Rollins Hudig Hall of Rhode Island, Inc. v. Clark

785 A.2d 523, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 236, 2001 WL 1586532
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 27, 2001
DocketNo. 99-383-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 785 A.2d 523 (Rollins Hudig Hall of Rhode Island, Inc. v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rollins Hudig Hall of Rhode Island, Inc. v. Clark, 785 A.2d 523, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 236, 2001 WL 1586532 (R.I. 2001).

Opinions

OPINION

LEDERBERG, Justice.

R. Gary Clark, the State of Rhode Island tax administrator, sought review of the District Court’s decision on two consolidated tax appeals.1 At issue was whether Rollins Hudig Hall of Rhode Island, Inc. and Frank B. Hall of Rhode Island, Inc., must pay taxes on premiums paid to them for insurance that they allegedly procured for Textron, Inc., a corporation headquartered in Rhode Island. For the reasons set forth herein, the petition for certiorari is granted in part and denied in part.

Facts and Legal Issues under Review

Rollins Hudig Hall of Rhode Island, Inc., with its predecessor-in-interest, Frank B. Hall of Rhode Island, Inc. (collectively, respondent or Hall-RI), was at all relevant times a surplus lines insurance broker, licensed under G.L.1956 § 27-3-38(a), which reads in part,2

“The insurance commissioner may issue a surplus line broker’s license to any person, firm, or corporation who or which is licensed as an insurance agent in this state, authorizing the licensee to procure, subject to the restrictions herein provided, policies of insurance, except life and health and accident, from insurers which are not authorized to transact business in this state.”

On December 20, 1991, after a field audit, the tax division issued three notices of deficiency to respondent, Hall-RI, as a consequence of the provisions of subsection (d) of the surplus lines insurance statute:

“Every person, firm, or corporation licensed pursuant to the provisions of this section shall file with the insurance commissioner, not later than April 1 of each year, a certificate of the tax administrator, on a blank furnished by the insurance commissioner, certifying that the licensee has paid to the tax administrator, for all policies procured by the licensee pursuant to the license, during the next preceding calendar year, a tax, computed at the rate of three percent (3%) on the gross premiums charged the insured by the insurers, less the amount [525]*525of premiums returned to the insureds.” Section 27-3-38(d).

Specifically, Hall-RI was assessed a $3,058,340 tax deficiency on premiums for aircraft products liability insurance issued in 1988, 1989, and 1990 to respondent’s client, Textron, Inc. (Textron). Although Hall-RI contended that its Massachusetts affiliate, Frank B. Hall of Massachusetts, Inc. (Hall-Mass), solicited, assembled, and placed the coverage at issue, Hall-RI filed tax returns for a portion of the premiums, pursuant to § 27-3-38(d), and filed affidavits, pursuant to § 27-3-38(b),

“setting forth facts showing that the insured and the licensee were unable, after diligent effort, to procure from any authorized insurer or insurers the full amount of insurance required to protect the property owned or controlled by the insured or the risks insured, and further showing that the amount of insurance procured from an unauthorized insurer or insurers is only the excess over the amount, if any, so procurable from authorized insurers and that the purpose of obtaining that insurance from unauthorized insurers is not to procure insurance on forms different from those which would be used by authorized insurers writing insurance against the same risks or hazards.” Section 27-3-38(b).

At issue here was whether Hall-RI “procured” an unreported portion of Tex-tron’s coverage from unauthorized/unapproved carriers “pursuant to” its Rhode Island surplus lines insurance broker’s license, such that respondent is subject to the 3 percent tax under § 27-3-38(d) on the premiums Textron paid.3

The respondent contended that, in general, there are three sources from which an insured can obtain coverage for excessive risks, the premiums for only two of which are taxable in Rhode Island. The first source by which an insured can obtain insurance is through ordinary commercial channels from insurers authorized to provide such coverage. In such cases, an authorized carrier must pay an insurance tax in the amount of 2 percent of the gross premiums on all coverage of Rhode Island risk, pursuant to G.L.1956 § 44-17-1, and, in addition, must contribute to the Rhode Island insurers’ insolvency fund, in accordance with G.L.1956 § 27-34-6. Textron sought insurance for approximately $500,000,000 of risk during each of the policy periods at issue. Approximately 45 percent of this risk was insured through authorized insurers, who presumably paid the proper taxes. Such coverage is not at issue here.

Because authorized insurers did not cover the total risk, Textron sought alternative sources to insure the remaining 55 percent of the $500,000,000 risk. An insured such as Textron may use a second source to obtain coverage for its remaining risk by purchasing “surplus lines” insurance through a licensed surplus lines broker who may procure additional insurance from unauthorized/approved insurers, named in a fist published by the Department of Business Regulation. Section 27-3-40. These unauthorized insurers are not subject to the same regulations that apply to authorized insurers, and they are not directly taxed on the premiums they receive for surplus lines coverage. Instead, the broker obtaining such coverage for a client must pay the 3 percent surplus lines premium tax “for all policies 'procured by [526]*526the licensee pursuant to the license,” in accordance with § 27-3-38(d). (Emphases added.) A portion of Textron’s remaining 55 percent risk was procured through such unauthorized/approved carriers, and Hall-RI reported and paid the 3 percent tax on the insurance acquired from those carriers.

Yet, several of the insurers that provided the remaining coverage were not on the insurance commissioner’s list of unauthorized but approved insurers, and Hall-RI did not report and pay tax on the premiums paid to such unauthorized/ira approved carriers. The tax administrator (petitioner here) contended that Hall-RI procured coverage on Textron’s behalf from these unauthorized/unapproved carriers contrary to the licensing provisions of § 27-3-38(a) and has attempted to avoid paying the surplus lines tax by circumventing statutory requirements.

Hall-RI argued that because it did not procure the insurance from the unauthorized/^ approved carriers, Hall-RI owed no tax on the premiums that Textron paid to these unauthorized insurers. Rather, Hall-RI maintained that Hall-Mass either procured the coverage from unauthorized insurers or helped Textron acquire the coverage by a third method, namely, direct placement by Textron. In this method, an insured obtains its coverage from insurers without the aid of a broker. Hall-RI contended that a gap in Rhode Island’s tax laws effectively excludes from taxation the premiums paid for unauthorized coverage obtained directly by an insured. According to Hall-RI, the insurance premiums in question fell within this gap and therefore were not taxable. The tax administrator, on the other hand, argued that, in accordance with the affidavits and tax returns filed by Hall-RI, the insurance at issue, in fact, was surplus lines coverage — the second type described — procured by respondent pursuant to its license. Consequently, he argued that the premiums for that coverage were subject to the 3 percent tax.

Procedural History

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785 A.2d 523, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 236, 2001 WL 1586532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollins-hudig-hall-of-rhode-island-inc-v-clark-ri-2001.