47 So. 439 | La. | 1908
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff is a Connecticut corporation, domiciled at Hartford, in that state, and does an insurance business in this state, including life, accident, and liability insurance, through an agent located in New Orleans. Por the year 1906 it was assessed as follows:
Money loaned on interest or credit. .. . $40,000
Money in possession. 4,000
Plaintiff contests this assessment. It'contends, as to the first item, that the loans which it makes to its policy holders are’ not in reality loans and do not give rise to credits ; but that, if they are loans and do give rise to credits, they nevertheless are not
Against the right of plaintiff to appeal to the courts on the score of the excessiveness of the assessment the defendant board pleads the estoppel provided for by section 25 of the revenue law (Act No. 170, p. 360 of 1898), which reads as follows:
“See. 25. Be it further enacted, etc., that it is hereby made the duty of every taxpayer in the parish of Orleans to make return of his property, duly sworn to, within twenty (20) days after the list for such purpose shall have been left at his, domicile or place of business, and any refusal, neglect or failure from any cause whatsoever to comply with this provision of this act shall act as estopping the taxpayer from contesting the correctness of the assessment list filed by the assessor,” etc.
The defendant, as we understand, does not contend that plaintiff is estopped from contesting the taxability of the property, but only the valuation or estimate which has been put upon it in the assessment.
l)he facts in connection with the loans are these: The policies of plaintiff contain a clause that the policy holders “may borrow” on the security -of the policy an amount of money equal to what the surrender value of the policy will be one year after the loan. For effecting a loan, the policy holder applies for it to the resident agent, and the latter furnishes a blank form. This blank is filled out, and the resident agent sends it to the home office of the plaintiff. The home office sends to the resident agent a check payable to the borrower, and the agent turns this check over to the borrower, receiving his policy as collateral security for the loan. No other papers are executed. The application for the loan evidences the entire transaction. It recites that so much money has been loaned; that the loan bears so much interest, and is payable at such a date, at which date repayment of it may be demanded, subject to extension by consent of both parties, and is secured by pledge of the policy. The maturity of the note corresponds with the maturity of the premium next falling due, and a stipulation is added that in the event of nonpayment of the note, or of the premium, within one month after due, the company is .authorized to cancel the policy for its cash surrender value, and to attribute pro tanto the amount due under the policy to the payment of the note. The note thus executed is kept by the home company. One month before the note and the premium fall due the home company sends to the resident agent a receipt for the premium and the inte'rest on the note, and also a notice to be sent to the policy holder. The agent sends the notice, receives payment, and delivers the receipt. In case of nonpayment at the expiration of the delay of grace, he sends the receipt back to the home company with advice of the nonpayment. The receipt for the premium and that for the interest on the note are on the same slip of paper. The usual course of the company is then simply to forfeit the policy and to deduct the amount of the note from its surrender value. When a note is paid, the payment is made to the local agent, who transmits the amount to the home company. The paid note is then sent to the agent, who delivers it to the maker. The loans outstanding on the 1st of January, 1907, amounted to $36,279, and this is approximately the average throughout the year. The amount of overdue premiums never exceeds $500.
The facts in connection with the “money in possession” are these: The company keeps in this state two bank accounts — one in the name of “Travelers’ Insurance Company, of Hartford, Conn.,” and the other in the name of “Travelers’ Insurance Co., Alfred Well-
The facts in connection with the estoppel •are as follows: By sections 14 and 16 of the revenue law (Act No. 170, p. 354 of 1898) it Is made the duty of the assessor to furnish to each person owning property an assessment list, to be filled out and sworn to; and by section 19 of the same law it is made his •duty to make the assessment himself “in whatever way he can, from the best information he can obtain,” in case the owner fails •or refuses to make it. The local agent of the plaintiff company was called upon to make out the' assessment of plaintiff. He ■wrote upon the list the following: “Have no property or money of the Travelers’ Insurance Co.” — and he made oath to this return.
In contending’ that the loans in question are not in reality loans and do not give rise to credits, the learned counsel for plaintiff assume that the transaction is merely an advance pro tanto of the amount eventually payable under the policy; that the money ■cannot be required to -be reimbursed, but ■can only be deducted from the surrender value of the policy. If such were the case, there would be no loan and no credit, and therefore nothing to be taxed, and a ease would be presented similar to the one which Judge Saunders, sitting as circuit judge, had to deal with in the suit of New York Life Ins. Co. v. Board of Assessors, 158 Fed. 462, recently decided in the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. But the document evidencing the loan expressly stipulates: “The company may demand the repayment of said loan at its maturity.” True, the company also “is authorized” to cancel the policy and deduct the amount of the loan from the surrender value; but this merely gives it an option so to do. It does not impose an obligation.
The question of whether credits arising like these in the course of business done in this state are situated in this state, and therefore taxable in this state, was carefully considered by this court in the recent cases of General Electric Company v. Board of Assessors, 46 South. 122,
Plaintiff’s learned counsel argue that the item of money in possession embraces the two bank accounts of plaintiff, and that inasmuch as one of these accounts represented money in course of transmission, and therefore not- taxable, the suit as concerns this non taxable bank account is not in reduction of the assessment, but in cancellation or an-nullment of it, and does not come within the estoppel pleaded by defendant.
We will not stop to consider whether the bank account in question is taxable or not, since nothing shows that the defendant board took it into consideration in making the assessment. For all that appears, the defendant board did not know that the plaintiff company had more than the one bank account, whereof plaintiff now admits the
Tbis brings us to tbe question of tbe reduction of tbe amount of tbe assessments; that is to say, to tbe estoppel.
In opposition to tbis plea of estoppel tbe plaintiff contends, first, “that it did make a return of its property duly sworn to,” and that consequently tbe statutory estoppel does not apply to its case; secondly, that a statute which subjects tbe taxpayer to tbe doom of tbe assessor is unconstitutional, as being a taking of .property without a bearing, or, in other words, without due process of law.
Tbe object of tbe statute, in requiring tbe taxpayer to furnish a statement of bis property and imposing upon him the penalty of estoppel in case be fails or refuses to do so, is to assist the assessor in ascertaining what property the taxpayer bas. This object is not in tbe slightest degree forwarded by a return which simply states that tbe taxpayer bad no property. Such a return is worse than no return. It is misleading.
By tbe Supreme Court of Rhode Island a’ return, “No ratable personal estate oyer and aboye the actual indebtedness of tbe company,” was held to be no return, and not to stay tbe operation of a statute of estoppel similar to tbe one relied on in tbe instant case. Coventry Co. v. Assessors, 16 R. I. 240, 14 Atl. 877. See, in tbe same sense, In re Newport Reading Room, 21 R. I. 443, 44 Atl. 511, Washington, B. & L. Ass’n v. Hornbacker, 42 N. J. Law, 635, and Desty on Taxation, vol. 1, p. 433.
Tbe settled jurisprudence has heretofore been that it is competent for tbe Legislature to impose such a penalty. Griggsry Construction Co. v. Tax Coll., 108 La. 437, 32 South. 399, 58 L. R. A. 349; 27 A. & E. E. 718; Weltz on Assessments, p. 291, § 159; Hilliard on tbe Law of Taxation, p. 321, §: 57, note 2; Desty on Taxation, p. 453, and authorities in note 8; Id. p. 454, and notes’. 4 and 5; Cooley on Taxation (3d Ed.) vol. 1, pp. 619, 622, 623; Gray on tbe Limitations of tbe Taxing Power, p. 604, § 1218, and note 7a; Glidden v. Harrington, 189 U. S. 255, 23 Sup. Ct. 574, 47 L. Ed. 798. But in tbe recent case of Central of Ga. Ry. v. Wright, 207 U. S. 127, 28 Sup. Ct. 47, 52 L. Ed. 134, tbe Supreme Court of tbe United States held that due process of law requires that, where the taxpayer’s failure or neglect to make a-return was without fraudulent intent and-from an honest belief, founded upon reasonable grounds, that tbe property was not taxable, be must be offered an opportunity to be beard, and that decision is, of course,binding upon tbis court, since tbe question is federal.
In tbe instant case tbe reason for not mentioning tbe loans or credits in tbe return was that under tbe jurisprudence of this; court prior to the decision in the case of Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. City of N. O., 115 La. 698, 39 South. 846, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1240, 116 Am. St. Rep. 179 (handed down in November, 1905, and affirmed by tbe Supreme Court of tbe United States in April, 1907, 205 U. S. 395, 27 Sup. Ct. 499, 51 L. Ed. 853), such credits had not been taxable in tbis state. That reason is tbe same which was held by tbe Supreme Court of tbe United States in the Central of Ga. Ry. v. Wright Case, supra, to have been “reasonable” ; and we find in tbis case, as was found in that case, that tbe plaintiff, in not returning tbe property for assessment, acted in perfect good faith. Tbe suit of plaintiff, however, in so far as tbis item of loans and credits is concerned, is distinbtly for cancellation, and not for reduction, of assessment; and hence no reduction of tbis item.
With reference to the “money in possession” the plaintiff company had no “reasonable grounds” for not making a return, and must be held to be subject to the doom of the assessor.
The judgment appealed from will have to be amended accordingly. For convenience in statement we set it aside entirely.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from be set aside, and that plaintiff’s demand be rejected, and that plaintiff be condemned to pay 10 per cent, attorney’s fees on the aggregate of the taxes and penalties' accruing on the assessment herein, aDd to pay costs in both courts.
MONROE, J.
I am of opinion that the debts due by citizens of Louisiana to plaintiff, a foreign corporation, are not taxable in this state. I therefore dissent from so much of the foregoing opinion and decree as hold the contrary, and otherwise concur.
121 La. 115.
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
The plaintiff company has been doing a life insurance business in the state of Louisiana for several years through its duly authorized agents, collecting annual premiums to the amount of some $60,000 or $70,000, and lending money to its policy holders on the pledge of their respective policies.
The argument that such loans were mere advances out of funds belonging to the policy holders is certainly not serious. The written contracts evidence loans on interest secured by a pledge of the policies, and the petition alleges that the plaintiff company was illegally taxed on “loans made to policy holders.”
That, under section 7 of Act No. 170, p. 350, of 1898, such credits arising out of the business transacted in this state are taxable, cannot be seriously disputed. See Metropolitan Life Insurance Company v. New Orleans, 205 U. S. 395, 27 Sup. Ct. 499, 51 L. Ed. 853. The distinction between taxing the average capital invested by a nonresident in business carried on in a particular state and the taxation of isolated credits due to nonresidents is obvious. The purpose of the section quoted is to place the resident and nonresident business concern on the same plane of equality. Section 7 of Act No. 170 of 1898 operated full notice to foreign corporations that if they engaged in business in the state of Louisiana they would be taxed in the same manner as similar local corporations.
The only issue raised by the pleadings is whether the plaintiff company is taxable on credits arising out of its business and representing capital invested in this state.
The proposed constitutional amendment of 1908 exempting loans on life policies from taxation reotogtiizes their taxability under the provisions of the Constitution of 1898.
Act No. 170 of 1908, making mortgage paper and other evidence of indebtedness taxable only at the domicile of the holder or owner thereof, has no retrospective operation.
Rehearing refused.