New York Life Insurance v. McMaster

66 S.E. 877, 84 S.C. 495
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 19, 1910
Docket7420
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 877 (New York Life Insurance v. McMaster) 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
New York Life Insurance v. McMaster, 66 S.E. 877, 84 S.C. 495 (S.C. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods. In four separate cases above named, the New York Life Insurance Company, Travelers’ Insurance Company and Mutual Life Insurance Company seek by mandamus to compel Pitz H. McMaster, insurance commissioner of the State, to issue to them licenses to transact the business of life insurance in the State from 1st April, 1909, to 31st March, 1910.

On hearing the petitions, the Chief Justice made orders in the several causes requiring the insurance commissioner to show cause why he should not be required to issue the licenses, and the causes were heard by the Court on the petitions, the returns and traverses of the returns. While these pleadings are voluminous, they raise no issue of fact which has any significance in the decision of the cases, for the question which is decisive of all others is whether the statute of 4th March, 1909, providing for license fees for insurance companies, is constitutional. As the decision depends on this act, it is necessary to set it out in full:

*497 “An act to provide certain conditions to be imposed upon certain foreign insurance companies and certain other foreign companies for the privilege of entering and doing business in this State:

Section 1. “Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina, that every foreign insurance company of any class, fire, life, marine, surety, security, guarantee, hail storm, live stock, accident, plate glass and other like insurance companies, and all other like classes of like business not incorporated under the laws of the State of South Carolina, except benevolent institutions operating under the grand lodge system, shall, as a condition for the privilege of entering into and doing business in this State, pay all taxes and perform all duties now or hereafter prescribed by law, and all such companies tvhich have heretofore done business in this State, and have not for any cause whatsoever paid the State and county taxes provided for by sections 302 and 1809, Code of Laws, 1902, volume I, ,for the years 1907 and 1908, either or both, or having paid and recovered such taxes by suit or otherwise, shall, in addition to the payment of all State and County taxes nozv or hereafter required by law, pay the State and county taxes provided for in sections 302 and 1809, Code of Laws, 1902, volume I, which have not heretofore been paid for the year ipof, the year 1908, or for both of said years, and such payment of this tax, together with all other State and county taxes, and the performance of all duties of any kind whatsoever imposed upon such foreign companies shall be a condition and part of the terms upon which they are allowed to enter this State, and to do business herein: Provided, That nothing herein contained shall be construed to affect the right of the corporate authorities of the cities and towns of the State to levy, assess or collect taxes or licenses from said insurance companies for municipal purposes: Provided, That nothing contained in this act shall deprive *498 such foreign companies of any right they may have to test, in any Court established under the laws of this State, which may have jurisdiction, the constitutionality of any act of the legislature imposing duties or burdens upon them.”

This Court held in the case of New York Life Insurance Company v. Bradley, 83 S. C., 418, that the taxes provided for by section 303 and 1809 of Civil Code, were imposed not as a charge or tax for the privilege of doing business in the State, but as a property tax on property not within the State, and that the imposition of the tax was, therefore, unconstitutional, in that it contemplated the taking of property without due process of law. That cause was heard in the Circuit Court in December, 1908, and the decree of the Supreme 'Court was filed on 38th August, 1909. In the meantime, the statute above quoted was enacted on 4th March, 1909. The licenses of all the petitioners to transact business in this State expired thereafter on 31st March, 1909, and in order for them to do business legally in the State for the year beginning 31st March, 1909, and ending 31st March, 1910, it was necessary for them to comply with the law of the State, and take out a new license thereunder. By reference to the lines we have italicized in the license act of 4th March, 1909, it will be seen that the statute required among other things, the taxes provided for 1907 and 1908 by sections 303 and 1809 of the Civil Code, to be paid by foreign insurance companies as a condition of doing business in the State for the year running from 1st April, 1909, to '31st March, 1910. The petitioners offered to comply with all other requirements of law, but refused to pay to the insurance commissioner for the year 1909-10 the taxes provided by sections 303 and 1809 of the Civil Code.

*499 1 *498 The constitutional question now made by the petitioners and returns is, whether the law-making branch of the government can require these insurance companies to pay for the privilege of doing business in the State certain taxes, which *499 had been charged against them for the past years under an unconstitutional statute, but which had not been paid, or had been recovered back after having been paid. It is manifest that in requiring the payment of “taxes provided for in sections 302 and 1809” for the years 1907 and 1908, the meaning and purpose of the General Assembly was to require payment of the amount of such taxes; for the face of the act shows that it was passed in contemplation of the contingency that the Court might hold the levy and collection of the tax illegal, because made under an unconstitutional statute. It was to meet this contingency, and to collect the amount which the General Assembly had intended should be paid under the unconstitutional statute that it passed the act now under consideration, to enforce the payment by the exercise of the power vested in it to impose on a foreign corporation any terms it saw fit as a condition of doing business in the State.

The main ground on which the petitioners rest their attack on the statute is that it is discriminatory. That it does discriminate in that it does not impose the same terms on all foreign insurance companies is quite evident. The petitioners have been doing business in this State for many years, and, therefore, would have to pay in addition to the sum exacted of a foreign insurance company entering the State for the first time, a sum equal to the taxes for the years 1907 and 1908, contemplated by sections 302 and 1809 of Civil Code. If, therefore, the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States, or the like provision of section 5, article 1 of our own Constitution applied, there would then be strong ground for ■argument against the legality of the exaction. But these constitutional limitations on the power of the General Assembly have no application to laws prescribing the terms on which foreign corporations may enter- a State. This was expressly decided in Pembina Mining Co. v. Pennsylvania, 125 U. S., 181, *500

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Related

Foster v. Morrison
84 S.E.2d 344 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1954)
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75 F. Supp. 980 (W.D. South Carolina, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 877, 84 S.C. 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-v-mcmaster-sc-1910.