Commonwealth Life Insurance v. City of Louisville

140 S.W. 306, 145 Ky. 284, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 836
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 9, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 S.W. 306 (Commonwealth Life Insurance v. City of Louisville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Life Insurance v. City of Louisville, 140 S.W. 306, 145 Ky. 284, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 836 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

These two appeals involve the same questions of law, were heard together and will be disposed of in one opinion.

The question is — -Can a domestic life insurance company be required to pay taxes upon securities or choses in action that it is required by law to deposit with the State Treasurer?

Section 648 of the Kentucky Statutes provides that:

“Every domestic life insurance company shall deposit with the Treasurer of the State, who shall receive the same in his official capacity, any of the bonds or securities in which, by law, it is authorized to invest its capital and accumulations, to an amount not less than one hundred thousand dollars, to be held by the said Treasurer for the benefit of the policy holders of the company making such deposit.”

Other provisions in the section require the company to maintain the value of the securities so deposited at one hundred thousand dollars, and allows the Treasurer to permit the company to collect the interest or dividends on the security so deposited, and to withdraw securities upon depositing others in their stead. This section became a law in 1893. In 1906 the legislature enacted a [285]*285law relating to the deposit of funds of domestic life insurance companies with the State Treasurer, which is now section 648a of the Kentucky Statutes. This act reads in part—

“Within ninety days after the. net cash value of each policy in force shall be ascertained, as now required by law, there shall be deposited with the State Treasurer, by every domestic life insurance company, for the security and benefit of all its policy holders, an amount which, together with such sums as may be deposited by said company with other States and G-overnments, by the requirements of the laws thereof, shall not be less than the amount of such ascertained valuation of all policies in force.
“But no company shall be required to make the deposit herein required until the net cash value of the policies in force exceeds the amount deposited by said company, under section six hundred and forty-eight of the Kentucky Statutes, and then only to the extent of such excess.”

Other sections of this act of 1906 designate the character of securities that shall be deposited with the State Treasurer, and give the company making the deposit the right to withdraw securities and substitute others of like value, and to collect the interest and dividends upon the securities. It also provides that—

“Whenever the net cash value of the policies outstanding and in force against any company is less than the amount of securities then on deposit with the treasurer, such company shall have the right to withdraw such excess; but at least one hundred thousand dollars in securities, at their par and market value, shall remain on deposit.”
Section 653 of the Kentucky Statutes, provides that:
“When the actual funds of any life insurance company doing business in this Commonwealth are not of a net cash value equal to its liabilities, counting as such the net value of its policies, which shall be until the twenty-first day of December, 1895, valued according to the “American Experience” table rate of mortality, with interest at four and one-half per centum per annum, and on and after that day shall be valued according to the “combined experience” or “actuaries” table rate of mortality, with interest at 4 per centum per annum, it shall be the duty of the Insurance Commissioner to give notice to such company and its agents to discontinue [286]*286issuing new policies within this Commonwealth until such tim'e as its funds have become equal to its liabilities, valuing its policies as aforesaid. ” * * *

In section 650 it is provided that the treasurer shall deliver the securities so held to the company, when he is satisfied in the manner pointed out in the statute that all of its debts and liabilities due or that may become due upon any contract or agreement issued or made by it have been paid.

The purpose of this legislation was to require life insurance companies to provide, maintain and keep a fund that in connection with deposits required by other States and governments would be at all times sufficient to pay the net cash value of all policies in force.- The insurance company contends that the securities in question are not owned beneficially or actually by the company, but are deposited as required by law with the State Treasurer who holds them as trustee for the benefit and protection of the policy-holders of the company, and that in fact they are owned by the policy-holders and not the company; and, this being so, the company should not be required to pay tax on them. On the other hand the contention of the taying authorities is that these secuiities deposited with the State Treasurer are the property of the company and, therefore, subject to assessment and taxation against it.

The question presented, although an important one, is a very simple one, depending entirely upon who owns these securities. All of the funds that a life insurance company owns, with the exception of its capital stock that is paid by its stockholders, is contributed by its policy-holders, and in consideration of these contributions which are paid in the form of premiums, the company obligates itself to perform the contract entered into when the policy is issued by paying to the beneficiaries therein named the sum stipulated in the policy. Except for the statute in question, the company would have and keep the actual and physical possession of all the funds it collected, and would have the right to control and dispose of them to the same extent that it would have the right to control and dispose of any other property owned by it. But the Legislature deemed it proper for the better protection of policy-holders to secure as safely as could be done a certain amount of these funds, and, therefore, instead of permitting the company to keep all of its funds and securities in its own physical possession, [287]*287it required that a certain amount should be deposited with the State Treasurer. It is true these securities are deposited with the State Treasurer for a specific purpose, and the authority of the company over them is limited, but, nevertheless in the ordinary and safe conduct of the business of the company they are for all practical purposes owned and controlled by it. It collects the interest on them, may withdraw such as it desires and deposits others of equal value in place of those withdrawn, and after its debts and liabilities are satisfied in full, it may withdraw’ all of them and do with them the same as it may do with its other property. We think, therefore, that, except for the mere circumstance that these • securities are required to be deposited in the vaults of the State Treasurer in place of the private vaults of the company, they are the same as other property of the company. They are not deposited with the State Treasurer to the credit of any particular policy-holder, nor has any particular policy-holder any claim to any of them above that of all other policy-holders. When the company comes to pay a policy or give the policyholder the net cash value of his policy, it does not necessarily raise the sum to be paid from the securities deposited with the State Treasurer. In the ordinary course of its business, it satisfies tfie policy-holder out of other funds in its possession.

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Related

City of Waco v. Amicable Life Ins.
248 S.W. 332 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1923)
In Re Oklahoma Nat. Life Ins. Co.
1918 OK 113 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 S.W. 306, 145 Ky. 284, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-life-insurance-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapp-1911.