This is an appeal by plaintiff from two judgments in favor of defendant insurance company in actions for taxes assessed upon premiums estimated by the Insurance Commissioner to have been received from its business done in this state in the calendar years 1939 and 1940 respectively.
Defendant is an Illinois corporation engaged in the writing of life and disability insurance. On July 1, 1938, it was issued a license by the Insurance Commissioner of the State of California to do business in this state. Prior to July 1, 1939, when, by its terms and by operation of law its license would have expired unless sooner revoked, plaintiff closed its offices and withdrew all of its agents from this state, and from and after July 1, 1939, ceased to transact any business in this state. Premiums on policies previously written were thereafter mailed direct to the company’s home office in Illinois.
The company paid the prescribed taxes on its reported gross premiums for the period from January 1,1939 to July 1,1939, but it made no report of business done thereafter to the In
The question involved is whether a foreign insurer is liable for taxes upon gross premiums on insurance policies written in this state while it was licensed to do business herein but remitted to its home office direct after it had entirely ceased to do business in this state and after its certificate of authority so to do had expired, the insurer not having withdrawn from the state in the manner prescribed by sections 1070-1074 of the Insurance Code of the State of California or reinsured its business under section 1090 of that code.
Subdivision (b) of section 14% of article XIII of the Constitution of the State of California provides that an insurance company doing business in this state shall pay a tax upon the amount of gross premiums received upon its business done in this state. The gross premiums tax has been held to be a franchise tax for the privilege of doing business in California. (Consolidated Title Sec. Co. v. Hopkins,
The gross premiums tax is a tax on the right to do business during the particular year in which the contract of insurance is written and the premium paid, and during subsequent years in which the company continues to be certified to do business in this state. (Ins. Code, § 700.) Appellant contends that when the foreign state insurer seeks admission to this state, it impliedly agrees to comply with statutory provisions affecting its withdrawal from the state; that if it neglects to comply with such provisions it is still an admitted ■ company “at least in the sense that the State has not consented to its departure from the State,” and that in continuing to receive premiums at its home office outside of the state
If this were a case of first impression it might be held that an insurance company is “doing business” in California as long as it receives premiums from policyholders in this state. This conclusion could be reached upon the theory that a second or subsequent act in a series of acts is of equal importance in a tax question determining when a company is “doing business.” (See Oliver Cont. Filt. Co. v. McColgan,
This is not a case wherein it is attempted to collect, from a foreign company that has ceased to do business in this state, taxes which accrued prior to its cessation of business but were not collectible until subsequent thereto, as in Carpenter v. Peoples Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
A constitutional provision such as subdivision (b), section 14%, article XIII, imposing a tax upon the amount of
There is a statutory provision in California that an insolvent insurer, upon retiring from business in this state, shall not reinsure its business unless its plan to effect such reinsurance is approved by the State Insurance Commissioner. (Ins. Code, § 1090.) An insurance company by writing no new policies may cease to do business and no statute called to our attention requires a company in that situation to reinsure its business except as above set forth. The internal affairs of a foreign insurance company licensed to do business in this state are ordinarily conducted according to the laws of the state of its domicile. This arises from its inherent reasonableness and practical necessity, which often compels a state licensing a foreign insurance company to accept the financial and other statements emanating from the home state. (Equitable Life Assur. Soc. v. Johnson,
Appellant treats the matter of taxes as an incident in the case, and directs attention to whether an insurance company may withdraw from transacting business without strictly complying with Insurance Code, sections 1070 to 1074, providing a method of withdrawal, and section 1090, providing for approval of a reinsurance plan, and without making provision for reinsurance of its contracts written during the period it was certified to do business in this state. However, whether the respondent company was “doing business” within the State of California so as to be subject to the tax levied under article XIII, section 14%, subdivision (b) of the Constitution of the State of California, is the real question involved in this case.
Appellant argues that there is a serious issue, namely, the plight of the policyholders, and that this issue is “hidden by the fact that the ease is one for the recovery of taxes.”
The case that determines the present appeal is Provident Savings Life Assur. Soc. v. Kentucky,
In Continental Assurance Co. v. Tennessee,
In American United Life Ins. Co. v. Fischer, - Iowa - [
The term “gross premiums . . . received upon its business done in this State, ’ ’ as used in the Constitution, was presented for construction in Western T. Acc. Assn. v. Johnson,
“The business conducted by appellant after it took over the business of the Nebraska association and withdrew from the state of Nebraska was business done in the state of California. . . .”
We can find no logical reason for holding on a tax question that sections 1070-1074 and 1090 of the Insurance Code in anywise apply to a foreign company whose certificate to do business has expired and its only business consists in receiving by mail premiums on policies written within the years of its certification to do business here. If it is the purpose of California to collect from a foreign corporation taxes on premiums payable after its license has been permitted to expire and it has ceased to do business in this state, then the Legislature should speak in terms similar to those of the Tennessee statute.
The judgments entered in the San Francisco Superior Court in cases numbered 302,343 and 308,787 are affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Knight, J., concurred.
