173 P. 1062 | Mont. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellants, foreign insurance corporations doing business in this and other states of the Union, have been held by the judgment below for payments in the form of license fees under Code, section 4017 (as amended by Chapter 63, Laws of 1915) and also under Chapter 79, Laws of 1917. This appeal is from that judgment, the appellants contending (A) that Chapter 79, Laws, of 1917, does not apply to them or to insurance corporations in their situation; (B) that if it does apply, it repeals section 4017, so that they are not liable to payment under both laws; and (C) that if it does apply and does not repeal section 4017, then it is unconstitutional and void.
(A) Chapter 79, Laws of 1917, provides:
“Section 1. Every corporation except as hereinafter provided * * * and engaged in business in the state of Montana, * * * shall annually pay for the exclusive use and benefit of the state of Montana a license fee for carrying on its business in the state of Montana of one per centum upon the total net income received by such corporation in the preceding fiscal year from all sources within the state of Montana, * * * provided, however, that in the case of a corporation engaged
“Sec. 2. In the case of a corporation engaged in business wholly within the state of Montana, such net income shall be ascertained by deducting from the gross amount of its income received within the year from all sources — First, all the ordinary and necessary expenses; * * * second, all losses actually sustained and charged off within the year and not compensated by insurance or otherwise; * * * third, the amount of interest paid within the year on its indebtedness; s # * fotlrth, taxes and license fees paid within the year imposed by authority of the United States or its territories or possessions, or any foreign country, or under the authority of this state or any county, school district or municipality or other taxing subdivision of this state, not including those assessed against local benefits; fifth, * * * an arbitrary deduction of * * * $10,000.
“Sec. 3. In the case of a corporation engaged partly in business within the state of Montana and partly within any other state or territory of the United States or any foreign country, the net income shall be ascertained by deducting from the gross amount of its income received within the year from all sources within the state of Montana, other than the income derived from interstate commerce: First, all the ordinary and necessary expenses; * * * second, all losses actually sustained within the year; ° # * third, the amount of interest paid within the year on its indebtedness; * * * fourth, taxes paid
“Sec. 10. That section 2773 of the Revised Codes * * * and sections 2774 and 2777 of the Revised Codes * * * and all Acts and parts of Acts in conflict with this Act are hereby repealed.”
It will be observed that nothing in the language or subject
If this be correct, and a comparison shows that the language of the Tariff Act was followed almost verbatim, then the following interpretation placed upon this language in Flint v. Stone Tracy Co., supra, is very helpful: “Within the category of indirect taxation, as we shall have further occasion to show, is embraced a tax upon business .done in a corporate capacity, which is the subject matter of the tax imposed in the Act under consideration. * * In the present case the tax is not payable unless there be a carrying on or doing of business in the designated capacity, and this is made the occasion for the tax, measured by the standard prescribed. * * * The tax under consideration, as we have construed the statute, may be described as an excise upon the particular privilege of doing business in a corporate capacity, i. e., with the advantages which arise from corporate or quasi corporate organization. # # * The thing taxed is not the mere dealing in merchandise, in which the actual transactions may be the same, whether conducted by individuals or corporations, but the tax is laid upon the privileges which exist in conducting business with the advantages which inhere in the corporate capacity of those taxed, and which are not enjoyed by private firms or individuals. These advantages are obvious, and have led to the formation of such companies in nearly all branches of trade. The continuity of the business, without interruption by death or dissolution; the transfer of property interests by the disposition of shares of stock; the advantages of business controlled and managed by corporate directors; the general absence of individual liability- — these and other things inhere in the advantages of business thus conducted, which do not exist when the same business is conducted by private individuals or partnerships. It is this distinctive privilege which is the subject of taxation, not the mere buying or * * * handling of
Thus the conviction obtains that, the purpose of our Chapter 79, Laws of 1917, being the imposition of an excise upon the corporation for the privilege of doing business as such, and without regard to the character of the business, insurance corporations were intended to be within its purview.
Our attention is called to the facts that the corporations excepted from the provisions of the Act in section 1, subsection 16, and those whose “rate of license was to be changed by the new law as set forth in section 10” are to be found in the Chapter of the Political Code relating to the classification of licenses. “The reason for this,” it is said, “is that the committee was dealing with the exercise of the licensing power of the state, and the fact that the legislature had exercised such power with reference to insurance companies * * * was overlooked. ’ ’ The facts are as stated, and the explanation suggested may be correct; but neither the facts nor the explanation suffice to show a legislative intent to except insurance corporations from the Act. Such an intent could be asserted only on the assumption that the legislature was pursuing a general plan to exclude all corporations subject to license under the Chapter referred to. That this is not true is clear, for, though brewers licensed by section 2770 are excepted, and though the provisions (sections 2773, 2774, 2777) licensing telephone, telegraph, electric light, gas, water and express companies, common carriers and street railways are repealed, the pursuit of other lines of business equally open to corporations and licensed by the same Chapter — such as retail liquor dealers, theater proprietors, imitation butter merchants, tobacconists, venders of implements, contracting builders, maltsters, etc. (Rev. Codes, sees. 2758, 2759, 2763, 2766, 2778, 2779) — stands unrelieved by any provision of Chapter 79, Laws of 1917. Again, if the facts referred to could be said to indicate a general plan to except corporations subjected to license under prior laws, the omission from such a plan so obviously within its scope as in
(B) The proposition that, if Chapter 79, Laws of 1917, [3] applies to insurance corporations, it repeals section 4017 involves considerations of (a) the general repealing clause contained in the Act first mentioned; (b) the abhorrence of the law for double taxation; and (c) the doctrine of implied repeal. Section 4017 provides: “All insurance corporations, associations and societies as hereinbefore specified in the preceding section, before commencing to do business in the state of Montana, shall be required to secure a license, authorizing them to transact business of insurance corporations, associations or societies, and shall pay to the state auditor for such license the following fees: For a license to collect in any one year premiums amounting to the sum of five thousand dollars or less, one hundred and twenty-five dollars. For a license to collect in any one year premiums over the sum of five thousand dollars, the sum of twenty dollars for each and every one thousand dollars to be so collected. * * ’ * ” The history of this and cognate statutes up to. 1903 will be found reviewed in Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Lewis & Clarke County, 28 Mont. 484, 98 Am. St. Rep. 572, 72 Pac. 982. From this decision and subsequent legislation it will be gathered that the legislature did not always deem the license fee exacted by section 4017 entirely adequate, for up to 1911, section 4073, Revised Codes, also existed, imposing an additional tax on in
(a) In the light of this decision we are enabled to say that section 4017 and Chapter 79, Laws of 1917, are not coterminous, either in language or purpose. The range of the former is over all insurance companies, whether corporate or not, and it is confined to them; the range of the latter is over all corporations save those excepted, without regard to the business pursued, and’it does not apply to unincorporated concerns. One is unconditional, requiring no net income, imposing a license to carry on a particular business subject to control by a specific department of the state, and fifty per cent of all licenses collected from fire insurance companies under it must be paid to the treasuries of cities for the benefit of the firemen’s disability fund (Laws 1915, Chap. 49); the other is conditional, requires a net income, imposes an excise upon the valuable privilege of doing business as a corporation measured by that income, and its principal purpose is the raising of revenue for the exclusive use of the state. There is therefore no manifest conflict between the two enactments; if they touch at any point, it is not in a way to interfere with the operation of either; hence the general repealing clause cannot be successfully invoked.
(b) This is not a ease of double taxation in any proper
(c) As there is not any conflict or crossing of purposes between the two statutes, the above considerations dispose of the
(C) It is argued, however, that if Chapter 79, Laws of 1917, does apply and does not repeal section 4017 then it is invalid, because its title is defective, because it violates the state Constitution (sec. 27, Art. Ill; sec. 26, Art. Y), and because it is inimical, to the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution.
The title is not open to any objection. It is comprehensive
The constitutional objections are twofold, viz., that no basis exists for the distinction whereby insurance corporations are required to pay a double license while other corporations covered by the Act are not, and that, the discrimination between corporations engaged in business wholly within this state and those engaged in business partly within and partly without the state is indefensible.
Assuming, for argument’s sake, that insurance corporations are required to pay a double license, while other corporations
From the portions of sections 2 and 3 of the Act above
We think the statute is squarely within all the rules touching reasonable classification for the purpose of responding to public charges.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
!Affirmed.
Rehearing denied July 11, 1918.