1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*58
1.
2.
3. and 4.
5.
6.
62 T.C. 661">*661 Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioner's Federal income taxes as follows:
Year | Deficiency |
1965 | $ 56,276.00 |
1966 | 19,452.00 |
1967 | $ 81,323.00 |
1968 | 26,876.50 |
62 T.C. 661">*662 One issue 1 has been conceded by respondent; those remaining for decision, which mostly concern Code sections added by the Life Insurance Company Income Tax Act of 1959, 73 Stat. 112, are as follows: 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*62 (1) Whether petitioner must include net deferred premiums and "loading" thereon in (a) "assets" under
1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*63 FINDINGS OF FACT
Some facts have been stipulated and are so found.
Petitioner is a life insurance company incorporated and organized under the insurance laws of the State of Colorado, with its home office and principal place of business in Denver, Colo. At all material times, petitioner was engaged in business as a life insurance company within the meaning of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.
Petitioner made timely filings of its Federal income tax returns for the taxable years 1965 through 1967 with the district director of internal revenue at Denver, Colo. Petitioner timely filed its 1968 Federal income tax return with the Internal Revenue Service Center in Austin, Tex.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (hereinafter NAIC) is a voluntary organization of insurance commissioners of various States who are charged with supervising insurance companies and their operations. The NAIC has adopted a uniform financial statement form for use by insurance companies in filing their annual statements with State insurance commissioners. Petitioner prepared its annual statements for the years 1965 through 1968 on the form approved by the NAIC and on the basis of NAIC requirements.
1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*64 Petitioner keeps cash receipts and disbursements records, as required by Colorado insurance laws, in addition to accrual records. In each year at bar petitioner was required to, and did, file a duplicate of its 62 T.C. 661">*663 NAIC annual statement for that year with its Federal income tax return. The NAIC annual statements are prepared on a hybrid system in which petitioner must report its cash receipts and disbursements, which are then converted to a modified accrual basis, and are used for examination and audit by State insurance departments.
Certain terms common to the life insurance industry have the following meanings.
Petitioner does not have1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*66 a legal right to collect premiums when they become due on its policies since premiums which have not actually been paid to petitioner are not contractually due from its policyholders. Payment of premiums is at the sole election of an insured, who may decide to keep his policy in force by paying premiums as they fall due or elect to abandon or otherwise permit his policy to lapse by nonpayment of premiums.
Petitioner has no legal right to collect deferred and uncollected premiums. Such premiums are not cash receipts. They cannot be invested, and they produce no income, until actually paid. As of any December 31, all events have not occurred which would fix the right to collect deferred and uncollected premiums in the following year.
62 T.C. 661">*664 Petitioner pays no investment expenses out of loading. Loading concerns only the writing of insurance and the conduct of the business of underwriting insurance. It is expected to cover agents' commissions and insurance operating expenses and to provide, if possible, an underwriting profit.
Under State laws and NAIC requirements, an insurance company is obligated to establish and maintain reserves for its potential liability for all policies1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*67 in force. The reserve is calculated, as a computational technique, as though all premiums had been paid in full 1 year in advance on each anniversary date commencing with the issuance date of the policy, even though premiums are not usually paid in this manner.
The NAIC requires an insurance company, in preparing its annual statements, to show under assets an amount equal to that which the company expects to receive if all net premiums deferred and uncollected at the end of the year are in fact paid; loading expected to be received on those premiums is not required to be shown. This "asset," as an accounting matter, offsets the reserve liability attributable to deferred and uncollected premiums substantially in an equal amount. As required by the NAIC through its annual statement form, petitioner's annual statements for the years at bar included net premiums deferred and uncollected as an asset but did not so include loading on such premiums. In those annual statements, net premiums deferred and uncollected are listed as nonledger admitted assets, opposite the caption "Life insurance premiums and annuity considerations deferred and uncollected." Loading on net premiums deferred1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*68 and uncollected was also reflected in petitioner's annual statements for the years at bar but was not listed as an asset.
On its Federal income tax returns for the years at issue, petitioner included net premiums deferred and uncollected as an asset and as a reserve. On those returns, petitioner did not include loading on such premiums either as an asset or as a reserve.
Net premiums deferred and uncollected were shown as assets under
Year | Amount |
1965 | $ 217,366 |
1966 | 313,559 |
1967 | $ 297,382 |
1968 | 330,284 |
Petitioner's returns did not include loading on net premiums deferred and uncollected as an asset under
Year | Amount |
1965 | $ 95,972 |
1966 | 143,137 |
1967 | $ 160,768 |
1968 | 167,864 |
62 T.C. 661">*665 On its Federal income tax returns for the years in issue, petitioner did not include in premium income under
Year | Amount |
1965 | $ 15,145 |
1966 | 10,043 |
1967 | $ 17,631 |
1968 | 7,696 |
Such increases were reflected in petitioner's annual statements in a table headed "Analysis of Operations1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*69 by Lines of Business," opposite the caption "Increase in loading on and cost of collection in excess of loading on deferred and uncollected premiums."
On its Federal income tax returns for the years at bar petitioner did include in premium income under
Year | Gross amount | Less loading | Net amount |
1965 | $ 20,373 | $ 15,145 | $ 5,228 |
1966 | 143,357 | 10,043 | 133,314 |
1967 | 1,454 | 17,631 | (16,177) |
1968 | 40,598 | 7,696 | 32,902 |
Part of petitioner's business is the making of mortgage loans. Each payment received by petitioner from certain borrowers on their respective mortgage loans includes a sum for real estate taxes and insurance on the mortgaged property which is accumulated periodically and thereafter paid out by petitioner when the real estate taxes and insurance premiums are due. These sums, together with minor amounts of withholding taxes, are referred to as petitioner's mortgage escrow funds.
Such escrow funds are received by petitioner from its borrowers pursuant to the terms of their respective mortgage loans and deeds of trust which provide that such funds shall be1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*70 held by petitioner in trust to pay such taxes and insurance premiums as they fall due. Such escrow funds are reflected in the NAIC -approved annual statements as a liability on the balance sheet; the funds do not per se appear as an asset on the balance sheet, but the cash or other asset into which such funds had been commingled would so appear.
On its Federal income tax return for 1965, petitioner did not include its mortgage escrow funds as an asset under
Year | Amount |
1966 | $ 212,128 |
1967 | 193,769 |
1968 | 173,515 |
62 T.C. 661">*666 The escrow funds were reflected in petitioner's annual statements for the years at issue as liabilities opposite the caption "Amounts withheld or retained by company as agent or trustee."
Petitioner, during the years at bar, maintained records clearly reflecting the escrow balance of each of its borrowers who were required to make escrow payments for taxes and insurance and maintained bank accounts far in excess of the amount of escrow funds held by it. The amounts of1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*71 escrow funds and the cash and bank deposits of petitioner were as follows:
Year | Escrow funds | Cash and bank deposits |
1965 | $ 212,854 | $ 3,283,050 |
1966 | 212,128 | 3,102,006 |
1967 | 193,769 | 1,849,973 |
1968 | 173,515 | 2,172,072 |
The cash and bank deposits were reflected in petitioner's annual statements as assets opposite the caption "Cash and bank deposits." Petitioner maintained its cash and bank deposits in both noninterest-paying bank accounts and in interest-paying certificates of deposit in the following amounts in the years at issue:
Year | Non-interest-paying | Interest-paying | Total |
1965 | $ 1,183,050 | $ 2,100,000 | $ 3,283,050 |
1966 | 1,772,006 | 1,330,000 | 3,102,006 |
1967 | 1,337,473 | 512,500 | 1,849,973 |
1968 | 1,602,072 | 570,000 | 2,172,072 |
The amounts above were as of December 31 of each year and would fluctuate from day to day throughout the year.
Petitioner was not required by law to keep its mortgage escrow funds in separate bank accounts, but was permitted to, and did, commingle the funds in its general bank accounts.
On its Federal income tax returns for 1967 and 1968, petitioner did not include interest on certain mortgage loans on which interest1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*72 was more than 90 days overdue as an asset under
1967 | $ 33,539 |
1968 | 51,550 |
These items were reflected in petitioner's annual statements for those years as nonadmitted items of gross investment income and as nonadmitted assets. Separate schedules in those annual statements show that the following represented the total amounts of interest due and unpaid on mortgages not in foreclosure owned by petitioner at the end 62 T.C. 661">*667 of each taxable year on which interest was overdue more than 3 months:
1967 | $ 47,990.86 |
1968 | 67,620.18 |
On the same returns, petitioner did not include interest on certain mortgage loans 90 days past due as gross investment income under
1967 | $ 33,539 |
1968 | 18,011 |
In 1967, $ 32,924 of the interest on mortgage loans on which interest was 90 days past due was attributable to loans secured by real estate which was subsequently bid in by petitioner at foreclosure in 1969 for the principal amount due on the loans. Petitions for deficiency judgments relating to these loans were filed in the appropriate court. To date of the trial in the case now at1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*73 bar, the parties stipulate that none of the interest in question had been collected. However, the petitions for deficiency judgments stated that the alleged debtors would be given credit for the amounts at which the properties in question were bid in by petitioner, to be applied first to attorney's fees due in connection with the loans, then to accrued interest, and only then to the remaining principal of the loans. The petitions prayed payment only of the amount of principal which would remain due, plus interest accruing after the date of the foreclosure sale, after the crediting scheme above. That amount of principal was in each case greater than the amount at which the petitions state that each property was bid in by petitioner. The petitions also stated that before the foreclosure sales of the two properties involved, each property had been appraised at a value equal to the original principal amount of the mortgage loan for which it had been pledged as security.
In 1968, $ 14,553 of the mortgage loan interest 90 days past due was attributable to an item of real estate regarding which no interest was collected in 1968 or any subsequent year.
On its Federal income tax return1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*74 for 1968, petitioner did not include interest on certain mortgage loans in the process of foreclosure in the amount of $ 109,518, either as an asset under
Policies issued by petitioner which have cash values provide that a loan may be obtained on the sole security of the policy at any time that a cash value is available and while the policy is in force. Interest on policy loans is booked in advance at the time the1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*75 loan is made to the end of the current policy year and annually thereafter on the policy anniversary for the ensuing year, in advance. Actual prepayment of interest is not usually made; instead, unearned interest is added to the loan balance with a credit to interest income for the unearned interest. If the interest on the policy loan is not paid when due, it is added to the principal of the existing loan and thereafter bears interest at the same rate, beginning with the next policy year.
The insured has the right to repay a policy loan at any time, and if he does so, will receive a refund or credit for the unearned interest, with petitioner retaining only the exact amount of interest ratably earned. If the policyholder should surrender his policy for the cash value, then only the exact amount of interest ratably earned by petitioner is retained by it and the residue is returned to the policyholder. If the policyholder should die, then only the exact amount of interest ratably earned by petitioner is retained by it and the residue is paid to the beneficiary of the policy, along with the death benefit, less the policy loan.
The method of determining what portion of the interest1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*76 belongs to petitioner as earned interest at the end of the calendar year and the portion which is unearned interest, is determined in accordance with established accounting principles. The amount of unearned interest at the end of the year which may become earned by petitioner in the subsequent year is undeterminable as to an individual policyholder and is dependent upon whether the insured continues to live and whether he elects to repay the loan or surrender the policy for its cash value.
Unearned interest on policy loans has no effect on policyholders' reserves and does not make available to petitioner any additional funds for investment, unless prepaid in cash.
On its Federal income tax returns for the years in issue, petitioner did not include unearned interest on policy loans in income under
1965 | $ 2,927 |
1966 | 7,782 |
1967 | $ 299 |
1968 | 5,294 |
The parties have stipulated, for purposes of the present inquiry, that one-third of the above sums was actually prepaid in cash by the 62 T.C. 661">*669 insureds and that two-thirds were not collected but were merely entered on petitioner's books, as
For the taxable year 1965, respondent1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*77 included the increase in unearned interest on policy loans from January 1, 1954, to December 31, 1964, in petitioner's income under
The unearned interest on policy loans is computed as of each December 31. The effect on income for such year depends on the increase or decrease in such account from year to year.
On its Federal income tax returns for the years in issue, petitioner reported total gross investment interest income under
Year | Amount |
1965 | $ 1,224,055 |
1966 | 1,319,693 |
1967 | $ 1,306,009 |
1968 | 1,187,203 |
In late 1965, petitioner acquired for $ 2,400,000 all of the outstanding stock of American Benefit Life Insurance Co. (hereinafter ABL), a life insurance company duly organized under the laws of Louisiana. Petitioner subsequently liquidated ABL, took over the latter's assets and insurance policies, and conducted the latter's business itself.
Petitioner treated the acquisition of ABL's stock and the subsequent liquidation as a purchase of ABL's assets. It thus treated the $ 2,400,0001974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*78 purchase price of the stock as its basis in the underlying assets and claimed amortization deductions therefor as follows:
Year | Amount |
1966 | $ 73,590 |
1967 | 176,616 |
1968 | 176,616 |
Respondent conceded petitioner's reporting of the transaction in his reply brief.
During 1967 petitioner paid $ 5,991.25 to the law firm of Sehrt, Boyle & Wheeler, of New Orleans, La., for legal services in connection with the transfer of the assets and insurance policies of ABL to petitioner. Respondent does not now contest that petitioner was entitled to amortize that legal fee in the same proportionate amounts as it did the purchase price of the ABL stock, but denies petitioner's right to deduct the entire amount of the fees as ordinary and necessary business expense in 1967.
OPINION
We are again faced with the task of determining whether certain deferred and/or uncollected items of potential income to an insurance company must be included in the computation of the company's taxable 62 T.C. 661">*670 income under the Life Insurance Company Income Tax Act of 1959,
The provisions of the 1959 Act, which are contained in subchapter L, part1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*80 I,
Computation of life insurance company taxable income is made under a three-phase approach outlined by
Under
Under
The principal issues with which we are concerned here are whether deferred and uncollected premiums, including premiums due and unpaid, and the1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*83 loading thereon, all of which terms have been defined in our findings of fact and in the various court opinions above mentioned, must be included in assets in the phase I computation and in gross premiums in the phase II computation. Section 818(a) requires generally that computation of a life insurance company's income taxes be made under an accrual accounting method. There is no dispute that under normal accrual accounting concepts neither net premiums deferred and uncollected nor loading thereon would be includable as assets or as operating income because they are not received by the end of the taxable year, and no right then exists to collect them. See
62 T.C. 661">*672 1.
The principal cause of the problem with regard to deferred and uncollected premiums is the fact that State insurance departments and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners Convention forms, which insurance companies are required to file, require that the yearend1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*84 reserve on each life insurance policy be computed on the assumption that the entire premium for the current policy year has been collected a year in advance. Of course, this assumption is not in accord with the facts; many premiums are paid on a quarterly or other deferred basis throughout the policy year, which extends beyond the end of the taxable year. The policyholder has no obligation to pay these premiums; he can discontinue the policy at any time without liability for any premiums not paid. But since the insurance company is required to credit its reserves at the end of the taxable year with the entire annual net valuation premiums, whether collected or not, the reserve liability becomes overstated. The reserve liability affects both the phase I and phase II tax computations because it is included in the numerator of the fraction used in determining the policyholder's share of investment income and the annual increase in such reserves is allowed as a deduction in determining gain from operations.
As mentioned before, these are not issues of first impression in this Court.
Several years later, in
Our conclusions in both of the above cases were based primarily on the philosophy that insurance companies are required to account on the 62 T.C. 661">*673 accrual method; that deferred and uncollected premiums would not normally be includable in the computations under an accrual method of accounting because the company had no legal right to collect them; that these items did not in fact exist and could not be used to produce investment income; and that the fact that Congress injected a limited modification of the normal rules of accrual accounting with respect to life insurance reserves did not justify the creation for tax purposes of an otherwise nonexistent asset. In our second opinion in
Despite what we consider to be logical reasoning in properly applying this rather complex statute in the above two cases, and despite the acceptance of some of our philosophy, 31974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*89 all four Courts of Appeals that have considered these issues have disagreed with our conclusions and have held that the gross amount of deferred and uncollected premiums, including loading thereon, must be included in assets for the phase I computations, and in gross premiums with no offsetting deductions for purposes of the phase II computation. In
The three Courts of Appeals that faced these issues after the Seventh Circuit decision in
Thus, our position has been that under an accrual method of accounting, while a fictitious adjustment might be made to assets to offset an overstated liability in order to avoid a distortion, the amount of such adjustment should, at most, not exceed the increase in the reserve account based on the assumption that all premiums are paid in advance, which is the amount of the net annual valuation premiums, exclusive of loading. We have not recognized that accrual accounting would permit any other adjustment, particularly when to do so would throw the formula out of balance on the other side. On the other hand, the Courts of Appeals have concluded that if any amount of the deferred and uncollected premiums are treated as being accrued for any purpose, then the total amount of the annual premiums, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*91 including loading, must also be treated as being accrued, even though this may cause distortion in favor of the Government for tax purposes.
62 T.C. 661">*675 An appeal of this case would normally lie to the Tenth Circuit, which has not yet had the occasion to express its views on these issues. Under the policy of this Court expressed in
While, of course, we are not bound by the decisions of the Courts of Appeals of the two circuits which have heretofore passed upon precisely this same question, we think it appropriate to say that it would take extremely cogent reasoning to cause us to take a different view on a matter of statutory construction.
1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*92 This Court has recognized its obligation to promote uniform application of the internal revenue laws,
1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*93 62 T.C. 661">*676 On brief taxpayer makes two additional arguments with regard to the phase I tax computation that have not received specific attention from the Courts of Appeals that have considered that issue: first, that deferred and uncollected premiums have no tax basis to include under
2.
Respondent determined that petitioner should have reported as an asset1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*94 under
Year | Amount |
1966 | $ 212,128 |
1967 | 193,769 |
1968 | 173,515 |
If petitioner is correct on this point, the effect would be to reduce its reported taxable investment income in the last 3 years at issue.
Those courts which have considered this question1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*95 have held in favor of petitioner's position.
62 T.C. 661">*677 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*96 This issue was discussed at length by the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in
Briefly, resolution of this issue is determined by the fact that these mortgage escrow funds are held by petitioner as trustee -- not as "assets of the company" as required by
Respondent argues (1) that in economic terms, petitioner and not the mortgagors had the primary interest in the mortgaged properties and thus that petitioner did not truly hold the funds for the benefit of the mortgagors; (2) that petitioner did profit by its holding of the escrow funds, in that funds otherwise unavailable are thereby freed for investment; and (3) that petitioner benefited1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*98 by disbursement of the funds because it increased the security of the loans. None of these arguments are convincing. There is insufficient evidence to support the second argument and neither argument (1) nor (3) would make the mortgage escrow funds "assets of the company" or available for investment by the petitioner for the benefit of it and its policyholders.
3. and 4.
In 1967 and 1968, petitioner failed to report as assets under
1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*99 The parties do not appear to disagree on the principles applicable to this question. Under section 818(a),
Where a taxpayer keeps accounts and makes returns on the accrual basis, it is the right to receive and not the actual receipt that determines the inclusion of an amount in gross income.
The primary question here is thus whether petitioner had reasonable grounds in1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*100 1967 and 1968 to believe that interest on mortgage loans which had interest more than 90 days overdue in those years, and on mortgage loans in the process of foreclosure, would never be received. We find that petitioner has failed to carry its burden of proof.
Petitioner relies on the fact that the NAIC annual statement does not require an insurance company to accrue interest on mortgage loans more than 90 days past due and on mortgage loans in foreclosure and argues that this constitutes an accounting judgment that there is sufficient doubt of the collectibility of additional interest to require its nonaccrual. Petitioner also argues that because sometime after the years here involved the mortgaged properties were bid in by petitioner at foreclosure sales at only the amount of principal then due indicates that there was little expectation that additional interest could be collected, citing section 1.166-6(b)(2) of the regulations as support for the conclusion that the bid price was determinative of the fair market value of the mortgaged properties. But these assumptions are far from proof that there were reasonable grounds for believing at the end of the years here involved that1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*101 no more interest would be received on these loans. Petitioner offered no direct evidence of the fair market value of the mortgaged properties; in fact, what evidence there is indicates those values were higher than the prices for which they were bid in at foreclosure sales. Nor do we have any evidence of the noncollectibility of the defaulted interest from the mortgagor or endorsers on the notes. The record does contain evidence that petitioner had filed suits for deficiency judgments against three individuals 62 T.C. 661">*679 who had endorsed for mortgage notes that were not in foreclosure in 1967 and 1968, which would indicate that even in 1969 petitioner had reasonable expectation of collecting the full remaining amount due on the mortgage loans, including interest and attorneys' fees.
Even assuming that an NAIC accounting requirement could serve as a surrogate for other proof of reasonable grounds to believe that an item of income would not be received, we find that petitioner has not established that the NAIC did in fact require the treatment petitioner gave the interest here at issue. Petitioner introduced no direct evidence at trial of the NAIC rules or regulations. Examination1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*102 of petitioner's annual statements for the years at bar shows that the forms approved by the NAIC at most
We hold for respondent on these issues.
5.
Petitioner makes loans to policyholders on the sole security of policies which have cash values available. Interest on policy loans is booked in advance on an annual basis measured by the anniversary date of the policy. The insured may repay a policy loan at any time and receive a corresponding reduction or refund of interest owed or due. If interest is not paid by the insured at the beginning of the policy year, it is merely added to the existing loan principal at that time and thereafter itself bears interest at the same rate, beginning with the next succeeding policy year. In the years at bar, petitioner included policy loan interest, whether actually prepaid or merely added to principal, in its gross investment income under
Respondent determined that petitioner should have included in its gross investment income for the years at bar the following amounts representing policy loan interest which remained unearned at the end of each year:
Year | Amount |
1965 | $ 2,927 |
1966 | 7,782 |
1967 | $ 299 |
1968 | 5,294 |
62 T.C. 661">*680 Respondent also determined that under section 481 relating to adjustments required by changes in accounting method, the increase in unearned interest on policy loans from January 1, 1954, to December 31, 1964 -- a total of $ 48,032 -- was to be included in petitioner's gross investment income for 1965.
We begin again with the requirement of section 818(a) that petitioner be on an accrual method of accounting. Section 1.446-1(c)(1)(ii) of respondent's regulations1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*104 provides that:
Generally under an accrual method, income is to be included for the taxable year when all the events have occurred which fix the right to receive such income and the amount thereof can be determined with reasonable accuracy. * * *
In
Keeping accounts and making returns on the accrual basis, as distinguished from the cash basis, import that it is the
In
If the right to receive income is contingent upon the happening of a future event, the right cannot be said to arise or exist in the taxable year to be accounted for as income under the accrual method of accounting. * * *
The court held that additional mortgage-servicing fees, which it could not be determined1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*105 as of the end of the taxable year would be received, need not be accrued as income.
In
62 T.C. 661">*681 It follows that in the present case petitioner need not accrue any interest on policy loans not prepaid in cash and not earned by the end of the taxable year.
Respondent cites two Circuit Courts of Appeals decisions which reached results different from ours here,
The "claim of right" doctrine, as stated in
If a taxpayer receives earnings under a claim of right and without restriction as to its disposition, he has received income which he is required to [show on his] return, even though it may still be claimed that he is not entitled to retain the money, and even though he may still be adjudged liable to restore its equivalent. * * * [
As we view the facts in this case on this issue, petitioner received nothing from the borrower when it added the prepaid interest to the principal of the loan; there was simply a temporary reallocation of funds petitioner already had on its books. Furthermore, petitioner was not entitled to retain whatever might even be considered as prepayments without an obligation to refund. Thus,
62 T.C. 661">*682 Because we decide that unearned interest on policy loans that is added to principal is not properly includable in petitioner's gross investment income until earned, we must also hold that respondent erred in applying section 481 to increase petitioner's income in 1965 by the $ 48,032 increase in unearned policy loan interest1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*109 from January 1, 1954, to December 31, 1964. To the extent that respondent's adjustment included interest actually prepaid during the years 1954-64, which petitioner does not now claim should be excluded from investment income, we will leave it to the parties to determine whether such an item is a sufficiently "material" item to justify the adjustment under section 481.
In 1965, petitioner acquired all of the outstanding stock of American Benefit Life Insurance Co. (ABL), which it subsequently liquidated. Petitioner treated the transaction as a purchase of ABL's assets and claimed amortization deductions, now acquiesced in by respondent, with respect to the purchase price as set out in our Findings of Fact. Respondent does not contest that petitioner is also entitled to amortize legal fees paid in 1967 in connection with the liquidation of ABL. Petitioner, however, asserts that it should be allowed to deduct the entire amount on its 1967 return. We disagree.
Respondent correctly argues that
We think the same principle applies here. The legal expenses involved arose in the process of acquisition of ABL's assets and should be treated in the same manner as the other costs of acquisition. Furthermore, the record contains no evidence upon which we could allocate the legal fees between the expense of acquiring capital assets and ordinary and necessary business expenses if we were so inclined.
Simpson,
In
Under the express terms of taxpayer's policy loan agreements with borrowers interest is paid in advance at the time of the loan to the end of the current policy year and annually thereafter on the policy anniversary date for the ensuing year, and interest not paid when so due is added to the principal of the existing loan. * * *
It stated at page 762 the company's policy to be: "Interest on policy1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*112 loans is taken into income or assets only as ratably earned." In explaining the reasons for its conclusions, the court clearly indicated that it considered that it was dealing with interest already prepaid; it said at page 762:
But, non-deferral of prepaid items is not foreign to permissible or required accrual accounting for income tax purposes. * * * And, here the taxpayer receives the interest under a binding agreement with the borrower calling for its receipt and without restriction upon its use by the taxpayer. The money is "earned" in a context sufficient for full tax recognition in that taxpayer, when it receives the interest, is fully entitled to it under the express terms of the policy loan agreement. * * *
It found that the
The facts of the case now before us are significantly different: Judge Drennen found that, although the interest is put on the books of the company at the time the loan is made and at the beginning of each policy year, most of the interest is not paid at those times, and no interest is charged on the interest until the beginning of the succeeding policy year. Initially, the company sought to exclude interest which was in hand but which was not earned at the end of the calendar year, but subsequently, it changed its position and admits that all interest actually received must be included; it now seeks to exclude only the interest which has not been received and is not earned at the end of the calendar year.
62 T.C. 661">*684 In view of the difference between the facts dealt with by the Seventh Circuit and those in this case, I am convinced that the Seventh Circuit opinion is not applicable to this case. The Seventh Circuit was dealing with money that was in hand, but we are only dealing with money which has not been received and not earned. It is true that the company has a reserve established with respect to the policy, and if the policyholder fails to pay the 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58">*114 interest, the company can collect from the reserve. Yet, the mere existence of that fund from which payment can be secured does not indicate to me that this is a situation in which the company should be treated as having actually received payment of the interest. The existence of the loan gives the company a right to receive interest for it, and in the ordinary course of events, it will receive, in addition to a repayment of the principal, interest for the period for which the loan is outstanding. I see no reason to treat the company as having actually received that interest until it is in fact paid to it or until it exercises its right to charge the interest against the reserve.
I agree with Judge Drennen's conclusion that as to the interest not received and not earned, it should not be accruable, but I feel that conclusion is not inconsistent with the opinions of the circuit courts in
1. Concerning whether petitioner's acquisition in 1965 of all of the outstanding capital stock of another life insurance company constituted a "purchase" within the meaning of sec. 334(b)(3).↩
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise stated.↩
3. In
"We discern from the statutory scheme a congressional intent that taxable investment yield be derived only from those assets of a life insurance company which are available to be, even though not actually, invested.
"* * * With respect both to the escrow funds held by Liberty and to those under dominion of the correspondents, it can be said, as the Tax Court has said in construing 'They do not currently yield any income. They cannot and are not used to produce investment income; and * * * should not be included in the formula used to determine the rate of return on the company's investment assets.' Petitioner cites as error in the petitions both the inclusion in gross premiums under We recognize that the Fifth Circuit, in We agree with the statement made by Judge Thornberry in his concluding paragraph in the "The result we reach is admittedly an imperfect one. None of the amounts under discussion are properly accruable under normal accounting practices. It would be far more accurate, we think, for the company to disregard deferred and uncollected premiums for all tax purposes, with the Commissioner's approval, of course. * * *"
4. The Court did allow accrual and deduction of agents' commissions on the deferred and uncollected premiums.↩
6. Part of each payment made by certain borrowers on mortgage loans extended by petitioner included a sum for real estate taxes and insurance on the mortgaged property. Petitioner held such sums, along with minor amounts of withholding taxes, in escrow as trustee under the terms of the mortgage loans and deeds of trust under which the payments were made, disbursing them as taxes and insurance payments came due.↩
7. In
8.
(b) Gross Investment Income. -- For purposes of this part, the term "gross investment income" means the sum of the following: (1) Interest, Etc. -- The gross amount of income from -- (A) interest, dividends, rents, and royalties,↩