Kenton Insurance v. City of Covington

5 S.W. 461, 86 Ky. 213, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 27, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 S.W. 461 (Kenton Insurance v. City of Covington) 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
Kenton Insurance v. City of Covington, 5 S.W. 461, 86 Ky. 213, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 115 (Ky. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was instituted in the conrt below to enjoin the collection of what was claimed to be delin[215]*215quent taxes, assessed against the insurance company for the years 1879, 1880, 1881, 1882 and 1883.

The injunction was sustained as to the collection for the entire period, except as to the year 1883, the chancellor below holding that the remedy by distress as to those years had been lost by the failure of the council to place the delinquent bills or tax bills in the hands of the collector at least once in’ each year, as required by the provisions of the charter of the city.

The failure to do this lost to the city the particular remedy, as was held in the case of Covington Gas-light Co. v. City of Covington, &c., 84 Ky., 94.

The taxes for the year 1883 are alone involved in this appeal.

The insurance company asserts an exemption from taxation on its reserved fund, or what is termed unearned premiums, on two grounds.

The first is, that being required to pay into the Treasury the sum of fifty cents upon each one hundred dollars of its capital stock by or on a named day, it was the legislative intent to exempt it "from any other burden in the way of taxation, State or municipal, and the cases of Johnson v. The Commonwealth, 7 Dana, 338, and Farmers’ Bank v. Commonwealth, 6 Bush, 127, are relied on as settling this question. An examination of those cases will show that in considering the charters of the two banks, it was held’ that the Legislature had manifested an intention to exempt the banks from any additional taxation in providing that the tax imposed “ shall be in lieu or in full of all other taxes.” There is nothing in the charter of the appellant expressly exempting its property from municipal [216]*216taxation, nor can a reasonable implication arise from any provision of its charter that such was the legislative will. On the contrary, the company has been listing its property for taxation from year to year with the assessor of the city, and paying taxes thereon for municipal purposes, placing' upon the language of its charter the only reasonable construction that can well be applied to it.

It is insisted, however, by the city, that the reinsurance reserve, or what has been termed unearned premiums, is liable to taxation, and as the company has-failed to list this money under the equalization law, or has deducted the amount from its assets, it is not. bearing its share of the municipal burden.

The General Statutes regulating the assessment of property provides, that after the assessment of the specific property described, each person shall fix the amount he is worth from all other sources, after deducting his indebtedness. Section 6 provides :

“The indebtedness which may be deducted as aforesaid, must be just and honest debts owing as principal, and not as surety, and created for a valuable considertion which the person intends to pay,” etc.

The fifteenth section of an act approved March 12, 1870, entitled “An act for the incorporation of and regulation of fire, marine, health, accident, etc., insurance companies, except life insurance companies,” provides as follows:

“It shall not be lawful for the directors, trustees, or managers of any insurance company to make any dividend except from the surplus profits arising from their business; and in estimating such profits there shall be [217]*217reserved therefrom a sum equal to the amount received for premiums on unexpired risks and policies, which' are hereby declared to be unearned premiums ; and also* there shall be reserved all sums due the corporation on bonds and mortgages, bonds and book accounts, or other securities, of which no part of the principal or interest thereon has been paid during the last year, and for which foreclosure or suit has not been commenced for collection, or which, after judgment obtained thereon, shall have remained more than two years unsatisfied, and on which interest shall not have been paid ; and also there shall be reserved all interest due or accrued and remaining unpaid. Any dividend made contrary to these provisions shall subject the company making the same to a forfeiture of its charter,” etc. _

We find no provision of the general law with reference to taxation that exempts this or like corporations from the payment of municipal taxes, and no provision of appellant’s charter from which it may be inferred that such an exemption exists; and if no such burden can be imposed, it must arise from the obligation of the company to pay losses sustained out of this reserved fuud, • denominated unearned premiums, or its contingent liability to policy-holders to refund to them a portion of the premiums paid when presenting their policies for cancellation.

If the right on the part of policy-holders to demand pay for losses, or to reclaim premiums paid upon a cancelment of the insurance contract, can be regarded as an indebtedness on the part of the company, then such indebtedness may be deducted from the assets of the [218]*218corporation when listing its property for taxation. These ontstanding risks pertain to all insurance companies, and if deducted from the value of assets, would result in exempting their property from any taxation whatever.

The act of March 12, 1870, with-reference to the payment of dividends, requiring that no dividends shall be made of this reserved fund, does not divest this corporation of its right of property in it, or to use and invest it for the benefit of the stockholders.

The policy-holder is not required to pay taxes on the amount of his policy, because he is entitled to no part of the money until he has sustained a loss. The premiums paid on unexpired policies belong exclusively to the corporation, and a reserved fund of near seventy thousand dollars, that is used, controlled and managed by the corporation for the beneficiaries called stockholders, by loaning it out at interest or investing it in securities from which profits are constantly derived, is asked to be released from municipal burdens for no other reason than by the general law enacted for. the protection of the company and the policy-holders, no dividends are to be paid out of this reserved fund. Mortgages and bonds due the corporation, and upon which no part of the principal or interest has been paid during the last year, constitute a part of this reserved fund, yet they are the property of the corporation, and the principal and interest as it accrues held for the benefit of the stockholders ; and if an exemption exists in the one case, a like reason should exempt the entire reserved fund from taxation.

It is argued for the company that at least fifty per [219]*219cent, of the premiums paid into any insurance company for any year will be paid out for losses occurring during that year, and that at least as much as this fund amounts to is used to pay losses for any year. What, then, is to-be realized from the business of the corporation upon such a theory is left so uncertain as to afford no guide to the mode of assessment of the property of such corporations for taxation; and if the probable loss of such companies is to govern, then, if the premiums paid for any one year are insufficient to pay losses, no burden should be imposed, and the amount of taxes to be demanded is to be regulated by the profits resulting from the enterprise.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W. 461, 86 Ky. 213, 1887 Ky. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenton-insurance-v-city-of-covington-kyctapp-1887.