Lindsay v. National Old Line Insurance

207 S.E.2d 75, 262 S.C. 621, 1974 S.C. LEXIS 365
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 9, 1974
Docket19852
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 207 S.E.2d 75 (Lindsay v. National Old Line Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsay v. National Old Line Insurance, 207 S.E.2d 75, 262 S.C. 621, 1974 S.C. LEXIS 365 (S.C. 1974).

Opinions

Moss, Chief Justice:

This action was brought by John W. Lindsay, as Chief Insurance Commissioner of South Carolina, against National Old Line Insurance Company, under “The Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act”, Section 10-2001 et seq., 1962 Code of Laws. The purpose of the action was to obtain a declaratory judgment as to the application of Section 37-132 of the Code, as the same applies to the license fees and taxes to be paid by the insurance company under Sections 37-122 and 37-128 of the Code.

National Old Line Insurance Company is a life insurance company incorporated under the laws of the State of Arkansas. It is licensed as a foreign life insurance company to do business in South Carolina. It is agreed that the State of Arkansas, pursuant to Section 66-2302 of its Code, imposes upon a South Carolina life insurance company, for the privilege of transacting business in that State, a tax of two and one-half percent of its gross premium income and does not permit a South Carolina life insurance company to re[625]*625duce the amount of such tax by making investments in said State. It was also conceded by the insurance company that it was required to pay its license fee to the State of South Carolina on the basis of gross premiums.

Under Section 37-122 of our Code, the Insurance Commissioner shall require each foreign life insurance company to pay a license fee to the State of South Carolina in an amount equal to two percent of the total net premium income collected in this State. Under Section 37-123 of the Code, provision is made for the reduction of the two percent license fee provided for by Section 37-122 by reason of credits granted an account of local investments. This statute provides for a graduated reduction of such license fee with the maximum not exceeding one percent. It appears that the insurance company has made certain investments in South Carolina as provided by Section 37-123 of the Code, so that the rate of the license fee imposed upon it by Section 37-122 was reduced to one and one-fourth percent.

Under Section 37-128 of the Code, the Insurance Commissioner is required to collect from all foreign insurance companies, in addition to the license fees provided by Section 37-122, an amount equal to one percent of the total net premiums collected in this State. The insurance company here has paid license fees to South Carolina under the above cited statutes at the rate of two and one-fourth percent of its net premium income in South Carolina.

It is the position of the Commissioner that the insurance company is required by our “Retaliatory Statute”, Section 37-132 of the Code, to pay an additional amount of one-fourth percent or a total of two and one-half percent of its gross life insurance premium income from this State, so that it will pay to South Carolina the same amount that a South Carolina insurance company would be required to pay to the State of Arkansas. It is admitted that the Commissioner has made demand upon the insurance company for the payment of this additional amount and such has been refused. This action followed.

[626]*626The Commissioner, pursuant to Rule 44 of the Circuit Court Rules of Practice, moved for Summary Judgment in his favor, asserting that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact and that he was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Two questions were presented for decision in the lower court and here, as follows: (1) Does Section 37-132 of the Code require the insurance company to pay an additional amount to the Commissioner so that it will pay South Carolina the same amount which a South Carolina insurance company is required to pay to the State of Arkansas, pursuant to Section 66-2302 of its Code; and (2) Whether the amendment to Section 37-132 of the Code, enacted by the General Assembly and approved on July 14, 1972, is to be applied retroactively.

The motion for Summary Judgment was heard by the Honorable J. A. Spruill, Jr., presiding judge, at the 1972 September Term of the Court of Common Pleas for Rich-land County. By his order of January 20, 1973, he held that Section 37-132 of the Code was to be so applied to the insurance company that investment credits otherwise available to it under Section 37-123 of the Code should not reduce the total license fee below that which a South Carolina life insurance company would have to pay in the State of Arkansas for transacting its business therein, and the license fee to be paid here by an insurance company should be calculated on the basis of gross premiums. He further held that the above ruling was to be applied only to tax periods prior to the amendment of Section 37-132 of the Code, which was effective on July 14, 1972. It is from these rulings that the insurance company prosecutes an appeal to this Court.

It is the position of the insurance company that the Commissioner’s motion for Summary Judgment should not have been granted because a genuine issue of fact existed. A review of the record convinces us that there was no need for a factual hearing in this case. The only question was the application of the statutes to admitted facts.

[627]*627The trial judge in granting the motion of the Commissioner for Summary Judgment relied upon the decision of this Court in Lindsay v. Southern Farm Bur. Cas. Ins. Co., 258 S. C. 272, 188 S. E. (2d) 374, where a majority of this Court affirmed the judgment of the lower court holding that insurers doing business in South Carolina, who qualify for reduced tax rate on the basis of investment in South Carolina securities, are subject to the provisions of the Retaliatory Statute, Section 37-132, which provides that foreign insurers doing business in South Carolina must pay the same fees as the foreign state requires a South Carolina insurer to pay for doing business in such foreign state. If similar investment credit is not authorized by the foreign state, then South Carolina must retaliate since the taxes imposed by a foreign state on a South Carolina insurer are greater than the taxes imposed by South Carolina on the foreign insurer. We think the trial judge properly applied the rule announced in the cited case by requiring the insurance company to pay an additional amount to the Commissioner so that it will pay the same amount which a South Carolina insurer is required to pay to the State of Arkansas.

The insurance company contends that the decision in the cited case dealt with a casualty insurance company and that the application of Section 37-132 to a foreign life insurance company is not necessarily the same. We do not agree. Sections 37-122 and 37-123 have to do with life insurance companies and Section 37-124 has to do with casualty companies. However, Section 37-132 encompasses and deals with “insurance companies” and this includes casualty companies and life insurance companies.

We conclude that there was no error on the part of the trial judge in holding that the decision in the cited case was here controlling.

The General Assembly of this State, at the 1972 Session thereof, passed the General Appropriations Act and such was [628]*628approved by the Governor on July 14, 1972. Section 16 thereof, 57 Stats., at page 3025, provides:

“(A) Section 37-132, Code of Laws of South Carolina, 1962, as amended, be and the same is hereby further amended by adding at the end thereof the following: ‘Provided, However,

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Lindsay v. National Old Line Insurance
207 S.E.2d 75 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.E.2d 75, 262 S.C. 621, 1974 S.C. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-v-national-old-line-insurance-sc-1974.