TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF MINNESOTA, Plаintiff and Respondent, v. STATE BOARD OF EQUALIZATION, Defendant and Appellant. [And six other cases.]*
No. S022285
Supreme Court of California
Dec. 31, 1992
*Western Title Insurance Company v. State Board of Equalization (No. 837641); Ticor Title Insurance Company of California v. State Board of Equalization (No. 837649); Ticor Title Insurance Company v. State Board of Equalization (No. 837680); Chicago Title Insurance Company v. State Board of Equalization (No. 850786); First American Title Insurance Company v. State Board of Equalization (No. 852932); Transamerica Title Insurance Company v. State Board of Equalization (No. 868556).
COUNSEL
John K. Van de Kamp and Daniel E. Lungren, Attorneys General, Timothy G. Laddish, Assistant Attorney General, and Richard F. Finn, Deputy Attorney General, for Defendant and Appellant.
Atwood, Knox & Anderson, Atwood, Knox, Anderson, Uzzi & Dinapoli, Stanford H. Atwood, Jr., Robert Knox, John H. Blake, White & Case, Harry G. Melkonian, David J. Wilson, Jill H. Silfen, Paul C. Rooney, Jr., Darren R. Fortunato, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, John A. Arguelles, Norman B. Barker and Maureen McGuirl for Plaintiff and Respondent.
O’Melveny & Meyers, Warren Christopher, Frederick A. Richman, Thomas M. McCoy, Nielsen, Merksamer, Parrinello, Mueller & Naylor, John E. Mueller and Eric J. Miethke as Amici Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
PANELLI, J.—We granted review to decide whether title insurers may be taxed on claims paid by underwritten title companies pursuant to underwriting agreements between the two. We conclude that they may not be so taxed. Additionally, we find that the State Board of Equalization failed to properly raise the defense that the title insurers should have been taxed on the total premiums paid by the insureds to the underwritten title companies. Therefore, we do not reach the premiums issue. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
I. STIPULATED FACTS
These consolidated actions are for refunds of taxes levied against title insurers. The refund actions were submitted for decision on the basis of a written stipulation of facts. We summarize the stipulated facts below.
Plaintiffs are seven corporations licensed to do business in California as title insurers. The insurers issue all or some of their title policies through underwritten title companies (sometimes referred to hereafter as title companies). Pursuant to a written underwriting agreement with the title insurer, to which those seeking title insurance are not a party, the underwritten title company conducts a title search and examination and prepares a preliminary report on the conditions under which title insurance would be availablе. Acting as the title insurer’s agent, the underwritten title company issues the title insurance policy using forms provided by the insurer, determines the premium from the insurer’s rate schedule, and collects the premium. According to the terms of the underwriting agreement, the underwritten title company retains most of the premium fee (usually about 90 percent) for itself. The title company pays the remainder over to the title insurer for its acceptance of the risk of insuring title as set forth in the policy.
Although the title insurer and the insured are the only parties to the title insurance policy, the underwriting agreement obligates the underwritten title company to pay a portion of certain title insurance claims. In some circumstances and under some underwriting agreements, the underwritten title company makes such payment directly to the insured party; in others, the title company pays the title insurer.
Under the California insurance tax imposed by
In 1972, the California Department of Insurance (CDI) decided that payments made by an underwritten title company to satisfy its obligation to pay certain portions of policy claims were to be characterized as “income” for purposes of calculating the title insurer’s tax burden. In 1973 the CDI began proposing, and defendant State Board of Equalization (the Board)
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Board issued deficiency assessments for various years between 1975 and 1984, which plaintiffs unsuccessfully contested in administrative proceedings before the Board. Plaintiffs then paid the assessments and filed separate actions for refunds. The actions were consolidated in the Superior Court of San Francisсo.
The parties stipulated that “[t]he issue in this case concerns whether the amounts of payments made by the underwritten title companies as described in paragraph 4(d) above [relating to underwritten title companies’ payment of claims], which were applied to reduce [title insurers’] liabilities under the title insurance contracts, should be included in the ‘income’ measure for purposes of calculating [title insurers’] tax burdens under the California Insurance Tax.” However, shortly before trial, the Board informed the insurers that it would assert a new defense to the insurers’ refund claims at trial. The Board claimed that the title insurers should have reported and paid taxes on the total amount of the premiums paid by the insureds, rather than only on the portion they received from the underwritten title companies. After a nonjury trial based on the stipulated facts, the trial court found in favor of the title insurers. In its memorandum opinion, the court held that neither the amount of the claims paid by the underwritten title companies nor the amount of the premiums retained by the title companies was income to the title insurers. A judgment was entered ordering refunds totaling approximately $93,000 plus interest.
The Board appealed the trial court’s judgment. The Court of Appeal reversed. The court held that the claims paid by title companies were taxable income to title insurers. The court also held that the total amount of the premium, including that portion retained by the underwritten title company, was taxable to the title insurer. Therefore, the court rejected the title insurers’ refund claims. Presiding Justice Anderson dissented, reasoning that the majority should not have reached the question of whether the entire premiums were taxable to the title insurers and that neither the portion of the premiums retained by the title companies nor the amount of the claims paid by the title companies was income to the title insurers.
III. TAXATION OF TITLE INSURERS IN CALIFORNIA
California taxes insurance companies differently than it taxes all other corporations. With some exceptions not relevant to this case, the
For title insurers, the basis of the annual tax is “all income upon business done in this State, except: (1) Interest and dividends. (2) Rents from real property. (3) Profits from the sale оr other disposition of investments. (4) Income from investments.” (
The annual tax for title insurers is subject only to those deductions specified in
IV. ARE THE CLAIMS PAID BY THE UNDERWRITTEN TITLE COMPANIES INCOME TO THE TITLE INSURERS?
As noted earlier, all of the underwriting agreements at issue in this case allocate to the underwritten title companies the obligation to pay a portion of certain title insurance claims. The provisions for payment of claims in the underwriting agreements vary; some contemplate that the underwritten title company will pay claims up to a certain sum, while others provide that the underwrittеn title company will pay some or all of the claims due to its negligence in searching title. Title insurance differs from other insurance in that the preliminary title search is designed to eliminate risk by identifying any possible clouds on the title and excluding them from the coverage of the policy. Thus, the obligation of the underwritten title company to pay some portion of claims made under the title policy appears to serve the purpose of increasing the title company’s incentive to perform its title search carefully.
We begin our analysis with a discussion of the meaning of “income,” as title insurers are taxed on the basis of “all income upon business done in this State.” (
The Board contends that a title insurer realizes income when an underwritten title company pays its share of claims made under title policies. The majority of the Court of Appeal characterized such payments as payments made on behalf of the title insurers in discharge of the insurers’ debts. In reaching that conclusion, the court emphasized that only the title insurer and the insured are parties to the title policy. The dissent below, on the other hand, correctly noted that a portion of the risk had, in effect, been contractually allocated to the underwritten title company through the underwriting agreement. As the dissent explained, “the insurer has agreed, on an aggregate basis, to take in only 10 percent of all premiums on the assumption that the risk-sharing and actual claims pay out is approximately proportionate. It
Income has been defined as “undeniable accessions to wealth, clearly realized, and over which the taxpayers have complete dominion” (Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co. (1955) 348 U.S. 426, 431 [99 L.Ed. 483, 490, 75 S.Ct. 473]) and as “the accrual of some gain, profit or benefit to the taxpayer.” (Commissioner v. Wilcox (1946) 327 U.S. 404, 407 [90 L.Ed. 752, 754-755, 66 S.Ct. 546, 166 A.L.R. 884], overruled on other grounds in James v. United States (1961) 366 U.S. 213, 221 [6 L.Ed.2d 246, 254-255, 81 S.Ct. 1052].) Income may be in the form of a direct payment to the taxpayer. Additionally, the discharge of a taxpayer’s indebtedness may constitute income to that taxpayer. (See United States v. Hendler, supra, 303 U.S. at p. 566 [“[The taxpayer’s] gain was as real and substantial as if the money had been paid it and then paid over by it to its creditors”]; see also Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner (1929) 279 U.S. 716, 729 [73 L.Ed. 918, 927-928, 49 S.Ct. 499]; Burnet v. Wells, supra, 289 U.S. at p. 677; Diedrich v. Commissioner (1982) 457 U.S. 191, 195 [72 L.Ed.2d 777, 781-782, 102 S.Ct. 2414], superseded by statute as stated in Davis v. Commissioner (6th Cir. 1984) 746 F.2d 357, 364.) Congress has defined “gross income” as “all income from whatever source derived,” including “[i]ncome from discharge of indebtedness.” (
Discharge of indebtedness does not constitute taxable income per se; rather, it is “income from discharge of indebtedness” that is included within taxable income. (See, e.g., Commissioner v. Rail Joint Co. (2d Cir. 1932) 61 F.2d 751, 752.) In order to determine whether the title insurers may be taxed on the claims paid by the title companies pursuant to the terms of the underwriting agreements, it is not enough to conclude that the insurers remain ultimately liable to the insured for these amounts. We must also consider whether the title insurers realize income, that is, whether the payment of claims results in an accession to wealth.
However, in reality the answer is not as simple as the Board’s argument suggests. The title insurer and the title company, through the underwriting agreement, have agreed to allocate the labor, risk, liability, and premium involved in the preparation and issuance of a contract of title insurance. The underwriting agreement is an arm’s-length contract; each party has presumably agreed that the values of the performances are equal, and each has promised consideration in return for the other’s promised performance. Under the agreement, the underwritten title company retains a рortion of the premiums and undertakes certain obligations, among them searching title and paying a share of certain claims arising under the policy. The title insurer forgoes the portion of the premium attributable to the portion of the risk that is allocated to the underwritten title company. Nevertheless, the insurer remains liable to the insured and must pay the full amount of the claims if the underwritten title company fails to perform in accordance with its obligation under the underwriting agreement.
The Board argues that an arrangement by which the insurer and the underwritten title company allocate the risks between them would make the underwriting agreement an illegal contract of insurance. California law forbids anyone to transact any class of insurance business without first being admitted by the Insurance Commissioner to such class. (
However, even if the underwriting agreements serve a risk-shifting function, we need not conclude that they are illegal insurance contracts. Insurance is defined as “a contract whereby one undertakes to indemnify another against loss, damage, or liability arising from a contingent or unknown event.” (
The underwriting agreement does not appear to be a contract of insurance for two reasons. First, it does not appear to distribute the risk of liability for claims among similarly situated persons. Under the contract, the underwritten title company agrees to indemnify the insurer for a portion of its liability. There is no indication that the underwriting agreements distribute the risk among similarly situated title insurers.
Second, “the mere fact that a contract contains these two elements [shifting and distribution of risk of loss] does not necessarily mean that the agreement constitutes an insurance contract for purposes of statutory regulation.” (Truta v. Avis Rent A Car System, Inc. (1987) 193 Cal.App.3d 802, 812 [238 Cal.Rptr. 806] [Truta].) Rather than simply look to whether the contract involves an assumption of a risk, we will instead ask “‘whether that [assumption of risk] or something else to which it is related in the particular plan is its principal object and purpose.’” (Transportation Guar. Co. v. Jellins (1946) 29 Cal.2d 242, 249 [174 P.2d 625] [Jellins]; see also 12 Appleman, Insurаnce Law and Practice (1981) § 7002, p. 14.)
Following this reasoning, California courts have held that arrangements similar to those in this case were not illegal contracts of insurance. For instance, a car rental agreement containing an element of insurance was not an illegal contract of insurance because the insurance element was peripheral to the main purpose of the contract. (Truta, supra, 193 Cal.App.3d at p. 814.) Likewise, a truck maintenance contract in which the contractor agreed to insure the vehicles for the owner with an authorized insurance company was held to be not an illegal contract because the main purpose of the contract was to supply labor. (Jellins, supra, 29 Cal.2d at pp. 249, 252-253.) Further, a medical services corporation that provided medical services to low-income patients who paid monthly membership dues did not engage in the business of insurance illegally, because the principal purpose or object of the operation was service rather than indemnity. (California Physicians’ Service v. Garrison (1946) 28 Cal.2d 790, 809-810 [172 P.2d 4, 167 A.L.R. 306].)
Based on this analysis, we conclude that the underwriting agreements are not illegal contracts of insurance. Their main function is not to require the underwritten title company to provide insurance, either to the title insurer or to the insured, but instead to require the underwritten title company to perform a title search and examination carefully and diligently as well as to carry out the formalities involved in the issuance of a title insurance policy. The indemnification provisions are secondary to the main
The parties have been unable to direct us to any case closely analogous to the one before us. However, none of the cases cited by the parties lead us to cоnclude that the title insurers realize income in the amount of the claims paid by the title companies. The Board asserts that we should follow cases holding that payments in discharge of legal obligations under a contract are income. (See, e.g., Robertson v. United States (1952) 343 U.S. 711, 713 [96 L.Ed. 1237, 1240, 72 S.Ct. 994] [Robertson].) However, the cases relied on by the Board for this proposition are clearly distinguishable.
The Board cites Diedrich v. Commissioner, supra, 457 U.S. 191, 196-198, which involved a gift structured so that the donee paid the gift tax rather than the donor. The court treated the transaction as a partial sale and held that the gift tax was income to the donor to the extent that the tax exceeded the donor’s adjusted basis in the property. Similarly, in Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner, supra, 279 U.S. 716, the court held that an employee realized income when his employer paid his income tax. (Id. at p. 729 [73 L.Ed. at pp. 927-928].) The court stated that the payments were in consideration of services rendered by the employee and constituted gain derived by the employee for labor. (Ibid.) The form of the payment made no difference. (Ibid.) Likewise, in United States v. Boston & Maine Railroad Co. (1929) 279 U.S. 732 [73 L.Ed. 929, 49 S.Ct. 505], a lessee agreed to pay taxes as part of a lease agreement. The court held that these taxes constituted income to the lessor. (Id. at pp. 734-736 [73 L.Ed. at pp. 930-931].) In each of these cases, the taxpayer realized a gain by being relieved of a tax obligation for which the taxpayer alone was liable. Such is not the case here, where the insurers and the title companies contracted in advance to divide the premium, labor, risk, and liability between themselves. The economic reality of the transaction is that the title insurer forgoes a portion of the premium and the underwritten title company receives that portion in return for its allocated share of the risk and liability. There is no
The Board also relies on Burnet v. Wells, supra, 289 U.S. 670, and Robertson, supra, 343 U.S. 711. Although these cases shed light on the concept of income, neither is applicable to the case at hand. Burnet v. Wells held that the proceeds of a trust for the payment of insurance premiums constituted taxable income to the settlor, as provided by statute. (Burnet v. Wells, supra, 289 U.S. at pp. 677, 680-681.) In Robertson, a composer won a prize for musical composition. The court held that the prize was income taxable to the composer, as it was compensation for his labor. (Robertson, supra, 343 U.S. at pp. 713-714.) Again, these cases do not consider a situation in which the taxpayer has reached an arm’s length agreement in advance with a third party by which that third party assumes certain risks in return for a consideration that reflects the value of those risks.5 The Board would have us conclude that the discharge of indebtedness pursuant to a contract always constitutes income to the obligor. However, we must look to the substance of the transaction to determine whether the taxpayer actually realizes gain when the third party fulfills its obligations under the contract. Under the facts of this case, we cannot conclude that the claims paid by the underwritten title company constitute gains on the part of the title insurer.
To summarize, from the outset the title insurer and the underwritten title company have divided the labor, risk, liability, and premiums between them. The title insurer takes in only that portion of the premium that compensates it for the risk that has not been contractually allocated to the underwritten title company. When the underwritten title company fulfills its obligation to the insurer by paying its portion of the claims, the insurer does not realize any additional gain. Since there is no gain, it follows that there is no income.
V. IS THE ISSUE OF WHETHER THE ENTIRE PREMIUMS ARE TAXABLE TO THE TITLE INSURERS PROPERLY BEFORE THE COURT?
The title insurers brought this action seeking a refund of taxes assessed and paid on the claims that the underwritten title companies paid pursuant to the underwriting agreements. The Board argues that, even if its position on the claims issue is incorrect, any possible refund is offset by the fact that the insurers should have paid taxes on the full amount of the premiums received by the underwritten title companies, rather than only on the portion passed on to them by the title companies. The Board did not raise this issue in either the administrative proceedings or in its pleadings in the consolidated action. Rather, it mentioned the issue for the first time shortly before trial, when the Board’s counsel informed the insurers’ counsel in a telephone conversation that the Board intended to rely on the issue at trial. This conversation appears to have taken place during the time the stipulated facts were being prepared.
The insurers argue that the Board could not properly raise an issue in the superior court that was not raised previously in the administrative proceedings. Alternatively, the insurers argue that, even if it was proper for the Board to raise the issue for the first time in the court action, the Board was required to plead the issue as a setoff in its answer by way of an affirmative defense. Finally, the insurers contend that the Board waived the issue when it agreed in the stipulated facts that the issue in the case concerned whether the claims paid by the underwritten title companies were taxable as income to the insurers.6
The insurers assert that the superior court lacked jurisdiction to rule on the premiums issue since the Board failed to raise this issue in the administrative proceedings. While it is evident that the taxpayer is limited to those claims
By claiming that the title insurers should not receive a refund because they should have paid taxes on the total premiums paid by their insureds to the title companies, the Board is essentially assessing a deficiency against the title insurers. However, the Board is charging such a deficiency without following the above mentioned statutorily required administrative procedures. Just as the taxpayer is limited to the claims it may assert in the superior court to those pursued in the administrative proceedings, the Board should be limited in its assertion of setoffs in the superior court action to those deficiency assessments formally pursued under
“The common count is a general pleading which seeks recovery of money without specifying the nature of the claim . . . . Because of the uninformative character of the complaint, it has been held that the typical answer, a general denial, is sufficient to raise almost any kind of defense, including some which ordinarily require special pleading. [Citations.]” (5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) Pleading, § 998, p. 422, italics in original; see also Interstate Group Administrators, Inc. v. Cravens, Dargan & Co., supra, 174 Cal.App.3d at p. 706.) However, even where the plaintiff has pleaded in the form of a common count, the defendant must raise in the answer any new matter, that is, anything he or she relies on that is not put in issue by the plaintiff.7 (Interstate Group Administrators, supra, 174 Cal.App.3d at pp. 706-707; Carranza v. Noroian, supra, 240 Cal.App.2d 481, 484-486, 488.)
The Board’s attempts to analogize the pleadings requirеd in response to the insurers’ pleadings to those required in response to a complaint in the form of a common count are not persuasive. The argument ignores the
To accept the Board’s position would place an unacceptable burden on taxpayers seeking refunds. As the Board notes, a refund case throws open the taxpayer’s entire tax liability for the period in question (State Bd. of Equalization v. Superior Court (1985) 39 Cal.3d 633, 641-642 [217 Cal.Rptr. 238, 703 P.2d 1131]), and the Board may raise issues unrelated to the basis or theory on which the taxpayer is seeking a refund in order to defeat the claim. (Sеe Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. v. State Bd. of Equalization (1974) 39 Cal.App.3d 532, 535-536 [114 Cal.Rptr. 515].) If the Board is not required to plead its defenses to refund claims, taxpayers would be forced to prepare for trial and conduct discovery in ignorance of any possible setoffs or defenses the state might assert. Taxpayers cannot prepare for unknown attacks on their refund claims. The burden would be particularly severe in a case such as this, in which the Board is seeking a setoff based on the taxability of the full premium, which it had never treated as income in the past, and which the insurers could not have expected to be at issue in the case.8
The insurers’ complaints in superior court alleged facts relating to the taxation of the payment on claims made by the underwritten title companies, but did not allege facts relating to the portion of the premium fees that the underwritten title companies passed on to them or whether they paid taxes on such fees. The Board’s answers did not allege that the insurers failed to pay taxes on the full amount of the premiums or that this underpayment of taxes would offset or defeat the refund claim. Nor did the Board provide specific information that would allow a сourt to determine whether the alleged underpayment of taxes on the premiums would in fact offset the entire amount of any refund of taxes paid on the claims payments. In sum,
Moreover, the Board stipulated before trial that “the issue” in the case “concern[ed]” whether the insurers received income from the claims paid by the underwritten title companies. A court will respect a stipulation limiting the issues in a case. (Vitale v. City of Los Angeles (1936) 13 Cal.App.2d 704, 706 [57 P.2d 993].) The Board suggests that the stipulation meant that the issue in the case concerned, but was not limited to, that issue, and that it remained free to raise other issues to defeat the refund claim. We cannot accept this strained reading of the stipulation. A plain reading suggests, rather, that the parties had agreed to limit the issues presented to the trial court and had waived all other issues. The Board should not be permitted to escape the effects of its stipulation.
Therefore, because the Board failed to issue a deficiency assessment on the premiums issue, failed to raise the setoff defense in its pleadings, and because the Board agreed to limit the issues in the case, the issue of whether the entire premium amounts can be taxed as the insurers’ income was never properly before the superior court.
VI. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed.
Lucas, C. J., Arabian, J., Baxter, J., and George, J., concurred.
KENNARD, J., Dissenting.—The question presented in this case is whether a title insurance company (insurer) that issues a policy of title insurance receives taxable income when an underwritten title company with which the insurer has a separate contractual arrangement pays a claim against the insurer by a policyholder on behalf of the insurer, or compensates the insurer for a claim that the insurer has paid. Looking beyond form to substance, I would hold that under these circumstances the insurer has received income, and is therefore subject to taxation under the California Constitution. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
BACKGROUND
The seven plaintiff insurers each issue policies through underwritten title companies that act as their agents. The relationships between the insurers
According to the underwriting agreements, when a policyholder makes a claim under a title insurance policy one of two procedures is followed. Under the procedure set forth in four of the seven underwriting agreements at issue here, the insurer pays the claim directly. Then the title company compensates the insurer for the amount of the claim the insurer has just paid its policyholder, up to a specified limit. Under the alternative procedure set forth in the remaining three underwriting agreements, when a claim is made by a policyholder, the title company pays the policyhоlder’s claim directly up to the specified amount, and the excess of the claim over the limit, if any, is then paid by the insurer.
The insurers here did not report as income or pay taxes on the payments made to them by the title companies to pay claims they had paid to the policyholders, nor on the claims that were paid by the title companies to the policyholders on behalf of the insurers. The Board of Equalization issued deficiency assessments against the insurers for certain years between 1975 and 1984, on the ground that the payments to the insurers by the title companies to compensate the insurers for claims the insurers had paid and the payments made directly to the policyholders by the title companies on behalf of the insurers were income to the insurers on which taxes must be paid. The insurers unsuccessfully contested those assessments in administrative proceedings, and then the insurers paid the claims and sued for refunds. The trial court found in favor of the insurers, but the Court of Appeal reversed the judgment.
DISCUSSION
Under
Under the precedents of the United States Supreme Court, the concept of “income” is broad. It has been described as encompassing all “undeniable accessions to wealth, clearly realized, and over which the taxpayers have complete dominion” (Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co. (1955) 348 U.S. 426, 431 [99 L.Ed. 483, 490, 75 S.Ct. 473]; accord, e.g., Commissioner v. Kowalski (1977) 434 U.S. 77, 83 [54 L.Ed.2d 252, 259, 98 S.Ct. 315]), and, more recently, simply as “any ‘accessio[n] to wealth’” (United States v. Burke (1992) 504 U.S. 229 [119 L.Ed.2d 34, 42-43, 112 S.Ct. 1867, 1870]). The high court has emphasized that the statutory language indicates an intent to include all sources of income to the fullest extent of constitutional taxing power. (Ibid.; Commissioner v. Kowalski, supra, 434 U.S. at p. 82 [54 L.Ed.2d at pp. 258-259].)
The labels parties attach to their transactions do not determine whether there is income. The high court “has recognized that ‘income’ may be realized by a variety of indirect means. . . . [T]he substance, not the form, of the agreed transactions controls.” (Diedrich v. Commissioner (1982) 457 U.S. 191, 195 [72 L.Ed.2d 777, 781, 102 S.Ct. 2414].) This court has also stressed that the judicial task is “to look beyond the formal labels the parties have affixed to their transactions and seek . . . to discern the true economic substance of the . . . arrangement.” (Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization (1982) 32 Cal.3d 649, 656-657 [186 Cal.Rptr. 578, 652 P.2d 426].)
1. Are the title companies’ payments to the insurers to compensate the insurers for claims the insurers have paid “income” to the insurers?
The first question is whether the payments made by the title companies to the insurers to compensate the insurers are “income” to the insurers. In my view, when an insurer receives a payment from a title company, the insurer has received income within the meaning of the broad statutory concept “all income.”
The insurers in their briefs treat the underlying transactions as if they were of labyrinthine complexity. They are not. What happens is this: A policyholder makes a claim under a title insurance policy. The insurer pays the
There is no difference between payment or compensation received by an insurer when a title company pays it money under a contract and payment or compensation received by any business under a contract with any other business. Both are income. The payment the insurer receives is not a gift. It is consideration for services rendered. The insurer has provided a service to the title company—it has made insurance for the title company’s title services available, and the title company benefits from this because it is then able to sell its services (searching title, etc.) in a package with insurance to the customer, who is the policyholder. In return for this service that the insurer provides to the title company, the title company assumes certain obligations. Among them is the obligation to compensate insurers for the claims insurers pay.
In any other business context, there would be no question that payment for services rendered is included within gross income. Indeed, under
The insurers contend that they receive no income when the title companies pay them for claims the insurers have paid. This contention might have merit if the insurers could somehow demonstrate that even though they had been paid, they received no “accession to wealth.” But they cannot do so. The Board of Equalization correctly points out in its brief that, as far as the record in this litigation shows, when an insurer pays a claim and then receives money from a title company, the money it receives is completely unrestricted. From the insurer’s point of view, all dealings with the insurance policy are over when it pays the claim. The later payment from the title company to the insurer is made under a separate business contract between the insurer and the title company, and the payment received makes the insurer that much “wealthier” than it would have been had the payment never been made. The payment may be used for salaries tо executives or dividends to shareholders, or for any other legal purpose. The insurer has “complete dominion” over such funds. It defies logic to suggest that when an insurer receives money from a title company with which it has a business relationship, its wealth is not thereby increased.
Several of the plaintiff insurers suggest that the funds they receive from the title companies when they have paid claims are not “income” because
Therefore, as a matter of economic reality, when an insurer receives money from a title company under a contractual arrangement requiring the title company to compensate the insurer for claims the insurer has paid, the insurer receives income. Under
2. Are the title companies’ direct payments to policyholders to discharge the obligations of the insurers “income” to the insurers?
As noted above, there is an alternative procedure set forth in three of the underwriting agreements at issue here. Under that procedure, when a claim is made by a policyholder, the title company, rather than compensating the insurer for the claims it has paid, simply pays the policyholder’s claim directly. In my view, this procedure also results in income to the insurer.
The conclusion that this alternate procedure produces income to the insurer is supported by both logic and case law. The case law is clear that substance, not form, determines whether a transaction gives rise to income. (Diedrich v. Commissioner, supra, 457 U.S. at p. 195; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of Equalization, supra, 32 Cal.3d at pp. 656-657.) Here, the distinction between the contracts specifying that the insurers pay the claims directly and then seek compensation from the title companies, and the contracts that specify that the title companies pay the claims in the first instance, is one of form and not substance. If, as I have shown, contracts of the first type produce income to the insurers, then surely contracts of the second type do as well.
Moreover, the conclusion that when a title company pays a claim on behalf of an insurer the insurer has received income is also compelled by the
This case is in substance no different. The insurer is legally obliged to pay all valid claims under its insurance policies. When a title company steps in and pays a policy claim on behalf of the insurer, it discharges a debt of the insurer. Accordingly, this discharge constitutes income to the insurer, and is to be treated as such.
The majority attempts to distinguish Old Colony Trust Co. v. Comm’r Int. Rev., supra, 279 U.S. 716; Diedrich v. Commissioner, supra, 457 U.S. 191; and United States v. Boston & M. R. Co. (1929) 279 U.S. 732 [73 L.Ed. 929, 49 S.Ct. 505]. It writes that “[i]n each of these cases, the taxpayer realized a gain by being relieved of a tax obligation for which the taxpayer alone was liable. Such is not the case here, where the insurers and the title companies contracted in advance to divide the premium, labor, risk and liability between themselves.” (Maj. opn. ante, at p. 727.) According to the majority, this case presents “a situation in which the taxpayer has reached an arm’s-length agreement in advance with a third party by which that third party assumes certain risks in return for a consideration that reflects the value of those risks.” (Id. at p. 728.) The factor of risk assumption by the title companies somehow, in the majority’s view, means that when the title companies pay claims on behalf of the insurers, the discharge of the insurers’ indebtedness is not income to the insurers.
The majority’s reasoning is defective, for two reasons.
First, it proves too much. An allocation of risk between contracting parties is certainly not unique to the insurer-title company relationship. Indeed, one court has stated that “[a]ll commerce and all contracts allocate risks and benefits.” (Valley Bank of Nevada v. Plus System, Inc. (9th Cir. 1990) 914 F.2d 1186, 1190.) To use a simple example, a private investor lends money to a manufacturer at a specified rate of interest for a fixed term. The loan contract by its nature allocates risks and benefits; the manufacturer bears the risk, among others, that deflation will occur and it will thereby be more
Second, the majority’s reasoning ignores the fact that the insurers, not the title companies, are primarily and ultimately liable to the policyholders for the payment of claims. The insurer is the obligor under the insurance cоntract; the title company is not even a party to the contract. And the insurer remains ultimately liable under the policy. This is an indisputable proposition of law. A title insurance policy is a contract that insures the owner of property or another interested party against defects in title or liens and encumbrances that affect title, the invalidity of liens or encumbrances, or the incorrectness of title searches. (
Because title companies can, as a matter of law, assume none of the functions of title insurers, but can only act as the agents of such insurers, the conclusion is unavoidable that title companies cannot ultimately assume any portion of the risk that a claim will be made, and that the title companies are mere conduits for claims payments for which the insurers remain primarily and ultimately liable. And because the title companies cannot be ultimately responsible for payment of any claims made under the insurers’ policies, it follows that, even under the majority’s reasoning that the allocation of risk can defeat the conclusion that income was received, the insurers transferred no risk and thus cannot escape the conclusion that they received income when the title companies paid claims on their behalf.
CONCLUSION
Title insurance exists to compensate policyholders for losses resulting from what may be described broadly as title defects. Although insurers that issue policies of title insurance are in the business of compensating thesе losses, the majority holds that when an insurer enters into an underwriting agreement with a title company under which the title company assumes the burden of paying policy claims—either directly to the policyholder or by way of offset to the insurer—these payments are not income to the insurer. The theory appears to be that when the title insurance policy and the underwriting agreement are read together, the insurer can be viewed as a mere passive intermediary or conduit of funds flowing from the title company to the policyholder to discharge the insurer’s liabilities under the policy. This theory is based on the supposition that the insurer has transferred the risk against which insurance is purchased from itself to the title company. But, as I have explained, the insurer’s role in paying policy losses is neither as slight nor as passive as the majority suggests. Ultimately, the insurer cannot transfer the risk against which the policyholder has purchased insurance to a title company or to any other third party that is not an admitted insurer. And the transfer of risk itself cannot transform a taxable receipt of income into the receipt of funds without tax consequenсes.
I would conclude that when a title company pays a claim on behalf of an insurer or pays the insurer directly to compensate it for a claim it has paid, the economic reality is that the insurer has received a gain; thus, the insurer
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
Mosk, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a rehearing was denied March 18, 1993. Mosk, J., and Kennard, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
