Alexander W. Jones and Margaret M. Jones v. United States of America, Howard E. Campbell and Betty Campbell v. United States

659 F.2d 618, 48 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6034, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 16772
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 19, 1981
Docket80-7853, 80-7854
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 659 F.2d 618 (Alexander W. Jones and Margaret M. Jones v. United States of America, Howard E. Campbell and Betty Campbell v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander W. Jones and Margaret M. Jones v. United States of America, Howard E. Campbell and Betty Campbell v. United States, 659 F.2d 618, 48 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6034, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 16772 (5th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

JAMES C. HILL, Circuit Judge:

Taxpayers 1 instituted these actions 2 in 1979 in the United States District Court, Northern District of Alabama, seeking refunds of federal taxes paid for years 1972-1974. 3 The district court, sitting without a jury, ruled in favor of the United States thereby denying taxpayers the refund they sought. We reverse.

I.

This case presents a recurring issue in the corporate tax area, the classification of a transaction between a corporation and its majority shareholders as debt or equity. In this case, however, the involvement of a statutorily regulated insurance company distinguishes it from the vast number of debt-equity cases that have reached our Court. Those facts, to our good fortune, are not in dispute.

In 1954, taxpayers and others organized an Alabama insurance corporation, presently known as Associated Doctors Health and Life Insurance Company [hereinafter “Associated Doctors” or “corporation”]. The corporation did not fare well in the 1950s, and underwent some significant reorganization in 1961. At that time the corporation redeemed the shares of certain dissatisfied holders leaving taxpayers owning 90 percent of corporate stock, approximately 45 percent each.

*620 The Corporation soon began a massive effort to increase its business. A major stumbling block, however, lay in the very nature of state statutory requirements governing insurance companies. Typically, the states in which Associated Doctors wrote insurance required insurers to maintain high levels of cash capital and surplus so that the insurers’ “creditors,” the policyholders, would be adequately protected. 4 Moreover, in arriving at account balances, insurers were required to use highly conservative “statutory accounting” methods rather than the often-used “Generally Accepted Accounting Principles” [GAAP]. 5 To ensure its compliance with state law, then, the corporation had to keep a close watch on the capitalization levels in these accounts. It was particularly difficult to maintain these levels on conservative accounting methods while simultaneously expending large sums of money in the aggressive generation of new business. Because the statutory accounting method required “expensing” costs in the year expenses are incurred, every sale of an insurance policy worsened the corporation’s economic picture for the year of sale. The more new business in a year, the less favorable the short-run economics under statutory accounting. Indeed, by late 1962 the capital surplus account was insufficient to meet the capitalization requirements of the various states in which Associated Doctors did business.

In an effort to inject capital into the deficient account, Associated Doctors, on the suggestion of an insurance commissioner in one of the states in which the corporation did business, executed “surplus capital notes.” 6 These notes, already in wide use at that time, were approved by many states 7 as financing devices since they permitted lenders to hold the insurer liable on the notes only to the extent that the insurer’s surplus exceeded a given amount. 8 For their part, insurers would set the “given amount” at the surplus capitalization level required by states in which they did business. The surplus account, thus, was not available to a lender, by the very terms of his surplus capital note, for satisfaction of the insurer’s debt to him. Policyholders’ interests were not infringed by this arrangement since the surplus account designed for their protection remained intact.

Under this scheme, taxpayers in December 1962 began advancing property and cash to Associated Doctors. Between 1962 and 1965, the advances totalled approximately $963,000. 9 Annual advances during the period were memorialized by “surplus capital notes” with identical terms; only principal amounts and due dates differed. 10 *621 To provide Associated Doctors with these advances, taxpayers borrowed $855,000 from Globe Life and Accident Insurance Company (hereinafter “Globe”), a concern that in 1961 had purchased a large portion of Associated Doctors’ business. Globe assigned the short-term notes executed in its favor by taxpayers to the First National Bank and Trust Company of Oklahoma City (hereinafter “FNB”), which retained recourse against Globe. From 1964 through 1969 taxpayers paid FNB interest only on these notes. Beginning in 1967, however, taxpayers were receiving from Associated Doctors interest and principal payments on the surplus capital notes. By that point, the corporation’s surplus had reached a level sufficient to withstand those payments.

In October 1969, all parties to all debts restructured their arrangements. Globe acquired through a reinsurance agreement 17 percent ', of Associated Doctors’ insurance business. For this Globe agreed to pay 25 percent of the commissions received on the transferred policies, up to $855,000, the principal amount owed, by taxpayers to FNB. Associated Doctors assigned this right to taxpayers, who reassigned to American Finance Company of Oklahoma (hereinafter AFC), a corporate relative of FNB. With the Globe commission contract as security, AFC then paid FNB $855,000, thereby satisfying taxpayers’ notes to Globe. Finally, AFC assigned the taxpayers’ obligations to it, together with the Globe commission contract, back to FNB. Apparently, that reassignment was for collection purposes.

Globe did not make payments under the commission contract directly to Associated Doctors. Instead, the arrangement envisioned payments by Globe to AFC or its collection agent, FNB. Essentially, this scheme eliminated the taxpayers from receiving and disbursing the funds involved. Furthermore, it alerted the defendant, the United States of America, to potential tax revenue which it promptly assessed and collected from taxpayers.

Upon audit of Associated Doctors and taxpayers for the three calendar years here at issue, the Internal Revenue Service treated Globe’s payments as dividend income from Associated Doctors to taxpayers. Taxpayers, however, were permitted a deduction for interest amounts paid by Globe to FNB. Having paid the contested amounts of tax liability, taxpayers sued without success for refund. In this Court, they meet with success.

*622 II.

The narrow question is whether Globe’s payments to FNB are properly regarded as repayment of Associated Doctors’ debt to taxpayers and thus nontaxable, or as dividends taxable under the Internal Revenue Code. 11 As earlier indicated, the issue is somewhat atypical because of state regulation of insurance companies and the resulting unavailability of many capital formation options. We do recognize controlling authority on this question in Harlan v. United States,

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659 F.2d 618, 48 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6034, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 16772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-w-jones-and-margaret-m-jones-v-united-states-of-america-ca5-1981.