United States Tax
Court
THE TAISEI FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE CO., LTD., ET
AL.,
Petitioners
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL
REVENUE,
Respondent
Docket Tax Ct. Dkt.
No. 14296-92
Date of Decision: May 2,
1995
Judge: Tannenwald, Theodore,
Jr.
Citations: 104 T.C. 535
Docket Nos. 14297-92, 14298-92,
14299-92
Filed May 2, 1995
SUBSEQUENT HISTORY: /1/ As Corrected May 10,
1995
DISPOSITION: Decisions will be
entered under Rule 155.
SYLLABUS: Ps, Japanese insurance
companies, wrote reinsurance through F, a North Carolina
corporation, which conducted its operations in the United States.
HELD, on the facts, F was an "agent of an independent status" within
the meaning of art. 9(5) of the Convention for the Avoidance of
Double Taxation, Mar. 8, 1971, U.S.-Japan, 23 U.S.T. (Part 1) 969,
between the United States and Japan and was therefore not a
permanent establishment, during the years at issue, of any of
petitioners within the meaning of art. 8(1) of such
convention.
George R. Abramowitz, Edward A. Scallet,
and Diana E. Buckley, for petitioners.
Kim A. Palmerino, Frank M. McClanahan
III, and S. Mark Barnes, for respondent.
OPINION
TANNENWALD, JUDGE: Respondent determined
the following deficiencies in, and additions to, the Federal income
taxes of The Taisei Fire and Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. (Taisei),
The Nissan Fire and Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. (Nissan), The Fuji
Fire and Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. (Fuji), and The Chiyoda Fire and
Marine Insurance Co., Ltd. (Chiyoda):
Year Deficiency Addition to
Tax
Sec. 6661 /2/
Taisei 1986 $
847.00 0
1987 295,134.00 $
73,784.00
1988 2,363,924.00 590,981.00
Nissan 1987 197,838.00 49,460.00
1988 2,272,534.00 568,134.00
Fuji 1986 49,009.00 12,252.00
1987 256,173.00 64,043.00
1988 2,506,733.00 626,683.00
Chiyoda 1986 19,886.00 4,972.00
1987 662,135.00 165,534.00
1988 4,569,945.00 1,142,486.00
The principal issue in these consolidated
cases is whether, during the years at issue, petitioners had a U.S.
permanent establishment by virtue of the activities of a U.S. agent
in accepting reinsurance on behalf of each petitioner. Depending on
our resolution of this issue, there is a further issue concerning
whether each petitioner's 1988 taxable income should include certain
reductions in pre-1988 estimates of unpaid losses under excess of
loss reinsurance contracts with non-U.S. insurers and reinsurers.
Respondent has conceded that none of the petitioners are liable for
the addition to tax under section 6661 for any of the years in
issue.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and
are so found. The stipulation of facts and accompanying exhibits are
incorporated herein by reference. The facts found are those which,
unless otherwise specified, existed during the years at
issue.
Each of the petitioners is a Japanese property
and casualty insurance company with its principal place of business
in Japan. The stock of each petitioner is publicly traded on a
Japanese exchange. There is no stock ownership relationship among
petitioners.
The primary business of each petitioner is
writing direct insurance in Japan. Each petitioner also assumes
reinsurance ceded /3/ to it by insurers and reinsurers, including
U.S. insurers and reinsurers, through a reinsurance department
located in Tokyo. Each petitioner obtains foreign reinsurance
through foreign brokers that bring reinsurance proposals to it, and
from foreign insurers and reinsurers with which each petitioner has
a direct relationship.
Each petitioner has at least one
representative office in the United States that provides information
on the U.S. market to it and assists its clients in the United
States, but which does not have authority to write any form of
insurance. Taisei and Fuji do not have U.S. branches and do not have
licenses to engage in the insurance business in the United States.
Chiyoda has a branch office in New York
that has insurance licenses for California, Illinois, New Jersey,
and New York. Nissan has a branch office in New York that has an
insurance license for New York and California.
Fuji has
a 100-percent owned U.S. subsidiary which holds an Illinois
insurance license, and which participates in three insurance
programs with a U.S. insurance company. The U.S. subsidiary
retrocedes to Fuji, on a quota share basis, 50 percent of the
business it receives under these programs.
In addition, each petitioner grants
authority to two or three different U.S. agents, including Fortress
Re, Inc., to underwrite reinsurance on its behalf and to perform
certain activities in connection therewith.
Fortress
Re, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as new Fortress or Fortress) is
the successor to Fortress Reinsurance Managers, Inc., established in
1972 as a subsidiary of Penn General Agencies, Inc., which was owned
in large part by Pennsylvania Life Company. Fortress Reinsurance
Managers, Inc., acted as a reinsurance underwriting manager on
behalf of various insurance companies with which it entered into
management agreements. From its inception, the chief operating
officer was Maurice D. Sabbah. In 1977, its name was changed to
Fortress Re, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as old Fortress). In
September 1979, certain of the assets and the name of old Fortress
were sold to M. D. Sabbah and Company, a newly organized North
Carolina corporation owned 66-2/3 percent by Mr. Sabbah and 33- 1/3
percent by Kenneth Kornfeld. In October 1979, M. D. Sabbah and
Company changed its name to Fortress Re, Inc. (new Fortress). New
Fortress assumed the duties, but not the liabilities, of old
Fortress with respect to treaty accounts underwritten by old
Fortress and certain duties of old Fortress with respect to the
facultative accounts underwritten by old Fortress. Since 1979, Mr.
Sabbah has transferred some of his shares in Fortress to members of
his family, so that Fortress is currently held as follows:
Shareholder Percent of
Ownership
Maurice D.
Sabbah 33.14
Zmira Sabbah 23.62
Leeor B.
Sabbah 9.91
Kenneth H. Kornfeld 33.33
The directors of Fortress are Mr. Sabbah,
his wife, and Mr. Kornfeld. Mr. Sabbah is the chairman of Fortress,
and Mr. Kornfeld is the president and chief underwriter.
Mr. Sabbah handles contacts with insurance
companies Fortress represents and has responsibility for reports
provided to those companies, in addition to certain administrative
responsibilities. Mr. Kornfeld's duties include underwriting the
reinsurance entered into on behalf of the companies Fortress
represents, establishing retrocession programs with respect to its
reinsurance treaties, managing claims with respect to those treaties
and managing the daily affairs of Fortress. Mr. Sabbah and Mr.
Kornfeld have total control over the daily operations of Fortress,
including the hiring and firing of employees and the assigning of
responsibilities to them. Fortress has approximately 20 employees,
whose duties include assisting underwriting, handling claims, data
processing and computer operations, secretarial support, and
accounting services.
Fortress maintains leased offices in
Burlington, North Carolina, for which it pays the rent. Fortress
purchases property and liability insurance in connection with its
business. The operating costs of Fortress, including rent and
salaries, are borne by Fortress.
Fortress is a reinsurance underwriting
manager, which involves acting as an agent for insurance companies
in underwriting and managing reinsurance on behalf of such
companies. Fortress is not licensed to conduct insurance or
reinsurance business in any jurisdiction. Fortress underwrites
reinsurance and places retrocessions only on behalf of the companies
with which it enters into management agreements. Fortress enters
into reinsurance and retrocession contracts on behalf of the
companies it represents only through brokers; Fortress itself does
not act as a broker.
Fortress enters into a separate management
agreement with each insurance company it represents. The agreements
with petitioners are identical except for the net acceptance limit
(see infra p. 10). Since its inception, Fortress has been involved
in as many as 10 management agreements in a management year. A
management year is defined as the annual period from July 1 to June
30. From inception through June 30, 1989, the management years have
been designated as Years I through XVI, respectively.
Taisei and Chiyoda first entered into
management agreements with old Fortress in November 1972. Nissan and
Fuji first entered into management agreements with Fortress in May
1981. Nissan and Fuji had previously been quota share reinsurers
with respect to the companies Fortress represented. In the
agreements, Fortress is referred to as the "Manager", and the
insurance company is referred to as a "Member". Each agreement
authorizes Fortress, among other things, to act as agent of each
company to underwrite and retrocede reinsurance on behalf of each
company. Under the agreement, the liability of the member with
respect to each reinsurance contract, underwritten by Fortress on
the member's behalf, is several and not joint with any other member.
Under the agreement, it is contemplated
that Fortress may enter into similar, or substantially similar,
management agreements with other insurance or reinsurance companies
or other insurers. Fortress does not need permission of, or even to
consult, the companies with which it has agreements, before entering
into a new agreement. Although in practice, when a member terminated
a management agreement, Fortress offered to increase the
participation of the companies it already represented, it was not
obligated to do so. In 1988, another Japanese insurance company, Dai
Tokyo, approached Fortress about entering into a management
agreement, which would have had the effect of diluting the
participation of petitioners. After declining to enter into this
agreement, Fortress, at the insistence of Dai Tokyo, polled
petitioners to determine and confirm whether petitioners would be
receptive to Dai Tokyo's participation.
Each reinsurance contract underwritten by
Fortress, or old Fortress, on behalf of the companies it
represented, is assigned to a management year. All premiums and
losses, including claims settled in later years, associated with a
particular reinsurance contract are allocated to the management year
to which the reinsurance contract was assigned. Fortress is
responsible for the handling and disposition of all claims against
the companies it represents. In many cases, claims relating to the
reinsurance underwritten by Fortress on behalf of companies it
represents are not fully settled for many years. Fortress has total
control over the handling and disposition of claims on behalf of
petitioners.
Pursuant to each agreement, Fortress
regularly exercises the authority to conclude original reinsurance
contracts and to cede reinsurance on behalf of each petitioner. Each
agreement provides Fortress with underwriting authority on a
continuous basis until the agreement is terminated. The agreements
can be terminated by either party, but only with 6 months' notice,
although in practice the notice period has been waived. After
termination of an agreement, Fortress continues to have obligations
with respect to reinsurance previously underwritten. During the
years in issue, Fortress had continuing duties to 13 insurance
companies, excluding petitioners, for contracts underwritten in
prior management years.
The only material limitation on Fortress'
authority under the agreement is a "net acceptance limit", which is
the maximum amount of net liability in respect of any one original
reinsurance contract that Fortress can accept on behalf of a member.
There is no gross acceptance limit in the agreements, so that
Fortress can underwrite reinsurance contracts on behalf of a member
that are greater than the net acceptance limit, provided that
Fortress arranges for retrocessions of the excess over the net
acceptance limit. In practice, Fortress sets its own gross
acceptance limit, as to which it voluntarily advises petitioners.
When approached by Chiyoda with regard to inserting a gross
acceptance limit into its agreement, Fortress refused, and Chiyoda
dropped its request.
Before each management year, Fortress
provided each petitioner with an estimate of net premium income for
the upcoming year, based on the gross and net participations of that
petitioner. Net premium income equals the gross premiums received
for all reinsurance contracts less retrocession premiums. Under the
terms of the management agreement, Fortress is not limited on how
many contracts it writes, only that no one contract can exceed the
net acceptance limit, so in effect the total net premium income from
reinsurance handled by Fortress is unlimited. When any of
petitioners approached Fortress about lowering their net premium
income, Fortress' advice was to increase the quota share cession to
its affiliated quota share reinsurer, Carolina Reinsurance Limited
(hereinafter referred to as Carolina Re). See infra pp. 18-19.
In 1986, Fortress anticipated a very
favorable market and sought to increase its capacity. It did so by
offering to increase the underwriting done for its existing members,
and by soliciting four other Japanese insurance companies about
entering into management agreements.
Each reinsurance contract underwritten by
Fortress is executed with a "security stamp" that identifies each
member and the percentage of the total liability assumed by each
member under the contract. The percentage to be assumed by each
member on each reinsurance contract entered into during the
management year is determined before the start of the management
year, after Fortress comes to terms with each member regarding the
net acceptance limit for the year. /4/ The percentage of each
contract assumed is subject to that limit.
Mr. Kornfeld is the chief underwriter and,
as such, decides what business Fortress will underwrite and
retrocede on behalf of the members. The retrocession program for a
management year was presented to each petitioner in advance, during
an annual trip by Mr. Kornfeld to each petitioner's offices.
However, Fortress does not need approval, and did not seek or
receive input, from petitioners.
All original reinsurance contracts, as
defined in the management agreements, are "excess of loss"
contracts. The lines of reinsurance that were the subject of
original reinsurance contracts and ceded reinsurance were aviation
excess of loss, nonmarine catastrophic excess of loss (e.g.,
land-based risks such as hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes and
fires), and marine excess of loss (e.g., water-based risks involving
oil rigs and ocean liners). With excess of loss reinsurance, the
reinsured pays a premium to a reinsurer for a layer of protection,
whereby the reinsurer agrees to pay all losses above a certain
amount (the retention), but only up to a certain limit. There may be
several layers of protection where a different reinsurer "writes"
each layer, the lowest layer being the first to bear a loss.
Generally, Fortress wrote a percentage of a single layer of loss. In
choosing which layer to write, Fortress tries to pick the first
"true" catastrophic layer, i.e., a layer that would not bear
ordinary losses but would be the first to bear a loss from a
catastrophe or extraordinary loss. The rationale behind this
strategy is that the reinsurer of lower layers receives a higher
premium, and Fortress feels a true catastrophe would cause losses at
all layers so that Fortress is getting a higher premium than
reinsurers of higher layers, yet bears similar risk. In respect of
each reinsurance contract, Fortress independently decides which
layer it should write on behalf of petitioners.
As part of its retrocession program,
Fortress cedes a part of the liability it writes, so that no
reinsurance contract exposes its members to a direct liability
greater than their net acceptance limit. In such a situation, each
petitioner is liable in the event the reinsurers should default. The
benefit of writing more reinsurance than it accepts on behalf of
petitioners is that a commission is earned on the ceded reinsurance.
Fortress transacted retrocessions through brokers, most of which are
in London and the rest in New York.
The premiums and commissions were
established by a lead underwriter of the reinsurance proposals and
were followed by Fortress.
Petitioners utilize the services of
Fortress because Fortress has good relationships with reinsurance
brokers, has access to good business, and has a profitable business
strategy.
Fortress has continued access to good
business because it has a reputation for paying its claims promptly
and, of immeasurable importance, because its clients are large
insurance companies that represent good security. Brokers would not
deal with Fortress if its clients were not as financially secure as
petitioners. However, there are 21 insurance companies in Japan and
hundreds in the world that meet the minimum capital requirements,
and whom Fortress could have as clients and continue to obtain
similar reinsurance business.
Fortress was compensated for its services
pursuant to compensation schedules set forth in each agreement.
During 1986 to 1988, Fortress' income was derived from management
fees, contingent commissions, and override commissions payable under
management agreements entered into for management years I through
XVI. Also, Fortress earned investment income on its own funds, which
was not related to the management agreements. Fortress' compensation
structure is the same as other reinsurance underwriting managers,
although its management fees are slightly lower and its profit
commissions slightly higher than the norm.
Management fees are calculated as a fixed
percentage of the gross earned premiums, with the percentage lower
as the volume of the premiums increases. It was anticipated that the
management fees would cover current operating expenses of Fortress,
including salaries. The fees are established on the basis of
experience rather than projections. For each of the years in issue,
a portion of the management fees Fortress earned was related to
reinsurance underwritten in prior management years.
Contingent profit commissions are based on
the profitability of business underwritten. Each year, Fortress
recomputes its contingent profit commission for the prior management
years to reflect results as they unfold and to reflect revisions to
the loss reserves with respect to reinsurance contracts assigned to
that year.
Override commissions are amounts received
on certain pro rata retrocessional treaties and are not a
significant part of Fortress' compensation.
For 1986, 1987, and 1988, Fortress earned
$1,819,152, $5,023,631, and $20,747,536, respectively, from
management fees and profit commissions. Of these amounts, 74
percent, 78 percent, and 62 percent, respectively, were attributable
to reinsurance underwritten in management years that ended before
the particular calendar years.
Fortress has the authority, under the
management agreements and its agreement with old Fortress, to
control the investment of funds withheld pursuant to such agreements
in its sole discretion. Distributions are made in accordance with
the management agreements and are made over a period of years
following the management year.
Fortress provides quarterly accounting
reports to all insurance companies with which it or old Fortress has
entered into management agreements. The quarterly reports contain a
summary which reflects the results for the company to which the
report is provided for the particular quarter for all management
years for which Fortress underwrote reinsurance on behalf of such
company. In addition, each report provides an individual summary of
the results for each such management year.
Each quarterly report reflects estimates
for unpaid losses, including reserves for incurred but not reported
(IBNR) losses. The reserves are set by Fortress based on Mr.
Sabbah's judgment, taking into account experience and information
from the reinsureds.
Each report also contains a narrative
summary of Fortress' overall underwriting results prepared by
Fortress.
Each year Mr. Kornfeld separately visited
the offices of each petitioner in Tokyo. At these meetings, he
described the underwriting results for prior management years, as
well as the retrocessional program. Communication during the year
occurred via letter or telex. There were no communications by
telephone. During the years in issue, a representative of each
petitioner visited the offices of Fortress one or two times. There
were also an additional few visits between representatives of
Chiyoda and Fortress in connection with discussions of the sale of
Fortress to Chiyoda. The other petitioners were not aware of these
discussions between Fortress and Chiyoda.
Petitioners attend monthly industry
meetings where each is present, but they have never met to discuss
Fortress. With one exception relating to a profit commission,
petitioners did not communicate with each other about their
relationship with Fortress.
In 1984, the owners of Fortress caused the
formation of Carolina Re, under the laws of Bermuda. In 1984, the
stockholders of Carolina Re were as follows:
Stockholder Shares
Fortress 120,993
Mr.
Sabbah 1
Mr. Kornfeld 1
Zmira Sabbah 1
H. C.
Butterfield 1
John A. Ellison 1
John
Collis 1
Nicholas G.
Trollope 1
Total 121,000
The latter four shareholders were Bermuda
residents and the shares were held as qualifying director's shares,
and Fortress was the beneficial owner of each share. The original
officers of Carolina Re were Mr. Sabbah, Mr. Kornfeld, Charles D.
Edelman, Leon E. Nearon, and Alan L. Brown.
In 1986, Fortress sold its shares in
Carolina Re for $1 each, as follows:
Purchaser Shares
Mr.
Sabbah 46,095
Zmira Sabbah 34,572
Mr.
Kornfeld 40,333
Carolina Re acts as a quota share reinsurer
of reinsurance underwritten by Fortress, meaning that it assumes a
certain share of the reinsurance ceded by petitioners, for which it
is paid a premium. Before forming Carolina Re, Fortress notified
petitioners of its intentions although it did not need their
approval.
Fortress requires that Carolina Re be
retroceded a minimum percentage of the reinsurance contracts
accepted on behalf of each petitioner, although each petitioner may
increase the percentage. In 1988, at the insistence of Fortress, the
minimum percentage ceded to Carolina Re was increased, despite the
objections of three of four petitioners.
Fortress' income is subject to U.S. Federal
income tax and is included on Fortress' Federal income tax returns.
Each petitioner included the items of income and expense with
respect to the reinsurance underwritten by Fortress on its behalf in
its Japanese income tax returns. Each petitioner filed protective
Federal income tax returns for the years in issue with the Internal
Revenue Service Center at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. After the
issuance of the deficiency notices, each petitioner made payment of
the tax and additions to tax asserted therein, together with accrued
interest, for which each petitioner filed an amended petition asking
for a determination of overpayment.
OPINION
Under the Convention Between the United
States of America and Japan for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and
the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Income,
Mar. 8, 1971, 23 U.S.T. (Part 1) 969 (hereinafter referred to as the
U.S.-Japan Convention or Convention), the commercial profits of a
Japanese resident are exempt from U.S. Federal income tax, unless
such profits are attributable to a U.S. permanent establishment.
Convention, art. 8(1). The relevant provisions of the Convention
whereby a Japanese resident will be deemed to have a U.S. permanent
establishment due to the activities of an agent are as follows:
(4) A person acting in a Contracting State
on behalf of a resident of the other Contracting State, other than
an agent of an independent status to whom paragraph (5) of this
article applies, shall be deemed to be a permanent establishment in
the first-mentioned Contracting State if such person has, and
habitually exercises in the first-mentioned Contracting State, an
authority to conclude contracts in the name of that resident, unless
the exercise of such authority is limited to the purchase of goods
or merchandise for that resident.
(5) A resident of a Contracting State shall
not be deemed to have a permanent establishment in the other
Contracting State merely because such resident engages in industrial
or commercial activity in that other Contracting State through a
broker, general commission agent, or any other agent of an
independent status, where such broker or agent is acting in the
ordinary course of his business. [Convention, art. 9.]
Initially, it is undisputed that Fortress
had the authority, which it exercised, to conclude contracts on
behalf of petitioners, so that unless Fortress is "a broker, general
commission agent, or any other agent of an independent status"
within the meaning of article 9(5), petitioners will be deemed to
have U.S. permanent establishments. The parties are in agreement
that Fortress was not a "broker" or "general commission agent", and
respondent concedes that Fortress was acting in the ordinary course
of its business when acting on behalf of petitioners. Thus, the
issue before us is whether, during the years at issue, Fortress was
an "agent of an independent status" in respect of each petitioner.
In this connection, we note that neither petitioner nor respondent
has argued that any petitioner should be treated differently from
any other petitioner in resolving this issue.
BACKGROUND
The U.S.-Japan Convention itself does not
define an "agent of an independent status". In applying a treaty
definition, "Our role is limited to giving effect to the intent of
the Treaty parties." Sumitomo Shoii America, Inc. v. Avagliano, 457
U.S. 176, 185 (1982); see also Crow v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. 376,
380 (1985), quoting Maximov v. United States, 299 F.2d 565, 568 (2d
Cir. 1962) ("The goal of treaty interpretation is 'to give the
specific words * * * a meaning consistent with the genuine shared
expectations of the contracting parties.'"), affd. 373 U.S. 49
(1963); Estate of Burghardt v. Commissioner, 80 T.C. 705, 708
(1983), affd. without published opinion 734 F.2d 3 (3d Cir. 1984).
Beyond the literal language, we must examine the Treaty's "purpose,
history and context." Crow v. Commissioner, 85 T.C. at 380.
Our examination shows that the relevant
provisions of the Convention are not only based upon, but are
duplicative of, article 5, comments 4 and 5, of the 1963 O.E.C.D.
Draft [Model] Convention (hereinafter referred to as the 1963
Model). /5/ See letter of transmittal from President Nixon to the
Senate requesting ratification of the Convention, dated May 11,
1971, 2 Tax Treaties (CCH) par. 5222, p. 34,021-3; Senate Committee
on Foreign Relations, Report on Tax Convention with Japan and Tax
Protocol with France (Nov. 22, 1971), 1973-1 C.B. 642, 643. While
the 1963 Model itself provides no more definition than the
Convention, the model is explained in part by a commentary, which
states in pertinent part:
15. PERSONS WHO MAY BE DEEMED TO BE
PERMANENT ESTABLISHMENTS MUST BE STRICTLY LIMITED TO THOSE WHO ARE
DEPENDENT, BOTH FROM THE LEGAL AND ECONOMIC POINTS OF VIEW, upon the
enterprise for which they carry on business dealings (Report of the
Fiscal Committee of the League of Nations, 1928, page 12). Where an
enterprise has business dealings with an independent agent, this
cannot be held to mean that the enterprise itself carries on a
business in the other State. In such a case, there are two separate
enterprises.
* * * * * * *
19. Under paragraph 4 of the Article, only
one category of dependent agents, who meet specific conditions, is
deemed to be permanent establishments. All independent agents and
the remaining dependent ones are not deemed to be permanent
establishment. Mention should be made of the fact that the Mexico
and London Drafts * * * and a number of Conventions, do not
enumerate exhaustively such dependent agents as are deemed to be
permanent establishments, but merely give examples. In the interest
of preventing differences of interpretation and of furthering
international economic relations, it appeared advisable to define,
as exhaustively as possible, the cases where agents are deemed to be
"permanent establishments".
* * * * * * *
20. * * * In the Mexico and London Drafts
and in the Conventions, brokers and commission agents are stated to
be agents of an independent status. Similarly, business dealings
carried on with the co-operation of any other independent person
carrying on a trade or business (e.g. a forwarding agent) do not
constitute a permanent establishment. Such independent agents must,
however, be acting in the ordinary course of their business. * * *
* * * * * * *
The special problems which can arise in the
case of insurance companies dealing by means of intermediaries or
variously qualified representatives shall be further studied.
[Commentary to art. 5 of the 1963 Model.]
Based on the above, petitioners argue that
the test of independent status is one of both legal and economic
dependence and that, if we find that Fortress was either legally or
economically independent of petitioners, it will necessarily follow
that Fortress was not a permanent establishment. Respondent argues
that comment 15 erroneously phrased the standard in terms of
"dependence" and the conjunctive "and" instead of the disjunctive
"or", thus allowing either legal or economic independence to satisfy
the requirement for independent status. See Roberts, "The Agency
Element of Permanent Establishment: The OECD Commentaries from the
Civil Law View (Part Two)," Intertax 488, 490 (Oct. 1993); Skaar,
Permanent Establishment: Erosion of a Tax Treaty Principle, 506-507
(1991); Nitikman, "The Meaning of 'Permanent Establishment' in the
1981 U.S. Model Income Tax Treaty: Part 2," 15 Intl. Tax J. 257,
267-268 (1989). /6/ The basis for this argument is that comment 15
of the 1963 Model expressly refers to the Report of the Fiscal
Committee of the League of Nations, 1928, p. 12, the commentary to
which states "The words 'bona-fide agent of independent status are
intended to imply absolute INDEPENDENCE. BOTH FROM THE LEGAL AND
ECONOMIC POINTS OF VIEW." (emphasis supplied); /7/ see Roberts,
supra at 490. Indeed, the commentary to the OECD model was changed
in the 1977 revision so that both legal and economic independence is
necessary. /8/ Comment 36 to the OECD Revised Model Double Taxation
Convention on Income and Capital 1977 (hereinafter referred to as
the 1977 Model); see also comment 37 to art. 5 of the OECD Model Tax
Convention on Income and On Capital (1992). Generally, we would have
reservations about interpreting a convention, ratified in 1971, on
the basis of a commentary, adopted in 1977, that contradicts the
literal language of the commentary in effect at the time of
ratification. However, in light of the extensive analysis by the
previously cited commentators and the confirmation of such analysis
by our own research, we are persuaded that the criteria in the later
commentary reflects the original intention of the commentary to the
1963 Model and that the 1963 Model should be interpreted as having a
disjunctive ("or") meaning. /9/
We note, however, that if we focus, as the
parties have ultimately done, on the test for legal and economic
independence set forth in comment 37 to article 5 of the 1977 Model,
as applied to the facts herein, the issue of disjunctive versus
conjunctive reading of the 1963 Model fades into the background.
That comment provides:
37. Whether a person is independent of the
enterprise represented depends on the extent of the obligations
which this person has vis-a-vis the enterprise. Where the person's
commercial activities for the enterprise are subject to detailed
instructions or to comprehensive control by it, such person cannot
be regarded as independent of the enterprise. Another important
criterion will be whether the entrepreneurial risk has to be borne
by the person or by the enterprise the person represents. * * *
[Comment 37 to art. 5 of the 1977 Model.]
It is obvious that the tests of
"comprehensive control" and "entrepreneurial risk", as the
determinants of legal and economic independence, involve an
intensely factual inquiry, which does not lend itself to the
articulation of a "definitive statement that would produce a
talisman for the solution of concrete cases." Commissioner v.
Duberstein, 363 U.S. 278, 284-285 (1960).
Petitioners suggest that guidance can be
found in the factors used in distinguishing employees from
independent contractors. See Donroy. Ltd. v. United States, 301 F.2d
200, 205-206 (9th Cir. 1962); Nitikman, supra at 266. We think the
employee versus independent contractor analogy is of limited use.
The fact that petitioners herein are clearly not employees (indeed,
respondent does not contend that they are) and therefore would be
considered independent contractors does not answer the question
before us, namely, whether they are the kind of independent
contractors who should be held to be "agent(s) of an independent
status". Nor are we prepared to accept respondent's argument that
the quoted phrase should be given a narrow scope by virtue of the
ejusdem generis rule in that it was intended to encompass only those
agents who exhibited characteristics associated with a "broker" or
"commission agent". We think that the generality of the phrase
"agent of an independent status" was intended to have an expansive
rather than a confining scope, particularly since the words "broker"
and "commission agent" themselves lack specificity. Respondent's
reliance on Fleming (H.M. Inspector of Taxes) v. London Produce Co.,
1 W.L.R. 1013, 2 All E.R. 975 (Ch. Div. 1968), is misplaced. In that
case the language, to which the doctrine of ejusdem generis was
applied, was totally different ("In this subsection, 'broker'
INCLUDES a general commission agent" (emphasis added)).
Against the foregoing background, we turn
to the determination of Fortress' legal and economic independence.
LEGAL INDEPENDENCE
The relationship between Fortress and
petitioners is defined by the management agreement that Fortress
entered into separately with each petitioner. Petitioners have no
interest in Fortress, and no representative of any of the
petitioners is a director, officer, or employee of Fortress. /10/
The agreements grant complete discretion to Fortress to conduct the
reinsurance business on behalf of petitioners. See Skaar, supra at
508.
Respondent agrees that Fortress had
independence with respect to day-to-day operations, but then argues
that its actions were restricted by gross acceptance limits and
limits on net premium income. However, even if there were such
restrictions, they would not necessarily constitute control. The
gross acceptance limit and net premium income both relate to the
total exposure of petitioners, and even an independent agent only
has authority to perform specific duties for the principal. It is
freedom in the manner by which the agent performs such duties that
distinguishes him as independent.
In any event, the record is clear that the
gross acceptance limits were set by Fortress as part of its strategy
to limit risk through diversification. Fortress advised petitioners
of the gross acceptance limits for informational purposes and
changed the limits without the advice or consent of petitioners.
Fortress refused to put gross acceptance limits in the management
agreements in order to retain flexibility. Respondent implies that
the limit forced Fortress to enter into many small contracts instead
of being able to enter into a few large contracts, but the pattern
is consistent with Fortress' strategy of limiting risk through
diversification, a strategy which Fortress was clearly in a position
to implement through a plethora of available contracts.
As to net premium income, there were no
limits under the terms of the management agreements. If one of
petitioners sought to lower its net premium income from U.S.
sources, Fortress' advice was to cede a greater share to Carolina
Re, operating in Bermuda. Petitioners could also terminate
agreements with their other U.S. agents. Respondent places great
weight on the estimates of net premium income Fortress provided to
petitioners before each management year, but the estimates are
clearly that, and nothing more, and were greatly exceeded for at
least one of the years at issue. While Fortress was aware that at
times petitioners wanted only to absorb a certain amount of net
premium income, Fortress did not change its business to accommodate
their concerns.
Respondent further argues there were
restrictions on Fortress' corporate affairs not reflected in the
agreements that gave petitioners comprehensive control of Fortress.
As evidence, respondent relies on Fortress' consultations with
petitioners in regard to the request of Dai Tokyo to become a client
of Fortress, and to Fortress' intent to include Carolina Re in the
reinsurance program. Respondent also points out that Fortress
reported to petitioners more regularly than required by the
agreements. However, these are actions of a company seeking to
maintain good relations with longstanding clients, rather than one
seeking approval. With respect to the Dai Tokyo and Carolina Re
situations, Fortress had already made its decision before consulting
with petitioners. /11/ Lewenhaupt v. Commissioner, 20 T.C. 151,
162-163 (1953), affd. per curiam 221 F.2d 227 (9th Cir. 1955), cited
by respondent, not only involved a different test, i.e., whether the
taxpayer was engaged in business in the United States through an
agent, but involved continuous activity in managing U.S. real estate
owned by the taxpayer which went beyond mere ownership or receipt of
income. It is clearly distinguishable.
Respondent further argues that petitioners
exercised "comprehensive control" over Fortress by acting as a
"pool". However, there is no evidence that petitioners acted in
concert to control Fortress. In only rare and isolated instances did
petitioners communicate with one another regarding Fortress.
Further, there are references to a "pool" throughout the history of
Fortress, which period covers relationships with 17 separate U.S.
and Japanese insurance companies. The inferences respondent would
have us draw from the fact that petitioners are all from Japan and
that petitioners are among the participants in regular industry
conferences in Japan are simply insufficient to establish the
existence of control by a "pool".
In a similar vein, we reject respondent's
attempt to construct control from the fact that, during the years at
issue, Fortress' activities were confined to the reinsurance it
underwrote on behalf of petitioners. Pointing to article 2(2) of the
U.S.-Japan Convention, /12/ respondent attempts to support her
position by drawing upon the phrase "other agent of independent
status" in section 864(c)(5)(A) and the regulation thereunder,
section 1.864-7(d)(3), Income Tax Regs. See S. Rept. 89-1707 (1966),
1966-2 C.B. 1055, 1072-1073. Obviously, the statute simply repeats
the phrase used in the Convention. The regulations suggest two
elements to be considered. The first is ownership or control,
section 1.864-7(d)(3)(ii), Income Tax Regs., which the regulation
specifically states is not determinative. The second, section
1.864-7(d)(3)(iii), Income Tax Regs., is whether the agent acts
"exclusively, or almost exclusively, FOR ONE PRINCIPAL," (emphasis
added) in which event "the facts and circumstances of a particular
case shall be taken into account in determining whether the agent,
while acting in that capacity, may be classified as an independent
agent." Assuming without deciding that these regulations,
implementing a particular statute, should be accorded interpretative
effect in respect of a treaty provision, it has no application
herein where we have concluded that Fortress acted separately in
respect of each of four petitioners and where respondent concedes
that Fortress was acting in the ordinary course of its business, a
position that seems inconsistent with both the "pool" and
"exclusively" concepts. Moreover, we note that the number of
principals for whom Fortress acted varied over the years and that,
even during the years before us, Fortress carried on a substantial
amount of activity in handling claims, etc., for several other
insurance companies.
Finally, we note that all four petitioners,
while not their primary business, did have reinsurance departments.
Thus, petitioners had the ability to give detailed instructions to
Fortress, yet they did not.
As an agent, Fortress had complete
discretion over the details of its work. As an entity, Fortress was
subject to no external control. In sum, Fortress was legally
independent of petitioners.
ECONOMIC INDEPENDENCE
Fortress is owned solely by Mr. Sabbah and
his family and Mr. Kornfeld. There was no guarantee of revenue to
Fortress, nor was Fortress protected from loss in the event it had
been unable to generate sufficient revenue. Fortress has management
agreements with four separate clients, whereby any one of them can
leave on 6 months' notice. If one of petitioners did end its
relationship, Fortress would bear the burden of finding a
replacement to subscribe to that client's share of reinsurance
contracts. /13/
Respondent argues that Fortress bore no
entrepreneurial risk because its operating expenses were covered by
a management fee, and because it was guaranteed business due to the
creditworthiness of the reinsurers on whose behalf it acted,
petitioners.
While the management agreements provided
that Fortress earned a percentage of the gross premiums written
which effectively covered Fortress' operating expenses, this did not
mean that Fortress bore no risk. Fortress had to acquire sufficient
business to produce the gross premiums. Further, it appears that
this provision of the agreements is normal for an underwriting
manager. That respondent's argument on this point misses the mark is
illustrated, for example, by a large mutual fund that charges an
annual management fee to cover operating expenses. Clearly, the
mutual fund company would not be considered dependent on its
thousands of investors. Under these circumstances, even with as few
as four investors, Fortress cannot be considered dependent on
petitioners to pay its operating expenses.
Nor do we agree with respondent's argument
that Fortress is able to secure profitable reinsurance contracts
only because its clients are petitioners. Although Fortress needs
clients with a certain minimum capital to conduct its business, any
of hundreds of other insurance companies worldwide would be adequate
substitutes. Also, it cannot be denied that Fortress had access to
the reinsurance contracts it considered good, in part because of
Fortress' relationships and reputation in the industry. In fact, it
appears that Fortress' access to profitable reinsurance contracts,
as well as its experience and ability to choose profitable
reinsurance contracts, attracted petitioners to Fortress, and would
attract other insurance companies if Fortress needed another client
to take a share of the contracts.
Finally, we think that the amount of
Fortress' profits is significant. See Madole, "Agents as Permanent
Establishments Under U.S. Income Tax Treaties," 23 Tax Mgmt. Intl.
281, 293-294 (1994). For the 3 years in issue, Fortress was paid
over $27 million. This is not the kind of sum paid to a subservient
company. In addition, petitioners were in effect forced to share
reinsurance profits with Carolina Re, an entity owned by the same
people who owned Fortress, by permitting Fortress to cede
reinsurance to Carolina Re even though Carolina Re was not as well
known or financially secure as other potential quota share
reinsurers.
CONCLUSION
In sum, during the years at issue, Fortress
was both legally and economically independent of petitioners, thus
satisfying the definition of an agent of an independent status under
article 9 of the U.S.-Japan Convention.
Two further items deserve comment. First,
petitioners point to a decision of the Federal Republic of Germany
Tax Court at Bremen, FG I 4/73, 10 EFG 467049 (1973), affd. Decision
of the FRG Bundesfinanzhof, BFH IR 152/73, BStBl II (24) 626-629
(1975), regarding the application of the independent agent provision
of the Germany-Netherlands Treaty to a German insurance agent. A
Dutch company had engaged a German firm as its representative and
principal agent and signed a standard form granting power of
attorney to the German firm enabling the German firm to conclude
contracts on behalf of the Dutch company. The German firm acted as
an independent insurance agent for numerous domestic and foreign
insurance companies. The court held the Dutch company did not have a
permanent establishment in Germany by virtue of the performance of
the German insurance agent. While the result reached in the German
case is consistent with that which we reach herein, we think that
its utility herein is limited by the clearly distinguishable facts.
Nor does de Amodio v. Commissioner, 34 T.C. 894 (1960), affd. on
other grounds 299 F.2d 623 (3d Cir. 1962), provide petitioners with
any sustenance. There, a resident of Switzerland owned U.S. rental
property which was managed and operated through local real estate
agents. We determined that the agents fell within the term "broker"
or "independent agent", in the income tax convention between the
United States and Switzerland, but the discussion is limited.
Second, we note that, in the commentary to
the O.E.C.D.'s 1977 Model, it is stated that an insurance company
could do "large-scale business in a State without being taxed in
that State on their profits arising from such business." Comment 38
to art. 5 of 1977 Model; see also comment 21 to art. 5 of 1963
Model. The commentary goes on to suggest that contracting states may
want to contemplate that an insurance company will be "deemed to
have a permanent establishment in the other State if they collect
premiums in that other State through an agent established there",
other than a dependent agent. Comment 38 to art. 5 of 1977 Model.
However, the commentary notes that such a provision is not in the
model and its inclusion should depend upon the factual and legal
situation involved. Comment 38 to art. 5 of 1977 Model; see Avery
Jones & Ward, "Agents as Permanent Establishments under the OECD
Model Tax Convention," European Taxation 154, 170-171 (1993).
The Convention between the United States of
America and the Kingdom of Belgium for the Avoidance of Double
Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes
on Income, July 9, 1970, 23 U.S.T. 2687 (hereinafter referred to as
the U.S.-Belgium Convention), does include such an insurance
provision. It provides that the independent agent provision "shall
not apply with respect to a broker or agent acting on behalf of an
insurance company if such broker or agent has, and habitually
exercises, an authority to conclude contracts in the name of that
company." U.S.-Belgium Convention, art. 5(6). Finally, we note that
it was decided not to include reinsurance within the coverage of
this provision. Technical Explanation by Treasury Department on the
Convention Between the U.S. and Belgium for the Avoidance of Double
Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes
on Income, signed July 9, 1970, 1 Tax Treaties (CCH) par. 1350, p.
17,032. From the foregoing it appears that the resolution of the
issue of the existence of an agent of independent status in the
insurance arena turns, at least in part, upon the presence of a
specific treaty provision. See Dept. of the Treasury, Report to
Congress on the Taxation of Income Earned by Members of Insurance or
Reinsurance Syndicates 45 (Feb. 1989).
Given the absence of any provision dealing
with insurance or reinsurance in the U.S.-Japan Convention, our
holding herein that Fortress is not a permanent establishment of
petitioners is consistent with the approach suggested by the
O.E.C.D. Model /14/ and the application thereof in the U.S.-Belgium
Convention.
In view of our holding, we do not reach the
further issue in respect of the inclusion in petitioners' 1988
taxable income of certain reductions in pre-1988 estimates of unpaid
losses.
In order to permit the determination of the
amounts of overpayments by petitioners in respect of the
deficiencies determined by respondent,
Decisions will be entered under Rule 155.