The proceeds of a contract described in subdivision (ii) of this subparagraph will be considered payable indirectly to a participant or beneficiary of such participant where they are payable to the trustee but under the terms of the plan the trustee is required to pay over all of such proceeds to the beneficiary.
Example. An annual premium policy purchased by a qualified trust for a common-law employee provides an annuity of $100 per month upon retirement at age 65, with a minimum death benefit of $10,000. The insurance payable if death occurred in the first year would be $10,000. The cash value at the end of the first year is 0. The net insurance is therefore $10,000 minus 0, or $10,000. Assuming that the Commissioner has determined that a reasonable net premium cost for the employee's age is $5.85 per $1,000, the premium for $10,000 of life insurance is therefore $58.50, and this is the amount to be reported as income by the employee for his taxable year in which the premium is paid. The balance of the premium is the amount contributed for the annuity, which is not taxable to the employee under a plan meeting the requirements of section 401(a), except as provided under section 402(a). Assuming that the cash value at the end of the second year is $500, the net insurance would then be $9,500 for the second year. With a net 1-year term rate of $6.30 for the employee's age in the second year, the amount to be reported as income to the employee would be $59.85.
the amounts payable under any such contract by reason of the death of the employee are taxable under the rules of subparagraph (2) of this paragraph, except in the case of a joint and survivor annuity.
Total face amount of the contract payable in a lump sum at time of death | $25,000 |
Cash value of the contract immediately before death | 11,000 |
Excess over cash value, excludable under section 101(a) | 14,000 |
Cash value subject to limited exclusion under section 101(b) | 11,000 |
Excludable under section 101(b) (assuming that there is no other death benefit paid by or on behalf of any employer with respect to the employee) | 5,000 |
Balance taxable in accordance with section 402(a)(2) or 403(a)(2) (assuming a total distribution in one taxable year of the distributee) | 6,000 |
Portion of premiums taxed to employee under the provisions of paragraph (b) of this section and considered as contributions of the employee | 940 |
Balance taxable as long-term capital gain | 5,060 |
Amount actually contributed by the employee | 0 |
Amount considered contributed by employee by reason of section 101(b) | $5,000 |
Portion of premiums taxed to employee under the provisions of paragraph (b) of this section and considered as contributions of the employee | $940 |
Investment in the contract | $5,940 |
Expected return, 10 * $1,320 | $13,200 |
Exclusion ratio, $5,940 ÷ $13,200 | 0.45 |
Annual exclusion, 0.45 * $1,320 | $594 |
Accordingly, $594 of the $1,320 portion of each annual installment is excludable each year under section 72, and the remaining $726 is includible. Thus, if the beneficiary is not a surviving spouse, a total of $1,006 ($280 plus $726) of each annual $3,000 installment is includible in income each year. If the beneficiary is a surviving spouse, and can exclude all of the $280 under section 101(d)(1)(B), the amount includible in gross income each year is $726 of each annual $3,000 installment.
26 C.F.R. §1.72-16