[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FILED
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
AUGUST 21, 2000
THOMAS K. KAHN
CLERK
No. 99-12407
D. C. Docket No. 96-09126
CARL J. FABRY,
PATRICIA P. FABRY,
Petitioners,
versus
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
Respondent.
Appeal from a Decision of the United States Tax Court
(August 21, 2000)
Before DUBINA, BLACK and HILL, Circuit Judges.
HILL, Circuit Judge:
This tax case presents a single issue: are damages to business reputation
received in the amount of $500,000 by taxpayers in 19921 in settlement of their tort
action for strict liability and negligence against the manufacturer of an allegedly
defective product properly excludable from gross income under Internal Revenue
Code (IRC) § 104(a)(2) as “damages received . . . on account of personal injuries”?
Under a de novo review, based upon the following, the answer to this question is
yes. The decision of the tax court is reversed.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are straightforward and undisputed. From 1976 to 1988,
taxpayers Patsy and Carl Fabry were the successful operators of an unincorporated
sole proprietorship known as Patsy’s Nursery in Orange County, Florida near
Orlando. They specialized in raising ornamental plants2 and citrus trees. During
1
Since 1996, this question does not arise. IRC § 104(a)(2) was amended by the Small
Business Job Protection Act of 1996. The amendment provides that damages received on
account of a non-physical injury (e.g., age discrimination and injury to reputation) are not
excludable from gross income. This restriction on the exclusion from income of non-physical
damages, however, is generally effective for amounts received after August 20, 1996, but does
not apply to amounts received under any written binding agreement, court decree, or mediation
award in effect on, or issued on or before, September 13, 1995. P.L. 104-188. The amended
section does not apply here.
2
The ornamental plants were wax plants, Hoya Carnosa. Due to the high quality and vivid
color of the wax plants, Patsy Fabry became known in the nursery business as the “Hoya Lady.”
Her success did not go unnoticed. Research papers were written by representatives of the
University of Florida’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Science on growing processes used by
the Fabrys.
2
this period of time, the nursery and the Fabry’s reputation in the agricultural
industry prospered. Their business grew to become that of a large-scale
commercial supplier.
Good times and the Fabrys’ good name suffered change in 1988 when the
Fabrys began to use a chemical fungicide manufactured by E. I. du Pont de
Nemours and Co. (du Pont) on their plants.3 Upon using this fungicide, their plants
began to yellow, leaves were distorted, growth was stunted. Many plants died.
Over the next three years, the Fabrys suffered extensive damage to their nursery
stock, eventually causing them to default on contracts under which they were
obligated to deliver healthy plants. Then, when previously sold plants developed
defects, alleged to be fungicide-related, the death knell struck. The Fabrys’
reputation as respected business persons with expertise in the production and
supply of quality plants was gone.4 They closed the nursery in 1991.
II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
3
Even the field notes of a du Pont representative admit that the Fabrys had established a
premier citrus nursery using state of the art operations.
4
The record very clearly reflects how the Fabrys’ sole proprietorship and their good name
were synonymous, inextricably intertwined. The fungicide contamination had a devastating
impact on both. When the Fabrys sold a plant or a tree, their name was on it. Long-term
customers felt that they could not depend on them anymore and the Fabrys’ word was viewed by
the closely-knit agricultural community as “no good.” They lost friends and withdrew from
trade organizations due to the embarrassment they suffered. In 1996, Mr. Fabry underwent open
heart surgery.
3
A. State Court Action
The Fabrys sued du Pont in state court seeking monetary damages under tort
theories of negligence and strict liability. Their complaint averred that the
fungicide they had used in the nursery was contaminated and that the
contamination caused damage to their plants. They sought damages for lost
profits, lost going concern value and damage to their business reputation.5
Settlement discussions commenced almost immediately. Part of the Fabry’s
initial settlement demand included in part a claim for $500,000 for damages to
their business reputation. The lawsuit was resolved through mediation in 1992.
Du Pont paid taxpayers $3.8 million in exchange for a full release of the claims
asserted in the suit. In their general release, the taxpayers released du Pont from all
claims relating to their use of its fungicide in their nursery between 1988 and 1991,
except, among other things, for claims for damages to crops planted in the future.
Thereafter, the Fabrys filed a notice of voluntary dismissal with prejudice.
B. The Federal Court Action
On their 1992 joint federal income tax return, the Fabrys did not include in
gross income the $500,000 received in settlement of their tort action against du
5
The Fabrys claimed in their first amended complaint that they had “sustained damages in
the form of the lost value of destroyed or injured plants, damage to their business reputation, lost
income and lost value for their business . . . .”
4
Pont attributable to damage to their business reputation. Their rationale was that,
acting in good faith, they had substantial authority and reasonable grounds for their
position that the $500,000 was not taxable income under IRC § 104(a)(2). The
Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (Commissioner) disagreed,
asserting against the taxpayers a tax deficiency of $201,054, plus an accuracy
penalty of $40,211. The Fabrys petitioned the tax court for a redetermination of
both the deficiency and the penalty.
Following trial, the tax court, using a facts and circumstance approach,
found in favor of the Commissioner.6 A final 1992 income tax deficiency against
the taxpayers was computed to be $200,192, with a penalty of $7,088. This appeal
follows.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The interpretation and application by the tax court of a statutory section of
the Internal Revenue Code is a question of law which we review de novo. Atlanta
Athletic Club v. Commissioner, 980 F.2d 1409, 1412 (11th Cir. 1993); Gold Kist v.
6
See also Henry v. Commissioner, 77 T.C.M. (CCH) 2209 (T.C. 1999)(where, relying upon
its opinion in this case, Fabry v. Commissioner, 111 T.C. 305 (1998), the tax court found that the
$1,623,203 payment received in 1994 by the taxpayer, a Florida orchid grower, for loss of
business reputation and loss of business reputation as an orchid grower, in settlement of his
claim for negligence and strict liability in tort against du Pont, after application of its chemical
fungicide on his orchids, was not made “on account of personal injuries” within the meaning of
IRC § 104 (c)(2) and was includable in gross income for income tax purposes).
5
Commissioner, 110 F.3d 769, 771 (11th Cir. 1997).
IV. ANALYSIS
A. The Statute - Damages Received for Personal Injuries or Sickness Prior to
August 21, 19967
The definition of gross income under the IRC sweeps broadly.
Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co., 75 S. Ct. 473, 475 (1955). Section 61(a)
provides that “gross income means all income from whatever source derived,”
subject only to the exclusions specifically enumerated elsewhere in the Code. IRC
§ 61(a). The settlement award in this case constitutes gross income unless it is
expressly excepted by another provision. Exclusions from income are narrowly
construed. See United States v. Centennial Sav. Bank FSB, 111 S. Ct. 1512, 1519
(1991).
For our purposes here, section 104(a)(2) provides that damages received
pursuant to a judgment or settlement (whether as lump sums or as periodic
payments) on account of personal injuries or sickness were excludable from gross
income. IRC § 104(a)(2). However, neither the statute nor its legislative history
offer any explanation of the term “personal injuries.”8 See United States v. Burke,
7
See note 1 supra.
8
Black’s Law Dictionary 790 (7th ed. 1999) defines personal injury to include both physical
and non-physical injury: “Torts. 1. In a negligence action, any harm caused to a person, such as
6
112 S. Ct. 1867 (1992). The regulations, however, in defining the term “damages”
equate the term “personal injury” to a violation of tort or tort type rights.9 Regs. §
1.104-1(c).
B. Inconsistent Case Law Prior to 199210
During this period of time, yet prior to the first of three Supreme Court
decisions beginning in 199211, neither the courts nor the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) appear to have been able to reach a firm consensus as to what constituted a
personal injury. Significant to this case, during the 1980's, there was considerable
disagreement and controversy as to whether the term “personal injuries or
sickness” encompassed injury to reputation, and if it did, whether that included
a broken bone, a cut, or a bruise; bodily injury. 2. Any invasion of a personal right, including
mental suffering and false imprisonment.”
9
“The term ‘damages received (whether by suit or agreement)’ means an amount received
(other than workmen’s compensation) through prosecution of a legal suit or action based upon
tort or tort type rights, or through a settlement agreement entered into in lieu of such
prosecution.” Regs. § 1.104-1(c).
10
Given the foregoing state of circumstances at the time of the settlement transaction here
under investigation, we seek in vain if we seek for precedential clarity. Nevertheless, we must
embark on the trip to the best conclusion available. Our voyage is upon dimly lit waters,
shrouded in fog, marked, if at all, by barely discernable lights and barely audible bell buoys,
some on one side and others on the opposite side of the channel we seek to navigate. If we
succeed in reaching the right destination it will have involved some unavoidable encounters with
shoals, sand bars and shell banks, but we hope, the watertight integrity of the vessel will have
survived.
11
See Part IV.C infra.
7
injury to business reputation.12
In Roemer v. Commissioner, 79 T.C. 398 (1982), rev’d 716 F.2d 693 (9th
Cir. 1983), the taxpayer was a licensed insurance broker who filed a libel suit
against a credit bureau for publishing a false credit report.13 The tax court found
that there was a distinction between an injury to personal reputation and an injury
to business reputation. Only the former was excludable under IRC § 104(a)(2).
The Ninth Circuit reversed. It looked to the nature of the tort of defamation under
California law and concluded that the Roemer defamation resulted in a personal
injury. The court noted that injury to personal reputation by a defamatory attack
should not be confused with its derivatory consequences, i.e., loss of income or
12
See Threlkeld v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 1294 (1986), aff’d 848 F.2d 81 (6th Cir. 1988)
(where the tax court found, as to amounts received by taxpayer in settlement of his malicious
prosecution suit, that there was no valid distinction between damages received for injury to
personal reputation and damages received for injury to business reputation); Rev. Rul. 85-98,
1985-2 C.B. 51(I.R.S. 1985) (recoveries for injury to personal reputation are excludable but
recoveries for injury to business reputation are not); Church v. Commissioner, 80 T.C. 1104
(1983) (where recoveries for injury to personal reputation found excludable in tort action
involving libel by elected state attorney general against newspaper; the fact that he was a public
figure compounded the pain); Roemer v. Commissioner, 716 F.2d 693 (9th Cir. 1983), rev’g 79
T.C. 398 (1982) (discussed at Part IV.B. infra, where recoveries for injury to business reputation
in tort action involving libel by licensed insurance broker against credit bureau for filing false
credit report found excludable).
13
The Roemer complaint alleged that the publication was made “with intent to damage his
reputation, and to injure him in his business profession and occupation.” Roemer, 716 F.2d at
695. The jury, instructed to consider both injury to personal reputation and injury to business
reputation in reaching a verdict, awarded the taxpayer both compensatory damages and punitive
damages. Id. Claiming that the damages were inextricably combined, the taxpayer excluded all
compensatory damages, personal and professional alike, from his gross income. Id.
8
loss of standing in the community. As all harm flowed from the same personal
attack, all compensatory damages were held excludable, whether personal or
professional. Id. at 700-01; see Rev Rul 85-143, 1985-2 C.B. 55 (I.R.S. 1985)
(where the IRS stated that it would not follow the Ninth Circuit’s opinion in
Roemer).
Then, in 1988, case law came full circle when the tax court and the Sixth
Circuit appeared to put the issue of distinction between an injury to personal
reputation and an injury to business reputation to rest. In Threlkeld v.
Commissioner, 87 T.C. 1294 (1986), aff’d 848 F.2d 81 (6th Cir. 1988), taxpayer
settled a tort action for malicious prosecution, arising out an earlier real estate
contract rescission action. The tax court recognized, and the Sixth Circuit agreed,
that unreasonable distinctions between an injury to personal reputation and an
injury to professional reputation had been made in the past. Id. at 83. Following
the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning in Roemer, the Sixth Circuit stated:
We agree with the Ninth . . . Circuit[] that the nonpersonal
consequences of a personal injury, such as a loss of future income are
often the most persuasive means of proving the extent of the injury
that was suffered, and that the personal nature of an injury should not
be defined by its effect. Injury to a person’s hand or arm is a personal
injury. This is so even though it may affect a person’s professional
pursuits.
Id. at 84. The Sixth Circuit held that because the injury to the taxpayer’s
9
reputation was a personal injury, although it affected his professional pursuits, all
income in compensation of the injury was excludable under IRC § 104(a)(2). Id.
C. The Supreme Court Decisions, Beginning in 1992
Finally, in three decisions, two of which are pertinent here, the Supreme
Court provided some definitive guidance as to how IRC § 104(a)(2) should be
interpreted.14 In 1992, the Court would essentially define what constituted a
“personal injury” under the statute by examining the concept of tort in United
States v. Burke, 112 S. Ct. 1867(1992). In Commissioner v. Schleier, 115 S. Ct.
2159 (1995), the Court would set forth a two-prong test for excludability,
discussed below: (1) that the wrong complained of must constitute a personal
injury, and, (2) that damages received must have been received on account of such
personal injury.
1. The Burke Decision
The Burke case involved whether back pay received by the taxpayer in
settlement of her sex discrimination claim against the Tennessee Valley Authority
(TVA) under Title VII was excludable under IRC § 104(a)(2) as “damages
received . . . on account of personal injuries.” Burke, 112 S. Ct. at 1868. In order
14
In O’Gilvie v. United States, 117 S. Ct. 452 (1996), discussed at note 25 infra, the Court
found that punitive damages were not excludable under IRC § 104(a)(2).
10
to qualify for the exclusion, the Court found that the taxpayer must show that Title
VII, the legal basis of her recovery for back pay, redressed a tort-like personal
injury, stating further that:
For example, the victim of a physical injury may be permitted,
under the relevant state law, to recover damages not only for lost
wages, medical expenses, and diminished future earning capacity on
account of the injury, but also for emotional distress and pain and
suffering. (citations omitted). Similarly, the victim of a “dignitary”
or non-physical tort such as defamation may recover not only for any
actual pecuniary loss (e.g., loss of business or customers), but for
“impairment of reputation and standing in the community, personal
humiliation, and mental anguish and suffering.” (citations omitted).
Id. at 1871-72. The Burke Court concluded that nothing in the remedial scheme of
Title VII compensated the taxpayer for the traditional harms associated with
personal injury, i.e., pain and suffering, emotional distress, harm to reputation or
other consequential damages.15 Id. at 1874.
2. The Schleier Decision
The Schleier case involved whether back pay and liquidated damages
received by the taxpayer, a terminated sixty-year old airline pilot, in settlement of
his age discrimination claim against United Airlines under the Age Discrimination
15
The Burke analysis was remedy-driven. It examined the remedial scheme of the
underlying law or statute to determine whether the injury claimed to have been suffered by the
taxpayer was a tort or tort-like injury. Burke, 112 S. Ct. at 1873. A personal injury was suffered
only if the law giving rise to the claim provided redress for pecuniary loss and redress for
intangible loss such as pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of reputation. Id.
11
in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA) was excludable from gross income under
IRC § 104(a)(2). The Court found that under the plain language of IRC §
104(a)(2), the text of its applicable regulation, and its decision in Burke, a taxpayer
must meet two independent requirements before a recovery may be excluded under
IRC § 104(a)(2). Schleier, 115 S. Ct. at 2167. “First, the taxpayer must
demonstrate that the underlying cause of action giving rise to the recovery is based
upon tort or tort type rights; and second, the taxpayer must show that the damages
were received on account of personal injuries or sickness.”16 Id.
The Schleier taxpayer met neither requirement. As to the first prong, the
Court concluded that recovery under the ADEA was not “based upon tort or tort
type rights.” As to the second prong, while the taxpayer’s recovery of back wages
16
While the Schleier Court’s articulation of the second prong has not been found to be a
model of clarity, it used a hypothetical example to illustrate the usual meaning of the phrase “on
account of personal injuries.” A taxpayer injured in an automobile accident, the Court stated,
suffers medical expenses, lost wages, and pain, suffering and emotional distress that cannot be
measured with precision. Schleier, 115 S. Ct. at 2163-64. If the taxpayer settles the resulting
lawsuit for $30,000, the entire amount would be excludable under IRC § 104(a)(2). The medical
expenses and compensation for pain, suffering and emotion distress clearly constitute damages
received “on account of personal injuries.” Id. Recovery for lost wages, the Court stated, is also
excludable as being “on account of personal injuries” as long as the wages resulted from the time
in which the taxpayer was out of work due to her automobile injuries. Id. The critical point this
hypothetical illustrates, the Supreme Court concluded, is that each element of the settlement is
recoverable not simply because the taxpayer received a tort settlement but because each element
of the settlement satisfies the requirement set forth in IRC § 104(a)(2) that the damages were
received “on account of personal injuries or sickness.” Id. This requirement employs a causal
analysis – that is, a causal link must exist between the personal injury and the damages received.
The Schleier majority, however, did not explain exactly what the link was nor how close the link
must be for a recovery to qualify for a IRC § 104(a)(2) exclusion.
12
appeared at first glance to be comparable to an automobile accident victim’s
recovery of lost wages, it did not satisfy the critical requirement of being “on
account of a personal injury or sickness.” Id. at 2167. Even if the proximate cause
of taxpayer’s loss of income was his discharge due to advanced age or the
celebration of his sixtieth birthday, neither event can fairly be described as a
“personal injury” or “sickness.” Id. And although, the Court said, his unlawful
termination may have caused him some pain, suffering and emotional distress such
as that suffered by an automobile accident victim, no personal injury had been
suffered affecting the amount of back wages recovered. Id.
3. Case Law after Burke and Schleier
While these two cases set forth the two requirements we must meet in order
to qualify for a IRC § 104(a)(2) exclusion, they stop short of the precise issue
before us. Burke holds that payment received because of a Title VII violation is
not excludable because violation of Title VII does not provide for personal injury
losses. Schleier holds that the consequences of reaching sixty years of age are not
consequences of personal injury.17 We must look elsewhere for guidance.
Although the few courts after Schleier that have examined the second prong
17
As discussed in detail in note 16 supra, the Schleier Court used a hypothetical automobile
wreck with bodily injury to illustrate personal injury. It is beyond dispute that bodily injury is
included in personal injury. The Schleier Court was not required to deal with damaged
reputation; it dealt only with birthdays and ADEA recoveries.
13
have failed to shed much light on its interpretation, we find helpful the recent
decision by the Sixth Circuit, in Greer v. United States, 207 F.3d 322 (6th Cir.
2000). In Greer, the taxpayer, an environmental compliance director, was abruptly
terminated by his employer, Ashland Oil, under circumstances he claimed were
highly suspicious. A normal severance package for an Ashland Oil employee of
taxpayer’s caliber and years of service would have totaled $51,000. Taxpayer
received $331, 968. He claims the extra portion constituted settlement of his
potential wrongful discharge claim and was excludable from gross income. Id. at
325. He asserted that the circumstances of his termination diminished his personal
and professional reputation and inflicted stress, humiliation, mental anguish, self
doubt and emotional pain upon him. Id. The district court agreed and granted the
taxpayer’s motion for summary judgment.
Upon the government’s appeal, the Sixth Circuit held that Schleier’s two
part test “tightly packs a number of discrete elements.” Id. at 327. It found it
useful to disaggregate the test into four disparate elements. Id. To satisfy Schleier,
the Sixth Circuit found that:
. . . the taxpayer must show that (1) there was an underlying claim
sounding in tort; (2) the claim existed at the time of settlement; (3) the
claim encompassed personal injuries; and (4) the agreement was
executed “in lieu” of the prosecution of the tort claim and “on account
of” the personal injury, rendering it a settlement rather than a mere
severance agreement. By requiring each of these elements, courts can
14
effectively distinguish between severance and settlement agreements
and prevent parties from “creating contrived ‘settlement agreements’
to avoid taxation of [severance] proceeds.” (citation omitted).
Id. (emphasis added).
Turning to the third disparate element, which is also applicable here, the
Sixth Circuit stated:
Third, we find that Greer’s tort claim potentially involved
injuries that were personal. Courts and the IRS have long recognized
that § 104(a)(2)’s reference to personal injuries “encompasses . . .
nonphysical injuries to the individual, such as those affecting
emotions, reputation, or character . . . . “ Burke, 504 U.S. at 235 n.6,
112 S. Ct. 1867. See also Schleier, 515 U.S. at 329 & n.4, 115 S. Ct.
2159 (stating that § 104(a)(2) covers “intangible as well as tangible
harms”). Specifically, personal injuries include emotional distress,
see Burke, 504 U.S. at 235 n.6, 112 S. Ct. 1867, mental pain and
suffering, see Bent v. Commissioner, 835 F.2d 67, 70 (3d Cir. 1987),
and injury to personal and professional reputation. See Threlkeld v.
Commissioner, 848 F.2d 81, 83-84 (6th Cir. 1988); Church v.
Commissioner, 80 T.C. 1104, 1109 (1983). Here, Greer’s tort claim
sufficiently encompasses personal injury. Specifically Greer claims
injuries to his personal and professional reputation, as well as
distress, humiliation, and mental anguish. These claims of non-
physical injury fall within the broad ambit of § 104(a)(2) “personal”
injuries.
Id. at 328 (emphasis added).18
We agree with the Sixth Circuit in Greer that after Schleier, claims of non-
18
With this said, nonetheless, the Sixth Circuit found that summary judgment was an
inappropriate vehicle as there remained a dispute as to whether the agreement was “on account
of” personal injury and remanded to the district court for this factual determination. Greer, 207
F.3d at 328.
15
physical injury can still be proven to be excludable.
Furthermore, in Noel v. Commissioner, 73 T.C.M. (CCH) 2178 (T.C. 1997),
the Tax Court held that two-thirds of the settlement proceeds were allocated to the
release of taxpayer’s claims in contract. The remaining one-third was allocated to
tortious interference with contractual rights and prospective business advantages.
As the interference caused emotional distress and damage to business reputation
through adverse publicity in the press, it was paid “on account of personal injury”
and excludable from gross income under IRC § 104(a)(2). See also Knevelbaard v.
Commissioner, 74 T.C.M. (CCH) 161, 168 (T.C. 1997) (where settlement proceeds
paid to dairy farmers by various bank defendants, caused by the banks’ violation of
duties owed, were held to be excludable as they were made “not for the value of
milk, but for the value . . . of the emotional distress claims asserted”); Banks v.
United States, 81 F.3d 874 (9th Cir. 1996) (as claim for breach of duty of fair
representation was “tort-like” due to available remedies and received from union
“on account of personal injury,” recovery was excludable); but see Gregg v.
Commissioner, 77 T.C.M. (CCH) 1215 (T.C. 1999)(distinguishing Noel, where the
court found that the taxpayer failed to prove that damages awarded on his claim for
interference with a business relationship was received on account of personal
16
injuries).19
D. The Present Case20
1. The Tax Court Opinion
The IRS stipulated at trial that the $500,000 payment was properly allocable
as damage to the Fabry’s business reputation.21 The tax court acknowledged
during trial that the case presented a single question of law. Yet, in its opinion
disallowing the exclusion under IRC § 104(a)(2), the tax court used a facts and
circumstance approach, focusing only on the nature of the Fabrys’ claims against
du Pont.
The tax court first examined the terms of the Fabrys’ release with du Pont
and its supporting documents. It found specific language lacking to allow it to
conclude that the $500,000 payment was received “on account of” personal
19
The appeal of this case is currently pending in our court.
20
Taxpayer’s counsel asserts throughout his brief that an unbroken line of cases hold as a
matter of law, that damage to business reputation is a personal injury. Thus counselled, we
approached our task as any easy one; we should just follow this unbroken line of cases. We have
been disappointed twofold: We do not find an unbroken line, as this was a mischaracterization,
and we were not as sincerely counselled as we should have been by an officer of the court.
21
At trial, the IRS stipulated that: (1) du Pont was aware from the beginning that the Fabrys’
claim included a claim for damage to their business reputation; (2) that throughout settlement
discussions the Fabrys had steadfastly presented a $500,000 claim for damage to their business
reputation; (3) that du Pont never disputed the Fabrys’ claim for business reputation damage
throughout the mediation; (4) that du Pont sought and obtained a release specifically with respect
to the business reputation claim; and (5) that du Pont would not have settled the case without a
release of the claim for damage to the Fabrys’ business reputation.
17
injuries.
Next the tax court turned to language found in the Fabrys’ first amended
complaint for damages and demand for jury trial. Again, it found specific
language lacking, as nowhere in the complaint did the Fabrys use the term
“personal injuries” to describe the injuries suffered as the result of their use of the
du Pont fungicide.
Finally the tax court examined the mediation process preceding settlement,
as well as the settlement negotiations themselves and their supporting documents
(statements, expert reports, and counsel correspondence).22 Again it found that no
claim for personal injury had been settled by the Fabrys with du Pont.
Based upon this examination of the record, the tax court found that there was
insufficient evidence of a claim for personal injury presented during the lawsuit
sufficient to support a conclusion that the Fabrys’ $500,000 claim for damages to
business reputation was “on account of personal injuries.” It then disallowed the
exclusion under IRC § 104(a)(2).
22
The tax court admits two instances where the Fabrys did assert personal injury in those
exact words. The first was in a letter to a private claims adjuster hired by du Pont before
commencement of the lawsuit, in which the Fabrys described their loss of friends who were also
customers and their belief that they appeared as “lying, deceiving fools to our customers.” The
second was in a mediation summary letter by the Fabrys’ attorney which asserted that the
personal injury exception to the stipulation of the parties applied only to physical personal
injury. Neither impressed the tax court, however, as the first predated the filing of the complaint
and the second postdated the execution of the release.
18
We disagree. The facts and circumstance approach used by the tax court is
insufficient.23 Its method of merely perusing the record, looking for the presence
of the magic words, “personal injury,” either in the complaint, the release,
mediation correspondence or settlement documents is incorrect.24
2. Intangible Injuries Such as Damage to Business Reputation in Light of
Schleier and Cases Following Schleier25
Based upon the previous discussion, therefore, in order to satisfy Schleier
23
While we agree that the terms of the settlement agreement (and supporting documentation)
is a factor to be considered, see Stocks v. Commissioner, 98 T.C. 1, 10 (1992), it is only one
factor. Intent of the payor is also a factor to be considered. See Metzer v. Commissioner, 88
T.C. 834, 847-48 (1987), aff’d without published opinion, 845 F.2d 1013 (3d Cir. 1988);
Knuckles v. Commissioner, 349 F.2d 610 (10th Cir. 1965). Mere lip service is given to Schleier.
Recent cases by the tax court also appear to reflect a pattern of this formalistic approach. See
Henry, 77 T.C.M. (CCH) at 2209; Bland v. Commissioner, 79 T.C.M. (CCH) 1713 (T.C. 2000);
Sherman v. Commissioner, 77 T.C.M. (CCH) 2199 (T.C. 1999).
24
Damage to business reputation may be an assertion of personal injury without saying so;
an action for broken bones, contusions, concussions and the like says “personal injury” without
those words. The tax court’s search for a convenient shibboleth is misdirected.
25
As the parties have stipulated that the first prong, articulated in Burke, is met in the present
case, we need analyze only the second. One year after Schleier, in the context of punitive
damages, the Supreme Court revisited the meaning of “on account of” in O’Gilvie v. United
States, 117 S. Ct. 452 (1996). The Court observed that the phrase “on account of” did not
unambiguously define itself. Id. at 454. The Court rejected the taxpayer’s contention that it
required merely a “but-for” connection between “any” damages and a personal injury lawsuit.
Id. The Court accepted the government’s interpretation under which only those damages were
excludable that were awarded “by reason of” or “because of” the personal injuries. Id. at 457-
58. O’Gilvie is consistent with Schleier because punitive damages do not bear the direct causal
link with the victim’s personal injury since the amount of punitive damages awarded generally
varies positively with the degree of the tortfeasor’s conduct, not with the extent of the injury
sustained. See note 14 supra.
19
and qualify for the exclusion, it appears that a cause and effect relationship must be
established between the tort, the personal injury resulting, and the amount received
in settlement. In a non-physical personal injury case therefore, each element of the
tort settlement must be examined to determine whether there is a direct causal link
between such element and an intangible element of the injury (i.e., emotional
distress, pain and suffering, loss of reputation, etc.). If such a link is found, it
would seem to satisfy Schleier and payments received for such damage, including
losses of earning capacity and the like, would be excludable.
Is damage to one’s business reputation a personal injury? Did the negligent
or wrongful conduct of du Pont amount to a tort resulting in personal injury to the
Fabrys, culminating in an injury to their business reputation, which injury in turn
caused them to suffer damages, personal to them? Did the injury justify the
$500,000 amount of damages recovered? 26 For the following reasons, we
conclude that it did.
3. The Unique Facts of this Appeal
26
The reasonableness of the value placed upon damage to business reputation, $500,000, is
not in dispute. Throughout the claims procedure, litigation and mediation, the $500,000 amount
remained constant, even when initial settlement demands by the taxpayers exceeded $9 million,
dropped to $7 million, and finally settled at a total of $3.8 million.
20
The destruction of Patsy’s Nursery business, allegedly resulting from the
Fabrys’ use of the du Pont fungicide on their plants, was a great loss. In this
respect, the physical assets of the sole proprietorship were calculated and a specific
sum of money paid by the tortfeasor. Here, du Pont paid $3.3 million to replace
the Fabrys’ business qua business. But, when the lost value of the business had
been restored, something intangible remained.27 Each individual taxpayer walked
away from the business stigmatized by allegedly sharp, even fraudulent, dealings.
As business persons they had sold defective merchandise that was said to have
cheated the buyer. Their reputation as respected merchants and honorable people
had been cut away. Even their health appears to have been affected.
The record indicates that both parties to the tort settlement undertook to
evaluate the claims for damage to the business itself, then to evaluate the claims for
damage done to the taxpayers as sole proprietors of the business. See Roemer, 716
F.2d at 697. Here the tort directly disparaged the Fabrys in their business capacity,
yet in this instance, the nursery business was the manifestation of the Fabrys, part
and parcel of their persona. See Greer, 207 F.3d at 328. Their business reputation
27
One would suppose that these parties could have evaluated and settled the claims arising
out of claimed destruction of the nursery business, reserving in the Fabrys the right to sue for the
damage done to them as people whose reputation as honest persons had been eroded. Would
such a reserved claim not be a claim for personal injury? We think it would.
21
was their personal reputation.28 Id. Aligning ourselves with the reasoning by the
Sixth Circuit in Greer, the distress, humiliation and mental anguish suffered by the
Fabrys through the loss of their good name were personal injuries within the
“broad ambit” of IRC § 104(a)(2). Id.
Due to the unique facts of this case, therefore, the taxpayers have proved that
the $500,000 in damages awarded on their claim for business reputation was
received “on account of personal injuries” sufficient to satisfy the second prong of
Schleier and are excludable from gross income under applicable IRC § 104(a)(2).
V. CONCLUSION
The decision of the tax court is REVERSED.
BLACK, Circuit Judge, specially concurring:
28
In reverse analogy to the line of tax cases referred to as “piercing the corporate veil” cases,
involving a sole corporate shareholder of a one-person corporation, here the Fabrys “were” their
unincorporated sole proprietorship business.
22
I concur in the result.
23