Thе question presented by this appeal is whether an insurance company, which has issued and delivered a policy of insurance on the life of a patron, is liable under Sec. 3710(b) of the Internal Revenue Code 1 for refusing to turn over the сash surrender value of the policy to the Collector of Internal Revenue upon the latter’s demand under Sec. 3710(a) of the Code because of an unpaid tax liability owing by the insured to the United States, the insured never having elected to receive the cash surrender value of the policy and never having surrendered the policy to the company for cancellation.
On April 25, 1918, the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company (the appellee) issued and delivered to Jаmes A. House in Ohio its twenty-payment policy on his life in a principal sum payable to the insured’s wife as beneficiary. The policy reserved to the insured the right to change the beneficiary, a right which he exercised on September 26, 1933, by substituting his son and daughter, or the survivor of them, as the beneficiaries, who, at all times thereafter, continued to be such.
In July, 1935, the Insurance Company was notified by the Collector of Internal Revenue that a lien existed in favor of the United States against all property and rights to property belonging to the insured on account of the latter’s liability for unpaid taxes due the United States. On November 18, 1935, notice of the Collector’s levy and a warrant of distraint 2 were served on the Insurance Company at its home office in Philadelphia, and on December 14, 1937, final notice of the Collector’s demand was likewise served on the Insurance Company. A second notice of levy *497 and warrant of distraint and, likewise, a second final notice and demand were served by the Collector on the Insurance Company in Philadelphia on February 5, 1940.
In the meantime the policy had lapsed because of the insured’s failure to pay the quarterly premium due July 9, 1936. Upon the happening of that event and in accordance with the provision in the policy for automatic extended insurance, the then cash surrender value was used by the company to place the policy on an extended insurance basis in a reduced principal sum for a term expiring July 16, 1943. In due course the cash surrender value of the policy will be entirely consumed by the running of the term of the extended insurance under the nonforfeiture provision of the policy. 3 The insured never took any action to obtain the cash surrender value of the policy, nor did he ever tender the policy to the company for cancellation. The Insurance Company does not maintain separate funds as respectivе reserves for individual insurance contracts and the reserve upon the policy in question is a part of the general assets of the company.
The Insurance Company, denying that it had in its possession any determined property or rights to property belonging to. the insured, refused to pay the Collector of Internal Revenue any sum as representing the cash surrender value of the policy. The United States thereupon brought the instant suit to recover from the Insurance Cоmpany the statutory penalty imposed by Sec. 3710(b) of the Internal Revenue Code. The District Court entered judgment in favor of the Insurance Company, from which the United States took the pending appeal.
According to the specifications of Sec. 3710(a) the establishment of three things is requisite to the enforcement of the right thereby conferred upon the Collector, viz., (1) the existence of property or rights to property in a delinquent taxpayer, (2) the possession оf such property or rights to property by the person of whom demand therefor is made by the Collector, and (3) that such property or rights to property are legally subject to distraint.
That an insured is the owner of “property, or rights to property” by virtue of a policy of insurance upon his life will hardly be questioned. See Burnet v. Wells,
While the policy endures, the insurer is powerless to compel the insured to exercise his option under the policy by accepting the cash surrender value thereof. Van Dyke Co. v. Moll,
Acting independently, the insurer is incapablе during the term of the policy of rendering determinate the amount of its obligation to the insured thereunder. How, then, can the insurer discharge its liability under an extant policy by paying to the Collector of Internal Revenue, pursuant to Sec. 3710, a sum which is assumed to be the property of the insured who has not exercised his rights in respect of the policy? The statute attempts no provision, over and above the terms of the policy, for the determination of or the manner of dischаrging the insurer’s contractual liability. And while it cannot possibly be of any pecuniary interest to the insurer whether it discharges its liability under the policy by paying the insured, the beneficiary, or the Collector of Internal Revenue by virtue of a distraint, the result in a case such as the present would be to require the insurance company to pay doubly when the policy binds it to pay singly. What the Collector seeks to recover from the insurer is not the latter’s liability to the insured under the policy but the statutory penalty prescribed by Sec. 3710(b), for which the insurer would be liable out of its own property or estate. To be sure, the Collector would measure the penalty by what happened to be the cash surrender value of the poliсy at the time of the demand, but the payment by the insurance company would be none the less in discharge of a penalty assessable against it and not in payment of its liability under the policy either to the insured or to the beneficiary. And though the penalty be paid, the policy would still continue in force until the expiration of the term of the extended insurance and, upon the insured’s death within that period, would become a liability on the part of the company in favor of the beneficiary for the face amount of the extended insurance. We do not believe that such a result is within the fair intendment of Congress as expressed in Sec. 3710.
The case of Columbian Nat. Life Ins. Co. v. Welch, D.C.D.Mass.,
We therefore hold that the property or rights to property owned by an insured in a policy of insurance are not in the possession of the insurance company so long as nothing has oсcurred to accrue the insurer’s contractual liability. How Congress might render definite an insured’s pecuniary interest under a life insurance policy so that the insurer’s discharge from its contractual liability would follow from its paying the insured’s accruеd interest in the policy to the Collector of Internal Revenue on account of a tax delinquency of the insured is neither for us to discuss nor consider. 4 It is sufficient for present purposes that Congress did not act to that *499 end in Sec. 3710 of the Internal Revenue Code. The “property, or rights to property,” contemplated by Sec. 3710 are only such as where the holder’s payment or transfer” thereof to the Collector of Internal Revenue will operate to dischargе the holder’s liability to the owner.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
Subsections (a) and (b) of Sec. 3710 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S. C.A.Int.Rev.Code § 3710(a, b), are as follows:
“§ 3710. Surrender of property subject to distraint
“(a) Requirement. Any person in possession of property, or rights to property, subject to distraint, * * * shall, upon demаnd hy the collector * * *, surrender such property or rights to such collector * * *, unless such property or right is, at the time of such demand, subject to an attachment or execution under any judicial process.
“(b) Penalty for violation. Any person who fails or rеfuses to so surrender any of such property or rights shall be liable in his own person and estate to the United States in a sum equal to the value of the property or rights not so surrendered, but not exceeding the amount of the taxes (including penаlties and interest) for the collection of which such levy has been made, together with costs and interest from the date of such levy.”
The Collector’s authority to distrain is derived from Sec. 3690 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev. Code § 3690, which provides as follows:
“§ 3690. Authority to distrain
“If any person liable to pay any taxes neglects or refuses to pay the same within ten days after notice and demand, it shall be lawful for the collector or his deputy to collect the said taxes, with such interest and other additional amounts as are required by law, by distraint and sale, in the manner provided in this subchapter, of the goods, chattels, or effects, including stocks, securities, bank accounts, and evidences of debt, of the person delinquent as aforеsaid.”
The cash surrender value of the policy was $793.15 in July 1935 when notice of the lien was first given but had shrunk to $386.74 on July 11, 1940, when the summons in the instant action was served.
Also see United States v. W. A. Trout et al., D.C.S.D.Cal.
