New York Life Ins. v. Bowers

34 F.2d 60, 7 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 9274, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1402
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 25, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 60 (New York Life Ins. v. Bowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Ins. v. Bowers, 34 F.2d 60, 7 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 9274, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1402 (S.D.N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

MACK, Circuit Judge.

Action to recover capital stock taxes assessed under title 10 of tbe 1918 Revenue Aet, 40 Stat. 1126, §§ 1000-1009, tried upon stipulated facts.

Tbe first question is whether, admitting tbe applicability of tbe 1918 act for tbe years in question, tbe assets of plaintiff in respect to which tbe assessment was made were taxable thereunder. Por each of tbe years these assets were: . (1) Such sums as about two weeks after tbe close of tbe year tbe corporate officers resolved to take out of tbe undivided surplus account for payment as annual dividends to policyholders having tbe right to share in surplus on tbe next anniversary of their policies; (2) sums taken out of the surplus account in like manner for payment as accumulated dividends to holders of deferred dividend policies maturing during tbe course of tbe ensuing year; (3) tbe aggregate of dividends provisionally declared out of tbe surplus account in previous years and for tbe year in question, to be held against deferred dividend policies maturing in future years. These were held in an interim accumulation fund.

[61]*61The 1918 act provides:

“See. 1000 (a) That on and after July 1, 1918, in lieu of the tax imposed by the first subdivision of section 407 of the Revenue Act of 1916—
“(1) Every domestic corporation shall pay annually a special excise tax with respect to carrying on or doing business, equivalent to $1 for each $1,000 of so much of the fair average value of its capital stoek for the preceding year ending June 30 as is in excess of $5,000. In estimating the value of capital stock the surplus and undivided profits shall be included;
“(2) Every foreign corporation shall pay annually a special excise tax with respect to carrying on or doing business in the United States, equivalent to $1 for each $1,000 of the average amount of capital employed in the transaction of its business in the United States during. the preceding year ending June thirtieth.
“(b) In computing the tax in the case of insurance companies such deposits and reserve funds as they are required by law or contract to maintain or hold for the protection of or payment to or apportionment among policyholders shall not be included.
“(c) The taxes imposed by this section shall not apply in any year to any corporation which was not engaged in business (or in the case of a foreign corporation not engaged in business in the United States) during the preceding year ending June 30, nor to any corporation enumerated in section 231. The taxes imposed by this section shall apply to mutual insurance companies, and in the case of every such domestic company the tax shall be equivalent to $1 for each $1,000 of the excess over $5,000 of the sum of its surplus or contingent reserves maintained for the general use of the business and any reserves the net additions to which are included in net income under the provisions of Title II, as of the close of the preceding accounting period used by such company for purposes of making its income tax return. * * *” 40 Stat. 1126.

The preceding act of 1916 had provided merely (section 407, 39 Stat. 789) that insurance companies should be taxable upon the value of their capital stock minus certain deductions, with the result as set forth in Regs. 38, art. 2b (T. D. 2383), that “Inasmuch as the basis of tax is the fair value of the stoek of a corporation, mutual insurance companies and other associations not having a stock represented by shares will also be exempt from tax, in the absence of a basis-for the computation of the tax.” The legislative history of the 1918 act shows clearly that Congress intended thereby to establish an effective basis of taxation for mutual life insurance companies. In spite of this evident intention, plaintiff contends for an interpretation of the statute which makes it almost as wholly inoperative as the 1916 aet, not only in the present case, but necessarily also in other eases.

It is argued that subdivision (b) of section 1000, providing for the deduction of “such deposits and reserve funds as they are required by law or contract to maintain or hold for the protection of or payment to or apportionment among policyholders shall not be included,” applies also to the parts of subdivision (e) governing mutual companies. The arrangement of the provisions indicates the contrary; for example, the parts of (c) in question are isolated from (b) by another provision so wholly distinct that its placement there would be unreasonable if what followed it were intended to refer back to what preceded it. But in any event the more specific (c) would supersede (b) rather than be limited by it; fair interpretation often requires that one of two provisions be read broadly enough to conflict with and override another rather than that it be limited to a meaning not inconsistent with the other. See Hopkins v. Zeigler (C. C. A.) 259 F. 43, 47. The application of a capital stoek tax to mutual and to' stoek insurance companies presents such different problems that in order to effect equality of treatment there must be formally different rules for the two, not the same rule, as plaintiff contends. Por example, since the capital stoek tax takes account of the market value of stoek as well as the asset value, it is possible greatly to enhance the assessments of insurance stock by reason of the highly valuable element of control, while the same factor must be disregarded in the assessment of mutual companies ; therefore, by way of equalization, deductions allowed in the former assessments' may well be denied in the latter. If these considerations did not sufficiently disprove the applicability of subdivision (b), it would be necessary to consider whether the assets here in question are such as (b) refers to, in view of the fact that, until they were ascertained in the middle of January of the next succeeding year, there were no such specific funds or accounts on the books subject to either legal or contractual requirements specified in (b). On the other hand, in a mutual company, the entire property of the company, including all deposits and reserve funds subject only to liabilities are held for “pay-[62]*62merit to or apportionment among policyholders,” inasmuch as they are the only ones to share therein.

Subdivision (e) taxes, inter alia, “surplus or contingent reserves maintained for the general use of the business,” and in my judgment the three items here in question were part of such surplus for the taxable year. They were not, as plaintiff designates them, a trust fund; and they were not a liability except in the accounting sense. The first two items existed throughout the year as an unsegregated part of the corporate assets; nobody had any elaim to them as against the corporation until at the earliest the middle of January of the next year, when the directors in their discretion decided how much should be set aside for the payment of dividends. They were like any undistributed corporate surplus. The same is demonstrably true of the interim accumulation fund, to which nobody could have any claim for at least thirteen months to come. It is immaterial whether the phrase, “maintained for the general use of the business,” modifies “surplus” as well as “contingent reserves,” for in a sense any surplus of an insurance company is necessarily maintained for the general use of the business, being employed in the financial operations and available to meet obligations.

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Bluebook (online)
34 F.2d 60, 7 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 9274, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-ins-v-bowers-nysd-1929.