Lincoln National Like Insurance v. Fischer

17 N.W.2d 273, 235 Iowa 506, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 9, 1945
DocketNo. 46625.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 17 N.W.2d 273 (Lincoln National Like Insurance v. Fischer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lincoln National Like Insurance v. Fischer, 17 N.W.2d 273, 235 Iowa 506, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317 (iowa 1945).

Opinion

Mantz, J.

The plaintiff, an insurance corporation of the state of Indiana, licensed, to carry on life-insurance business in the state of Iowa, brought suit herein against Charles R. Fischer, Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Iowa, and also against the Treasurer and the Comptroller of this state, to compel a refund of certain insurance taxes paid to the defendants for certain years following the year 1932. Plaintiff is the assignee or agent of two insurance companies formerly carrying on the business of writing insurance in Iowa, to wit, the Royal Union Life Insurance Company of Des Moines, and the Iowa Life Insurance Company of Waterloo, both of which companies, by reason of receiverships, were taken over by the State Insurance Department of Iowa and later, by proper court proceeding, transferred to plaintiff under reinsurance contracts. This action was brought by plaintiff as the assignee and present bolder of tbe *508 property of said companies to compel a refund of certain taxes paid to defendants growing out of business transacted for and on behalf of such companies. Under the reinsurance contract the plaintiff was to collect premiums on policies outstanding in each of said companies at the time taken over, keep same in a separate fund, and use this fund to pay losses as they occurred.

The petition is in six counts, the first three relating to taxes paid on business transacted for the Royal Union and the last three relating to tax payments paid on behalf of the Iowa Life Insurance Company. Briefly stated, the petition claimed that during various years since 1932 there had been paid to the insurance department of the state of Iowa taxes based upon the premiums received by plaintiff on policies in such two companies in the state of Iowa, and that through mistake and erroneous interpretation of section 7022, Code of 1939, said premium taxes were paid, and that under the provisions of section 8613.3, Code of 1939, plaintiff is entitled to a refund for such sums paid, and plaintiff prayed fhat. süch refund be ordered and that the Insurance Commissioner of Iowa be enjoined from in any manner interfering with the rights of plaintiff to carry out its business in Iowa because of its carrying out such reinsurance contracts.

Count I related to premium-tax payments made to defendants in 1942 for and on behalf of the Royal Union and for premiums collected by plaintiff in 1939, 1940, and 1941. Count IV related to insurance-tax payments made to defendants in 1942 for and on behalf of the Iowa Life Insurance Company and for premiums collected by plaintiff in 1939, 1940, and 1941.

To Counts II, III, V, and VI defendants filed a motion to dismiss. The grounds stated in said motion were identical. The said motion to dismiss, as directed to said counts, is as follows:

“1. That the taxes alleged to have been paid in the said Count II to the Treasurer of the State of Iowa, were paid voluntarily and are, therefore, not subject to refund, recovery or transfer as claimed by the Plaintiff.
“2. That said taxes having been paid voluntarily, Plaintiff is entitled to recover only on statutory authority. That Section 8613.3 of the .1939 Code, under which recovery and refund is here sought, does not create or endow the Plaintiff with a cause of action for refund, recovery or transfer.
*509 “3. That the cause of action alleged in said Count II of the Amended and Substituted Petition, is a suit against the State of Iowa, to which the consent of the State has not been given.
‘ ‘ 4. That the said cause of action, if any, alleged in Count II accrued immediately, upon the payment of taxes alleged to have been paid, is barred by Statutes of Limitation of the State of Iowa, and more particularly by Section 84.13 and Sub-section 4 of Section 11007 of the 1939 Code of Iowa, and by Section 393 of the 1931 Code of Iowa, and Section 84E13 [84-el3] of the 1935 Code of Iowa.
“5. That Section 8613.3 of the 1939 Code of Iowa, referred to in Count II of Plaintiff’s Amended and Substituted Petition, endows the Commissioner of Insurance, Defendant herein, with discretionary power with respect to the refund of the taxes alleged to have been paid, and the exercise of his discretion herein is not the subject of inquiry or control by the Court.
“6. That the relief sought can neither be imposed nor enforced by a Court of Equity.”

It will be noted that the defendants did not in any manner attack Counts I and.IV. The court in ruling on the motion to dismiss overruled the same as to certain paragraphs in each of said four counts and sustained it as to other paragraphs of each. Both parties refused to plead over, electing to stand upon the pleadings, and the court entered judgment and decree which in effect held that plaintiff was entitled to .a refund for tax-premium payments made within the five-year period .in which the payments were made, and denied the claim of defendants that plaintiff had no right to maintain the action, and also that the three-year statute of limitations as claimed by defendants did not apply. Both parties have appealed.

I. The appeal on behalf of plaintiff claims that the court erred in not allowing refund of tax-premium payments made in the years 1934 to 1937 inclusive. In other words, the plaintiff claims that subsection 5, section 11007 does not apply to the payments made in such years.

The appeal of defendants is based upon the claim that the court erred in allowing plaintiff a refund of taxes paid in 1938 and 1939, and in holding that subsection 5, section 11007 applied *510 therein; also that the court erred in holding that section 8613.3 applied and that thereunder plaintiff was entitled to a refund.

Briefly stated; the plaintiff claims that under the provisions of section 8613.3 it was entitled to recover insurance-premium taxes paid by it prior to 1938, and that subsection 5, section 11007 did not apply, while the defendants claim that plaintiff could not maintain the suit under section 8613.3 of the Code and that if recovery was permissible thereunder said claims were barred under other Code provisions, particularly subsection 4, section 11007, Code of 1939.

Hereinafter in this opinion the Lincoln National Life Insurance Company will be referred to as appellant and Charles B. Fischer, Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Iowa, et al., defendants, will be referred to as appellees.

II. We think it logical to first take up and determine the claim of appellees that appellant has no right to maintain the action under the provisions of section 8613.3. If the appellees are right in their contention that appellant cannot maintain the action and is entitled to no relief thereunder, then, so far as the claims based upon Counts II, III, Y, and YI, are concerned, the court erred in holding that appellant .could recover therein.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.W.2d 273, 235 Iowa 506, 1945 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-national-like-insurance-v-fischer-iowa-1945.