United States v. John S. Mellinger and Sweeney J. Doehring, as Executors of the Estate of Mary Edith Giles, Deceased

228 F.2d 688, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 800, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 5232
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1956
Docket15402
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 228 F.2d 688 (United States v. John S. Mellinger and Sweeney J. Doehring, as Executors of the Estate of Mary Edith Giles, Deceased) 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
United States v. John S. Mellinger and Sweeney J. Doehring, as Executors of the Estate of Mary Edith Giles, Deceased, 228 F.2d 688, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 800, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 5232 (5th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

We have here presented the question whether premiums paid by the taxpayer on life insurance policies on the life of her debtor which she held as collateral for a debt which had become worthless many years prior to the payments, are deductible as non-business expense deductions under Section 23(a) (2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, 1 the insurance policies at no time having any cash surrender value.

The District Court, in a suit for refund of income tax illegally collected, brought against the United States, and there tried without a jury found in favor of the taxpayer, and the United States appeals.

The facts as stated in the appellant’s brief were conceded by appellee. They are substantially undisputed and were the basis of findings of fact by the trial court.

In 1928 Mary Edith Giles made a loan in the amount of $25,000 to one *690 Edwin Larendon. The loan was secured by a deed of trust upon several pieces of property. As additional collateral Larendon assigned to the taxpayer ten separate policies of ordinary life insurance upon his life. Each was in the amount of $5,000. The loan was liquidated some two years later as a part of other business agreements between the taxpayer and Larendon, and the lien upon the real property was released. However, the policies of life insurance were not reassigned to the borrower by reason of the fact that the taxpayer claimed a lien for the amount of some $1,300 advanced to pay the premium thereon.

Shortly thereafter Larendon borrowed $4,000 from the taxpayer. A note for that amount dated May 30, 1930, was executed by him, payable to the order of the taxpayer on May 30, 1931, such note bearing interest from date at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable semi-annually. Larendon also gave second liens upon several pieces of real estate to secure this indebtedness, and, while the written instruments do not reflect it, it was the understanding of the parties that the life insurance policies would likewise stand as security for this loan.

By the date of maturity of the $4,000 loan, Larendon had become a victim of the depression and was insolvent. He was unable to pay any part of the principal or interest. Foreclosure under prior mortgages rendered the taxpayer’s second liens valueless. The only source from which the taxpayer could reasonably expect any recovery was the life insurance.

At the time that such policies were pledged with the taxpayer, Larendon had borrowed the maximum permissible amount by means of policy loans. As the cash surrender value was the same as the loan value, these policies did hot have any present cash value over and above the amount of the loan.

By 1933, five of the policies of insurance were released and returned to Lar-endon. The remaining five were retained as collateral by the taxpayer.

Thereafter, until Larendon’s death in 1952, at the age of eighty-six, each year the taxpayer paid the annual premium on each policy and the interest on the policy loan. Such payment was made in the following manner. On each premium paying date a small dividend accrued to the benefit of the policyholder. Likewise, the cash surrender and/or loan value increased each year. The total of these figures (amount of dividend, plus amount of increase in loan value) was deducted from the amount necessary to keep the policy in effect, namely, the annual premium plus interest on the prior policy loan. The taxpayer paid this balance in cash to the company. The net result of this practice was that the total permissible amount was always borrowed against the policies, and the taxpayer’s out-of-pocket cost was kept at a minimum. The amounts of these cash payments made by the taxpayer to keep the policies in effect during the years beginning with 1942 and consecutively thereafter through 1948 amounted to between $1400 and $1700 per year.

John S. Mellinger, executor of the estate and manager of taxpayer’s property during the taxable years, stated that he considered the payments dead losses.

While Larendon agreed, by means of renewals from time to time, to repay these advances, they did not constitute bona fide loans to him. Such advances were made by the taxpayer without any reasonable expectation that Larendon would repay them, and for the sole purpose of keeping alive the collateral, with the hope that, on his death, the insurance proceeds would be sufficient to repay the total outlay.

As time passed, and the amount expended by the taxpayer for premiums and interest on policy loans increased, a point was reached (in 1938) when, even in the event of Larendon’s death, the taxpayer would not be able to recoup her entire outlay from the collateral. Putting it differently, in the event of the death of the insured, the proceeds of the policies ($25,000), from which' the amount of the policy loans necessarily *691 was to be deducted, were less than the combined Larendon loan and the expense to which the taxpayer had been put in keeping the policies in effect.

At the time of Mr. Larendon’s death taxpayer recovered $5,937.90 on the policies.

In her income tax returns for the taxable years here involved the taxpayer deducted as bad debts, among other items, the amounts which she paid out in keeping the insurance policies in effect. These deductions were disallowed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and income tax deficiencies, with interest, were assessed against the taxpayer, which amounts were paid to the Collector of Internal Revenue for the First District of Texas. The taxpayer timely filed claims for refund with respect to the deficiency assessments paid by her and interest thereon for each of the years 1943 through 1948, which were disallowed by the Commissioner, excepting the claim for refund for the year 1948 as to which more than six months had elapsed between the filing date of the claim and the bringing of this action. The taxpayer died on February 13, 1952, and thereafter this suit for refund was timely instituted by the executors of her estate. The Collector of Internal Revenue to whom the taxes involved were paid was no longer Collector when this action was filed and therefore it was brought against the United States of America.

In the District Court several issues were presented, all of which were decided against the taxpayer except the question of the taxpayer’s right to deduct the amounts paid during the years involved to keep the above-mentioned insurance policies alive. The District Court held that these payments were not deductible as partial bad debt losses but were deductible by the taxpayer as non-business expenses under Section 23(a) (2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. The court further stated that the taxpayer in making the payments was not lending additional monies to Laren-don but that the payments were “voluntarily made as a speculation on Laren-don’s longevity.”

Appellee does not here contend that the payments are deductible as trade or business expenses under § 23(a) (1), supra, but argues that they are deductible, as held by the trial court, under § 23(a) (2) as a non-business expense.

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228 F.2d 688, 48 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 800, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 5232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-john-s-mellinger-and-sweeney-j-doehring-as-executors-of-ca5-1956.