delivered the opinion of the Court.
Less than a month before her death in 1936, decedent, at the age of 80, executed two contracts with the Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. One was an annuity contract in standard form entitling decedent to annual payments of $589.80 as long as she lived. The consideration stated for this contract was $4,179. The other contract was called a “Single Premium Life Policy — Non Participating” and provided for a pаyment of $25,000 to decedent’s daughter, respondent Le Gierse, at decedent’s death. The premium specified was $22,946. Decedent paid the total • consideration, $27,125, at the
The “insurance” policy would not have been issued without the annuity сontract, but in all formal respects the two were treated as distinct transactions. Neither contract referred to the other. Independent applications were filed for each. Neither рremium was computed with reference to the other. Premium payments were reported separately and entered in different accounts on the company’s books. Separate reservеs were maintained for insurance and annuities. Each contract was in standard form. The “insurance” policy contained the usual provisions for surrender, assignment, optional modes of settlement, etc.
Uрon decedent’s death, the face value of the “insurance” contract became payable to respondent Le Gierse, the beneficiary. Thereafter, a federal estate tax return was filed which excluded from decedent’s gross estate the proceeds of the “insurance” policy. The Commissioner notified respondents Bankers Trust Co. and Le Gierse, as executors of decedent’s estate, that he proposed to include the proceeds of this policy in the gross estate and to assess a deficiency. Suit in the Board of Tax Appeals followed, and the Commissioner’s action was reversed. 39 B. T. A. 1134. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed.
The ultimate question is whether the “insurance” proceeds may be included in decedent’s gross estate.
Section 302 of the Revenue Act of 1926 (44 Stat. 9, 70; as amended, 47 Stat. 169, 279 ; 48 Stat. 680, 752) provides: “The value of the gross estate of the decedent shall be determined by including the value at the time
Conventional aids to construction are of little assistance here. Section 302 (g) first appeared in identical language in the Revenue Act of 1918 as § 402 (f). 40 Stat. 1057, 1098. It has never bеen changed.
1
None of the acts has ever defined “insurance.” Treasury Regulations, interpreting the original provision, stated simply: “The term 'insurance’ refers to life insurance of every description, including death benefits paid by fraternal beneficial societies, operating under the lodge system.” Treasury Regulations No. 37, 1921 edition, p. 23. This statement has never been amplified.
2
The committee report accompanying the Revenue Act of 1918 merely noted that the provision taxing insurance receivable by the executor clarified existing law, and that the provision taxing insurance in excess of $40,000 receivablе by specific beneficiaries was inserted to prevent tax evasion. House Report No. 767, 65th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 22.
3
Sub
Necessarily, then, the language and the apparent purpose of § 302 (g) are virtually the only bases for determining what Congress intended to bring within the scope of the phrase “receivable as insurance.” In fact, in using the term “insurance” Congress has identified the characteristic that determines what transactions are entitled to the partial exemption of § 302 (g).
We think the fair import of subsection (g) is that the amounts must be received as the result of a transaction which involved an actual “insurance risk” at the time the transaction w;as executed. Historically and commonly insurance involves risk-shifting and risk-distributing. Thаt life insurance is desirable from an economic and social standpoint as a device to shift and distribute risk of loss from premature death is unquestionable. That these elements of risk-shifting and risk-distributing are essential to a life insurance contract is agreed by courts and commentators. See for example:
Ritter
v.
Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
Analysis of the apparent purpose of the partial exemption granted in § 302 (g) strengthens the assumption that Congress used the word “insurance” in its cоmmonly accepted sense. Implicit in this provision is acknowledgment of the fact that usually insurance payable to specific beneficiaries is designed to shift to a group of individuals the risk of premаture death of the one upon whom the beneficiaries are dependent for support. Indeed, the pith of the exemption is particular protection of contracts and their proceeds intended to guard against just such a risk. See
Commissioner
v.
Keller’s Estate, supra; United States Trust Co.
v.
Sears,
We cannot find such an insurance risk in the contracts between decedent and the insurance company.
The two contracts must be considered together. To say they are distinct transactions is to ignore actuality, for it is conceded on all sides and was found as a fact by the Board of Tax Appeals that the “insurance” policy would not have been issued without the annuity contract. Failure, even studiоus failure, in one contract to refer to the other cannot be controlling. Moreover,
Considered together, the contracts wholly fail to spell out any element of insurance risk. It is true that the “insurance” cоntract looks like an insurance policy, contains all the usual provisions of one, and could have been assigned or surrendered without the annuity. Certainly the mere presence of the customary рrovisions does not create risk, and the fact that the policy could have been assigned is immaterial since, no matter who held the policy and the annuity, the two contracts, relating to the life of thе one to whom they were originally issued, still counteracted each other. It may well be true that if enough people of decedent’s age wanted such a policy it would be issued without the annuity, or that if thе instant policy had been surrendered a risk would have arisen. In either event the essential relation between the two parties would be different from what it is here. The fact remains that annuity and insurance are opposites; in this combination the one neutralizes the risk customarily inherent in the other. From the company’s viewpoint, insurance looks to longevity, annuity to transiency. See
Commissioner
v.
Keller’s Estate, supra; Helvering
v.
Tyler, supra; Old Colony Trust Co.
v.
Commissioner, supra; Carroll
v.
Equitable Life Assur. Soc.,
We hold that they are taxable under § 302 (c) of the Revenue Act of 1926, as amended, as a transfer to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after death. See
Helvering
v.
Tyler, supra; Old Colony Trust Co.
v.
Commissioner, supra; Kernochan
v.
United States,
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
Notes
Act of 1921: 42 Stat. 227, 279; Act of 1924: 43 Stat. 253, 305; Act of 1926: 44 Stat. 9, 71; Code of 1939: 53 Stat. 1, 122.
Regulations No. 63, p. 26; Regulations No. 68, p. 31; Regulations No. 70, 1926 edition, p. 30; Regulations No. 70, 1929 edition, p. 33; Regulаtions No. 80, p. 62.
“.
. . [Insurance payable to specific beneficiaries does] not fall within the existing provisions defining gross estate. It has been brought to the attention of the committee that wealthy persons have and now anticipate resorting to this method of defeating the
The same comment appears in Senate Report No. 617, 65th Cong., 3d Sess., p. 42.
The curious consistency and inadequacy of § 302 (g) have not escaped notice. See Paul, Life Insurance and The Federal Estate Tax, 52 Harv. L. Rev. 1037; Paul, Studies in Federal Taxation, 3d Series, p. 351;
United States Trust Co.
v.
Sears,
Legg
v.
St. John,
