128 Ky. 174 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
These three eases involve precisely the same questions, and were heard together. In deciding them we shall use, for the purpose of illustrating the principles of law involved, the data furnished by the record in Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, etc. In this action the appellee charges the appellant with having received, and with failing to report for taxation, in each of the years, respectively, ending June 30, 1900, to June 30, 1904, inclusive, certain sums of money as premiums on business done in this State. It is not claimed that it failed to make a regular report for each of the years.of premiums received; but the contention on the part of the appellee is that such reports did not embrace all of the premiums received by appellant, but, on the contrary, omitted premiums to the extent of the amounts alleged in the petition for the years respectively mentioned.
Date of Report Amt. Premiums Reported. Amt. Premiums Claimed. Alleged Deficit. Tax Claimed.
July 1, 1900 $497,587 25 $563,582 03 $65,994 78 $1,319 89
July 1. 1901 545,024 89 607,440 89 62,416 00 l;248 32
July 1, 1902 561,681 78 626,397 74 64,715 96 1,294 32
July b 1903 578,399 48 642,093 00 63,693 52 1,273 87
July 1, 1904 601,962 28 666,802 53 64,840 25 1,296' 80
It is clearly shown by the evidence, and conceded by counsel for the State, that the reports as made by the appellant company embrace all first, or original, premiums — the premiums-receipted for on the face of the policies — and also the subsequent, or renewal, premiums, except to the extent that such renewal premiums were reduced by what is termed “dividends. ” It is the contention of the appellee that such renewal premiums should have been reported without such reduction or abatement, as having been received by the company “in cash, or otherwise;” while the appellant company contends that the reduction from the nominal, or stated, premium, as made, was a contract right of the policy holder, and constituted ho premium or part of premium received
The Commonwealth is claiming to- tax the appellant upon money which it never received at all. The appellant says that» it is only required-- to pay upon money which it receives in cash or otherwise, except
The ease of German Insurance Co. v. Van Cleave, 191 Ill. 410, 61 N. E. 94, involved the question whether premiums rebated to the insured upon the cancellation of the policies should be-included in the words Vgross amount of premiums received,” as used in a taxing statute; The court said: “In the construction of the act effect is to be given to . the intention of the Legislature, and that intention appears to be to levy a tax on the gross income of foreign fire insurance companies. The object is .to require such companies to pay, at designated times, a tax of 2 per cent. On the gross receipts of their business for the previous calendar year. * * * According to the argument which would include premiums returned on canceled policies, if an insurance company should issue a policy and receive a premium, and at once cancel the policy and return the premium, it would have- done the amount of business represented by the
The difficulty which surrounds the appellant in this case grows out of its.method of bookkeeping, and its use of terms out of their ordinary signification. What really happened in every case was that the stipulated premium was much larger than the company actually needed to carry the risk under ordinary conditions; but, if extraordinary conditions should arise, the whole might be needed. Thus, if an epidemic swept over the country, the losses among its policy holders would, perháps, be abnormal, and then the company would need the full amount of the' contract premium. Now, in order to prepare in advance against such untoward contingencies of the future, the company collected the first year the full amount of the premium and set aside so much of it as was overpayment as a guaranty against misfortune; and then said to its policy holders: “You need not pay hereafter the full amount of the stipulated premium, but may .omit the
1900 (beginning of the insurance period) premium paid ..............................$150 00
1901, premium paid....................,...... 100 00
1902, premium paid.......................... 100 00
1903, premium paid.............t............ 100 00
1904, premium paid........................ 100 00 '
1905, premium paid........................... 100 00
Total ............................... $650 00
Obviously the total amount of money paid by the policy holder and received by the insurance company is $650, and it has received no more ,either in cash or otherwise; and on the sum so received it is conceded that appellant has paid the tax due. Now, to tax the company on the $50 per yéar, which it did not collect, but left in the pockets of its policy holders, is to tax it on.money that it never received, either in cash or in ’any other manner. To consider the overpayment of $50, made at the beginning of the contract period,' as money belonging to the policy holder, and a credit to be made each year on the annual premium, is to make the same sum of $50 pay in credits a debt equal to itself each year during the life of the policy. If the policy continued for 20 years, then one sum of $50 would pay off and extinguish $1,000 of debt due for premium; i. e., each year it would be credited on the contract premium of $150 and reduce
If we look only at the method of bookkeeping of the appellánt and have regard only to the terms it uses, there is much in the appearance of the case thus presented to warrant the position of the Commonwealth as to its right to tax the so-called “dividends” said to he annually credited on the premiums due from policy holders, but the law looks below the mere appearance of things, and has regard to the reality; and, thus looking, it sees that the appellant misuses the terms “dividend” and “credit,” and, as shown above, pays no dividend and allows no credit, but that, in reality, all that it does is to collect on the first premium a sum sufficient to meet the contingencies of any given year of the future, and then abstains from collecting any further overpayments while the first remains on hand. If . it were permissible to extend our investigation from the law of the case into the realm of economic policy, much might be said in favor of encouraging these' so-called “annual dividend-paying” 'companies, who manage their affairs economically, and leave in the pockets of the people these misnamed “dividends” rather than, as is done by- the deferred dividend companies, collect unnecessary premiums and hold them for long periods of time; thus piling up gigantic sums of money in our financial centers with which, it is charged, politicians are corrupted, speculation is engendered, and the fair prospect of legitimate commerce is one day paralyzed by the unnatural stringency of the money market, and on another maddened with the intoxication of an equally unnatural inflation of capital, all in the interest of the speculators and brokers, and detrimental to that of the people at large. But with
For these reasons, the judgments are reversed, with! directions to dismiss the petitions.
Petition for rehearing by appellee overruled.