332 Mass. 395 | Mass. | 1955
The State tax commission appeals from a decision of the Appellate Tax Board granting an abatement to Aetna Life Insurance Company, a Connecticut corporation, upon a part of the taxes paid the Commonwealth under its 1952 excise tax return. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, § 20, as appearing in St. 1943, c. 531, § 1. The parties are in agreement that Aetna is taxable on the basis of the net value of policies issued, or assumed, by it and in effect on
The facts are found in the decision of the board. According to Aetna’s return, on December 31, 1951, the aggregate net value of its Massachusetts business was $40,511,069, of which $39,650,654 was “net value of policies.” Of the policies all or part of the risk of some had been reinsured with other life companies. The net value of the policies so ceded by Aetna and assumed by the other companies was $456,630. The exact question we have to decide is whether Aetna could deduct this figure in determining the net value upon which it must pay a tax. The commissioner of corporations and taxation disallowed most of the deduction,
The pertinent provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, § 20, as amended by St. 1941, c. 509, § 5, are: “Every life in
Chapter 175 is the comprehensive insurance statute, § 9 of which provides that the commissioner of insurance “shall each year compute the reserve liability or net value on December thirty-first of the preceding year of every life company . . . with respect to the policies . . . issued by such company” if before January 1, 1948, on one basis, and if after on another. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 175, § 9, as appearing in St. 1943, c. 227, § 1. Section 9, five pages in length and much too long to be set forth here, requires the commissioner of insurance to use certain actuarial tables varying with type of policy and date of issue. In Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Commonwealth, 133 Mass. 161, 164, it was said that the “net value” of a policy under our statutes is a sum which with compound interest and with the addition of future net premiums will provide for the payment of the policy when it is to mature according to the appropriate table.
In its decision the Appellate Tax Board pointed out that there was no reference to reinsurance in c. 175, § 9, but de
The decision of the Appellate Tax Board quoted at length from G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 175, § 20, as amended by St. 1941, c. 343, by St. 1946, c. 508, and by St. 1948, c. 571. Chapter 175, § 20, reads in part: “When reinsurance is so effected the ceding . . . life company shall be charged thereafter with a reserve liability . . . representing the proportion of the obligation retained by it, and the company with which the reinsurance is effected shall be charged thereafter in like manner with the proportion of the obligation assumed by it. Both the companies shall together carry the same . . . reserve which the ceding company would have carried had it not reinsured the risk.”
There is also a provision in c. 175, § 20, introduced by amendment in St. 1941, c. 343, which reads: “No credit shall be allowed to any ceding insurer for reinsurance made, ceded, renewed or otherwise becoming effective after September thirtieth, nineteen hundred and forty-one, as an admitted asset or as a reduction of liability, unless, by the terms of a written reinsurance agreement, the reinsurance is payable by the assuming insurer on the basis of the liability of the ceding insurer under any policy or contract reinsured without diminution because of the insolvency of the ceding insurer.” The board found that by the terms of the written reinsurance agreement between Aetna and each of the reinsuring companies the reinsurance was payable by the assuming insurer on the basis of the liability of the ceding insurer.
The entire reasoning in the decision of the board is contained in one sentence: “Since the net value of the policies, as defined by statute (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 175, § 9), is the reserve liability of the company upon its insurance contracts, — it would seem that the tax in the instant case
The taxpayer contends that the only place or occasion for charging a reserve of a life company is the commissioner’s annual valuation pursuant to c. 175, § 9; and that since under the reinsurance section, § 20 of c. 175, the commissioner of insurance must charge the reserve required to support the reinsured risk to the reinsurer and only that required to support the retained risk to the ceding company, “that process is necessarily part of the 1 basis of valuation’” referred to in the taxing section, § 20 of c. 63.
Some of the tax commission’s contentions are stated at length in this paragraph. The pertinent tax statute, c. 63, § 20, as amended by St. 1941, c. 509, § 5, prescribes the payment of the excise “upon the net value of all policies . . . issued or assumed” by a company. Not only is there no stated exception, but the return must give “the total number of policies” and their “aggregate net value,” the latter to be “the combined aggregate of the mean reserve computed for each policy, or each group of policies” on the basis of the insurance commissioner’s valuation under c. 175, § 9, and § 9 only. Section 9 sets up a complete method for computing “the reserve liability or net value . . . with respect to the policies . . . issued” by every life company. There is no reference in § 9 to c. 175, § 20, nor in § 20 to § 9. The net value of any given policy will always be the same whether reinsured in whole or in part or not at all. This is because the conditions affecting liability, such as terms of the policy, age and condition of the insured, and the expected date of maturity, remain constant. The phrase, reserve liability, under c. 175, § 9, must be synonymous with net value. Not only are these terms
While the statutory provisions could be clearer, our inclination is to support the result reached by the Appellate Tax Board. Notwithstanding that c. 175, §§ 9 and 20, do not in terms refer to each other, we think that the provision in § 20 as to the reserve liability with which the ceding company and the assuming company are to be proportionately charged must in reason refer to the reserve liability which must be computed under § 9. In the absence of unmistakable language we are unable to adopt the restricted interpretation by which a distinction is sought to be drawn between reserve liability and the amount of security to be
The tax commission relies upon an amendment to G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 175, § 20, enacted in 1946. For many years before that date, § 20 contained the provision: “Such reinsurance shall not reduce the taxes to be paid by the ceding company, nor, if a life company, shall it reduce the reserve to be charged to it [a life company], unless effected with a company authorized to issue policies in the commonwealth covering risks of the same kinds as those reinsured, or with a company incorporated or formed to reinsure and authorized to reinsure in the commonwealth risks of the same kinds as those reinsured.” By St. 1946, c. 508, entitled, “An Act further regulating the effect upon the taxation of insurance companies of the reinsurance of risks thereby,” the italicized words were struck out and the phrase in brackets was added. It now reads: “Such reinsurance shall not reduce the reserve to be charged to a life company, unless effected with a company authorized to issue policies in the commonwealth covering risks of the same kinds as those reinsured, or with a company incorporated or formed to reinsure and authorized to reinsure in the commonwealth risks of the same kinds as those reinsured.”
In its brief the commission states: “prior to 1946 the statute permitted a life insurance company reinsuring with authorized companies to reduce its taxable base by the amount of the net value of policies reinsured with such companies, thereby reducing its excise tax liability. Thus, if the appellee were claiming a deduction for reinsurance in one of its excise tax returns covering a year prior to 1946, the appellee would be on solid ground.” This concession is made notwithstanding that at all times c. 63, § 20, imposed an excise “upon the net value of all policies . . . issued or assumed,” that c. 175, §§ 9 and 20, contained no mutual references, and that other statutory provisions outlined
It is argued that the purpose of the Legislature in enacting St. 1946, c. 508, was “to remove any deduction for reinsurance by life companies still on the net value tax basis, in order to bring the tax laws relating to such companies into conformity with the tax statutes relating to life
Abatement granted in the amount of $768.73 with costs.
In a letter to the taxpayer the commissioner of corporations and taxation said: “Allowance for deduction for net value of policies reinsured in authorized companies has always been limited to the amount reported by the assuming company in its net value taxable basis; therefore, cessions to . . . [three companies] have been totally disallowed because these three companies have gone over to the premium basis, and the deduction covering cession to ... [a fourth company] is limited to . . . the frozen amount which that company reported assumed in their 1944 return.”
“The word ‘premiums’ as used in this section shall include all amounts received as consideration for life insurance policies without deduction for amounts paid to other companies for reinsurance . . ..” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, § 20, as appearing in St. 1943, c. 531, § 1.
See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 63, § 22, as appearing in St. 1945, c. 721, § 1, as amended by St. 1946, c. 387, § 1.