DocketNumber: No. 21333-97
Judges: Chiechi
Filed Date: 11/9/2000
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*81 Decision will be entered for respondent.
Trust (T), a tax-exempt voluntary employees' beneficiary
association described in
each year at issue a certain amount of investment income to
provide for the payment of reasonable costs of administration
directly connected with providing for the payment of health care
benefits (amount of investment income at issue).
HELD: In determining for each year at issue the unrelated
business taxable income (UBTI) of T under
I.R.C., the amount of investment income at issue is subject to
the limitation prescribed by
further, in calculating for each year at issue the limitation
prescribed by
that T set aside to provide for the payment of health care
benefits, including reasonable costs of administration directly
connected with providing for the payment of such benefits, is
not to be reduced*82 by the amount of the reserve described in sec.
HELD, FURTHER, because of the limitation prescribed by sec.
the UBTI of T under
investment income at issue may not be excluded as exempt
function income.
*440 OPINION *441 Year Deficiency
---- -----------
*83 1991 $ 489,941
1992 339,924
The issues for decision are:
(1) In determining for each year at issue the unrelated business taxable income (UBTI) of the Trust under
(2) In calculating for each year at issue the limitation prescribed by
BACKGROUND
This case was submitted fully stipulated. The facts that have been stipulated are so found except as stated herein.
At the time of the filing of the petition, the Trust's address was in care of its trustee, Key Trust Company of Ohio, N.A. (Trustee), in Cleveland, Ohio.
On December 30, 1987, The Sherwin-Williams Company (Sherwin-Williams) established the Trust to fund health care benefits for participants in The Sherwin-Williams health care plan (Sherwin- Williams health care plan participants). On September 27, 1988, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined that the Trust was exempt from tax because it qualified as a voluntary employees' beneficiary association described in
*442 The Trust agreement establishing the Trust provided in pertinent part:
8.2 PAYMENT OF BENEFITS. * * * Any Trust Fund income not used
in the year in which it was earned to provide life,
sickness, accident or other benefits described in Section
501(c)(9) of the Code and the regulations thereunder or to
pay reasonable administrative costs associated with the
delivery of those benefits shall be set aside to provide
for the payment of the benefits and benefit costs described
in
following year. * * *
The Trust derived its income from (1) member contributions from Sherwin-Williams and Sherwin-Williams health care plan participants and (2) investment income. The Trust set aside, and subsequently expended, income to provide for the payment of health care benefits and reasonable costs of administration directly connected with providing for the payment of such benefits. The amounts of income*86 that the Trust set aside to provide for the payment of reasonable costs of administration directly connected with providing for the payment of health care benefits equaled $ 1,580,455 for 1991 and $ 1,853,529 for 1992.
not be taxed on income set aside for:
1. Religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or
educational purposes, or for the prevention of cruelty
to children or animals;
2. The payment of life, sick, accident, or other
benefits by a
zation. The amount allowed as a set-aside may not
exceed a limit determined using
3. Reasonable administration costs directly con-
nected with 1 and 2 above.
In the notice of deficiency (notice) issued to the Trust, respondent determined that, in calculating its UBTI, the Trust erroneously deducted in Forms 990-T for 1991 and 1992 (1) $ 1,424,371 and $ 1,588,555, respectively, as "Compensation of officers, directors, and trustees" and (2) $ 156,084 and $ 264,974, respectively, as "Other deductions". Respondent made those determinations because the Trust failed to establish that those disallowed amounts*89 constitute expenses directly related to, and therefore deductible from, its investment income that it reported as unrelated business income in Forms 990-T (i.e., $ 1,851,399 for 1991 and $ 1,155,793 for 1992). *444 DISCUSSION
On brief, the Trustee abandons the position that the Trust took in Forms 990-T for 1991 and 1992 that, in calculating its UBTI, it is entitled to deduct from unrelated business gross income (1) "Compensation of officers, directors, and trustees" in the amounts of $ 1,456,954 and $ 1,618,779, respectively, and (2) "Other deductions" in the amounts of $ 156,084 and $ 287,450, respectively. Instead, the Trustee argues on brief that $ 1,580,455 of the Trust's income for 1991
*91 Before addressing the issues presented, we set forth the pertinent statutory provisions implicated by those issues.
(1) General rule. -- Except as otherwise provided in this
subsection, the term "unrelated business taxable income" means
the gross income derived by any organization from any unrelated
trade or business (as defined in
on by it, less the deductions allowed by this chapter*92 which are
directly connected with the carrying on of such trade or
business, both computed with the modifications provided in
subsection (b).
(3) Special rules applicable to organizations
described in paragraph (7), (9), (17), or (20) of
(A) General rule. -- In the case of an organi- zation
described in paragraph (7), (9), (17), or (20) of section
501(c), the term "unrelated business taxable income" means
the gross income (excluding any exempt function income),
less the deductions allowed by this chapter which are
directly connected with the production of the gross income
(excluding exempt function income) * * *.
(B) Exempt function income. -- For purposes of
subparagraph (A), the term "exempt function income" means
the gross income from dues, fees, charges, or similar
amounts paid by members*93 of the organization as
consideration for providing such members or their
dependents or guests goods, facilities, or services in
furtherance of the purposes constituting the basis for the
exemption of the organization to which such income is paid.
Such term also means all income (other than an amount equal
to the gross income derived from any unrelated trade or
business regularly carried on by such organization computed
as if the organization were subject to paragraph (1)),
which is set aside --
(i) for a purpose specified in section 170(c)(4),
or
(ii) in the case of an organization described in
paragraph (9) * * * of section 501(c), to provide for
the payment of life, sick, accident, or other
benefits,
including reasonable costs of administration directly
connected with a purpose described in clause (i) or (ii).
If during the*94 taxable year, an amount which is attributable
to income so set aside is used for a purpose other than
that described in clause (i) or (ii), such amount shall be
included, under subparagraph (A), in unrelated business
taxable income for the taxable year.
* * * * * * *
(E) Limitation on amount of setaside in the case of
organizations described in paragraph (9) * * * of section
501(c). --
*446 (i) In general.--In the case of any
organization described in paragraph (9) * * *
of
pose specified in clause (ii) of subparagraph
(B) may be taken into account under subpara-
graph (B) only to the extent that such set-
aside does not result in an amount of assets
set aside for such purpose in excess of the
account limit determined under
*95 (without regard to subsection (f)(6) thereof)
for the taxable year (not taking into account
any reserve described in section
419A(c)(2)(A) for post-retirement medical
benefits).
The Trust as a VEBA that is funded by, inter alia, employer contributions is subject to
ADDITIONS TO ACCOUNT.
(a) General Rule. -- For purposes of this subpart
and
means any account consisting of assets set aside to
provide for the payment of --
* * * * * * *
(2) medical benefits * * *
ADDITIONS TO ACCOUNT.
(c) Account Limit. -- For purposes of this section --
(1) In general. -- Except as otherwise provided in
this subsection, the account limit for any qualified
asset account for any taxable year is the amount rea-
sonably and actuarially necessary to fund --
(A) claims incurred but unpaid (as of the
close of such taxable year) for benefits referred
to in subsection (a), and
(B) administrative costs with respect to such
claims.
*97 (2) Additional reserve for post-retirement medical
and life insurance benefits. -- The account limit for any
taxable year may include a reserve funded over the
working lives of the covered employees and actuarially
determined on a level basis (using assumptions that are
reasonable in the aggregate) as necessary for --
(A) post-retirement medical benefits to be
provided to covered employees (determined on the
basis of current medical costs) * * *
*447 We turn now to the initial dispute between the parties over whether, in determining for each year at issue the Trust's UBTI under
(1) amounts paid by members of the association as
consideration for goods, facilities, or services;
(2) amounts set aside for a charitable purpose;
(3) amounts set aside for the payment of life, sick,
accident, or other benefits; and
(4) reasonable costs of administration directly con-
nected with components 2 and 3.
According to the Trustee, "It is apparent from the plain language of the statute
Proceeding from its premises that reasonable costs of administration directly connected with a purpose described in
*448 Respondent counters that reasonable costs of administration directly connected with a purpose described in
It is clear the statute
written so that the reasonable cost of administration
phrase did not have to be written twice, that is once
after clause (i) and*100 again after clause (ii). This is
a common drafting technique used throughout the Inter-
nal Revenue Code. * * *
Another way of describing exempt function income
is income set-aside [sic] for a purpose specified in
section 170(c)(4) including administrative costs di-
rectly connected with this purpose or, in the case of
an organization described in paragraph (9), (17), or
(20) of
life, sick, accident, or other benefits, including
reasonable costs of administration directly connected
with this purpose. This is the clear meaning of this
costs are a part of the benefit costs which may be set-
aside [sic] under clauses (i) and (ii) of I.R.C. section
512(a)(3)(B), not a separate component thereof.
We first address the premises of the Trustee's position under
The first source of gross income from which exempt function income may be derived is specified in the first sentence of
The second source of gross income from which exempt function income may be derived is specified in the second sentence of
*103 The phrase that appears at the end of the second sentence of
*106 In further support of its position that reasonable costs of administration directly connected with a purpose described in
tions will not be taxed on income set aside for:
1. Religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or
educational purposes, or for the prevention of cruelty
to children or animals;
2. The payment of life, sick, accident, or other
benefits by a
zation. The amount allowed as a set-aside may not
exceed a limit determined using
3. Reasonable administration costs directly con-
nected with 1 and 2 above.
We acknowledge that the foregoing instructions to Forms 990-T are not as clearly stated as
In any event, we are not bound by the instructions to Forms 990-T for the years at issue. The authoritative sources of tax law are statutes, regulations, and judicial decisions, and not informal instructions published by the Internal Revenue Service. See
We hold that
*108 The Trustee's contentions that
As a VEBA described in
*453 The Trustee advances an alternative argument in the event that the Court were to hold, as we have, that the limitation prescribed by
The parties agree that (1) the Trust's respective account limits, determined under
It is the*112 position of respondent that, in calculating for each year at issue the limitation prescribed by
Although we have quoted
(E) Limitation on amount of setaside in the case
of organizations described in paragraph (9), (17), or
(20) of
(i) In general. -- In the case of any organiza-
tion described in paragraph (9), (17), or (20) of
fied in clause (ii) of subparagraph (B) may be
taken into account under subparagraph (B) only to
the extent that such set-aside does not result in
an amount of assets set aside for such purpose in
*113 excess of the account limit determined under sec-
tion 419A (without regard to subsection (f)(6)
thereof) for the taxable year (not taking into
account any reserve described in section
419A(c)(2)(A) for post-retirement medical bene-
fits).
We find the Trustee's interpretation of
Section 1.512(a)-5T, Q&A-3(a), Temporary Income Tax Regs.,
Q-3: What amount of income may a VEBA, SUB or
GLSO set aside for exempt purposes?
A-3: (a) Pursuant to
amounts set aside in a VEBA, SUB, or GLSO (including a
VEBA, SUB, or GLSO that is part of a 10 or more em-
ployer plan, as defined in
the close of a taxable year of such VEBA, SUB, or GLSO
to provide for the payment of life, sick, accident, or
other benefits may not be taken into account for pur-
poses of determining "exempt function income" to the
*455 extent that such amounts exceed the qualified asset
account limit, determined under
419A(f)(7), for such taxable year of the VEBA, SUB, or
GLSO. IN CALCULATING THE QUALIFIED ASSET ACCOUNT LIMIT
FOR THIS PURPOSE, A RESERVE FOR POST-RETIREMENT MEDICAL
BENEFITS UNDER
INTO ACCOUNT. [Emphasis added.]
Q&A-3(a) plainly provides that, for purposes of determining the limitation*115 prescribed by
Our interpretation regarding the parenthetical phrase appearing at the end of
The [Deficit Reduction] Act [of 1984] provides a
specific annual limit on the amount of income of a tax-
exempt VEBA * * * that may be considered a permissible
set aside. Under the*116 Act, the amount of such an orga-
nization's income for a year that may be considered set
aside as exempt function income is generally not to
increase the total amount that is set aside to an
amount in excess of the account limit for the taxable
year determined under the deduction limits provided by
the Act (
aside is intended to apply to more-than-10-employer
VEBAs which are exempt from the deduction limitations.
* * *
In general, the rules applicable in computing the
account limit under the deduction rules
such as the special reserve limits for collectively
bargained plans, also are applicable in determining the
set-aside allowed for purposes of the unrelated busi-
ness income tax. However, for purposes of determining
the limit on the set aside, THE ACCOUNT LIMIT IS NOT TO
INCLUDE ANY AMOUNT WITH RESPECT TO RESERVES TO PROVIDE
POST-RETIREMENT MEDICAL BENEFITS. The limit on the
amount set aside as exempt function income does not
include a reserve for post-retirement*117 medical benefits
because, in view of the advance deductions provided to
employers for these benefits, it was determined that
the allowance of such a tax-exempt *456 reserve would pro-
vide an unnecessary tax incentive with respect to these
benefits. [Footnote ref. omitted; emphasis added.]
Staff of Joint Comm. on Taxation, General Explanation of the Revenue Provisions of the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984, at 791 (J. Comm. Print 1984).
The General Explanation plainly provides that, in determining the limitation prescribed by
We hold that, in calculating for each year at issue the limitation prescribed by
*457 We have considered all of the contentions and arguments of the Trustee*119 that are not discussed herein, and we find them to be without merit and/or irrelevant. *120 To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered for respondent.
1. Unless otherwise indicated, our Opinion pertains to 1991 and 1992, the years at issue.↩
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect for the years at issue. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
3. All references herein to an amount set aside are to an amount set aside within the meaning of
4. The costs for 1992 ($ 1,853,529) were paid first from investment income for that year.↩
5. The parties stipulated that the Trust's account limit for 1991, as defined in
6. The Trust reported in Forms 990 additional investment income of $ 232,202 and $ 405,095 for 1991 and 1992, respectively, which the Trust did not treat as unrelated business income in those forms or in Forms 990-T for those years.↩
7. See supra note 4.↩
8. Respondent made no determinations in the notice regarding the amounts of unrelated business income that the Trust reported in Forms 990-T for the years at issue.↩
9. The Trustee makes no argument about the balance of the investment income (i.e., $ 270,944) that the Trust reported as unrelated business income in its Form 990-T for 1991. We find that petitioner has failed to show that such remaining amount of investment income for 1991 (1) constitutes exempt function income, as defined in
10. On brief, the Trustee acknowledges that for 1992 not only its investment income but also certain of its other income was set aside, and subsequently expended, for $ 1,853,529 of reason- able costs of administration directly connected with providing for the payment of health care benefits. The Trustee further acknowledges that it reported in Form 990-T for 1992 only $ 1,155,793 of its investment income for that year as unrelated business income. Respondent made no determination in the notice that the Trust's remaining investment income for 1992 (i.e., $ 405,095), which the Trust did not treat as unrelated business income in Form 990 and Form 990-T for that year, should be included in calculating the Trust's UBTI for that year. We conclude that the only amount of the Trust's income for 1992 that is at issue in this case is $ 1,155,793 of investment income that the Trust reported as unrelated business income in Form 990 and Form 990-T for that year. Our references hereinafter to the amount at issue for 1992 shall be to the correct amount at issue for 1992, and not to the amount (i.e., $ 1,853,529) that the Trustee claims on brief is at issue for that year.↩
11. Respondent also advances arguments on brief as to why respondent's determinations in the notice should be sustained. However, as noted above, the Trustee no longer contests those determinations.↩
12. Although the statutory provisions set forth below apply not only to a VEBA but also to certain other organizations, our discussion generally is limited to the application of those provisions to a VEBA.↩
13.
14. See supra notes 4, 8, and 10.↩
15.
16. We need not resort to the legislative history of
17. The taxpayer in
SUCH TERM [EXEMPT FUNCTION INCOME] ALSO MEANS ALL
INCOME * * * WHICH IS SET ASIDE --
(i) FOR A PURPOSE SPECIFIED IN SECTION 170(c)(4)
* * * including reasonable costs of administration
directly connected with a purpose described in clause
(i) or (ii). * * *
18. It is noteworthy that the Trust agreement establishing the Trust provided that such costs are subject to the limitation prescribed by
8.2 PAYMENT OF BENEFITS. * * * ANY TRUST FUND INCOME
NOT USED IN THE YEAR IN WHICH IT WAS EARNED to
provide life, sickness, accident or other benefits
described in
regulations thereunder or to pay reasonable admin-
istrative costs associated with the delivery of
those benefits SHALL BE SET ASIDE TO PROVIDE FOR
THE PAYMENT OF THE BENEFITS AND BENEFIT COSTS
DESCRIBED IN
AND LIMITED BY
THE IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING YEAR. * * * [Emphasis
added.]↩
19. If we were to accept the Trustee's alternative position that for each year at issue not only the account limit, as defined in
20. We shall briefly address one of those arguments. The Trustee argues that the Trust's investment income at issue is not subject to the unrelated business income tax because the investment income of a VEBA described in