KILEY, Circuit Judge.
The Tax Court decided, 54 T.C. 953 (1970), that a lump payment to the taxpayer,1 secondary beneficiary under an employees’ pension fund annuity contract, is entitled to capital gains treatment. The Commissioner has appealed. We affirm.
Alice U. Benjamin’s husband, Jack A. Benjamin, before his death was employed2 by Uhlmann Grain Company. During Benjamin’s employment Uhlmann established a pension plan trust, qualified under 26 U.S.C. § 401(a), for the exclusive benefit of its employees or their beneficiaries. The plan from its inception was funded by purchases of individual annuity contracts for each employee, with premiums paid by contributions of both Uhlmann and the employees. The contract for Benjamin was purchased from Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, on or about November 1, 1945.
In October, 1957, Uhlmann terminated the pension trust plan. The annuity contract, representing Benjamin’s entire interest of $28,664.76 in the trust, was assigned to him by the Trustee. On November 1, 1960, Mutual, by virtue of a retention agreement, began the monthly payments to Benjamin of the proceeds of the contract. After receiving four payments, and while still employed by Uhlmann, Benjamin died on February 27, 1961. Taxpayer surrendered the contract during 1961 and received the lump sum payment of $30,606.883 which is the subject of this litigation.
Taxpayer in her 1961 income tax returns excluded $5,000.00 from gross income under 26 U.S.C. § 101(b)(2) (B) (i) and reported the balance of $25,312.19 as a capital gains distribution from the Uhlmann pension trust.4 The Commissioner made a deficiency assessment of $9,838.13 against taxpayer for the year 1961. Her petition for redetermination before us followed.
In the Tax Court taxpayer originally proceeded on the theory that under 26 U.S.C. § 402(a)(2) 5 the 1961 lump sum [985]*985payment was entitled to capital gains treatment. At the Tax Court’s invitation taxpayer claimed alternatively that 26 U.S.C. § 403(a)(2)6 applied to the same effect in her favor. The Tax Court held that § 402(a)(2) did not apply but granted relief under § 403(a)(2). The Tax Court’s theory was that although the trusteed plan terminated in 1957, the assignment of the trust annuity contracts to Benjamin and others converted the trusteed plan into a qualified non-trusteed plan so as to entitle taxpayer to capital gains treatment of the 1961 lump sum payment from the qualified non-trusteed annuity plan by virtue of § 403(a)(2).
The Commissioner contends that the Tax Court erred in deciding that there was a conversion from the trusteed to a non-trusteed plan effected by the 1957 assignment of the annuity contract to Benjamin. He claims that under, the general rule of either § 402(a)(1) or § 403(a)(1) the lump sum payment is taxable as ordinary income 7 because after the 1957 termination there was no annuity pension plan in existence. No case has been cited or found which decides the precise question presented by the Commissioner’s contention.
Prior to 1942 Congress made no provision in 26 U.S.C. § 165 (1952 ed.), the 1939 predecessor of § 402(a)(2), for capital gains treatment of payments from employee pension trusts. Section 162(d) of the Revenue Act of 1942 amended § 165 and introduced capital gains treatment to a distributee’s net lump sum payments from employees’ trusts on account of the employee’s “separation from the service.” In the 1954 Code, § 165(b) was rewritten as § 402(a)(2) covering trusteed employee pension plans.8 In 1954 § 403(a)(2) was also adopted, extending capital gains treatment to non-trusteed employee pension plans. The congressional [986]*986purpose was to correct inequities resulting from capital gains treatment accorded to lump sum distributions from trus-teed plans because of separation from service while not granting similar treatment to lump sum distributions from non-trusteed or insurance plans.9
The general rule is that amounts received by an employee under an annuity are taxable as ordinary income. § 403(a)(1). An exception to the general rule is provided in § 403(a)(2) which allows capital gains treatment of lump sum payments under a plan which meets the requirements of § 404(a)(2).10 And the taxpayer had the burden of proving that the 1961 lump sum payment comes within the exception. The elements to be proven are (a) that after the 1957 termination of the trusteed pension plan a qualified annuity plan under § 403(a)(2) existed; (b) that the plan was a written program communicated to the employees as required by Treas. Reg. § 1.401-1 (a) (2) (1961); and (c) that the annuity plan was established and maintained by Uhlmann as required under Treas. Reg. § 1.401-Kb) (l)C.i).
The relevant requirements of § 404(a)(2) are that the plan meet the requirements of § 401(a)(3), (4), (5), and (6). The latter requirements deal in (3) with the minimum employee coverage and minimum span of employment of the annuity plan needed for qualification, in (4) with the need of non-discrimination in favor of officers, etc., in (5) with what classifications are not discriminatory, and in (6) with what in one respect satisfies the time span requirement of § 401(a)(3).11
The exception to the general rule in § 403(a)(2)(A) provides that: If
(i) an annuity contract is purchased by an employer for an employee under a plan described in paragraph (1);
(ii) such plan requires that refunds of contributions with respect to annuity contracts purchased under such plan be used to reduce subsequent premiums on the contracts under the plan; and
(iii) the total amounts payable by reason of an employee’s death or other separation from the service, or by reason of the death of an employee after the employee’s separation from the service, are paid to the payee within one taxable year of the payee,
then capital gains treatment is to be accorded to the net amounts paid under the annuities.12
[987]*987The facts stipulated before the Tax Court show that the three requirements of § 403(a)(2)(A) are met by the Uhlmann annuities. Uhlmann purchased the annuity contract under a qualified pension plan. Under the plan the annuity contracts were fully paid when assigned to the employees and there would be no refunds. The lump sum payment in 1961 represented “the total amounts payable by reason of” Benjamin’s separation from employment by death13 and it was paid within one taxable year of the payee.
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KILEY, Circuit Judge.
The Tax Court decided, 54 T.C. 953 (1970), that a lump payment to the taxpayer,1 secondary beneficiary under an employees’ pension fund annuity contract, is entitled to capital gains treatment. The Commissioner has appealed. We affirm.
Alice U. Benjamin’s husband, Jack A. Benjamin, before his death was employed2 by Uhlmann Grain Company. During Benjamin’s employment Uhlmann established a pension plan trust, qualified under 26 U.S.C. § 401(a), for the exclusive benefit of its employees or their beneficiaries. The plan from its inception was funded by purchases of individual annuity contracts for each employee, with premiums paid by contributions of both Uhlmann and the employees. The contract for Benjamin was purchased from Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, on or about November 1, 1945.
In October, 1957, Uhlmann terminated the pension trust plan. The annuity contract, representing Benjamin’s entire interest of $28,664.76 in the trust, was assigned to him by the Trustee. On November 1, 1960, Mutual, by virtue of a retention agreement, began the monthly payments to Benjamin of the proceeds of the contract. After receiving four payments, and while still employed by Uhlmann, Benjamin died on February 27, 1961. Taxpayer surrendered the contract during 1961 and received the lump sum payment of $30,606.883 which is the subject of this litigation.
Taxpayer in her 1961 income tax returns excluded $5,000.00 from gross income under 26 U.S.C. § 101(b)(2) (B) (i) and reported the balance of $25,312.19 as a capital gains distribution from the Uhlmann pension trust.4 The Commissioner made a deficiency assessment of $9,838.13 against taxpayer for the year 1961. Her petition for redetermination before us followed.
In the Tax Court taxpayer originally proceeded on the theory that under 26 U.S.C. § 402(a)(2) 5 the 1961 lump sum [985]*985payment was entitled to capital gains treatment. At the Tax Court’s invitation taxpayer claimed alternatively that 26 U.S.C. § 403(a)(2)6 applied to the same effect in her favor. The Tax Court held that § 402(a)(2) did not apply but granted relief under § 403(a)(2). The Tax Court’s theory was that although the trusteed plan terminated in 1957, the assignment of the trust annuity contracts to Benjamin and others converted the trusteed plan into a qualified non-trusteed plan so as to entitle taxpayer to capital gains treatment of the 1961 lump sum payment from the qualified non-trusteed annuity plan by virtue of § 403(a)(2).
The Commissioner contends that the Tax Court erred in deciding that there was a conversion from the trusteed to a non-trusteed plan effected by the 1957 assignment of the annuity contract to Benjamin. He claims that under, the general rule of either § 402(a)(1) or § 403(a)(1) the lump sum payment is taxable as ordinary income 7 because after the 1957 termination there was no annuity pension plan in existence. No case has been cited or found which decides the precise question presented by the Commissioner’s contention.
Prior to 1942 Congress made no provision in 26 U.S.C. § 165 (1952 ed.), the 1939 predecessor of § 402(a)(2), for capital gains treatment of payments from employee pension trusts. Section 162(d) of the Revenue Act of 1942 amended § 165 and introduced capital gains treatment to a distributee’s net lump sum payments from employees’ trusts on account of the employee’s “separation from the service.” In the 1954 Code, § 165(b) was rewritten as § 402(a)(2) covering trusteed employee pension plans.8 In 1954 § 403(a)(2) was also adopted, extending capital gains treatment to non-trusteed employee pension plans. The congressional [986]*986purpose was to correct inequities resulting from capital gains treatment accorded to lump sum distributions from trus-teed plans because of separation from service while not granting similar treatment to lump sum distributions from non-trusteed or insurance plans.9
The general rule is that amounts received by an employee under an annuity are taxable as ordinary income. § 403(a)(1). An exception to the general rule is provided in § 403(a)(2) which allows capital gains treatment of lump sum payments under a plan which meets the requirements of § 404(a)(2).10 And the taxpayer had the burden of proving that the 1961 lump sum payment comes within the exception. The elements to be proven are (a) that after the 1957 termination of the trusteed pension plan a qualified annuity plan under § 403(a)(2) existed; (b) that the plan was a written program communicated to the employees as required by Treas. Reg. § 1.401-1 (a) (2) (1961); and (c) that the annuity plan was established and maintained by Uhlmann as required under Treas. Reg. § 1.401-Kb) (l)C.i).
The relevant requirements of § 404(a)(2) are that the plan meet the requirements of § 401(a)(3), (4), (5), and (6). The latter requirements deal in (3) with the minimum employee coverage and minimum span of employment of the annuity plan needed for qualification, in (4) with the need of non-discrimination in favor of officers, etc., in (5) with what classifications are not discriminatory, and in (6) with what in one respect satisfies the time span requirement of § 401(a)(3).11
The exception to the general rule in § 403(a)(2)(A) provides that: If
(i) an annuity contract is purchased by an employer for an employee under a plan described in paragraph (1);
(ii) such plan requires that refunds of contributions with respect to annuity contracts purchased under such plan be used to reduce subsequent premiums on the contracts under the plan; and
(iii) the total amounts payable by reason of an employee’s death or other separation from the service, or by reason of the death of an employee after the employee’s separation from the service, are paid to the payee within one taxable year of the payee,
then capital gains treatment is to be accorded to the net amounts paid under the annuities.12
[987]*987The facts stipulated before the Tax Court show that the three requirements of § 403(a)(2)(A) are met by the Uhlmann annuities. Uhlmann purchased the annuity contract under a qualified pension plan. Under the plan the annuity contracts were fully paid when assigned to the employees and there would be no refunds. The lump sum payment in 1961 represented “the total amounts payable by reason of” Benjamin’s separation from employment by death13 and it was paid within one taxable year of the payee. We think the Tax Court could reasonably infer that the annuities purchased by Uhlmann for its employees contained in themselves the qualification of an annuity plan contemplated by § 404(a)(2) and § 403 (a)(2)(A) upon the termination of the trusteed pension plan in 1957. The stipulated facts formed a basis for a Tax Court inference that the conditions of § 403(a)(2)(A) were met. We conclude that prima facie proof was made that after the 1957 termination of the trusteed pension plan a qualified annuity plan existed under § 403(a)(2)(A).
The question now is whether the plan shown was a written program communicated to the employees as required by Treas. Reg. § 1.401-1 (a) (2) (1961).14 We think that the Tax Court could conclude here also that prima facie proof had been made of these requirements.
It is conceded that no writing beyond the annuity contracts themselves is required by the regulation. We think we must presume that the Uhlmann employees knew generally the terms of the pension trusteed plan, the terms of the annuities included in that plan, and also the terms of a 1955 retention agreement between the Trustee and Mutual which provided several options for beneficiaries. We shall assume, but not decide at this point, that a conversion to a non-trusteed plan was effected by the 1957 termination of the trusteed plan. Under that assumption it seems to us that there had been communicated to the employees everything needed for them to know that the annuities after termination of the trust and plan constituted a new plan in which Uhlmann reserved the right, and agreed to withhold from the employees the right, to request the retention of the proceeds of the annuity contracts. We think that here again there was a basis for the Tax Court to conclude that the annuity plan in existence upon termination of the trusteed plan was a written program substantially communicated to the employees.
There remains the question whether taxpayer has met the burden of proving that the annuity plan in existence after the 1957 termination was established and maintained by Uhlmann as required by Treas. Reg. § 1.401-1 (b) (1) (i) (1961).15 Principal reliance for this proof is placed by taxpayer upon the retention agreement made by the pension plan Trustee, under authority of Uhlmann, with the insurer Mutual.
On November 1, 1955, the Trustee and Mutual agreed16 that Mutual, upon request of the Trustee, was to retain the proceeds of the annuity contracts at 2% % until November 1, 1960, or until [988]*988the annuitant’s death. The right of the employee to make such a request was expressly withheld. Presumably the retention agreement covered all annuitants.
We think a letter written by Uhlmann to Mutual on March 17, 1958, justified an inference that Uhlmann, despite the termination of the trusteed plan in 1957, exercised a control over the annuities sufficient to show that its prior interest in its employees under the trusteed plan carried over into the annuities. The 1958 letter was written to Mutual to serve the interest of the “participants” in the “certificates which we now hold.”17
The letter was written to modify the 1955 retention agreement.18 It told Mutual of Uhlmann’s attorney’s opinion that the 1957 assignment of the annuities could not be considered taxable income to “participants” if the only annuity option was monthly payments over a ten year period and the “participant” does not have the right to withdraw. It further stated “the certificates which we now hold” provide that the “right of withdrawal or commutation is withheld from the participant,” but that with respect to Benjamin and four other named “participants” the right to withdraw before November 1, 1960, should be transferred in the agreement from Uhlmann to those “participants” named.
In rejecting an earlier proposal of Mutual that payments of the annuity benefits installments begin November, 1957, the letter stated that this was not in the best tax interests of “participants” and “this was the reason that the funds were left” with the insurance company for the five year period.
The retention agreement was not rescinded when Uhlmann terminated the trust in 1957. The effect of the agreement was to enable Uhlmann through the “Trustee” to effectually direct until November, 1960, how the annuitant should be paid the benefits. The record discloses that the restriction on the right of Benjamin, and the four other employees named in the March, 1958, letter, was removed. We assume that the removal ended the Uhlmann right, against Benjamin, in Benjamin’s annuity. Nevertheless the Tax Court could reasonably infer that the interim retained right of the “Trustee” was the nexus between the terminated trusteed plan and the converted qualified annuity plan.
The decision in Estate of Russell, 47 T.C. 8 (1966), does not control or preclude our decision. In Russell the decision rested on the application of § 402. The court found that the provisions of § 403 did not apply. The Tax Court held that the facts in Russell did not bring Russell’s claim under the provisions of § 402(a)(2) and that the distribution to Russell from the trusteed plan there— according to his option to accept the annuity contract and retain it without additional payments and to receive a lesser annuity at maturity of the contract— was not on account of Russell’s separation from the service of his employer by reason of death or termination of employment. Here Benjamin’s separation from service was by reason of his death.
We are not impressed by the Commissioner’s argument that the trusteed plan was not continued after 1957 as an annuity plan because the annuity contract did not provide “systematically for the payment of definitely determinable benefits” to Benjamin for life, required by Treas. Reg. § 1.401-1 (b) [989]*989(1) (i) (1961), and the contract did not contemplate or was not made in contemplation of factors such as years of service and compensation. It is true that each annuity did not state systematically the span of service and compensation paid, with the details of the trusteed plan. But the annuities had assimilated those details when in that plan. And the amounts payable under each contract were based upon the formula used in the trust to establish the amounts payable and thus inhered in the annuities. There is no significance to the fact that Uhlmann made no contributions after 1957. The annuities were fully funded and employee interests had vested at that time.
We conclude that the strict construction of the exception in § 403 (a) (2) would not be offended by drawing the reasonable inference justified by this record that Uhlmann maintained a substantial control of the annuities after 1957 and that the previous termination of the trusteed pension plan was transformed thereby into a qualified non-trusteed plan. The court was not required to have direct evidence of Uhlmann’s intention to maintain the annuity plan. It is sufficient if the circumstances justify his conclusion. And we think it follows that if Uhlmann maintained the plan it had also established the plan.
We conclude that the Tax Court had a basis for an inference that when the trusteed plan was terminated in 1957 a conversion to a non-trusteed plan was made. We hold therefore that the Tax Court did not err in concluding that taxpayer was entitled to capital gains treatment for the lump sum payment received in 1961.
For the reasons given, the decision of the Tax Court is affirmed.