Colonial Life & Accident Insurance v. South Carolina Tax Commission

149 S.E.2d 777, 248 S.C. 334, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 18, 1966
Docket18551
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 149 S.E.2d 777 (Colonial Life & Accident Insurance v. South Carolina Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colonial Life & Accident Insurance v. South Carolina Tax Commission, 149 S.E.2d 777, 248 S.C. 334, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 190 (S.C. 1966).

Opinion

Lionel K. Legge, Acting Associate Justice.

Appellant paid under protest and brought this action to recover $5,447.76 assessed against it by respondent for additional license taxes, and interest thereon, for the years 1958, 1959, 1960 and 1962. It appeals from a circuit court decree upholding the assessments and dismissing the action.

Appellant is a South Carolina corporation, with its home office in Columbia. During the period with which we are here concerned its operations extended into some thirty-five states. Ninety-seven per cent of its business is accident insurance, with specified death benefits; it also writes life, and combination accident and life, policies.

The license taxes in question were imposed under the provisions of Sections (A), (B), (C) and (D) of Section 8 *337 of Act No. 234 of 1955 (49 Stat. at L. 329), which appear in the 1962 Code as Sections 37-130.1, 37-130.2, 37-130.3 and 37-130.4.

37-130.1 imposes upon each domestic life insurance company an annual license tax in an amount equal to two per cent of the total premium income from policies issued to residents of this state or paid from a point within this state, less dividends or bonuses paid or credited to such policyholders, as collected from citizens or residents of this state during the year next preceding the date of the tax return. It provides that such license tax shall not exceed five per cent of the company’s net income as determined under the provisions of Chapter 5 of Title 65 (the South Carolina income tax statute) ; and further, that “in addition to the deductions allowed by such chapter there shall be allowed in computing net income any addition to policy reserves as may be required by the Commissioner, but no more than such required amount.”

37-130.2 imposes upon each domestic insurance company of any other class a like annual license tax of two per cent of total premium income from insurance contracts issued to residents of this state or paid from a point within this state, less return premiums on risks and less dividends paid or credited to policyholders in this state, during the year next preceding the date of the return. It provides that such license tax shall not exceed five per cent of the company’s actual net income as determined under the provisions of Chapter 5 of Title 65; and further, that “In addition to the deductions allowed by such chapter there shall be allowed in computing net income any addition to unearned premium reserves as may be required by the Commissioner, but no more than such amount required.”

(The “Commissioner” referred to in 37-130.1 and 37-130.2 is the Chief Insurance Commissioner of South Carolina.)

37-130.3 provides that the license taxes imposed under 37-130.1 and 37-130.2 shall be administered and collected *338 by the South Carolina Tax Commission, which “may make such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, necessary for the proper administration and collection of taxes imposed in such sections, and such rules and regulations shall have full force and effect of law.”

37-130.4 provides that returns for such license taxes shall be filed with the Tax Commission on or before the fifteenth day of the third month following the close of the company’s accounting period; that the tax shall be paid in full when the return is filed; and that the Tax Commission may, for good cause shown, grant a reasonable extension of time for filing the return and paying the tax, “provided, that interest at the rate of six per cent per annum shall be paid on any tax due from the date the return and tax was originally due to the date of payment.”

The controversy here relates to: (1) certain deductions, claimed by Colonial and disallowed by the Commission, in the computation of Colonial’s liability for license taxes for the years 1958, 1959, 1960 and 1962; and (2) the consequences of an agreement, between an auditor of the Commission and Colonial, as to the method of computing such liability for the year 1958, and acceptance by the Commission of the tax paid pursuant to that agreement.

In support of its contention that all taxes paid by it in South Carolina are deductible, Colonial relies upon Section 65-259(4), which allows, among deductions in computing net income, “taxes for the income year” except income and inheritance taxes and those assessed for local benefits. This contention disregards the fact that certain taxes paid by Colonial in South Carolina are for the benefit of its business in other states as well as this, e. g.: county and municipal property taxes on its home office and its furnishings, which enure to the benefit of its entire organization, as do taxes relating to employment of personnel of the home office, whose services are rendered to its agents and agencies throughout the whole area of its *339 operations. It would lead to the unreasonable conclusion that the General Assembly intended the tax statutes in question, which exempt from the license taxe base Colonial’s income from policyholders in other states, to allow deduction for income and license tax purposes not only of those taxes that are fairly referable to the production of taxable South Carolina income, but also of those that are referable to the production of the tax-free out-of-state income. It overlooks, too, Section 65-222.2, which declares that where a taxpayer transacts business partly within and partly without this state his income tax shall be imposed upon a base “which reasonably represents the proportion of the trade or business carried on within this State.” The lower court properly held that the provisions of 65-259(4) permitting tax deductions in the computation of taxable income, and those of 65-222.2, should be considered together. In the exercise of its functions, under 37-130.3, of administering and collecting the license tax, the Commission has the power and the duty, in cases within the purview of 65-222.2, to prescribe a method for arriving at a tax base “which reasonably represents the proportion of the trade or business carried on within this State”; and its determination thereabout will not be overthrown by the courts except upon a showing, absent here, that it is arbitrary, discriminatory or unreasonable. Cf. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Public Service Commission, 225 S. C. 196, 81 S. E. (2d) 357; Griggs v. Hodge, 229 S. C. 245, 92 S. E. (2d) 654.

Missouri is one of the states in which Colonial operates. By an order dated January 3, 1962, the Superintendent of Insurance of Missouri required each life insurance company doing business in that state to set aside, in connection with its group life and group accident and health insurance business, an additional “mass hazard or catastrophe reserve” in an amount equal to two per cent of net premiums received for such insurance during each year until the reserve so accumulated should equal fifty per cent of such net premiums received in one year on all *340 such insurance. The amount of the reserve so required of Colonial was $78,488.53. If such reserve is allowable as a deduction in calculating net income in South Carolina, the proportionate amount allocable to Colonial’s South Carolina policies would be $8,724.29.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.E.2d 777, 248 S.C. 334, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colonial-life-accident-insurance-v-south-carolina-tax-commission-sc-1966.