Insurance Co. of North America v. McCoach

224 F. 657, 140 C.C.A. 167, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 512, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1918
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 6, 1915
DocketNo. 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 224 F. 657 (Insurance Co. of North America v. McCoach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. of North America v. McCoach, 224 F. 657, 140 C.C.A. 167, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 512, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1918 (3d Cir. 1915).

Opinions

McPHERSON, Circuit Judge.

Under the act of August 5, 1909,' the government compelled the Insurance Company of, North America to pay an excise tax with respect to its net income for the years 1910 and 1911. This suit is brought to recover a part of the tax, the company claiming that too much had been exacted. In the court below two items were in dispute, and, as the company obtained judgment for only one' of them, this writ of error presents the question whether judgment should have been entered for the other item also, a sum of $2,503.47, with interest.. The opinion of the district judge is reported in 218 Fed. (C. C.) at page 905. •

The trial was without a jury, and nearly all the facts were agreed upon, only three witnesses having been heard. The controversy arises in this way: The company, a Pennsylvania corporation chartered in 1794 by a special act (3 Smith’s Taws, p. 129), is now subject to the general insurance laws of the state. Its business is confined to-fire and marine risks. As the federal statute lays the tax with respect to net income, the question is immediately, presented, How is net income to be ascertained? The answer is found in section 38, subd. 2, and we quote so much of the. section as is now important:

“ * * * Such net income shall be ascertained by deducting from the gross amount of the income of such * * * insurance company, * * * all losses actually sustained, &c. * * * and in the case of insurance companies the sums other -than dividends paid within the year on policy and annuity contracts and the net addition if any required Toy law to be made withim, the year to reserve funds.”

We italicize the words on which the decision turns.

[1] 1. The first matter to be noted is that the deduction in question is such addition as may be “required by law.” The parties agree that this, phrase means the law of the particular state, for the federal government does not attempt to regulate the internal affairs of insurance companies. In this case, we have to do with the requirements of the Pennsylvania law, and especially with such as concern the reserve funds of fire and marine insurance companies. (The reserves required from companies doing' other kinds of insurance are not involved in this controversy.) Whatever sum, therefore, the law of the state required the company to add to its reserve funds during each of the years in question is expressly declared by Congress to be a proper item of deduction from the company’s gross income. For the moment, we defer the examination of the Pennsylvania law on this subject, in order to consider the ground on which the district court decided against the company. Briefly, the position taken by the learned judge is this: That, because the company had an ample surplus, much more than adequate to-meet every addition to its reserve funds that was required by the state, it could not be allowed the deduction given by the federal statute. One of the additions required was the amount necessary to .meet unpaid losses and'claims, and the ground taken below seems, in effect, to be this: Since the company had accumulated a surplus more than enough to meet these unpaid claims, it had lost its right to the deduction. We.do not know whether the deduction would have been regarded as allowable, if the company had been barely able to' provide for these liabilities, but in any event we cannot agree with the conclu[659]*659sion. Surplus is what remains after making provision for all liabilities of every kind (leaving capital stock out of the present consideration); and, as we understand the situation before us, the surplus of the Insurance Company of North America ps what remained after it had' made provision for these losses by setting aside all that the Pennsylvania law required for that purpose. 0 We are unable to see how the fact can be relevant that (after thus providing once for these losses) the company still had in its treasury a large sum of money out of which it could pay them, again, and several times over. In other words, rve do not think the company’s surplus has anything to do with the present dispute. Congress has in terms allowed the company to deduct from its gross income “the net addition, if any, required by law to be made within the year to reserve funds”; and, as we see the question for decision, it is simply this: What net addition does the Pennsylvania law require to be made to the reserve funds of an insurance company doing a fire and marine business only ?

[2] 2. In order to answer this question correctly, we must first ascertain what Congress meant by “reserve funds.” Was the phrase used in a special sense, or does it include generally such funds as must be reserved to meet liabilities, whether they be contingent or already adjusted? In our opinion it bears the general meaning. If Congress intended to allow no other deduction ou this account except what is technically known as “reinsurance reserve,” or unearned premium, it is not easy to understand why that well-known term of art was not used. The plural form, reserve funds, seems also to indicate that Congress intended to include, not only reinsurance reserve, but any other fund as well that a state might require the company to set aside for the purpose of meeting such a liability as unpaid losses and claims. This seems to be the natural and ordinary meaning of the words, and presumably therefore is the construction to be adopted.

What then does the Pennsylvania law require to be added to the reserve funds of a fire and marine insurance company? For more than 40 years the state has had a department of insurance, and a system of regulating the affairs of companies doing that kind of business, and from time to time it has passed statutes on this subject. Ou June 1, 1911, an act was adopted codifying and superseding many of the previous enactments, and (although this statute is later than 1910, one of the years now in question) we need not go behind it, since for present purposes it does not differ materially from the earlier acts. The system is as follows: A department of insurance is established in charge of a commissioner, whose powers of control are varied and extensive. He is to see that all the laws of the state respecting insurance companies are faithfully executed. At his pleasure he may investigate, and examine the affairs of any company with the utmost thoroughness. If it has failed to comply with tlie law, or if he shall find its assets insufficient, he may suspend its entire business, reporting the delinquent, to the Attorney General for further action looking to its dissolution. He is to make an annual report to the Legislature of the condition of all the companies doing business in the state. Every such company must file an annual statement, using the blank forms furnished by the com[660]*660missioner, who may adopt any form he thinks “best adapted to elicit from them a true exhibit of their financial condition.” Failure to make such a statement, or the making of a false statement, is severely punished.

The act provides in section 4 the method of ascertaining the “reserve liability” of life insurance companies (with which we have no present concern), and then in sections 7,*8, and 9 turns to the subject of ascertaining the financial condition of other companies.

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Bluebook (online)
224 F. 657, 140 C.C.A. 167, 1 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 512, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-of-north-america-v-mccoach-ca3-1915.