American United Life Insurance v. Fischer

11 N.W.2d 573, 234 Iowa 460
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1943
DocketNo. 46356.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 N.W.2d 573 (American United Life Insurance v. Fischer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa 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. Fischer, 11 N.W.2d 573, 234 Iowa 460 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Smith, J. —

The question presented on these appeals is the liability of plaintiff to taxation (under section 7022, Code of Iowa, 1939) on account of certain life insurance premiums on policies written in-Iowa by a foreign company while authorized to do business in Iowa, but collected after the writing company ceased to write new business in Iowa (or elsejvhere) and was in receivership.

The writing company was the American Life Insurance Company of Detroit, a Michigan corporation, hereinafter called the American Life. Its receiver collected said premiums for 1938 and 1939 and later turned them over to plaintiff (an Indiana corporation, qualified to transact business in Iowa) under a contract we shall later refer to. Plaintiff, after entering into said contract, collected further premiums for 1939, 1940, and 1941. The taxes on account of all said premiums, levied under Code section 7022, were paid under protest. This suit is to recover the amount of same and to enjoin the collection of the tax on similar premiums to be collected in the future. The trial court ordered refund of the taxes paid on account of premiums collected by the receiver but denied plaintiff any further relief. All parties appeal. We shall hereinafter refer to plaintiff as appellant and the defendants as appellees.

The contract between appellant and the receiver of the American Life became effective April 13, 1938. It is long and complex but the pertinent provisions may be briefly and simply *462 stated. It is called a reinsurance contract, but tbe taking effect of the reinsurance feature is postponed fifteen years, or to a possible earlier date when a certain lien, placed by the receiver against the outstanding policies and contract obligations of the American Life, “shall be completely removed.”

In the meantime, under it appellant took over all the assets of the American Life (after deduction of all expenses of custodianship and receivership and all amounts ascertained to be due various classes of creditors) and undertook the management of its assets and business until said lien is discharged or until the expiration of fifteen years, whichever proves to be earlier. It is expressly provided that during this management period appellant is to have no right “to accept or receive any profits or gains, directly or indirectly, from the • assets transferred and conveyed or from the business reinsured.”

The assets so taken over, together with premiums already collected, constitute a so-called fund to which subsequently collected premiums are to be added as collected and from which are to be paid the expenses of administration and the policy obligations and- claims as they arise, according to a detailed adjustment schedule set up in the contract.

Before the making of this contract appellant was already licensed to do, and actually doing on its own account, a life insurance business in Iowa and it had an office in Des Moines. The American Life receiver had continued to maintain the American Life office in Des Moines. When appellant took over the management under this contract it continued the American Life office just as had the receiver. The cashier at that office sent out the premium notices as they were made out and forwarded to her, and collected the money and remitted it to appellant in Indianapolis each day as received. Appellant meanwhile continued its own Iowa office and continued its own business in Iowa.

In 1941 the two offices were combined and the expense of operation prorated between appellant on its own individual / business and the business it was managing under the contract. ^ This arrangement continued until the end of October 1942, when the combination Des Moines office was discontinued and thereafter everything was done direct from the home office in Indian *463 apolis. At all times the business of the management of the American Life assets and the fund itself were kept entirely separate from appellant’s own Iowa insurance business.

Both appellant and appellees coni end the status of the premiums collected by the receiver and by him turned over to appellant, and the status of the premiums collected by appellant under the contract, are the same, under Code section '7022. However, appellant says none of said premiums is within the statute while appellees claim all come within it. The trial court, as we have said, made a distinction between them.

Section 7022, Code of Iowa, 1939, provides for a tax upon “the gross amount of premiums received” by foreign insurance companies “for business done in this state, including all -insurance upon " " * the lives of persons resident in this state during the preceding year.”

I. Appellant and appellees agree, both in pleading and argument, that this tax is a privilege or license tax. We have so held. State ex rel. Mitchell v. National L. Ins. Co., 223 Iowa 1301, 1307, 275 N. W. 26.

With this major premise established appellant proceeds to its minor premise: the continued existence of previously written policies, after the company ceases to write new business in the state, and the continued collection of premiums upon such policies after writing of new business is discontinued, do not constitute “doing business within the state.”

From these premises appellant logically concludes that such premiums therefore do not make appellant subject to tax under our statute; that is, if continued existence of the license to do business is not necessary to the collection of the premiums, the authority to levy the premium tax does not exist. If the minor premise is sound the conclusion is inescapable. Such conclusion would be decisive — at least of defendant’s appeal from the court’s decision holding the taxes collected by the receiver not subject to the tax. Appellees deny the soundness of the minor premise.

Appellant first cites Provident Savings Life Assur. Soc. v. Commonwealth of Kentucky, 239 U. S. 103, 116, 36 S. Ct. 34, 38, 60 L. Ed. 167, 172, L. R. A. 1916C, 572. That case con *464 cerned a Kentucky statute which, previous to a certain 1906 amendment, hereinafter referred to, was similar to our own. The Kentucky Court of Appeals held that after the company withdrew from writing new business in the state its liability to the tax would continue because of the continued existence of its policy obligations in the state and its continued collection of premiums thereon. Appeal was taken to the United States Supreme Court.

The supreme court opinion points out that the state court decision was based on the proposition that the state could treat “the mere continuance of the obligation of the existing policies held by resident policy holders” as justifying “the imposition of an annual privilege tax in the absence of the actual conduct of business within the limits of the State,” and adds:

“We cannot conclude that the State has this power, and in this view the judgment must be reversed. ’ ’

It should be noted here that an amendment to the Kentucky statute enacted in 1906 (Ky. Stat., 1909, section 4230a) provided that the foreign company would be liable for

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Related

Leggett v. Missouri State Life Insurance Company
342 S.W.2d 833 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1960)
Lincoln National Like Insurance v. Fischer
17 N.W.2d 273 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1945)
People v. Alliance Life Insurance
151 P.2d 868 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.W.2d 573, 234 Iowa 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-united-life-insurance-v-fischer-iowa-1943.