Occidental Life Insurance v. Holmes

80 P.2d 383, 107 Mont. 48, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 60
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1938
DocketNo. 7,801.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 383 (Occidental Life Insurance v. Holmes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Occidental Life Insurance v. Holmes, 80 P.2d 383, 107 Mont. 48, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 60 (Mo. 1938).

Opinions

*50 MR. JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff is a California corporation engaged in the life insurance business and admitted to do business in Montana. In compliance with a demand of the state auditor and insurance commissioner, the plaintiff paid to the state of Montana taxes and fees in the sum of $4,508.64, alleged to be due for the year 1937, and which the statutes require to be paid before the auditor is authorized to issue the annual certificate to corporations of that nature to continue in business in this state. The plaintiff tendered the auditor the sum of $3,621.16, which it claimed was the legal amount due, which tender was refused, and thereupon the plaintiff paid the amount first above mentioned but at the same time filed its written protest as to the payment of $887.48 of the amount, and, within the time allowed, commenced *51 this action in the First Judicial District of the State of Montana to recover the amount paid under protest.

When the matter came on for hearing, counsel for the respective parties entered into a stipulation by which it was agreed that if plaintiff prevailed in the action an additional refund, which was paid in part for taxes alleged due for the previous year in the sum of $55.65, but under protest, might be added to the amount claimed due by refund for 1937. A general demurrer to the complaint was sustained; plaintiff refused to plead further and appealed to this court.

Plaintiff alleges and contends that the reciprocal provisions of section 6155, Revised Codes of Montana, under which the auditor, adopting the California rates, computed the fees and taxes, do not apply and that the correct amount due should be arrived at by computing the fees and taxes as provided by sections 6112 and 6276 of the Revised Codes, which would give the following result:

Demonstration No. 1.

License tax on first $5,000 of premiums........... $ 125.00

Premium tax on remaining $173,108.22 of premiums at the rate of 2% ............................ 3,462.16

Filing fee ...................................... 25.00

Publication fee.................................. 9.00

Amount tendered and refused $3,621.16

The tax on premiums collected under the California statute, Political Code of California, section 3664b, is 2.6%, or six-tenths more than the Montana rate, and under the “retaliatory” or reciprocal provisions of section 6155 of the Revised Codes of Montana, the state auditor and tax commissioner of Montana adopted the higher California rate in computing the tax on the premiums collected at 2.507%, allowing a reduction of the California rate of .093% by reason of the fact that Montana requires the tax to be paid March 1, while California makes the collection in two semi-annual payments at later dates, and the reduction of the California rate was allowed for interest *52 between the dates of collection as between the two states, and by that method equalized the tax.

The state auditor and insurance commissioner of Montana computed the tax due from plaintiff under the higher California rate on the assumption that our section 6155, Bevised Codes, was operative in the premises, and such computation was made as follows:

Demonstration No. 2.

License tax on first $5,000 of premiums collected.....$ 125.00

Premium on remaining premiums collected $173,108 at 2.507% .................................. 4,339.64

Miscellaneous fees ............................... 10.00

Total demanded and paid.................... $4,508.64

Admitted due and tendered...................... 3,621.16

Amount paid under protest.................. $ 887.48

The reciprocal or retaliatory statutes of the two states are materially different in the method of computation provided. Montana imposes a tax of 2% on premiums collected and certain fees in addition, but allows no deduction for taxes paid on real estate owned by the foreign corporation in this state. California imposes a tax on premiums collected of 2.6% and certain fees, but deducts from the total taxes found to be due on premiums all taxes collected on real estate owned by the foreign corporation in that state. By allowing the deduction of the real estate taxes collected, the tax levied on premiums collected in that state is, on facts involved such as in the ease at bar, much less than the taxes levied on premiums collected in Montana.

The statutes of both states provide in effect that the reciprocal or retaliatory statute shall apply only when other states impose greater burdens upon foreign corporations which engage in business in the state collecting the taxes and fees than are imposed for like purposes in the state of incorporation. Such *53 being the situation, it becomes necessary to determine what burdens in the way of taxes and fees would be imposed upon a Montana corporation doing business in California. In proceeding with that problem it must be kept in mind that the respective rates of taxation on real estate in the two states are immaterial.

The total taxes paid by the foreign corporation in California are deducted from the total taxes found to be due on the premiums collected, and the rate of the levy and the amount of the real estate are not taken into account. To demonstrate the distinction between the respective methods we will assume that the plaintiff here is a Montana corporation admitted to do business in California, collected the same in premiums in that state and paid the same amount of real estate taxes on land owned there, which would give us,

Demonstration No. 3.

License tax on first $5,000 of premiums collected____$ 125.00

Premium tax on remaining.$173,108.22 of premiums collected at 2.507% .......................... 4,339.64

Total.......................................$4,508.64

Deduct total taxes paid on real estate.............. 1,684.87

Amount a domestic corporation would pay in California on premiums ......................... $2,823.77

On the other hand, the California plaintiff doing business in Montana paid for taxes on premiums collected and in fees................................ $4,508.64

In addition paid taxes on real estate ........... 1,684.87

Total....................................... $6,193.41

The $887.48 paid under protest is included in the item of $4,508.64.

*54 It has been suggested that the retaliatory provisions of section 6155 must be separately considered and applied, i. e., the tax on premiums collected and the real estate taxes must be computed and collected separately and independently of each other. Such conclusion fails to give effect to the purpose of the reciprocal and retaliatory statutes under consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 383, 107 Mont. 48, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/occidental-life-insurance-v-holmes-mont-1938.