Lincoln Sav. & Loan Asso. v. Commissioner

51 T.C. 82, 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 44
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1968
DocketDocket No. 325-67
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 51 T.C. 82 (Lincoln Sav. & Loan Asso. 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
Lincoln Sav. & Loan Asso. v. Commissioner, 51 T.C. 82, 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 44 (tax 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

Batovi, Judge:

Petitioner, a savings and loan association licensed by the State of California and doing business in the Los Angeles area, has since 1938 insured the savings accounts of its depositors with the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (the “FSLIC”), pursuant to the provisions of title IV of the National Housing Act, as amended. (12 U.S.C. sec. 1724 et seg.) It pays an annual “premium for such insurance” in an amount equal to i/12 of 1 percent of the total amount of all its savings accounts and creditor obligations, as provided in section 1727(b) (1). Since 1962, as the result of amendments made to the National Housing Act, petitioner has been required to make further annual payments to the FSLIC under section 1727(d), hereinafter sometimes referred to as “section 1727 (d) payments,” equal to 2 percent of any net increase in its insured accounts during the previous year, but reduced in the case of an insured institution, such as petitioner, which is also a member of a Federal home loan bank, by the amount of any required purchase of stock in such Bank for that year. These section 1727 (d) payments are described in the statute as “additional premium [s] in the nature of * * * prepayment [s] with respect to future premiums.” In 1963, the only year here in issue, petitioner paid its annual insurance premium for the year in the amount of $135,760.52, and made its section 1727(d) payment in the amount of $882,636.86. Both sums were deducted on its 1963 Federal income tax return as “Federal insurance premiums.” The Commissioner, while not disputing petitioner’s right to deduct its regular annual insurance premium, disallowed in full the deduction of $882,636.86 claimed for the additional section 1727 (d) payment. The sole issue for decision is whether this latter payment was an ordinary and necessary expense of petitioner’s business in 1963, or a capital expenditure deductible, if at all, only in later years to the extent that it ceased to be an asset of petitioner.

Although described in the statute as “an additional premium in the nature of a prepayment with respect to future premiums,” the section 1727 (d) payment is neither an “additional premium,” in the sense of being a mere increase in the annual insurance premium as contended by petitioner, nor a “prepayment with respect to future premiums,” at least insofar as the ordinary prepaid insurance premium is taken as a standard. The National Housing Act is not, of course, a revenue statute, and the label attached1 to section 1727(d) payments1 therein is not, and was not intended to be, conclusive in the determination of how these payments should be treated for Federal tax purposes. See McMillan Mortgage Co., 36 T.C. 924, 928. The label is at any rate ambiguous, though if we were to give it binding effect here, we should most certainly adopt the characterization of “prepayment” as controlling, and would therefore have to deny petitioner a current deduction for its section 1727 (d) payment under a long line of decisions by this Court holding that prepaid insurance premiums are capital expenditures to be expensed over the years in which coverage is actually obtained. Higginbotham-Bailey-Logan Co., 8 B.T.A. 566, 577; George S. Jephson, 37 B.T.A. 1117, 1119-1120; Martha R. Peters, 4 T.C. 1236, 1242; Louise K. Herter, 20 T.C.M. 78, 86, 30 P-H. Memo. T.C. par. 61,019. See and compare Commissioner v. Boylston Market Assn., 131 F. 2d 966 (C.A. 1), affirming a Memorandum Opinion of the Board of Tax Appeals, with Waldheim Realty & Inv. Co. v. Commissioner, 245 F. 2d 823 (C.A. 8), reversing 25 T.C. 1216. But regardless of whether the section 1727 (d) payment may properly be characterized as a prepaid1 insurance premium, we reach the same ultimate result, for an analysis of the substantive provisions of section 1727 convinces us that this payment, however labeled, is in the nature of a capital outlay and is therefore not deductible as an expense in the year that it is made.

That the section 1727 (d) payment is qualitatively different from the regular annual insurance premium payable under section 1727 (b) (1), and constitutes something more than a mere increase in the premium rate, seems to us beyond question. Regular annual premiums are part of the gross income of the FSLIC and, along with its income from investments, are used to meet the FSLIC’s operating expenses and insurance losses, if any, for the year. To the extent that such premiums are not so used, they are transferred, as part of the FSLIC’s net income for the year, to the “Primary Reserve,” the FSLIC’s general reserve which contains its cnmnlative net income or “retained earnings” and which is available to meet the FSLIC’s insurance losses if its income in any year is insufficient for this purpose. Section 1727 (d) payments, on the other hand, are not considered as income by the FSLIC, and are not ordinarily available to meet the annual expenses and losses of the Corporation. Instead, the FSLIC is required by statute to credit all such payments directly to a “Secondary Reserve,” which is to be used “only for losses of the Corporation and shall be so available only to such, extent as other accounts of the Corporation which are available therefor are insufficient for such losses.” Sec. 1727 (e). (Emphasis added.) Thus, instead of being taken into income, freely available to meet expenses and' losses of the current year, the section 1727 (d) payment is credited directly to an account, rather like a capital account, which may be applied against losses only on the event that the regular insurance premiums for the year, the Corporation’s other income, and its retained earnings of prior years have all been depleted. It cannot, therefore, be accurately termed a premium for insurance coverage in the year of payment, but, at least initially, is in reality a capital investment in the FSLIC, part of a pool of capital available to the FSLIC for the payment of losses in the event of emergency.

Furthermore, when the regular insurance premiums paid by insured institutions under section 1727 (b) (1) are received by the FSLIC, they lose their distinctive character as premiums and become merely part of the gross income of the Corporation; the insured institution retains no rights in respect of such sums, other than the right to insurance coverage for the current year, and its premium, once paid, is lost to it forever. Payments made under section 1727(d), however, stand on quite a different footing. Such payments, as noted above, are immediately segregated in the “Secondary Reserve,” and the FSLIC is directed by statute to credit the outstanding balance in this account, on an annual basis, with a “return” computed “at a rate equal to the average annual rate of return to the Corporation * * * on the investments held by the Corporation in obligations of, or guaranteed as to principal and interest by, the United States.” Sec. 1727(e). What is more, each insured institution maintains an interest in a prorata share of the Secondary Reserve, and is annually furnished with a statement of its account by the FSLIC, which keeps a separate account for each iusured institution. That annual statement discloses all section 1727 (d) payments made by the insured institution, the interest or return earned by the account, any debits that may have been charged against the account, and, finally, the new balance in the account as of the end of the year.

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Lincoln Sav. & Loan Asso. v. Commissioner
51 T.C. 82 (U.S. Tax Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
51 T.C. 82, 1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-sav-loan-asso-v-commissioner-tax-1968.