more; such as will simply make good or replace the loss caused by the wrong or injury. Black's Law Dictionary, 352 (5th ed. 1979). In other words, they are "damages awarded to a person as compensation, indemnity, or restitution for harm sustained by him." Id. See
Punitive or exemplary damages are damages on an increased scale, awarded not as the measure of actual loss suffered but "as punishment for outrageous conduct and to deter future transgressions." Black at 352. [Fn. ref. omitted.] See
In Maryland, punitive or exemplary damages thus represent a form of civil punishment. In effect, the term "punitive damages" is somewhat of a misnomer because it is wholly unrelated to the plaintiff's damages. The defendant's "malice" or intentional conduct in the commission of the tort is the essential element for an award of punitive damages.
Punitive damages are inherently different from compensatory damages and the reasons for the award of each differ sharply. The award of compensatory damages is an attempt to make the plaintiff whole again *347 by monetary compensation. In contrast,
Maryland courts are reluctant to impose punitive damages, and as a safeguard, they normally require the plaintiff to show actual injury, for which an award is made of at least nominal compensatory damages, before punitive damages will be awarded.
The U.S. Supreme Court recognized the inherent difference between compensatory and punitive damages, described above by the Maryland courts, in
The Supreme Court again recently recognized the fundamentally different nature of punitive damages in
It is clear that the majority treats petitioner's claim for punitive damages as in the nature of a claim for "personal injuries" within the meaning of section 104(a)(2). However, the basis for doing so is not clear. The majority neither specifically states that Maryland law is irrelevant nor provides an explanation for its failure to take Maryland law into account. The majority's opinion, reasonably interpreted, is that once petitioner's claim for compensatory damages has been determined to be in the nature of a claim for personal injuries, it is not necessary to review State law to determine the characterization of petitioner's claim for punitive damages.
Unlike the majority, I do not believe that this approach is justified by the fact that section 104(a)(2) uses the words "any damages" and does not expressly distinguish between compensatory and punitive damages. Rather, it seems to me that the majority's analysis*163 on that point begs the question of whether the payment, by whatever name it is described, qualifies under section 104(a)(2) as an amount "paid on account of personal injuries." We have consistently held that the law of the State or jurisdiction under which the *349 claim is made must be analyzed in order to make that determination. E.g.,
The memorandum opinion of the U.S. District Court in Alabama cited by the majority,
Unlike
In any event, the majority's "causation" analysis confuses a prerequisite for eligibility to make a claim for punitive damages with the nature of the claim itself. I do not believe that the nature of petitioner's claim for punitive damages is established as a matter of law under section *351 104(a)(2) by the nature of a taxpayer's claim for compensatory damages.
Moreover, the majority's "causation" analysis departs from our previous and consistent approach in other cases where one type of damages is a prerequisite for another:
For example, in
In adopting the approach that punitive damages are automatically covered by section 104(a)(2) without any consideration of State law, the majority has formulated an *352 expansive view of the statute and, in my view, has run afoul of the Supreme Court's long-standing admonition that exclusions from income are to be narrowly construed. See, e.g.,
Because of the distinction between compensatory and punitive damages under both Maryland and Federal law, and our mandate to construe exclusions from income narrowly, I would hold that the punitive damages received by*170 petitioner in this case are not "damages received * * * on account of personal injuries."
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. In the notice of deficiency, respondent determined that petitioner had received $ 525,000 of unreported income in 1983, implying that although she had received $ 900,000 of income, she was entitled to deduct $ 375,000 of costs and attorneys' fees. Respondent did not determine alternatively that in the event a portion of the settlement proceeds were held to be excluded from gross income, the deduction of a portion of the costs and fees should be disallowed pursuant to sec. 265 or some other provision. Our holding
3. In
4. Although
1. The fact that Maryland courts "might," in some instances, presume the existence of an injury upon proof of defamation does not mean that punitive damages can be awarded in the absence of personal injury. See
1. See Note, "Exemplary Damages in The Law of Torts,"
Such damages are given to the plaintiff over and above the full compensation for the injuries, for the purpose of punishing the defendant, of teaching the defendant not to do it again, and of deterring others from following the defendant's example. Occasional decisions [fn. ref. omitted, citing one case each from Georgia, Iowa, Kansas and Texas] have mentioned the additional purpose of reimbursing the plaintiff for elements of damage which are not legally compensable, such as wounded feelings or the expenses of suit.
Something more than the mere commission of a tort is always required for punitive damages. There must be circumstances of aggravation or outrage, such as spite or "malice," or a fraudulent or evil motive on the part of the defendant, or such a conscious and deliberate disregard of the interests of others that the conduct may be called wilful or wanton. [Fn. refs. omitted.]↩
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