Fеderated Mutual Insurance Company brought an action under OCGA § 48-5-380 against DeKalb County, seeking a refund of gross premium taxes in the amount of $27,088.98 which were paid during the years 1981 through 1983 pursuant to DeKalb County Code § 7-1011 (1). Federated Mutual moved for summary judgment, urging the retrospective application of
Cotton States Mut. Ins. Co. v. DeKalb County,
The trial court granted the county’s motion, finding that the taxes were assessed and collected under a 1958 local constitutional amendment (Ga. L. 1958, p. 582) and the 1959 enabling legislation (Ga. L. 1959, pp. 2658-61); and that the
Cotton States
decision presented the first opportunity for the Supreme Court to address the effect of the enactment of the 1960 Insurance Code on local ordinances such as § 7-1011 (1). After applying the tests set forth in
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
In 1958 a local constitutional amendment authorized DeKalb County to levy license taxes “on all firms and corporations doing business in thе unincorporated area of said county except businesses which are subject to regulation by the State Public Service Corpora *71 tion,” Ga. L. 1958, pp. 582, 583. The implementing legislation amended Ga. L. 1957, p. 3237, by adding a new paragraph at the end of section 12 to be designated as paragraph “(r),” which would enable the county to “[f]ix, levy, assess license fees, charges or taxes оn all persons, firms and corporations engaging in or offering to engage in any trade, business, calling, avocation or profession” in the unincorporated area of the county. Ga. L. 1959, pp. 2658, 2659. On July 1, 1959, the county enacted a business license ordinance which levied a tax on all such businesses within the county, including casualty insurance companies. It called for a percentagе tax upon the gross premium receipts of all persons authorized or certified as insurance agents by an insurance company or companies doing business in the state. This ordinance was amended several times over the years, and at the time of the Cotton States decision, it levied a tax upon insurance companies (with the exception of life insurance companies) оf three percent of the gross premiums received during the preceeding license year.
Shortly after DeKalb County adopted its ordinance imposing a license tax on insurance companies, the General Assembly enacted the Georgia Insurance Code of 1960, which had an effective date of January 1, 1961, and which provided for a statewide gross premiums tax of 2.25% on all casualty companies doing business in the state and a $300.00 fee to be levied on all insurance companies. Ga. L. 1960, pp. 289, 392, 507. The tax on gross premiums was not a new tax; it had been in existence since 1935, when a 1.5% tax was enacted. Ga. L. 1935, pp. 11, 60-61. In 1945 the rate was increased to 2%. Ga. L. 1945, pp. 419, 420. The language of the provision in the Insurance Code of 1960 first appeared in 1955 and authorized a tax оf 2.25%. Ga. L. 1955 (Extra Sess.), p. 45 et seq. The 1960 Insurance Code and prior provisions authorizing such a tax did not make reference to similar taxes that local governments could impose. In 1963 the General Assembly amended DeKalb County’s 1959 local act and reenacted section 12 (r), which pertained to the county’s authority to impose business license taxes, by deleting the exception to businesses whiсh are subject to regulation by the Public Service Commission and adding a provision pertaining to businesses operating buses upon county roads. No change was made referring to the county’s authority to tax insurance companies. Ga. L. 1963, pp. 3324-3325.
In 1964 the Insurance Code was amended to add a new section expressly preempting the field of imposing taxes, except ad valorem and real property taxes, upon life insurance companies. Municipalities, but not counties, were permitted to impose a gross premiums tax not to exceed one percent upon life insurance companies. Ga. L. 1964, p. 122 et seq. Similar express preemption language applying to all insurance companies, including casualty insurers, was not added until *72 1983. Ga. L. 1983, pр. 1595, 1596. A new section, Ga. L. 1963, p. 1600 (OCGA § 33-8-8.2), was added and authorizes cities and. counties to levy a tax “at a rate not to exceed 2.5 percent upon the gross direct premiums of all foreign, alien, and domestic insurance companies doing business in this state other than life insurance companies.” Section 3 of this Act (OCGA § 33-8-8.2 (d)) authorizes cities and counties which were levying a tax on gross premiums on Jаnuary 1, 1983, at a rate in excess of 2.5 percent to continue to levy the tax provided the rate is reduced to 2.5 percent by January 1, 1986. The Insurance Commissioner, however, is now authorized to collect the taxes imposed on behalf of the counties and municipalities. OCGA § 33-8-8.2 (b) (3) (C). This Act was further amended in 1984 by the addition of two sections, denominated OCGA §§ 33-8-8.5 and 33-8-8.6, to provide for the reimbursement of illеgally assessed and collected insurance premiums by a county or municipality and to require that a written protest accompany payment of the tax as a condition precedent to recovery. Ga. L. 1984, p. 1294.
We must next consider the case law in determining the application of the
Cotton States
decision. “The overruling of a decision is generally retroactive, but retroaсtive application of a decision overruling a prior decision may be declined where unjust results would accrue to those who justifiably relied upon the prior rule.”
Preston Carroll Co. v. Morrison Assur. Co.,
In applying the first prong of the test set forth in Chevron Oil, we *73 find that the Insurance Code enacted in 1960 contains no preemption language as to either casualty or life insurance companies. This fact was obviously considered by the Supreme Court, which held that the 1960 enactmеnt repealed by implication DeKalb County’s statutory authority to impose a gross premium tax on casualty insurance companies. As discussed previously, the 1963 Act amended the local enabling legislation and reenacted section 12 (r) of the 1959 Act (which pertained to the authority of the county to impose business and license taxes) without containing any preemption languagе as to insurance companies. Such language did not appear until the 1964 amendment to the Insurance Code to expressly preempt the taxing of life insurance companies. No mention was made of other types of insurers. In 1983, prior to the decision in Cotton States, the General Assembly preempted all insurance companies, but authorized the cities and counties to levy a 2.5% tax аnd permitted existing taxes to continue at a scaled-down rate. We therefore find on the basis of the statutory history of the Insurance Code and the local enabling legislation, that the county could reasonably believe its ordinance was valid.
We must next turn to the case history of the DeKalb County ordinance to determine whether the
Cotton States
decision established a new principle of law by overruling past precedents or deciding an issue of first impression. The court points out that “[t]hese acts are no strangers to this court.”
“The Cotton States decision came as a surprise to many outside the industry who follow taxation of insurance companies.” J. Coalson, Jr., “State & Local Taxation,” 36 Mer. L. Rev. 307, 319 (1984). Coal- *74 son observes that the court in Cotton States went much further than in Nash v. Nat. Preferred Life Ins. Co., supra, by concluding that the legislature in adopting the 1960 Insurance Code entirely preempted by implication the field with resрect to taxation of insurance companies.
“No mention was made in the Cotton States decision of the fact that the 1960 Act adopting the Insurance Code represented in large part merely a consolidation of statutory provisions that previously had been scattered throughout the code rather than a sweeping new regulatory scheme, and that this was certainly the case with respect to the stаtewide gross premiums tax, which then had been in existence for 25 years. Nor did the court discuss the fact that the statewide gross receipts tax incorporated into the Insurance Code in 1960 (and later codified at Official Code of Georgia Annotated section 33-8-4) did not deal separately with life insurance companies and other kinds of insurers, but rather applied to all foreign and domеstic insurance companies doing business in Georgia. As a result, if the 1960 legislation preempted local taxes with respect to casualty insurance companies, as the court concluded in Cotton States, it presumably did so with respect to life insurance companies as well. This conclusion makes it difficult to explain the need felt by the legislature to include express preemption language with respect to life insurance companies in the 1964 amendments, or indeed difficult to explain the court’s own reliance on the 1964 express preemption language in Nat. Preferred Life with respect to life insurance carriers and its subsequent 17-year delay (following the National Preferred Life decision) in concluding that the 1960 Act had already preempted all local taxation of all insurance carriers even prior to the 1964 amendments.” Id. at 319-320.
We find that the
Cotton States
decision was the first time the 1960 Insurance Code was interpreted to invalidate local taxing authority over insurance companies (other than life insurance companies) and was therefore an issue of first impression whose resolution was not clearly foreshadowed. Casualty insurers doing business within the unincorporated area of DeKalb County filed returns and paid taxes under the 1959 ordinance for almost 24 years without challenging its validity. Moreover, in
Allstate Ins. Co. v. DeKalb County,
250 Ga. XXVII (
The second prong of the Chevron Oil test requires the court to balance the merits and demerits of the сase by looking into the prior history of the rule, its purpose and effect, and whether retrospective operation would further or retard its operation. The legislative history both preceding and following the enactment of the ordinance has *75 been set forth in detail above. The legislative intent behind the 1958 and 1959 laws was to empower DeKalb County to levy a tax on the gross premiums of insurance companies doing business within the unincorporated area and to allow the counties to spend the monies collected for public purposes. The action of the legislature in 1984, after the Cotton States decision, clarifies its intent to authorize local taxation, OCGA § 33-8-8.2, to avoid a windfall to insurance companies by providing that any recovery must be distributed on a pro rata basis to the policyholders, OCGA § 33-8-8.5, and to protect local governments by assuring that their coffers would not be depleted by tax refund requests by requiring a written protest. OCGA § 33-8-8.6.
Although there is no evidence of the county’s potential liability other than the amount claimed in this case and an estimate of the amount insurance companies could claim if Cotton States were applied retroactively, it is apparent that local governments would be required to refund large sums of money for which the funds may not now be available. The fact that the sums could amount to millions of dollars could present a financial stability problem for those governments required to make such refunds, and could cause local governments to increase taxation and/or reduce existing services. The insurance companies could possibly obtain a windfall if it should be determined that the refund requirements of OCGA § 33-8-8.5 did not apply to companies that filed for the refund before that provision’s effective date. Moreover, there is no provision in the law for disposition of funds when the insurance company is unable to locate policyholders. As these refunds may be sought for the three preceding years, this amount could be substantial. We therefore find that the trial court did not err in holding after examining the prior history of the rule, that prospective application of Cotton States will further the purpose and effect of the Insurance Code and the local statutory enactments.
The final test required in
Chevron Oil
requires a balancing of the equities by looking at the inequity imposed by retrospective application. In
Strickland v. Newton County,
As in the
Strickland
case, the county collected the taxes in good faith reliance that its ordinance was valid. Appellant has received a benefit under the
Cotton States
decision in that it no longer has to pay those taxes, and the taxes sought to be recovered were paid for an unspecified number of years by the company without аny protest whatsoever. In
Allan v. Allan,
supra, the court held portions of Georgia’s year’s support statute unconstitutional, but declined to give the decision retroactive application, holding that its long history, the good faith reliance upon the statute, and the disruptive effect a retroactive application would have upon those who relied upon its validity was sufficient to givе it prospective application only. See also
Adams v. Adams,
In examining any inequity done to the insurance company by failing to grant retroactive application to Cotton States, we note that the insurance company is not really denied any funds because of the tax ordinance because any сost of meeting this tax obligation was passed on to its insureds in the premium. Indeed, retroactive application would increase the insurance company’s workload if OCGA § 33-8-8.5 is determined to be applicable to these companies who filed for a refund before its effective dates because the company would have to review all its policies for the past thrеe years, notify the policyholders, make a good faith attempt to locate those who had moved, determine each policyholder’s pro rata share of the refund, and then send out the refund. The possibility of a windfall to the company has been discussed above. Moreover, the insurance company and its insureds have benefited through the expenditure of these funds fоr public purposes.
Even though the 1960 Act contained language which the court in Cotton States interpreted as impliedly repealing local authority over taxing property and casualty companies, the legislature, from 1961 through 1983, continued to pass local acts granting local governments the authority to impose such taxes, thereby giving local governments the impression that they still had the authority to impose such taxes. *77 A list of these acts has been provided in the amicus curiae briefs submitted on behalf of the Georgia Municipal Association, Inc. 1
We find the trial court correctly balanced the equities and found that the third prong of the Chevron Oil test to be satisfied in favor of DeKalb County.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
City of Calhoun, Ga. L. 1983, pp. 4710, 4730; City of St. Marys, Ga. L. 1981, pp. 4783, 4784; City of DeSoto, Ga. L. 1980, pp. 4442, 4447; City of Hapeville, Ga. L. 1980, pp. 3769, 3785; City of Athens, Ga. L. 1979, pp. 3770, 3805; City of Covington, Ga. L. 1979, p. 3986 (Charter Amendment); City of Oxford, Ga. L. 1979, p. 3984 (Charter Amendment); City of Macon, Ga. L. 1977, pp. 3776, 3801; City of Pooler, Ga. L. 1976, pp. 3419, 3479; Town of Thunderbolt, Ga. L. 1974, pp. 3269, 3291; City of Atlanta, Ga. L. 1973, pp. 2188, 2233; City of Pitts, Ga. L. 1970, pp. 2806, 2819, City of Palmetto, Ga. L. 1966, p. 2771, Sec. 28.1 at 2785; City of Hamilton, Ga. L. 1964, pp. 2601, 2612; City of Lavonia, Ga. L. 1964 (Ex. Sess.), pp. 2008, 2040; City of Oconee, Ga. L. 1963, pp. 2755, 2769; City of Omaha, Ga. L. 1963, pp. 3262, 3275; City of Sylvania, Ga. L. 1963, pp. 2030, 2059; City of Rochelle, Ga. L. 1962, pp. 2791, 2804; City of Brunswick, Ga. L. 1961, Sec. 4 at 2217 (Charter Amendment); City of Shiloh, Ga. L. 1961, pp. 2045, 2056; City of Summerville, Ga. L. 1961, pp. 2658, 2674; City of Zebulon, Ga. L. 1961, pp. 2074, 2718.
