Beisel's Appeal

35 Pa. D. & C. 581, 1939 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 135
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Northampton County
DecidedFebruary 13, 1939
Docketno. 23
StatusPublished

This text of 35 Pa. D. & C. 581 (Beisel's Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Northampton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beisel's Appeal, 35 Pa. D. & C. 581, 1939 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 135 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Laub, J.,

This is an appeal from an order of the Secretary of Revenue of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania dismissing the petition of the present appellant for reassessment of her personal property tax for the year 1936 and allowing the assessment to stand.

The petition for the appeal sets forth certain facts, some of which are admitted in the answer filed by the Commonwealth to said petition.

From the admissions we therefore find that W. Clayton Hackett died on December 10, 1930; that the present petitioner is his daughter, then a minor, as appears from the admitted facts in the transcript, of whom the Easton National Bank became guardian; and said minor has now become of age and is married to a man named Beisel.

Petitioner was assessed by the Department of Revenue for the amount of $22.31 as personal property tax for the year 1936, and such assessment was based on alleged annuities of $18,165.

In his lifetime said W. Clayton Hackett obtained policies of insurance on his life in the Massachusetts Mu[582]*582tual Life Insurance Company in the face amount of $25,000, and in The Equitable Life Assurance Society in the face amount of $10,000, the beneficiaries in both policies being his minor daughter, then Ann Hackett, the present petitioner.

In the application for insurance in the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company the following appears: “19. To whom is the amount of insurance to be paid in case of your death? To my daughter, Ann Hackett, in monthly installments of $125 under Option A.” Option A, by reference to said insurance policy, provides as follows: “Equal installments, each of such an amount as may be elected, to continue until the proceeds, together with the interest herein specified, are exhausted; provided, that the final installment shall be for the balance only of said proceeds and specified interest. On each anniversary of the first installment, interest at not less than three percent per annum will be added to the unpaid balance of said proceeds.” The application for insurance to the aforesaid Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company bears date of September 24, 1923, and the date of the insurance policy is September 29, 1923, the same being put into force and effect as of September 24,1923. It will therefore be noticed that this contract of life insurance became effective in the lifetime of W. Clayton Hackett who was the applicant for same and whose life was insured under the provisions of said policy, and that the contract was entered into between him and the said life insurance company at a time when the present petitioner was a minor as appears by the admissions at the time of hearing.

It will also be observed that said monthly payments of $125 to the. present petitioner were due to the provisions of the aforesaid contract of insurance entered into not by herself, but by her deceased father in his lifetime, with the said Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, at a time when she was a minor.

[583]*583In referring to the policy of life insurance in the Equitable Life Assurance Society, we find that the provisions of said policy insured the life of the said W. Clayton Hackett for $30,000, the application for such insurance specifying, “$10,000 policy to be issued to wife, $10,000 to daughter, and $10,000 to my estate.” On the policy itself is found the following special provision:

“In compliance with the written request of the Insured, it is hereby specially provided that the Beneficiary under this policy, said Ann Hackett, shall be restricted to settlement in thirty annual installments as per Option 2, of the Modes of Settlement at Maturity of Policy. In lieu of each annual installment due under said Option there shall be substituted monthly installments equal to one-twelfth of the annual amount stated in the table under said Option. The Society will neither commute nor discount any of the said installments nor make any advance payments thereon, nor recognize any assignment or hypothecation of the installments herein referred to, or of any installment to become due thereon, without the written consent of the insured.”

Such special provision bears date of December 12,1924, which was in the lifetime of the insured, W. Clayton Hackett. We find on the policy the following provision bearing date December 24,1930 (at a time when the insured, W. Clayton Hackett, was dead) :

“This policy having matured by the death of the Insured, the amount of each monthly income installment payable in accordance with the terms of the policy (exclusive of any interest or excess interest dividend) will be $41.80 commencing on December 24,1930. This settlement is carried on the Society’s records under Supplementary Contract Account No. 18140.”

The policy itself shows that for the $10,000 face value thereof, the insured, said decedent, designated as his beneficiary Ann Hackett, his daughter, who is the present petitioner. Underneath the designation of herself as beneficiary appears the following language, “Payable in ac[584]*584cordance with the Special Provision dated December 12, 1924, on the third page hereof.” Again it will be observed that whatever was done to form this contract of life insurance and the payments due thereunder was done between decedent, W. Clayton Hackett, and said Equitable Life Assurance Society, and that the present petitioner had nothing to do with same — that is, the formation of the contract or regulating the amount of payments due thereunder, she being at the time of said decedent’s death a minor.

Under this statement of facts, has the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania the right to assess the present petitioner a personal property tax on the principal value of the funds (contended by the Commonwealth to be the principal value of annuities) from which she receives monthly payments from said insurance companies? The question in this case turns on whether or not the amounts received by her are to be regarded as annuities or proceeds of life insurance. In other words, even though petitioner had nothing to do with the creation of the contracts under which she now receives these monthly instalments of life insurance, can she nevertheless be made to pay a personal property tax on monthly instalments received from such funds of life insurance on the theory that the monthly instalments are no longer proceeds of life insurance but annuity payments, and that such principal amounts must be considered as the principal value of annuities.

By reference to the State Personal Property Tax Act of June 22,1935, P. L. 414, we do not find life insurance policies or the payments derived therefrom set forth as taxable under section 3 of the provisions of said act, nor do we find any such authority in the reenacted State Personal Property Tax Act of May 18, 1937, P. L. 633, but we do find in said last-mentioned act that a tax may be assessed on the principal value of all annuities.

That it has not been the policy of the State of Pennsylvania to tax life insurance policies is shown by a very able opinion of Attorney General McCormick of Pennsylvania [585]*585in 1895, Taxation of Life Insurance, 4 Dist. R. 780, said opinion holding that no kind of life insurance policy is the subject of taxes for State purposes under existing laws.

Life insurance, unlike fire or marine insurance, is not a contract for indemnity, but is a contract to pay a certain sum of money in the event of death: Scott v. Dickson, Admr., etc., 108 Pa. 6.

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Related

Scott v. Dickson
108 Pa. 6 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1885)
Commonwealth v. Equitable Beneficial Ass'n
18 A. 1112 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1890)
Commonwealth ex rel. Hensel v. Provident Bicycle Ass'n
36 A. 197 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1897)
Commonwealth v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
98 A. 1072 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Pa. D. & C. 581, 1939 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beisels-appeal-pactcomplnortha-1939.