409 P.2d 248 | Nev. | 1966
By the Court,
The question presented on this appeal is whether an insurance company may seek a judicial declaration of the meaning of the insurance premium tax statute by an action for declaratory relief, or must it petition to “review” an order of the insurance commissioner in the manner provided by the Nevada Insurance Law? The proceeding below was for declaratory relief and was dismissed because that court believed that the remedy provided by the insurance code was exclusive. We do not agree and reverse.
Of course, the dismissal precluded inquiry into the merits of the controversy. The mutual life insurance companies and the insurance commissioner have different views about the meaning of the insurance premium tax statute, NRS 686.010. The companies contend that the statute imposes a tax only upon the stated and fixed premiums as reflected in the policies of insurance. On the other hand, the commissioner believes that the statute also allows a tax upon the companies’ divisible surplus apportioned to the holders of life insurance policies and annuity contracts as dividends and applied to provide paid-up additions to such policies and contracts. Accordingly, he ordered an additional tax payment. In an effort to resolve their divergent views, Prudential, for itself and on behalf of 132 other life insurance companies similarly situated, commenced a class suit for declaratory relief to ascertain the meaning of the premium tax statute. The commissioner persuaded the lower court that Prudential had selected the wrong remedy; that only a petition to “review” the commissioner’s order in accordance with NRS 680.230 of the insurance code is permissible.
The present dispute between the mutual life insurance companies and the commissioner is not within the “review” statute, as it involves a question of law and is not concerned with administrative discretion. The meaning of the premium tax statute is not a question
As this case must be remanded, we must decide one further question. The lower court was persuaded that the doctrine of sovereign immunity also precluded declaratory relief. That doctrine concerns immunity from suit to establish state liability or control state action. Neither is involved here. The purpose of this suit is simply to ascertain the meaning of a state statute. This kind of litigation has never been subject to the immunity doctrine. Abelson’s Inc. v. New Jersey State Bd. of Optom., 5 N.J. 412, 75 A.2d 867 (1950).
Reversed and remanded.
The statute reads: “1. Any order or decision made, issued or executed by the commissioner, except an order to make good an impairment of capital or surplus of a deficiency in the amount of admitted assets, whereby any company or person is aggrieved, shall be subject to review by the district court of Ormsby County.
“2. Any company or person aggrieved by an order or decision of the commissioner may, within 60 days after the order or decision has been mailed to or otherwise served upon the company or person entitled to receive the same, appeal from such order, or decision by filing a petition for a review of the findings of the commissioner in the district court of Ormsby County. If an appeal is not so taken it shall conclusively be deemed to have been waived.
“3. The commencement of proceedings under this section shall not operate as a stay of the commissioner’s order, findings, ruling or decision, unless so ordered by the court.”
We note that in 1966 the state waived its immunity from liability and action. Stats. Nev. 1965, ch. 505, p. 1413. The present dispute arose before the 1965 act.