Court Opinion

ID: 4333222
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-11-14 01:05:59.040282+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:47:05.243390
License: Public Domain

116 T.C. No. 18

                UNITED STATES TAX COURT

            METROCORP, INC., Petitioner v.
     COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 19780-98.             Filed April 13, 2001.

     M, a State bank, acquired a portion of the assets
and assumed a portion of the deposit liabilities of C,
a failed Federal savings association. Before the
transaction, the deposit liabilities of M and C were
insured by different funds (B and S, respectively)
administered by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation. The transaction was a “conversion
transaction” under 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(B) (1994),
because M and C each participated in a different fund,
and M assumed C’s deposit liabilities. R determined
that the exit and entrance fees related to the
transaction which M paid to S and B, respectively,
under 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(E) (1994), were non-
deductible capital expenditures. The fees were
capitalizable, R asserts, because they produced
significant future benefits to M in that M, following
the assumption, insured all of its deposit liabilities
through B. M’s use of B to insure all of its deposit
liabilities meant that M’s future costs for compliance
and insurance premiums would be lower than if M had
                                   - 2 -

     continued to use S to insure the assumed deposit
     liabilities.
          Held: M’s payment of the fees produced no
     significant future benefit to M that would require
     capitalization of either fee.

                                  OPINION

     James R. Walker and Charles L. Mastin II for petitioner.

     Jennifer L. Nuding, for respondent.

     LARO, Judge:    The parties submitted this case to the Court

without trial.    See Rule 122.    Respondent determined deficiencies

of $15,288, $14,372, and $14,375 in petitioner’s respective

taxable years ended October 31, 1993, 1994, and 1995.     Following

concessions, we must decide whether petitioner may deduct the

exit and entrance fees which its subsidiary, Metrobank, paid to

the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) with respect to

a “conversion transaction” under 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(B)(iv)

(1994).   We hold it may.1   Unless otherwise indicated, section

references are to the Internal Revenue Code applicable to the

relevant years.    Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of

Practice and Procedure.

                             Background

     The parties have filed with the Court a stipulation of facts

and certain related exhibits.      We incorporate herein by reference

that stipulation of facts and those exhibits.     We find the

     1
       Our holding renders moot the parties’ other dispute;
namely, whether the fees, if capitalizable, are amortizable.
                               - 3 -

stipulated facts accordingly, and we set forth the relevant facts

in this background section.   We also set forth in this section,

as they relate to the operation of the FDIC and of the insurance

funds at issue, the pertinent provisions of title 12 of the

United States Code (1994) (title 12).

     Petitioner is a Delaware corporation whose principal office

was in East Moline, Illinois, when its petition was filed.    It is

a bank holding company that files consolidated Federal income tax

returns.2   It reports its income and expenses using an accrual

method and on the basis of a fiscal year ending on October 31.

It includes in its consolidated returns a wholly owned

subsidiary, Metrobank, that is a bank chartered in Illinois.

     The FDIC is a congressionally established corporation that

serves primarily to protect financial institution depositors by

insuring any deposit up to $100,000 that is held by a bank or

savings association participating in the FDIC insurance program.

The Banking Insurance Fund (BIF) and the Savings Association

Insurance Fund (SAIF) are separate funds which the FDIC maintains

and administers under this program.    The BIF insures the deposit

liabilities of participating banks, e.g., Metrobank.   The SAIF

     2
       For purposes of title 12, the term “bank” generally refers
to a State-chartered bank, and the term “savings association”
generally refers to a Federal- or State-chartered savings
association (or savings and loan or thrift as it is sometimes
called). 12 U.S.C. sec. 1813(a) and (b) (1994). We use herein
the same terminology. We refer collectively to banks and savings
associations as financial institutions.
                               - 4 -

insures the deposit liabilities of participating savings

associations; e.g., Community Federal Savings Bank (Community).

Each financial institution that participates in the FDIC’s

insurance program is generally assessed a semiannual charge

(premium) equal to its liability for deposits multiplied by the

applicable rate set forth in 12 U.S.C. sec. 1817(b)(1)(C) or (D)

(1994).   Any amount assessed against a participant in the BIF is

deposited into the BIF and is available to the FDIC for use with

respect to any BIF participant.   Any amount assessed against a

participant in the SAIF is deposited into the SAIF and is

available to the FDIC for use with respect to any SAIF

participant.

     Community is a failed savings association.   On October 16,

1990, Metrobank submitted to the FDIC a bid to consummate a

transaction (transaction) under which Metrobank would acquire a

portion of Community’s assets and assume a portion of Community’s

deposit liabilities.   Because Community and Metrobank each

insured its deposit liabilities through a different FDIC fund,

and Metrobank had agreed to assume Community’s deposit

liabilities, which would be insured after the transaction by the

BIF instead of the SAIF, the transaction was a conversion

transaction under 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(B)(iv) (1994).

Section 1815(d)(2)(B) of title 12 defines a "conversion

transaction" as:
                               - 5 -

          (i) the change of status of an insured depository
     institution from a Bank Insurance Fund member to a
     Savings Association Insurance Fund member or from a
     Savings Association Insurance Fund member to a Bank
     Insurance Fund member;

          (ii) the merger or consolidation of a Bank
     Insurance Fund member with a Savings Association
     Insurance Fund member;

          (iii) the assumption of any liability by--

               (I) any Bank Insurance Fund member to
          pay any deposits of a Savings Association
          Insurance Fund member; or

               (II) any Savings Association Insurance
          Fund member to pay any deposits of a Bank
          Insurance Fund member;

          (iv) the transfer of assets of--

               (I) any Bank Insurance Fund member to
          any Savings Association Insurance Fund member
          in consideration of the assumption of
          liabilities for any portion of the deposits
          of such Bank Insurance Fund member; or

               (II) any Savings Association Insurance
          Fund member to any Bank Insurance Fund member
          in consideration of the assumption of
          liabilities for any portion of the deposits
          of such Savings Association Insurance Fund
          member;

     Financial institutions are required by 12 U.S.C. sec.

1815(d)(2)(E) (1994) to pay to the FDIC exit and entrance fees on

conversion transactions, and Metrobank agreed in its bid to pay

these fees to the FDIC.   That section provides:

     Each insured depository institution participating in a
     conversion transaction shall pay--

               (i) in the case of a conversion
          transaction in which the resulting or
                    - 6 -

acquiring depository institution is not a
Savings Association Insurance Fund member, an
exit fee * * * which–-

          (I) shall be deposited in the
     Savings Association Insurance Fund;
     or

          (II) shall be paid to the
     Financing Corporation, if the
     Secretary of the Treasury
     determines that the Financing
     Corporation has exhausted all other
     sources of funding for interest
     payments on the obligations of the
     Financing Corporation and orders
     that such fees be paid to the
     Financing Corporation;

     (ii) in the case of a conversion
transaction in which the resulting or
acquiring depository institution is not a
Bank Insurance Fund member, an exit fee in an
amount to be determined by the [Federal
Deposit Insurance] Corporation * * * which
shall be deposited in the Bank Insurance
Fund; and

     (iii) an entrance fee in an amount to be
determined by the [Federal Deposit Insurance]
Corporation * * *, except that--

          (I) in the case of a
     conversion transaction in which the
     resulting or acquiring depository
     institution is a Bank Insurance
     Fund member, the fee shall be the
     approximate amount which the
     [Federal Deposit Insurance]
     Corporation calculates as necessary
     to prevent dilution of the Bank
     Insurance Fund, and shall be paid
     to the Bank Insurance Fund; and

          (II) in the case of a
     conversion transaction in which the
     resulting or acquiring depository
     institution is a Savings
                               - 7 -

               Association Insurance Fund member,
               the fee shall be the approximate
               amount which the [Federal Deposit
               Insurance] Corporation calculates
               as necessary to prevent dilution of
               the Savings Association Insurance
               Fund, and shall be paid to the
               Savings Association Insurance Fund.

     Metrobank consummated the transaction on November 2, 1990,

and the FDIC approved the transaction on November 6, 1990,

effective as of November 2, 1990.   After the transaction, all of

Metrobank's deposit liabilities (including those assumed from

Community) were insured by the BIF.    Metrobank could not have

insured through the BIF the deposit liabilities it had assumed

from Community without paying the exit and entrance fees.

     In total, Metrobank paid to the FDIC an exit fee of $309,565

and an entrance fee of $43,339 on its assumption of Community’s

deposit liabilities.   Metrobank paid those fees in five annual

installments, paying $71,518 in each subject year ($62,735 for

the exit fee and $8,783 for the entrance fee).3   For each of the

subject years, petitioner claimed a deduction for the payment of

the fees during that year.   Petitioner also claimed for those

respective years deductions of $465,046, $463,583, and $311,245

that Metrobank paid to the FDIC as semiannual insurance premiums

under 12 U.S.C. sec. 1817 (1994).

     3
       We recognize that the sum of the exit and entrance fee
($309,565 + $43,339 = $352,904) is $4,186 less than the total of
the five payments ($71,518 x 5 = $357,590). The record does not
adequately explain the difference.
                               - 8 -

     Pursuant to 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(E)(i) and (iii)

(1994), the FDIC deposited the exit fee into the SAIF, and it

deposited the entrance fee into the BIF.    Metrobank calculated

the exit fee from a formula under which the fee equaled 0.9

percent (.009) multiplied by the total liability that it assumed

from Community as to the deposits.     See 12 C.F.R. secs. 312.1(j),

312.5(c) (2000).   Metrobank calculated the entrance fee from a

different formula under which the fee equaled the “Bank Insurance

Fund reserve ratio” (BIF reserve ratio) multiplied by the

“entrance fee deposit base” received from Community.    12 C.F.R.

secs. 312.1(g), 312.4(b) (2000).    The BIF reserve ratio was the

ratio of the net worth of the BIF to the value of the aggregate

total domestic deposits held in all participants of the BIF.    See

12 C.F.R. sec. 312.1(c) (2000).    The entrance fee deposit base

was “those deposits which the Federal Deposit Insurance

Corporation * * * [estimated] to have a high probability of

remaining with * * * [Metrobank] for a reasonable period of time

following the * * * [conversion transaction], in excess of those

deposits that would have remained in the * * * [SAIF had

Community] been resolved by means of an insured deposit

transfer.”   12 C.F.R. sec. 312.1(g) (2000).   Community generally

would have been resolved by an insured deposit transfer if its

deposit liabilities had been paid by the FDIC or Resolution Trust

Corporation.   See id.
                               - 9 -

     If Metrobank did not pay its annual FDIC insurance premiums

after the transaction, the FDIC could commence administrative

proceedings to terminate involuntarily Metrobank's FDIC

insurance.   Metrobank could also in certain circumstances

voluntarily terminate its FDIC insurance.   Metrobank would not

have been entitled to a refund for the exit or entrance fee which

it paid to the FDIC incident to the transaction if it terminated

its FDIC insurance after the transaction either voluntarily or

involuntarily.

     At the end of 1990, the approximate rates for depository

insurance under the BIF and the SAIF were .12 percent (.0012) and

.208 percent (.00208), respectively.   As of the same time, SAIF

rates were set to exceed BIF rates until 1998.

     Respondent determined that petitioner could not deduct

either fee that Metrobank paid to the FDIC incident to the

conversion transaction and disallowed petitioner’s deductions for

those payments.   According to the notice of deficiency:

     It has been determined that your deductions for the
     entrance and exit fee paid to the Federal Deposit
     Insurance Corporation for the transfer of your insured
     deposits from one depository insurance to another
     depository insurance fund is a non-deductible capital
     expenditure that is not subject to depreciation or
     amortization.[4]

     4
       The notice of deficiency indicates that the deposits were
actually transferred from the SAIF to the BIF. This is not true.
As explained herein, the BIF and the SAIF do not hold a financial
institution’s deposits but merely insure the deposits held by the
                                                   (continued...)
                               - 10 -

                             Discussion

     We are faced once again with the question of whether an

expenditure may be deducted currently as an expense or must be

capitalized and deducted in a later year.     Following INDOPCO,

Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. 79 (1992), in which the Supreme

Court clarified that nonasset-producing expenditures5 may require

capitalization if they provide significant future benefits to the

payor, the parties dispute whether petitioner’s entrance and exit

fees are capitalizable expenditures.      Respondent determined and

asserts they are.   Respondent’s sole argument in support of his

assertion is that Metrobank’s payment of the fees generated

significant future benefits for it.     Respondent lists the

following as future benefits which are significant to Metrobank:

(1) Metrobank was able to insure its entire liability for

deposits through one fund, subjecting itself to only one

regulatory scheme and minimizing its risk of complicated

compliance problems; (2) insurance premiums under the BIF were

less than insurance premiums under the SAIF; and (3) the BIF was

more stable than the SAIF.   Petitioner asserts it may deduct the

     4
      (...continued)
financial institutions.
     5
       We use the term nonasset-producing expenditures to refer
to expenditures which do not create or enhance a separate and
distinct asset.
                              - 11 -

fees.   Petitioner argues that Metrobank derived no significant

long-term benefit from its payment of either fee.

     We decide this case as framed by respondent and hold that

petitioner may deduct the fees.   In reaching this holding, we

specifically note that respondent did not determine, and has

declined to argue, that the fees should be capitalized on the

grounds that they were necessarily incurred in connection with

the acquisition of another financial institution or, more

specifically, the acquisition of the assets and liabilities of

another financial institution.    See, e.g., INDOPCO, Inc. v.

Commissioner, supra; Ellis Banking Corp. v. Commissioner, 688

F.2d 1376 (11th Cir. 1982), affg. in part and remanding in part

on an issue not relevant herein T.C. Memo. 1981-123; American

Stores Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 458 (2000).    If

respondent had made such a determination or argument, petitioner

may well have wanted to offer evidence relating to it.   In order

to avoid prejudicing petitioner with respect to a theory not

raised before the case was submitted, we save any comment on that

theory for another day.   See Leahy v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 56,

64-65 (1986) (Court declined to consider a theory raised by

respondent on brief where, as here, the parties submitted the

case with the facts fully stipulated and presumably with an

understanding of the legal issues to be presented and defended);
                                - 12 -

see also Concord Consumer Hous. Corp. v. Commissioner, 89 T.C.

105, 106-107 n.3 (1987).

     Our analysis begins with a general background of the FDIC

and the pertinent insurance funds.       Congress established the FDIC

in 1933 to insure bank deposits, see Lebron v. National R.R.

Passenger Corp., 513 U.S. 374, 388 (1995); FDIC v. Godshall, 558

F.2d 220, 221 (4th Cir. 1977), and it established the Federal

Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) in 1934 to insure

savings association deposits, see United States v. Winstar Corp.,

518 U.S. 839, 844 (1996).   Savings associations were required to

participate in the FSLIC insurance system but could withdraw from

the FSLIC insurance fund by converting from a Federal to a State

charter.   See Great W. Bank v. Office of Thrift Supervision, 916

F.2d 1421, 1423 (9th Cir. 1990).

     High interest rates, inflation, Government deregulation,

fraud, and insider abuse caused a crisis in the savings

association industry during the late 1970's and the 1980's.      The

FSLIC’s insurance fund was threatened by this crisis when a large

number of failing savings associations approached the FSLIC with

deposit insurance liabilities and hundreds of savings

associations actually failed.    The FSLIC’s insurance fund became

insolvent by billions of dollars after the FSLIC paid out

billions of dollars to cover the failed savings associations’

insured deposits and incurred additional liabilities on its
                              - 13 -

closing of hundreds of problem savings associations.     See United

States v. Winstar Corp., supra at 845-846; Great W. Bank v.

Office of Thrift Supervision, supra at 1423.

     The Federal Home Loan Bank Board (Bank Board) was an

independent agency in the Executive Branch of the United States

with broad discretionary powers over the Federal home loan bank

system.   In 1985, the Bank Board attempted to replenish the FSLIC

insurance fund by raising the insurance premiums charged to the

FSLIC-insured institutions through a "special assessment" at the

maximum amount allowed by Congress.    As a result, many healthy

FSLIC-insured savings associations, which paid insurance premiums

of approximately $2.08 per $1,000 of insured deposits, took the

steps necessary to meet the requirements to withdraw from the

FSLIC insurance system and obtain insurance from the FDIC, which

charged insurance premiums of only $.83 per $1,000 of insured

deposits.   See Great Western Bank v. Office of Thrift

Supervision, supra at 1423-1424.

     Congress responded to the savings associations’ attempt to

change their insurer from the FSLIC to the FDIC by passing the

Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 (CEBA), Pub. L. 100-86,

101 Stat. 552.   In relevant part, CEBA:   (1) Imposed a moratorium

that prohibited savings associations from leaving the FSLIC

insurance fund and (2) imposed a final insurance premium on

savings associations which left the FSLIC insurance fund after
                              - 14 -

the moratorium expired.   See CEBA sec. 306(h), 101 Stat. 602,

amended by Pub. L. 100-378, sec. 10, 102 Stat. 887, 889 (1988),

current version at 12 U.S.C. sec. 1730(d)(1) (1994).   The intent

of CEBA was to recapitalize the depleted FSLIC.   See Branch

Banking & Trust Co. v. FDIC, 172 F.3d 317, 320 (4th Cir. 1999).

     CEBA proved to be ineffective in replenishing the FSLIC’s

insurance funds, and, on August 9, 1989, Congress enacted the

Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of

1989 (FIRREA), Pub. L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183, as an emergency

measure to prevent the collapse of the savings association

industry.   See H. Rept. 101-54(I) at 307 (1989); see also H.

Conf. Rept. 101-222 at 393 (1989); United States v. Winstar

Corp., supra at 856.   In relevant part, FIRREA abolished the

FSLIC, transferred to the FDIC the responsibility of insuring the

deposits at savings associations, and established the BIF and the

SAIF.   FIRREA gave the FDIC responsibility for regulating both

the insurance fund it had traditionally administered (now known

as the BIF) and the insurance fund formerly regulated by the

FSLIC (now known as the SAIF).   See FIRREA secs. 202, 215, 103

Stat. 188, 252.   FIRREA imposed on SAIF (as opposed to BIF)

participants higher deposit premiums and a higher degree of

supervision in an attempt to ensure the SAIF’s strength.   See

generally 12 U.S.C. sec. 1817 (1994).
                                - 15 -

     Congress anticipated that SAIF participants would try to

convert to BIF participants in order to escape the higher SAIF

premiums and regulatory costs.    Thus, Congress included in FIRREA

certain control measures to prevent an exodus from the SAIF.    See

12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(E) and (F) (1994).    First, FIRREA

required that entrance and exit fees be paid to the respective

funds as to a conversion transaction between a BIF participant

and a SAIF participant.     See 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(E) (1994).

A higher exit fee was placed on financial institutions leaving

the SAIF for the BIF in order to discourage SAIF-insured

institutions from insuring their deposits with the BIF.    See 12

U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(F) (1994).    Second, FIRREA imposed a 5-

year moratorium beginning on August 9, 1989, to replace the

expired CEBA moratorium.6    See 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(A)(ii)

(1994).   Under the FIRREA moratorium, SAIF-insured institutions

were generally unable to enter into conversion transactions,

which essentially prevented them from converting to BIF-insured

institutions and essentially ensured mandatory SAIF participation

for savings associations during the moratorium’s duration.

     FIRREA imposed two relevant exceptions to the moratorium.

First, the FDIC could allow certain conversion transactions

involving the acquisition of a depository institution that was in

     6
       Congress later extended the 5-year FIRREA moratorium,
which was in effect during the relevant years.
                                  - 16 -

default or in danger of default.7      A financial institution that

utilized this exception was required to pay an exit fee to the

fund that insured the assumed deposit liabilities before the

transaction and an entrance fee to the fund that insured the

assumed deposit liabilities after the transaction.       See 12 U.S.C.

sec. 1815(d)(2)(C), (E) (1994).       Congress provided explicitly

that the entrance fee was imposed to prevent dilution of the

reserves of the fund that began insuring the assumed deposit

liabilities as a result of the transaction.       See H. Rept. 101-

54(I), at 325.       The pertinent legislative history does not

contain an explicit explanation of Congress’ intent as to the

imposition of the exit fee.

       Under the second exception to the moratorium, certain

conversion transactions could be consummated through a merger or

consolidation (collectively, merger).       See 12 U.S.C.

sec. 1815(d)(3) (1994); see also FIRREA sec. 206(a)(7), 103 Stat.

196.       Under this exception, which Metrobank could have utilized

to effect the transaction, but decided not to, a bank holding

company that controlled a SAIF-insured savings association could

generally merge the savings association’s assets and liabilities

with a BIF-insured subsidiary.       Because the deposit liabilities

of the SAIF-insured institution and a certain percentage of

       7
       The subject transaction was consummated under this
exception.
                              - 17 -

future deposits always remained assessable by the SAIF, the

financial institution utilizing this exception was not required

to pay the exit and entrance fees as to the conversion

transaction.   See 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(3)(B), (G) (1994).    The

institution, however, could not during the moratorium period stop

paying SAIF assessments on the ascertained percentage of the

future deposits.   The institution could switch the insurance

coverage on those deposits, if it so desired, after the

moratorium expired but only if the FDIC approved the switch and

the institution paid the requisite exit and entrance fees.

     With this backdrop in mind, we turn to the relevant text of

the Internal Revenue Code.   Section 162(a) generally provides

that a taxpayer may deduct "all the ordinary and necessary

expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on

any trade or business".8   Section 263(a)(1) generally provides

that a deduction is not allowed for "Any amount paid out for new

buildings or for permanent improvements or betterments made to

increase the value of any property or estate."   Whether an

expense is deductible under section 162(a) or must be capitalized

under section 263(a)(1) is a factual determination for which

     8
       An expense is ordinary if it is of common or frequent
occurrence in the type of business involved. See Deputy v. du
Pont, 308 U.S. 488, 495 (1940); Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111,
114 (1933). An expense is necessary if it is appropriate or
helpful to the development of the taxpayer's business. See
Commissioner v. Tellier, 383 U.S. 687, 689 (1966); Welch v.
Helvering, supra.
                                - 18 -

there is no controlling rule.    Petitioner, as the taxpayer, bears

the burden of establishing its right to deduct the disputed fees.

See INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. at 84, 86; Welch v.

Helvering, 290 U.S. 111, 114-116 (1933); see also A.E. Staley

Manufacturing Company and Subs. v. Commissioner, 119 F.3d 482,

486 (7th Cir. 1997), revg. and remanding 105 T.C. 166 (1995).

     When an expense creates a separate and distinct asset, it

usually must be capitalized.    See, e.g., Commissioner v. Lincoln

Sav. & Loan Association, 403 U.S. 345 (1971); FMR Corp. & Subs.

v. Commissioner, 110 T.C. 402, 417 (1998); Iowa-Des Moines Natl.

Bank v. Commissioner, 68 T.C. 872, 878 (1977), affd. 592 F.2d 433

(8th Cir. 1979).   When an expense does not create such an asset,

the most critical factors to consider in passing on the question

of deductibility are the period of time over which the taxpayer

will derive a benefit from the expense and the significance to

the taxpayer of that benefit.    See INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner,

supra at 87-88; United States v. Mississippi Chem. Corp., 405

U.S. 298, 310 (1972); FMR Corp. & Subs. v. Commissioner, supra at

426; Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Commissioner, 106 T.C.

445, 453 (1996).   Expenses must generally be capitalized when

they either:   (1) Create or enhance a separate and distinct asset

or (2) otherwise generate significant benefits for the taxpayer

extending beyond the end of the taxable year.
                               - 19 -

     Respondent makes no assertion that either fee created or

enhanced a separate and distinct capital asset.      Respondent’s

sole argument in support of the determination is that the fees

generated for Metrobank the proffered benefits listed supra p.

10, which, respondent asserts, are significant long-term benefits

to Metrobank.   We disagree with respondent that any of these

benefits are significant long-term benefits which would require

either fee’s capitalization.   Although the fees may arguably have

produced one or more future benefits for Metrobank, none of those

benefits, when considered either separately or together, is

enough to characterize either fee as a capitalizable expense.

Under the requisite test, capitalization is not always required

when an incidental future benefit is generated by an expense.

See INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra at 87.

     We are unable to find as a fact that Metrobank’s payment of

either fee produced for Metrobank a significant future benefit

requiring capitalization.   Whether a benefit is significant to

the taxpayer who incurs the underlying expense rests on the

duration and extent of the benefit, and a future benefit that

flows incidentally from an expense may not be significant.      See

id. at 87-88.   We find as a fact that Metrobank’s payment of the

fees produced for it no significant long-term benefit.

     Metrobank did not pay either fee as a condition to obtaining

FDIC insurance in the first place.      Metrobank always had and,
                                - 20 -

absent a decision by it to the contrary, would always have had

FDIC insurance for its deposit liabilities, including those

deposit liabilities assumed from Community.    Metrobank paid the

fees to insure its assumed deposit liabilities with the BIF, the

insurance fund in which it was already a participant, rather than

with the SAIF, a fund with which it was unaffiliated.    Any

benefit that Metrobank derived from insuring the assumed deposit

liabilities with the BIF, rather than the SAIF, is insignificant

when weighed against the primary purpose for the payment of the

fees.   That purpose, as explained herein, was, in the case of the

exit fee, to protect the integrity of the SAIF for the direct

benefit of the FDIC and the potential benefit of the SAIF’s

participants, one of which was not Metrobank, by imposing upon

Metrobank a final premium for the insurance coverage that the

assumed deposit liabilities had received while insured by the

SAIF before their assumption.    The primary purpose of the

entrance fee, as also explained herein, was to protect the

integrity of the BIF by charging an additional first-year premium

for insurance coverage on the assumed deposit liabilities.

     It is critical that Metrobank would not have recovered any

portion of either fee were it to have severed its relationship

with the BIF.   Metrobank paid the exit fee to the SAIF as a

nonrefundable, final premium for insurance that it had already

received.   The SAIF had insured the assumed deposit liabilities
                              - 21 -

before the conversion transaction, and Metrobank was not

affiliated with the SAIF either before or after the transaction.

Metrobank had neither a right nor a chance to recover any of the

exit fee following its payment of the fee to the SAIF; SAIF funds

were available for use by the FDIC only with respect to SAIF

participants.   As we view the exit fee in the context of the

statutory scheme, we see that the fee serves mainly to compensate

the former insurer (in this case, the SAIF) for its future loss

of income as to the assumed deposit liabilities, which

compensation flowed to the direct benefit of the FDIC and the

potential benefit of the former insurance fund’s participants.

But for the conversion transaction, the former insurer would have

received income in the form of the semiannual insurance premiums

payable on the deposit liabilities which were the subject of the

assumption, and a failing SAIF participant could have had an

opportunity to reach that income were the FDIC to have allowed

it.   Here, the exit fee gave to the SAIF (and to its

participants) 0.9 percent of the deposit liabilities assumed by

Metrobank which translates into four to five times the annual

assessment which the SAIF would otherwise have received as to

those liabilities had they not been assumed by Metrobank.

      We view the entrance fee as also paid as a nonrefundable

premium for insurance coverage; in contrast with the exit fee,

however, we understand the entrance fee to be paid for the
                              - 22 -

current year’s insurance.   The use and purpose of the entrance

fee is diametrically different from that of the exit fee.     In

addition to the fact that the entrance fee is significantly less

than the exit fee, the entrance fee is paid to the fund that

insures the deposits of the institution that assumes the deposit

liabilities in a conversion transaction.   Moreover, the entrance

fee is imposed in accordance with an express congressional intent

to prevent dilution of the reserves of the current insurer

through the addition of unworthy participants which could prove

to be financially troubled and cause an undesired depletion of

that insurer’s resources.   See H. Rept. 101-54(I), at 325 (1989).

But for the imposition of the entrance fee, the participants in

an FDIC fund could deplete the reserves of that fund if the fund

became liable for an extraordinary amount of deposit liabilities

which had been assumed by the participants in conversion

transactions.   After a BIF participant assumes the deposit

liabilities of a SAIF participant and pays an entrance fee,

however, the value of the BIF generally bears the same ratio to

the total deposits insured by the BIF (inclusive of the deposits

underlying the assumed deposit liabilities) as before the

conversion transaction.

     We find additional support for our conclusion that Metrobank

derived insignificant benefits from its payment of the fees by

noting that Metrobank paid both fees incident to its management’s
                              - 23 -

decision to assume the deposit liabilities of a failed savings

association.   Metrobank’s management obviously made a business

decision to pay the two fees to insure the assumed deposit

liabilities with its regular insurer, the BIF; management decided

not to forgo the fees, merge under the second exception to the

moratorium, and insure the deposit liabilities with the SAIF.

The BIF’s annual insurance premiums were less expensive than

those of the SAIF, and Metrobank, being a participant in the BIF,

was obviously more familiar with its requirements.   Although

respondent observes correctly that Metrobank could have avoided

the fees by assuming the deposit liabilities through a merger,

Metrobank chose for business reasons not to do so.   We decline to

second-guess that business judgment.   Under the facts herein, the

exercise of such a sound and reasonable business practice under

which a taxpayer such as Metrobank acts to minimize its recurring

operating costs is not a significant future benefit that requires

capitalization of the related nonasset-producing expenditures.

Cost saving expenditures such as this, which are incurred in the

process of fulfilling an everyday sound and reasonable business

practice, as opposed to effecting a change in corporate

structure, qualify for current deductibility under section

162(a).   See T.J. Enters., Inc. v. Commissioner, 101 T.C. 581,

589 (1993) (“Expenditures designed to reduce costs are * * *

generally deductible.”), and the cases cited therein.   This is
                               - 24 -

especially true where, as is here, the fees relate solely to the

optional insurance of a liability and do not relate directly to

either a capital asset or to an income producing activity.     Cf.

INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. at 83-84 (capitalization

generally required to match an expense with the income to be

generated therefrom).

     Respondent analogizes petitioner’s payment of the fees with

the purchase of a nontransferable membership interest, which,

respondent asserts, is a capitalizable expense.    According to

respondent, Metrobank’s membership interest in the BIF entitled

it to:    (1) A substantial reduction in future depository

insurance premiums, (2) the right to insure all of its deposits

in a more stable insurance fund, and (3) the need to adhere to

only one regulatory scheme.    We disagree with respondent’s

analogy.9   First, as mentioned above, respondent makes no

assertion that Metrobank’s payment of either fee was related to

the purchase of a capital asset.10   Second, Metrobank was already

     9
       We recognize that title 12 uses the terms BIF member and
SAIF member to refer to the participants of those funds. See,
e.g., 12 U.S.C. sec. 1813(d) (1994). We do not understand
Congress’ use of the word “member” to refer to a membership
interest in the funds in the property sense of the word. In
fact, respondent has not even made such an argument.
     10
       In this regard, respondent relies incorrectly on
Darlington-Hartsville Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. United States,
273 F. Supp. 229 (D.S.C. 1967), affd. 393 F.2d 494 (4th Cir.
1968), and Rodeway Inns of Am. v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 414
(1974), to support his position herein. The taxpayer in each of
                                                   (continued...)
                              - 25 -

participating in the BIF program before the transaction, and

Metrobank could have continued its participation in the BIF

program had it not consummated the transaction.   Third, new banks

are not charged either fee to insure their deposit liabilities

with the BIF, nor is either fee imposed when a bank assumes the

deposit liabilities of another bank.   Fourth, the fees were

nonrefundable, and any perceived benefit derived from Metrobank

from its payment of the fees would have been extinguished

completely had Metrobank terminated its FDIC insurance.

     We conclude and hold that the fees are currently deductible.

In so concluding, we note that respondent does not argue that the

facts at hand are similar to the facts of Commissioner v. Lincoln

Sav. & Loan Association, 403 U.S. 345 (1971).11   Nor do we find

that such is the case.   Whereas the payments in the Lincoln

Savings case served to create or enhance for the taxpayer a

separate and distinct asset, to wit, a “distinct and recognized

property interest in the Secondary Reserve”, id. at 354-355, the

payments here did no such thing.

     10
      (...continued)
those cases purchased a capital asset incident to the payment of
the expenses in dispute there.
     11
       In fact, respondent does not even mention Commissioner v.
Lincoln Sav. & Loan Association, 403 U.S. 345 (1971), in his
brief.
                               - 26 -

     We have considered all arguments of the parties and, to the

extent not discussed herein, find those arguments to be

irrelevant or without merit.   To reflect concessions,

                                         Decision will be entered

                                    under Rule 155.

     Reviewed by the Court.

     WELLS, CHABOT, COHEN, SWIFT, GERBER, COLVIN, FOLEY, VASQUEZ,
and THORNTON, JJ., agree with this majority opinion.
                              - 27 -

     SWIFT, J., concurring:   I write separately to clarify why I

believe the fees paid by Metrobank to the FDIC are currently

deductible.

     In INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. 79, 86-87 (1992),

the Supreme Court described two closely related types of costs

that are to be capitalized under section 263:   (1) Costs incurred

in connection with the acquisition, creation, or enhancement of a

specific capital asset; and (2) costs that provide significant

benefits that accrue to a taxpayer in future years.

     Recently, in analyzing costs allegedly incurred in

connection with the acquisition or creation of a capital asset,

three Courts of Appeals have reversed all or part of recent Tax

Court opinions.   See Wells Fargo & Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner,

224 F.3d 874 (8th Cir. 2000), affg. in part and revg. in part

Norwest Corp. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 112 T.C. 89 (1999); PNC

Bancorp, Inc. v. Commissioner, 212 F.3d 822 (3d Cir. 2000), revg.

110 T.C. 349 (1998); A.E. Staley Manufacturing Co. & Subs. v.

Commissioner, 119 F.3d 482 (7th Cir. 1997), revg. and remanding

105 T.C. 166 (1995).   In these opinions, because of the close

relationship of the above types of costs, the Courts of Appeals

use language and analyses that are relevant in the instant case

to the issue as to the capitalization of fees paid because they

allegedly provided to Metrobank significant future benefits.
                                - 28 -

     In Wells Fargo & Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 224 F.3d at

885-887, the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit explained as

follows:

     it is not proper to decide that a cost must be
     capitalized solely because the fact finder determines
     that the cost is “incidentally connected” with a long
     term benefit. This is supported by both Lincoln
     Savings and INDOPCO. * * *

     *      *       *       *            *   *         *

     The INDOPCO case addressed costs which were directly
     related to the acquisition, while * * * [Wells Fargo]
     involves costs which were only indirectly related to
     the acquisition. * * * In this case, there is only an
     indirect relation between the salaries (which originate
     from the employment relationship) and the acquisition
     (which provides the long term benefit * * *).

     Based on the above analysis of the Court of Appeals for the

Eighth Circuit, salary and investigatory costs indirectly

relating to the acquisition of a capital asset and indirectly

providing the taxpayer with future benefits were not required to

be capitalized under INDOPCO because they did not directly

provide significant future benefits to the taxpayer.   See id.

at 889.

     In PNC Bancorp, Inc. v. Commissioner, 212 F.3d at 829,

involving expenses paid for credit reports, appraisals, and

salaries relating to consumer loans, the Court of Appeals for the

Third Circuit refused to conclude that --
                              - 29 -

     in performing credit checks, appraisals, and other
     tasks intended to assess the profitability of a loan,
     the banks “stepped out of [their] normal method of
     doing business” so as to render the expenditures at
     issue capital in nature. Encyclopaedia Britannica,
     Inc. v. Commissioner, 685 F.2d 212, 217 (7th Cir.
     1982).

     The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in PNC Bancorp,

Inc. v. Commissioner, 212 F.3d at 830, continued as follows

(quoting from a portion of the taxpayer’s brief):

     the Tax Court proceeded from the clearly accurate
     premise that the expenses in question were associated
     with the loans, incurred in connection with the
     acquisition of the loans, or “directly related to the
     creation of the loans,” * * * to the faulty conclusion
     that these expenses themselves created the loans. We
     conclude that the term “create” does not stretch this
     far. In Lincoln Savings, it was the payments
     themselves that formed the corpus of the Secondary
     Reserve; therefore, it naturally follows that these
     payments “created” the reserve fund. In * * * [the
     taxpayer's] case, however, the expenses are merely
     costs associated with the origination of the loans; the
     expenses themselves do not become part of the balance
     of the loan. * * * [Citation omitted.]

          While purporting to apply the Lincoln Savings
          language, both the Tax Court and the
          government effectively have transformed that
          language, by subtle but significant degrees,
          from a test based on whether a cost “creates”
          a separate and distinct asset, into a much
          more sweeping test * * * . * * *

In PNC Bancorp, Inc. v. Commissioner, 110 T.C. at 370, we

concluded that the costs in issue were “assimilated” into the

asset that was acquired.   In contrast, the Court of Appeals for
                              - 30 -

the Third Circuit held that the costs reflected “recurring,

routine day-to-day business” costs that may be currently deducted

as the costs were not incurred for significant future benefits.

PNC Bancorp, Inc. v. Commissioner, 212 F.3d at 834.     While the

benefits from the consumer loans would continue for years, the

Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit resolved not to expand the

type of costs that must be capitalized “so as to drastically

limit what might be considered as 'ordinary and necessary'

expenses.”    Id. at 830.

     A.E. Staley Manufacturing Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner,

119 F.3d 482 (7th Cir. 1997), involved fees paid to investment

bankers to explore alternative transactions in connection with an

unsuccessful defense of a hostile tender offer.   In reversing the

Tax Court’s holding that the fees had to be capitalized, the

Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit relied on the “well-worn

notion” that costs incurred in defending a business are currently

deductible.   Id. at 487.

     As noted in A.E. Staley Manufacturing by the Court of

Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, the test to apply under INDOPCO

is difficult to articulate and to apply.   See id.    The test is

very factual and practical.   In an effort to partially reconcile

the various statements of the INDOPCO test and, in particular, in

light of the recent Courts of Appeals’ opinions reversing the Tax

Court’s application of the INDOPCO test, I offer the following:
                             - 31 -

          Under INDOPCO, direct and indirect (e.g.,
     overhead) costs that are similar to routine expenses
     incurred by a taxpayer in the ordinary and normal
     course of its business (e.g., salaries and insurance
     fees) need not be capitalized unless they directly
     relate to the acquisition, creation, or enhancement of
     a specific capital asset or unless they directly
     produce significant benefits to the taxpayer that
     accrue to the taxpayer in future years.

     Applying this statement of the INDOPCO capitalization test

to the fees involved in this case, it becomes clear that the fees

should be currently deductible.   Relevant aspects of the fees are

described on pages 18-24 of the majority’s opinion.   I would

emphasize that the fees --

     (1) Were paid to the FDIC, the Federal governmental
     agency which routinely supervises Metrobank in the
     normal course of its business, not to Community, the
     transferor of the deposit liabilities and not to third-
     parties such as lawyers and financial advisers for a
     specific service necessary to consummate the conversion
     transaction;

     (2) Were similar to other insurance fees that were
     routinely paid by Metrobank to the Federal government
     in the normal course of Metrobank’s banking business;

     (3) Both in amount paid per year ($71,518) and in the
     total cumulative amount paid over five years
     ($352,904), were generally less than Metrobank’s total
     regular insurance premiums paid into the FDIC funds in
     a single year (in 1993 and 1994, $465,046 and $463,583
     respectively, and in 1995, $322,245);

     (4) Did not provide Metrobank with any additional
     insurance coverage with regard to its deposit
     liabilities (including those transferred from
     Community) and were not paid in lieu of the regular
     future annual insurance premiums due;
                        - 32 -

(5) Once paid by Metrobank into the insurance funds,
were not refundable to Metrobank and were available for
use by the FDIC to assist any participant in the funds;

(6) Were triggered by and were coincidental with the
conversion transaction, but had the origin and purpose,
and were assessed and paid not because thereof but
because of the broader purpose to shore up the
financial strength of the FDIC’s insurance funds, the
financial strength of which was of ongoing and
necessary concern not just to the FDIC but to the
entire financial community (and which concern reflected
the same purpose for which Metrobank and others paid
the annual premiums into the FDIC insurance funds). In
other words, the FDIC, Metrobank, Community, and all
other contributors into the insurance funds had the
same purpose for paying the annual premiums and for
paying the exit and entrance fees (i.e., the
maintenance of the financial integrity of the Federal
government’s depository liability insurance programs,
essential not just to the government, but also to every
participant in the financial community -- the
government, the banks and savings and loans, and even
you and I, the depositors who hope and trust that we
will always be able to get our money back).

For the reasons stated, I respectfully concur.
                                - 33 -

     CHIECHI, J., concurring:    Respondent chose to ask the Court

to decide the issue of whether the exit fee and the entrance fee

should be capitalized solely on the basis of respondent’s theory

that those fees generated certain significant future benefits for

Metrobank.   The majority states that it will “decide this case as

framed by respondent”.   Majority op. p. 11.   However, the

majority rejects respondent’s reliance on Darlington-Hartsville

Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. United States, 273 F. Supp. 229 (D.S.C.

1967), affd. 393 F.2d 494 (4th Cir. 1968), and Rodeway Inns of

America v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 414 (1974),1 because:   “The

taxpayer in each of those cases purchased a capital asset

incident to the payment of the expenses in dispute there.”

Majority op. p. 24 note 10.   I am concerned that such language by

the majority could be read to suggest its view on what the result

in this case would have been if respondent had argued that the

exit fee and the entrance fee should be capitalized because such

fees constitute amounts expended to acquire an asset with a life

extending substantially beyond the taxable year of acquisition.

See, e.g., Commissioner v. Idaho Power Co., 418 U.S. 1, 13

(1974); Woodward v. Commissioner, 397 U.S. 572, 575-576 (1970);

Ellis Banking Corp. v. Commissioner, 688 F.2d 1376, 1379 (11th

Cir. 1982), affg. in part and remanding in part T.C. Memo. 1981-

     1
      On brief, respondent described those two cases as cases in
which “the courts held that the taxpayers could not deduct
expenses that were part of a plan to produce a positive business
benefit for future years.”
                              - 34 -

123; American Stores Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 458,

468-470 (2000).   If the majority intended to express no opinion

on what the result in this case would have been if respondent had

advanced such an argument, the majority should not have used

language that, in my view, could be construed to suggest such an

opinion.2

     I have considered and resolved the issue of whether the exit

fee and the entrance fee should be capitalized solely on the

basis of respondent’s theory that those fees produced certain

significant long-term benefits for Metrobank.   On the record

presented, I, like the majority, reject respondent’s theory that

the benefits which respondent asserts the fees in question

produced are significant long-term benefits requiring

capitalization of those fees.3   However, I disagree with the

majority that the exit fee is a “final premium for insurance that

it had already received”, majority op. p. 20, and that the

entrance fee is a “premium * * * paid for the current year’s

     2
      Similarly, if the majority decided this case “as framed by
respondent”, majority op. p. 11, the majority should not have
concluded that, although respondent does not argue that the facts
presented in this case are similar to the facts in Commissioner
v. Lincoln Sav. & Loan Association, 403 U.S. 345 (1971), see
majority op. p. 25, the facts in the instant case are not similar
to those facts, see id.
     3
      Unlike the majority, I have not considered whether there
are any benefits other than those alleged by respondent that are
significant future benefits generated for Metrobank by the fees
in question. See majority op. pp. 18-19.
                             - 35 -

insurance”, majority op. pp. 21-22.   In my view, the record and

12 U.S.C. secs. 1815 and 1817 (1994) regarding the nature, use,

and purpose of those nonrefundable fees, which were paid in five

annual installments, belie the majority’s analogy of the exit fee

and the entrance fee to premiums paid for insurance coverage

provided.

     THORNTON, J., agrees with this concurring opinion.
                               - 36 -

     RUWE, J., dissenting:    The majority refuses to consider

whether the exit and entrance fees should be capitalized as costs

incurred in connection with the acquisition of a capital asset

because the majority believes that respondent failed to include

this theory in his determination.   The majority reads the notice

of deficiency too narrowly.   Respondent’s determination, as

contained in the notice of deficiency, states:

     It has been determined that your deductions for the
     entrance and exit fee paid to the Federal Deposit
     Insurance Corporation for the transfer of your insured
     deposits from one depository insurance to another
     depository insurance fund is a non-deductible capital
     expenditure that is not subject to depreciation or
     amortization.

The language contained in the notice of deficiency is broad and

disallows deduction of the fees simply because respondent

determined that the fees were capital expenditures.

     The broad language contained in the notice of deficiency

should not have misled petitioner into believing that it did not

have to establish that the fees were not costs incurred in

connection with the acquisition of a capital asset.    Petitioner’s

primary argument on brief was that the fees were for deposit

insurance coverage for the years in issue.   Petitioner’s

alternative argument was that if the fees must be capitalized

then they are to be associated with the acquired deposits and

amortized over the useful life of the core deposits.   Thus,

petitioner recognized that the fees might be viewed as being

incurred in connection with the acquisition of capital assets.
                              - 37 -

There is nothing to indicate that there were any additional facts

bearing on this case that could have been introduced.   This case

was submitted on the stipulated facts, and there is nothing to

indicate that petitioner was not aware of its burden of proving

entitlement to the claimed deductions, including the need to

establish that the fees were not incurred in connection with the

acquisition of assets.

     This is not a case where respondent issued a narrowly drawn

notice of deficiency and subsequently advanced new grounds not

directly or implicitly within the ambit of the determination.

See Pagel, Inc. v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. 200, 212 (1988), affd.

905 F.2d 1190 (8th Cir. 1990); Sorin v. Commissioner, 29 T.C.

959, 969 (1958), affd. per curiam 271 F.2d 741 (2d Cir. 1959);

Weaver v. Commissioner, 25 T.C. 1067, 1085 (1956).   While the

language contained in the notice of deficiency does not

specifically state that the fees were costs incurred in

connection with the acquisition of a capital asset, that is a

reason for capitalization that is within the scope of the

determination.   The failure to enumerate every theory that could

support a determination should not prevent us from deciding this

case on what we consider to be the correct application of the law

to the facts presented.   See Rendina v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.

1996-392; Barnette v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-595, affd.

without published opinion sub nom. Allied Management Corp. v.
                                - 38 -

Commissioner, 41 F.3d 667 (11th Cir. 1994).    Indeed, this Court

has recognized on several occasions that we have the inherent

authority to decide a case on grounds not raised in the notice of

deficiency and will do so if petitioner is not surprised or

prejudiced by the ground.    See Seligman v. Commissioner, 84 T.C.

191, 198 (1985), affd. 796 F.2d 116 (5th Cir. 1986); Estate of

Horvath v. Commissioner, 59 T.C. 551, 555 (1973); Barr v.

Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-69 n.24; Gmelin v. Commissioner,

T.C. Memo. 1988-338 n.18, affd. without published opinion 891

F.2d 280 (3d Cir. 1989).1

     Petitioner bears “the burden of clearly showing the right to

the claimed deduction”.     INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S.

79, 84 (1992).   In order for us to decide that petitioner is

entitled to a current business expense deduction under section

162(a), petitioner must establish that the fees:    (1) Did not

create or enhance a separate or distinct asset;2 (2) did not

     1
      Where the record contains sufficient facts to permit us to
decide a case on an issue that would dispose of it, we shall do
so, regardless of whether the parties have pleaded the issue.
See Rendina v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1996-392; Barnette v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-595, affd. without published
opinion sub nom. Allied Management Corp. v. Commissioner, 41 F.3d
667 (11th Cir. 1994); see also Park Place, Inc. v. Commissioner,
57 T.C. 767, 768-769 (1972).
     2
      See Commissioner v. Lincoln Sav. & Loan Association, 403
U.S. 345, 354 (1971).
                               - 39 -

create significant future benefits;3 and (3) were not incurred in

connection with the acquisition of a capital asset.4

     Capitalization is generally required for expenditures that

are incurred by a taxpayer “in connection with” the acquisition

of an asset.   Such expenditures include more than just the stated

purchase price of the asset.   For example, wages paid in

connection with the acquisition of a capital asset or legal fees

paid to consummate an acquisition must be capitalized.   See

Commissioner v. Idaho Power Co., 418 U.S. 1 (1974); American

Stores Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 458 (2000).

     In Commissioner v. Idaho Power Co., supra at 13, the Supreme

Court observed:

     Of course, reasonable wages paid in the carrying on of
     a trade or business qualify as a deduction from gross
     income. * * * But when wages are paid in connection
     with the construction or acquisition of a capital
     asset, they must be capitalized and are then entitled
     to be amortized over the life of the capital asset so
     acquired. * * *

In American Stores Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner, supra at 469, we

explained:

          A particular cost, no matter what its type, may be
     deductible in one context but may be required to be
     capitalized in another context. Simply because other
     cases have allowed a current deduction for similar

     3
      See INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. 79, 87-88
(1992).
     4
      See Commissioner v. Idaho Power Co., 418 U.S. 1, 13 (1974);
American Stores Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 458, 469
(2000).
                               - 40 -

     expenses in different contexts does not require the
     same result here. * * *

                 *    *    *     *      *   *   *

     As previously indicated, expenditures which otherwise
     might qualify as currently deductible must be
     capitalized if they are incurred “in connection with”
     the acquisition of a capital asset. Commissioner v.
     Idaho Power Co., supra at 13. * * *

As further explained in Ellis Banking Corp. v. Commissioner, 688

F.2d 1376, 1379 (11th Cir. 1982):

     The requirement that costs be capitalized extends
     beyond the price payable to the seller to include any
     costs incurred by the buyer in connection with the
     purchase, such as appraisals of the property or the
     costs of meeting any conditions of the sale. See,
     e.g., Woodward v. Commissioner, 1970, 397 U.S. 572, 90
     S.Ct. 1302, 25 L.Ed.2d 577; United States v. Hilton
     Hotels Corp., 1970, 397 U.S. 580, 90 S.Ct. 1307, 25
     L.Ed.2d 585. Further, the Code provides that the
     requirement of capitalization takes precedence over the
     allowance of deductions. §§ 161, 261; see generally
     Commissioner v. Idaho Power Co., 1974, 418 U.S. 1, 94
     S.Ct. 2757, 41 L.Ed.2d 535. Thus an expenditure that
     would ordinarily be a deductible expense must
     nonetheless be capitalized if it is incurred in
     connection with the acquisition of a capital asset.6
     The function of these rules is to achieve an accurate
     measure of net income for the year by matching outlays
     with the revenues attributable to them and recognizing
     both during the same taxable year. When an outlay is
     connected to the acquisition of an asset with an
     extended life, it would understate current net income
     to deduct the outlay immediately. * * *
          6
           We do not use the term “capital asset” in the
     restricted sense of section 1221. Instead, we use the
     term in the accounting sense, to refer to any asset
     with a useful life extending beyond one year.

     Metrobank chose to acquire Community’s assets.   One way to

accomplish this was through a conversion transaction where assets

of an SAIF insured institution are transferred to a BIF insured
                              - 41 -

institution and, after the transfer, all deposits are insured by

the BIF.   Pursuant to this method, Metrobank was required to pay

the exit and entrance fees.   The other way Metrobank could have

acquired Community’s assets was to effectuate a merger with

Community.   If Metrobank had chosen to acquire Community through

a merger it would have avoided the requirement to pay exit and

entrance fees, but the deposits acquired from Community would

have continued to be insured by the SAIF.   Metrobank undoubtedly

had its reasons for not entering into a merger transaction.   On

brief, petitioner states that among its reasons for choosing to

acquire Community’s assets in a conversion transaction in which

it had to pay the exit and entrance fees were to reduce future

deposit insurance premiums and reduce the future regulatory and

reporting requirements that would otherwise have applied.5

     The fact that the expenditures by Metrobank were incurred in

connection with the acquisition of Community’s assets is

     5
      These objectives appear to be significant long-term
benefits that support respondent’s argument. Petitioner states
on page 13 of its brief:

          Metrobank’s purposes for incurring the
     expenditures were twofold. First, by electing to
     convert the deposits assumed from the SAIF to the BIF,
     Petitioner hoped to reduce future deposit insurance
     assessments because the BIF assessment rate was much
     less than the SAIF assessment rate. Second, Petitioner
     was already a member of BIF and understood the FDIC
     rules and regulations for insurance coverage through
     this system. Maintaining insurance coverage under both
     funds would significantly increase the reporting and
     administrative requirements on an ongoing basis.
                              - 42 -

especially clear in the case of the exit fee.   On page 20, the

majority asserts that the “purpose” of the exit fee was to

protect the integrity of the SAIF for the potential benefit of

SAIF participants.   While this may have been the FDIC’s purpose,

it surely was not one of Metrobank’s business purposes.

Metrobank was never insured by the SAIF and derived no insurance

coverage from the SAIF in return for payment of the exit fee.     To

the extent that “purpose” is relevant to the issue of

capitalization versus deduction, it is the payor’s (taxpayer’s)

purpose for making an expenditure that controls whether the

expenditure must be capitalized.   See INDOPCO, Inc. v.

Commissioner, 503 U.S. at 85, 88-89.   The majority, at pp. 20-21,

erroneously relies on the payee’s purpose for imposing the exit

fee in order to justify the payor’s (petitioner’s) deduction.

     The majority allows the exit fee as an insurance expense

deduction.   It justifies its conclusion that the exit fee did not

produce significant future benefits for Metrobank by finding that

all the insurance benefits from the SAIF had been received prior

to Metrobank’s acquisition of Community’s assets.6   The majority

thus rejects petitioner’s primary argument that the exit fee was

paid for deposit insurance coverage that Metrobank received

during the years in issue.7   As described on page 20 of the

     6
      Petitioner acquired Community’s assets on Nov. 2, 1990.
     7
      The years in issue are petitioner’s fiscal years ending
                                                   (continued...)
                               - 43 -

majority opinion, the exit fee paid by Metrobank was for

insurance coverage that Community’s deposit liabilities had

received before Metrobank acquired Community’s assets and assumed

its liabilities.8    Nevertheless, the majority concludes that

“Metrobank paid the exit fee to the SAIF as a nonrefundable,

final premium for insurance that it had already received.”

Majority op. p.20.    (Emphasis added.)   Of course, if the exit fee

was paid for insurance that Metrobank had already received, it

would follow that there was no significant future benefit.

However, the majority’s conclusion that the exit fee was a

“premium” for insurance coverage that Metrobank had already

received from the SAIF is clearly wrong.

     Metrobank never received any “insurance” benefit from the

SAIF.    Any SAIF insurance benefit was derived prior to

Metrobank’s acquisition of Community’s assets.     Indeed, the

majority acknowledges that “Metrobank was not affiliated with the

SAIF either before or after the transaction” whereby it acquired

Community’s assets and liabilities.     Majority op. p. 21.

Metrobank would have no reason to pay for “insurance” coverage on

deposits for a period prior to its acquisition of those deposits.

     7
      (...continued)
Oct. 31, 1993, 1994, and 1995.
     8
      It is ironic that the majority relies on this theory that
petitioner never argued. Petitioner argued that the exit fee
paid to the SAIF was for insurance coverage that it received
during the years in issue. The majority correctly recognizes
that Metrobank was not insured by the SAIF during those years.
                              - 44 -

It is obvious that Metrobank paid the exit fee because it was

required in order for Metrobank to acquire Community’s assets.

The exit fee was paid for, and in connection with, the

acquisition of Community’s assets.

     Petitioner has failed to prove its entitlement to the

deductions in issue.   The uncontroverted facts show that the fees

were costs incurred in connection with the acquisition of a

capital asset.   Accordingly, the fees should be capitalized.

     WHALEN, HALPERN, BEGHE, GALE, and MARVEL, JJ., agree with
this dissenting opinion.
                                 - 45 -

      HALPERN, J., dissenting:

I.    Introduction

       We are faced here with a question of fact, whether

petitioner’s payments of the exit and entrance fees constitute

capital expenditures.    Petitioner bears the burden of proving

that they do not.    See Rule 142(a).     I do not believe that

petitioner has carried that burden.       Therefore, I would sustain

respondent’s deficiency determinations to the extent allocable to

respondent’s disallowance of deductions for those payments.

II.    Background

       A.   Facts

       This case was submitted for decision without trial, the

parties having stipulated or otherwise agreed to facts that each

believed sufficient to make his (its) case.       See Rule 122(a).

The fact that this case was submitted upon a stipulated record

does not alter petitioner’s burden of proof.       See Rule 122(b).

Following is a summary of the significant facts relied on by

petitioner.

       Metrobank purchased certain assets of a failed savings

association from the Resolution Trust Company (the purchase, the

assets, Community, and the RTC, respectively).       It did so

pursuant to a purchase and assumption agreement (the agreement),

which states that, as consideration for the assets (and certain

rights and options it acquired), Metrobank would pay to the RTC a

premium of $400,000 and assume certain deposit and other
                              - 46 -

liabilities of Community’s and undertake certain other

obligations and duties.   At the time of the purchase, Metrobank

was an “insured depository institution”, within the meaning of

section 204(c) of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery,

and Enforcement Act of 1989, Pub. L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 191 (1989)

(hereafter, without citation, FIRREA), 12 U.S.C. sec. 1813 (c)(2)

(1988), and the purchase constituted a “conversion transaction”

(conversion transaction) within the meaning of 12 U.S.C. sec.

1815(d)(2)(B) (Supp. I, 1989).   As a consequence, Metrobank

required the approval of the Federal Deposit Insurance

Corporation (the FDIC), which it obtained, to participate in the

purchase.   12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(A) (Supp. I, 1989).   Because

the purchase constituted a conversion transaction, Metrobank was

obligated to pay the exit and entrance fees imposed by 12 U.S.C.

section 1815(d)(2)(E) (Supp. I, 1989) (the exit fee and the

entrance fee, respectively, or, collectively, the fees), which

were assessed against it by the FDIC and became its liability.

See 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(F) (Supp. I, 1989); 12 C.F.R. sec.

312.10(a) (1991).   Metrobank paid the fees over 5 years, as

permitted by 12 C.F.R. section 312.10(e) (1991), and deducted

each payment (the payments) on its Federal income tax return for

the year in which payment was made.

     B.   Issue Raised by the Pleadings

     On account of Metrobank’s deductions of the payments (for

1993 through 1995), respondent determined deficiencies in tax.
                                 - 47 -

In his notice of deficiency (the notice), respondent explained

the adjustments giving rise to the deficiencies related to the

payments as follows:

       It has been determined that your deductions for the
       entrance and exit fee paid to the Federal Deposit
       Insurance Corporation for the transfer of your insured
       deposits from one depository insurance [fund] to
       another depository insurance fund is a non-deductible
       capital expenditure that is not subject to depreciation
       or amortization. Accordingly, your taxable income is
       being increased as follows: [$71,518 for each year].

       In the petition, petitioner assigned the following errors to

respondent’s adjustments:

       The Commissioner erred in disallowing petitioner’s
       payment of $71,518 to the Federal Deposit Insurance
       Corporation as an ordinary and necessary business
       expense. The expenditure is allowable as an ordinary
       and necessary business expense pursuant to Section
       162(a) and Treas. Reg. § 1.162-1(a).

By the answer, respondent denied petitioner’s assignments of

error.      Respondent did not, however, disagree with petitioner’s

averments, which, in substance, reflect the facts stipulated.

Petitioner filed no reply.

III.    Discussion

       A.    Introduction

       The details of the purchase are not in controversy.    The

pleadings establish that the only issue for decision is whether

the payments entitle Metrobank to a deduction pursuant to section

162(a) and section 1.162-1(a), Income Tax Regs.      Section 162(a)

allows “as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses
                               - 48 -

paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade

or business”.   As pertinent to this case, section 1.162-1(a),

Income Tax Regs., states that, among items included in business

expenses, are “insurance premiums against fire, storm, theft,

accident, or other similar losses in the case of a business”.

Petitioner’s burden is to prove that the payments are not capital

expenditures as alleged by respondent in the notice.1   I believe

that petitioner has failed to carry that burden.    Specifically,

petitioner has not shown that, as to it, the exit fee is anything

other that a cost incident to the purchase, nor has it shown that

the entrance fee purchased an insurance benefit or, even if it

did, that such insurance benefit did not extend beyond the year

in which the purchase occurred.

     B.   The Exit Fee

           1.   Introduction

     The exit fee is imposed by 12 U.S.C. section

1815(d)(2)(E)(i) (Supp. I, 1989), in an amount to be determined

jointly by the FDIC and the Secretary of the Treasury

(Secretary).    See 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(F) (Supp. I, 1989).

The origin of the exit fee requirement is section 206(a)(7) of

FIRREA.   With respect to transactions such as the purchase,

     1
        On the basis of the notice and the pleadings, it is
apparently respondent’s position that, if the payments are not
capital expenditures, they may be deducted as ordinary and
necessary business expenses under sec. 162(a).
                                - 49 -

regulations establish the amount of the exit fee as “the product

derived by multiplying the dollar amount of the retained deposit

base transferred from the Savings Association Insurance Fund

member to the Bank Insurance Fund member by 0.90 percent

(0.0090)”.   12 C.F.R. sec. 312.5(c)(2) (1991).   In pertinent

part, the term “retained deposit base” means:

     the total deposits transferred from a Savings
     Association Insurance Fund Member to a Bank Insurance
     Fund Member * * * less the following deposits:

          (1) Any deposit acquired, directly or indirectly,
     by or through any deposit broker; and

          (2) Any portion of any deposit account exceeding
     $80,000.

12 C.F.R. sec. 312.1(j) (1991).

          2.     Failure of Petitioner To Establish Purpose of the
                 Exit Fee

     There is no clear explanation in FIRREA of the purpose of

the exit fee.    Moreover, the majority recognizes:   “The pertinent

legislative history does not contain an explicit explanation of

Congress’ intent as to the imposition of the exit fee.”    Majority

op. p. 16.     Nevertheless, the majority speculates variously that

the purpose of the exit fee is “to discourage SAIF-insured

institutions from insuring their deposits with the BIF”, Majority

op. p. 15, “to protect the integrity of the SAIF, id. p. 20, and

“to compensate the former insurer (in this case, the SAIF) for

its future loss of income as to the assumed deposit liabilities”,

id. p. 21.   The majority also speculates that the purpose of the
                               - 50 -

exit fee is to compensate the Savings Association Insurance Fund

from the cherry-picking of its desirable members:    “But for the

conversion transaction, the former insurer would have received

income in the form of the semiannual insurance premiums payable

on the deposit liabilities which were the subject of the

assumption, and a failing SAIF participant could have had an

opportunity to reach that income were the FDIC to have allowed

it.”   Id.

       The majority has failed to reconcile its various

speculations with the condition imposed by 12 U.S.C. section

1815(d)(2)(C) (Supp. I, 1989), pertinent to the approval by the

FDIC of a conversion transaction during the 5-year moratorium

imposed by 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(A)(ii)(Supp. I, 1989), that

the FDIC may approve such a conversion transaction any time if:

       (ii) the conversion occurs in connection with the
       acquisition of a Savings Association Insurance Fund
       member in default or in danger of default, and the
       Corporation determines that the estimated financial
       benefits to the Savings Association Insurance Fund or
       the Resolution Trust Corporation equal or exceed the
       Corporation’s estimate of loss of assessment income to
       such insurance fund over the remaining balance of the
       5-year period referred to in subparagraph (A) * * *

Apparently, Congress intended the FDIC to approve conversion

transactions involving a failed or failing Savings Association

Insurance Fund (SAIF) member during the moratorium only if the

loss of that member would improve the SAIF (e.g., if the present
                              - 51 -

value of any expected bailout of such member exceeded the present

value of any expected premiums).2

     Because petitioner failed to establish Congress’ purpose in

enacting the exit fee requirement, the majority’s conclusions as

to that purpose are not supported by the record.   Perhaps

petitioner could have obtained indirect evidence of Congress’

purpose for the exit fee by establishing the rationale behind the

FDIC’s and the Secretary’s decisions in implementing 12 U.S.C.

section 1815(d)(2)(F)(i) (1988) (by promulgating 12 C.F.R. sec.

312.5) (1991).3   Petitioner, however, did not do so.   The record,

therefore, contains no evidence from which we could conclude that

the exit fee was collected and expended on petitioner’s behalf

for any benefit (for instance, insurance for the remainder of the

     2
        The majority may have in mind the exit fee previously
imposed by the Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 (CEBA),
Pub. L. 100-86, 101 Stat. 552. See discussion in Majority op.
p. 13. That exit fee, imposed by 12 U.S.C. sec. 1441(f)(4)
(1988), was designed to protect against the Federal Savings and
Loan Insurance Corporation’s losing insured institutions. See
H. Rept. 100-62, at 42 (1987) (“Some profitable well-capitalized
institutions are considering converting from an institution
insured by FSLIC to an institution insured by FDIC. * * * In
order to reduce the amount of assessments flowing out of FSLIC
during the recapitalization period, the Committee believes it is
necessary to require the payment of a exit fee.”)
     3
        See, e.g., 55 Fed. Reg. 10406, 10408 (Mar. 21, 1990),
prescribing interim rule for assessment of exit fee and setting
exit fee at 0.90 percent of the deposit base as the “approximate
present value of each SAIF member’s pro rata share of interest
expense on the obligations of the Financing Corporation (“FICO”)
projected over the next thirty years.”
                              - 52 -

year in which the purchase occurred) that would entitle

petitioner to a deduction under section 162(a).

          3.   Petitioner Has Failed To Carry Its Burden of Proof

     Without any clear understanding of the purpose of the exit

fee, I fail to see how petitioner has carried its burden of

showing that the payments (as allocable to the exit fee) are not

a capital expenditure.   Petitioner argues:   “The exit fee

assessment is merely a one-time payment required by the FDIC to

protect the SAIF when deposits are transferred out of the fund.”

Even if that claim were true, so what?   How does it establish

that the exit-fee-allocable payments were anything other than a

cost incident to the purchase?

     The purchase was an asset purchase, with Metrobank acquiring

assets relating to the main office and one branch of Community.

The assets were cash, cash items, securities, loans, various

business assets, certain records and documents, and any assets

securing liabilities assumed by Metrobank.    The liabilities

assumed by Metrobank pursuant to the agreement (the liabilities)

consisted of indebtedness for deposits, secured indebtedness, and

any indebtedness for unpaid employment taxes and ad valorem

taxes.

     With exceptions not here relevant, section 1012 provides the

following rule:   “The basis of property shall be the cost of such
                              - 53 -

property”.   Section 1.1012-1(a), Income Tax Regs., provides:

“The cost is the amount paid for such property in cash or other

property.”   As used in section 1012, the term “cost” (cost) has

been interpreted to include any indebtedness to the seller for

the purchase price of the property and any indebtedness to a

third party secured by the property.   See, e.g., Parker v.

Delaney, 186 F.2d 455 (1st Cir. 1950) (purchase money

indebtedness included in cost basis); Blackstone Theatre Co. v.

Commissioner, 12 T.C. 801, 804 (1949) (cost basis of property

acquired subject to liens for taxes and penalties includes amount

of such liens); sec. 1.1012-1(g)(1), Income Tax Regs. (cost of

property includes amount attributable to debt instrument issued

in exchange for property).   Cost also includes expenses of, or

incident to, the acquisition of property.   See, e.g, Warner

Mountains Lumber Co. v. Commissioner, 9 T.C. 1171, 1174 (1947)

(fee paid to attorney for examining title of property to be

purchased is part of cost of property); sec. 1.263(a)-2(d),

Income Tax Regs. (fees for architect’s services); sec. 1.263(a)-

2(e), Income Tax Regs. (“Commissions paid in purchasing

securities”), approved in principle by Helvering v. Winmill, 305

U.S. 79 (1938).

     It is clear that the cost of the assets includes not only

the $400,000 premium paid by Metrobank to the RTC but also the

liabilities.   The conclusion suggested by the facts before us is
                               - 54 -

that the exit fee, which was imposed by statute and not by

contract, was also part of that cost.   If the only measurable

benefit to Metrobank resulting from payment of the exit fee is

that such payment enabled Metrobank to proceed with the purchase,

then I fail to see how the exit fee is anything other than a cost

incident to the purchase of the assets.   There is nothing in the

record (or in FIRREA) to support the majority’s finding that:

“Metrobank paid the exit fee to the SAIF as a non-refundable,

final premium for insurance that it had already received.”

Majority op. p. 20 (emphasis added).4   Even if that were taken as

a statement with respect to Community, it would not justify a

current deduction for Metrobank any more than would Metrobank’s

payment of its indebtedness for Community’s unpaid employment

taxes and ad valorem taxes, which it assumed pursuant to the

agreement.

           4.   Conclusion

     Petitioner bears the burden of proof, and the pleadings

clearly establish what it is that petitioner must prove, viz,

that the exit-fee-allocable payments were not a capital

expenditure.    Clearly, respondent has failed to convince the

majority that petitioner enjoyed the long-term benefits claimed

for it by respondent.    That, however, in no way satisfies

petitioner’s burden.    Petitioner has failed to prove that the

     4
         To the contrary, see supra note 3.
                                - 55 -

exit fee constituted anything other than a cost incident to the

purchase and, therefore, a capital expenditure.    Petitioner has

failed to prove its entitlement to a deduction on account of

payment of the exit fee pursuant to section 162(a).

     C.    The Entrance Fee

            1.   Introduction

     The entrance fee is imposed by 12 U.S.C. section

1815(d)(2)(E)(iii) (Supp. I, 1988) in an amount to be determined

by the FDIC.     The FDIC is guided in making that determination as

follows:

     in the case of a conversion transaction in which the
     resulting or acquiring depository institution is a Bank
     Insurance Fund member, the fee shall be the approximate
     amount which the Corporation calculates as necessary to
     prevent dilution of the Bank Insurance Fund, and shall
     be paid to the Bank Insurance Fund;

12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(2)(E)(iii)(I) (Supp. I, 1989).    With

respect to transactions such as the purchase, regulations

establish the amount of the entrance fee as “the product derived

by multiplying the dollar amount of the entrance fee deposit base

transferred from the Savings Association Insurance Fund member to

the Bank Insurance Fund member by the Bank Insurance Fund ratio.”

      12 C.F.R. sec. 312.4(c)(2) (1991).    The term “entrance fee

deposit base” is defined in 12 C.F.R. section 312.1(g) (1991) as

follows:

          The term "entrance fee deposit base" generally
     refers to those deposits which the Federal Deposit
     Insurance Corporation, in its discretion, estimates to
                               - 56 -

     have a high probability of remaining with the acquiring
     or resulting depository institution for a reasonable
     period of time following the acquisition, in excess of
     those deposits that would have remained in the
     insurance fund of the depository institution in default
     or in danger of default had such institution been
     resolved by means of an insured deposit transfer. The
     estimated dollar amount of the entrance fee deposit
     base shall be determined on a case-by-case basis by the
     Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation at the time
     offers to acquire an insured depository institution (or
     any part thereof) are solicited by the Federal Deposit
     Insurance Corporation or the Resolution Trust
     Corporation.

The term “Bank Insurance Fund reserve ratio” is defined in

12 C.F.R. section 312.1(c) (1991) as follows:

          The term "Bank Insurance Fund reserve ratio" shall
     mean the ratio of the net worth of the Bank Insurance
     Fund to the value of the aggregate total domestic
     deposits held in all Bank Insurance Fund members. * *
     *

     Like the exit fee, the origin of the entrance fee

requirement is in section 206(a)(7) of FIRREA.    H. Rept. 101-

54(I) (1989), is the report of the Committee on Banking, Finance

and Urban Affairs that accompanied H.R. 1278, 101st Cong., 1st

Sess. (1989), which, as enacted, became FIRREA.    That report

states that the entrance fee “must be enough to prevent the

dilution of the reserves of the Fund to be joined by the

institution.”   H. Rept. 101-54(I) at 325.

          2.    Petitioner’s Claim, and Majority’s Understanding,
                as to Purpose of Entrance Fee

     On brief, petitioner argues:   “Petitioner paid the entrance

fee simply to insure the deposits transferred into the BIF until
                               - 57 -

the next FDIC premium assessment.”      The majority concurs:   “[W]e

understand the entrance fee to be paid for the current year’s

insurance.”    Majority op. pp. 21-22.

     Neither petitioner nor the majority has convinced me that

the entrance fee was a deductible insurance premium.      Therefore,

I do not believe that petitioner has carried its burden of

showing that payment of the entrance fee meets the prerequisites

for a deduction under section 162(a).

          3.    Discussion

     Certain business-related insurance expenses unquestionably

are deductible under section 162(a).      See, e.g., sec. 1.162-1(a),

Income Tax Regs., discussed supra in sec. III.A.      Not all

business-related, annual insurance premiums, however, are

deductible under section 162(a).     See, e.g., Commissioner v.

Lincoln Sav. & Loan Association, 403 U.S. 345 (1971) (disallowing

deduction for “additional premiums” (prepayments of future

premiums) paid by taxpayer to Federal Savings and Loan

Association); Commissioner v. Boylston Mkt. Association, 131 F.2d

966 (1st Cir. 1942) (disallowing deduction for prepaid insurance

premiums), affg. a Memorandum Opinion of this Court dated

November 6, 1941.    In Black Hills Corp. v. Commissioner, 101 T.C.

173 (1993), Supplemental Opinion at 102 T.C. 505 (1994), affd. 73

F.3d 799 (8th Cir. 1996), we disallowed deductions for those

portions of annual premiums paid for black lung insurance that
                              - 58 -

the taxpayer had not shown to be commensurate with the actual

risks of loss for the years of payment.   We relied on INDOPCO,

Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. 79 (1992), to conclude that the

premium payments, the deduction of which we disallowed, created

significant future benefits for the taxpayer.   See Black Hills

Corp. v. Commissioner, 102 T.C. at 514.

     It is a question of fact whether any premium payment creates

future benefits that rule out a current deduction.    The fact that

Congress intended an entrance fee adequate to insure nondilution

of the Bank Insurance Fund (sometimes, the Fund) is not, by

itself, a sufficient fact to prove that its payment did not

create a significant future benefit to Metrobank.    The Fund was

established by section 211 of FIRREA (adding, among other

provisions, 12 U.S.C. sec. 1821(a)(5) (Supp. I, 1989)).    The Fund

was established by Congress for use by the FDIC to carry out its

insurance purposes.   See 12 U.S.C. sec. 1821(a)(4)(C) (Supp. I,

1989).   Initial funding of the Fund came from the Permanent

Insurance Fund.   See 12 U.S.C. sec. 1821(a)(5)(B) (Supp. I,

1989).   Additional funding was to come from annual assessments

(the annual assessments) against insured depository institutions.

See 12 U.S.C. sec. 1817(b)(1)(A) (Supp. I, 1989).    Congress

established a designated reserve ratio for the Fund of 1.25

percent of estimated insured deposits, or, if justified by

circumstances that raise a significant risk of substantial future
                              - 59 -

losses, a higher percentage, up to 1.50 percent.    12 U.S.C. sec.

1817(b)(1)(B)(i) (Supp. I, 1989).   Assessment rates were fixed

for an initial period that might extend to 1995 (0.12 percent of

insured deposits for the year in question).   12 U.S.C. sec.

1817(b)(1)(C) (Supp. I, 1989).   However, with restrictions, the

FDIC could increase rates if necessary to restore the Fund’s

ratio of reserves to insured deposits to its target level.     12

U.S.C. sec. 1817(b)(1)(C)(iv) (Supp. I, 1989).    Any assets of the

Fund in excess of 1.25 percent of insured deposits are treated as

a supplemental reserve, which assets, if the supplemental reserve

is no longer needed, are to be distributed to Fund members (but

earnings on those assets are to be distributed annually).     See 12

U.S.C. sec. 1817(b)(1)(B)(iii) (Supp. I, 1989).    Finally,

assessment income in excess of amounts necessary to maintain the

designated reserve ratio is to be credited against the Fund

member’s assessment for the following year.   See 12 U.S.C. sec.

1817(d) (Supp. I, 1989).   Clearly, the annual assessment system

for the Fund designed by Congress contemplates continued

participation by insured depository institutions.    There are

multiperiod aspects to the system that raise questions as to the

extent of the deductibility of even the annual assessments.

     The assessment system established by Congress is detailed

and complex.   The majority has made little reference to it.     The

entrance fee required of Metrobank was assessed at a rate
                                - 60 -

different from the annual assessment rate and on a base that did

not necessarily take into account all of the deposit liabilities

assumed by Metrobank pursuant to the purchase.   The purpose of

the entrance fee was, as stated, to prevent dilution of the Fund.

Whether the rationale for the actual entrance fee imposed by

12 C.F.R. section 312.4 (1991) is limited to that stated purpose

is not clear.   Possibly, the fee imposed by 12 C.F.R. section

312.4 (1991) was designed to make up for what, in hindsight, was

an inadequate annual assessment because, when that assessment was

fixed, the conversion transaction was not taken into account.       On

the other hand, perhaps it was a reserve contribution that would

serve only to reduce next year’s annual assessment.     Given the

complex nature of the annual assessment system, without testimony

from officials of the FDIC or other information, we do not know

what the assessment of the entrance fee was designed to

accomplish.

          4.    Conclusion

     Petitioner was required to prove a fact:    that the payment

of the entrance fee created no significant future benefits that

rule out a current deduction.    See INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner,

503 U.S. 79 (1992).   Petitioner has failed to do so.   Petitioner

has failed to prove its entitlement to a deduction on account of

payment of the entrance fee pursuant to section 162(a).
                                 - 61 -

IV.   Conclusion

      Petitioner’s task was established by the notice and the

pleadings, to prove that the payments were not capital

expenditures.      Respondent has not shifted the grounds on which he

determined the related deficiencies.      Respondent has failed to

persuade the majority of his view of the facts.      That, as stated,

does not relieve petitioner of its burden to prove facts in

support of its assigned error, that respondent erred in

disallowing petitioner’s deductions for the payments because they

were capital in nature.     Petitioner has failed to carry its

burden of proof.     Therefore, we should sustain the deficiencies

related to the payments.

     RUWE, WHALEN, BEGHE, GALE, and MARVEL, JJ., agree with this
dissenting opinion.
                               - 62 -

     BEGHE, J., dissenting:   The stipulated facts establish that

Metrobank paid the exit and entrance fees to acquire selected

assets and deposits of Community.   At least some of the acquired

assets were capital, because Metrobank could expect to receive

significant long-term benefits from them.   See Citizens &

Southern Corp. v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. 463 (1988) (bank’s

acquisition of “core deposits” from another institution gave rise

to amortizable intangible asset), affd. without published opinion

900 F.2d 266 (11th Cir. 1990).   Because the exit and entrance

fees were paid to acquire capital assets, they must be

capitalized.    See INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. 79

(1992); Commissioner v. Idaho Power Co., 418 U.S. 1, 13 (1974)

(costs paid “in connection with” construction or acquisition of

capital assets must be capitalized); Woodward v. Commissioner,

397 U.S. 572 (1970) (expenses incurred in connection with

litigation originating in the acquisition or disposition of

capital assets must be capitalized, regardless of payor’s

subjective motive); A.E. Staley Manufacturing Co. & Subs. v.

Commissioner, 119 F.3d 482, 488 (7th Cir. 1997) (describing

Supreme Court’s INDOPCO decision as “merely reaffirming settled

law that costs incurred to facilitate a capital transaction are

capital costs”), revg. 105 T.C. 166 (1995); sec. 1.263(a)-2(a),

Income Tax Regs. (cost of acquisition of property having useful

life substantially beyond the taxable year is a capital

expenditure).
                               - 63 -

     The majority advance three arguments for avoiding this

seemingly inescapable conclusion.    First, the majority claim that

respondent “did not determine, and has declined to argue” that

the fees should be capitalized on the ground that they were

incurred in connection with the acquisition of capital assets.

Majority op. p. 11.   Second, the majority assert that the fees

were paid to an insurer (the FDIC) in order to protect the

“integrity” of the insurer’s reserves.    Majority op. pp. 19-22.

Third, the majority claim that the fees were deductible “cost

saving expenditures”.    Majority op. pp. 22-23.   None of these

arguments holds water.

     Costs Incurred in Connection With Asset Acquisitions Are
     Capital

     Even normally deductible costs must be capitalized if they

are sufficiently related to the acquisition of a capital asset

(or to some other capital transaction).    As the Supreme Court

stated in Commissioner v. Idaho Power Co., supra at 13:

     Of course, reasonable wages paid in the carrying on of
     a trade or business qualify as a deduction from gross
     income. * * * But when wages are paid in connection
     with the construction or acquisition of a capital
     asset, they must be capitalized and are then entitled
     to be amortized over the life of the capital asset so
     acquired.

This Court has recently cited Idaho Power Co. to support the

holding that legal fees, like other expenditures that ordinarily

might qualify as currently deductible, must be capitalized if
                               - 64 -

they are incurred “in connection with” the acquisition of a

capital asset.   See American Stores Co. & Subs. v. Commissioner,

114 T.C. 458, 469 (2000).    But see Wells Fargo & Co. & Subs. v.

Commissioner, 224 F.3d 874, 885-888 (8th Cir. 2000)

(distinguishing expenditures directly related to capital

transactions from expenditures indirectly related to such

transactions), affg. in part and revg. in part Norwest Corp. &

Subs. v. Commissioner, 112 T.C. 89 (1999).

     Respondent Sufficiently Raised Asset Acquisition Issue

     According to the majority, respondent failed to argue that

the exit and entrance fees were connected with Metrobank’s asset

acquisition; we should therefore defer consideration of this

“theory” to another day.    Majority op. p. 11.   I disagree.

     Although respondent didn’t specifically argue that the fees

were paid to acquire Community’s assets and deposits, respondent

did argue that the fees created significant long-term benefits

for Metrobank.   The presence of significant long-term benefits is

relevant to the case at hand because it serves to distinguish

payments that result in the acquisition of capital assets from

those that don’t.   See sec. 263 (cost of “permanent improvements

or betterments” must be capitalized); INDOPCO, Inc. v.

Commissioner, supra at 87-88 (long-term benefit is an undeniably

important and prominent, if not predominant, characteristic of a

capital asset within the meaning of section 263, in part citing
                              - 65 -

Central Tex. Sav. & Loan Association v. United States, 731 F.2d

1181, 1183 (5th Cir. 1984)); Wells Fargo & Co. & Subs. v.

Commissioner, supra at 883-884 (a separate and distinct capital

asset always provides long-term benefits).   Therefore,

respondent’s broader assertion of long-term benefits necessarily

included the narrower assertion that the fees were part of

Metrobank’s cost of acquiring capital assets.1

     More importantly, the stipulated record establishes that the

fees were paid in connection with Metrobank’s asset acquisition.

We should therefore consider the factual, causal, and legal

consequences of that relationship, even if respondent didn’t

expressly raise it as an issue, and even though the case at hand

was submitted fully stipulated under Rule 122.    In Ware v.

Commissioner, 92 T.C. 1267 (1989), the taxpayer asserted that we

should reconsider a case submitted under Rule 122 because the

Commissioner allegedly had relied on a theory raised for the

first time on brief.   We denied the taxpayer’s motion, and noted

that under appropriate circumstances we can rest our decision for

the Commissioner on reasons neither set forth in the notice of

deficiency nor relied upon by the Commissioner.   See Ware v.

Commissioner, supra at 1269, and cases cited therein; Bair v.

     1
       See majority op. p. 18, which states that “Expenses must
generally be capitalized when they either: (1) Create or enhance
a separate and distinct asset or (2) otherwise generate
significant [long-term] benefits”. (Emphasis added.)
                              - 66 -

Commissioner, 16 T.C. 90, 98 (1951) (Tax Court reviews a

deficiency, not the Commissioner’s reasons for determining it),

affd. 199 F.2d 589 (2d Cir. 1952); Standard Oil Co. v.

Commissioner, 43 B.T.A. 973, 998 (1941) (reasons and theories

stated in statutory notice, even if erroneous, do not restrict

the Commissioner in presenting case before the Court), affd. 129

F.2d 363 (7th Cir. 1942); cf. sec. 7522.

     Our Consideration of Asset Acquisition Issue Would Not
     Prejudice Petitioner

     Although respondent’s actions don’t limit our ability to

consider the relationship between fees paid and assets acquired,

the majority suggest we should close our eyes to that

relationship “in order to avoid prejudicing petitioner”.

Majority op. p. 11.   According to the majority, if respondent had

stressed that relationship, “petitioner may well have wanted to

offer evidence relating to it.”   Id.

     I agree that the appropriate question is whether

respondent’s conduct has limited or precluded petitioner’s

opportunity to present pertinent evidence.   See Ware v.

Commissioner, supra at 1268-1269; Pagel, Inc. v. Commissioner, 91

T.C. 200, 211-213 (1988), affd. 905 F.2d 1190 (8th Cir. 1990).

However, I disagree that there could be any prejudice in the case

at hand.   The stipulated facts clearly establish that Metrobank

paid the fees in order to acquire the assets and deposits it
                              - 67 -

wanted to acquire.   Indeed, payment of the fees was legally

required, if Metrobank was to consummate the acquisition in the

form it desired; Metrobank accordingly agreed in its bid to pay

the fees to the FDIC.   See majority op. p. 5.    The record thus

establishes that the fees were part of Metrobank’s cost of

acquisition; I can’t imagine any evidence petitioner could have

presented to support a contrary conclusion.2     See Ware v.

Commissioner, supra, and Pagel, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra.

      The majority assert that considering the relationship

between fees paid and assets acquired requires us to “second

guess” petitioner’s business judgment.   See majority op. pp. 22-

23.   To the contrary, I accept that judgment; the payment of the

fees was a necessary element of the transaction that petitioner,

in its best business judgment, actually decided to achieve.3

      2
       By contrast, in the cases relied upon by the majority, it
was clearly possible that the taxpayers could have offered
relevant evidence to support their position, or the Court
believed that the record did not permit it to decide the issue.
See Concord Consumers Housing Coop. v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. 105,
106-107 n.3 (1987) (Court did not consider whether taxpayer was
sec. 216 cooperative housing corporation because neither party
addressed the issue and Court could not tell from the record);
Leahy v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 56, 64-65 (1986) (Commissioner
originally contended that partnership was not entitled to
investment tax credit on ground that partnership was not owner of
the property; later ground was alleged failure to attach
statement to return, as required by regulations).
      3
       It appears that the only way Metrobank could have acquired
assets and deposits from Community, without paying exit and
entrance fees, would have been to acquire control of Community
                                                   (continued...)
                               - 68 -

     I also disagree with the majority’s suggestion that our

reliance on Metrobank’s asset acquisition would unfairly surprise

petitioner.    Petitioner was aware that respondent would rely on

two cases referred to by the majority (see majority op. p. 24

note 10):    Darlington-Hartsville Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. United

States, 273 F. Supp. 229 (D.S.C. 1967), affd. 393 F.2d 494 (4th

Cir. 1968), and Rodeway Inns of Am. v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 414

(1974).4    The majority try to distinguish these cases on the

ground that the taxpayer in each “purchased a capital asset

incident to the payment of the expenses in dispute”.    Majority

op. p. 24 note 10.    Assuming the majority are correct,

respondent’s reliance on these cases put petitioner on notice of

the importance of the connection between the payment of the fees

and Metrobank’s asset acquisition.

     3
      (...continued)
and then merge or consolidate with it. See majority op. p. 16;
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of
1989, Pub. L. 101-73, sec. 206(a)(7), 103 Stat. 183, 195,
currently codified at 12 U.S.C. sec. 1815(d)(3)(A) (Supp. V,
1999)). Of course, this is not what Metrobank did. Moreover,
such a transaction might have required Metrobank to acquire all
assets (and assume all liabilities, including unknown and
contingent liabilities) of Community, rather than a portion of
them.
     4
       See Brief for Petitioner at 22 (briefs were simultaneous),
which states: “The Respondent has cited Darlington-Hartsville
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. United States, 393 F.2d 494 (4th Cir.
1968) and Roadway Inns of America v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 414
(1974) as support for Respondent’s argument that the exit and
entrance fees were paid as part of a plan to produce a positive
business benefit for future years.”
                              - 69 -

      There’s other evidence of petitioner’s awareness of the

importance of that connection.   In its brief, petitioner argued

in the alternative that, if the fees were capitalized, they

should be amortized over the life of the “core deposits” acquired

from Community.   See Brief for Petitioner at 24-25.5   Finally,

respondent’s long-term benefit argument sufficiently raised the

issue whether the fees were part of the cost of acquiring capital

assets, as I explained supra pp. 64-65.

      Treating the Fees as Insurance Premiums Is Also Insufficient

      Even if I accepted the majority’s invitation to defer

consideration of the asset acquisition “theory” to another day, I

would still conclude that the fees must be capitalized.    The

majority assert that deduction is proper because any long-term

benefit to Metrobank “is insignificant when weighed against the

primary purpose for the payment of the fees.”   Majority op. p.

20.   According to the majority, that primary purpose was to

      5
       There is no occasion in the case at hand to consider
petitioner’s alternative argument that, if the fees are
capitalizable, petitioner is entitled to amortize them over a 10-
year period; there is no evidence of useful life in the
stipulated record. It does seem to me that amortization should
probably be allowed over such useful life of the core deposits
acquired as could be shown. See Citizens & Southern Corp. v.
Commissioner, 91 T.C. 463 (1988), affd. without published opinion
900 F.2d 266 (11th Cir. 1990); see also First Chicago Corp. v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1994-300; Trustmark Corp. v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1994-184, and compare Field Serv. Adv.
Mem. 2000-08-005 (Feb. 25, 2000), where, in a transaction similar
to the case at hand, the taxpayer amortized the entrance and exit
fees over a 10-year period for financial statement purposes.
                                - 70 -

“protect the integrity” of the SAIF and the BIF.    Id.    The

majority additionally assert that “Metrobank paid the exit fee to

the SAIF as a nonrefundable, final premium for insurance that it

had already received”, while the entrance fee was a nonrefundable

premium “for the current year’s insurance.”   Majority op. pp. 20-

21.   Once again, I disagree.

      The majority’s conclusion that Metrobank paid the exit fee

for insurance it had already received is clearly wrong.      As the

majority opinion clearly states, the exit fee was paid to the

SAIF.   See id.   The deposits of Community acquired by Metrobank

were insured by the SAIF only when they were Community’s

deposits; those deposits became insured by the BIF upon their

acquisition by Metrobank.

      Therefore, if the exit fees accurately can be described as

premiums for SAIF insurance, they were for insurance coverage the

deposits received before Metrobank acquired them.    The only

business purpose Metrobank could have had for paying this “SAIF

insurance expense” was its desire to acquire Community’s assets

and deposits.

      The majority’s reliance on the role the fees played in

protecting the “integrity” of the SAIF is misplaced.      While it

may have been the FDIC’s purpose in imposing the exit fees, it

certainly wasn’t Metrobank’s reason for paying them.      Moreover,

the FDIC’s purpose is of limited relevance to the case at hand.
                             - 71 -

See Commissioner v. Lincoln Sav. & Loan Association, 403 U.S.

345, 354 (1971) (“It is not enough, in order that an expenditure

qualify as an income tax deduction * * * that it serves to

fortify FSLIC’s [the predecessor of SAIF] insurance purpose and

operation”).

     What all this means is that, even if the majority’s

characterization of the fees as insurance premiums is correct,

the fees nevertheless must be capitalized.   As I’ve already

explained, ordinarily deductible expenditures must be

capitalized, when they are incurred in connection with the

acquisition of a capital asset.   More generally, however,

insurance premiums that give rise to benefits extending beyond

the end of the taxable year must be capitalized, even if they are

not connected with the acquisition of a capital asset.   See

Lincoln Sav. & Loan Association v. Commissioner, 51 T.C. 82, 94

(1968) (citing “long line of decisions by this Court holding that

prepaid insurance premiums are capital expenditures to be

expensed over the years in which coverage is actually obtained”),

revd. 422 F.2d 90 (9th Cir. 1970), revd. 403 U.S. 345 (1971);

sec. 1.461-4(g)(8) Example (6), Income Tax Regs. (where taxpayer

pays premium in 1993 for insurance contract covering claims made

through 1997, period for which premium is permitted to be taken

into account is determined under the capitalization rules,
                               - 72 -

because the contract is an asset having a useful life extending

substantially beyond the close of the taxable year).

       The entrance and exit fees were in addition to the

semiannual premiums Metrobank paid to the BIF to insure the

acquired deposits after the acquisition.    The fees were also

several times greater than the semiannual premiums, as a

percentage of the acquired deposits.    See majority op. pp. 7-9,

21.6    The exit and entrance fees therefore resemble premium

prepayments, which entitled Metrobank to insure the acquired

deposits with the BIF in future years.    This would support

capitalizing the exit and entrance fees, even if they had no

connection with the acquisition of a separate asset.    See Herman

v. Commissioner, 84 T.C. 120 (1985) (one-time purchase of

subordinated loan certificate, which entitled physician, upon

payment of annual premiums, to malpractice insurance coverage,

held capital investment; Commissioner conceded deductibility of

annual premiums).

       6
       The third of the emphasized points in Judge Swift’s
concurrence (Swift, J., concurring op. p. 31) compares the
entrance and exit fees paid by Metrocorp to acquire the deposits
of Community with the regular semiannual premiums paid by
Metrocorp on its total deposits, including both its own deposits
and the deposits of Community that it acquired. Obviously, the
ratio of the entrance and exit fees to the regular semiannual
premiums would be much higher if the regular premiums paid by
Metrocorp on its own deposits are removed from consideration.
They should be so removed if the much more meaningful comparison
of the entrance and exit fees with the regular premiums on the
acquired deposits is to be made.
                              - 73 -

     The Cost Savings Argument Is Not Persuasive

     The majority’s final argument for deductibility is that cost

savings expenditures, such as payments to escape from burdensome

or onerous contracts, are generally deductible.    See majority op.

pp. 23-24.   This principle may have been limited by the Supreme

Court’s opinion in INDOPCO, Inc. v. Commissioner, 503 U.S. 79,

88-89 (1992) (identifying benefits of transformation from public

to private company, such as avoidance of shareholder-relations

expenses and administrative advantages of reducing the number of

classes and shares of outstanding stock).   Moreover, the

majority’s cost reduction analysis is defective; the case relied

upon by the majority, T.J. Enters., Inc. v. Commissioner, 101

T.C. 581 (1993), is distinguishable.   The payments in that case

were made each year to reduce costs that otherwise would have

been payable during each such year; the Court also noted that no

separate and distinct additional asset was acquired by virtue of

the payments sought to be deducted.    See T.J. Enters., Inc. v.

Commissioner, supra at 589 n.8, 592-593.    By contrast, the fees

in the case at hand entitled Metrobank to insure the acquired

deposits with the BIF for many years to come (and, as noted

above, the fees were connected with the acquisition itself).

     Finally, we have held that a payment to terminate a

burdensome contract may be capitalized, if the payment is also

integrally related to the acquisition of a new long-term contract
                             - 74 -

with significant future benefits.   See U.S. Bancorp & Consol.

Subs. v. Commissioner, 111 T.C. 231 (1998).   Even if one were to

agree with the majority that the entrance and exit fees were paid

in order to terminate burdensome insurance premium obligations,

the entrance and exit fees would still fall within the rubric of

long-term benefits.

     For all the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.

     RUWE, WHALEN, and GALE, JJ., agree with this dissenting
opinion.