In Re Tax Appeal of the Von Hamm-Young Co.

36 Haw. 11, 1941 Haw. LEXIS 1
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1941
DocketNo. 2404.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 Haw. 11 (In Re Tax Appeal of the Von Hamm-Young Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Tax Appeal of the Von Hamm-Young Co., 36 Haw. 11, 1941 Haw. LEXIS 1 (haw 1941).

Opinion

*12 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

PETERS, J.

This appeal presents for review the single question of whether a corporation may deduct .from gross income the annual cost of current life insurance effected by it in its favor upon the life of its president and general manager under the income tax law as it existed during the taxable years 1932 to 1936, both inclusive.

The von Hamm-Young Company, Limited, an Hawaiian corporation, effected insurance upon the life of its president and general manager, C. C. von Hamm, with itself as beneficiary. There are two policies of $100,000 each. It was agreed between the parties in advance that the insured should not enjoy any of the benefits or privileges to be reserved to him under the policies and the insured, pursuant to that agreement, assigned all of his interest in the policies to the beneficiary. Both policies contain investment features. Those portions of the annual premiums, deduction of-which from gross income was claimed by the taxpayer, constituted what is known as gross premiums, 1 less dividends, exclusive of any portion of the premiums payable under the investment features of the policies. The premiums involved were those paid by the corporation during the taxable years 1932 to 1936, both inclusive.

The tax commissioner held that the cost of current life insurance protection was not an allowable deduction under the statute and disallowed the claimed deductions. In this conclusion he was affirmed by the tax appeal court and hence the present appeals by the taxpayer.

Under our local income tax law, as it existed during the calendar years involved, taxable income was computed by the inclusion in gross income, with certain statutory exceptions and exclusions with only one of which we are concerned, of “all gains, profits and income derived or received from any and every source in the Territory, whether *13 or not connected with a trade or business, and also all gains, profits and income derived or received from all property owned and every trade or business carried on in the Territory and also all commissions, fees, wages, salaries, bonuses, and every and all other kinds of compensation paid for or attributable to personal services performed within the Territory” 2 and deducting therefrom the allowable statutory deductions which included “all actual operating and business expenses paid or incurred or accrued during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business including reasonable amounts for salaries or other compensation for personal service or attributable to personal services actually rendered, traveling expenses (including the entire amount expended for meals and lodging) while away from home in the pursuit of a trade or business and rentals or other payments required to be made as a condition to the continued use or possession for the purpose of the trade or business, of property to which the individual or corporation has not taken or is not taking title, or in which the individual or corporation has no equity.” 3 The result constituted net income to which the rate was applied. One of the statutory exceptions to and exclusion from gross income was the “amounts received by an individual or corporation under any life insurance policy or contract paid by reason of the death of the insured, whether in a single sum or in instalments.” 4 An additional allowable statutory deduction from gross income was “losses sustained during the taxable year if incurred in the trade or business or in any transaction entered into for profit though not connected with such trade or business.” 5

There is a paucity of constructive precedent upon the question involved and such administrative construction *14 and cases as have been called to our attention are to say the least more confusing than otherwise.

The taxpayer places great reliance upon an opinion of the attorney general of the Territory rendered in October, 1925, and upon the construction placed by the Treasury Department of the United States upon a substantially similar provision contained in the Revenue Act of 1913 and prior to its amendment of October 3, 1917. In October, 1925, the pertinent statute involved, 6 differently from its successor, 7 was silent upon the disposition of proceeds of life insurance policies paid by reason of the death of the insured. By Haw. Laws 2d Spec. Sess. 1932, Act 44, § 4, which subsequently was incorporated into the 1935 compilation as section 2033, 2 (f), the section was remodeled so that in computing taxable income there was excepted and excluded from gross income “amounts received by an individual or corporation under any life insurance policy or contract paid by reason of the death of the insured, whether in a single sum or in instalments,” and the attorney general-of the Territory, upon the assumption that “any payments to the corporation, under such policies upon the death of the insured, would be taxable as income for the period in which it was received,” held that “the yearly premiums paid upon said policy are therefore deductible as necessary expenses actually incurred in carrying on the business.” It appears affirmatively that the attorney general gave an oral opinion upon the same subject matter since the enactment of Haw. Laws 2d Spec. Sess. 1932, Act 44, to the effect that the cost of life insurance was not an allowable deduction from gross income under the Act and the taxing authorities have consistently, since that time, administered the provisions of the Act accordingly.

*15 In December, 1914, the Treasury Department of the United States took the position that under the Revenue Act of 1913, “in cases wherein corporations pay premiums on insurance policies insuring, in favor of the corporations, the lives of officers or others, such premiums may be allowably deducted from the gross income of the corporations paying the same” but also required that “in all such cases the proceeds of the policies when paid at maturity or upon death of the insured shall be returned by the corporation as income for the year in which such proceeds were received.” 8

Prior to the amendment of October 3, 1917, hereinafter referred to, the treasury department adhered to the fiat announced in Treasury Decision 2090, except as modified in August, 1917, hereinafter more particularly referred to. 9

The Revenue Act of 1913 10 allowed as a deduction, in ascertaining the net income of a corporation, “all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid within the year in the maintenance and.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Haw. 11, 1941 Haw. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tax-appeal-of-the-von-hamm-young-co-haw-1941.