Lead Opinion
CLAY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MOORE, J., joined. WELLFORD, J. (pp. 1027-29), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
OPINION
In this case of first impression in this Circuit, we are asked to decide whether settlement proceeds paid to members of a class action suit by their former employer for its violation of § 510 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1140, are subject to taxation as “income” or are exempt under Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”) § 104(a)(2) as proceeds from a tort or “tort type” remedy; as well as whether these proceeds are subject to Federal Insurance Contributions Act (“FICA”) taxes under 26 U.S.C. § 3101 et seq. To the extent set forth below, we find that the proceeds are exempt from income taxation under IRC § 104(a)(2), and are not subject to FICA taxation under 26 U.S.C. § 3101 et seq.
I.
Background
Plaintiffs, Robert E. Gerbec and Raymond E. Morgan, both worked for Continental Can Company (“Continental”). These men (along with approximately 7,000 similarly situated employees) were “laid-off” shortly before they were eligible to vest in Continental’s “Magic Number” health and pension benefits.
The class action suits alleged that Continental violated § 510 of ERISA by engaging in a “liability avoidance” scheme designed to prevent their employees from realizing pension benefits.
On December 22, 1995, Plaintiffs filed the instant suit against the United States (“the Government”) seeking reimbursement of the federal income and FICA taxes paid on their awards. They argued that their class action settlement award should not have been subject to federal income tax because I.R.C. § 104(a)(2) excludes “the amount of any damages received ... on account of personal injuries or sickness” from gross income,
The Government filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that under Mertens v. Hewitt Associates,
On January 10, 1997, the district court granted the Government’s motion in part, finding that Plaintiffs’ awards were subject to federal income taxation. The court reasoned that Plaintiffs’ compensatory damages arose from Continental’s violation of ERISA § 510, and under Mertens, did not fit within the “tort or tort-type rights” exclusion of I.R.C. § 104(a)(2). Gerbec v. United States,
II.
Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Henegar v.
III.
Analysis
A. Federal Income Taxation
Mertens v. Hewitt Associates Interpretation of Relief Available Under § 502(a)(3)
The district court held that inasmuch as Mertens limits the relief available under § 502(a)(3) to traditional forms of equitable relief and does not allow for compensatory damages, Plaintiffs’ settlement proceeds could not be characterized as being from a tort or “tort-like” remedy, and therefore were not excludable from taxation under § 104(a)(2).
In Mertens, several former employees of the Kaiser Steel Company lost a significant portion of their pensions because of the alleged breach of fiduciary duties by Hewitt Associates, an actuarial services company.
In a five to four opinion, Justice Scalia narrowly construed the phrase “other appropriate equitable relief’ as found in § 502(a)(3) as only permitting the categories of relief that were typically available in equity; those forms of relief such as injunctions, mandamus, and restitution. Mertens,
require us either to give the term a different meaning these than it bears elsewhere in ERISA, or to deprive of all meaning the distinction Congress drew between “equitable” and “remedial” relief in § 409(a), and between “equitable” and “legal” relief*1020 in the very same section of ERISA, see 29 U.S.C. § 1132(g)(2)(E); in the same sub-chapter of ERISA, see § 1024(a)(5)(C); and in the ERISA subchapter dealing with the PBGC, see §§ 1303(e)(1), 1451(a)(1). Neither option is acceptable. The authority of courts to develop a “federal common law” under ERISA, is not the authority to revise the text of the statute.
Id. at 258-59,
Writing for the dissent, Justice White opined that the words “appropriate equitable relief’ as found in § 502(a)(3) “[we]re no more than descriptive and simply referred] to all remedies available in equity under the common law of trusts, whether or not they were or are the exclusive remedies for breach of trust.” Mertens,
Split Among the Circuits as to Whether Mertens Applies to the Continental Settlement
The split among the circuits as to the legal issues before this Court today and the application of the Mertens decision to the various claims arising from the Continental settlement, is as sharply divided as the Mertens Court itself. For example, the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit found that settlement proceeds from the Continental settlement were properly subjected to income and FICA taxation. See Hemelt v. United States,
The Hemelt Court found that the fact that the settlement predated the Supreme Court’s holding in Mertens was of no consequence because, in applying Mertens, the court was
simply giving effect to the Supreme Court’s enunciation of what ERISA means and always has meant, notwithstanding the McLendon Special Master and parties. Thus, the “retroactivity” of Mertens is not at issue here, as “[i]t is only when the law changes in some respect that an assertion of nonretroactivity” may even be considered.
Like the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, the Eighth Circuit has also found that the application of Mertens precluded proceeds from the Continental settlement from being exempt from taxation under § 104(a)(2). See Mayberry v. United States,
However, unlike the Courts of Appeals for the Fourth and Eighth Circuits, when addressing the same disputes arising out of this settlement, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit found that the proceeds were exempt from income taxation under § 104(a)(2) and were not subject to taxation under FICA. See Dotson v. United States,
The characterization of damages received is not affected by the shifting sands of statutory interpretation after a bona fide settlement has been reached or a damage award rendered____ The characterization of settlement depends upon the determination that the damages were received “through prosecution of a legal suit or action based upon tort or tort-type rights ...” Treasury Reg. 26 C.F.R. 1.104-1 (c). The fact that such a remedy may no longer exist is irrelevant to the determination of the character of a settlement to be taxed.
Although the Supreme Court’s decision in Mertens may retroactively apply to pending ERISA cases, this case is not an ERISA case. It is an income tax case involving the tax treatment of a final settlement of a claim for damages under ERISA that was concluded before the issue of first impression decided by the sharply divided Mertens court was even clearly foreshadowed. Consequently, Mer-tens does not change the classification of the instant settlement for tax purposes any more than it could retroactively reduce the amount of the settlement which the parties made based on their now perhaps outmoded interpretation of ERISA law.
Id. (footnote omitted).
However, the Fifth Circuit noted that, in the recent case of Commissioner v. Schleier, the Supreme Court clarified the requirements of § 104(a)(2) exclusion: the taxpayer must (1) demonstrate that the underlying cause of action is “based upon tort or tort-type rights” and (2) show that the damages were received “on account of personal injury or sickness.” Dotson,
In analyzing this inquiry, the Dotson Court focused on the Schleier holding, where it was found that settlement damages for back pay received through a discriminatory firing ease brought under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) were taxable as income and not excludable under § 104(a)(2) because the recovery of back wages was not “on account of’ any personal injury and because no personal injury affected the amount of back wages recovered. By way of example, the Schleier Court explained its reasoning:
Consideration of a typical recovery in a personal injury case illustrates the usual meaning of “on account of personal injuries.” Assume that a taxpayer is in an automobile accident, is injured, and as a result of that injury suffers (a) medical expenses, (b) lost wages, and (c) pain, suffering, and emotional distress that cannot be measured with precision. If the taxpayer settles a resulting lawsuit for $30,-000 (and if the taxpayer has not previously deducted her medical expenses, see § 104(a)), the entire $30,000 would be ex-cludable under § 104(a)(2). The medical expenses for injuries arising out of the accident clearly constitute damages received “on account of personal injuries.” Similarly, the portion of the settlement intended to compensate for pain and suffering constitutes damages “on account of personal injury.” Finally the recovery for lost wages is also excludable as being “on account of personal injuries,” as long as the lost wages resulted from time in which the taxpayer was out of work as a result of her injuries. See. e.g., Threlkeld v. Commissioner,87 T.C. 1294 , 1300,1986 WL 22061 (1986) (hypothetical surgeon who loses finger through tortious conduct may exclude any recovery for lost wages because “[t]his injury ... will also undoubtedly cause special damages including loss of future income”), aff'd,848 F.2d 81 (C.A.6 1988). The critical point this hypothetical illustrates is that each element of the settlement is recoverable not simply because the taxpayer received a tort settlement, but rather because each element of the settlement satisfies the requirement set forth in 104(a)(2) (and in all of the other subsections of § 104(a)) that the damages were received “on account of personal injuries or sickness.”
In contrast, no part of respondent’s ADEA settlement is excludable under the plain language of § 104(a)(2). Respondents recovery of back wages, though at*1022 first glance comparable to our hypothetical accident victim’s recovery lost wages, does not fall within § 104(a)(2)’s exclusion because it does not satisfy the critical requirement of being “on account of personal injury or sickness.” Whether one treats respondent’s attaining the age of 60 or his being laid off on account of his age as the proximate cause of respondent’s loss of income, neither the birthday nor the discharge can fairly be described as a “personal injury” or “sickness.” Moreover, though respondent’s unlawful termination may have caused some psychological or “personal” injury comparable to the intangible pain and suffering caused by an automobile accident, it is clear that no part of respondent’s recovery of back wages is attributable to the injury. Thus, in our automobile hypothetical, the accident causes a personal injury which in turn causes a loss of wages. In age discrimination, the discrimination causes both the personal injury and loss of wages, but neither is linked to the other. The amount of back wages recovered is completely independent of the existence or extent of any personal injury.
Sckleier,
Based upon this reasoning, the Fifth Circuit found that the back wages received by Dotson under the settlement with Continental could not be excluded from taxation under § 104(a)(2).
the district court should determine the degree to which the award represented lost wages for Mr. Dotson, since the record shows that he actually saw an increase in earnings at his next job. Once the district court distinguishes future lost wages from other potential parts of the Earnings Impairment Additur, it must also determine the nature of that award, and the degree to which the award envisioned earnings impairment as a result of the firing, and thus taxable, or instead, “on account of personal injuries” such as emotional damage or loss of reputation. Any part of the future lost wages attributable to causation by personal injury is excludable.
Id. However, the Fifth Circuit made it clear in Dotson that, on all other points, the proceeds from the settlement with Continental fell squarely within the exclusion set forth in § 104(a)(2), and therefore were excludable from income taxation.
Sixth Circuit’s View
In Mayberry, the Eighth Circuit acknowledged that the Fourth Circuit and the Fifth Circuit had reached opposing results in deciding the exact issues arising out of the Continental settlement: “[A] Fifth Circuit panel decided in favor of the taxpayers after focusing on the parties’ intent at the time of the settlement and the interests in finality and predictability of taxation ... [while] the Fourth Circuit focused instead on the nature of the underlying action that had been settled and on the Supreme Court’s decision in Mertens [and decided in favor of the Government].” Mayberry v. United States,
We agree with the Fifth Circuit’s reasoning. As noted by the Dotson Court, the Special Master in this ease allowed Plaintiffs to introduce evidence of nonpecuniary losses.
We emphasize, as did the Fifth Circuit, that the case before us today is not an ERISA case. Dotson,
If there had been a bench trial and the district court judge had allocated the award based on dignitary loss, loss in earning capacity, and long-term loss in employment prospects, this Court would respect that allocation unless it was clearly erroneous. Because the law at the time did not dictate otherwise, we would find that the district court’s decision was not clearly erroneous, although after Mertens a different result would be necessary because Mertens allows only equitable relief which would mean back-pay and. not tort-type relief. Therefore, because this was a court approved settlement, the point remains that the law at the time was such that the district court’s approval was proper under the law and, as found by the Fifth Circuit, “[t]he characterization of damages received is not affected by the shifting sands of statutory interpretation after a bona fide settlement has been reached or a damage award rendered.... The fact that such a remedy may no longer exist is irrelevant to the determination of the character of a settlement to be taxed.” Dotson,
The case before us today is an income tax case in which we must determine whether the settlement proceeds, that were provided as compensatory damages for the wrongs to which the plaintiffs testified, are subject to income taxation or exempt under § 104(a)(2). Under these facts, the answer is clear — the compensatory damages provided in the arm’s length agreement with Continental fit squarely within the purpose and intent of the § 104(a)(2) exclusion as proceeds from a tort or “tort-type” remedy. See Dotson,
As such, we find that Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation,
Although we find that Mertens is not applicable to the instant case, we hasten to note that while Mertens and its progeny
Mertens restricts plan beneficiaries to remedies such as mandamus, injunction, constructive trust, and restitution, even if those beneficiaries suffer harms that can only be properly rectified through compensatory damages. As such, the practical import of Mertens, as applied to a ease such as this, is that a corporation could create a scheme to prevent employees from fully vesting in then-pensions without suffering any severe liability for their actions. See Flint, supra note 12 at 618-19. We find such a result unacceptable, particularly in light of the Congressional intent behind § 104(a)(2) — to relieve a taxpayer who has suffered a personal injury, as well as the Congressional intent behind ERISA — ’“to protect ... the interests of participants in employee benefit plans and their beneficiaries ... by providing for appropriate remedies, sanctions, and ready access to the Federal courts.” 29 U.S.C. § 1001(b). Under Mertens, it is dubious whether a plan beneficiary would get “appropriate remedies,” as Congress intended. See H.R.Rep. No. 101-247, at 55-56 (1989), reprinted in 1989 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1906,1948.
In summary, at the time the settlement was crafted by the Special Master, agreed to by the parties, and approved by the district court in this ease, it was designed to compensate for non-physical personal injuries inflicted by Continental’s apparent wrong-doing resulting in class members being deprived of their Magic Number pension benefits. As such, we find it unnecessary to apply Mer-tens retroactively to the settlement proceeds at this date, and decline to do so because the law at the time apparently allowed for such compensatory damages under ERISA and the case is therefore no longer “open on direct review.” Accordingly, we hold that Plaintiffs’ compensatory settlement award for non-physical personal injuries fits squarely within the I.R.C. § 104(a)(2) “tort or tort-type rights” exemption, subject to those proceeds received for back or future wages received as a result of the firing.
B. FICA Taxation
The Government claims that the district court erred in finding that, as a matter of law, Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) taxes, 26 U.S.C. §§ 3101 et seq., should not have been withheld from Plaintiffs’ settlement distribution. The Government contends that, because the Basic Award was based upon an individual’s age and seniority with Continental and because the Earnings Impairment Additur was based upon the individual’s earning history, the settlement distribution was, in fact, remuneration for employment and thus wages subject to FICA taxation.
FICA taxes consist of a percentage of an employee’s wages collected to contribute to the Social Security programs. See Rowan Cos., Inc. v. United States,
With respect to the portions of the award that are found on remand to be includable in income, only the amounts that fall within the definition of wages under FICA are subject to FICA taxation.
The phrase “remuneration for employment” as it appears in § 3121 should be interpreted broadly. See 26 C.F.R. § 31.3121(a)-l(b) (“all remuneration for employment unless specifically excepted”); Social Sec. Bd. v. Nierotko,
Had Plaintiffs in this case actually worked for Continental during the periods for which they sought back wages and future wages lost as a result of the firing, the wages indisputably would have been subject to FICA taxation. We conclude that it would be improper to exempt Plaintiffs from mandatory FICA taxes merely because they were not employees of Continental at the time the payments were made and because the payments were not in return for actual services performed. Cf. 26 C.F.R. § 31.3121(a)-(l)(i) (“Remuneration for employment ... constitutes wages even though at the time paid the relationship of the employer and employee no longer exists between the person in whose employ the services were performed and the individual who performed them”). Therefore, any damages attributable to wages they would have received had they not been wrongly terminated should also be subject to the FICA taxes they would have paid on those wages had they not been wrongly terminated. Any oth
IV.
Accordingly, because we find that a portion of the settlement may be subject to federal income taxation as well as FICA taxation, we REVERSE IN PART AND AFFIRM IN PART the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Government on the federal income tax issue, and AFFIR^l IN PART AND REVERSE IN PART the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Plaintiffs on the FICA taxation issue, and REMAND the ease for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
.A Continental Group employee qualified for a Magic Number benefit if the employee had at least fifteen years of continuous service, and if the sum of the employee’s age and years of continuous service equaled seventy (if the worker was at least fifty years old) or seventy-five (if the worker was younger than fifty). In 1977, Continental added the same Magic Number benefit for employees whose age and years of continuous service equaled sixty-five, as long as the employee had at least twenty years of continuous service on the last day worked. This latter benefit was referred to as the “Rule of 65 benefit.” Magic Number benefits were equal to a full retirement pension. See "Report and Recommendation from George L. Priest, Special Master, Regarding the Fairness of the Settlement and of the Proposed Plan of Distribution to the Honorable H. Lee Sarokin,” July 13, 1992. (J.A. at 284.)
. See McLendon v. Continental Group, Inc.,
. § 510 of ERISA provides that:
It shall be unlawful for any person to discharge, fine, suspend, expel, discipline, or discriminate against a participant or beneficiary for exercising any right to which he is entitled under the provisions of an employee benefit plan ... or for the purpose of interfering with the attainment of any right to which such participant may become entitled.
29 U.S.C.A. § 1140 (West 1985).
. FICA taxes amounting to $1,817.21 were withheld from the Morgans' award, and $1,389.89 in FICA taxes were withheld from the Gerbecs' award. Federal income taxes amounting to $16,955.67 were withheld from the Morgans’ award, and $15,467.16 in federal income taxes were withheld from the Gerbecs' award.
. The Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 amended Section 104(a)(2) to limit the exclusion to damages received on account of personal physical injuries or sickness. However, this amendment is inapplicable to the facts of this case because statutes are to have prospective effect only. See, e.g., United States v. Security Indus. Bank,
. The district court applied Mertens retroactively in light of the Supreme Court’s holding in Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation,
. § 502(a)(3) provides that a civil action may be brought
by a participant, beneficiary, or fiduciary (A) to enjoin any act or practice which violates any provision of this subchapter or the terms of the plan, or (B) to obtain other appropriate equitable relief (i) to redress such violations or (ii) to enforce any provisions of this subchapter or the terms of the plan.
29 U.S.C.A. § 1132(a)(3) (West 1985).
. We note that the dissent erroneously states that "Mertens held that the term, 'any other equitable relief,’ excludes from income tax consequences 'awards for compensatory or punitive damages.’ ” Mertens did not address income tax consequences at all, and certainly did not so hold. See Mertens,
. The Special Master found that he had authority to consider nonpecuniary losses under the Supreme Court’s decision in Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. McClendon,
We find it unnecessary to comment on the Special Master's reliance upon Ingersoll-Rand because, as stated, characterization of damages received in this case is solely dependant upon the determination that the damages were received through an action based upon tort or tort-type rights. See Dotson,
. We note that, likewise, we find it unnecessary to adopt the Fourth Circuit’s approach and apply the Burke holding as a bar to the application of the § 104(a)(2) exclusion. See Hemelt,
. See, e.g., Varity Corp. v. Howe,
. See Elaine McClatchey Darroch, Mertens v. Hewitt Associates: The Supreme Court's Dismantling of Civil Enforcement Under ERISA, 1994 Det. C.L.Rev. 1089 (1994) (analyzing the history and development of the common law of trusts, discussing legislative attempts to overturn Mer-tens, and recommending that Mertens should be reversed); Karl J. Stoecker, ERISA Remedies After Varity Corp. v. Howe, 9 DePaul Bus. L.J. 237, 245-258 (1997) (discussing the narrow construction of Section 502(a)(3) in Mertens, and concluding that the Varity approach "is more in keeping with ERISA’s purpose than the narrowly categorical approach taken by Mertens")', see also George Lee Flint, Jr., ERISA: Extracontractual Damages Mandated For Benefit Claims Actions, 36 Ariz. L.Rev 611 (1994) (advancing the argument that legislative history, the historical development of employee benefit law, and the law of trusts can all be read to permit recovery of extracontractual damages under ERISA Section 502(a)).
.In this report, the Committee on Budget opined:
The Committee believes that the legislative history of ERISA and subsequent expansions of ERISA support the view that Congress intended for the courts to develop a Federal common law with respect to employee benefit plans, including the development of appropriate remedies, even if they'are not specifically enumerated in section 502 of ERISA. Since the issue of preemption and civil remedies under ERISA is within the exclusive purview of the labor committees of Congress, the Committee has, over the years, considered the option of amending the statute to encompass specifically several additional remedies. In light of the legislative history on this issue, however, the Committee believes such action is unnecessary.
*1025 The Committee reaffirms the authority of the Federal courts to shape legal and equitable remedies to fit the facts and circumstances of the cases before them, even though those remedies may not be specifically mentioned in ERISA itself. In cases in which, for instance, facts and circumstances show that the processing of legitimate benefit claims has been unreasonably delayed or totally disregarded by an insurer, an employer, a plan administrator, or a plan, the Committee intends the Federal courts to develop a Federal common law of remedies, drawing upon principles enunciated in state law, including such remedies as the awarding of punitive and/or compensatory damages against the person responsible for the failure to pay claims in a timely manner.
H.R. Rep. 101-247 at 56.
. Not all income is wages. The Supreme Court in Rowan pointed out that "many items qualify as income and yet clearly are not wages.” Rowan,
. But see, e.g., Dotson,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent from the decision in this case, one of many arising from a consolidated class action suit brought by former employees of Continental Can Company challenging the taxability of payments made to such employees, including plaintiffs Gerbec and Morgan. The district court held that payments to these plaintiffs were taxable for federal income tax purposes, but not taxable under FICA.
The majority, somewhat begrudgingly, concedes that the Supreme Court in Mertens v. Hewitt Associates,
The reasoning of Hemelt was also adopted in Mayberry v. United States,
Like the majority of the circuit courts and judges who have considered this very controversy, I disagree with my colleagues and conclude that Mertens is applicable here and that this is indeed an ERISA-related case. The rule announced in Harper v. Virginia Dep’t of Taxation,
I find the majority of the panel to be off the mark in expressing concerns about “appropriate remedies, sanctions and access to federal courts” under ERISA, particularly when it states that this is not an ERISA case. That the benefits awarded plaintiffs under ERISA are substantial belies such concerns in this case as access to the courts and appropriate remedies. The issue is simply whether these benefits are taxable just as other compensation-like, non-personal injury-type benefits are taxable.
I agree with my colleagues only in respect to their concession that at least the back wages portion and the “future lost wages” portion of the awards are clearly taxable both with respect to income and FICA taxes. I dissent, however, from the statement that any “future lost wages attributable to causa
A major basis for the majority opinion that this “is not an ERISA case” is that the parties made a good faith settlement agreement concerning whether benefits to employees, such as plaintiffs in this case, were “compensatory damages.” This rationale that a party agreement, even if reached in good faith, may be binding on the proper tax characterization of benefits or payments made by one party to the other does not pass muster. Tax disputes are frequently determined by the Internal Revenue Service or the court based upon the tax code and regulations instead of the way parties may have purported or intended to act. A party employee may claim that a payment to that employee is a gift instead of a taxable bonus or compensation. A party corporation may claim and intend that a distribution to a shareholder is á return of capital or a capital gain rather than a taxable dividend. An ex-spouse’s payment to his former wife may be deemed taxable alimony rather than child support. A “loan” from one party to another may be deemed by IRS to be a taxable payment, dividend, or compensation. All of these agreements may involve unintended tax consequences to the parties thereof. In this tax case arising out of an ERISA settlement, we must apply the law regardless of the characterization of the benefits designed by the parties in reaching a settlement.
Dotson, supra, reversed the decision of the district court, holding that “Mr. Dotson failed the requirement that damages be recovered for a tort-like claim.”
In my view, the cogent dissent in Dotson held that Dotson “cannot avoid the fact that those cases [Mertens and Medina, supra ] classify his cause of action as one that does not redress personal injury.” Id. at 691 (citing Rivers v. Roadway Express,
I must confess that I am at a loss to understand that section of the majority opinion styled “Sixth Circuit’s View.” That seven page discussion cites to one Sixth Circuit case in passing — “See Allinder v. Inter-City Prods. Corp.,
Nor can this writer understand the majority’s unexplained conclusion that “the case is no longer ‘open on direct review’ ” so that the majority may somehow avoid application of Mertens contrary to Hemelt, Mayberry, and the dissenter in Dotson.
Mayberry and Hemelt point out that many of the circuits had held at the time of the Continental Can settlement that such damages, claimed to be personal injury damages, were not available under ERISA. Hemelt affirmed the decision of the district court, which also disagreed with the decision of the Dotson majority. Chief Judge Wilkinson in Hemelt concluded that the payments in question were essentially wages, relying on Mer-tens and Burke, and characterized what plaintiffs received as a “substantial benefit to which they were not entitled under law, namely the award of large sums of money for emotional and intangible injuries that ERISA section 502 does not compensate.”
The exclusion sought by plaintiffs from taxation is narrowly construed, not broadly construed as the majority does in this case. For the reasons well-stated by Hemelt, May-berry, and the Dotson dissent, I would hold that the benefit payments received by plaintiffs are fully taxable for federal income and FICA purposes.
. The majority reluctantly concedes that "Supreme court case law ... may dictate that the Special Master incorrectly found that compensatory damages were allowed in the Continental settlement.” We should not be influenced, it seems to me, by University of Detroit, DePaul Business Law Journal and Arizona law review articles rather than reasoned decisions of the strong majority of views of circuit judges on the issues. See footnote 11.
. In Dotson,
. See also Mayberry: "[h]ow the class may have characterized its damages does not control.” Further, it held that a court does not look exclusively to the "record the parties created in order to determine the tax character of a recovery." (Emphasis added.)
