Unum, Corporation v. United States

130 F.3d 501, 1997 WL 735315
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 1997
Docket96-1877
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 130 F.3d 501 (Unum, Corporation v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unum, Corporation v. United States, 130 F.3d 501, 1997 WL 735315 (1st Cir. 1997).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

The need to raise capital and to compete in increasingly diversified financial markets has led a number of American mutual life insurance companies to convert to being stock companies. This process, known as “demu-tualization,” often involves a conversion of the mutual policyholders’ ownership interest in the old company into ownership interest in the form of stock in the new company.

This appeal raises important questions about the proper tax treatment of one form of demutualization: whether stock and cash distributed to policyholders in exchange for their mutual ownership interests as part of a statutory demutualization constitute “policyholder dividends” under § 808 of the Internal Revenue Code. If so, the insurer may take a deduction for “policyholder dividends” under § 805(a)(3). Whether the “policyholder dividends” deduction is available has great financial consequences for the company and for the public fisc. This question involves consideration of the scope of the “policyholder dividend” under § 808, as well as the broader relationship between the general corporate tax provisions of the Code (contained in Subchapter C) and the Code’s insurance tax provisions (contained in Sub-chapter L).

In this case, UNUM Corp. (“UNUM”), the demutualized successor to Union Mutual Life Insurance Co. (“Union Mutual”), seeks a tax refund based on a “policyholder dividends” deduction of over $652 million. This sum, which UNUM was required to distribute to its policyholders by state law, represents the value of Union Mutual’s accumulated surplus. See Me.Rev.Stat. Ann. tit. 24-A, § 3477 (West 1996).

UNUM’s principal argument is that the cash and stock distributed during the demu-tualization constitute “policyholder dividends” under the plain language of § 808(b) and thus are deductible under § 805. UNUM further argues that, beyond the statute’s plain language, the legislative history and public policy behind the Code’s treatment of life insurance companies support this result.

The IRS argues that general corporate tax provisions apply to insurance companies in the absence of specific provisions to the contrary in the Code’s insurance tax section, and that, under those corporate tax provisions, UNUM is not entitled to any deduction for its reorganization. The IRS argues that nothing in § 808 or its legislative history indicates that Congress envisioned § 808 as encompassing capital transactions such as UNUM’s demutualization. Rather, placed in proper context, § 808 is not relevant to the value-for-value exchanges for which UNUM seeks a deduction.

The district court entered judgment for the government in UNUM’s suit for a refund. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

I

This appeal involves only questions of law; we exercise de novo review. Alexander v. Internal Revenue Service, 72 F.3d 938, 941 (1st Cir.1995). The parties have agreed on the facts.

A. Background

Demutualization has become increasingly common in the insurance industry. More *503 than 200 mutual life insurance companies have demutualized since 1930. See S. Preston Ricardo, The Deductibility of Policyholder Dividends: UNUM Corp. v. United States, 50 Tax Law. 265, 265 (1996). Between 1954 and 1981, the number of mutual insurers declined from 171 to 135; during the same time, the number of stock insurers increased from 661 to 1,823. Edward X. Clinton, The Rights of Policyholders in an Insurance Demutualization, 41 Drake L.Rev. 657, 659 n. 13 (1992). Today, fewer than 80 mutual insurers have assets of over $100 million. See William B. Dunham, Jr., et al, Introduction, in Demutualization of Life Insurers, 648 PLI/Comm 9,16 (1993). These figures suggest that mutual insurers are rapidly demutualizing, and that new insurance companies prefer the stock form at the outset.

State legislatures have facilitated this de-mutualization process by passing statutes permitting such conversions. Presently, at least forty-one states have specific statutes that provide for demutualization of mutual life insurers. Alexander M. Dye, Distributing Consideration to Policyholders, in De-mutualization of Life Insurers, 648 PLI/ Comm 75, 78 (1993). Only Hawaii and Idaho expressly prohibit direct mutual to stock conversion, although they still permit demutuali-zation through the alternate method of bulk reinsurance conversion. See Clinton, supra, at 673 n. 116. Every state, including those that lack specific demutualization statutes, permits at least some form of demutualization. See id.

There are three usual types of mutual to stock conversions: a statutory conversion whereby the insurer directly converts its form of business, merger with a stock insurer, and bulk reinsurance of the mutual company’s policies. See id. at 660-61. This case only concerns the first type of conversion: a statutory conversion, in which a mutual company alters its organizational form to become a stock insurer by redistributing all the mutual policyholder’s ownership interest in the mutual insurer into shares of stock in a new stock corporation. “This type of reorganization may properly be regarded as a reorganization of the company because the policyholders are exchanging membership in the mutual for shares in the new corporation.” Id. at 660.

By demutualizing, mutual insurers can obtain certain advantages available to stock insurers. Stock corporations are better able to raise capital because they may sell stock on the equity markets. See id. at 666-671. Stock companies can more easily diversify their operations by creating upstream holding companies which can own subsidiaries engaged in other businesses. See id. at 671-72. They can also create incentives for superior management performance through stock option plans. See id. at 672-74. Mutual insurers can only raise capital by retaining earnings or charging excess premiums, and are generally subject to comprehensive regulation by state authorities. These limitations can hinder their ability to grow and diversify. See id. at 666.

Much is at stake in this process. Mutual insurance companies have historically lagged behind stock insurers in growth of assets and capital. Demutualization and subsequent stock sales may improve a mutual insurer’s capital position and competitive standing with other insurers and financial institutions. Mutual insurers naturally want to contend in the increasingly competitive and deregulated financial services markets. Many mutual insurers regard demutualization as an important step toward bolstering their financial strength and flexibility.

B. Facts

Union Mutual, based in Maine, was organized as a mutual insurance company in 1848. Union Mutual’s business was selling various types of insurance and annuity products. As a mutual company, Union Mutual had no stock and was owned by its participating policyholders. 1

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130 F.3d 501, 1997 WL 735315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unum-corporation-v-united-states-ca1-1997.