Taxpayer Anesthesia Service Medical Group, Inc. (ASMG) appeals from the Tax Court’s decision finding deficiencies in its tax payments in the years 1974 to 1979. ASMG, a California medical professional corporation, created an irrevocable trust (Trust) to cover medical malpractice claims against its employees. ASMG on appeal disputes the Tax Court’s disallowance of its deductions for payments to the Trust and the court’s attribution of Trust income to it.
The well-reasoned opinion of the Tax Court,
Were the Trust established to pay malpractice claims brought against ASMG, ASMG’s contributions to it would not be deductible. Amounts placed into self-insurance reserves are not deductible business expenses under I.R.C. § 162(a).
Clougherty Packing Co.,
ASMG argues that the Trust provides for payments not of claims against it but rather of claims against its employees. We think this a distinction without significance. Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, ASMG is liable for the tortious acts of its employees committed within the scope of their employment.
Hinman v. Westinghouse Elec. Co.,
ASMG attempts to characterize its payments as deductible insurance premiums,
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employee compensation, or contributions to an employee benefit plan. These types of deductible payments, however, are subcategories of deductible business expenses. The above analysis indicates that ASMG’s payments are not a deductible business expense because they create a capital asset inuring to its continued benefit. Thus, the rationale for generally permitting the deduction of these types of payments — the employer’s incurrence of a nonrecoverable expense — is not present here.
See Greensboro Pathology Assocs. v. United States,
We also agree with the Tax Court that ASMG’s ability to use Trust funds to discharge its potential vicarious liability requires taxing the Trust’s income to ASMG. See I.R.C. § 677(a)(1), (2) (grantor shall be treated as owner of trust whose income in a nonadverse party’s discretion may be distributed to or held for future distribution to the grantor); 3 B. Bittker, Federal Taxation of Income, Estates and Gifts ¶ 80.4.-1, at 80-38 (“The attribution to the grantor of income that is, or may be, used to discharge his legal obligations ... is a reasonable interpretation of IRC § 677(a); indeed, a contrary result would nullify the statutory rule by opening an escape hatch as wide as a barn door.”). ASMG on appeal has abandoned its argument raised in the Tax Court that Trust income is not attributable to it because the Trust is either a voluntary employees’ beneficiary association or an insurance company; we therefore do not reach these issues.
The judgment of the Tax Court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Trust instrument provides that employees’ eligibility for payment of claims brought against them is to be conclusively determined by a claims committee appointed by ASMG’s Board of Directors.
. ASMG argues that the Trust provided no real continuing benefit to it because it could always seek indemnity from its employees for their unauthorized negligent acts.
See generally Davidson v. Welch,
We do not decide whether ASMG's other continuing benefit from the Trust — the satisfaction of its state-imposed medical security obligations — would by itself require treating the Trust as an account held for its benefit.
. Treas.Reg. § 1.162-1 (a) provides for the deduction of "insurance premiums against fire, storm, theft, accident, or other similar losses in the case of a business.” ASMG cites
Carnation Co. v. Commissioner,
. Rev.Rul. 58-238, 1958-
