Ehrhart v. Commissioner

57 T.C. 872, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 155
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1972
DocketDocket Nos. 2597-70, 2911-70, 5788-70
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 57 T.C. 872 (Ehrhart v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ehrhart v. Commissioner, 57 T.C. 872, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 155 (tax 1972).

Opinion

The Commissioner determined deficiencies in petitioners’ income tax as follows:

Petitioners Petitioners
Year Ehrhart Tierney
1966___ $114,75_
1967_ 377.96 $344.03
1968_ 268.75 222.88

The only issue for decision is whether amounts received by petitioners Lawrence A. Ehrhart and Thomas P. Tierney, respectively, were ex-cludable from gross income as “scholarship [s]” or “fellowship grant[s] ” under section 117 (a) (1), I.E.C. 1951.

BINDINGS OF FACT

The parties have filed a stipulation of facts which, together with accompanying exhibits, is incorporated herein by this reference.

Lawrence A. and Melanie D. Ehrhart, petitioners in docket Nos. 2597-70 and 5788-70, are husband and wife. They filed joint Federal income tax returns for the calendar years 1966, 1967, and 1968 with the district director of internal revenue at Boston, Mass., and resided in Boston, Mass., at the time their petitions herein were filed.

Thomas P. and Joann M. Tierney, petitioners in docket No. 2911-70, are husband and wife. They filed joint Federal income tax returns for 1967 and 1968 with the district director of internal revenue at Boston, Mass., and resided in Framingham, Mass., at the time their petition herein was filed.

Petitioners Lawrence A. Ehrhart (Ehrhart) and Thomas P. Tierney (Tierney) are employed by New England Mutual Life Insurance Co. (New England Mutual) and the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. (John Hancock), respectively. Both Ehrhart and Tierney (petitioners) have been trained as actuaries. Actuaries are highly skilled mathematicians who deal with various contingencies affecting-human life. They function primarily as technical experts of life insurance companies, but their broad understanding of the life insurance business frequently enables them to rise to nonactuarial managerial or executive positions.

To become recognized as a fully qualified actuary, one must pass a series of 10 examinations administered by the Society of Actuaries, the authoritative organization which establishes the qualifications of actuaries in the life insurance industry. One who successfully completes all 10 examinations becomes a fellow of the Society of Actuaries. The examinations are offered in two sittings each year, one in the spring and the other in the fall, usually in May and November. Most candidates take one examination at a sitting, although it is not uncommon to take two examinations at one time, particularly those involving parts 1, 2, and 3. Examinations for parts 1, 2, and 3 are offered at each sitting; as to the remaining seven parts, examinations for odd-numbered parts are given in the fall and the even-numbered parts in the spring. The examinations are quite difficult, and the length of time required to become a fellow is usually not less than 5 or 6 years; the great majority of persons who sit for the first examination do not survive to become fellows.

There has been an acute shortage of qualified actuaries for a number of years, prior to, during, and subsequent to the tax years here involved. In an effort to help relieve that shortage there was established at Northeastern University in 1964 a Graduate School of Actuarial Science (“Northeastern” or the “school”), which offered a 2-year course leading to the degree of master of actuarial science. The nature of the school was unusual. It was established with the aid of and functioned in conjunction with some 40 “sponsoring” life insurance companies or institutions or agencies (sometimes referred to herein generally as insurance companies) that utilized the services of actuaries and were therefore interested in increasing the number of available qualified actuaries.

The course of study at the school was designed to prepare students for parts three through six of the examinations given by the Society of Actuaries. As a prerequisite to matriculation a student was required to have passed the first two examinations, or to have demonstrated clearly his ability to pass such examinations. Each year of the 2-year course was divided into two semesters of 10 weeks each, and each semester was devoted exclusively to preparing the student to take a particular examination. Thus, the first semester of the first year was aimed at part three, and the second semester at part four; similarly, the first and second semesters of the second year were concerned exclusively with the materials covered by parts five and six, respectively. Each semester was so scheduled that it terminated shortly before the Society of Actuaries gave the particular examination with which that semester was concerned. Moreover, the framework of the 2-year course was so constructed that there was a 16-week interval between each semester and the one following it.

The school was unusual in the further respect that it would admit as students only those who were employees of and sponsored by one of the cooperating insurance companies. No student whose employment relationship with his sponsor had terminated — whether by his own choice or his sponsor’s — was allowed to remain in the school after completion of the semester hr which he was enrolled at the time of severance of his employment. It was also a condition that each student work or serve as an “intern” for his sponsor during the 16-week periods between semesters, and that his performance during such periods be satisfactory. During the 10-week periods when the employee attended the school as a student, his efforts were directed exclusively towards his studies and, unlike the 16-week periods between semesters, he did not perform any services for his employer. No prospective student, however qualified, was eligible for admission to the school rmless he was an employee of a sponsoring company, although it was possible for one to become an employee at the same time that he was accepted as a student. The faculty of the school consisted of three full-time teachers plus an undisclosed number of part-time teachers, some of whom were officers or employees of the sponsoring insurance companies.

Pursuant to the arrangement between Northeastern and the insurance companies, the tuition fee for each student was required to be paid by his sponsor, and not by the student himself. In addition, it was the practice of at least some of the companies to pay their employees a “living allowance” during the 10-week periods when they were attending sessions at Northeastern. Both Tierney and Ehrhart received such allowances from their respective employers, more fully hereinafter described, and the sole issue is whether those allowances were excludable from gross income as fellowships or scholarships under section 117 of the 1954 Code.

Tierney received a B.S. degree in physics from Boston College in 1964, and became a “programmer” in John Hancock’s computer department on March 30, 1965. Approximately 9 months later, in early January 1966, he transferred to the company’s special training program for prospective actuaries (the actuarial development program) where he remained a full-time employee and was compensated as such. About this time he learned that John Hancock offered to sponsor the Northeastern education of a limited number of participants in its actuarial development program.

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Ehrhart v. Commissioner
57 T.C. 872 (U.S. Tax Court, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
57 T.C. 872, 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ehrhart-v-commissioner-tax-1972.