American United Life Insurance v. Crichton

78 S.E.2d 226, 138 W. Va. 877, 1953 W. Va. LEXIS 70
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1953
DocketCC808
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 78 S.E.2d 226 (American United Life Insurance v. Crichton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American United Life Insurance v. Crichton, 78 S.E.2d 226, 138 W. Va. 877, 1953 W. Va. LEXIS 70 (W. Va. 1953).

Opinion

Browning, Judge:

This is a proceeding for a declaratory judgment to determine the taxability of certain assessments collected by plaintiff on fraternal beneficiary certificates issued by the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias prior to 1930. The Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias was organized in 1864 as a voluntary, unincorporated secret society. It was incorporated in 1870, and in 1882, its articles were amended to permit it to conduct a fraternal insurance benefit activity, which it did until the year 1930.

On April 12, 1930, by an Act of Congress, such fraternal societies were permitted to divide and separate their social activities from their insurance activities. Thereafter, on August 18, 1930, this organization availed itself of this privilege, divided its activities, and set up a separate corporation, the United Mutual Life Insurance Company, for the purpose of carrying on the insurance activity. The Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias continues to operate as a fraternal society and maintains approximately one hundred and twenty subordinate lodges in this State. The United Mutual Life Insurance Company subsequently merged with another corporation, and changed its name to American United Life Insurance Company. The petition recites that the plaintiff is a corporation incorporated under the laws of Indiana and duly licensed and authorized to engage in its business of selling insurance contracts in the State of West Virginia.

No new fraternal certificates have been issued subsequent to August 18, 1930. The certificates issued prior to that time have remained subject to, and are controlled by, the constitution and by-laws of the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias. The plaintiff maintains separate *879 books of account in regard to the assessments, death benefits, etc., and conducts such business on a nonprofit basis, as did the Supreme Lodge.

The bill further recites that, for the years 1931 through 1935, the plaintiff filed an annual report showing the amount of premiums collected upon its ordinary life insurance business, but excluding the amount received from fraternal assessments. Beginning in 1936, the annual report contained the amounts received from both sources, but payment of tax was made only upon the premium income. Such reports and payments were accepted and no demand was made upon it to include the amount of receipts from fraternal benefit certificates in the computation of the tax until the year 1951.

On April 11, 1952, upon the plaintiff’s refusal to pay the taxes allegedly due, the Insurance Commissioner, after a hearing, entered an order refusing to issue a Certificate of Authority to the plaintiff for the period April 1, 1952-April 1, 1953.

An amended petition was filed setting forth that all profits realized from such certificates are applied to the purchase of additional insurance which is in turn allocated to the certificates then in force; that such amount so allocated has amounted to approximately $1,000,000.00 in the past sixteen years; and, also, that the plaintiff now sells its insurance policies to the general public, rather than to the members of Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias.

The defendant demurred to the petition and amended petition, the Circuit Court sustained the demurrer and on its own motion, certified the following points of law raised thereby:

1. Are the premiums received by plaintiff from such fraternal benefit certificates subject to inclusion in the statutory base for the computation of the annual privilege tax under Code, 33-2-37, Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, 1945, C.74?

*880 2. Did the Legislature intend that the exemption granted by Code, 33-8-5, should inure to the benefit of the individual holders of fraternal benefit certificates after the insurance activity of the fraternal society has separated and transferred to a non-exempt company?

3. Does the inclusion of such receipts, in the measure of tax imposed, deprive plaintiff of its property without due process of law?

4. Does the failure of state officials in previous years to assess and collect tax upon the premiums received by plaintiff from such certificates amount to an administrative construction of the statutes involved to the effect that the Legislature did not intend the tax to be applicable thereto?

Code, 33-2-37, provides that: “Every insurance company licensed to transact business in this State shall make a return annually, on or before the first day of March, to the insurance commissioner, under the oath of its president or secretary, of the gross amount of premiums collected and received by it during the previous calendar year on business done in this State; and upon receiving from the commissioner a certificate of the acceptance of such return and of the amount of tax due thereon, such company shall pay such tax to the insurance commissioner annually on or before the first day of March. The annual tax which a licensed insurance company is required to pay under the provisions of this section shall be a sum equal to two per cent of the gross premiums received by it on the business written or renewed in this State, including any so-called dividends on participating insurance, policies applied in reduction of premiums less premiums returnable for cancellation. * * * ”

The West Virginia Constitution, Section 1, Article X, provides that: “ * * * property used for educational, literary, scientific, religious or charitable purposes, * * * may by law be exempted from taxation; * * * .” Pur *881 suant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature, by Code, 33-8-1, defined a fraternal benefit society as follows: “Any corporation, society, order or voluntary association, without capital stock, organized and carried on solely for the mutual benefit of its members and their beneficiaries, and not for profit, and having a lodge system with ritualistic form of work and a representative form of government and which shall make provision for the payment of benefits in accordance with section 5 (§ 3415) of this article, is hereby declared to be a fraternal benefit society.* * * ” Section 4 of Article 8 provides in part as follows: “Except as provided in this article, and except where such societies are expressly designated in other provisions of this chapter, such societies shall be governed by this article, and shall be exempt from all provisions of the insurance laws of this State, * * Section 35 of the same article read’s as follows: “Every fraternal benefit society organized or licensed under this article is hereby declared to be a charitable and benevolent institution, and all of its funds shall be exempt from all state, county, district and municipal taxes other than taxes on real estate and office equipment.”

The plaintiff does not attack the validity of the provisions of Code, 33-2-37, and admits that they are applicable to the business which they have transacted in this State since 1930. Likewise, the defendant does not com tend that the fraternal benefit certificates issued by the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias were subject to the two per cent tax imposed by that section prior to that date. The issue then resolves itself into the question of whether the non-taxable benefit certificates lost their status as such by the transactions which occurred on and subsequent to August 18, 1930, as heretofore related.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 S.E.2d 226, 138 W. Va. 877, 1953 W. Va. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-united-life-insurance-v-crichton-wva-1953.