Kern County Electrical Pension Fund v. Commissioner

96 T.C. No. 41, 96 T.C. 845, 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 53, 14 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1045
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 20, 1991
DocketDocket No. 4843-89
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 96 T.C. No. 41 (Kern County Electrical Pension Fund 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
Kern County Electrical Pension Fund v. Commissioner, 96 T.C. No. 41, 96 T.C. 845, 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 53, 14 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1045 (tax 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

RAUM, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in the income tax of Kern County Electrical Pension Fund (petitioner or the pension fund) in the amount of $12,371 for its 1980 taxable year. Petitioner had its principal office in Bakersfield, California, on the date it filed the petition in this case. The case was submitted pursuant to a stipulation of facts and exhibits under our Rule 122.1 The issue for decision is whether petitioner is liable for the tax on unrelated business taxable income imposed by section 511, often referred to informally as UBIT.

Petitioner is an employee benefit pension plan described in section 401(a) and exempt from Federal income tax pursuant to the provisions of section 501(a). In 1978, the pension fund owned three certificates of deposit issued by Valley Federal Savings & Loan Association (Valley Federal). The certificates had the following terms:

Date of issuance Principal sum Interest rate Maturity date
Feb. 3, 1978 $250,000 ■ 8.125% Feb. 3, 1983
Apr. 5, 1978 300,000 8.325 Apr. 5, 1983
July 12, 1978 200,000 9.000 July 12, 1983
750,000

The certificates were of a hybrid type, somewhere between a bond and a savings account. Each certificate had an “Account No.,” and recited that the holder “has opened a certificate of deposit.” (Emphasis supplied.) Like a bond, each certificate of deposit had a stated principal amount, rate of interest, and date of maturity. But like a savings account, and unlike a bond, withdrawals from and additions to principal were recognized, and reductions in interest rate were provided for in certain situations. Thus, the first certificate of deposit provided in part:

Date of Issuance February 3, 1978
THIS CERTIFIES THAT
KERN COUNTY ELECTRICAL WORKERS PENSION FUND
has opened a certificate of deposit in the initial principal sum of $250,000.00 and for the initial term ending February 3, 1983, as adjusted as to principal and term from time to time and recorded in this evidence of account in SAN FERNANDO VALLEY FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, * * *
This sum shall bear interest at the rate of 8.125 % per annum, payable on March 31, 1978 and quarterly thereafter, provided the account is not reduced below the minimum amount established by the association to be eligible to receive the stated rate. * * *
In the event of any withdrawal from this account during the first three months (90 days) of the term, no earnings shall be paid on the amount withdrawn. In the event of any withdrawal thereafter, prior to the conclusion of the term, earnings on the amount withdrawn shall be paid at the then current rate on regular accounts for the period since issuance or renewal of the account, less three months. To the extent necessary to comply with these requirements, deductions shall be made from the amount withdrawn.

The provisions of the other two certificates of deposit were identical except for dates of issuance, principal amounts, maturities (5 years from dates of issuance), and rates of interest. All three will be referred to hereinafter as the “old certificates.”

During 1979 and 1980, interest rates payable on certificates of deposit like the old certificates began to increase sharply. In view of such increase, petitioner’s board of trustees sent a representative to negotiate with Valley Federal for a higher rate of interest on the old certificates. As stipulated by the parties, “Valley Federal called attention to both the provisions of the Old Certificates and governmental regulations requiring a reduction of accrued interest if the Old Certificates were negotiated for the purpose of purchasing new certificates of deposit.”2 Valley Federal then proposed a plan to pay petitioner “an increased rate of return on the funds invested in the Old Certificates without selling the Old Certificates and thereby triggering the reduced interest rates.”

The plan contemplated (1) petitioner’s borrowing funds from Valley Federal in three separate loans with each of the three old certificates delivered to Valley Federal as collateral for the respective loan thereon (savings account loan), and (2) the issuance of a new certificate in an amount equal to the aggregate of the three amounts borrowed on the security of the three old certificates. On September 17, 1979, when the plan was put into effect as hereinafter set forth, the account balances in the three old certificates were as follows:

$280,367.37
332,795.23
218,231.50

The amounts to be borrowed pursuant to the plan (taking into account the interest payable by Valley Federal in respect of the balances in the accounts of the old certificates), the rates of interest payable by pétitioner on the borrowed funds, and the rate of interest payable to petitioner on the new certificate were so computed that upon consummation of the transaction “the effective rate of return to petitioner on the Old Certificates would be increased to approximately 9.75% per annum.”

The stipulation of the parties sets forth petitioner’s acceptance of the plan, its implementation, and the computation of the amount of additional interest realized by petitioner, as follows:

8. Petitioner agreed to the terms proposed by Valley Federal and the transaction was implemented as follows:
(a) possession of the Old Certificate passbooks was transferred by Petitioner to Valley Federal;
(b) Valley Federal and Petitioner signed standard form Savings Account Loan Agreements dated September 17, 1979, to document the terms by which the Old Certificates were assigned and pledged as collateral to Valley Federal, and the Petitioner agreed to repay $740,000.00 plus interest at rates from 10.125% to 11.0% per annum. The terms of the loan agreements were as follows:
Loan amount Interest rate Maturity date
$250,000 10.125% Sept. 17, 1980
295,000 10.375 Sept. 17, 1980
195,000 11.00 Sept. 17, 1980
740,000
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(c) Valley Federal issued a new certificate of deposit (“New Certificate I”) on September 17, 1979, in the principal amount of $740,000.00 with interest payable to the Petitioner at the rate of 11.75% per annum. * * *

(d) [0]n or about April 2, 1980, Petitioner exchanged the New Certificate I together with accrued interest for a new certificate of deposit issued by Valley Féderal (“New Certificate II”) in the principal amount of $789,920.91 providing an interest rate of 17.5% per annum payable to petitioner. * * *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 T.C. No. 41, 96 T.C. 845, 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 53, 14 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kern-county-electrical-pension-fund-v-commissioner-tax-1991.