Tom Cifelli

831(b) Captive Tax law Update – Tax Law Changes Effective 2017, and Pending Tax Court Case

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The IRS put a stake in the ground in 2015 adding 831(b) captives to its Dirty Dozen list. This does not mean 831(b) captives are abusive or tax shelters; it merely means the IRS has seen enough aggressive tax minimization planning using 831(b) captives to formally (indirectly) announce it wants to chill the growing use of such risk management structures, despite IRS senior tax counsel stating on several previous occassions they had no such intentions. The Protecting Americans From Tax Hikes Act of 2015 enacted early this year contains tax law changes to IRC code scetion 831(b). Beginning with tax years starting after December 31, 2016, these changes restrict continued use of 831(b) captives integrating estate tax avoidance ownership structures shifting the captive insurance company asset outside of the estate of the insured business owners. We will publish more soon on the exact impact of these new tax code changes which overall are positive for the vast majority of businesses and taxpayers benefiting by use of small captive insurance companies to improve risk management and risk finance programs.

IRS Challenging Perceived Abusive Captive Programs and Promoters

It has been widely reported there are some captive promoters who do a sloppy job in the design, formation and management of client captives, focusing primarily and nearly exclusively on the potential tax savings legislatively afforded such captive structures, rather than on improving a closely held enterprise group’s risk management programs as must be the primary focus of properly designed and formed captive insurance solutions. These allegedly abusively designed captives may not be deemed truly legitimate risk management programs on close inspection; if such is the conclusion on IRS review, assuming the taxpayers capitulate or lose in litigation, the captive owners and affiliated insured businesses are at risk of losing premium deductions while possibly having premium payments taxed as income to the recipient insurance company, and also being assessed substantially onerous penalities and interest. Criminal implications are even possible in extremely abusive situations. This can even happen when a captive is licensed by a US state as an insurance company, concluding definitively it absolutely is an insurance company under state law, yet the IRS concludes that for federal income tax purposes it is not an insurance company qualifying for use of federal statutory tax incentives afforded insurance companies.

The IRS challenge to Benjamin and Orna Avrahami’s captive insuring their Arizona jewelry businesses, in litigation at this time, is currently one such case the IRS perceived as falling short of captive design, formation and management standards expected today to qualify as an insurance company for US federal taxation purposes. The dispute is pending in court as of the time this article was written. The IRS is attempting to prove the captive was not a legitimate risk management program meeting US tax law requirements. They are asserting deficiencies including but not limited to inadequate underwriting behind the captive design, no real risk of material claims arising from the exposures covered, and a primary business objective when setting up the captive of tax minimization and avoidance, not of risk management improvements.

Even if the underwriting and other design and operational elements meet practice standard muster, the IRS will likely argue the captive runs afoul of the Affordable Care Acts’ new Economic Substance Test rules, as well as other and predecessor tools/theories the IRS has in its war chest to challenge taxpayer reporting positions deemed to lack substance and go beyond legal tax avoidance into the area of being abusive and prohibited tax shelters.

The final court decision in the Avrahami case is expected to add additional needed guidance on several controversial issues taxpayers and the IRS often disagree on. In recent years, in cases where the taxpayers have stood up for themselves in court, the courts have overwhelmingly sided with taxpayers in most captive disputes. It would be a very good thing for both taxpayers and the government if more clarity in regulatory guidance were provided on issues of concern to the IRS as they did in 2002 with the now widely referenced safe harbor trilogy – Revenue Rulings 2002-89, 2002-90 and 2002-91 – which underlie the growth in use of smaller captive structure solutions since publication of the safe harbors.

Landscape Possibly Changing, Against Taxpayers to Some Respect, Due to Recent Tax Code Amendments

The new I.R.C. section 831(b) tax law changes taking effect for 2017 may increase the complexity for designing qualifying 831(b) captives, and will likely make it impossible to integrate materially valuable asset protection and wealth transfer planning benefits with a family business group’s enterprise risk management practice by having the captive ownership held by children or other lineal descendants of the insured business’ owners.  Bottom Line: the tax law changes leave room for continued legitimate use of advanced captive insurance programs and structures; the changes will however likely eliminate or greatly restrict use of advanced estate tax, asset protection and wealth transfer planning integration where captive insurance companies are owned by children and grandchildren of a business owner, usually through irrevocable trusts as owners of the captive. Captives set up to achieve such ancillary benefits will need to be reviewed carefully by legal and tax advisers as it appears such benefits can probably be protected with proper planning.

Besides targeting ownership structuring that attempts to shift captive assets out of a business owner’s taxable estate and also out of reach of his or her creditors, the new tax law changing 831(b) rules also impact the qualifications for a captive desiring to qualify for the valuable 831(b) tax election. These new rules are flexible enough so that most if not all existing 831(b) captives will be able to continue for years to come, in most cases probably with little to no changes, assuming of course they have been properly designed, managed and operated. This is all tentative as the 831(b) tax statute changes are very recent and do not take effect except for captive years beginning in January 2017. So everyone has time to discuss and analyze and understand the impact and plan accordingly.

References and More Information:

  • Read the New York Times article published January 15, 2016 by Paul Sullivan, by clicking here.
  • Read more captive tax articles by clicking here.
  • For a good primer on the evolution of captive best practice standards, click here.

Disclaimer: Nothing herein is tax, legal or financial advice.

831(b) Captive Insurance Company – 2016 Legislative Development Hot Topics

By | Captive Legislatibve Developments, Captive Taxation, IRS Audits of Captive Insurance | No Comments

Jay Adkisson, former Chairman of the Captive Insurance Committee of the American Bar Association, is again out front alerting the insurance industry about important developments. In his December 9th article titled “2015 Extender Bill May Throw Out 831(b) Captives Baby With The Bathwater,” Mr. Adkisson cautions that passing such legislation without proper debate, industry input, and fine tuning will have negative economic consequences while minimally impacting government income tax collections through the bills hidden tax increases. He asserts the 2015 Extender Bill as written fails to protect legitimate use of 831(b) electing insurance companies by successful closely held businesses across the country. “Today, section 831(b) is used by numerous small insurance companies to fill gaps in traditional coverage where large insurance companies have either completely left the marketplace, or charge so much in premiums that the purchase of such insurance is uneconomical. Many smaller businesses today would be completely exposed to such things as products liability claims, employee practices claims, environmental claims, and numerous other claims but for their coverage from 831(b) insurance companies. This is the baby,” Mr. Adkisson states in his Forbes article.

Ironically, Mr. Adkisson is probably the single most responsible captive industry professional pointing a negative spotlight on the 831(b) captive industry; articles he has published in recent years have heightened concerns within the IRS and within state regulatory circles about the growing use of 831(b) qualifying captive solutions utilizing 3rd party risk pools. The use of risk pools as part of an 831(b) captive design is to protect the captive from shock losses in its early years, and often to more clearly meet complex risk distribution requirements under US federal tax rules for a captive to be deemed an insurance company for tax purposes, thus qualify for use of the 831(b) election and other tax incentives afforded insurance companies.

Notably his prior Forbes article published in March 2014 titled “IRS Noose Starting To Tighten In Sham Risk Pools” caused widespread industry concern and controversy. Other industry lawyers responded noting Mr. Adkisson in his earlier years as a captive professional spoke at conferences promoting the tax benefits of captive arrangements (read Sean Kings piece titled “Feeding Trolls” by clicking here), not the risk management benefits, suggesting Mr. Adkisson has in more recent years been trying to distance himself from “tax shelter promoter circles,” whoever they might be. If there are tax shelter promoters assisting clients or encouraging sale of life insurance in abusive situations driven only by tax impacts, some of them may have been schooled by Mr. Adkisson’s earlier analysis that perhaps helped birth the use of 831(b) captives by successful small family businesses. The tone and content of many of Mr. Adkisson’s writings in recent years directly or indirectly attacking the small family owned captive industry (captive insurance solution use by companies smaller than the fortune 1000) he helped create is hard to understand from any perspective other than scoring points with IRS enforcement officials, and to be well positioned for hire as special litigation counsel or an expert witness.

On the legislative front, and response to enacted changes to existing insurance statutes, suffice it to say that there likely will surface structural solutions should the 2015 Extender Bill or something similar to it pass. These structural solutions will emerge to help protect legitimate use of 831(b) captives by small closely held businesses. Sophisticated transactional lawyers nearly always find a way to legally restructure solutions where there is legitimate need as there is for expanded effective alternative risk finance and transfer programs.

Regarding abuse of tax incentives, it is important to remember tax incentives exist to be utilized, and there already is recently expanded tools in the IRS arsenal to combat tax abuse. One example is the new Economic Substance Test part of the Affordable Care Act. It should in and of itself prove sufficient over time to address clear 831(b) use abuses. The US already has the most pervasive and complex tax code in the world, and the largest enforcement agency behind it. Truly simplifying the tax code, and reducing the need for expansive audit and enforcement staff, is the best path should Congress and the IRS want to help make the US economy more competitive, create better job opportunities for our children, and stop the growth and deficit spending of the federal government.

For more insight on this issue, read the following comments to Mr. Adkisson’s re-publication of his article on LinkedIn:

  1. Middle market businesses face a great number of risks for which insurance is not readily or affordably available in the commercial insurance market. For example, my friend in Charlotte who operates a number of fast casual restaurants, seven of which were closed for 3 days and two for 3 weeks as a result of flooding in Columbia, SC. He discovered that his flood insurance did not cover business interruption. And another Charlotte business owner, whose business relies heavily on online sales, who suffered a loss this year of hundreds of thousands of dollars when her website crashed; an event for which insurance is effectively unavailable. The threat to her business is existential.

  2. Martin Eveleigh

    While large companies have balance sheets that enable them to weather these storms and have formed captive insurance companies to help finance these and other risks, middle market businesses often do not have the strength to survive such events. By offering an incentive to finance risks in a captive insurance company, the election available under S.831(b) helps middle market businesses deal with adversity and so encourages entrepreneurship and job creation.

  3. Nigel Bailey

    Is this the result of lobbying by traditional insurance companies, or just the IRS?

  4. Jay Adkisson

    @Nigel — It is the result of (1) Sen. Grassley wanting to increase the 831(b) limit for farm mutuals — but needing a revenue offset to increase the limits, and (2) the IRS wanting to clamp down on “tax shelter captives” and by doing so providing Grassley with the revenue offset that he needs. Even if this doesn’t get past (and maybe more likely if it doesn’t), the IRS will likely come down in 2016 with some pretty onerous rules for 831(b) captives.

  5. Click here for a direct link to Mr. Adkisson’s blog.

Importance of Actuaries in IRS Audit of 831(b) Captives

By | Captive Best Practice Standards, Captive strategic reviews, Captive Taxation | No Comments

The article below being republished explains the weight placed on actuarial testimony by the tax court in the recent RVI case. It confirms the importance of the associated best practice standards we as a firm have been promoting for years now. Our strategic review service will help you address any deficiencies your program may have had in prior years.

Here is the republished artucle by and experienced actuarial firm’s view of the RVI case:

The recent decision of the U.S. Tax Court in RVI Guaranty Co. Ltd. & Subsidiaries v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (RVI v. IRS) is not only the latest in a string of victories for the insurance industry, it is also yet another case where the expert testimony of actuaries holding credentials from the Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS) were pivotal in the decision of the court.

Briefly stated, the RVI v. IRS case was focused on a determination of whether residual value insurance constituted insurance for federal income tax purposes. In supporting RVI’s contention that residual value insurance was in fact insurance for tax purposes, the court had several key findings that appear to have applicability in other insurance and particularly captive insurance coverages. The Court:

  • had no difficulty finding that from the insured’s perspective they were paying premium to transfer meaningful risk of loss.
  • rejected the contention that coverages with low frequency and high severity do not provide risk transfer solely due to the absence of claims. The Court recognized that residual value insurance was analogous to hurricane and earthquake insurance in that an insurer may go many years without paying a claim. In the words of the Court, “this does not mean that the insurer is failing to provide ‘insurance.’”
  • went on to note that “(m)any insureds who pay premiums will not incur losses.”
  • reinforced that “perfect independence of risks is not required” for risk distribution.
  • gave credence to both the state insurance regulatory treatment and the Statutory Accounting Principles as they were applied to residual value insurance at RVI by their regulators and auditors, respectively. In regard to the regulatory aspects of this issue, they specifically cited that “Congress has delegated to the states the exclusive authority (subject to exception) to regulate the business of insurance” in deferring to the opinion of state insurance regulators.
  • gave weight to how “commonly accepted notions of insurance” applied to residual value insurance. In particular, the facts that state insurance departments treat this coverage as insurance and that many well-established insurance companies provide similar coverage and treat it as insurance were considered in the opinion. This is a bit of a departure from prior decisions.
  • found that “speculative risk” in some cases can still be insured.
  • found that “(f)or more than 80 years, the States have regulated as ’insurance’ contracts that provide coverage against decline in market values of particular assets.”

As interesting as the key elements of the decision are, the importance of the expert testimony of actuaries from the CAS cannot be overlooked. This continues a trend of the Court placing significant importance on the testimony and credibility of actuaries in other cases such as ACUITY, A Mutual Ins. Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue. In the RVI case, two leading members of the CAS played instrumental roles. Current CAS President, Bob Miccolis, of Deloitte Consulting, and former American Academy of Actuaries Casualty Practice Council Vice President, Mike Angelina, who currently serves as executive director of the Academy of Risk Management and Insurance at Saint Joseph’s University, were essential to the success of RVI’s case. On the essential issues of risk transfer/shifting, risk distribution, commonly accepted notions of insurance, and the definition of insurance risk, their testimony was critical and was often specifically cited in the opinion. The Court went out of its way in discussing the issue of insurance risk to state, “The Court regarded Professor Angelina as a credible witness and found his testimony helpful.”

The IRS’ experts did not fare as well. During the same insurance risk discussion the Court in evaluating one of the IRS’ experts (an academic and non-actuary) stated “we found her testimony argumentative and unpersuasive.” Another expert upon cross examination “ultimately conceded … errors, acknowledging that his method of computing loss ratios systematically understated the true extent of petitioner’s losses.” The error in question demonstrated a lack of understanding of the coverage provided by residual value insurance and undermined the credibility of the expert.

In RVI v. IRS, the U.S. Tax Court continues to provide the insurance industry with meaningful and favorable clarification of fundamental concepts such as risk distribution, risk transfer, and the definition of insurance. They also continue to place a great deal of importance on the credible testimony of actuarial expert witnesses.

Read full article by clicking here.

US Licensed Captives May Have Advantage if IRS Challenges Tax Incentives

By | Captive Best Practice Standards, Captive Taxation, IRS Audits of Captive Insurance | No Comments

Insert below: October 8, 2015 article of Sean King – click here to read the original article.

Has The Burden Of Proof Shifted To The IRS In Captive Insurance Cases – The RVI Guaranty Case – Part 2

When you think of legal catch-phrases in America, what comes to mind?  If you enjoy watching police detective shows, you may be thinking, “You have the right to remain silent…anything you say may be used against you in a court of law.”  And, here is another legal phrase anchored firmly in the Constitution and the U.S. legal tradition: “Innocent until proven guilty.”

It’s very easy to take this fundamental right of presumed innocence for granted.  Nevertheless, our rights as citizens are turned on their heads when it comes to tax law and civil disputes with the IRS.  You may or may not be aware that taxpayers are not presumed innocent in court when the IRS has determined via audit that the taxpayer underpaid taxes.  When the Service issues a Notice of Deficiency, the burden of proof falls on the taxpayer to demonstrate their innocence or compliance with U.S. tax laws.

The burden of proof determines who wins the case in the absence of evidence.  Said another way, if the IRS has issued a Notice of Deficiency after an audit, the case goes to tax court, and neither the IRS nor the taxpayer offer up any factual evidence to the court, the IRS automatically wins.  In the absence of proof the government wins, hence the “burden of proof” is on the taxpayer.

However, when it comes to insurance companies, the tax court seems (thanks to the RVI case) to be on the verge of adopting a shifting burden of proof, thus making things more challenging for the IRS going forward.

Last week, we reported that the IRS lost what is at least its third major insurance case in two years in U.S. Tax Court.  The case is titled R.V.I. GUARANTY CO., LTD. & SUBSIDIARIES, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent.

To, to read the RVI Guaranty case in its entirety, CLICK HERE.

While RVI Guaranty was not a captive insurance company, this decision has significant bearing on the captive insurance industry, as discussed in last week’s report.  But, perhaps the most significant and most under-appreciated (so far) import of the court’s ruling in the RVI case was the court’s explicit reliance on the determinations of state regulators as to the definitions of “insurance” and “insurance company”.  This reliance was so extensive and so consistent that, once the taxpayer made out a prima facie case that the arrangement qualifies as “insurance” under state laws, or that a given insurance company is recognized and regulated as such under state laws, the court seemingly shifted the burden of proof to the IRS to prove the contrary.

For instance, in resolving question of whether the RVI policies transferred enough risk to RVI to be treated as a true insurance arrangement under Federal tax law, the court said:

“[The IRS’s expert witness] was aware of no instance in which an insurance regulator had determined that the risk of loss on a policy of direct insurance was too ‘remote’ for the product to be treated as ‘insurance’.  And [the IRS] offers no plausible metric by which a court could make this assessment.”

This quote is enlightening because, in its Notice of Determination, the IRS hadalready made the determinationthat insufficient risk was transferred and that the arrangement was not therefore “insurance”.  And, because the burden of proof in such matters is on the taxpayer, that determination should be deemed correct unless the taxpayer offers up sufficient proof to the contrary.  The Service was under no obligation to “offer [the court a] plausible metric by which the court could make this assessment”, and yet the court chastised it for failing to do so. Why?

Time and again, on issue after issue, the court seemingly accepted the findings of state insurance regulators, offered up by the taxpayer, as sufficient to meet the taxpayer’s initial burden of proof on the contested matters. Once state insurance regulators contradicted the Notice of Determination, the court no longer gave it deference by presuming its findings correct.  In fact, the court began insisting that, to win, the IRS must overcome the determinations of state insurance regulators by offering up compelling evidence of its own.  When it failed to do so, the taxpayer won.

True, the taxpayer offered up lots of proof other than just the findings of state insurance regulators, and the court took that other evidence into account, but it usually did so only to the extent needed to contradict the limited and inconsistent evidence offered by the IRS. The flow of the court’s analysis was:

Court:  In the absence of additional evidence, IRS wins.

Taxpayer:  Judge, here’s uncontested evidence that state insurance regulators deemed this to be a legitimate insurance arrangement.

Court:  IRS, the taxpayer is right, and since the states are empowered to regulate insurance, I’m inclined to rule for the taxpayer. The burden is now on you to prove state regulator’s wrong.  What say you?

IRS:  Judge, state regulators are wrong on this because of X, Y, and Z.

Court:  Taxpayer, what say you to that?

Taxpayer:  Judge, X is not X, Y is not Y, and Z is not Z.  The IRS’ evidence is therefore insufficient to overcome the presumption that the state insurance regulators are correct and this is real insurance.

Court:  I agree.  Taxpayer wins.

Conclusion

The ruling by the Court in RVI is broadly worded and appears to have shifted the burden of proof from the taxpayer to the IRS in circumstances where state insurance regulators have determined that legitimate insurance exists. In future tax court cases involving issues of defining insurance and insurance companies, it may be sufficient for taxpayers to point to the determinations of state insurance regulators in these matters, thus establishing a rebuttable presumption of legitimacy that the IRS must overcome with significant contrary evidence.  In the absence of such evidence, the taxpayer is likely to win.

In addition to licensing captive insurance companies, approving business plans and approving all insurance policies written, many domiciles also regulate, examine or approve risk distribution pools (re-insurance arrangements) often employed by smaller captives to achieve risk distribution.  Industry pundits have suggested the IRS might attack risk distribution pools using many of the same theories rejected by the tax court in RVI.  If the thesis of this article is correct, the IRS will have its work cut out for it when it seeks to attack pools that have been specifically vetted and found legitimate by state insurance regulators.

 

DISCLAIMER: The above articles are opinion of the author Sean King. Captive Experts, LLC is not and cannot provide any tax or legal guidance or opinions. Tom Cifelli also is not providing any tax or legal advice regarding this article or any other information on this website or in articles he authors as part of this website or on any affilaite website such as www.CaptiveExperts.com.

IRS Loses Another Insurance Tax Court Case – RVI Guaranty Decision Helps Tax Position of 831(b) Captives

By | Captive insurance, Captive Taxation, IRS Audits of Captive Insurance | No Comments

The IRS has lost 3 major insurance tax cases in the last 2 years. This is very favorable for businesses who are benefiting from the use of captive insurance companies. The author suggests the burden of proof required for the IRS to modify tax reporting positions of captive insurance companies is getting more difficult, especially for US licensed and regulated 831(b) captive insurance companies.

Insert below: October 1, 2015 article of Sean King – click here to read the original article.

IRS Loses Another Case With Bearing On The Captive Insurance Industry – The RVI Guaranty Case

Last week, the IRS lost what is at least its third major insurance case in two years in U.S. Tax Court.  The case is titled R.V.I. GUARANTY CO., LTD. & SUBSIDIARIES, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent, and it comes on the heels of two major losses in captive insurance cases in 2014, Rent-A-Center (CLICK HERE) and Securitas (CLICK HERE).

While RVI Guaranty was not a captive insurance company, this decision has significant bearing on the captive insurance industry.  The Tax Court answered two key questions in its opinion, and both answers undercut arguments the IRS frequently makes when attacking self-insurance arrangements, captive insurance companies and other non-traditional insurance companies.  The first question is, “What constitutes real insurance?”  And, the second is, “Who gets to decide what constitutes real insurance?”

Brief Overview Of The Case

The U.S. Tax Court held its trial in R.V.I. Guaranty Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner (IRS) to decide whether residual value insurance policies are insurance for federal income tax purposes.  R.V.I. Guaranty Co. Ltd. (RVI), argued that its insurance policies in question fit into the insurance regulatory framework.  RVI is an insurer that offers residual value insurance, which protects insureds’ property from unexpected declines in value over the life of a contract.  Specifically,  RVI insures taxpayers engaged in the business of leasing passenger vehicles, commercial real estate, and commercial equipment.  Under the contracts, RVI is obligated to pay the insured the excess of the predicted residual value of the protected asset over the fair market value at the end of the lease.

In 2012 the IRS had issued a notice of deficiency to RVI for 2006 alleging a $55 million underpayment in taxes.  The IRS argued the insurance contracts were not insurance for federal tax purposes.  RVI argued that all state courts that have addressed whether residual value insurance is insurance for state regulatory purposes have decided that it is insurance.  The IRS argued that residual value insurance covers a loss in expectation, which is not an insurance risk.  The Service argued that the case revolves around “pure risk” and “speculative risk.”  The Service also argued that risk distribution generally requires the law of large numbers and does not exist in these types of policies because the types of events that would cause a payout would affect all insureds, not just a few of them. The Court rejected the Service’s arguments and delivered an opinion in favor of the tax payer.

To read the entire case, CLICK HERE.

Arguments Considered By The Tax Court

What Constitutes Real Insurance?

The IRS argued that residual value insurance is not insurance, at least under the circumstances of this case.  Its reasoning as to why is important to owners of captive insurance companies (CICs) because the IRS sometimes attacks CICs using the same lines of attack.

First, the IRS argued that no true insurance arrangement existed because there was no transfer of meaningful risk from the insured to the insurance company.   As it often does in cases involving captive insurance companies, the IRS argued that the insurance company’s low claims frequency, or low “claims ratio” over several years evidenced that RVI assumed insufficient  risk.  The court dismissed this argument on both theoretical and practical grounds.  The court’s theoretical argument was short, simple, and extremely important:

Both parties’ experts analogized the RVI policies to “catastrophic” insurance coverage, which insures against earthquakes, major hurricanes, and other low-frequency, high- severity risks. An insurer may go many years without paying an earthquake claim; this does not mean that the insurer is failing to provide “insurance.” [The IRS’s expert] Mr. Barrett acknowledged that, under many catastrophic coverages, the odds of a loss occurring may be quite low. He was aware of no instance in which an insurance regulator had determined that the risk of loss on a policy of direct insurance was too “remote” for the product to be treated as “insurance.” And respondent offers no plausible metric by which a court could make this assessment.

In short, the court stated unequivocally that, when it comes to insuring low-frequency but high-severity risks, frequency of claims and low claims ratios have very little probative value  in determining the legitimacy of the insurance arrangement.  Neither is a “plausible metric” that supports the IRS’ argument.  Low frequency risks are clearly the proper subject of insurance, and “going many years without paying…a claim” under such policies is to be expected of insurers of these risks.  The court’s conclusion on this point explicitly contradicts one of the IRS’ theories of attack against captive “risk pools”—that low claims ratios or low claims frequency is de facto evidence of a sham.

Second, the IRS argued that RVI did not insure “pure” risks but rather only “speculative risks” (sometimes called “business risks” by the IRS) OR “investment risks” neither of which are, the IRS argued, properly the subject of real insurance arrangements. This is consistent with the IRS’ position in its 2015 “Dirty Dozen” listing where the Service cautioned taxpayers to be careful of captive insurance companies that issue “policies to cover ordinary business risks” as opposed, presumably, to those that cover “pure risks.”

But neither the court nor the IRS’ experts could come up with any principled means of distinguishing between “pure” risk and the other more “speculative” or “investment” types criticized by the IRS in the case and its “Dirty Dozen” release.  The court concluded:

In any event, we find respondent’s attempt to distinguish between a “pure risk” and a “speculative risk” in this setting as essentially metaphysical in nature.

When the court calls your argument “metaphysical”, you can be sure that you are going to lose.  And lose the IRS did.  The court concluded:

[The IRS’s]  efforts to split hairs by disentangling the causes of “loss” are philosophically interesting.  But we do not think they carry much weight in determining whether the RVI policies constitute “insurance” for Federal income tax purposes.

Regarding whether “investment risks” (as characterized  by the IRS) are properly the subject of true insurance arrangements, the court settled things (hopefully) once and for all:

Finally, [the IRS] urges that we find the RVI policies to entail mere “investment risk” by analogizing its policyholders to investors who have purchased put options to protect their stock. The problem with this argument is that the insureds are not investors and the policies are not derivative products. Investors invariably purchase stock in the hope that it will appreciate in value, enabling them to sell the shares for a capital gain. The assets petitioner insured are not investment assets; in the hands of the lessors or finance companies, they are ordinary business assets in the nature of inventory or equipment. The insureds do not acquire these assets expecting them to appreciate in value and be sold to generate gain.

Analogizing the RVI policies to put options, moreover, is little more than a simile. In the real world, put options are typically settled for cash rather than by actual transfer of the underlying shares. At a conceptual level, many insurance products could be likened to put options. A mortgage guaranty policy, for example, could be said to give the policyholder the right to put the mortgage loan to the insurer unless the insurer pays the insured the difference between the remaining balance of the loan (the strike price) and its value on the exercise date. Even a fire insurance policy could be likened to a put on the fire-damaged house that is settled by the insurer’s payment of the damage claim.

For all these reasons, we reject [the IRS’s] contention that the RVI policies involve an uninsurable “investment risk.” These policies were designed and marketed as insurance products. Similar products were sold in the insurance market by other major insurance companies. These policies were undergirded by insurance strength ratings from the major insurance rating agencies. For more than 80 years the courts have recognized that contracts insuring against the risk that property will decline in value can involve “insurance risk.” The types of events that cause losses under these policies closely resemble the events that cause losses under policies of mortgage guaranty and municipal bond insurance. Most importantly, every State in which petitioner does business recognizes these policies as involving insurance risk and regulates them as “insurance.” Respondent is correct that these policies have some features that are atypical of what might be called “standard” insurance policies. But these differences are driven by the economics of the underlying business transaction and do not nullify the existence of “insurance risk.”

Finally, the IRS made its standard “homogeneity” argument (often used against CIC risk pools) suggesting that the pooling of different types of independent risks does not achieve risk distribution (an inherent element of any true insurance arrangement) because, according to the IRS,  “the law of large numbers” does not apply in that context. The IRS argued that for risk distribution to occur, the risks pooled by the insurance company must be the same or very similar in nature—that is, homogenous.

The Court rejected the IRS’s argument on this point, flatly noting the following:

As we have explained previously, losses under RVI policies are caused by fortuitous events outside of its control. And its policies clearly do pool [such] risks to take advantage of the law of large numbers.

The court concluded:

The legal requirement for “insurance” is that there be meaningful risk distribution; perfect independence of risks is not required. See Rent-A-Center, Inc. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 142 T.C. 1, 24 (2014) (“Risk distribution occurs when an insurer pools a large enough collection of unrelated risks (i.e., risks that are generally unaffected by the same event or circumstance”); Harper Group, 96 T.C. at 55, 59-60 (finding sufficient risk distribution where insurer insured numerous unrelated insureds even though the risks “were not statistically independent * * *,but rather were highly correlated”); Gulf Oil Corp., 89 T.C. at 1025 n.9 (stating that sufficient risk distribution may exist if risks are independent “to some minimum extent”). We have no difficulty concluding, as respondent’s expert Mr. Cook ultimately did, that the RVI policies accomplish sufficient risk distribution to be classified as “insurance” for Federal tax purposes.

Thus the court stuck a dagger in the heart of the IRS fallacious argument, often launched at captive risk pools, that true insurance arrangements only pool “homogeneous” risks.  In the court’s mind, a pooling of unrelated risk is sufficient to achieve risk distribution, at least in some contexts.

Who Decides What Constitutes Real Insurance?

Consistent with both the Rent-A-Center and Securitas cases, the Court once again showed great deference to the determination of domicile regulators on these issues and the determination of what constitutes valid insurance.  In deciding whether risk transfer occurred in the RVI case, the court said:

[The IRS’s expert] was aware of no instance in which an insurance regulator had determined that the risk of loss on a policy of direct insurance was too “remote” for the product to be treated as “insurance.” And respondent offers no plausible metric by which a court could make this assessment.

In deciding that certain types of investment risk are properly the subject of valid insurance arrangements, the court noted:

Most importantly, every State in which petitioner does business recognizes these policies as involving insurance risk and regulates them as “insurance.”

Why did the court give such deference to state regulators in defining insurance?  Well, the court tells us why:

Congress has delegated to the states the exclusive authority (subject to exception) to regulate the business of insurance.” AMERCO, 96 T.C. at 42 (citing the McCarran-Ferguson Act, 59 Stat. 33, as amended, 15 U.S.C. secs. 1011-1015 (1998)). We have repeatedly emphasized the significance of State insurance regulation in determining whether an entity should be recognized as an “insurance company.” See Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Commissioner, 96 T.C. 61, 101 (1991), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, 972 F.2d 858 (7th Cir. 1992); Harper Group, 96 T.C. at 60; AMERCO, 96 T.C. at 42; Securitas Holdings, T.C. Memo. 2014-225, at *5-6.

The “exclusive authority” vested in the states to “regulate the business of insurance” almost certainly includes (within reasonable limits) the ability to define the term, else that authority is largely meaningless.

And this may be the most significant and under appreciated (so far) import of the court’s ruling:  The court’s reliance on state regulators in this case was so extensive and so consistent that one might be forgiven for concluding that the burden of proof in such matters has now shifted to IRS.  Where the taxpayer makes out a prima facie case demonstrating that the states have characterized a certain arrangement as one of “insurance,” or  a certain corporation as a “insurance company,” the IRS will seemingly be required to offer up much evidence to prove the contrary.  In this case it was not up to the challenge.

Conclusion

The RVI Guaranty Case is a significant win for the taxpayers, captive insurance companies and businesses that are served by non-traditional risk management approaches.  The ruling by the Court is broadly worded and completely undermines the IRS’ attempts to draw an artificial distinction between “insurance” risks on one hand and “business” or “speculative” or “investment” risks on the other.  The ruling also bolstered the position of many re-insurance (or risk distribution) pools commonly employed by small captive insurance companies.  Finally, it is clear that insurance policies and companies approved by state insurance regulators will, in the absence of significant proof to the contrary, generally be respected by the Tax Court.  A well-managed captive insurance company in a well-regulated domicile is clearly on an even stronger footing today than it was two weeks ago.

Insert below: October 8, 2015 article of Sean King – click here to read the original article.

Has The Burden Of Proof Shifted To The IRS In Captive Insurance Cases – The RVI Guaranty Case – Part 2

When you think of legal catch-phrases in America, what comes to mind?  If you enjoy watching police detective shows, you may be thinking, “You have the right to remain silent…anything you say may be used against you in a court of law.”  And, here is another legal phrase anchored firmly in the Constitution and the U.S. legal tradition: “Innocent until proven guilty.”

It’s very easy to take this fundamental right of presumed innocence for granted.  Nevertheless, our rights as citizens are turned on their heads when it comes to tax law and civil disputes with the IRS.  You may or may not be aware that taxpayers are not presumed innocent in court when the IRS has determined via audit that the taxpayer underpaid taxes.  When the Service issues a Notice of Deficiency, the burden of proof falls on the taxpayer to demonstrate their innocence or compliance with U.S. tax laws.

The burden of proof determines who wins the case in the absence of evidence.  Said another way, if the IRS has issued a Notice of Deficiency after an audit, the case goes to tax court, and neither the IRS nor the taxpayer offer up any factual evidence to the court, the IRS automatically wins.  In the absence of proof the government wins, hence the “burden of proof” is on the taxpayer.

However, when it comes to insurance companies, the tax court seems (thanks to the RVI case) to be on the verge of adopting a shifting burden of proof, thus making things more challenging for the IRS going forward.

Last week, we reported that the IRS lost what is at least its third major insurance case in two years in U.S. Tax Court.  The case is titled R.V.I. GUARANTY CO., LTD. & SUBSIDIARIES, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent.

To, to read the RVI Guaranty case in its entirety, CLICK HERE.

While RVI Guaranty was not a captive insurance company, this decision has significant bearing on the captive insurance industry, as discussed in last week’s report.  But, perhaps the most significant and most under-appreciated (so far) import of the court’s ruling in the RVI case was the court’s explicit reliance on the determinations of state regulators as to the definitions of “insurance” and “insurance company”.  This reliance was so extensive and so consistent that, once the taxpayer made out a prima facie case that the arrangement qualifies as “insurance” under state laws, or that a given insurance company is recognized and regulated as such under state laws, the court seemingly shifted the burden of proof to the IRS to prove the contrary.

For instance, in resolving question of whether the RVI policies transferred enough risk to RVI to be treated as a true insurance arrangement under Federal tax law, the court said:

“[The IRS’s expert witness] was aware of no instance in which an insurance regulator had determined that the risk of loss on a policy of direct insurance was too ‘remote’ for the product to be treated as ‘insurance’.  And [the IRS] offers no plausible metric by which a court could make this assessment.”

This quote is enlightening because, in its Notice of Determination, the IRS hadalready made the determination that insufficient risk was transferred and that the arrangement was not therefore “insurance”.  And, because the burden of proof in such matters is on the taxpayer, that determination should be deemed correct unless the taxpayer offers up sufficient proof to the contrary.  The Service was under no obligation to “offer [the court a] plausible metric by which the court could make this assessment”, and yet the court chastised it for failing to do so. Why?

Time and again, on issue after issue, the court seemingly accepted the findings of state insurance regulators, offered up by the taxpayer, as sufficient to meet the taxpayer’s initial burden of proof on the contested matters. Once state insurance regulators contradicted the Notice of Determination, the court no longer gave it deference by presuming its findings correct.  In fact, the court began insisting that, to win, the IRS must overcome the determinations of state insurance regulators by offering up compelling evidence of its own.  When it failed to do so, the taxpayer won.

True, the taxpayer offered up lots of proof other than just the findings of state insurance regulators, and the court took that other evidence into account, but it usually did so only to the extent needed to contradict the limited and inconsistent evidence offered by the IRS. The flow of the court’s analysis was:

Court:  In the absence of additional evidence, IRS wins.

Taxpayer:  Judge, here’s uncontested evidence that state insurance regulators deemed this to be a legitimate insurance arrangement.

Court:  IRS, the taxpayer is right, and since the states are empowered to regulate insurance, I’m inclined to rule for the taxpayer. The burden is now on you to prove state regulator’s wrong.  What say you?

IRS:  Judge, state regulators are wrong on this because of X, Y, and Z.

Court:  Taxpayer, what say you to that?

Taxpayer:  Judge, X is not X, Y is not Y, and Z is not Z.  The IRS’ evidence is therefore insufficient to overcome the presumption that the state insurance regulators are correct and this is real insurance.

Court:  I agree.  Taxpayer wins.

Conclusion

The ruling by the Court in RVI is broadly worded and appears to have shifted the burden of proof from the taxpayer to the IRS in circumstances where state insurance regulators have determined that legitimate insurance exists. In future tax court cases involving issues of defining insurance and insurance companies, it may be sufficient for taxpayers to point to the determinations of state insurance regulators in these matters, thus establishing a rebuttable presumption of legitimacy that the IRS must overcome with significant contrary evidence.  In the absence of such evidence, the taxpayer is likely to win.

In addition to licensing captive insurance companies, approving business plans and approving all insurance policies written, many domiciles also regulate, examine or approve risk distribution pools (re-insurance arrangements) often employed by smaller captives to achieve risk distribution.  Industry pundits have suggested the IRS might attack risk distribution pools using many of the same theories rejected by the tax court in RVI.  If the thesis of this article is correct, the IRS will have its work cut out for it when it seeks to attack pools that have been specifically vetted and found legitimate by state insurance regulators.

 

DISCLAIMER: The above articles are opinion of the author Sean King. Captive Experts, LLC is not and cannot provide any tax or legal guidance or opinions. Tom Cifelli also is not providing any tax or legal advice regarding this article or any other information on this website or in articles he authors as part of this website or on any affilaite website such as www.CaptiveExperts.com.

Tax Benefits of a Captive Insurance Company Could Be Lost if Improper Business Purpose or Failing Economic Substance Test

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Read this excellent primer article written by two leading captive insurance lawyers on the importance of the business purpose test and what the IRS seems to be looking for when they are concerned about whether or not a captive insurance company was created for the right reasons, by clicking here.

Click here to read more about the new Economic Substance Test and its relation to business purpose in forming a captive and other complex transactions with significant tax benefits associated with them.

How to pick the right captive manager

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Selecting the right captive manager for your project is perhaps the most important decision you can make when deciding to form an affiliate captive insurance company. The range of quality between managers varies greatly. In the micro-captive industry, paying more does not assure you of quality either.

We recommend requesting a free preliminary captive assessment, or pre-feasibility study. This can provide you not only with an exact proposal of start-up and ongoing operational expenses of your captive, but will give you some ideas to the quality of analysis and responsiveness of communications with a manager.

COMPETING CAPTIVE MANAGEMENT FIRM TYPICAL FEES AND COSTS

Click here for information on the typical fees charged by experienced mid-sized to large captive managers.

IMPACT OF RISK POOLING ON FEES

If 3rd party risk pooling is a required part of your captive design to follow IRS guidance for qualifying your captive as an insurance company for federal income tax purposes, and/or to reduce risk of high severity losses retained solely by your captive, and thereby reducing volatility of losses in your captive program, be sure to inquire of your prospective manager the type of risk pooling facility they utilize, the associated costs, and the collateral elements of the risk pooling facility program. You can learn more about risk pool programs by visiting www.CaptiveRiskPool.com.

MAIN CAPTIVE MANAGER SERVICES AND SKILLS NEEDED

A written engagement agreement controls every captive management relationship. No two managers have identical engagement agreements; in fact they vary widely and it is very unreliable to compare management service price quotes until you get confirmation in writing of exactly what services and outside costs are included. Also it is important to discuss a manager’s operating policies and procedures and the timing of those activities. You may find when talking to a captive management firm’s business development team that they do not really know that much about the details of operations post formation as typically they do not have any related hands on experience.

Here is a list of the main management functions typically needed after formation (formation stage essentially entails the captive design, creation and licensing):

  • insurance contract management (invoice, prepare policies, and manage policies)
  • captive accounting (creation and maintenance of accounting system)
  • bank and investment account review (assist with opening bank and investment accounts, and reconciling such accounts monthly)
  • claims management (whether directly or with involvement of a TPA, most management agreements include claims investigation, processing and payment)
  • fronting, surplus, pooling, reinsurance arrangements (managers typically coordinate involvement with other insurance companies and captives that may be part of your captive program)
  • investment guidance
  • regulatory reporting and exams (filing required reports with domicile regulators and assisting with any examinations)
  • actuarial assistance (engaging and working with actuaries)
  • financial audit assistance (identifying and working with outside financial auditors)
  • tax preparation (identify and assist with completion of income and other required tax returns by a 3rd party tax preparer)
  • corporate secretarial services (assisting with board and shareholder meetings and maintenance of a corporate book)
  • distributions and unusual transactions (sometimes managers assist with loans, capital financing arrangements, dividend approval, and wind up of captives but often for extra fees or with involvement of outside legal service providers)

TYPES OF CAPTIVE MANAGERS

These three (3) basic types of captive managers.

Broker/managers, the largest group by number of captives, have resources for integrating traditional insurance products, fronting, reinsurance, and third-party administration (TPAs) into the program. Fees can be difficult to compare and determine as brokers tend to spread costs internally without revealing them.

A few lawyers, banks, accounting firms, and claims firms have become managers in order to feed their other lines of business. These structures can be restrictive to the captive’s operations and often result in added costs for services typically included by full service independent firms.

Independent firms also come in a variety of shapes, sizes, and competencies.

Each form of manager has its own strengths and weaknesses. One is not necessarily better than another based purely on whether they offer a basket of products and services. So as to not be surprised, and to better understand the focus of your management firm, be sure to ask what related services they offer and whether or not they subsidize formation and management fees expecting to make money elsewhere in the relationship.

For more information visit www.UScaptive.com and www.CaptiveExperts.com.

831(b) Qualifying captive insurance companies – design & tax planning guidance

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Disclaimer: Nothing herein is legal, tax, financial, insurance, accounting or investment advice. The information herein may be dated. No obligation to update or make corrections is intended or implied.

Caution: As use of captives making the 831(b) election has proliferated in recent years, the IRS too is increasing its attention and review of these transactions. IRS Associate Counsel stated the IRS does not want to chill proper use of captives but are concerned about potential abuses. This scrutiny may be warranted. Some captive promoters and managers may not know how to or do not care to follow best practice standards, but rather focus nearly exclusively on the tax benefits of captive structures. Some may lack the requisite risk management experience to design and manage them first and foremost as legitimate and effective risk management vehicles. Shortcomings in some programs may relate to weak or questionable practices regarding risk assessment, policy selection, policy pricing, policy periods, and risk pools that may not be designed and operated correctly themselves.

INTRODUCTORY BACKGROUND

Technically there is no such thing as an 831(b) captive. 831(b) is a reference to U.S. Code, Title 26, Subtitle A, Chapter 1, Subchapter L, Part II, section 831, subsection (b), of the United States Internal Revenue Code, titled “Alternative tax for certain small companies.” Therefore 831 (b) applies only to insurance companies that are US taxpayers. You can read this 831(b) statute on the Cornell University website by clicking here.

The following chart lays out the bigger picture of the tax impacts of a captive insurance company in “for profit” enterprise groups:

Captive Tax Impacts

IRC 831(b), providing for exemption from income tax of a qualifying small insurance company’s underwriting income, is a US tax code provision enacted as part of the 1986 Tax Reform Act by Congress during President Ronald Reagan’s 2nd term. At this time the US insurance markets were a very “hard” market, meaning affordable insurance was expensive and for many companies and professionals difficult if not impossible to find. Section 831(b) specifically created a powerful tax incentive for the formation and operation of small insurance companies.  It helps US businesses create loss reserves with formalized insurance programs under their control. This tax incentive is valuable to make sure US businesses will hopefully never again find themselves in the disastrous commercial insurance market conditions existing in the mid-1980s that left 1000s of US businesses without adequate protection from or liquidity to survive high severity operational risks.

This section 831(b) election is available to qualifying insurance companies who timely make the necessary election; otherwise applicable taxes dictated by section 831(a) applies to all insurance companies except life insurance companies. All US insurance companies, whether electing 831(b) benefits or not, must file IRS tax form 1120-PC (click here to see the form, or click here to see instructions).

Section 831(b) (2) (A) limits its application only to insurance companies if:

  • The greater of net written premiums or direct written premiums do not exceed $1,200,000 in the taxable year, and
  • Such company elects the application of section 831(b) for such taxable year.

There is some disagreement and confusion on the interpretation of “written premium” in a taxable year. Some believe it is measured on a cash basis reading the statute literally, others think accrual methods control particularly where tax returns are prepared that way. The author does not believe there is yet definitive guidance.

Various Names Used for Small Captives

Increasingly the term “micro-captive” was used to describe these small 831(b) election qualifying captives from 2009 into 2014, hence why it is incorporated into the title of this book. As of 2014 the term “enterprise risk captive,” coined by some of the leadership at SIIA, is emerging as the preferred description. Suffice it to say technically there is no such thing really as a micro-captive, or an 831(b) captive, or even an enterprise risk captive.

Captives are all unique (when designed properly) and are nothing more than an insurance company licensed under an enabling insurance statute in the US or abroad whether large or small and irrespective of the types of insurance coverage it is designed to issue. Being an insurance company for US tax purposes is distinct from being a licensed insurance company for insurance regulatory purposes. Just because your captive receives approval and a license to conduct its insurance business does not mean the IRS must agree it can avail itself of favorable tax incentives and treatment afforded an insurance company under the US Internal Revenue Code.

Learn more by reading this inexpensive eBook – “831(b) Enterprise Risk Micro-Captive Insurance Companies – Design and Tax Planning Guidance.”

Also visit these leading websites: www.UScaptive.com and www.CaptiveExperts.com

For information on best practice standards today in the micro-captive industry, read this article.

Why all 831(b) Micro-Captives Need a Strategic Review

By | Captive Best Practice Standards, Captive strategic reviews | No Comments

BACKGROUND ON STRATEGIC REVIEWS OF CLOSELY HELD CAPTIVE INSURANCE COMPANIES

Feasibility studies are common in the captive industry as part of the formation process. “Refeasibility study” is a newly coined term meaning taking a fresh look to see if you would make the same decisions now. Frankly “refeasibility” is a silly term. Well managed captives following best practices do a “refeasibility” study at least annually anyway, as part of the “renewal” procedure we recommend and feel should be part of all base management fees. Annual renewals, done correctly, almost invariably lead to business plan changes resulting in modifications to lines of cover and policy rating.

GOING BEYOND FEASIBILITY STUDIES AND CAPTIVE RENEWALS

Strategic reviews go beyond feasibility, refeasibility or annual renewal procedure studies. For one they should be conducted by a fresh pair of eyes. And they should have a scope beyond an actuarial peer review.

Strategic reviews should look at all existing documentation, including processes and procedures, financial condition, reports (financial, regulatory and tax), contractual relationships, everything available relating to the captive since inception, and identifies all weaknesses and areas needing improvement. A strategic review’s main objective is to identify any potential problem areas that might arise during a regulatory or tax examination of the captive.

The reason strategic reviews are not common is captive managers guard their processes and procedures and documentation very closely. They do so out of competitive spirit as well as insecurity.

Owners of captives should be the one making a decision to hire someone to do a voluntary strategic review, and demand the manager cooperate and provide all needed documentation if not already in the owner’s possession (as it should be via shared secure dedicated server or a cloud storage service facility).

BEST TIME FOR CONDUCTING STRATEGIC REVIEWS

The slowest time of year for most captive managers seems to be the June through August time period. This would be a good time to conduct a strategic review. This would also seem allow sufficient time to address any findings of concern by year end.

SCOPE OF STRATEGIC REVIEWS

Every strategic review engagement is uniquely customized. The exact scope should be articulated in the engagement agreement.

We have done general “clean up” testing strategic reviews for captive managers which merely involved reviewing client databases to see if core documentation connected to formations was properly stored and easily retrieved in client files. Deficiencies are not uncommon from the early years as a manager since many managers in their early years lacked staff depth and expertise compared to today. Earlier year client project files are often not documented to the same degree of quality and scope as more recent captive project may be. This type of strategic review helps bring older client captive documentation standards up to current practice standards if possible. Many management firms have grown fast and are busy; full time internal staff often simply lack time, or expertise, to do this type of special project work.

We recommend every strategic review initiated by an owner (verses by the management firm to get a second and outside opinion on the quality of their program and staff work product) consider having part of its scope be development of a RFQ (Request For Quote) component if the owner is considering either changing managers (possibly creating a new captive and winding down an old one no longer deemed adequate for any of many reasons that may surface during a strategic review) or looking for engagement renewal negotiation strength.

For information on best practice standards today in the micro-captive industry, read this article.

For more information visit www.UScaptive.com and www.CaptiveExperts.com