The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) appeals the district court’s grant of a tax refund to the American Academy of Family Physicians (Academy). The IRS contends the Academy, a tax-exempt organization, is required to pay federal income tax on certain payments it received through its sponsorship of group insurance plans. We conclude the payments are not taxable, and affirm.
The Academy is a national association of family physicians that was organized to represent the interests of family physicians and to promote quality health eare. The Academy is exempt from federal income tax as a business league under 26 U.S.C. § 501(a), (c)(6). The Academy created the American Academy of Family Physicians Foundation (Foundation) to serve as the Academy’s charitable arm. The Foundation is exempt from *1157 federal income tax as a scientific and educational foundation. See id. § 501(a), (c)(3).
The Academy owns and sponsors group disability, medical, and life insurance plans that are available to Academy members and their employees. The . Principal Mutual Life Insurance Company (Principal) underwrites the policies. The policies were initially administered by an individual, and when he died, he bequeathed the business of administering the policies to the Foundation. The Foundation then created AAFP Insurance Services, Inc. (ISI), a separate corporation, and turned over the administration of the insurance plans to ISI. ISI is a for-profit corporation that pays federal income tax on its profits from administering the insurance plans and distributes dividends to the Foundation, which owns all ISPs stock. The Academy provides its membership lists to ISI for fair market value. ISI reports twice a year to an Academy committee, and must obtain the committee’s approval before making any changes to the policies.
The Academy members who elect coverage under the group policies pay premiums to Principal. Principal sets aside part of the premium payments as reserves to pay future claims, and Principal controls the investment of the reserves. The group policies require Principal to turn over to the Academy any reserve funds remaining after the policies have been terminated and all the claims have been paid, whenever that might occur. In the meantime, whether the insurance plans are profitable for Principal or not, the policies require Principal to make annual payments to the Academy for Principal’s use of the reserves, based on a fixed percentage of the insurance reserves. Principal paid the Academy over $600,000 a year during the Academy’s 1984 to 1987 fiscal years. The issue on appeal is whether these annual payments are taxable.
The IRS contends the payments are taxable under 26 U.S.C. § 511, which provides that an organization entitled to a tax exemption under § 501(a), like the Academy, still must pay income tax on its “unrelated business ■ taxable income.” See id. § 511(a)(1)-(2)(A). Unrelated business taxable income is income the organization earns by regularly carrying on a trade or business that is not substantially related to the purposes or functions entitling the organization to its § 501(a) tax exemption. Id. §§ 512(a)(1), 513(a). Here, the IRS concluded Principal’s payments to the Academy were compensation for the Academy’s sponsorship of the group insurance plans, and the payments qualified as unrelated business taxable income. The IRS determined the Academy had improperly failed to pay tax on the payments received from 1984 to 1987. The Academy paid the back taxes and interest assessed by the IRS and then brought this refund action, contending the Academy’s participation in the insurance plans did not constitute a trade or business under § 513 and the payments from Principal were interest, a type of income specifically excluded from unrelated business taxable income, id. § 512(b)(1). Relying on the parties’ extensive factual stipulations, the district court decided the Academy’s insurance activities were not a trade or business, granted the Academy summary judgment, and ordered a tax refund. The district court did not reach the interest issue.
In reviewing the district court’s decision, we first must determine the meaning of the phrase “trade or business” in § 513. Section 513(c) defines a trade or business as “any activity which is earned on for the production of income from the sale of goods or the performance of services.” Treasury Regulation § 1.513 — 1(b) clarifies this statutory definition by providing that “trade or business” has the same meaning in § 513 as it does in 26 U.S.C. § 162, the Internal Revenue Code section permitting business expense deductions.
United States v. American Bar Endowment,
In addition to the profit motive requirement, the income-producing activity of a tax-exempt organization must have the general characteristics of a trade or business.
American Bar Endowment,
Moreover, the ABE’s significant business activity was important to the Supreme Court’s analysis. The Supreme Court decided the ABE’s insurance activities met the definition of a trade or business because they involved both the sale of goods and the performance of services, and “possesse[d] the general characteristics of a trade or business.”
Id.
at 110-11,
In our view, the Academy did not have the profit motive required for a trade or business.
Id.
at 110 n. 1,
The stipulations show the payments were not compensation for services rendered and were not profit in a commercial sense. As we have already explained, the parties stipulated the group policies entitled the Academy to receive the excess reserves after the policies’ termination. Thus, the Academy had a recognizable interest in the reserves Princi *1159 pal was holding. The parties also' stipulated Principal was required to make the annual payments to the Academy as “interest on [the] insurance reserves for Principal’s use of the reserves.” Appellant’s App. at 148. These annual payments were based on a specified, annual, fixed percentage of the insurance reserves, and were generated by Principal’s investment of the reserves. Further, the parties stipulated the interest on the insurance reserves was payable without regard to the profitability of the group insurance plans. Based on these stipulations, the annual payments were neither brokerage fees nor other compensation for commercial services, but were the way the parties decided to acknowledge the Academy’s eventual claim to the excess reserves while Principal was still holding and using the reserves. We need not decide whether the payments were interest within the meaning of § 512(b)(1) as the Academy asserts, because the stipulated record persuades us the payments were not compensation for commercial services performed by the Academy and were not profit for purposes of the unrelated business income tax.
Besides finding no profit motive, we also conclude the Academy’s involvement in the insurance plans was not extensive and did not “possess[ ] the general characteristics of a trade or business.”
American Bar Endowment,
Contrary to the IRS’s view, “not every income-producing and profit-making endeavor constitutes a trade or business.”
Groetzinger,
