Petitioners ask for review of a decision of the Tax Court,
Deductions for Medical Care.
In 1953, § 23 (x) controlled deductions for medical care. It made deductible from gross income “Expenses paid during the taxable year, not compensated for by insurance or otherwise, for medical care of the taxpayer, his spouse, or a dependent * * As to “medical care” it stated:
“ * * * The term ‘medical care,’ as used in this subsection, shall include amounts paid for the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or for the purpose of affecting any structure or function of the body (including amounts paid for accident or health insurance). * * *” (Emphasis supplied.)
The words of the above statute are to be given their normal meaning without striving to read exceptions into them. Deputy v. Dupont, 1940,
“That Report states in part:
“The term ‘medical care’ is broadly defined to include amounts paid for the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or for the purpose of affecting any structure or function of the body. It is not intended, however, that a deduction should be allowed for any expense that is not incurred primarily for the prevention or alleviation of a physical or mental defect or illness.”
The next following sentence of the report, which is not quoted in the brief, reads:
“Although a deduction is denied with respect to such expenses as are compensated for by insurance or otherwise, amounts paid for accident or health insurance are included in the category of medical expenses.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The Senate Report by this statement unmistakably indicates that the direct language of the parenthetical clause of § 23 (x), which includes amounts paid for accident or health insurance as proper deductions under medical care, is no inadvertence but the considered decision of the Senate Finance Committee which was adopted as proposed.
Whatever the Tax Court’s current attitude may be towards the 1939 Code’s specific designation of accident or health insurance premium payments to be deductible, in 1952 it held that the Commissioner had erred in disallowing as a deductible item, a health and accident premium payment. Concerning that payment it said, “It is clearly allowable as an item of
total
expenditure for medical expenses under Section 23 (x), Internal Revenue Code.” Taylor v. Commissioner, 1952,
The 1954 Code continues § 23 (x) as § 213, 26 U.S.C.A. § 213. The continuance of the full deductibility of paid accident and health insurance premiums was patently no oversight. This is revealed forcibly by the fact that when in §§ 104 and 105 of the 1954 Code, 26 U.S. C.A. §§ 104, 105, the Congress wished to break down accident and health coverage into its separate items it did so in so many words. In both sections exclusions are granted for accident and health items “ * * * except in the case of amounts attributable to (and not in excess of) deductions allowed under section 213 (relating to medical, etc. expenses) for any prior taxable year.”
Objections to Finding of Untimely Filing of Declaration of Estimated Tax, Assessment of Double Penalties and Assumption that Ultimate Liability for the Tax Year Accrued in Equal Quarters.
These other questions arise in connection with the filing of petitioners’ declaration of estimated tax for 1953. The first concerns its timeliness. The declaration was mailed for filing before midnight Friday, January 15, 1954. The stipulation of facts states that the declaration was filed January 18, 1954. It is conceded by the Commissioner that the filing took place on the first day after the mailing date, exclusive of the intervening Saturday and Sunday. Petitioners’ contention that the particular district revenue office was not open on Saturdays during the critical period does not seem controverted. Nor does the fact that when the filing date for income tax
returns
fell on a Saturday, returns were considered by that office to have been timely filed if received the following Monday or if postmarked on or before midnight of that day. While this latter circumstance is of no real help to petitioners inasmuch as January 15,1954 fell on a Friday, generally speaking taxpayer’s present difficulty would seem to stem from his assumption that the above ruling as to timeliness applied to all income tax documents. Actually, unless otherwise defined by statute, filing does not occur until the paper to be filed is delivered to, received and filed by the proper official. If the mails are used to transmit the document, filing takes place when it is delivered at the office of the official designated to receive it. United States v. Lombardo, 1916,
Petitioners then protest the double penalty assessed for the untimely filing of their declaration. Beyond doubt they were penalized twice; once for substantially underestimating their tax and once for their late filing of their Declaration of Estimated Tax. It is true as petitioners state that the complained of double penalty has been eliminated by the 1954 Code, 26 U.S.C. § 6651(c) and § 6654. And the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Acker v. Commissioner, 1958,
Finally, petitioners contend that the Tax Court’s computation of additions to the tax is unfair. The Court divided the ultimate annual tax into equal fourths and added the precentage penalties to each fourth. The governing 1939 code (26 U.S.C. 0 294(d)(1)(A)) provides that the percentage for addition to the tax should be added to “each installment due but unpaid”. With no timely declaration of income filed, the Commissioner assessed the penalties as if none had been filed and apportioned them equitably throughout the year. The regrettable fact may well have been that most of the taxpayer’s income came in the last quarter and that he would have been entitled to file his 1953 declaration on January 15, 1954 as we mentioned in footnote 1, supra. But there is no evidence in the record of his quarterly income or facts to warrant a different calculation than the Commissioner made. The point was not contested in the Tax Court and we have nothing before us to justify a revision in the penalties computation as far as the equal quarterly assignments of income are concerned.
The decision of the Tax Court will be reversed as to the deductions for medical care. The case will be remanded for inclusion as a deduction the full amount of premiums paid on taxpayer’s accident and health insurance policies involved and, in view thereof, for any necessary recomputation of the penalties and additions to the tax.
Notes
. All of the above assumes that petitioners’ declaration would have been timely if filed by January 15, 1954. There is some question regarding this. However, the facts need not be examined because, as indicated, even if filing by January 15, 1954, would have been proper, the declaration was not so filed.
. Certiorari has been granted in this case by the United States Supreme Court,
