The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, (James P. Moore, Jr., Vice President and Comptroller) v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

488 F.2d 1101
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1974
Docket73-1169
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 488 F.2d 1101 (The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, (James P. Moore, Jr., Vice President and Comptroller) v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, (James P. Moore, Jr., Vice President and Comptroller) v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 488 F.2d 1101 (3d Cir. 1974).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

WEIS, Circuit Judge.

While there are many who complain that the Internal Revenue Code is incomprehensible, there are some few who revel in the intricacies of its labyrinthine composition. But those who take delight in such pursuits and who also understand the mystic processes of es *1103 tablishing reserves in the life insurance industry are an even rarer specie of the ornithological world. Such are the vagaries of assignments, however, that it has fallen to the lot of this panel to decide a case where the two sciences conjoin. We therefore tread into the thicket with some trepidation. 1

The immediate question before us is whether the Tax Court properly decided that amounts allocated by the petitioner Insurance Company to an “additional reserve” qualify . as “life insurance reserves” under Section 801 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 and the Life Insurance Company Tax Act of 1959, 26 U.S.C. § 801.

The problem is complicated by the fact that in the life insurance industry, as in many others, words acquire a technical significance, and the first step to confusion is to read these special terms as if they mean what they seem to mean. Thus, at the very outset it is appropriate to note that contrary to generally held belief, “reserves” are not trust funds or assets in escrow but factually are merely statements of liability, involving no representation that specific assets are held to meet any particular claim or class of claims. 2 We are concerned here, therefore, with the computations of an amount which is to be entered on the balance sheet of an insurance company as a liability and, thus, has significant tax consequences.

The dispute here has its origin in a real life situation, to be exact, the substantial lenghtening of life which occurred during the first half of the twentieth century.

Beginning in 1908 and continuing through 1945, the Insurance Company sold a series of life policies (called P-Policies) which gave the beneficiary the privilege of electing one of several methods of settlement in lieu of the customary face value lump sum payment. The option of concern here gives the beneficiary the right to receive payments for the rest of his life, but in no event for less than a stated number of these installments. The amount of each payment (which varies with the age of the beneficiary) is fixed and set forth in tables printed in the policy.

The tables were prepared on the assumption that the lump sum payment and the installment option would be roughly equivalent in value so that the liability of the Company in either event would be the same. However, as time went on and the lives of beneficiaries lengthened, it became obvious that the liability of the Company to meet the annuity-type option was becoming substantially greater than the lump sum payment. This situation developed because the amount of each monthly payment was fixed by the tables in the original policies based on life expectancies which were prevalent at that time. Since the beneficiaries began to live longer than the Company had anticipated at the time it wrote the contract, more payments were required and, hence, a greater total expenditure became necessary.

The petitioner had its headquarters in New Jersey, and that state’s insurance laws required the Company to enter on its books annually a “basic reserve” which represented the amount that would be needed to meet the obligation to pay the face amounts of policies which became collectible that year. So long as the costs of lump sum payments and the time payment option were about the *1104 same, the accounting procedure was satisfactory and accurately reflected the Company’s liabilities. When, however, the increasing longevity of beneficiaries required payment of sums beyond the amount of the basic reserves, an accounting problem was created.

The difference in amounts between the “basic reserve” and that required to settle under the settlement option was called “strain.” Before 1946, the Company took the amount of “strain” from current surplus at the time that a beneficiary elected to receive the payment option. The problem became increasingly acute, and in 1946 the Legislature of New Jersey enacted a statute (N.J.Stat. Ann. § 17:34-22.1) permitting an insurance company to set up “additional reserves” to meet the anticipated “strain” situation in future years. 3

The statute provided that the establishment of such reserves initially would be voluntary but that once a company had availed itself of the privilege, reserves could not be changed to a basis producing smaller amounts thereafter except with approval of the insurance commissioner.

The Company decided to avail itself of the statutory provision and computed an “additional reserve” by using:

(1) The 1941 C.S.O. Mortality Tables, 3 4
(2) The 1937 Standard Annuity Mortality Table, adjusted by rating down 1 year in age,
(3) An assumed rate of interest of 2%% and additionally:
(a) Projected rate of election of the settlement option,
(b) Age and sex of beneficiaries,
(c) Amount of policy proceeds which would become subject to election, and
(d) The future date on which the election would become effective.

In computing the additional reserve requirements which would be required as of December 31, 1946, the Company assumed that the “strain” experienced in previous years, as compared to the lump sum death claims and endowment benefits paid, would remain at a constant ratio during the remaining years in which the P-Policies would be in effect, that is, to the year 2031. Rather than debit this amount in one year — which would have had a strong, adverse effect on the Company surplus and reduce the dividends to policyholders — -it was decided to strengthen the reserves over a period of years until the desired level was achieved. The computations and procedures followed by the Company were approved by the Insurance Commissioner of New Jersey.

As of December 31, 1956, the “additional reserve” amounted to $21,254,529.-00. It was then decided to recalculate this reserve by utilizing the Company’s experience during the preceding five years, that is, 1952 to 1956 inclusive. This resulted in a reduction for 1957 to $18,586,369.00.

In computing the “additional reserve” in 1956, the Company followed basically the same formula except that in this later calcuation the mortality experience of the Company during the years 1952-1956 was used to determine the life expectancy of the insured person instead of the 1941 mortality table which was *1105 used in the 1946 calculation. 5

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488 F.2d 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-mutual-benefit-life-insurance-company-james-p-moore-jr-vice-ca3-1974.