George Washington Life Insurance v. Board of Review & Equalization of Kanawha County

169 S.E. 532, 113 W. Va. 664, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 219
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1933
Docket7402
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 169 S.E. 532 (George Washington Life Insurance v. Board of Review & Equalization of Kanawha County) 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
George Washington Life Insurance v. Board of Review & Equalization of Kanawha County, 169 S.E. 532, 113 W. Va. 664, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 219 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

Kenna. Judge.-

In returning its personal property for taxation for the tax year beginning January 1, 1931, the George Washington Life *665 Insurance Company, a domestic life insurance company, listed its taxable bonds at market value, amounting to $684,559.00. It deducted from its taxable assets the sum of $50,244.00 ^s the aggregate of premiums and interest paid to it in advance, and also deducted the sum of $4,652,728.00, the cash surrender value reserve on its participating policies.

The assessor listed its bonds at their par value of $710,-700.00. He refused to allow the deduction of $50,244.00 for premiums and interest paid in advance. He did allow deduction of the reserve for policy holders.

The Insurance Company took the matter before the Board of Equalization and Beview of Kanawha county. The tax commissioner appeared by counsel before the board to oppose the company’s method of assessing the bonds and to contest the deduction of premiums and interest paid in advance. The tax commissioner also injected the further question that the deduction, made in the return and apparently not questioned by the assessor, of $4,652,728.00 under the classification of ‘'reserves policy holders” (meaning the aggregate of cash surrender value of all of the participating policies of the company) should not be allowed. After hearing, the board of equalization and review (1) assessed the bonds at their market value of $684,559.00; (2) refused to allow the deduction for premiums and interest paid in advance amounting to $50,244.00, and (3) refused to allow the deduction of $4,-652,728.00 as owing by the company to its policy holders, thus increasing the amount of the taxable property of the company by that amount.

The Insurance Company appealed to the circuit court of Kanawha county on both of these disallowances.

The decision of the circuit court was that the item of $4,-652.728.00 was deductible and that the item of $50,244.00 was not. The board of equalization and review prosecutes this appeal against the allowance of the deduction of $4,-652,728.00, and the Insurance Company assigns cross-error seeking the allowance of the deduction in the amount of $50,244.00, representing interest and premiums paid in advance.

The record before us is not as complete in detail and definition as we would wish in a ease of this importance. How *666 ever, it seems to have been regarded by counsel on both, sides as adequate to fully present the questions for decision. Mr. Fred Staunton, who testified before the board of equalization and review (this is the only testimony that we have before us), explaining the different items of the company’s deductions claimed,, stated as follows: “This ‘reserves policy holders, $4,652,728’, represents the actual, legal required reserve that has to be set up as of that date, January 1, 1931, to protect our policy contracts. The ‘premiums and interest paid in advance, $50,244.00’, represents just what it says, ‘premiums and interest paid us in advance which has not been earned. It has been received by us but is not our property, etc. * * A great many more matters of fact are asserted in the brief of the company than appear from the proof before us. It appears from the brief that the method of accumulating this fund consists in the division and segregation of premium payments into three parts; first 10% set apart to conduct the business, second, approximately 35% set aside for the payment of current death losses, and third, approximately 55% set aside to build up a fund which maintains the cash surrender value of the participating policies in effect. It is this last fund that concerns us on the principal deduction. The item of $50,244.00 does not appear to have any definite actuarial classification and probably is a casual item representing a mere question of convenience in payment.

Counsel for the board of equalization and review in its brief and' in oral argument raise the question that the principal deduction should not be allowed, because in making its return to the assessor, George Washington Life Insurance Company failed to break it down into its several items by listing the policy holders to whom the debt was supposed to have been payable as is claimed section 6,. article 5, chapter 11, Code, contemplates. There is no pretense that the nature of the item and the basis upon which it was claimed as a deduction did not sufficiently appear from the return, that the assessor did not fully understand it, nor that it was not fully understood and fully heard before the board of equalization and review and before the circuit court. For every purpose the information furnished by the return has proven adequate to permit the question to be exhaustively and in *667 telligently dealt with. While it may be true that in the ordinary _ case, the statute contemplates that debts claimed as deductions from the aggregate of personal assets returned for taxation be separately listed, it seems more or less obvious that the purpose of such listing is to permit the debts to be cheeked in their different categories as a test of the bona fides of the taxpayer’s claim of deduction. Here, every single item going to make up the aggregate of the claimed deductions, is based upon exactly the same state of facts. The names of policy holders and amounts of their several cash surrender values only would differ if separately listed. The face of the return itself is sufficient to disclose that this is true. A break-down of the aggregate item of $4,652,72-8.00 would have furnished the assessor with no additional knowledge concerning the questions involved. It would have been a laborious, expensive and unprofitable undertaking involving a practical transcript of the records of the company which, without it, were readily available. However 'much we realize that laxity in these respects is not to be encouraged, under all of the circumstances, we hold that the tax return of the Insurance Company was a substantial compliance with the statute. In addition, since this return was made to the assessor, the matter has been reviewed by the board of equalization and review and also by the circuit court of Kanawha county. A similar question was before this court in Mortgage & Discount Corp. v. Newcomer, 101 W. Va. 292, 295, 132 S. E. 748, where it was observed: “The suggestion is made in briefs of counsel that the assessor was derelict in not pursuing strictly the statute, in investigating the question of the bona fides of the note deducted in plaintiff’s return. Any irregularity in that particular becomes unimportant, for this whole question was gone into on the hearing before the board of equalization and review, when the conclusion of the assessor was confirmed; and appellant was again accorded a hearing on the same question before the circuit court on writ of error there, where the conclusions of law and fact by said board were approved.”

The principal question presented is whether the aggregate of the cash surrender values of all of the company’s participating policies in force is a deduction within the terms of *668 section 6, article 5, chapter 11, Official Code of 1931. That section allows to be deducted from money, credits, or investments of '&

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169 S.E. 532, 113 W. Va. 664, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-washington-life-insurance-v-board-of-review-equalization-of-wva-1933.