Allen v. State Tax Commission

150 N.E.2d 14, 337 Mass. 502, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 693
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 7, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 150 N.E.2d 14 (Allen v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. State Tax Commission, 150 N.E.2d 14, 337 Mass. 502, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 693 (Mass. 1958).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

The taxpayer (hereinafter called the beneficiary) was the widow of Frank G. Allen (hereinafter called the insured) who died in 1950. She was the beneficiary named in a policy of fife insurance upon the insured’s life in the face amount of $100,000. When the proceeds became payable upon the insured’s death, the taxpayer became en *503 titled to elect either (a) to receive immediately in cash the face amount (plus a small prepaid premium) or (b) to receive settlement under any one of the three stated options set out in the margin. 1 Further provisions of the policy are also described in the margin. 2 The beneficiary elected settlement “in accordance with . . . Option#2 . . . by 20 annual payments of . . . $6,847.08 . . . beginning October 9, 1950,” with the proviso that, in the event of her death, “the balance of said payments remaining unpaid shall be commuted and paid in one sum” to her executors or administrators.

The insurance company made a first payment of $6,847.08 in 1950. The beneficiary did not include any part of this sum in her Massachusetts income tax return of income receiyed by her in 1950. The State tax commission (hereinafter called the commission) assessed the beneficiary for a deficiency of $135.85 based upon the omission from her return of $1,810.98 of the first payment, claiming that this $1,810.98 was interest on indebtedness within subsection (a) of G. L. c. 62, § 1, which at all times here relevant provided for a tax “at the rate of six per cent per annum” on “interest from bonds, notes, money at interest and all debts due *504 the person to be taxed” with certain exceptions not here pertinent. The commission “divided the total payments to be made, $100,722 by twenty, the number of payments. The quotient $5,036.10 deducted from . . . $6,847.08 gives . . . $1,810.98 which” the commission claims is taxable under the quoted provisions of § 1 (a).

The tax of $135.85 with interest of $17.37 was paid. An application for abatement was denied and the beneficiary perfected an appeal to the Appellate Tax Board. The board also denied an abatement, holding that “the excess over the face amount of the policy paid annually to the appellant is the amount fixed by the parties for the use of the cash retained by the insurer and constitutes a receipt of 'interest' from a debt due the . . . [beneficiary] which is taxable under . . . § 1 (a).” The beneficiary has appealed from the board's decision.

1. This court has recently considered the question of what constitutes interest under § 1 (a). Gordon v. State Tax Commission, 335 Mass. 431, (profits realized by a finance company purchasing a conditional sale transaction from a dealer held not to be interest). In the Gordon case (at page 437) weight was given “to the doctrine . . . that tax statutes are to be strictly construed, and to the further doctrine that 'all doubts are to be resolved in favor of the taxpayer'” and (at page 435) to the principle that the “right to tax must be found within the letter of the law; it is not to be extended by implication beyond the clear meaning of the language used.”

The Gordon case and the present case both obviously present instances of payments the amounts of which, in a general sense, in part are determined by the fact that the payment of money owed is being delayed, but without any allocation by the parties of any specific part of the payment as a consideration and compensation for the retention of the money and delay in payment. In the present case, for example, the amount of the delayed payments is undoubtedly computed on an actuarial basis which takes into account the interest, at the rate of at least three and one half per *505 cent per annum, which the insurer expects to earn on the unpaid balance of the face amount of the policy. It was held, in effect, in the Gordon case, in the light of the earlier case of Hayes v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, 261 Mass. 134, and of the canons of construction of tax statutes already mentioned, that § 1 (a) exhibited no clear legislative intention to tax any unsegregated portion of the payments there involved. The present problem similarly must be considered in the light of the fundamental canons of construction just mentioned.

2. We have not been referred to any prior decision of this court under § 1 (a) which is determinative of the present case. The beneficiary, however, contends (1) that the precise matter has been dealt with under the closely comparable provisions of § 22 (b) (1) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, 3 and (2) that we should follow the decision in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Pierce, 146 F. 2d 388, 389 (2d Cir.) in which the court (per Learned Hand, J.) held that § 22 (b) (1) did “not mean to separate ... installments . . . ¡(payable monthly under a provision similar to that in the present case] into principal and interest and to include the interest in gross income; but that it exempts the whole installment” even where, at the death of the insured, “it was the beneficiary, not the insured, who made the choice” of option. The court rejected the “argument . . . that, since she had the option of choosing between the principal and one of the options, it is as though she had actually received the principal and had reinvested it with the insurer, instead of upon some other security.” See to the same effect Law v. Rothensies, 155 F. 2d 13, 14 (3d Cir.); *506 Bullard, 5 T. C. 1346, 1349. See also Hilgedag, Life Insurance Planning for Estate and Gift Taxes, 5 N. Y. Univ. Inst. Fed. Taxation (1946) 25, 48-51; Mertens, Federal Income Taxation, §§ 6A.01, 7.03-7.06. Compare Hall, 12 T. C. 419, 423-428; Strauss, 21 T. C. 104, 110-111; Jones, 22 T. C. 407, 411.

We have recently pointed out that in construing the Massachusetts income tax law (G. L. c. 62) decisions under the Federal income tax statutes must be used with caution in view of the very different character of the two taxes. Second Bank-State Street Trust Co. v. State Tax Commission, ante, 203, 211-212. Here the language of the Federal statute is not precisely the same as that of the Massachusetts statute, and the Federal cases deal, to a considerable extent, with the construction of what constitutes amounts “received under a life insurance contract” within § 22 (b) (1) quoted, supra, in footnote 3, rather than what is interest. Many aspects of the problem, however, are the same and the conclusions reached in the Federal cases are persuasive. What the beneficiary here receives is a payment as a result of a contract made with the deceased insured to pay her, at her option, either the face value of the policy at death or payments over a period of time in accordance with any one of the three options. What she received is the payment by one method of a debt which she could collect in four different ways. As Judge Hand points out in the

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.E.2d 14, 337 Mass. 502, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-state-tax-commission-mass-1958.