State Ex Rel. National Life Insurance v. Jay

260 P. 180, 37 Wyo. 189, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 78
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1927
Docket1463
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 260 P. 180 (State Ex Rel. National Life Insurance v. Jay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. National Life Insurance v. Jay, 260 P. 180, 37 Wyo. 189, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 78 (Wyo. 1927).

Opinion

*194 Bltjme, Chief Justice.

The relator, a mutual life insurance company, duly filed its annual statement of business transacted in the state of Wyoming for the year 1926, and paid $889.51 as a tax at the rate of 2y2 per cent on premiums in the sum of $35,-580.21, received on business done in this state during that year. This amount of tax was accepted, but later the Insurance Commissioner of the state demanded a further tax on an additional sum of $17,099.46, and threatened to cancel the license of the relator to do business in this state, unless this additional tax amounting to $427.48 were paid. Thereupon the relator commenced this original proceeding in this court, praying for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the Insurance Commissioner to vacate his order demanding such additional tax, and that he issue his receipt showing full payment of taxes due by relator to the state for said year. An alternative writ of mandamus was issued citing the defendant to appear and show cause why the writ should not be made permanent. The defendant appeared and demurred to the petition, alleging that it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and the ease has been argued and submitted thereon.

The facts, as disclosed by the^fietition, are in brief as follows: Relator is a mutual life insurance corporation organized under the laws of Vermont and duly licensed to transact business in Wyoming. It conducts its business on the mutual plan, and with the purpose to furnish the insured with insurance at cost. Inasmuch, however, as relator has no capital stock, and must rely on the receipt of premium to pay ordinary losses, as well as to meet all unusual contingencies, it must provide for a margin of safety. Hence it fixes the premium payable on the face of the poli- *195 ices high, witb the intent and under the agreement with the policy holders, that if the amount collected is found from time to time to be not needed, the latter shall participate in the benefit thereof. The policies issued, accordingly, are known as policies on the participating-plan, and the premium payable on the face of the policies is but a maximum amount of premium and necessary to be paid only if contingencies should require it. To provide the margin of safety above mentioned, relator and other insurers operating on the same plan, determine the maximum amount of premium payable on the face of the policies on the following assumptions: first, of a mortality rate higher than may be expected in actual operation; second, of a rate of interest on investments lower than may actually be realized; third, of an amount for expenses and contingencies greater than that which may actually be needed. Accumulations by reason of these factors, namely money saved and not expended on account of a lower mortality, and money gained because of more interest received, and because of less expense for operation and contingencies, than above calculated, constitute and are put into what is called a divisible surplus or dividend fund, the amount of which is determined and fixed at the end of each year, and is paid back to the policy holders in one of the ways stated in the policies, namely, (a) in cash, or (b) applied toward the payment of any premium, or (c) converted at net single, premium rates into additional paid-up participating insurance, which may be surrendered for its cash value at any time, or (d) deposited with the company subject to the payment annually of three per cent interest thereon. The aggregate maximum amount of premiums specified in the policies of insurance of the relator, held by residents of the state of Wyoming, payable for the year 1926, was the gross sum of $52,679.67, which was paid as follows: $9,057.01 by the application of dividends, pursuant to requests of policy holders, as part-payment of premiums due; $8,042.45 by the payment of cash dividends to policy hold *196 ers out of the divisible surplus; $35,580.21 by cash paid by policy holders to the company and retained by it. The tax specified in the statute was paid on the last sum, namely on $35,580.21, but the Insurance Commissioner also claims a tax on the sums of $9,057.01 and $8,042.45 returned to the policy holders either in cash or by application, as part payment, on the premiums specified on the face of the policies of the respective policy holders. The provisions of section 2766, W. C. S. 1920, in so far as material here, are as follows:

‘ ‘ There is hereby imposed and levied upon each and every insurance company transacting the business of insurance within this state, a tax of 2% per centum per annum upon the gross premiums received by it for insurance within this state from the beginning until the close of the calendar year. ’ ’

The point in dispute is as to whether or not the amounts paid in 1926 out of the divisible surplus of relator to its policy holders, as cash, or which was applied as a part-payment on the maximum premium specified in their respective policies, should be considered as part of the “gross premium” mentioned in the statute aforesaid. We do not understand that there is any controversy in this case as to so-called dividends paid to policy holders other than those paid to policy holders who actually paid premiums to the company during the year 1926. We think that the contention of the relator as to the meaning of “gross premiums,” as used in our statute above quoted, must be sustained, and that the distribution made to policy holders as above mentioned, out of the divisible surplus fund, cannot be considered a part thereof. For it is apparent from what has been said, that this fund does not represent any profits. A dividend therefrom is not a dividend as ordinarily understood. It represents an overpayment previously made by the policy holders and an amount not deemed necessary by the company to be retained in order to meet the expenses *197 of operation and of contingencies. And inasmuch as the insurance is at cost, the distribution of this amount is not even a matter of favor to, but a matter of right of, the policy holders. They are not bound under their contract to pay the amount of the premium specified on the face of the policy except when necessary for the company to meet its obligations. The premium which they are compelled to pay is the amount specified on the face of the policies less their proportion of the divisible surplus. If one of them has agreed to pay $200 less any overpayment which may be found to have been made by him, and such overpayment is found to be $50, and he pays only $150, the gross premium received from this policy necessarily is only the last sum mentioned, and it is hardly credible that the legislature intended to tax an amount not actually paid or received. That is substantially the situation of the policy holder who exercises the second option above mentioned contained in relator’s policies. If instead of paying $150, this same policy holder should pay the full amount of premium specified on the face of his policy, and, exercising the first option specified therein, receives $50 in cash from the company, the result would be the same, though the bookkeeping somewhat different. If A owes B $150, but gives B a check for $200 and receives $50 back in change, the gross amount that A has paid is, practically speaking, but $150 and no more. This is the view that has been taken by nearly all the courts that have had occasion to pass on this question.

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Related

Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
99 N.E.2d 866 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1951)
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163 S.E. 653 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 P. 180, 37 Wyo. 189, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-national-life-insurance-v-jay-wyo-1927.