1. The "Revenue Act of 1918" (passed February 24, 1919), in the
income tax provisions applicable to corporations, adopts the
definition of gross income applicable to individuals (§ 213), which
excludes "the proceeds of life insurance policies paid upon the
death of the insured to individual beneficiaries or to the estate
of the insured."
Held that there was no purpose, in the
exemption, to distinguish between individual beneficiaries and
corporate beneficiaries, and that the proceeds of insurance taken
by a corporation on the life of an important official, to secure
its financial position and indemnify itself against loss of earning
power in case of his death were not taxable as income under the
act. P.
265 U. S.
194.
2. Assuming that Congress could tax proceeds of such indemnity
life insurance as income, its purpose to do so should be express,
in view of the popular conception of life insurance as resulting in
a single addition to the resources of the beneficiary, and not in a
periodical return. P.
265 U. S.
195.
3. A construction of a war taxing act as imposing both an income
and an estate tax on the proceeds of life insurance should be
avoided unless required in express terms.
Id.
58 Ct. Clms. 343 affirmed.
Page 265 U. S. 190
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims allowing recovery
of money paid under protest as an income tax.
Page 265 U. S. 192
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Supplee-Biddle Hardware Company sued the United States in
the Court of Claims to recover $55,153.89, with interest, as taxes
illegally assessed on the proceeds of two life insurance policies
paid to it as the beneficiary on the death in 1918 of the insured,
Robert Biddle, 2nd. Biddle was elected president of the company in
February, 1917. He was then 37 years of age, in good health, and
had for nearly 20 years held various offices in the Biddle Hardware
Company, which had merged with the appellee company in January,
1914. He was a man of ability, energy, and initiative, and was so
regarded in the hardware trade. The returns from the company's
business under Biddle's management had been much increased. At the
instance of the board of directors and the expense of the company,
he took out the two policies for $50,000 each. They were term
policies for 5 years. The company intended thus to make secure its
financial position, and to indemnify itself against losses to its
earning power in the event of Biddle's death.
The Revenue Act of 1918, which was passed February 24, 1919 (40
Stat. 1057, c. 18), in prescribing the income to be taxed, deals
first with individuals, from § 212 to
Page 265 U. S. 193
§ 228, inclusive. Then follow provisions for the rate of income
tax on corporations, beginning with § 230. Section 233(a) says
that, "[i]n the case of a corporation subject to the tax imposed by
§ 230, the term
gross income' means the gross income as defined
in § 213," with certain exceptions not here material. Section 213
defines the gross income for individuals as follows:
"That for the purposes of this title (except as otherwise
provided in § 233) the term 'gross income' --"
"(a) Includes gains, profits, and income derived from salaries,
wages, or compensation for personal service . . . of whatever kind
and in whatever form paid, or from professions, vocations, trades,
businesses, commerce, or sales, or dealings in property, whether
real or personal, growing out of the ownership or use of or
interest in such property; also from interest, rent, dividends,
securities, or the transaction of any business carried on for gain
or profit, or gains or profits, and income derived from any source
whatever; . . . but"
"(b) Does not include the following items, which shall be exempt
from taxation under this title:"
"(1) The proceeds of life insurance policies paid upon the death
of the insured to individual beneficiaries or to the estate of the
insured."
The Treasury Department, construing these sections, held that
the proceeds of insurance policies, paid to a beneficiary which was
a corporation, were not exempted, and were included as "gains . . .
from any source whatever." Under this ruling, the appellee was
forced to pay a tax of $84,737.95 on the proceeds of the two
policies of $97,947.28. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue
reduced this amount by $29,584.06 in accordance with the powers
conferred upon him by §§ 327 and 328 of the Revenue Act of 1918 to
reduce the rate of taxation in cases of unusual hardship. There
remained, however, the sum of $55,153.89, which tax the appellees
paid under
Page 265 U. S. 194
protest, and for this, with interest, the Court of Claims gave
judgment to the appellee.
We think the Treasury Department erred in assuming that Congress
intended by §§ 233 and 213 to distinguish between individual
beneficiaries and corporate beneficiaries in including the proceeds
of life insurance policies as within gross income. We think the two
sections have no such purpose. Section 213 primarily applies only
to the taxing of individuals. The union of proceeds of life
insurance payable to individual beneficiaries and to the estate of
the assured was thus intended to emphasize the exclusion from
taxation in the hands of individuals of all such proceeds, and to
leave no doubt of it. The meaning is the same as if the clause had
read: "The proceeds of life insurance shall not be included in
gross income whether they are paid to individual beneficiaries or
to the estate of the assured." When Congress came to deal with the
gross income of corporations, it made use of § 213 by reference and
grafted it on to 233. It is reasonable that the purpose of § 213 to
exclude entirely the proceeds of life insurance policies from
taxation in the case of individuals should be given the same effect
in adapting its application to corporations, and that such proceeds
should be so excluded whether by the direction of the insured they
were to go to specially named beneficiaries or were to inure to the
estate of the insured.
Nor do we find any difficulty with the expression in paragraph
(b) which
exempts proceeds of life insurance from gross
income. The word is used not to indicate that they would be
otherwise included in the income to be taxed, but only to make
clear that the gross does not include them.
It is earnestly pressed upon us that proceeds of life insurance
paid on the death of the insured are in fact capital, and cannot be
taxed as income under the Sixteenth Amendment.
Eisner v.
Macomber, 252 U. S. 189,
252 U. S.
207;
Page 265 U. S. 195
Merchants' Loan & Trust Co. v. Smietanka,
255 U. S. 509,
255 U. S. 518.
We are not required to meet this question. It is enough to sustain
our construction of the act to say that proceeds of a life
insurance policy paid on the death of the insured are not usually
classed as income.
Life insurance in such a case as the one before us is valid, and
is not a wagering contract. There was certainly an insurable
interest on the part of the company in the life of Biddle.
Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Board, 115 Va.
836;
Keckley v. Coshocton G. Co., 86 Ohio St. 213;
Mechanics' National Bank v. Comins, 72 N.H. 12;
United
Security Life & Trust Co. v. Brown, 270 Pa. 264. Life
insurance in such a case is, like that of fire and marine
insurance, a contract of indemnity.
Central Bank of Washington
v. Hume, 128 U. S. 195. The
benefit to be gained by death has no periodicity. It is a
substitution of money value for something permanently lost, either
in a house, a ship, or a life. Assuming, without deciding, that
Congress could call the proceeds of such indemnity income, and
validly tax it as such, we think that, in view of the popular
conception of the life insurance as resulting in a single addition
of a total sum to the resources of the beneficiary, and not in a
periodical return, such a purpose on its part should be express, as
it certainly is not here.
This view is strengthened by the fact that, under § 402, p.
1097, of the same Revenue Law of 1918, a decedent's estate tax is
levied, with rates ranging from one percentum to twenty-five
percentum on the net estate which is made to include (paragraph
f)
"the amount receivable by the executor as insurance under
policies taken out by the decedent upon his own life, and to the
extent of the excess over $40,000 of the amount receivable by all
other beneficiaries as insurance under policies taken out by the
decedent upon his own life."
The result of the construction put by the government upon §§
233, 230, and 213
Page 265 U. S. 196
would be to impose a double tax on the proceeds of the two
policies in this case over and above $40,000 --
i.e., an
income tax and an estate tax. Such a duplication, even in an
exigent war tax measure, is to be avoided unless required by
express words.
The judgment of the Court of Claims is affirmed.