We are presented with a tax refund case that raises a question of first impression in this circuit: whether payments to employee-beneficiaries derived from the liquidation of a supplemental unemployment benefit trust fund are “wages” within the meaning of the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (“FICA”) and the Federal Unemployment Tax Act (“FUTA”). The district court concluded that the payments in this ease were not wages. For the reasons stated, we REVERSE.
I.
The relevant facts involve little, if any, dispute. In 1975, Sheet Metal Workers Local No. 141 (“Local 141”) and Sheet Metal Contractors Association of Greater Cincinnati, Inc., (“Contractors”) established the Supplemental Unemployment Benefit Trust Fund (“Fund”) pursuant to the provisions of *247 a collective bargaining agreement (CBA). 1 The purpose of the Fund was to provide supplemental unemployment benefits, accident and sickness disability benefits, and severance pay to union members who were involuntarily unemployed. The Contractors contributed all of the monies in the Fund, and the benefits were to be paid from the contributions as well as interest, dividends and income derived therefrom.
The Fund established an individual account for each union member. Each beneficiary received credit in his or her account for each month that a contractor contributed, or was legally obligated to contribute, on his or her behalf. A contractor’s obligation to contribute to the Fund was based on the number of hours worked by each covered beneficiary on a monthly basis. A beneficiary’s benefits were not limited to the amount of the contractor’s contribution. A beneficiary could draw benefits up to $10,000.00 in excess of the amount contributed by his or her employer. If a beneficiary did not draw from his account an amount equal to the contribution by his or her employer, the beneficiary retained a “positive account balance.”
In December of 1986, Local 141 merged with Local 224 of Dayton, Ohio and Local 98 of Columbus, Ohio. The new local, Local 24, presented its members with an alternative benefit plan which was intended to replace the benefit plan formerly offered by the Fund. The union membership voted to merge the Fund into the new benefit plan offered by Local 24. Following this vote, the Contractors and Local 24 negotiated a new CBA which discontinued all contributions to the Fund. The Contractors and Local 24 subsequently terminated the Fund and decided to distribute all assets to the beneficiaries.
In December of 1989, the trustees of the Fund distributed to the beneficiaries a total of $1,839,292.00. Each beneficiary received a proportionate payment in accord with his or her “positive account balance.” The Fund defined the positive account balance as “an account that has an aggregate of more contributions paid into the Trust Fund then the aggregate of benefits paid out to the employee at the time the claim for benefits is made.” Following the distribution of the positive account balance, $1,341,388.00 in assets remained for distribution. The Fund labeled these assets the “residual account balance” and the assets were to be distributed to “all living Plan participants who ha[d] established five or more consecutive years of participation in the ... Plan.” The trustees prorated each beneficiary’s payment based on the beneficiary’s years of service.
The Fund conceded that the payments from the positive account balance were wages within the meaning of FICA and FUTA and were, thus, subject to withholding tax. Prior to distributing the residual account balance, however, the Fund sought a private letter ruling from the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) as to whether the residual account balance constituted wages for which FICA and FUTA required employer withholding. In its ruling, the IRS found the residual balance payments taxable under both FICA and FUTA. Although the Fund disagreed, it paid to the IRS — in conformance with the letter ruling — $88,616.60 in FICA taxes and $9,256.63 in FUTA taxes, or a total of $97,773.23. The Fund subsequently sought a refund of those monies, which the IRS denied. This action followed.
Both parties moved for summary judgment, and the district court referred the matter to a magistrate judge. In support of its motion, the Fund submitted the affidavit of Donald Geis, a member of the Fund’s board of trustees. In his affidavit, Geis averred that the residual balance payments were not wages because they were not distributed in return for services rendered to the Contractors but were merely payments from a “reserve generated by prudent investments and competent administration of the contributions made to the Fund over a period of years dating back to 1975.” The IRS did not submit evidentiary materials in opposition to the allegations in the Geis affidavit. Relying on the truth of the affidavit, the magistrate judge recommended that the district court grant the Fund’s motion for summary judgment. Without further analysis, *248 the district court adopted the report and recommendation of the magistrate judge and ordered the IRS to refund $97,773.23, plus interest.
II.
Since the district court resolved this case on summary judgment, we review its decision
de novo. Henegar v. Banta,
Rule 56(e) also provides that
[w]hen a motion for summary judgment is made and supported as provided in this, rule, an adverse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the adverse party’s pleadings, but the adverse party’s response ... must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. If the adverse party does not so respond, summary judgment, if appropriate, shall be entered against the adverse party.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e);
see also Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
We agree with the IRS’ contention that the source of the residual account payments is not dispositive as to whether the payments are wages. If the original contributions to the Fund had come from Local 141 or individual union members, then the magistrate judge’s finding might be supportable. In that case, the residual account distributions would be income derived from the sound administration of the union’s money. Article VI, section 6.1 of the trust agreement, however, clearly indicates that only the employers—not individual union members—contributed to the Fund. That same section expressly acknowledges that “interest, dividends and other income” derived from the employers’ contributions were to be used to pay benefits. Therefore, the fact that the residual account payments derived from wise investment of the corpus is not dispositive as to whether the payments were wages. Employees cannot claim that income derived from investment of the trust corpus is the fruit of their ownership when they never contributed to the corpus itself.
Compare Lane Processing Trust v. United States,
III.
FICA and FUTA define wages as “all remuneration for employment, including the cash value of all remuneration (including benefits) paid in any medium other than cash.” 26 U.S.C. §§ 3121(a), 3306(b). Employment is defined as “any service, of whatever nature, performed ... by an employee for the person employing him.”
Id.
§§ 3121(b)(A),
*249
3306(c)(A).
2
“Taken together, subsections (a) and (b) of § 3121 [and subsections (b) and (c) of § 3306] define ‘wages,’ therefore, as ‘all remuneration’ for ‘any service.’”
STA of Baltimore-ILA Container Royalty Fund v. United States,
The IRS contends that the only relevant inquiry is whether the payments were remuneration for services rendered to the contributing contractors. The IRS suggests that, because a beneficiary’s length of service with a participating contractor determined his or her eligibility for residual balance payments, the payments were remuneration for past services. In short, the IRS contends that “payment tied to hours of past service is quintessentially remuneration for employment.” Brief of Appellant at 14.
The IRS cites the trust agreement to support its contention that the disputed payments were contingent on past service to employers. For example, a covered employee could only acquire credits (i.e., contributions from a contractor) by working more than sixteen hours in a month, and an employee had to earn twenty-five credits within a two year period to obtain minimal eligibility. The only exception to the work requirement was for work equivalents (e.g., injury or illness) compensated under the state worker’s compensation law and, if an employee experienced a two year break-in-service with a participating contractor, the employee forfeited all credits. In addition, an employee’s eligibility for a share of the residual account balance was conditioned solely on the employee being a living participant in the Fund for five or more consecutive years, and the amount of the employee’s payment was directly proportional to the length of the employee’s participation in the Fund.
The IRS relies on
STA of Baltimore-ILA Container Royalty Fund v. United States,
The trustees argued that the containerization fund did not owe FICA and FUTA taxes because the distributions were not wages.
Id.
at 1571. In rejecting this contention, the district court relied primarily on the fact that the trust agreement conditioned eligibility for payments on past service to an j3TA employer.
Id.
at 1571-72. The court noted that a union member’s eligibility turned on
*250
obtaining a minimum of 700 hours of past service to an STA employer and that time off for sickness or injury did not count in the computation of the minimum hour requirement.
Id.
at 1572. Consequently, the district court held that the payments were wages within the meaning of FICA and FUTA.
Id.
at 1575. On appeal, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit affirmed, adopting the district court’s opinion as its own.
See
Another circuit in a similar case involving a container royalty fund followed
STA of Baltimore. NYSA-ILA Container Royalty Fund,
In a more recent case,
Lane Processing Trust,
still another circuit court considered whether distributions from a trust, which held the stock of a company in receivership for the benefit of the employees, were wages within the meaning of FICA and FUTA.
Lane Processing Trust,
The Fund argues that these cases are distinguishable on the grounds that the holdings in those eases turned on a finding that the trust fund payments were directly attributable to services rendered to employers. The Fund contends that in this case the residual account payments did not depend on the employees’ relationship with the employers, but rather their union status and years of participation in the Fund. As the IRS points out, however, “[ejmployment (past or current) by a union contractor was the
sine qua non
for Plan participation.” Reply Brief of Appellant at 4. Although it was possible for a person to be employed as a sheet metal worker and not be a participant in the Fund
(i.e.,
working for a non-union contractor who was not obligated to contribute), it was not possible to be a member .of the Fund unless the person worked, or had worked, for a participating union contractor. The substance of the transaction, rather than its form, controls our inquiry as to whether the disputed payments were wages.
See, e.g., Spicer Accounting, Inc. v. United States,
In situations analogous to the present case, the three cases cited focused on the trust fund’s “eligibility” requirements to determine whether a payment to an employee was remuneration for past or present services. After considering the reasoning of the other circuits, we agree that eligibility requirements provide the most accurate test to determine whether a payment is truly in consideration for services.
Cf.
Rev.Rul. 80-124, 1980-
Notes
. This agreement established the Fund to qualify as a tax exempt employee benefit plan under the Taft-Hartley Act and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
. The Fund does not contest that it was the employer for the purposes of FICA and FUTA. Thus, if the disputed payments were "wages,” the Fund clearly served as the employer for withholding purposes.
See Otte v. United States,
. "Containerization” reduced the need for manual labor to load cargo on to ships.
. The Fund does not contend that these payments were supplemental unemployment benefits which are exempt from FICA and FUTA taxes.
See
Rev.Rul. 75-461, 1975-
