Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America v. Chapman

276 A.D.2d 88

This text of 276 A.D.2d 88 (Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America v. Chapman, 276 A.D.2d 88 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Heffernan, J.

Petitioner is now and at all times referred to herein has been a domestic life insurance corporation with its principal office in the city of New York.

In addition to its insurance business transacted in this State petitioner was during the calendar year of 1939, authorized to conduct its business in the District of Columbia and in all the sister States of the country with fifteen exceptions. It was never authorized to carry on a life insurance business in four of the States and had previously withdrawn from doing business in eleven others. The company paid a corporate franchise tax for the privilege of conducting its business in every State in which it legally operated based on premiums received on policies on the lives of residents thereof, except Massachusetts where it paid an excise tax based on net reserves on policies on the lives of residents.

In no State where petitioner was not authorized to transact • business did it pay a tax on or in any way related to premiums received by it on policies on the lives of persons resident in those States. It has, however, in force policies of insurance on the lives of residents in every one of those States where it has no authority to do business.

[90]*90Section 187 of the Tax Law, prior to 1937 (L. 1935, ch. 38), imposed upon insurance companies, both domestic and foreign, a privilege or franchise tax measured by a percentage of the premiums for business done ” in this State. Deduction was allowed for reinsurance premiums paid to corporations taxed under the statute. This was repealed by chapter 530 of the Laws of 1937, and a new section 187 was enacted. The new statute adopted as a basic tax measure premiums on risks * * * resident in this state ”.

Subdivisions 1, 3 and 4 of section 187, applicable to domestic insurers and certain foreign insurers (other than life insurance companies), impose a tax on direct premiums * * * on risks located or resident in this state ”.

Subdivision 2, applicable to domestic and foreign life insurance companies, imposes a tax on “ direct premiums * * * on risks resident in this state

This controversy involves the correct interpretation of subdivision 5 which was the subject of the 1937 amendment, more particularly however the clause which provides that In ascertaining the amount of direct premiums upon which tax is payable * # * there shall be first determined the amount of total gross premiums * * * on property or risks located or resident in this state, including premiums for reinsurance assumed, and also including premiums written, procured or received in this state on business which cannot specifically be' allocated or apportioned and reported as taxable premiums on business of any other state or states ”.

The amendment of 1937 likewise made a change in the treatment of reinsurance premiums for tax purposes. The former statute used the “ net retained ” basis. A company was required to report premiums both for direct insurance and for reinsurance charged for “ business done in this state but could deduct any reinsurance premium paid ” to corporations taxed under the statute. The tax was thus designed to fall on the reinsurance premiums in the hands of the assuming company, and the direct writer bore the tax only on the amount of the direct premium not used for reinsuring its own risks plus premiums received by it for reinsurance of others. Only where the reinsurance was ceded to a company not subject to tax in New York was there no deduction, in which case the direct premium bore the full tax.

This change in the law resulted by reason of our decision in People ex rel. Sea Ins. Co. v. Graves (248 App. Div. 255, affd. 274 N. Y. 312).

[91]*91The new enactment requires both direct and reinsurance premiums but permits deduction of “ Such premiums * * * which have been received by way of reinsurances ” from reinsurers authorized to transact business in this State. (§ 187, subd. 5, par. [a].) The general effect of such a deduction is to throw the whole burden of the tax on the direct writing company and to leave reinsurance premiums tax free except where they are received from companies not authorized to transact business in New York, which are thus free from any New York tax on the direct business.

Reinsurance premiums are those paid by one insurance company to another. Each company has a certain limit which represents the largest amount of insurance it is willing to carry on an individual life. Where the original writing company issues an amount in excess of such maximum, such excess is reinsured or transferred for all practical purposes to another company and the premiums on the portion of the risk which is transferred to the other company will be paid by the original writing company to the reinsuring company.

Petitioner’s contention, in effect, is that premiums collected and receipted for by it outside of the State of New York do not constitute “ premiums received in this state ” under the statute and that this law does not impose a tax on premiums for reinsurance assumed with respect to nonresident risks.

The respondents, bn the other hand, assert that the basic tax measure of premiums on resident risks adopted in the 1937 amendment is a valid method of measuring a tax on the privilege granted by the State in the case of companies authorized to do business within its borders. It urges, however, that the adoption of this tax base as to such risks would provide an opportunity for tax evasion by any State on a large volume of premium income from nonresident risks if provision were not made to include it.

It is conceded that during the calendar year 1939, petitioner collected $229,977.68 as gross direct premiums, less return premiums and dividends, which it did not report as taxable to any other State. Of this sum $46,957.78 constituted premiums collected in this State — and petitioner concedes that it is taxable with respect thereto — and the balance of $183,019.90 represented premiums collected outside of the State. Of the latter amount $7,120.61 constituted premiums on policies written or procured in this State but collected at petitioner’s agencies outside of the State, and the balance of $175,899.29 relates to prem[92]*92iums on policies written or procured in States other than our own. The latter item represents the amount in dispute.

It is undisputed that the questioned balance of $175,899.29 was collected by petitioner as premium income from policies on the lives of persons residing in States or countries where it had no authorization to do business and which was not allocated or reported as taxable income under the franchise privilege granted by any other State.

Petitioner argues that these premiums were not written, procured or received in this state ” because they were paid at a local agency of petitioner outside of this State, and deposited by such agency in a bank in the name of petitioner located in the place where the collection agency was located. Petitioner does not maintain branch offices but does have agencies in every State where it is authorized to act, except Connecticut and Kansas. These agents may receive applications for insurance but may not approve contracts. The home office in New York determines whether an application shall be accepted or rejected. Premiums may be paid by the insured at the home office or at a local agency.

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Related

People Ex Rel. Sea Insurance v. Graves
8 N.E.2d 872 (New York Court of Appeals, 1937)
People ex rel. Sea Insurance v. Graves
248 A.D. 255 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1936)

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276 A.D.2d 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardian-life-insurance-co-of-america-v-chapman-nyappdiv-1949.