Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Lederer

252 U.S. 523, 40 S. Ct. 397, 64 L. Ed. 698, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1533
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 19, 1920
Docket499
StatusPublished
Cited by138 cases

This text of 252 U.S. 523 (Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Lederer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Lederer, 252 U.S. 523, 40 S. Ct. 397, 64 L. Ed. 698, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1533 (1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brandéis

delivered the ppinion of the court.

The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, a purely mutual legal reserve company which issues level-premium *524 insurance, brought this action in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania to recover $6,865.03 which was assessed and collected as an income tax of one per cent, upon the sum of $686,503, alleged to have been wrongly included as a part of its gross income) and hence also of its net income, for the period from March 1, 1913, to December 31, 1913. The latter sum equals the aggregate of the amounts paid during that period by the company to its policyholders in cash dividends which were not used by them during that period in payment of premiums. The several amounts making up this aggregate represent mainly a part of the so-called redundancy in premiums paid by the respective policyholders in some previous year or years. They are, in a sense, a repayment of that part of die premium previously paid which experience has proved was in excess of the amount which had been assumed would be required to meet the policy obligations (ordinarily termed losses) or the legal reserve and the expense of conducting the business. 1 The District Court allowed recovery of the full amount with interest. (247 Fed. Rep. 559.) The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, holding that nothing was recoverable except a single small item, reversed the judgment and awarded a new trial. (258 Fed. Rep. 81.) A writ of certiorari from this court was then allowed. (250 U. S. 656.)

Whether thé plaintiff is entitled to recover depends wholly upon the construction to be given certain provisions in § II G. (b) of the Revenue Act of October 3, 1913, c. 16, 38 Stat. 114, 172, 173. The act enumerates among *525 the corporations upon which’the income tax is imposed, “every insurance company” other than “fraternal beneficiary societies, orders, or associations operating under the lodge system or for the exclusive benefit of the members of a fraternity itself operating under the lodge system.” It provides (G. (b) pp. 172-174) how the net income of insurance companies shall be ascertained for purposes of taxation, prescribing what shall be included to determine the gross income of any year, and also specifically what deductions from the ascertained gross income shall be made in order to determine the net income upon which the tax is assessed. Premium receipts are a part of the gross income to be accounted for.

In applying to insurance companies the system of income taxation in which the assessable net income is to be ascertained by making enumerated deductions from the gross. income (including premium receipts) Congress naturally provided how, in making the computation, 1 repayment of the redundancy in the premium should be dealt with. In a mutual company, whatever the field of its operation, the premium exacted is necessarily greater than the expected cost of the insurance, as the redundancy in the premium furnishes the guaranty fund out of which extraordinary losses may be met, while in a stock company they may be met from the capital stock subscribed. It is of the essence of mutual insurance that the excess in the premium over the actual cost as later ascertained shall be returned to the policyholder. Some payment to tire *526 policyholder representing such excess is ordinarily made by every mutual company every year; but the so-called repayment or dividend is rarely made within the calendar year in which the premium (of which it is supposed to be the unused surplus) was paid. Congress treated the so-called repayments or dividends in this way (p. 173):

(a) Mutual fire companies “shall not return as income any portion of the premium deposits returned to their policyholders. ”

(b) Mutual marine companies “shall be entitled to include in deductions from gross income amounts repaid to policyholders on account of premiums previously paid by them and interest paid upon suchr-amounts between the ascertainment thereof and the payment thereof.”

(c) Life insurance companies (that is both stock and strictly mutual) “shall not include as income in any year such portion of any actual premium received from any individuál policyholder as shall have been paid back or credited to such individual policyholder, or treated as an abatement of premium of such individual policyholder, within such year.”

(d) For all insurance companies, whatever their field of operation, and whether stock or mutual, the act provides that there be deducted from gross income “the net addition, if any, required by law to be made within the year to reserve funds and the sums other than dividends paid within the year on policy and annuity contracts. ”

The Government contends, in substance, for the rule that in figuring the gross income of life insurance companies, there shall be taken the aggregate of the year’s net premium receipts made up separately for each policyholder. 1 The Penn Mutual Company contends for the *527 rule that in figuring the gross income there shall be taken the aggregate full premiums received by the company less the aggregate of all dividends paid by it to any policyholder by credit upon a premium or by abatement of a premium and also of all dividends whatsoever paid to any policyholder, in cash whether applied in payment of a premium or not. The non-inclusion clause, (c) above, excludes from gross income those premium receipts which were actually or in effect paid by applying dividends. The company seeks to graft upon the clause so restricted a provision for what it calls non-including, but which in fact is deducting, all cash dividends not so applied. In support of this contention the company relies mainly, not upon the words of the statute, but upon arguments which it bases upon the nature of mutual insurance, upon the supposed analogy of the rules prescribed in the statute for mutual fire and marine companies and upon the alleged requirements of consistency.

First: The reason for the particular provision made by Congress seems to be clear: Dividends may be made, and by many of the companies have been made largely, by way of abating or reducing the amount of the renewal premium. 1 Where the dividend is so made the actual premium receipt of the year is obviously only the reduced amount. But, as a matter of bookkeeping, the premium is *528 entered at the full rate and the abatement (that is, the amount by which it was reduced) 'is entered as a credit. The financial result both to the company and to the policyholders is, however, exactly the same whether the renewal premium is reduced by a dividend or whether the renewal premium remains unchanged but is paid in part either by a credit or by cash received as a dividend. And the entries in bookkeeping would be substantially the same.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 U.S. 523, 40 S. Ct. 397, 64 L. Ed. 698, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-mutual-life-insurance-v-lederer-scotus-1920.