American Steamship Company v. United States

427 F.2d 235, 25 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1325, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8996
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 1970
Docket34586_1
StatusPublished

This text of 427 F.2d 235 (American Steamship Company v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Steamship Company v. United States, 427 F.2d 235, 25 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1325, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8996 (2d Cir. 1970).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Circuit Judge:

The appellant taxpayer in this suit is a New York corporation which owns and operates commercial vessels on the Great Lakes. From 1960 through 1963 the corporation whose tax claims are inherited by the appellant successor corporation 1 uniformly insured its vessels against casualty damages by means of policies containing $25,000 deductible clauses. As a result of these provisions, the cost of the insurance was reduced to approximately one third of what the costs would have been without the deductible clauses, 2 and the steamship com *236 pany absorbed sizeable losses which, because of the deductible clauses, were not compensated. In effect, the company acted as a self-insurer for all of its losses to its property up to $25,000. During the four years in question the parties stipulated 3 that the company itself bore $1,312,556 in casualty losses which, individually, were less than $25,-000 each; and that the company bore an additional $430,084.73 as a result of casualty losses which totaled more than $25,000 in each individual case, of which the threshold $25,000 of each loss was borne by the company and the remainder in excess of that sum was borne by the insurance company,

Section 1231 of the Internal Revenue Code 4 provides that if recognized gains from sales, exchanges, and involuntary *237 conversions of real estate or depreciable property used in a trade or business exceed recognized losses from such transactions or occurrences in any given tax year, the net gain shall be treated as capital gain. If, on the other hand, such recognized losses exceed the gains, the gains and the losses are treated as ordinary income and ordinary losses rather than as capital gains and losses. Casualty losses of the kind suffered by the taxpayer in this case qualify as involuntary conversions under the statute. Thus, where the gains described in Section 1231 exceed the losses described therein, taxpayer’s casualty losses serve only to reduce the amount of its capital gains recognized pursuant to the section, just as capital losses are netted against capital gains pursuant to Sections 1211 and 1222. Were it not for Section 1231, casualty losses could be deducted directly from ordinary income under Section 165 (a).

Inasmuch as American Steamship Company recognized more gains than losses under Section 1231 in each of the relevant tax years, 1960-1963, it was to its advantage to exclude all of its casualty losses, if possible to do so, from Section 1231 treatment so that these losses could be deducted from ordinary income pursuant to Section 165(a) rather than be netted against Section 1231 capital gains. During the tax years in question, the last paragraph of Section 1231(a) provided that Section 1231 did not apply to any casualty loss of the type suffered by this taxpayer if the loss were one “in respect of which the taxpayer is not compensated for by insurance in any amount.” Accordingly, taxpayer tried to bring all the casualty losses it believed it had suffered as a “self-insurer” within this proviso, and on the relevant returns deducted from gross income all the casualty losses it suffered that did not exceed $25,000 and deducted $25,000 from gross income for the casualty losses it incurred that exceeded that amount.

The Commissioner agreed with taxpayer that each occurrence that resulted in a total loss of less than the $25,000 deductible amount, and for which taxpayer was a self-insurer, and which was of course “not compensated for by insurance in any amount” was a loss ex-cludable from the capital loss treatment prescribed in Section 1231. However, the Commissioner concluded that in those instances where the Company received some insurance money for occurrences that had resulted in losses greater than $25,000, each of the $25,000 deductible amounts thereby borne by the Company could not be excluded from the capital loss treatment Section 1231 prescribed and could not be deducted from ordinary income. Taxpayer, preserving its rights by paying under protest, complied with the Commissioner’s interpretation of the statute, paid the deficiencies asserted, filed claims for refunds to no avail, and then sued in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York for the refunds due it if its treatment of the character of these losses was correct. The trial judge agreed with the Commissioner’s interpretation and held that the disputed losses were to be treated as capital losses under Section 1231 rather than as deductions from gross business income.

The lower court stated that this result is clearly required by the language in Section 1231(a) which permits deduc *238 tions from ordinary income only for “any loss, in respect of which the taxpayer is not compensated for by insurance in any amount.” The court reasoned that because some insurance is received in compensation for casualties of more than $25,000, the $25,000 borne by the company does not qualify as a loss “not compensated for by insurance in any amount.”

We recognize at the outset that an unassailable decision in this case is difficult if not impossible to reach, simply because the distinction drawn by the statute between losses which are completely uncompensated for by insurance and losses which are compensated for in some amount does not seem to serve any rational policy. According to a 1958 report of the Senate Finance Committee, 5 the reason that a deduction from ordinary income is permitted in eases where a business taxpayer suffers a completely uninsured casualty loss is that the cost of insurance premiums can be deducted as a business expense; thus if the taxpayer elects to become a self-insurer and to absorb its losses directly, rather than to pay insurance premiums, he should be placed in no different tax position. Logically it seems that this rationale should extend also to taxpayers who decide to insure part of the value of their property against casualty loss, but elect to bear the risk of the loss of the remainder of that value as self-insurers rather than to pay the additional insurance premiums necessary to secure complete insurance coverage. For some reason, however, Congress elected in Section 1231(a) not to achieve this result, but provided instead that taxpayers who receive some insurance compensation for a casualty loss, but who do not receive total compensation, 6 suffer a capital loss rather than an ordinary loss. 7

There are two kinds of insurance coverage where a taxpayer might receive the partial insurance compensation just described. One is coverage provided by a policy containing a deductible clause, as in the present case, where the taxpayer is insured against loss only above a certain dollar amount, and is a self-insurer for losses suffered below that threshold. The second is coverage provided by a policy which provides for compensation only up to a certain percentage of loss or up to a certain maximum dollar figure, even though the total amount of loss may be greater than this limitation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
427 F.2d 235, 25 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1325, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-steamship-company-v-united-states-ca2-1970.