60 Kan. 842 | Kan. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
At the last session of the legislature there was passed a law entitled “An act to provide for the taxation of contracts of insurance made with insurance companies not authorized to do business in Kansas, and providing for the enforcement thereof.” (Laws 1899, ch. 249.) On May 26, 1899, Thomas Page, owner of the Mid-Continent mills in Topeka, wrote to the Indiana Millers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Company, of Indianapolis, Ind., proposing to take out insurance on his mill property with that company. At the same time he remitted thirty dollars to pay for a five-year policy on $2000 of insurance. The money was received and accepted by the company, and on May 29, 1899, the company, at its office in Indianapolis, issued a policy in accordance with the request of Page, placed it in the post-office, and by due course of mail it was received by Page at Topeka. The company was not authorized to do business in Kansas, and had no office*-agent, solicitors or representatives in the state. In June, 1899, the superintendent of insurance made a demand on Page to exhibit his contracts and policies of fire insurance, and especially those issued by companies not authorized to do business in Kansas, but the demand was refused. Page never reported the policy mentioned to the superintendent of insurance, and never paid any tax on the premium therefor. The demand was made and the payment of the tax required in an attempt to enforce the act above mentioned. The statute provides that
It will be observed that the burden imposed by the act is not a license, nor a charge placed upon a privilege, franchise, or occupation. It is specifically designated as a tax, and is levied upon insurance contracts, which are treated as taxable assets and property of the insured. The act is an anomaly in the method of raising public revenues, and constitutes a wide departure from the means of taxation heretofore employed in this state. It is said that a tax is ordinarily levied on the property, income or receipts of the taxpayer, and not upon what he has paid out. Counsel for the petitioner assert that ‘ ‘ this is the pioneer effort to tax losses and disbursements, instead of profits and accumulations. It is the only recorded instance of requiring a man to pay a tax, not upon what he hath or seemeth to have, but confessedly upon what he hath not.” Such contracts, however, indemnify the insured against loss, and have some of the characteristics of bonds, mortgages and other like securities which are made the subjects of taxation. They have property value susceptible of measurement, and it was competent, therefore, for the legislature to treat them as property, as it did, and to make them subject to taxation. (4. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Howe, Treasurer, 32 Kan. 737, 5 Pac. 397.) Being a property tax, the constitutional limitations upon the taxation of all the
The lack of uniformity is manifest in another way : One taxpayer has a policy written in the state by a company with authority on which no tax is imposed, while his neighbor has one written by an unlicensed company at Indianapolis, or other place outside of the state, which is subject to taxation. Taxes are uniform and equal when imposed on all property of the same character within the taxing district, and yet here the insured pays a ten per cent, tax upon a policy written outside of the state, while his neighbor pays nothing on a policy of equal value and affording the same protection because it is written within the state. - Contracts of insurance written outside of the state cannot be regarded as illegal. Aside from the consideration that they may not be Kansas contracts and are therefore beyond the reach of the legislature, the act itself contemplates that such contracts may and will be made, and when made are to be treated as property within the state and become the subject of taxation here. This is an invidious discrimination, purposely made, and is a distinct departure from the constitutional rule of uniformity. (The State, ex rel. the Attorney General, v.
Another ground on which the act is assailed is, that in part the tax is levied for a private and illegal purpose. Two-fifths of the taxes to be raised are to be used for the benefit of the fire department of a city or township, whether paid or volunteer. All will agree that taxation for other than public purposes is unjustifiable. For the maintenance of a fire department public money may be raised and expended, and if the municipality incurs any legitimate expense in providing such an organization taxes may be imposed therefor. The taxing power of the state, however, can hardly be exercised in order to bestow public money on a department made up of volunteers who are not employed by the municipality, and for whose services no expense is assumed or incurred by it. However commendable the object of such an organization maybe, and however valuable the services of the members may be, it is clear that public money can only be used to discharge a public liability. As will be observed, the money when collected is to be applied to the benefit of such a department and not for the benefit of the municipality, but taxes cannot be imposed nor public money expended for the benefit of private individuals or enterprises, nor can it be given away for such purposes.
For the reasons stated, we conclude that the statute is invalid and the tax illegal, and therefore the petitioner will be discharged.