174 F.2d 79 | 3rd Cir. | 1949
With four judges dissenting, the Tax Court has upheld the disallowance by the Commissioner of a $40,000 deduction claimed by petitioner in its 1941 tax return as “extra -compensation.” 1948, 10 T. C. 26. Petitioner here urges that the deduction was authorized by the “ordinary and necessary expenses” provision of section 23 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U. S.C.A. § 23(a).
Petitioner, on an accrual calendar-year tax basis, designs and manufactures equipment for filtration plants of municipalities and industries.
The nature of its business led petitioner to follow a policy of employing highly-trained personnel and keeping them at work during slack as well as busy periods. On December 31, 1941, consequently, petitioner was paying many of its employees substantially lower wages than employees
Reciting that the fund therein provided would promote loyalty and efficiency of the trained employees, the trust agreement included the following relevant provisions: (a) Petitioner deposited with the trustee, a bank, $15,000 in cash and a note for $25,-000; (b) “all of the present employees” of petitioner, with specified exceptions,
The final section of the agreement stated that its purpose was that the contributions “represent additional compensation” to the “participants”; that a pension trust as contemplated by section 23 (p) of the Internal Revenue Code was not intended, but that petitioner did intend its contributions to be deductible expenses; and that petitioner obligated itself to make such amendments as were necessary to serve and accomplish the purposes of the agreement.
Approximately one year later, petitioner withdrew from the trustee the $25,000 note and, as authorized by the resolution of the board of directors, delivered in substitution therefor a new issue of 500 shares of 4% "non-cumulative preferred stock of petitioner, par value $50. In determining the nature of the trust which petitioner established, we note that, for a period of three years from the date the trust was established, the fund made disbursements to three “participants”: (1) two monthly payments of $60 each to a $1400-per-an-num employee, as “disability pension”; (2) thirty monthly payments of $40 each to a $l,400-per-annum employee over 75 years old, as “pension”; and (3) twenty-five monthly payments of $20 each to a $2,400-per-annum employee over 67 years old, “retired.” Thus, in the three-year period, disbursements to “participants,” totalled $1,820, while the income alone from the note and preferred stock of petitioner was $3,000; and the only disbursements shown in the record as made to “participants” were in the nature of pensions.
At the outset, we can readily confine the scope of the issues before us in two respects: (1) petitioner concedes, and the analysis of the trust outlined above discloses, that the trust does not meet the requirements of section 23(p) of the Internal Revenue Code and that the deductibility of the contribution in question stands or falls on its being a business expense recognized by section 23(a) of the Internal Revenue Code; and (2) even if the contributions to the trust were such a business expense, only the $15,000 cash contribution could qualify as deductible, since the new issue of preferred stock had the legal effect of merely redistributing the ownership of petitioner rather than affecting its assets, liabilities, or net worth; consequently the stock payment could in no wise be considered an “expense.” It remains for us to decide whether the $15,000 cash contribution was deductible under section 23(a) of the Internal Revenue Code.
The allowance of a tax deduction for contributions to trusts with features similar to that here in issue has been determined in a number of Tax Court and appellate decisions. Recently, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, asserting that the case it had under consideration was so similar to Lincoln Electric Co. v. Commissioner, 6 Cir., 1947, 162 F.2d 379 and the case at bar that the decision should be the same in all three, specifically endorsed the reasoning of the Tax Court in the instant case and denied the deduction. Robertson v. Steele’s Mills, 4 Cir., 1949, 172 F.2d 817. The comprehensive opinions filed in Robertson, Lincoln Electric, and the Tax Court in the case sub judice lead us to refrain from again elaborating, except by way of supplementary material, upon a field already so well-documented. All agree that the establishing of employees’ beneficial trusts by employers is a praiseworthy step, but that a tax deduction for contributions to such beneficial trusts must nonetheless be based upon some provision of section 23 of the Internal Revenue Code. The difference of opinion thus far displayed among the judges who have been called upon to hear and review this field of litigation arises over the question whether a contribution to a trust which does not meet the requirements of section 23(p) of the Internal Revenue Code, in which category that at bar belongs, may be recognized as a,n ordinary and necessary expense under section 23(a).
The legislative history of section 23 (p) seems to us not inapposite to such determination. As is outlined in Chapter 9, Volume 1 of Montgomery’s Federal Taxes, Corporations and Partnerships, 1948-49,
The report made by the House conference managers, as to this amendment, seems to us highly significant: “On amendment No. 35: The Senate amendment provided that an. employer who had established a. pension reserve could transfer the reserve to a pension trust of the type exempt under section 165 of the bill, and would be permitted to deduct the amounts so transferred, the deduction to be prorated over a period of years equivalent to the time during which the reserve was accumulated.. There, are two' other classes of cases which should be provided for: (1) The creation of a pension trust by an employer who has had a pension plan in existence, but who has been paying the pensions out of current income, for example, without the establishment of a pension reserve; and (2) the employer who creates a pension trust and adopts for the first time a pension plan. Upon the creation of a pension trust, the payments of the employer, in any of the above cases, consist of contributions covering the pension liability accruing during the year (which are allowed as a deduction under section 23(a) of the new law, assuming the reasonableness of the contribution) and payments made during the year, for example, on account of the pension liability which would have accrued during prior years had the plan been in existence, or to build up reserves in order to place the plan upon a basis which is actuarily [sic] sound. The House recedes with an amendment permitting the spread of the payments of the latter type above described over a period of 10 years.” (Emphasis supplied.) 69 Cong.Rec. 10126, May 6, 1928. It would therefore appear that both branches of the legislature contemplated that, upon creation of a pension trust, section 23(a) could be utilized only to the extent that the trust received contributions (a) in reasonable amount and (b) defraying liabilities which accrued during the year under the terms of the pension plan. Cf. Clark Thread Co. v. Commissioner, 3 Cir., 1939, 100 F.2d 257, 258, cited in Robertson v. Steele’s Mills, supra.
Moreover, in recommending the 1942 amendment of section 23 (p) which provides that contributions of an employer under a stock bonus, pension, profit-sharing, or annuity plan “shall not be deductible under subsection (a) but shall be deductible, if deductible under subsection (a) without regard to this subsection, under this subsection but only to the following extent,” 26 U.S.C.A. Internal Revenue Acts Begin
In the light of the consistent legislative approach toward deductions,
Were it necessary for us to choose, therefore, between the reasoning of the Lincoln Electric case, as opposed to- that of Steele’s Mills and the Tax Court in the instant case, we should feel constrained to adopt the view limiting the scope of the “ordinary and necessary expenses” clause. The facts of Lincoln Electric Co. v. Commissioner, supra, nevertheless, are so different from those under review as to foreclose petitioner from all possibility of claiming its 1941 -contribution as a deductible business expense. Comparison of the facts is in order. (1) In Lincoln Electric, the court of appeals was strongly influenced by the fact that the employer had a long history of granting its employees, in addition to their salaries, substantial benefits such as a bonus and retirement annuity policies; in the case at bar, there is no evidence that its employees ever before received any benefit other than their salaries, (2) In Lincoln Electric, the court of appeals also stressed that the Commissioner for six years had allowed the deduction of annuity premiums and then disallowed the premiums for the years in question; in the instant case, no insurance premiums are involved. (3) In Lincoln Electric, eligibility for the benefits of the trust extended to- all employees then serving petitioner except the salesmen, the president, and the chairman of the board of directors; in the case sub judice, the “participants” were limited, inter alia, to those in the service of petitioner for at least five years, and, with minor exceptions, “participants” lost their status as such by leaving the employ of petitioner. (4) In Lincoln Electric, the trust was to terminate at the end of ten years; in the case before us, the date of termination, being dependent upon the exhaustion of the fund or the reduction in number of “participants” to twenty, was indefinite. (5) In Lincoln Electric, the percentage of the fund which each employee would receive at termination of the trust could have been -computed when the trust was created, since the share of each was based upon an already completed salary period and was not subject to loss because of death or severance of employment; here, what each “participant” would receive at termination is not ascertainable, but dependent upon what the Board of Managers determines at some indefinite date in the future. (6) In Lincoln Electric, two of the three members of the Committee were required to be beneficiaries of the trust, and the Committee had appreciably less
Still other distinctions might be mentioned, but the foregoing we. deem more than sufficient. If the trust fund established in Lincoln Electric did have sufficient substance to qualify a contribution to it as “ordinary” .and “expenses” — as to which the Steele’s Mills decision, that of the Tax Court here, and the legislative history give rise to considerable doubt — assuredly the instant trust was entirely too illusory to justify similar treatment. Petitioner did little more than promise that, at some time in the indefinite future, it would distribute a fund, of uncertain size, in undetermined proportions or amounts, among a fraction of its employees. The record discloses no instance when the fund was treated as anything other than a pension fund, one very similar to that for which a deduction was denied in South Texas Commercial Nat. Bank of Houston v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 1947, 162 F,2d. 462, certiorari denied 1947, 332 U.S. 772, 68 S.Ct. 87.
We are consequently impelled to the conclusion that, desirable as the trust may have been from an ethical point of view, there was substantial basis for the Tax Court decision that the creation of this trust was not an ordinary and necessary expense of petitioner. Accordingly, the decision of the Tax Court will be affirmed.
“Sec. 23. Deductions from gross income.
“In computing net income there shall be allowed as deductions:
“(a) Expenses. (3) In general. — All the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business, including a reasonable allowance for salaries or other compensation for personal services actually rendered * * Revenue Act of 1938, 26 U.S.C.A. Internal Revenue Acts 1924 to Date, page 1011.
Petitioner and its predecessors have been in. this business since 1897.
The total payroll of petitioner in 1941 was $219,237.60.
According to the minutes of the special meeting, “Mr. Chadwick [attorney of pe-tioner] stated to the Board the legal and tax incidents of a pension trust as compared with a profit-sharing trust and stated .that he recommended the latter because of the wider scope of benefits. The matter having been discussed, the Board approved of this latter alternative.”
The exceptions were the president, the vice-president, anyone with an interest in the estate of Charles V. Roberts’ father, and any one hired after reaching the age of 60. The beneficiaries -of the estate were Charles V. Roberts, his mother, and his two brothers.
A list prepared in accordance with this provision named 42 “employees eligible to participate” and 16 “eligible to participate after 5 years service.” The average age of the 42 employees was 48, and their average length of service for petitioner was 18 years. Of the 16 not then eligible, 9 had less than 1 year of Service with petitioner.
Numbered 35, the Senate amendment read as foEows: “(q) Pension trusts: In the ease of an employer estabEshing or maintaining a pension trust for the benefit of his employees which is exempt from tax under section 165, amounts transferred to such trust from a' pension reserve fund accumulated prior to the enactment of this act,' under a pension plan previously in force, to the extent that the amounts so transferred have not been theretofore allowable as a deduction. The deduction allowed by this paragraph shall be apportioned in equal parts over a number of consecutive years (beginning with the year in which the transfer is made) equal to the number of years during which such pension reserve fund was accumulated.” 69 Cong.Rec., page 7869. May 5, 1928.
It is also not without interest to note that, while the provision permitting deduction of charitable contributions, section 23 (q) of the Internal Revenue Code, like the pension trust provision prior to 1942, includes no clause specifically eliminating the possibility of applying section 23(a), the Ways and Means Com-mitteo report of January 14, 1938, pertinent portions of which are reprinted at 4 Tax Law Review 125 (November, 1948), states that the deduction of charitable contributions as business expenses “is no longer possible under the bill * * *_»
Of the five members of the Board, two were tbe president and vice-president of petitioner, and thus ineligible to be “participants”; two, the attorney for petitioner and the representative'of the trustee (which. could be removed by a majority of the Board), may be safely assumed to have been .sympathetic to the position of the officers of petitioner. The lone employee representative was the chief engineer, an- employee for 32 years who, besides the sales manager, was the only non-officer employee of petitioner paid more than $4,250 in 1941. .
It is probably unnecessary to point out that, through this provision, petitioner had an effective -way' of regaining substantial possession of the fund which the trust instrument presumably ■ granted away irretrievably.
While the Tax Court and the court of appeals discussed only the applicability of section 23 (p) of the Internal Revenue Code, we believe it would be ingenuous to assert that the tribunals were not familiar with the “ordinary and necessary expenses” provision, or that the doctrine enunciated in the Lincoln Electric case was not considered at some stage of the proceedings.