State Ex Rel. American Automobile Insurance v. Gehner

8 S.W.2d 1057, 320 Mo. 702, 59 A.L.R. 1026, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 726
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 1057 (State Ex Rel. American Automobile Insurance v. Gehner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. American Automobile Insurance v. Gehner, 8 S.W.2d 1057, 320 Mo. 702, 59 A.L.R. 1026, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 726 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*708 WHITE, J.

An original proceeding in certiorari, wherein the relator prays this court to quash an assessment for taxes for June, 1925, approved by the respondents, constituting the Board of Equalization for the City of St. Louis.

On the petition and return the relator filed a motion for judgment. After a former hearing and ruling by this court a motion for rehearing was sustained, the case reargued and again submitted, with eight other cases. On the rehearing nine cases were argued as one, counsel on both sides seeming to consider that a single issue common to all the cases was determinative of them all. In doing so the reason for granting a rehearing was entirely lost sight of. Some of those cases involve tax assessments against life insurance companies, and others against fire and liability insurance companies. This particular company insures against fire, theft and liability. The one issue common to all the companies turned upon the constitutionality of Section 6386, Revised Statutes 1919. The argument was mainly, presented by attorneys for life insurance companies.

I. The principal point made by counsel for relators in the argument was that the reserve of a life insurance company is not the property of the company, but the property of the policyholders, in the sense that bank deposits are the property of the depositors, and taxable as such to the policy-holders. No claim is made that fire and indemnity insurance policies are taxable. One thing in common to the two policies is that each may be canceled or surrendered for a certain cash value. But if they are not so canceled, the life insurance policy is certain to be paid in the end; whether the loss secured by a fire insurance policy shall ever be paid is contingent. The beneficiary in a life insurance policy has a vested interest, so’to speak, in the reserve which must be paid at the death; an event certain to occur. But a fire insurance policy, particularly automobile insurance, usually runs for a year. It is a remote contingency only that payment for loss would be demanded during that period. So, the interest in the reserves of the policyholders in a life insurance company is different, both in kind and degree, from that of a policyholder in the reserves of a fire insurance or liability insurance company. This distinction should be borne in mind in considering Section 6386, and the oral argument in the case.

This case, however, can be determined upon another principle.

*709 If. The Board of Equalization hi passing upon the tax return of the relator found that the amount, of the legally required reserve of the company, and the amount of unpaid claims against the company, Were correctly stated; therefore, reiat,or contends, the only question for consideration is whether Section 6386 is unconstitutional. We cannot agree to that conclusion. The const motion of Section 6386 was before the Board of Equalization, and is before this court just as prominently as its constitutionality, and so is the construction of every other statute affecting the ease.

The hoard took evidence and made the findings mentioned. It also found that the relator had taxable assets amounting to $375,000, and assessed that sum to it. If a proper construction of Section 6386, and other sections, would allow that amount of taxable property to be assessed to the relator, the assessment of the hoard should stand though the board acted upon an erroneous theory. AVe are not bound, by the reasons which the board advanced for approving the assessment-. Relator quotes from State ex rel. American Automobile Insurance Co. v. Schramm, 271 Mo. 223, and states that Section 6386 “prescribes a system of taxation of net assets.” If on the face, of the. return for taxation, presented by the relator to the assessor, it appears that relator had taxable property, in excess of all proper deductions, amounting to $375,000, or more, then the assessment should stand, whatever reason actuated the board in sustaining that assessment. The statement of relator’s taxable assets was not considered at alt.

III. One important fact obtrudes itself upon our attention, if relator is srrstained. This company pays no taxes either in this State or any other, as we shall presently show. No matter how prosperous it is, no matter how great dividends it may pay to its stockholders, it contrived a statement which woup| prevent it paying any taxes anywhere of any kind or character. For the purpose of taxation it is insolvent. True it has two hundred and fifty-six thousand dollars in non-taxable securities, but even so. with the deductions it claims, its actual assets are slightly above insolvency. On that statement it is not in position to do business in this State.

The abstract of the record does not show how much capital stock the company has, nor how much surplus. The respondents, in their motion for rehearing, quote in their brief from what they claim to be the report of the relalor to the Insurance Department, in December, 1925. which shows that paid-up capital of the company was *710 $500,000, and its surplus approximately $1,384,000, making a total of $1,884,000. While this fact is not in the record it is not disputed by relator. Probably it was in evidence before the Board of Equalization. Whether we may consider it before us or not we know that it cannot be far from the truth because of the facts appearing in the return. Then this company has over and above all reserves, which are unearned premiums, almost two million dollars of taxable assets, and yet pays no taxes, and makes a return showing that its actual assets above liabilities are a little more than a hundred thousand dollars.

IV. We come now to a consideration of the return of June 1, 1925, on which the assessment was based, as follows:

Non-Tax able Assets 'Outside Assets Missouri*

Assets in Missouri

Total Assets

U. S. Gov. Lib. Bonds $256,869.37 ?......... $256,869.37

State, .County, Town, City or Mun|. Bds. 37,300.00 37,300.00

R. R. Pub. UtR. and Industrial Bonds 3,754,710.00 3,754,710.00

R. R. and Ind. Stock of other States 481,375100 481,375,00

Premiums in Course of Coll. 1,339,290.34 180,628.69 1,519,919.03

Cash on hand and in banks 352,925.41 97,909.11 450,834.52

Accrued Interest on Bonds 1,687.59 59,807.64 61,495.23

Furniture and Fixtures 5,000.00 5,000.00

Due from Re-insuring Cos. 148.00 148.00

$739,931.96 §1,752,171.39 $4,075,547.80 $6,657,651.15 Total

. • Deductions

$3,066,357.82 Reinsurance Reserve ..........

1,702,081.02 Unpaid Policy Claims, (9,000)

Total Deductions ...................... $4,768,438.84

Net Amount Subject to Taxation........ Nil

*Non-taxable in Missouri.

*711

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 1057, 320 Mo. 702, 59 A.L.R. 1026, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-american-automobile-insurance-v-gehner-mo-1928.