Industrial Commission v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.

144 P.2d 548, 61 Ariz. 86, 1943 Ariz. LEXIS 141
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1943
DocketCivil No. 4638.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 144 P.2d 548 (Industrial Commission v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Commission v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., 144 P.2d 548, 61 Ariz. 86, 1943 Ariz. LEXIS 141 (Ark. 1943).

Opinion

HALL, Superior Judge.

The Industrial Commission of Arizona, appellant herein, brought suit against the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, appellee, hereinafter referred to as the company, to recover taxes allegedly due on workmen’s compensation insurance premiums for the years 1936 to 1941, inclusive, in the sum of $1,705.70. The Arizona Corporation Commission was properly brought in as a third party defendant.

The company answered that the taxes sued for had been paid and pleaded further by way of inter-pleader that demand had been made upon it by the appellant for payment of an additional two per cent tax on the same premiums, and asked the court to adjudge its liability under the two statutes hereinafter referred to.

The determinative question presented involves the construction of Section 56-932, Arizona Code 1939, hereinafter referred to as the workmen’s compensation statute, which provides, so far as material, as follows:

“Such insurance carrier shall pay to the state treasurer, for the credit of the expense reserve of the state fund, in lieu of all other taxes on workmen’s compensation insurance, a tax of two (2) per cent on all premiums collected or contracted for during the year ending December thirty-first next preceding, less deductions from said premiums, also amounts paid to policy holders as return premiums, and- the amount paid as premiums to admitted companies for reinsurance on workmen’s compensation insurance in this state”;

and of Section 61-328, as amended, Laws 1941, *88 ci-113, ._§ 3, hereinafter referred to as the insurance statute, which provides, in part, as follows:

“(c) Every foreign and alien company doing business in this state shall pay to the state treasurer, through the commission, a tax of two (2) per cent of the gross amount of all premiums received on policies and contracts of insurance covering property or other risks within this state during the year ending December 31 next preceding, after deducting from the gross amoiint of such premiums cancellations, return premiums, dividends, and the amount received as reinsurance, on business in this state. No deduction from the gross amount of premiums shall be made of cash surrender values of life insurance policies or contracts. The tax shall be due at the time of filing the statement required in subsection (a), and shall be payment in full of all demands of taxes on said company or of licenses for conducting said business of insurance, except the fees prescribed for agents’ licenses and for the commission, and the tax prescribed in section 61-340 (section 1821, Revised Code of 1928).”

The facts disclose that the company mailed its checks at various times to the Corporation Commission sufficient to cover two per cent of all premiums collected by the company from workmen’s compensation insurance and in the amount sued for herein. A letter of • transmittal accompanied each of said checks, stating that it was in payment of the two per cent tax levied on said workmen’s compensation premiums as assessed under the workmen’s compensation statute. The checks carried the company’s endorsement that they were for that particular purpose.

' In addition, the company submitted checks to said-commission covering a two per cent tax levied against all premiums collected on its general insurance business, except workmen’s compensation premiums, as set forth above. A letter of transmittal accompanied *89 each of said checks stating that it was in payment of the two per cent tax levied on premiums, excluding workmen’s compensation premiums, as assessed under said insurance statute.

The Corporation Commission alleged in its pleadings that all of the above amounts paid to it by the company were taxes due it under the provisions of the insurance statute, as amended; and asserted that no part of the moneys received by it and paid to the state treasurer and deposited in the general fund belonged to the state compensation fund.

The lower court held that the company had fully paid and satisfied its liability to the appellant, Industrial Commission, under said compensation statute, and that it was the duty of the Corporation Commission to deliver to the state treasurer the said checks received in payment of the liability imposed under both of said statutes; and that it was the duty of the state treasurer to then allocate said checks to the respective fund of the State of Arizona provided therefor under the provisions of the particular statutes.

Thes appellant, Industrial Commission, has appealed to this court, contending that the company should pay not only two per cent on all premiums, including workmen’s compensation premiums under the insurance statute, but in addition thereto, should pay two per cent additional under the provision for taxing workmen’s compensation premiums under the workmen’s compensation statute.

The appellant contends that if the two statutes are interpreted as holding that after the company pays a two per cent tax into the state compensation fund and is thereafter exempted from paying additional tax on the same premiums under the insurance statute, as held by the lower court, it would amount to an unconstitutional interpretation and a *90 violation of the following sections of Article 9 of the Constitution of Arizona:

Section 1, which requires that all taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of property;

Section 2, which authorizes no exemption of property from taxation, with certain exceptions not applicable here;

Section 7, which bars the state from making any donation for the benefit of a private insurance carrier; and

Section 10, which bars any appropriation of public money in aid of a public service corporation.

However, counsel have not cited any authority in support of this contention and we are unable to find any.

If the two sections were reconciled as suggested by the appellant, so that the company had to pay four per cent on all premiums on workmen’s compensation insurance, it would violate both of said sections, each of which provides, that one payment shall be in lieu of all other taxes. In addition thereto such procedure would amount to double taxation, which is never favored and an intent to levy it should not be presumed. Automobile Gasoline Co. v. City of St. Louis, 326 Mo. 135, 32 S. W. (2d) 281.

The lower court adopted the view that the only way of reconciling the conflict between the statutes was on the theory that the special statute governing payment of workmen’s compensation premiums constituted an exception to the general taxing statute; that the company was obligated to pay a two per cent tax on its workmen’s compensation premiums under the workmen’s compensation statute, and that this tax was in lieu of all other taxes upon workmen’s compensation premiums. It then held that the company was obligated to pay a two per cent tax under the insurance statute on all premiums *91 of insurance other than workmen’s compensation premiums. We believe this was a proper holding.

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Bluebook (online)
144 P.2d 548, 61 Ariz. 86, 1943 Ariz. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-commission-v-hartford-accident-indemnity-co-ariz-1943.