WINN-DIXIE STORES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
No. 00-11828
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
June 28, 2001
Tax Court No. 05382-97
WINN-DIXIE STORES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES, Petitioner-Appellant, versus COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from a Decision of the United States Tax Court
(June 28, 2001)
Before WILSON and COX, Circuit Judges, and RYSKAMP*, District Judge.
PER CURIAM:
* Honorable Kenneth L. Ryskamp, U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Florida, sitting by designation.
Background
In summary, the tax court found the following facts: In 1993, Winn-Dixie embarked on a broad-based company-owned life-insurance (COLI) program whose sole purpose, as shown by contemporary memoranda, was to satisfy Winn-Dixie‘s “appetite” for interest deductions. Under the program, Winn-Dixie purchased whole life insurance policies on almost all of its full-time employees, who numbered in the tens of thousands. Winn-Dixie was the sole beneficiary of the policies. Winn-Dixie would borrow against those policies’ account value at an interest rate of over 11%. The high interest and the administrative fees that came with the program outweighed the net cash surrender value and benefits paid on the policies, with the result that in pretax terms Winn-Dixie lost money on the program. The deductability of the interest and fees posttax, however, yielded a benefit projected to reach into the billions of dollars over 60 years. Winn-Dixie participated until 1997, when a change in tax law jeopardized this tax arbitrage, and it eased its way out.
Winn-Dixie‘s two core arguments here are the same as those it made to the tax court. The first is that Congress, through the Internal Revenue Code, explicitly authorized the deduction of interest and fees incurred in certain borrowing against whole life-insurance policies’ account value. This explicit permission, Winn-Dixie says, makes application of the sham-transaction doctrine inappropriate. In the alternative, Winn-Dixie argues that even if the sham-transaction doctrine properly applies here, the tax court misinterpreted the economic-substance and business-purpose prongs of that doctrine and thus “shammed” a transaction that was due respect. Winn-Dixie does not dispute any finding of historical fact; these issues are exclusively ones of law, and our consideration of them is accordingly de novo. United Parcel Serv. of Am., Inc. v. Comm‘r, ___ F.3d ___ (11th Cir. 2001).
Discussion
Winn-Dixie starts its argument by invoking the special treatment afforded life insurance contracts (as defined in
This argument may have some force, but it runs into binding precedent. The Supreme Court was faced with a materially similar argument decades ago by a taxpayer who sought to deduct interest payments on loans taken against an annuity
That doctrine provides that a transaction is not entitled to tax respect if it lacks economic effects or substance other than the generation of tax benefits, or if the transaction serves no business purpose. See United Parcel Serv., ___ F.3d ___ at ___; Kirchman v. Comm‘r, 862 F.2d 1486, 1492 (11th Cir. 1989). The doctrine has few bright lines, but “[i]t is clear that transactions whose sole function is to produce tax deductions are substantive shams.” Kirchman, 862 F.2d at 1492. That was, as we read the tax court‘s opinion, the rule the tax court followed. Nor did the court misapply the rule in concluding that the broad-based COLI program had no “function” other than generating interest deductions.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the tax court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
