Estate of Olsen v. Commissioner
This text of 1989 T.C. Memo. 50 (Estate of Olsen 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.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM OPINION
SWIFT,
All of the relevant facts have been stipulated, and this case has been submitted under Rule 122. 1 Petitioner, Margaret Olsen, and the decedent were residents of California at the time the petition was filed.
Beginning in 1959, the decedent was employed for 16 years by the Federal Government as a physics professor at the U.S. Naval Post Graduate School in Monterey, California. In 1972, decedent suffered a heart attack but was thereafter able to continue employment for three years. In July of 1975, decedent suffered a second heart attack, as a result of which decedent became permanently disabled and could not continue teaching.
Because of his disability, decedent applied for and was granted permanent disability status by the U.S. Civil Service Commission in December of 1975. Thereafter through 1981, decedent received from the Civil Service Retirement Commission disability retirement payments. The payments were received in the*51 form of annuity payments under the provisions of
On decedent's and petitioner Margaret Olsen's 1981 Federal income tax return, the $ 13,179 in disability retirement payments were not included as taxable income. On audit, respondent determined that the payments did not qualify for exclusion from income under section 105(c)(2).
Generally, amounts received through an accident or health insurance plan for personal injuries or sickness are included in the recipient's gross taxable income. Sec. 105(a). However, amounts normally includable in gross income under section 105(a) may be excluded if the requirements of section 105(c)(2), among other requirements, are satisfied. To qualify for the section 105(c)(2) exclusion, benefit payments must be "computed with reference to the nature of the injury without regard to the period the employee is absent from work." Sec. 105(c)(2). In a recent opinion, the Ninth Circuit explained this requirement as follows:
To accomplish the congressional purpose of excluding only those payments that compensate*52 for permanent losses of bodily function, the nature-of-the-injury requirement is best read to require that benefits vary according to the type and severity of a person's injury. Only then are the payments and the injury sufficiently related to reflect the compensatory purpose required by section 105(c). * * * [
The payments at issue in
In
The benefits, however, *53 do not vary according to the type of injury received and a pilot who has a heart attack is entitled to the same benefits as one who suffers a mental breakdown or loses a limb. Thus, the payments are not computed with reference to the nature of the injury. [
The legislative history of section 105(c) illustrated the type of payments that were intended to qualify for the exclusion under section 105(c)(2), as follows:
The following example will illustrate the kind of payments excludible from gross income under this subsection. Assume that under the plan of an employer payments equal to 25 percent of annual compensation are made to employees for loss of a leg. The $ 10,000 employee would therefore receive a payment of $ 2,500 and the $ 4,000 employee would receive a payment of $ 1,000. These amounts would be excludible from gross income * * *. [S. Rept. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. 183-184. Also quoted in
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1989 T.C. Memo. 50, 56 T.C.M. 1199, 1989 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-olsen-v-commissioner-tax-1989.