Wolfe v. Commissioner

8 T.C. 689, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 240
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1947
DocketDocket No. 7287
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 8 T.C. 689 (Wolfe 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
Wolfe v. Commissioner, 8 T.C. 689, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 240 (tax 1947).

Opinion

OPINION.

Disney, Judge:

Petitioner contends that the monthly payments received by him from Standard are an annuity and that he is taxable on the amount received under section 22 (b) (2) of the Internal Revenue Code.1 His argument is limited to the following points:

I. The amounts received by petitioner from Standard Oil Company of New Jersey were received as an annuity under an annuity contract.
II. The amount paid by Anglo-American Oil Company, Ltd. to Standard Oil Company of New Jersey was the aggregate premium or consideration paid for such annuity.

The respondent contends, in substance, that the amounts received by the petitioner represent not an annuity, but additional compensation for services, and are therefore taxable in full, and that, even if the payments received are an annuity, the petitioner is taxable in full because he contributed none of the cost of the annuity.

Our first inquiry, therefore, is whether the payments are “Amounts received as an annuity under an annuity * * * contract,” within the text of section 22 (b) (2) of the code. If so, only 3 per cent of the consideration or aggregate premiums paid is taxable (at least if paid by the petitioner, and that question we need not decide just here in considering only and primarily whether the payments were received as an annuity under an annuity contract).

After close study of the facts before us, we are of the opinion that the amounts were not received as an annuity under an annuity contract, but were received as a pension in consideration of services rendered in prior years. We can not and should not close our eyes to the realities presented in this case. By petitioner’s own words he says that it was his understanding when he undertook the assignment of chairman and managing director of Anglo, at the request of Standard, that if he were eventually retired from the services of Anglo he would receive a life annuity based on the provisions of the superannuation scheme of Anglo in effect on the date of retirement and that payments of such pension in sterling would be guaranteed by Standard in dollars at an exchange rate of $5 to the pound. The agreement of March 22,1940, contains the following paragraph:

And Whereas, the Anglo Company desires to recognize Mr. Wolfe’s valuable services to the Anglo Company by contributing to the Standard Company a capital sum of £89,120-0-0 representing the liability which it would have Incurred had it granted Mr. Wolfe a sterling pension equivalent to that payable under the superannuation scheme of the Anglo Company.

Soon after arriving- in England the petitioner discussed the matter of his retirement with officers of Anglo, and after some discussion it was decided that he was entitled to service as of June 1902 (the date when he entered the employ of Queen City Oil Co., Ltd., predecessor of, and absorbed by, Imperial Oil Co., Ltd., which was owned largely by Standard), and on October 22, 1931, the resolution of the directors of Anglo stated, “that for the purpose of calculating pension payable by this Company to him,” his services should be deemed to commence from June 1902, “and that he be entitled to pension on the same basis as employees benefiting under the Company’s Superannuation Scheme.” Thus it is seen that, though he did not come strictly within the provisions of Anglo’s superannuation plan, he was to be treated as if he did — “entitled to pension on the same basis” as employees so situated. (Italics supplied.) The procedure finally carried out was a mere way of effectuating a pension for the petitioner. It was not, in form, any usual commercial annuity. Such an annuity was, in fact, considered, and the idea not carried out.

In our opinion, the arrangement carried out here provides “benefits from a retirement fund” in the nature of pension compensating for services rendered. The petitioner actually received money in the taxable years. It is clearly within the broad sweep of income as defined by section 22 (a),2 and, the Commissioner having determined it to be such, it is petitioner’s burden to demonstrate otherwise. So attempting, he relies primarily on section 22 (b) (2). The provision thereof, so far as here involved, is summed up in the words “annuity” and “annuity contract.” Their usual connotation does not, in our view, encompass the plan carried out in this matter; and no sound ground is suggested for broadening the concept to cover the contract here considered. The petitioner suggests that it was an annuity because Standard might make a profit or suffer a loss in its execution, depending on the length of life of the petitioner, and relies on a definition of annuities in the law of New York. Such law does not control interpretation of section 22 (b) (2), and we see nothing in the possibility of profit or loss to Standard to cause consideration of a plan for additional compensation as an annuity. Nor does the fact that Regulations 111, sec. 29.22 (b) (2) — 2, states that amounts received as an annuity “include” amounts received in periodic installments, demonstrate that we have an annuity here. The regulation does not say that every periodic payment is annuity.

We regard this case as in essence analogous in principle to Hooker v. Hoey, 27 Fed. Supp. 489; affd., 107 Fed. (2d) 1016, where it was held that there was no annuity. There, too, the payments were made to reward long service. No annuity contract was purchased, the employer, Vacuum Oil Co., making payments until its property and obligations were transferred to Standard Oil Co. of New York, which, under its new name of Socony Vacuum Corporation, continued the payments, including the one in question. Though the retirement plan was called “Annuity Plan,” just as here the word annuity is sometimes, though not always, used, the court regarded the name of “no particular importance,” adding: “It was manifestly a pension plan, a retirement allowance plan, and the payments made under it were payments of pensions or retiring allowances.” Keferring to the change from one corporation to another as payor, the court said that “All that happened was that Socony Vacuum Corporation took the place of Vacuum Oil Co. as payor of his pension or retiring allowance.” So here we think Standard of New Jersey merely took the place of Anglo and the earlier companies, so far as obligation for pension retirement was concerned. The court in the Hooker case, referring to the contention that there was annuity because of the assumption by Socony Vacuum of the obligation of Vacuum, says:

* * * In the first place, the plaintiff has no annuity, within the meaning of that word in section 22 (b) (2). He has a pension or retirement allowance, taxable under section 22 (a) of the Act as already shown. The exemption as to annuities in the income tax statutes does not cover cases where an annuity is not in reality purchased, even though the transaction may be somewhat analogous to the purchase of an annuity. Helvering v. Butterworth, 290 U. S. 365, 369, 370, 54 S. Ct. 221, 78 L. Ed. 365. In the second place, the transaction involving transfer of assets by the Vacuum Oil Company and assumption of liabilities by Socony Vacuum Corporation was not an “annuity contract,” except in a forced sense. * * *

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Wolfe v. Commissioner
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Bluebook (online)
8 T.C. 689, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolfe-v-commissioner-tax-1947.