Spring Canyon Coal Co. v. Commissioner

SPRING CANYON COAL CO., PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.
Spring Canyon Coal Co. v. Commissioner
Docket Nos. 23902, 25743.
United States Board of Tax Appeals
13 B.T.A. 189; 1928 BTA LEXIS 3295;
August 2, 1928, Promulgated

*3295 The amounts reserved by the petitioner for self-insurance pursuant to resolution of the Industrial Commission of Utah are not deductible in computing net taxable income.

Charles D. Hamel, Esq., and Benjamin H. Saunders, Esq., for the petitioner.
Arthur H. Murray, Esq., for the respondent.

MORRIS

*189 These proceedings are for the redetermination of deficiencies of $31,675.47, $35,766.61, and $15,246.50, for the calendar years 1920, 1921, and 1922, respectively.

Upon motion of counsel at the hearing of these proceedings, Docket No. 23902, embracing the years 1920 and 1921, and Docket No. 25743, covering the calendar year 1922, were consolidated for joint hearing and consideration.

*190 The sole question for consideration is whether the petitioner is entitled to deduct the amounts paid by it into a welfare or compensation insurance fund in the computation of net income for the years 1920, 1921, and 1922.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The petitioner was organized under the laws of the State of Utah, July 27, 1912, and has been at all times engaged in the business of mining coal in the so-called Carbon County field.

The State of Utah*3296 in 1917 enacted the Workmen's Compensation Law, and at the same time and by the said Act created the Industrial Commission of Utah to administer and enforce the provisions of the said Act. Under the provisions of section 3114, Compiled Laws of Utah, 1917, all employers were required to secure compensation to their employes in one of the following ways:

(1) By insuring and keeping insured the payment of such compensation with the state insurance fund.

(2) By insuring and keeping insured the payment of such compensation, with any stock corporation or mutual association authorized to transact the business of workmen's compensation insurance in the state; provided, that any such stock corporation or mutual association must write and carry all risks or insurance for which application may be made to it, which are not prohibited by the provisions of Section 1148, Compiled Laws of Utah, 1917, and any carrier assuming a risk shall carry it to the conclusion of the policy period unless cancellation is agreed to by the Industrial Commission and the employer; and, provided, that any policy written shall be subject to cancellation at any time by the legislature.

(3) By furnishing annually*3297 to the commission satisfactory proof of financial ability to pay direct the compensation in the amount and manner and when due as provided for in this Act. In the latter case, the commission may in its discretion require the deposit of acceptable security, indemnity or bond to secure the payment of compensation liabilities as they are incurred, provided, the Industrial Commission of Utah may at any time change or modify its findings of fact herein provided for, if in its judgment such action is necessary or desirable to secure or assure a strict compliance with all the provisions of the law in reference to the payment of compensation and the furnishing of medical, nurse, and hospital services, medicines and burial expenses to injured and the dependents of killed employes.

By virtue of its hazardous undertaking petitioner is required by the Act above cited to carry compensation insurance for all of its employees. Prior to July 1, 1919, petitioner was insured in the State Insurance Fund.

On or about July 1, 1919, petitioner elected, pursuant to the provisions of sections 3114 and 3124, Compiled Laws of Utah, 1917, to become a self-insurer and made application to the Industrial*3298 Commissioner for permission to carry its compensation on such basis. Said application was formally approved by the Commission and a *191 certificate of authority issue to the petitioner under date and as of July 1, 1919, which reads as follows:

This certifies that The Spring Canyon Coal Company has furnished to The Industrial Commission of Utah satisfactory proof of financial ability to pay direct the compensation, in the amount and manner and when due, as provided for in Chapter 100, Laws of Utah, 1917, known as the Workmen's Compensation Act, by filing with this Commission Surety Bond in the sum of $50,000.00, and the Industrial Commission of Utah hereby grants the application of the said Spring Canyon Coal Company for the self-insuring privilege, subject to the proper posting of notices and a full compliance with the rules of the Commission.

This privilege is subject to revocation at any time.

THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION OF UTAH,

P. A. THATCHER, Chairman.

The petitioner thereupon established a welfare or compensation insurance fund and together with two other coal-mining companies operating in the aforesaid field, employed one F. D. Brown, who had then recently*3299 resigned from the office of Secretary of the Utah Industrial Commission, to assume charge of all administrative duties in connection with the handling of said fund established by the petitioner and the funds established by the two other coal-mining companies aforesaid. The said Brown organized and set up a complete organization and system for the purpose of carrying out the objects for which the fund was established. The funds paid the said Brown by the petitioner and the two other coal companies referred to were not commingled but were administered by the said Brown as separate and district funds.

Brown immediately set up a separate office of his own for such purpose and since then the welfare or compensation insurance funds and affairs in connection with personal compensation and industrial injury cases of the said three companies have been personally administered by him. At the close of each month, beginning with the month of July, 1919, the said Brown examined the pay rolls of the petitioner and determined the amount of the premium which petitioner would have been required to pay were it carrying its insurance with the State Insurance Fund, and rendered a statement of the*3300 amount due. Petitioner thereupon said to the said Brown by check the amount of such premium, which check was endorsed by the said Brown and deposited to the credit of the Spring Canyon Welfare Fund in the Knight Trust & Savings Bank at Provo, Utah. The fund thus established by petitioner was at all times conserved and kept intact by the said Brown, and used only for the purpose of satisfying allowable compensation and personal injury claims arising against the petitioner, and the payment of necessary expenses in connection with the administration thereof.

*192 On November 19, 1920, the said Commission issued a special order to the petitioner designated "Resolution No. 84," which reads as follows:

WHEREAS, this Commission has previously authorized the Spring Canyon Coal Company to pay compensation in the amount and manner and when due, as provided for in the Workmen's Compensation Act of this State, direct to its employes and become what is known as a self insurer; and

WHEREAS, at the time such permission was granted, informal instructions were given to said company to set up reserves for the purpose of such payments in an amount equal to the premiums that would be paid*3301 if said company were insured in The State Insurance Fund; and

WHEREAS, the nature of the business engaged in by said Spring Canyon Coal Company, being that of mining coal, is generally regarded as an extremely hazardous occupation; and

WHEREAS, it is the desire of this Commission, in every reasonable respect, to protect injured employes who might be entitled to the benefits of the Compensation Act: Now, THEREFORE,

BE IT RESOLVED, that the Spring Canyon Coal Company be and it is hereby ordered to set aside an amount of money equal to that which would be required as premiums from said Company was it insured with The State Insurance Fund, said amount to be used for the payment of compensation medical and other benefits of the Workmen's Compensation Act and for such incidental expenses as may be necessary for the proper administration and carrying out of such requirements; and be it

FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Spring Canyon Coal Company be and it is hereby ordered to continue to set up such reserves until the further action of this Commission either modifying or annuling this Order; and be it

FURTHER RESOLVED that the Secretary of this Commission be and she is hereby ordered to*3302 transmit copies of this Resolution to the parties interested.

The foregoing Resolution No. 84 as thus promulgated by the Commission was not thereafter modified or changed and has ever since stood in full force and effect.

The petitioner has at all times since July 1, 1919, continued to make payments, computed as aforesaid, to the said Welfare or Compensation Insurance Fund. No part of the said fund has ever been used or appropriated for any purpose except as contemplated and expressly provided for in the UtahWorkmen's Compensation Act. Payments of all compensation and personal injury claims properly arising against the petitioner were made from said fund by the said Brown, and, pursuant to the requirements of the Commission, a detailed report of all such transactions was promptly furnished to the Commission. Whatever earnings accrued to the fund were added thereto and became a part thereof.

In the balance sheets of the petitioner for the year 1921 and subsequent years, the balance remaining in the fund has been reflected as an asset and a corresponding amount reflected as a reserve for Workmen's Compensation Insurance, and was therefore not included in the surplus on the*3303 books of the petitioner in any amount for the *193 taxable years in controversy. Nor has the said fund been claimed in any part by the petitioner as invested capital for any of the taxable years in question.

The said Welfare or Compensation Insurance Fund, together with all additions thereto, has been included by the respondent as a part of petitioner's invested capital for the taxable years 1920 and 1921, the only years for which invested capital was a factor in computing income and profits taxes after the said fund was established.

Pursuant to the provisions of sections 3125 and 1135, Compiled Laws of Utah, 1917, the said Brown as manager and custodian of the aforesaid fund paid into the State Treasury of the State of Utah a tax equivalent to one and one-half per cent of all amounts thus paid into the said Welfare or Compensation Insurance Fund by the petitioner.

After making payment of all compensation and other allowable claims properly determined and falling due within the year, pursuant to and in conformity with the provisions of the UtahWorkmen's Compensation Act and the orders of the Industrial Commission, together with the necessary expense of administering*3304 said Welfare or Compensation Insurance Fund, the net addition thereto made by petitioner amounted to $30,407.97 for the year 1920, $28,365.67 for the year 1921, and $12,130.26 for the year 1922.

In determining the amount of net income subject to taxation for the years 1920, 1921, and 1922, petitioner deducted as an ordinary and necessary expense the sum of $30,407.97 for the year 1920, $28,365.67 for the year 1921, and $12,130.26 for the year 1922, respectively, referred to in the preceding paragraph.

In determining the deficiency tax in controversy the respondent refused to allow as a deduction the amounts specified in the preceding paragraph, to wit: $30,407.97 for the year 1920, $28,365.67 for the year 1921, and $12,130.26 for the year 1922.

OPINION.

MORRIS: Before passing to the specific question raised it might be well to consider briefly the Workmen's Compensation Act. The compensation provided for in the act is not to be considered in the sense of damages for injuries sustained; It is precisely what the term implies; namely, compensation, pure and simple. *3305 . In , the court clearly sets out the purposes of the Act.

The recent history of the enactment of the law in question justifies the court in saying that the recognized and known intent of the legislature was to secure compensation to injured employees, or to their dependents in case of *194 death, whether such injury or death resulted from the negligence of the employer or was purely accidental. Also it was the intent to secure such compensation without delay, and without the expense and annoyance of a suit at law. An administrative body, to wit, the commission, was created primarily to enable injured employees, or dependents of such employees when death ensues, to obtain such relief without delay, and without having to resort to the uncertainties and expense of litigation.

In order to secure the payment of such compensation the statute provides for three methods, insurance in the state insurance fund, insurance in a stock or mutual association and self insurance, the last named method being*3306 the one selected by the petitioner.

An employer selecting the self insurance method is relieved of the payment of premiums to an insurance carrier and is only subjected to the payment of such compensation as may become due its employees under the terms of the Act. If no accident occurs, no payment is required. . In order, however, to protect injured employees which might be entitled to the benefits of the Act, the Industrial Commission ordered the petitioner to set aside a reserve equal to the premiums it would have to pay it is insured in the State Insurance Fund. It is the net addition to this reserve that occasions the present controversy.

The petitioner contends that the amounts set aside constituted a trust fund and that payments thereto represent ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in its business; that the continuing payments to said fund, being required by law, are deductible as ordinary and necessary expenses in the computation of net taxable income, and that it is an insurance company for the purpose of paying workmen's compensation insurance and is entitled to deduct*3307 additions to the fund, as a reserve required by law, in the computation of its net taxable income. The respondent, on the other hand, contends that there is no authority under the revenue acts for such deductions as are contended for by the petitioner; that the amounts set aside by the petitioner are not "required by law to be made within the taxable year to reserve funds"; that the amounts sought to be deducted are not allowable as ordinary and necessary expenses under the provisions of section 234(a)(1) of the Revenue Acts of 1918 and 1921; and, furthermore, that the fund so set aside, as required by resolution of the Industrial Commission of Utah, is not a trust fund and the net additions thereto are not deductible as ordinary and necessary expenses in the computation of net taxable income.

If the amounts sought to be deducted by the petitioner are deductible at all, authority therefor must be found in subdivision (a)(1) or (10) of section 234 of the Revenue Acts of 1918 and 1921, which provide (except for slight modifications found in the Act of 1921 not applicable here), as follows:

*195 (a) That in computing the net income of a corporation subject to the tax imposed*3308 by section 230 there shall be allowed as deductions:

(1) All the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business, including a reasonable allowance for salaries or other compensation for personal services actually rendered, * * *

* * *

(10) In the case of insurance companies, in addition the above: (a) The net addition required by law to be made within the taxable year to reserve funds (including in the case of assessment insurance companies the actual deposit of sums with State or Territorial officers pursuant to law as additions to guarantee or reserve funds); and (b) the sums other than dividends paid within the taxable year on policy and annuity contracts.

We have, on several occasions, considered the deductibility of amounts reserved for self insurance, and have uniformly held that said amounts are not deductible. In , the taxpayer assumed certain insurance risks itself and charged to its profits for the year 1918 amounts equal to the premiums that would ordinarily be paid to insurance companies on the basis of quoted rates, and it deducted those amounts*3309 in the computation of its net taxable income for that year. The Board there, following the reasoning in ; ; and , said:

The taxpayer also urges that it is improper to discriminate between one who pays premiums to an insurer and one who bears his own risk. The difference is one of fact; in the one case the expense of premiums is paid or incurred and in the other it is not. The discrimination, if such it be, is self-imposed. Since the statute does not permit a taxpayer to deduct as an expense an amount which he fears he may some day be called upon to spend, there can be no sanction for such a deduction.

In ; also , owing to fire hazard and the extraordinary risk involved in the petitioner's business, no insurance company would accept insurance liability on its properties, and during 1919 the taxpayer set aside, out of its income, amounts representing the minimum premium which it would have been obliged to*3310 pay if an insurance company would have assumed the risk. The Board, following , said:

It may be conservative accounting to set aside a portion of the income to a fund out of which a fire may be provided against in advance, but deductions permitted by the law in determining the taxable net income present a quite different question. The amount of the reserve does not constitute an ordinary and necessary business expense and is therefore not deductible.

In , petitioner, prior to 1916, carried liability insurance, but, by reason of a controversy which it had with the insurance company it ceased to do so and in lieu thereof, deposited certain amounts with a trustee as a reserve for liabilities *196 growing out of accidents to employees. In 1918 it deposited in said reserve $15,838.91, and during that year paid out to injured employees $6,248.67. The taxpayer there deducted the entire amount so deposited in the computation of net income subject to tax, and the respondent disallowed all except the amount actually paid during the year, or $6,248.67, and the Board said in upholding*3311 his action, "Such a reserve is not authorized by the Revenue Act of 1918." In , the petitioner claimed a deduction for reserves set aside for casualties and damages during the fiscal years ended June 30, 1920, and 1921, and the Board upheld the respondent's disallowance of those deductions.

The attitude of this Board with respect to deductions claimed on account of self-insurance is well settled by the foregoing decisions. The petitioner contends, however, that its case is not controlled by the above cases but is on all fours with, and controlled entirely by the decision in . In that case the taxpayer submitted to its employees a proposition for the establishment of a pension fund, which was accepted by the employees and the taxpayer, and a fund known as "Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co. Pension Fund" was created. Rules and regulations were promulgated, governing the operation and conduct of said pension fund, in which it was provided that a pension committee of seven should be created, consisting of the president and vice president of the taxpayer, *3312 three directors thereof, and two employees; that each employee specified in those regulations should contribute to the said fund a sum equal to 2 per cent of his annual salary, not exceeding $60 per annum, to be deducted quarterly from the payment of such salary, and that the taxpayer should contribute each quarter a sum equal to the aggregate payments by the employees during the same period. The rules and regulations vested in the appointed committee full power and authority to do all acts necessary to carry out the objects of the fund and the question of capacity or incapacity of any employee was entirely within the discretion of the pension committee. The pension fund committee established and maintained a deposit account in the name of "Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co. Pension Fund," and funds were withdrawn from that account only upon checks signed with the name of that fund. Separate books of account were kept for the pension fund and the general books of the taxpayer in no manner reflected any interest in the fund. The taxpayer there contended that there was a valid trust relationship created between itself and its employees, and that it was thereafter a separate taxable*3313 entity, and payments made to it were deductible in the computation of net income as ordinary and necessary expenses of carrying on its business. The Board there, after having concluded from *197 the facts and circumstances that there was a valid trust, held that the payments made by the taxpayer to the fund were ordinary and necessary expenses of conducting its business.

While the instant case and the Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co. case have many points of similarity, we are constrained to believe that the major points of distinction preclude the adoption of the doctrine laid down therein. There is no evidence in the instant case, as there was in that case, of an agreement, either written or oral, between the petitioner and its employees, looking forward to the establishment of a trust fund, nor can we find from the act of the petitioner in establishing the said fund that there was any intent to create a trust of the amount set aside pursuant to the order of the Industrial Commission of Utah. If a trust was established it must have been by the voluntary action of the petitioner. The only thing required by the Industrial Commission was that a reserve be set aside. *3314 The petitioner attaches great importance to that order as proving the creation of a trust and distinguishing this case from the preceding cases of self insurance which have come before us. We can not agree with such a conclusion. The employer is the one against whom jurisdiction must be obtained. The right to compensation arises out of the relation existing between employer and employee and the employer is primarily liable for it. . The fact that the Industrial Commission, as a protective measure, directs the establishment of a reserve does not make that fund a trust fund, thus divesting the employer of legal title thereto, nor place it under the control of said commission.

It is true that the amount so reserved was set aside for the exclusive benefit of the employees, if, as, and when casualties in their ranks may occur, and we do not doubt but that the Commission guarded this fund jealously and would have pounced upon the petitioner upon the slightest indication of insolvency or attempt to deplete the fund; but that in our opinion amounts to nothing more than a protective measure*3315 and does not establish a trust. It is well settled that before a trust relationship can be created there must have been an intention to create a trust and the donor or settlor must have expressly or impliedly placed in the trustee absolute legal title to the fund beyond all control, and it is essential that there be a separation of the legal and equitable estates therein. Had the petitioner itself, or the custodian of the fund, violated the provisions of the statute or the resolution of the Industrial Commission, the said Commission would no doubt have compelled it to insure its employees either with the State Insurance Fund or through some stock corporation or mutual association authorized by law to transact such business. *198 We do not believe that the said commission would have sought to impound the fund and have it declared a trust, nor that it would have succeeded in such an attempt, except to the extent that employees who were already injured and whose rights had already arisen under the statute might have been affected.

While the petitioner established a compensation fund and, together with two other coal-mining companies, employed a man in connection with the*3316 handling of said fund, and while he organized and set up a complete organization and a system for the carrying out of the objects of the fund, and deposited the sums paid to him in a separate bank account, we find no satisfactory evidence of a separation of the legal and equitable estates in the amounts set aside. Nor are we satisfied that Brown was any more than a mere employee of the petitioner and, therefore, subject to their orders in all matters appertaining to the fund.

In the Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co. case the amount of the pension fund was in no manner reflected in the books of the taxpayer. In the instant case the amount was carried in the balance sheet of the petitioner as an asset, which was offset by a corresponding reserve for workmen's compensation insurance. While we realize that this factor is not in and of itself determinative of the question under consideration, it is one of the circumstances to be considered in reaching conclusion as to the intention of the parties and the status of their relationship.

While the funds created in both Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co. and the instant case are for the benefit of a class, it is important to note*3317 that here the cestui who is to benefit by the fund is unknown, and unidentified, and can assert no claim until he has been injured in some manner provided for in the Workmen's Compensation Act. In the Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & Co. case, however, the cestui is definitely ascertained and identified as and when contributions are jointly made to the fund by the employer and employee. The obligation in one case arises upon the employee depositing a certain amount in the fund within a given year, whereas the obligation of the petitioner in the instant case to pay sums to its employees may never arise.

While revocability, as was pointed out in , is not inconsistent with the creation of a valid trust, the power to revoke, vested entirely within the petitioner, which may be exercised by it, should it elect to insure in some other manner, is an important consideration in determining the nature of the fund in question.

Considering all the facts and circumstances, we are of the opinion that the amounts in controversy were not paid to a trust fund and *199 that the instant case is not controlled by the doctrine*3318 of

A somewhat similar question arose in the case of , in which the petitioner contended that the amounts which went into the "interest fund" provided for in a city ordinance and which could not be used for the payment of dividends, but only to reduce fares in succeeding years, were ordinary and necessary expenses. We did not agree with that argument and in the course of the opinion used the following language:

* * * The payment that would constitute an expense and, therefore, be deductible, occurs when the fund is used for operating and maintenance costs, and interest charges. There is no return of the fund to the car riders who paid excessive fares, nor is it held in trust to be paid to any one. The most that can be said is that the fares in the succeeding period will be less and a part of the expenses incident to the collection of these fares will be paid out of this interest fund, but until such payments are made or incurred, there has been nothing expensed that would constitute a deduction from gross income. To say that it would be a violation of the ordinance*3319 not to raise or lower fares as the amounts which are accumulated in the "interest fund" indicate that such action should be taken, and that therefore the doing of what the ordinance says is an ordinary and necessary expense, would in effect be saying that whatever a taxpayer is required to do in fulfillment of a contract is an ordinary and necessary expense. Admittedly, it was necessary for the petitioner to comply with the ordinance as a condition to its continuing in business under the franchise, but this does not make amounts required to be retained by it for use in a subsequent year or period an expense item and, therefore, a deduction when it has not in fact been expended. Each year must be dealt with as a unit. We can no more say that the amounts retained in this fund for use in a subsequent year's operation are expenses in the year when retained than we can say that the income of the subsequent year should be increased because a part of the expenses were paid from funds which had been accumulated for this purpose in the prior year. * * *

Petitioner further contends that it is an insurance company for the purpose of paying workmen's compensation insurance to its employees*3320 and that it is, therefore, entitled to deduct additions to the fund as a reserve required by law as provided for in section 234(a)(10), supra. In order for the petitioner to succeed in this contention we must be able to say that it is an insurance company in the intended sense and, secondly, that the net additions made to the reserve are "required by law." We are convinced by reading the articles of incorporation under which the petitioner exists that it can not be any interpretation be regarded as an insurance company within the meaning of section 234(a)(10), supra. It was organized under the laws of the State of Utah in 1912, and, according to its charter, it was empowered to acquire by purchase, lease, exchange or otherwise, coal lands, coal mines, and coal properties, and to develop, operate, manage and control the same. The fact that the *200 state statute permits it to insure its own workmen, in lieu of placing the risk with insurance companies regularly engaged in that business, does not convert a coal-mining business into an insurance business. Nor does the fact that it was compelled by section 3125 of the Compiled Laws of Utah to pay a tax "of the same per*3321 cent as required by law to be paid by insurance companies upon their premiums" change the character of the petitioner's business from coal mining to insurance.

Even assuming that the petitioner should be regarded as an insurance company for our purposes, we still feel that the deduction can not be allowed as a "net addition required by law to be made within the taxable year to reserve funds."

In , the question considered was whether the reserve funds set aside by the taxpayer were the funds "required by law" within the meaning of the statute. The court, after considering the duties and powers of the State Insurance Commissioner under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, said:

It appears that under this legislation, and under previous statutes in force since 1873, the insurance commissioner has required plaintiff and similar companies to return each year, as an item among their liabilities, the net amount of unpaid losses and claims, whether actually adjusted, in process of adjustment, or resisted. And, although this practice has not been sanctioned by any decision of the Supreme Court of the*3322 State, it is relied upon as an administrative interpretation of the law.

Conceding full effect to this, it still does not answer the question whether the amounts required to be held against unpaid losses, in the case of fire and marine insurance companies, are held as "reserves", within the meaning of the Pennsylvania law or of the act of Congress, however that may be designated upon the official forms. As already appears, the Pennsylvania act specifically required debts and claims of all kinds to be included in the statement of liabilities, and treats them as something distinct from reserves. The object is to exercise abundant caution to maintain the companies in a secure financial position.

The act of Congress, on the other hand, deals with reserves not particularly in their bearing upon the solvency of the company, but as they aid in determining what part of the gross income ought to be treated as net income for purposes of taxation. There is a specific provision for deducting "all losses actually sustained within the year and not compensated by insurance or otherwise." And this is a sufficient indication that losses in immediate contemplation, but not as yet actually sustained, *3323 were not intended to be treated as part of the reserve funds; that term rather having reference to the funds ordinarily held as against the contingent liability on outstanding policies.

In our opinion the reserve against unpaid losses is not "required by law", in Pennsylvania, within the meaning of the act of Congress.

See also , in which the court said:

*201 We think , is conclusive of the issue here presented; and appellee's claim must be denied. * * *

It follows from McCoach v. Insurance Co. that the permitted deductions specified by section 12, Act 1916, do not necessarily include anything which may be denominated "reserve fund" by state statute or officer. We there distinctly ruled that the "reserve fund" of the Federal Act did not include something held by a fire and marine insurance company to cover accrued but unsettled claims for losses. We adhere to and reaffirm that doctrine. * * * (Italic supplied.)

See also the language contained in *3324 , with respect to .

The statute of Utah under which the petitioner chose to insure its employees provided for the annual rendition to the Commission of satisfactory proof of financial ability to pay compensation, and it further provided that the Commission may require the deposit of acceptable security to secure the payment of said compensation. There is no requirement in the Utah statute for the setting aside of a reserve such as was required by resolution of the Industrial Commission of Utah, nor do we find anywhere in the statute creating the said Commission authority to require corporations to establish such reserves. Therefore, considering the state statute in the light of , and , we are of the opinion that the amounts sought to be deducted by the petitioner are not reserve funds "required by law" within the meaning of the taxing statute.

Reviewed by the Board.

Judgment will be entered for the*3325 respondent.