Louise H. Edwards v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

242 F.2d 142, 50 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1802, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5144
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 1957
Docket16042
StatusPublished

This text of 242 F.2d 142 (Louise H. Edwards v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louise H. Edwards v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 242 F.2d 142, 50 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1802, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5144 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition for review of six related decisions of the Tax Court in which the only issue here is whether petitioners’ transferor’s right to a pro rata share of “unabsorbed premiums” of a mutual insurance company accrued to the transferors during its final, shortened fiscal year before its dissolution, or at .some later date.

The pertinent facts are as follows:

On September 19, 1944, the Growers Mutual Insurance Company (GMIC) was organized as a mutual insurance company under the insurance laws of Florida. Its organizers, officers, policyholders, etc., were all relatives or business associates of the petitioners, then stockholders of the Dixie Groves Company. The pertinent provisions of the GMIC by-laws relating to its reserves, Art. VI, §§ 3, 4, provided that all income, in the form of premiums or otherwise, would constitute (1) first a fund for the payment of claims for loss or damage; (2) second a fund for operating expenses and for the creation of such reserves as->required by law or regulation or by the judgment of the directors; (3) whenever such reserves in the judgment.of the directors became excessive a distribution was to be made to the policyholders, proportional to the premiums they had paid. Also: .

“Whenever a member of the company shall cease to be a member thereof, all unabsorbed premiums remaining in the company or in the different classes thereof applying to policies held and premiums paid by such retiring member shall be returned to the retiring member and all interest of the retiring member in the reserve and surplus of the company shall thereupon terminate.
“Section 4 — All funds of the company, over and above the amounts necessary to pay the debts of the company shall and do belong to the members of the company and on dissolution of the company, .the same shall be distributed to the members of the company pro rata in proportion to the payment of premiums which said members shall have made to the company.”

The first year 29 policies were written for the period October 20, 1944 — September 1, 1945, assuming a total risk of $760,932 against loss from frost for premiums of $253,644. Dixie Groves was issued Policy No. 3 for a premium of $52,600, and Dixie reported this amount as an expenditure on its tax returns for the fiscal year September 1, 1944 — August 31, 1945.

On August 31, 1945, the Balance Sheet of GMIC showed “Policyholders’ reserve” at $248,269.22, of which Dixie Groves’ pro rata share was $51,544.13.

On September 18, 1945:

(1) The stockholders of Dixie Groves met and decided to liquidate and dissolve the company, all assets and liabilities to be transferred to the stockholders in un *144 divided shares proportional to the stock ownership.

(2) Thereupon the directors of Dixie Groves met and passed the resolutions necessary to implement the desire ¡of the stockholders.

(3) The directors of GMIC also met and amended the above quoted portion of Art. VI, § 3, of the by-laws to provide that a retiring member would be paid his interest in the reserve in five annual installments, the first to be paid one year after the expiration of the member’s last policy unless a different arrangement was made by agreement between member and company. It was also resolved that reserves be set up on the books of the company and that all the net earnings of the previous year be carried into that reserve, to be entered on the books in the names of the members according to the interest of each. At about that time the company had been advised by the Insurance Commissioner of Florida to establish a minimum reserve of $100,000.

On September 19, 1945, Dixie Groves transferred all of its property to its stockholders, here the petitioners, by means of several instruments.

On September 24, 1945, the individual stockholders transferred their undivided interest in the property received from Dixie to the Triple E Development Company, a corporation that had been the largest stockholder in Dixie and was also largely owned by some of the petitioners. On that day Triple E entered on its books an asset described as “a/c Growers Mut. Ins. Co. — $50,000.00.”

Some days later the president of Triple E directed an oral request to an officer of GMIC that it be paid the “unabsorbed premiums” due to Dixie. This was the first semi-official notification to GMIC that Dixie had gone out of business though, because of the close relationship of the officers of the several organizations, the officials of GMIC were probably fully informed of the status of Dixie.

On October 6, 1945, the directors of GMIC adopted a resolution to the effect that: “due to the fact that Dixie Groves Company was now out of business, that they be paid in cash their equity in the policyholders’ reserve.”

Pursuant to this resolution and on the same day a payment of $45,000.00 was made to Triple E, in part payment pending the annual audit of the GMIC books.

Dixie’s final taxable period ended on November 10,1945, according to the later determination of the Tax Court, originally hotly contested by the petitioners but now conceded. (Thus their final fiscal' year was September 1, 1945-November 10, 1945.)

On December 14, 1945, after its audit,. GMIC paid $6,544.13 to Triple E, in complete payment of the unabsorbed premiums due to Dixie.

On March 29, 1946, the stockholders of Dixie signed a written consent of dissolution which was filed on April 24th and resulted in an issuance of a dissolution certificate on June 6, 1946.

During the year following the payment to Triple E several other members withdrew from GMIC, but payments to them were made in installments as provided for by the amended by-laws; on December 30, 1946, however, lump sum payments were made to four “previous policyholders.”

In its final income tax return (for the period September 1-November 10, 1945) Dixie Groves did not report any portion of the $51,544.13 received by Triple E;. the Commissioner now attempts to assert a deficiency against petitioners, Dixie’s immediate transferees. As appellants state it, the only issue here is:

“Did Dixie Groves Company’s equity of $51,544.13 in the reserve and surplus of Growers Mutual Insurance Company constitute income to Dixie Groves Company on the accrual basis in its taxable period which began September 1, 1945.”

On this point the Tax Court held:

“The insurance year for which the premium had been paid expired on, *145 September 1, 1945, and the facts supplying the basis for computing the unabsorbed premium were fixed and determined and there is no showing or contention that there were any claims remaining under the policies which were in dispute or yet to be determined * * * On the facts here present, we conclude and hold that the unabsorbed premium of $51,544.13 had accrued prior to the liquidation of Dixie Groves, and was income to it in its taxable period beginning September 1, 1945.”

Petitioners argue that the unabsorbed premiums did not accrue to them on September 1, 1945, or at any time within their final tax period because:

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Bluebook (online)
242 F.2d 142, 50 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1802, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louise-h-edwards-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1957.