Basye v. United States

295 F. Supp. 1289, 23 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 454, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10151
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedNovember 29, 1968
DocketCiv. Nos. 44352-44356, 45575
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 295 F. Supp. 1289 (Basye v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Basye v. United States, 295 F. Supp. 1289, 23 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 454, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10151 (N.D. Cal. 1968).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER DIRECTING JUDGMENT FOR PLAINTIFFS

WOLLENBERG, District Judge.

These are consolidated actions for the refund of income taxes, and each one poses the identical problem which arises within the partnership provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. The facts have been stipulated to by the taxpayer petitioners and the respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The petitioners are physicians who were each, during the years involved in their respective cases, general partners in a limited partnership of physicians organized in 1949 to practice medicine in California under the name of “The Permanente Medical Group” (hereinafter referred to as Permanente or as the partnership). This partnership used the accrual method of tax accounting in filing its partnership information returns. All partners used the cash method of accounting.

Prior to the years involved in these cases, Permanente contracted with Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc. (hereafter referred to as Kaiser), a California nonprofit corporation, to provide medical services to members of Kaiser in its Northern California Region. Kaiser operates a contractual membership program providing pre-paid hospital and medical care to its dues paying members. [1291]*1291The contract provided that Kaiser would not only pay a basic compensation to Permanente for the medical services, but would also make payments toward a retirement plan when such a plan was approved by Kaiser. On or about December 30, 1958, such a plan (hereafter referred to as the Retirement Plan) was established to take effect as of July 1, 1959, by a trust agreement among Kaiser, Permanente, and the Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association, as trustee. In entering into both the original medical services contract and the trust agreement, Permanente and Kaiser were and remained independent organizations contracting at arms length.

The primary purpose of the trust agreement and the retirement plan is to create an incentive for physicians to remain with Permanente, or if they left Permanente, then to join some other group of physicians contracting to serve Kaiser members, thereby ensuring Kaiser that it would have a stable and reliable pool of physicians providing medical services to its members. To secure this purpose, the Retirement Plan contains the following provisions. A trust fund under the Bank of America trusteeship was established, and is to be supported by payments from Kaiser in partial compensation for the services of Permanente. Each physician who had served two years within Permanente, both those who were partners and those who were merely employees, was assigned a certain number of “units”, which took into account such factors as the physician’s salary from Permanente, his past service with Permanente, and the age at which he became associated with Permanente. Tentative accounts were then set up for each physician, and these accounts were credited with portions of the trust fund earnings (which included payments from Kaiser plus interest accrued on the corpus), with each account receiving credits in proportion to the units assigned to that particular physician. The accounts are tentative because the eventual enjoyment by any physician of his accrued share of the fund depends on several contingencies. If either a partner-participant or an employee-participant in the Retirement Plan terminates his affiliation with Permanente, for reasons other than his death or disability, prior to reaching age 65 or serving Permanente for fifteen continuous years, and if the participant does not thereupon join another medical group serving Kaiser subscribers, he forfeits the amounts allocated to his tentative account. And even upon his becoming eligible to receive retirement benefits from his tentative account, a participant may lose his right to these benefits if he renders professional services for a competitor of Kaiser, or if, while he is physically fit and legally entitled to practice medicine, he refuses to render consulting services to any medical group under contract with Kaiser, when reasonably requested to do so. Moreover, a “Retirement Committee”, composed of representatives selected by both Kaiser and Permanente, is given the power to prescribe further conditions to the receipt of Retirement Plan benefits by participants.

The effect on each participant’s rights in the trust fund in the event of a dissolution or reorganization of Permanente is of particular interest in the present case. The trust agreement provides that if, in the event of a dissolution or reorganization of Permanente, at least 50% of the combined total of practicing partner-participants and employee-participants become reassoeiated with a reorganized Permanente or with another group serving Kaiser subscribers, then the trust fund shall be kept intact and any unretired physician-participant who does not join in the new grouping shall forfeit his rights in the trust fund. The forfeiture will not occur in either of two circumstances. First, if in connection with Permanente’s dissolution or reorganization, Kaiser and Permanente jointly agree to use the trust funds to support a new retirement plan which they believe will provide better retirement benefits for the participants, or will better effect the original purpose [1292]*1292of the trust agreement (viz., a reliable pool of doctors for Kaiser), then such a new retirement plan could provide that the accruals in the tentative accounts of all participants would be preserved. Second, if there is a dissolution or reorganization of Permanente without the above-mentioned 50:% regrouping and without the creation of a new retirement plan by Permanente and Kaiser, then the assets held by the trust fund are to be liquidated and the proceeds distributed to all participants, retired and active, in lump sums prorated according to the tentative account balances.

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined that the partnership income returns filed by Permanente for its fiscal years ending June 30, 1960 through 1963 had understated income in omitting the sums of Kaiser’s payments to the trust fund and the earnings on trust corpus. The Commissioner further determined that the increased partnership income was taxable to the partners for each calendar year in which the partnership fiscal year ended, and he assessed deficiencies in the individual income tax returns of each of the partners, including plaintiffs. In computing the deficiency for each partner, the Commissioner used the following formula. He calculated the total sum of payments attributable to the tentative accounts of employee-participants in the Retirement Plan, and he assessed each partner for these payments according to that partner’s distributive share of general partnership income under the partnership articles.1 He further assessed each partner for the annual increments in trust earnings attributable to that partner’s own tentative account in the Retirement Plan, thereby treating the “unit” allocations under the trust agreement as a modification of the basic partnership agreement on the distribution of partnership earnings.2

It is this latter assessment which is contested here. Plaintiffs do not contend that they should never be taxed on the allocations to their tentative accounts, but rather that, in view of the many contingencies which condition their actual receipt of the proceeds represented in their accounts, the tax should be postponed until such actual receipt.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 F. Supp. 1289, 23 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 454, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basye-v-united-states-cand-1968.