Am. Fin. Group & Consol. Subsidiaries v. United States, No. 10-3991 (6th Cir. 2012)
Annotate this CaseThe National Association of Insurance Commissioners helps to coordinate the state-based regulations of insurance, creating model statutes and regulations and releasing actuarial guidelines. Actuarial Guideline 33 (1995), describing how insurance companies should handle accounting questions connected to annuities sold after 1980. The new guidance prompted plaintiff to change the way it calculated financial reserves for roughly 200,000 annuity contracts it had issued over the prior 15 years, increasing its reserves by approximately $59 million—about 1.2 percent. The company’s parent claimed a deduction for part of that increase on its federal taxes for the following year and sought to do the same for the next nine years, 26 U.S.C. 807(f) The IRS concluded that insurers could not use Guideline 33 in calculating reserves for annuity contracts issued before its effective date. The company paid the disputed taxes under protest and sought to recover $11 million in overpayments and several million more in interest. The district court concluded that Guideline 33 clarified the pre-1995 requirements rather than changing them, granting the company summary judgment. The Sixth Circuit affirmed.
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