                   WINN-DIXIE STORES, INC. and Subsidiaries, Petitioner-Appellant,

                                                       v.
                  COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent-Appellee.

                                                No. 00-11828.

                                       United States Court of Appeals,
                                               Eleventh Circuit.

                                                June 28, 2001.

Appeal from a Decision of the United States Tax Court. (No. 05382-97).

Before WILSON and COX, Circuit Judges, and RYSKAMP*, District Judge.

        PER CURIAM:
        Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. appeals the tax court's judgment resting on the conclusion that Winn-Dixie
was not entitled to deduct interest and fees incurred in borrowing against insurance policies that it owned on

the lives of more than 36,000 Winn-Dixie employees. We affirm.

                                                 Background
        In summary, the tax court found the following facts: In 1993, Winn-Dixie embarked on a

broad-based company-owned life-insurance (COLI) program whose sole purpose, as shown by contemporary
memoranda, was to satisfy Winn-Dixie's "appetite" for interest deductions. Under the program, Winn-Dixie
purchased whole life insurance policies on almost all of its full-time employees, who numbered in the tens

of thousands. Winn-Dixie was the sole beneficiary of the policies. Winn-Dixie would borrow against those
policies' account value at an interest rate of over 11%. The high interest and the administrative fees that came
with the program outweighed the net cash surrender value and benefits paid on the policies, with the result

that in pretax terms Winn-Dixie lost money on the program. The deductibility of the interest and fees posttax,
however, yielded a benefit projected to reach into the billions of dollars over 60 years. Winn-Dixie

participated until 1997, when a change in tax law jeopardized this tax arbitrage, and it eased its way out.

        The IRS determined a deficiency because of the interest and fee deductions taken in Winn-Dixie's

1993 tax year. Winn-Dixie challenged the determination before the tax court. The tax court rejected Winn-

Dixie's assertions that the COLI program had a business purpose, or that Congress had expressly authorized



    *
     Honorable Kenneth L. Ryskamp, U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Florida, sitting by
designation.
its tax benefits. See Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. v. Comm'r, 113 T.C. 254 (1999). The court held that the loans

against the policies were substantive shams, and that Winn-Dixie was therefore not entitled to deductions for

the interest and fees paid for the loans. Winn-Dixie appeals.

        Winn-Dixie's two core arguments here are the same as those it made to the tax court. The first is that
Congress, through the Internal Revenue Code, explicitly authorized the deduction of interest and fees incurred

in certain borrowing against whole life-insurance policies' account value. This explicit permission, Winn-

Dixie says, makes application of the sham-transaction doctrine inappropriate. In the alternative, Winn-Dixie

argues that even if the sham-transaction doctrine properly applies here, the tax court misinterpreted the
economic-substance and business-purpose prongs of that doctrine and thus "shammed" a transaction that was

due respect. Winn-Dixie does not dispute any finding of historical fact; these issues are exclusively ones of

law, and our consideration of them is accordingly de novo. United Parcel Serv. of Am., Inc. v. Comm'r,---

F.3d ----, ---- (11th Cir.2001).

                                                 Discussion
        Winn-Dixie starts its argument by invoking the special treatment afforded life insurance contracts
(as defined in I.R.C. § 7702) in general, whose benefits are generally untaxed and whose appreciation is

tax-deferred. See I.R.C. §§ 101(a)(1), 72(e).1 That treatment extends to loans made against a policy, whose

interest (unlike most other (nonconsumer) interest, I.R.C. § 163(a)) is generally not deductible. See I.R.C.

§§ 264(a)(3). But there is an exception (called the 4-of-7 exception) to this prohibition on deducting interest
on policy loans; the prohibition does not apply if no part of the annual premium is financed by a policy loan

in four of the first seven years. See I.R.C. § 264(c)(1). Winn-Dixie's loans fell within the 4-of-7 exception,

all agree. Because they qualify for the exception, and because the loans are within the specially treated world

of life insurance that has obviously been the subject of congressional attention, Winn-Dixie contends, there
is no room for application of the sham-transaction doctrine.

         This argument may have some force, but it runs into binding precedent. The Supreme Court was
faced with a materially similar argument decades ago by a taxpayer who sought to deduct interest payments

on loans taken against an annuity contract. See Knetsch v. United States, 364 U.S. 361, 363, 81 S.Ct. 132,

133-34, 5 L.Ed.2d 128 (1960). Because, as here, the annuity contract was obviously being used as a tax


    1
     We follow Winn-Dixie's practice of consistently citing to the statutes in effect during the pertinent
tax year, 1993. The use of the present tense to describe 1993 provisions is for convenience and does not
imply that they are still in effect.
shelter, and as used offered the taxpayer no financial benefit other than its tax consequences, the Court held

that the indebtedness was not bona fide, and the interest not deductible under § 163(a). See id. at 366, 81

S.Ct. at 135. Along the way, the Court rejected an argument based on § 264 that is at least a cousin of Winn-
Dixie's present contention. Knetsch argued that Congress's failure to close a loophole in § 264 (that section's

prohibition of deductions on indebtedness to purchase life-insurance policies did not extend to annuities until

1954, the year after the tax year in question) equated to blessing the loophole. The Court declined to attribute

such an intention to Congress, because that would "exalt artifice above reality." Id. at 367, 81 S.Ct. at 136

(quoting Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S. 465, 470, 55 S.Ct. 266, 268, 79 L.Ed. 596 (1935)). Knetsch holds,

therefore, that the sham-transaction doctrine does apply to indebtedness that generates interest sought to be
deducted under § 163(a), even if the interest deduction is not yet prohibited by § 264. That is a holding that

we have followed in this circuit. See Campbell v. Cen-Tex, Inc., 377 F.2d 688, 692 (5th Cir.1967) (applying

the sham-transaction doctrine to deduction of interest on insurance-policy loans, but finding economic
substance).

        Winn-Dixie tries to get around Knetsch with the argument that we have 33 more years (as of 1993)

of congressional regulation of interest deductions in this context, and that 33-year history shows that Congress
does not want courts to look behind facial compliance with, for instance, the 4-of-7 exception. It may well

be that Knetsch was then, and this is now, but we are not the court to make that call. Knetsch 's holding is

at best undermined by congressional action (or inaction) in the intervening decades, and it is up to the

Supreme Court, not us, to determine when the Court's holdings have expired. See Agostini v. Felton, 521 U.S.

203, 237, 117 S.Ct. 1997, 2017, 138 L.Ed.2d 391 (1997). We therefore must conclude that the tax court

properly examined the transaction under the sham-transaction doctrine.

         That doctrine provides that a transaction is not entitled to tax respect if it lacks economic effects or

substance other than the generation of tax benefits, or if the transaction serves no business purpose. See

United Parcel Serv., --- F.3d ---- at ----; Kirchman v. Comm'r, 862 F.2d 1486, 1492 (11th Cir.1989). The

doctrine has few bright lines, but "[i]t is clear that transactions whose sole function is to produce tax

deductions are substantive shams." Kirchman, 862 F.2d at 1492. That was, as we read the tax court's

opinion, the rule the tax court followed. Nor did the court misapply the rule in concluding that the
broad-based COLI program had no "function" other than generating interest deductions.
        The tax court found, without challenge here,2 that the program could never generate a pretax profit.

That was what Winn-Dixie thought as it set up the program, and it is the most plausible explanation for Winn-
Dixie's withdrawal after the 1996 changes to the tax law threatened the tax benefits Winn-Dixie was

receiving. No finding of the tax court suggests, furthermore, that the broad-based COLI program answered

any business need of Winn-Dixie, such as indemnifying it for loss of key employees. Nor could it have been

conceived as an employee benefit, because Winn-Dixie was the beneficiary of the policies. Under Kirchman,

therefore, the broad-based COLI program lacked sufficient economic substance to be respected for tax

purposes, and the tax court did not err in so concluding.

                                                Conclusion
        For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the tax court is affirmed.

        AFFIRMED.




    2
     Winn-Dixie disclaims any intent to challenge the tax court's fact findings and asks for a de novo
standard of review. (Blue Br. at 13, 39.) We therefore read Winn-Dixie's arguable challenges to this
finding of historical fact as disagreement with the rule stated in Kirchman. That challenge is, of course,
unavailing.
