Prudential Property & Casualty Co. v. Department of Treasury

725 N.W.2d 477, 272 Mich. App. 269
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 27, 2006
DocketDocket 260203, 260204
StatusPublished

This text of 725 N.W.2d 477 (Prudential Property & Casualty Co. v. Department of Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prudential Property & Casualty Co. v. Department of Treasury, 725 N.W.2d 477, 272 Mich. App. 269 (Mich. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Defendant appeals as of right the trial court’s order allowing plaintiffs to take single business *271 tax credits against Michigan’s retaliatory tax on insurance companies. We reverse.

This case arose when plaintiffs amended their tax returns to take a credit available to domestic and foreign insurance companies that file their taxes under Michigan’s single business tax (SBT). The credits are included as part of the calculation for determining the ultimate SBT owed. Plaintiffs, however, were required to determine their taxes consistently with the retaliatory tax, not the SBT, because, properly figured, their home states require foreign insurers to pay more in taxes and other payments, security, and charges than Michigan requires of its foreign insurers under the SBT. According to the retaliatory tax statute, a foreign insurance company must pay the greater of its SBT obligation or the obligation that a similar Michigan company would face in the foreign company’s home state. MCL 500.476a and 500.476b. This means that plaintiff Prudential Insurance Company (PIC), which is a New Jersey corporation, was required to calculate its tax under the SBT and then create a hypothetical company, mimetic in all things except its state of origin, and send it back to New Jersey to be taxed. If PIC’s imaginary Michigan twin would theoretically pay more to New Jersey than PIC was required to pay under Michigan’s SBT, then PIC must pay the amount its twin would have paid in New Jersey. Therefore, if the insurer’s home state imposes a higher financial burden on similar Michigan insurance companies than Michigan would ordinarily impose on the out-of-state insurer, then the hypothetical computation translates into very real funds in Michigan’s coffers.

PIC challenged this system by offsetting its twin’s foreign tax obligations with SBT credits, which are *272 available only to domestic insurers and foreign insurance companies from states that levy lower fiscal burdens on foreign insurers. PIC took the credits contained in the Single Business Tax Act (SBTA), MCL 208.1 et seq., even though it was indisputably required to calculate its taxes according to the retaliatory tax scheme. The SBT credits in question are credits for mandatory payments to Michigan insurance associations and facilities. MCL 208.22c. Plaintiff Prudential Property and Casualty Insurance Company (PruPAC), an Indiana corporation, also took the SBT credits, even though it did not report any Indiana association or facility fees and Indiana did not offer the same credit for such payments. Both PIC and PruPAC took the SBT credits directly against the foreign taxes that their imaginary Michigan twins were hypothetically required to pay to New Jersey and Indiana, respectively.

Neither credit is permitted because the credit is an SBT credit that should never factor into the calculation of the home state’s aggregate financial burden on Michigan insurers. 1 In MCL 500.476b, the statutory language clearly requires a foreign insurer to pay the greater of the tax calculated by applying the liabilities and credits found in the SBTA or the aggregate amount of financial obligations that the home state would require of a Michigan insurer as determined under *273 MCL 500.476a. Although MCL 500.476a(5) applies one routing provision of the SBTA to the funds defendant receives from the retaliatory tax, it does not allow the insurer to apply any of the credits contained in MCL 208.22c against the retaliatory tax. In fact, nothing in the statutory framework suggests that an insurance company may borrow an SBT credit and apply it to its twin’s hypothetical tax obligation to the insurer’s home state. See MCL 500.476a. The statutory language in MCL 500.476b clearly and unambiguously prohibited plaintiffs’ conduct, and the trial court erred to the extent that it held otherwise.

The limited availability of SBT credits does not violate equal protection principles because Michigan’s tax scheme only withholds the credits from insurers whose home states place a higher total (or aggregate) financial burden on Michigan insurers than Michigan would place on the foreign insurer under the SBT and because it only requires those foreign insurers to pay the same amount that a similar Michigan insurer would pay in the insurer’s home state. TIG Ins Co, Inc v Dep’t of Treasury, 464 Mich 548, 558-559; 629 NW2d 402 (2001). Therefore, defendant did not violate plaintiffs’ equal protection rights when it rejected their claimed credits for payments to Michigan associations and facilities. Id.

Plaintiffs raise a compelling corollary argument, however. They claim that defendant rejected the entire amount claimed as a credit, even though New Jersey and Indiana provide Michigan insurers with a tax credit for association payments. They argue that defendant’s failure to recognize the other states’ credits, while including the entire SBT credit for similar association payments, distorts the comparison of each state’s tax on “similar” foreign insurers, contrary to MCL 500.476a. *274 Ironically, defendant here retreats from its argument for parity and responds that the foreign states do not allow credits for payments to Michigan associations and facilities, so the total rejection of the claimed credits was appropriate. This reverses the application of MCL 500.476a onto itself and disturbs the entire comparison of the hypothetically “similar” companies. The correct analysis does not turn on whether the home state provides a tax credit for payments made to foreign associations and facilities (like those in Michigan), but whether the home state allows Michigan insurance companies to take a credit for payments made to the home state’s domestic associations and facilities. Otherwise, the analysis does not compare two “similar” insurers, as MCL 500.476a requires, but compares a foreign insurer that receives Michigan tax credits with a Michigan insurer that is artificially prevented from receiving all allowable tax credits from the home state. 2 To be considered “similar” under MCL 500.476a, the insurer’s imaginary twin must be an insurance company deemed to have paid “similar” association fees to the real insurer’s home state (i.e., the state that is foreign to the imaginary insurer), and it should receive whatever tax or payment credit that the home state allows. Otherwise, plaintiffs are correct that the home state’s taxes are artificially inflated while Michigan’s taxes are artificially reduced.

*275 For example, suppose Michigan and New Jersey each charged foreign insurers a flat $1,000 in gross taxes, with a 50-percent tax credit for any payment to domestic insurance associations, and further required $200 in association fees. The states would have achieved complete parity and would have accomplished every legitimate purpose for Michigan’s establishment of the retaliatory tax and exclusion of association fees in the computation of that tax. See TIG, supra at 560-561; MCL 500.134(5).

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Related

Tig Premier Insur Co v. Dept of Treasury
464 Mich. 548 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2001)
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629 N.W.2d 401 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2001)
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574 N.W.2d 924 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
725 N.W.2d 477, 272 Mich. App. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prudential-property-casualty-co-v-department-of-treasury-michctapp-2006.