198 Mass. 466 | Mass. | 1908
The decision of this case involves two questions: First, whether the taxation upon insurance companies incorporated in other States, provided for in the R. L. c. 14, §§ 24, 28, is to be imposed under both sections, and taxes are to be collected of the companies under each section, or whether the sections provide two separate and independent modes of taxation, of which one only can be adopted in any particular case, so that the Commonwealth has no right to collect under § 28 unless the amount assessable under that section is larger than the amount that would be payable under § 24. Secondly, whether the rate named in § 28 is to be so construed as to impose a heavier burden of taxation upon the company, in proportion to the premiums charged and received, than is imposed upon Massachusetts companies by the laws of the State in which the foreign company is incorporated.
Section 28 is as follows : “A life insurance company, association or partnership, incorporated or associated by virtue of any other State of the United States, by the laws of which a tax is imposed upon the premium receipts of life insurance companies chartered by this Commonwealth and doing business in such State, or upon their agents, shall annually, so long as such laws continue in force, pay a tax or excise upon all premiums charged or received upon contracts made in this Commonwealth, at a rate equal to the highest rate so imposed during the year.”
The history of the legislation of which § 28 is a part makes it plain that the section was intended only to create reciprocal relations between the taxation of our domestic companies in another State and the taxation of similar companies of that State in this Commonwealth. It seems clear that the taxation resorted to under this statute is to be the only taxation to which the foreign company should be subjected. The section was enacted in substantially its present form in the St. 1873, c. 141, before the provision for taxation upon the net value of policies, now contained in § 24, was made by the St. 1880, c. 227. The latter statute did not repeal the former one, and both were included in Pub. Sts. c. 13, §§ 25-31, and re-enacted in the Revised
The first provision in Massachusetts on this subject is found in the St. 1856, c. 252, § 47, and it requires “ the same taxes, fines, penalties, deposits, and obligations ” of foreign companies doing business in Massachusetts as are imposed on Massachusetts companies doing business in the other State. This law was continued unchanged in the Gen. Sts. c. 58, § 70. In Pub. Sts. c. 119, § 215, the language is “ like fines, fees, penalties, deposits, obligations, and prohibitions (not being less in amount than those required by other provisions of law of this Commonwealth in similar cases) are imposed,” etc. All these provisions are intended to be reciprocal, and to govern the subject of taxation upon companies incorporated in other States, where taxation upon premium receipts is imposed upon Massachusetts companies to an amount greater than the taxation of net values under § 24. The practice of the insurance commissioner, to claim the tax under § 28 only when the amount due under that section exceeds the amount due under § 24, and to claim nothing under § 24 if taxation is imposed under § 28, is correct. The two sections are not cumulative.
The statute of New York which introduced the taxation under § 28 went into effect October 1, 1901, and, as interpreted by the Court of Appeals of that State in People v. Miller, 179 N. Y. 227, it imposes a tax of one per cent upon premiums received during the calendar year 1902, on all contracts made after January 1 of that year. The court held that the statute did not include premiums paid upon pre-existing policies, and that the time was to be reckoned only from the beginning of the calendar year. The case before the court was that of a domestic
The question now to be decided is whether our taxation under § 28 shall be at a rate equivalent to one per cent upon all premiums charged or received upon contracts made in this Commonwealth, after similar taxation began under the law of New York, or one per cent upon the premiums charged or received upon such contracts, and also upon pre-existing contracts.
There is much ground for contending, for reasons given in the ease just cited, that the expression “ charged or received upon contracts made in this Commonwealth ” means charged or received upon contracts made in this Commonwealth only while “ such laws continue in force.” With that construction the one per cent would be computed only upon the premiums on contracts made after January 1,1902.
We think it very plain that the object of the statute is to make the rate of taxation under this section no more burdensome upon foreign companies here than the like rate is upon companies of Massachusetts doing business in the foreign State. If we should adopt the contention of the Attorney General that the expression “ contracts made in this Commonwealth ” means, not only contracts made after the foreign law took effect, but also previously existing contracts, we should be constrained to hold that the “ rate equal to the highest rate so imposed ” in the foreign State is such proportion of one per cent as the amount of premiums charged or received on account of the new contracts bears to the amount charged or received on account of all contracts, including those previously existing. In that way we should reach the same result. If we are to compute the tax here upon premiums charged and received from all contracts, we should compute it at the rate imposed under the rule in the foreign State, applying this rule with a modification of the per cent named, rendered necessary by the application of it to premiums from all contracts. That rule, showing the rate to be put upon the company, would give us a fractional part of one per cent determined by the proportion stated above. As applied to premiums charged and received from all contracts, that would be the rate imposed under the rule in the foreign State.
Decree for the petitioner.