COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE v. TREGANOWAN
No. 211, Docket 21583
United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit
June 6, 1950
Writ of Certiorari Denied Oct. 16, 1950
183 F.2d 288 | 71 S.Ct. 82
Bеfore L. HAND, Chief Judge, and CHASE and CLARK, Circuit Judges.
For the reasons stated the decision of the Tax Court will be affirmed.
Carlton Fox, Special Assistant to Attorney General, and C. Oliphant, Washington, D. C. (Theron Lamar Caudle, Assistant Attorney General, and Ellis N. Slack and Robert N. Anderson, Special Assistants to Attorney General, on the brief), for petitionеr.
Timothy N. Pfeiffer, of New York City (Milbank, Tweed, Hope & Hadley, Weston Vernon, Jr., Howard O. Colgan, Jr., Rebecca M. Cutler, and Robert L. Woodford, all of New York City, on the brief), for respondent.
CLARK, Circuit Judge.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue here seeks review of a decision of the Tax Court, 13 T.C. 159, two judges dissenting, which expunged a deficiency he had assessed against the taxpayer executrix on the ground of her failure to include the proceeds of life insurance in the gross estate of her decedent for the computation of the estate tаx. The governing statute is
From 1925 until his death in 1944, decedent was a member of the New York Stock Exchange. Since 1873 the Exchange has had a plan providing for the payment by the surviving members of a certain sum to the families of deceased members. The constitution of the Exchange sets up for this purpose a Gratuity Fund and provides that before any one may be elected to membership in the Exchange he must make a contribution to the Gratuity Fund of $15. By the constitution the member also “pledges himself to make, upon the death of a member of the Exchange, a voluntary gift to the family of each deceased member in thе sum of fifteen dollars.” The constitution also pledges the faith of the Exchange to pay, out of these assessments, $20,000, or so much thereof as may have been collected, to the persons named in the next section of the document. The persons there named were the widow and children of the member or issue of a deceased child or children, or if he died leaving neither widow, child, nor issue of a child, then to his legal heirs or the persons who would, under the laws of New York, takе the same by reason of relationship to him had he owned the same at the time of his death. No member has at any time had the right to name, select, or designate any beneficiary or beneficiaries other than those named above, nor may the proceeds be assigned or pledged for the payment of any debt.
Although the constitution provides that the beneficiaries of a deceased member are to receive the full $20,000 only if that amount is collected, prаctically it is certain that the full amount will be paid. Under Art. X, § 5, of the constitution of the Exchange, members are subject to loss of their
This happy state of financial stability came about because of quite generous support of the fund in the past. In its early period the fund was built up in four ways: (1) from an initial payment of $10 by each member of the Exchange and a similar payment—later increased to $15—from each person thеreafter admitted to membership; (2) from allocation to it of half the annual profits of the Exchange in excess of $10,000; (3) from the excess of the amounts collected from surviving members over the amount paid to the kin of deceased members; and (4) from the accumulation of interest on the invested capital. In 1896 the allocation to the fund of half of the annual profits in excess of $10,000 was terminated. In 1915 the accumulation of the income was terminated and thereafter the net income was credited pro rata to the members of the Exchange in reduction of the amounts payable by them on the deaths of other members. On March 26, 1941, a constitutional amendment was adopted providing for the use of both capital and income of the fund as a credit against amounts otherwise payable by surviving members so long as the value of the fund should remain in excess of $500,000. See Franklin v. Dick, 262 App.Div. 299, 28 N.Y.S.2d 426, affirmed 287 N.Y. 656, 39 N.E.2d 282, which discusses the operation of the fund and sustains the validity of the 1941 amendment. The credits from the surplus in the fund, which had built up to almost $2,000,000, were enough to cover all the assessments from January 1, 1941, until beyond the time when decedent‘s executrix sold his seat. Hence no direct payments of assessments were made by him, or by his executrix, during this period.
“Insurance” is not defined by statute, and Treasury interpretation of the term has never gone beyond a statement that
In the Le Gierse case the Court, resolving a conflict in the lower courts, denied the benefit of the $40,000 exemption then allowed for the proceeds of life insurance to the receipts upon death under an ingenious transaction whereby an uninsurable prospect did obtain a policy of life insurance. The device was the purchase by the uninsurable risk (in the particular instance a woman of 80) of both a life insurance and a life annuity contract upon the payment of single premiums for each, sufficient together to avoid all loss by the insurer; for thе nature of these contracts is such that, whatever the time of death, any loss upon one will be necessarily offset by the gain on the other. The Court therefore held that when the two contracts were put together there was no “insurance risk.” The holding really highlights the situation here where the payment is actually conditioned upon death, whenever occurring, in the true terms of insurance. “From an insurance standpoint there is no risk unless there is uncertainty or, to use a better term, fortuitоusness. It may be uncertain whether the risk will materialize in any particular case. Even death may be considered fortuitous, because the time of its occurrence is beyond control.” 8 Ency.Soc.Sc. 95. That fortuitous-
Here the risk of loss from premature death is effectively shifted from the individual to the group of other members of the Exchange. If the individual member dies prematurely, the amount paid to his kin will exceed the amount of assessments which he himself has paid in, the difference representing the loss caused by his premature death which the group has had to bear. Had he not been a member of the plan, he would have saved the amount of assessments against him before his death, but his beneficiaries would be $20,000 poorer. Thus they would have borne this loss which, through the Exchange plan, he has shifted to the group. And manifestly this plan provides a distribution of the risk, for because of the plan the risk of premature death is borne by the 1373 other members of the Exchange, rather than by the individual.
The Tax Court stressed such matters as the lack of adjustment of premiums to health or age or living habits of the member, of any requirement as to the passing of a physical examination, of any fixing of the amount of the “gift” with reference to his life expectancy as determined by the mortality tables. But these do not appear to be essentials.1 As Judge Opper well said, in dissenting for himself and Judge Turner in the Tax Court: “Modern level-premium life insurance contracts issued by great companies engaged primarily in that business have become so commonplace that the contentiоn can now be made, and apparently with success, that nothing else is ‘life insurance.’ I venture to suggest, however, that neither legal authority nor ordinary usage justifies even today so narrow a construction of the term.” Here over the years and by a system of actual trial the cost of the plan had been equated with the required contributions as successfully as more detailed analyses of the risks might have provided. In fact, the plan here carried out is in essence the assessments for death charges made by the ancient guilds on their membership, from which the origin of life insurance has been traced, 9 Ency. Soc.Sc. 462; Ency.Britannica 1948, tit. Life Insurance, and still employed by mutual benefit and fraternal societies, though their popularity has diminished in the last half century. These plans provide that living members make payments whenever a member dies, rather than periodically, with the payments equal for all members of the group, regardless of their life expectancy. These plans have always been understood to be insurance, see, e. g., Commonwealth v. Wetherbee, 105 Mass. 149, 161, and are so considered with regard to
The finding that this plan is insurance does not alone ensure taxability of the sum in question here, for the other requirements of the statute must also be fulfilled. The insurance must result from contracts wherein the insured either “possessed at his death any of the incidents of ownership” or which he had “purchased with pre-
The phrase “incidents of ownership,” as used in
From both the broad language used and its inclusive interpretation, it is thus clear that such powers as to receive the surrender value of insurance or to put another in one‘s place as the insured are incidents of ownership. An Exchange member does have the power to sell his seat, thus divesting his beneficiary of any right to payments, and entitling the purchaser to the same insurance which the seller has had. This power to cancel one‘s own engagement and substitute another seems to us an inсident of ownership, within the statutory meaning. The purchase price of a seat on the Exchange is necessarily the
Considering the matter along somewhat broader lines, the result must be the same. It is contrary to our theories of property to conceive of a valuable right such as this without ownership somewhere; and since the member has the control over it, he is the natural one to whom to ascribe such right. Even though ownership be not complete for all purposes—i. e., his bundle of rights be less than some assumed total—that does not require rejection of the concept; we are well accustomed to various forms of impairment or inseparable joining of rights, as because of physical connection, e. g., a house and land, or of legal status, e. g., a joint or community ownership of husband and wife, or of limited creation or extent, e. g., the nonassignable annuities considered in United States v. Drescher, 2 Cir., 179 F.2d 863. We are unwilling to hold this right ownerless, cf. 1 Restatement, Property, c. 1 and § 10, 1936; Morris Plan Industrial Bank of New York v. Schorn, 2 Cir., 135 F.2d 538, 540, and n. 4, or at least that decedent failed to possess any of the incidents of ownership.
The decision must therefore be reversed for reinstatement of the deficiency assessment.
L. HAND, Chief Judge (dissenting in part).
In the first form of the “Gratuity Fund” each member agreed to pay $10 every time another member died, and the members collectively agreed that half the profits of the Exchange should also contribute. The promise to make the $10 payments was like the “premium notes” of old mutual fire insurance companies, in which each member assumed a limited liability for the loss suffered by any onе, the result of which was to spread his loss over all. These companies were always considered insurance companies; and insurance is usually regarded as essentially the ratable distribution over all members of a group of a payment which becomes due to some one of them upon a future occasion not predictable in time or in occurrence. The respondent‘s argument, as I understand it, is that in the tax statute the word should be limited to conventional life insurаnce, based upon adequate actuarial bases, and perhaps limited by the exclusion of bad risks. That appears to me must too circumscribed a reading of the phrase: “Insurance of every description.” Back of the statute lies the purpose, I think, to include in a man‘s estate whatever provision he may have made for his successors, which depends upon his death, and which he has secured by means of “premiums” or “other considerations,” paid during his life. Such cоntracts are a form of saving, and it is of no importance whether they are mutual arrangements, or arm‘s length bargains with companies who are in the business. Now that the “Gratuity Fund” has become so large that the payments are made out of its income, the similarity to ordinary life insurance has become less; just as it was at the outset so far as concerned the contribution of half the profits of the Exchange. But that did not change the result. When a member buys his seat, he buys an interest in the “Fund,” which is nothing more than security for the obligation which he assumes to pay $15 every time another member dies. True, it has become practically certain that he will never be called upon to pay—the security is large enough; but even though
I would, however, limit the amount to be included in the gross estate to that proportion which the premiums paid after January 10, 1941, bears to all premiums paid while the member had his seat; and by premiums, I mean those successive charges of $15 which were debited аgainst his interest in the “Fund.” That these debits were “premiums,” or at least “other considerations,” follows from what I have already said; and I think that a member has no “incidents of ownership” in the “insurance” while he lives. Nobody has been able to suggest any such incident except that, if he sells the seat, he sells his interest in the “Fund,” and that this interest will presumably figure in the price that he gets for the seat. I assume as much; indeed, I can conceive that an old member in bad health might decide not to sell just because of his interest in the “Fund“; or that a young unmarried member, confident of exceptional prospective longevity, might be induced to sell chiefly for the same reason. But we are not dealing with words in vacuo, stripping them of the connotations which their context imposes. I agree that the grantee of a power to sell Whiteacre and Blackacre together, but not separately, has an “incident of ownership” in each; but when we apply that phrase to insurance, it shоuld take on an insurance meaning, so to speak. I think the phrase covers those policies which the insured has reserved some power to change; it means that he can change the beneficiary; that he can borrow on them; that he can surrender them; that he can influence their obligation by acts directed to them alone. It does not mean, I submit, that he can affect them by transactions in which they are at best only an incident, and a relatively unimportant one аt that. But, however, that might be if we had no more than the bare words, it appears from the House Report that this interpretation is that which Congress had in mind. True, “it is impossible to include an exhaustive list“; but the examples given are all of the kind I mention; they are of powers reserved in the policy; they do not suggest a power which can be exercised only by including an interest of much greater moment. I would include only about one-fourth of $20,000 in the estate.
L. HAND
CHIEF JUDGE
Notes
1. Thus in Estate of Keller v. C. I. R., 312 U.S. 543, 545, 61 S.Ct. 651, 652, 85 L.Ed. 1032, the companion case to Le Gierse, the Court said: “Absence of a physical examination may well be inconclusive as to the existence of an insurance risk. For example, some companies do not require such an examination for group insurance. But there the risk as to one is distributed among the group, an insurance risk squarely within the definition stated in the Le Gierse case.”
2. The choice of the date, January 10, 1941, by the legislators is thus explained by the Commissioner in his brief: “January 10, 1941, is the date on which Article 27 of Treasury Regulations 80 (1937 ed.) was amended by T.D. 5032 (1941-1 Cum.Bull. 427, 429), so as to provide that, where the insurance was taken out prior to January 10, 1941, it was includible in the decedent‘s gross estate to the extent that he had paid the premiums thereon, if thereafter he possessed any ‘incidents of ownership.‘”
January 25, 1939 provided (1) it was a “modification” and a “supplement” to the March 31, 1933 contract of employment; (2) the taxpayer during his employment was to “be in charge of the organization and the development of manufacture and sales of the said Power Chain Saws and their accessories“; (3) “You (taxpayer) will immediately make every effort to develop claims and apply for patents on any features of the said Power Chain Saw or accessories which you have developed; and (4) “Should any pаtents be granted on any of these claims you agree that these will be assigned forthwith to this Company, without any other compensation to you than that provided under this agreement“; the letter of March 28, 1941 provided (1) “The following changes in the agreements between you and the Company dated March 31, 1933 and January 25, 1939 have been agreed to” and “all other terms and conditions of our agreements dated March 31, 1933 and January 25, 1939 to remain in full force and effect.”
5. The taxpayer left thе Company on January 5, 1942. In his 1941, 1942 and 1943 income tax returns he treated the payments of commissions made to him by the Company as “ordinary income“. It was not until he filed his 1944 return (in 1945) that he asserted therein that the commissions were payments received in consideration for the “sale” of the patents.
