OPINION OF THE COURT
This tax case presents two questions. First, are “delay damages,” received by the plaintiff in a personal injury tort action pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 238, exempt from federal income taxation as damages “received on *305 account of’ a personal injury? 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2). Second, if delay damages are taxable, how should their amount be determined when the plaintiff has agreed to a post-verdict settlement that fails to allocate the recovery between compensation for the injury and delay damages?
We hold that the personal injury exemption of 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2) does not extend to “delay damages” under Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 238 and thus the recovery of those damages by taxpayers is taxable. While we acknowledge the practical difficulty of determining delay damages when they are subsumed as an unidentified component of a comprehensive settlement agreement, we nonetheless conclude that the District Court reasonably found delay damages to be an element of the settlement at issue in this case. We therefore affirm its judgment.
I. FACTS
Charles Francisco and his wife Cecilia (collectively, the “Taxpayers”) brought an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County to recover damages for personal injuries Mr. Francisco sustained in a 1983 automobile accident. 1 In March 1994, a jury returned a verdict in favor of the Taxpayers-awarding Mr. Francisco $1,810,000 in damages and Mrs. Francisco $100,000 for loss of consortium. Delay damages in the amount of $1,615,662 were then added to that award 2 by the court pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 238, resulting in a total judgment in favor of the taxpayers of $3,525,662. 3 The defendants in the personal injury action appealed to the Pennsylvania Superior Court, which affirmed the trial court’s judgment in July 1995.
While the defendants’ petition to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court for allowance of appeal was pending, the parties agreed to and executed a Settlement Agreement and Release (the “Settlement Agreement”) on January 19, 1996. The Settlement Agreement provided for payment to the Taxpayers of $3,400,000 in exchange for releasing the defendants from liability. It contained no admission of liability and was entered “for the sole purpose of avoiding further costly litigation.” Taxpayers’ counsel later submitted an affidavit to the District Court in this action explaining that neither the payment of “prejudgment interest” nor the tax consequences of the settlement was considered during settlement negotiations. Instead, he suggested that the verdicts “were considered only for the purpose of establishing the dollar exposure around which negotiations with defendants centered. No specific part of the verdicts was considered in establishing interest as a component of the settlement.” After attorneys’ fees and costs were subtracted, the Taxpayers received $2,247,727.
The Taxpayers did not include any of the $3,400,000 settlement as income on their 1996 tax return. The Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) audited the Taxpayers and assessed a tax deficiency of $402,646. 4 The deficiency was calculated *306 by first determining what component of the net settlement recovery represented delay damages. The IRS assumed that 46% of the recovery was '-taxable as delay damages because 46% was the same ratio of delay damages ($1,615,662) to the total award ($3,526,462) awarded to the Taxpayers in court. It then multiplied the net recovery of the Taxpayers ($2,247,727) by 46% and concluded that $1,033,954 of the settlement was taxable as delay damages. The IRS assessed a deficiency of $402,646 on the $1,033,954 in taxable income received by the Taxpayers.
II. Jurisdiction
The Taxpayers paid the deficiency, with interest, and then filed a timely claim with the IRS for a refund on March 17, 1998. See 26 U.S.C. § 6511(a). The IRS denied their administrative claim and Taxpayers brought this refund suit against the Government in the United' States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Because the suit was filed within two years of the IRS’s denial of their claim, it was timely. See 26 U.S.C. § 6532(a)(1). Jurisdiction in the District Court was proper pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7422(a) and 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1).
On June 22, 1999, the District Court ruled that delay damages were taxable and granted part of the Government’s motion for summary judgment. The Court declined to address what portion of the settlement should be properly allocated to delay damages and requested further briefing on the subject. On May 25, 2000, the District Court granted final judgment in favor of the Government after concluding that the IRS’s method of apportioning the delay damages was proper.
This Court has jurisdiction over the Taxpayers’ timely appeal of both rulings pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The District Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Government is entitled to plenary review by this Court.
See Greenberg v. United States,
III. Taxability of Delay Damages
A.
Gross income is defined for purposes of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”) in 26 U.S.C. § 61. That section states that “[ejxcept as otherwise provided in this subtitle, gross income means all income from whatever source derived.” 26 U.S.C. § 61(a). The statute provides an illustrative list of various sources of income. One example is “(4) Interest.” 26 U.S.C. § 61(a)(4). The Supreme Court has long acknowledged the comprehensiveness of defining income in this manner. “The broad sweep of this language indicates the purpose of Congress to use the full measure of its taxing power....”
Helvering v. Clifford,
Taxpayers assert that the entire proceeds of the settlement are exempt from income under the personal injury exemption, 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2). In 1996, that exception excluded from taxation “the amount of any damages (whether by suit or agreement and whether as lump sums or as periodic payments) on account of personal injuries or sickness.”
Id.
The Supreme Court has noted that the effect of the broad construction of § 61’s definition of gross income is that “exclusions from income must be narrowly construed.”
United States v. Burke,
It is undisputed that Taxpayers’ underlying jury award was for a tort or tort type rights and that those damages were received on account of personal injury. “For damages to be excludable under section 104(a)(2), the taxpayer’s underlying claim must be for tortlike personal injury.”
Kovacs v. Commissioner,
The principle underlying § 104(a)(2) is known as the “human capital” rationale. As recently explained in
O’Gilvie v. United States,
Obviously, we cannot determine whether delay damages make a victim whole or return the victim’s personal or financial capital without understanding the purpose served by delay damages under
*308
Pennsylvania law. This is not to say, however, that we are deciding an issue of state law. While Pennsylvania law describes the character of the legal right to delay damages, the tax consequences of the Taxpayers’ receipt of delay damages are governed solely by federal law, in this case the considerations underlying § 104(a)(2).
5
See Helvering v. Stuart,
B.
To ascertain the character of delay damages awarded pursuant to Rule 238, we must begin with a discussion of prejudgment interest in Pennsylvania common law. Traditionally, prejudgment interest, also called “interest
eo
nomine,”
6
was only available when a fixed or liquidated sum was due on a certain date.
See Pollice v. Nat’l Tax Funding, L.P.,
Yet Pennsylvania law did not completely deny to tort victims a remedy for the passage of time. In
Citizens’ Natural Gas Co. v. Richards,
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court established that in some property tort cases, such as “unintentional conversion or destruction of property,” prejudgment interest may be awarded.
Into these cases the element of time may enter as an important factor, and the plaintiff will not be fully compensated unless he receive not only the value of his property, but receive it, as nearly as may be, as of the date of his loss. Hence it is that the jury may allow additional damages in the nature of interest for the lapse of time. It is never interest as such, nor as a matter of right, but compensation for the delay, of which the rate of interest affords the fair legal measure.
*309
Id.
The award of such “compensation for delay” in property torts “is not a matter of right but is an issue for the finder of fact, the resolution of which depends upon all the circumstances of the case.”
Marrazzo v. Scranton Nehi Bottling Co.,
However, neither prejudgment interest nor “compensation for delay” was awarded for personal injuries under the common law in Pennsylvania.
Conover v. Bloom,
Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 238 was enacted in 1978 to provide successful plaintiffs in actions for damages for personal or property injuries with compensation for the delay preceding judgment. Its primary provision states:
At the request of the plaintiff in a civil action seeking monetary relief for bodily injury, death or property damage, damages for delay shall be added to the amount of compensatory damages awarded against each defendant or additional defendant found to be liable to the plaintiff in the verdict of a jury, in the decision of the court in a nonjury trial or in the award of arbitrators ..., and shall become part of the verdict, decision or award.
Pa. R. Civ. P. 238(a)(1). It goes on to award damages in an amount that “shall be calculated at the rate equal to the prime rate as listed in the first edition of the Wall Street Journal published for each calendar year for which the damages are awarded, plus one percent, not compounded.” Pa. R. Civ. P. 238(a)(3). These “delay damages” are only available to certain plaintiffs and for certain periods of delay. Delay damages are unavailable during periods in which the plaintiff caused delay of the trial or if the defendant made a reasonable written settlement offer and the plaintiff did not recover more than 125 percent of that offer after trial. Pa. R. Civ. P. 238(b).
Because the damages awarded pursuant to Rule 238 are determined by reference to prevailing interest rates, Pennsylvania
*310
courts have frequently characterized the rule as providing for “prejudgment interest.”
7
In one of the first cases addressing the Rule, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court described it as follows. “Rule 238 pertains to prejudgment interest granted in certain instances to plaintiffs who receive jury verdicts in excess of any settlement offer made by a defendant prior to trial.”
Laudenberger v. Port Auth. of Allegheny County,
Having concluded that Rule 238 permits the awarding of prejudgment interest, we must recognize one caveat. As the Taxpayers’ repeatedly assert, delay damages are not available to all successful tort plaintiffs as a matter of right, but can only be awarded either when the defendant did not make a reasonable settlement offer or for periods of time for which the plaintiff is
*311
not responsible for causing delay.
See Schrock v. Albert Einstein Med. Ctr.,
In making a decision on a plaintiffs entitlement to delay damages!,] the mere length of time between the starting date and the verdict is not to be the sole criterion. The fact finder shall consider: the parties’ respective responsibilities in requesting continuances!;] the parties’ compliance with rules of discovery; the respective responsibilities for delay necessitated by the joinder of additional parties; and other pertinent factors.
Craig v. Magee Memorial Rehabilitation Ctr.,
C.
Three other courts of appeals have addressed whether prejudgment interest on a personal injury award is entitled to exemption from taxation pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 104(a)(2) because it is received “on account of’ personal injury.
See Rozpad v. Commissioner,
In
Kovacs,
the first of the prejudgment interest eases, the Tax Court parsed the traditional distinction between “damages” and “interest” and noted that “damages are the principal sum on which the interest is owed, and ordinary usage suggests the two are separate.”
Kovacs,
The Tenth Circuit in
Brabson
was critical of the
Kovacs
opinion’s overt reliance on the labels “damages” and “interest” in determining the taxability of prejudgment interest.
Brabson,
First, it noted that “[p]rejudgment interest was rarely available under the common law, and never for personal injuries.”
Brabson,
Secondly, the Tenth Circuit in
Brabson
recognized that delay damages did not fit easily within the human capital rationale that underlies § 104(a)(2). “[Cjompensation for the lost time value of money is caused by the delay in attaining judgment. Time becomes the relevant factor, not the injury itself — the longer the procedural delay, the higher the amount.”
Brabson,
Lastly, the First Circuit in
Roznad,
It is true that many of the cases discussed in Kovacs deal with post-judgment interest-but the petitioners fail to persuade us that this distinction makes a meaningful difference. Interest, whether pre— or post-judgment, compensates for delay in payment, and is specifically included in the litany of income items subject to taxation under section 61.
Rozpad,
We discern no meaningful distinction between delay damages received pursuant to Rule 238 and the prejudgment
*314
interest statutes in eases such as
Kovacs, Brabson
and Rozpad,
11
The common law in Pennsylvania is no different from that in Colorado or Rhode Island with respect to prejudgment interest. Personal injury plaintiffs in neither of these states were entitled to prejudgment interest as a component of their remedy at the common law.
See Conover,
was unheard-of in 1919 when Congress enacted the direct lineal ancestor of section 104(a)(2), section 213(b)(6) of the Revenue Act of 1918, ch. 18, 40 Stat. 1057, 1066 (1919). Since the exclusion for personal injury awards has been handed down almost verbatim from 1919 forward, Congress could not conceivably have intended the exclusion to apply to prejudgment interest.
Rozpad,
The Taxpayers’ attempts to argue otherwise are unpersuasive. They would have us draw a distinction between “interest,” awarded as of right for the failure to pay a liquidated sum on a fixed day, and “compensation for delay,” which was sometimes available in property torts such as “unintentional conversion or destruction of property.”
Citizens’ Natural Gas Co.,
Prejudgment interest was rarely available under the common law, and never for personal injuries.... The requirement of a liquidated sum, ‘fixed and known,’ posed the greatest obstacle towards recovery of such interest.
Thus prejudgment interest, when awarded at all, generally compensated for pecuniary harms, most often easily determinable contractual ones. It is only more recently, pursuant to certain statutes, that prejudgment interest has become recoverable in personal injury suits on nonpecuniary harms.
Brabson,
In contrast, it is well established that the exclusion for personal injury was intended to exempt from income damages that “substitute for any normally untaxed personal (or financial) quality, good, or ‘asset.’ ”
O’Gilvie,
Wfiiile Taxpayers repeatedly assert that delay damages are intended to make a victim whole,
see Costa,
As noted in
Kovacs,
since the 1933 case of
Riddle v. Commissioner,
We are unable to divine a meaningful distinction between postjudgment interest and delay damages. Both compensate the plaintiff for the delay in payment of the principal — the jury’s damage award.
See Rozpad,
Taxpayers distinguish Rule 238 delay damages from interest generally because they are not awarded in every case as a matter of right, but instead only when the defendant caused delay or failed to make a reasonable settlement offer.
See Laudenberger,
We find this argument unavailing because the Taxpayers cannot establish that a remedy for the harm incurred in this respect is based on “tort” or “tort-like” rights.
12
See Schleier,
Recognizing that the narrow remedial scheme of Rule 238 is persuasive evidence that delay damages are not based in tort or tort-type rights, Taxpayers argue that delay damages should be analogized to liquidated damages that serve a compensatory function. The Supreme Court noted
*317
in Schleier, while discussing the taxability of the liquidated damages permitted by the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA), “that if Congress had intended the ADEA’s liquidated damages to compensate plaintiffs for personal injuries, those damages might well come within § 104(a)(2)’s exclusion.”
Schleier,
Nor is our conclusion that delay damages are not included within the scope of § 104(a)(2) swayed by the Taxpayers’ argument that the 1996 amendments to that statute alter our analysis. In 1996, Congress passed the Small Business Job Protection Act, which expressly made punitive damages taxable and limited the exemption to “physical” personal injuries and “physical” sickness. See 110 Stat. 1755, 1838-39, Pub.L. 104-188, § 1605 (August 20, 1996). Because the Taxpayers’ settlement was agreed upon before the effective date of the amendment, it is undisputed that the additions to § 104(a)(2) do not apply to this case. Nonetheless, the Taxpayers argue that language from the House Report on the amendments to § 104(a)(2), when read in conjunction with the Supreme Court’s decision in Schleier, demonstrates a congressional intent that courts construe the personal injury exemption broadly to include delay damages.
The passage on which Taxpayers rely states in its relevant portion that “[i]f an action has its origin in a physical injury or physical sickness, then all damages (other than punitive damages) that flow therefrom, are treated as payments received on account of physical injury or physical sickness.” H.R.Rep. No. 104-586 at 143-44 (1996) (emphasis added). We ignore for the moment that the 1996 amendments are inapplicable to the Taxpayers’ action. Their argument is that the use of “all damages ... that flow therefrom” indicates a congressional intent to expand § 104(a)(2) to include delay damages.
*318
This is unpersuasive for two reasons. One, the House Report on which the Taxpayers rely does not mention interest at all, but instead was intended to emphasize that damages for emotional distress, defamation, discrimination and other non-physical torts do not result in tax-exempt recoveries under § 104(a)(2).
Id.
Thus, the legislative history is not clearly in support of the Taxpayers’ suggested interpretation of the statute. Two, the Supreme Court’s opinion in
O’Gilvie
forecloses the possibility that all damages that flow from a personal injury are exempt from taxation.
Having considered both the language of § 104(a)(2) and its rationale, we are not persuaded that Rule 238 delay damages can be meaningfully distinguished from prejudgment interest in general simply because they are only available when the defendant has delayed the trial or not made an adequate settlement offer. For this reason, we affirm the District Court’s ruling that the Taxpayers’ recovery of delay damages should have been taxed.
IV. ALLOCATING DELAY DAMAGES in Settlement
Having concluded that delay damages received pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 238 are not exempt from taxation as damages received on account of personal injury, we proceed to whether the District Court allocated the proper measure of delay damages from the total recovery received in settlement. The IRS suggested, and the District Court found, that 46% of the $3.4 million received in settlement was properly allocated to delay damages because that was the same proportion of the trial court’s total award apportioned to delay damages. After reducing the taxable income to the amount actually received by the Taxpayers after payment of attorneys’ fees and costs, 14 the IRS proposed to tax 46% of the net settlement received by the Taxpayers. Using *319 this formula, the IRS determined that $1,033,954 was taxable income.—
Before proceeding to the Taxpayers’ assignments of error on this point, we note that “the taxpayer bears the ultimate burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that [the IRS’s] assessment is erroneous.”
Sullivan v. United States,
The Taxpayers’ burden in this respect is made more difficult by the reasonableness of the IRS’s allocation. It is a tenet of federal tax law that income received in settlement of a claim should be taxed in the same manner as if it had been received on that claim in court.
See Lyeth v. Hoey,
The Taxpayers aver that the Settlement Agreement in this case lacks any express language parsing the payment of the defendants between personal injury damages and delay damages. Lacking any evidence of allocation in the settlement agreement, they maintain that the only evidence presented to the Court was the affidavit of Don P. Foster, Taxpayers’ *320 counsel in the personal injury litigation, in which he asserts that no consideration was given to delay damages in the settlement negotiations and that the tax consequences of the agreement were never considered by the parties. Therefore, their argument proceeds, the District Court erred in refusing to credit the only evidence with which it was presented on the subject of allocation.
We are unpersuaded. Because the “intent of the payor” is paramount in determining the nature of the settled claims, it is admittedly difficult to discern the nature of settled claims in an agreement that fails to distinguish the separate elements of recovery. Yet in situations like this, 15 where there has been a judgment in a trial court that preceded settlement of the claims, the most persuasive evidence of the payor’s intent in settling the case is the previous damages award of that court. Recognizing this logic, the First Circuit has stated that
when the interest component of a personal injury settlement can be delineated with accuracy and ease — as when there has been a jury verdict and an ensuing judgment that contains separate itemizations of damages and interest — a subsequent settlement that does not purport .to make a different allocation is quite logically viewed as including a pro rata share of interest.
Rozpad,
The IRS and District Court were thus justified in assuming, under the facts of this case, that the proportion of interest to damages reflected that of the preceding judgment. As previously noted, the settlement was for $3.4 million, just fractionally less than the Taxpayers’ combined judgment awarded at trial and affirmed on appeal. 16 Thus, the Foster affidavit was not the District Court’s only evidence on allocation. It was not even the best evidence.
Nor was it error for the District Court to have rejected Foster’s assertions that the settlement contained no delay damages. According to the affidavit, “settlement amounts were derived at solely from a consideration on behalf of the plaintiffs of the risks to which they would be sub *321 jected by refusing to settle the case while an appeal was pending.” (emphasis added). This statement is not probative of any fact relevant to our inquiry; instead it is the “payor’s intent” — the defendants in the Taxpayers’ personal injury suit — which is relevant. On the subject of the defendants’ intentions, the affidavit states, “discussions with defendants’ representatives concerned the considerable exposure to a larger verdiet[,] in the event defendants prevailed on the their appeal and a new trial was granted[,] because of Mr. Francisco’s continuing and worsening condition.” This statement does not help the Taxpayers’ argument. For even if the defendants were concerned with the possible exposure to a larger damages award on remand, that does not support the inference that the defendants sought to allocate its payments in this settlement entirely to personal injury, as opposed to some pro rata portion of both personal injury damages and delay damages. That is, the defendants’ concern with a later, larger judgment supports the inference that they wished to settle sooner for less money; it does not support the inference that they intended only to pay personal injury compensation in the settlement. 17 Indeed, if the defendants were motivated by their future exposure in the event of a possible new trial, they nonetheless had every reason to believe that any future increased judgment would include increased delay damages commensurate with the increased compensatory damages.
Furthermore, even had the District Court accepted the Foster affidavit to establish the proposition that the settlement agreement was intended by the pay- or to provide no compensation for delay damages, it was within the Court’s province to reject that evidence. The general rule is that a trial court may reject the parties’ allocation of claims, even when that allocation is contained within the settlement itself.
See Delaney v. Commissioner,
It is thus well established that in cases in which the settlement agreement’s allocation of damages does not reflect the true nature of the underlying award, the District Court has a duty to look behind the agreement of the parties to discern the true nature of the “payor’s intent” in settling claims. Similarly, when a party, such as the Taxpayers here, asserts that the allocation intended by the payor is different than that contained in the underlying judgment (which, if adopted by the IRS, enjoys a rebuttable presumption status), courts are obliged to measure the veracity of, and support for, that assertion.
See Kurowski v. Commissioner,
Having rejected the Taxpayers’ assertions on this point, we agree that the District Court correctly concluded that the IRS’s use of a ratio method to determine the portion of the settlement allocated to delay damages was correct. Taxpayers have not submitted credible evidence that would rebut, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendants’ intentions in settling their suit were anything other than to avoid the underlying judgment. Because that judgment contained both personal injury damages and delay damages, the IRS was correct in allocating the settlement similarly.
Lastly Taxpayers argue that, if we do not accept their argument that no part of the settlement was allocated to delay damages, the Government should only tax the amount by which the net settlement exceeded the award of damages given by the jury. 20 We first note that no court has adopted this methodology for calculating the taxable portion of a settlement recovery. 21 The District Court dismissed this methodology out of hand, stating “I do not find this argument persuasive.”
Nor do we. The Taxpayers’ suggested calculation is initially appealing because it would tax as delay damages only that amount by which their recovery exceeded the jury award. On closer analysis, however, it is apparent that this allocation method assumes that, for some inexplica *324 ble reason, the attorneys’ fees were deducted only from the delay damages and not in pro rata portions from the Taxpayers’ recovery as a whole. Not only is this supposition untenable, but it would also result in a scheme by which the quantity of the judgment that is taxable would turn on the amount of attorneys’ fees and costs. The anomalous, result would be that plaintiffs identically situated to the Taxpayers but who represented themselves pro se and obtained an identical recovery would pay substantially more taxes on their judgment than the Taxpayers in this case. There is no reason that the tax incidence of a recovery of delay damages should be almost entirely mitigated by attorneys’ fees and costs deducted from the recovery. Calculation of taxes is not a reprise of Jamdyce v. Jamdyce, the legendary suit in Charles Dickens’ Bleak House, in which resolution came about only because legal fees ate up the whole of an estate.
Indeed, the inherently rational and fair method to disaggregate taxable delay damages from non-taxable personal injury damages in a general settlement following a judgment containing both, in the absence of persuasive evidence supporting a contrary allocation, is the ratio method adopted by the IRS and District Court in this case. The IRS’s allocation accomplishes the purpose of § 104(a)(2) by exempting only those damages received in compromise of the personal injury claim while permitting taxation of the Rule 238 damages added to the award to compensate the plaintiff for delay. We therefore affirm the judgment of the District Court awarding summary judgment in favor of the Government on the allocation issue.
Notes
. The facts of this case are undisputed and are taken from the Stipulation of Uncontested Material Facts agreed by the parties before the District Court.
. Delay damages were awarded on Mr. Francisco’s personal injury award and not the loss of consortium claim. Under Pennsylvania law, delay damages are not available for loss of consortium.
See Anchorstar v. Mack Trucks, Inc.,
. The Stipulation of Uncontested Material Facts appears to have excluded Mrs. Francisco’s consortium award in its calculation of the "total award” of $3,425,662.
. Though Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 238 has been in effect since 1979, we know of no prior case in which the IRS has *306 sought to tax delay damages received under this Rule.
. Because the role of state law in this inquiry is merely to describe the nature of the interest being taxed, and because we believe the nature of the interest created by Rule 238 to be settled in Pennsylvania law, we decline the Taxpayers' invitation to certify questions to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. See 210 Pa.Code § 63.10.
. The English translation is "interest under that name.”
. Taxpayers argue that delay damages available under Rule 238 are not ''prejudgment interest” and those cases which have so described the rule "suffer from ... inattention to detail.” Taxpayers' Opening Br. at 19. Given the sheer quantity of cases that have characterized Rule 238 damages as prejudgment interest, we find this argument to be meritless. See,
e.g., Weber v. GAF Corp.,
. "Conversely, delay damages also prevent a defendant from being unjustly enriched by keeping the interest that could be earned during the litigation process on what is essentially the plaintiff’s money.”
See Costa,
. Indeed, following the decision in Craig v. Magee Memorial Rehabilitation Ctr. Rule 238 was amended to ensure that delay damages turned on fault by eliminating those provisions that granted delay damages automatically and replacing them with a hearing on the párties' fault as discussed in Craig. See Pa. R. Civ. P. 238, Explanatory Comment— 1988.
. We reject the argument proffered by the dissent in
Kovacs,
and suggested by the Taxpayers here, that the Periodic Payment Settlement Act of 1982, Pub.L. 97-473, § 101, 96 Stat. 2605 (1982) — which added the phrase "and whether as lump sums or periodic payments” after the clause "whether by suit or agreement” in § 104(a)(2) — was also intended by Congress to make all receipts of interest on personal injury awards nontaxable.
See Kovacs,
. Indeed, in
Laudenberger,
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court described the Michigan prejudgment interest statute, Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.6013, discussed in
Kovacs,
the Colorado prejudgment interest statute, Colo.Rev. Stat. Ann. § 13-21-101, discussed in
Brabson,
and the Rhode Island prejudgment interest statute, R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-21-10, discussed in
Rozpad,
among others, as “similar pre-trial interest provisions.”
Laudenberger,
. While we acknowledge that the underlying recovery of damages for personal injury is based in tort, we are required under § 104(a)(2) to parse the separate elements of the damages award to ensure that each fulfills the statute's criteria.
See Schleier,
. Indeed, the
Schleier
Court noted the presence of liquidated damages in the ADEA was not "sufficient to bring it within
Burke’s
conception of a 'tort type righ[t].’ ”
Schleier,
. No party has contested the propriety of the IRS's initial deduction of all legal fees and expenses from the award before determining taxable income.
But see Robinson v. Commissioner,
. The circumstances of this case do not require us to reach the tax consequences of a personal injury settlement agreed upon before adjudication of the claims in court.
Cf. Rozpad v. Commissioner,
. Indeed, Foster’s affidavit candidly admits that the verdicts were a starting point for settlement negotiations. "The verdicts, including Rule 238 damages, were considered only for the purpose of establishing the dollar exposure around which negotiations with defendants centered.”
. Though not the case here, it is possible that parties could allocate contractually the whole of a settlement only to the non-taxable portion of a prior judgment. In
McKay v. Commissioner,
. "[BJasic contract principles do indeed apply to settlement agreements.”
In re Cendant Corp. Prides Litig.,
. We find the Tax Court’s holding in
McShane v. Commissioner,
. Subtracting the personal injury award ($1,910,000) from the net settlement received by the Taxpayers ($2,247,727) yields $337,727, which is the amount actually received by the Taxpayers in excess of the jury award.
. Taxpayers assert that this methodology is consistent with that in
Bagley v. Commissioner,
While the allocation in Bagley did result in taxation of only that amount by which the settlement exceeded the jury’s compensatory, non-taxable damages, this does not support the Taxpayers in this case because the result in Bagley was intended by the settling parties, as found by the Tax Court after consideration of all relevant circumstances. Id. at 395. In contrast, the Taxpayers have no evidence that any party to this underlying litigation intended such an allocation and instead have suggested this technique as a normative principle, one to which we do not subscribe.
