delivered the opinion of the court.
The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, the plaintiff in error, does business in Pennsylvania. By an act of June 28, 1895, that State levies an annual tax of two per cent, upon the gross premiums of every character received from business done within the State during the preceding year. The Company paid large taxes under this act, but appealed to the state courts from charges made by the State Accounting Officer in respect of premiums for the years 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909 and 1910, paid to the Company outside the State by residents of Pennsylvania. The' Supreme Court sustained the charge. 239 Pa. St. 288. The whole discussion there was whether these items fell within the statute. On that point of-course the decision of the state court is final, and as the Company is a foreign corporation and this is held to be a tax for the privilege of doing business in the State, it is obvious that the scope of the question before us is narrow, being only whether the statute as construed deprives the Company of its property without due process of law, contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment, as alleged, It is true that the plaintiff in error suggests a further infraction of that amendment in an assumption by the Supreme Court of an improved fact: that the beneficiaries of the policies lived in Pennsylvania. But it is enough to answer that we understand the decision when it uses the word beneficiaries to mean parties t@- the contracts, the insured, and that the assumption was warranted by the record as to them.
The grounds for the only argument open are that a State cannot tax property beyond its jurisdiction,
Union Transit Co.
v.
Kentucky,
Without going into any preliminary matters that might be debated it is enough for us to say that we agree with the Supreme Court of. the State in its line of reasoning; applying it to the claim of constitutional rights which that court did hot discuss. The question is not what is doing business within a State in such a sense as to lay a foundation for service of process there. It being established that the relation of the foreign company to domestic policy holders constituted doing business within the meaning of the statute, the question is whether the Company may be taxed in respect of it,'in this way, whatever it may be called. We are dealing with a corporation that has subjected itself to the jurisdiction of the State; there is no question that the State has a right to tax it and the only doubt is whether.it may take this item into account in fixing the figure of the tax. Obviously the limit in that regard is a different matter from the inquiry whether the residence of a policy holder would of itself give jurisdiction oyer the Company.. The argument of the state court is that the Company is protecting its insured in Pennsylvania equally whether they pay their premiums to the Company’s agent in Philadelphia or by mail or in person to another in New York.
These are'policies of life insurance and according to the
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statement of the plaintiff in error are kept alive and renewed to residents.of Pennsylvania by payments from year to year. The fact that the State could not prevent the contracts, so far as that may be true, has little bearing upon its right to consider the benefit thus annually extended into Pennsylvania in measuring the value of the privileges that it does grant. We may add that the State profits the Company equally by protecting the lives insured, wherever the premiums are paid. The tax is a tax upon a privilege actually used. The only question concerns the mode of measuring the tax.
Flint
v.
Stone Tracy Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
