Van Schaick v. Commissioner

32 B.T.A. 736, 1935 BTA LEXIS 897
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1935
DocketDocket No. 67263.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 32 B.T.A. 736 (Van Schaick v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Schaick v. Commissioner, 32 B.T.A. 736, 1935 BTA LEXIS 897 (bta 1935).

Opinion

[739]*739OPINION.

Matthews:

Other questions than those raised by the pleadings suggest themselves. First, have we jurisdiction? The answer to this depends on whether the liquidation proceeding under section 63 of the Insurance Law of New York is a receivership proceeding in a state court within the meaning of section 274 (a) of the Bevenue Act of 1928. This section provides that no petition for the redeter-mination of a deficiency shall be filed with the Board after the appointment of a receiver for the taxpayer “ in a receivership proceeding before any court ” of any state.

If the Superintendent of Insurance of the State of New York is the receiver of the taxpayer in a “ receivership proceeding before a court of the State of New York ”, we have no jurisdiction, the taxpayer having been decreed insolvent and liquidation ordered in 1921, long before the taxable years here involved and the filing of the petition. In Farrell v. Stoddard, 1 Fed. (2d) 802, the court had before it the question as to the nature of the liquidation proceeding under section 63 of the Insurance Law of New York. With respect to this, the court said:

An examination of section 63 of the Insurance Law of the state of New York makes it clear that the superintendent of insurance is a public officer in the executive department of the1 state government, and that he still retains his character as a public officer when he acts as liquidator of insurance companies under the provisions of this statute. His power to act as custodian of th,e res comes alone from the statute. The judicial power cannot change or modify this statute, or affect his power in any respect whatever. True, the defendant must first apply to the court for an order to act as liquidator. That, however, merely means that the court must give the signal to start the machinery under which the superintendent, the agent of the executive power, acts. Thereafter the defendant, as the representative of tire executive power, pays no heed to the court or its mandates. His chart is the statute under which he acts.

The Superintendent of Insurance of New York is, therefore a statutory receiver and the liquidation proceeding is not a receivership proceeding in a state court within the meaning of section 274 (a). The Board has jurisdiction.

[740]*740The question also arises as to whether an insurance company in process of liquidation, as here, is subject to the special provisions of the revenue act relating to insurance companies.

The taxpayer is an insurance company other than life or mutual. The fact that it is being liquidated by the Superintendent of Insurance of New York and has been in process of liquidation since February 1921' does not change the character of the corporation. It is, therefore, subject to the tax imposed by section 204 of the Revenue Act of 1928 on insurance companies other than life or mutual, and its net income is required to be computed under the provisions of that section, the pertinent portions of which are quoted in the margin.1

The petitioner concedes that the interest received in 1928 and 1929 on the awards is subject to tax, but contends that the principal of the awards is not subject to tax, since it is neither investment income, underwriting income, nor gain on the sale or disposition of property.

It is clear that the principal of the awards was neither investment income nor gain derived from the sale of property; hence, it is not to be included in gross income unless it is underwriting income within the meaning of the statute.

[741]*741Counsel for petitioner states that from the terms employed m the statute and the reference in the statute to the annual statement approved by the National Convention of Insurance Commissioners, the question whether the principal of the awards received by the taxpayer was taxable income resolves itself finally into the question whether the proceeds of the award come within the meaning of the term “ salvage ”, and reaches the conclusion that the proceeds of the awards are not salvage. He contends that the technical meaning of the term “ salvage ” as used in the law of insurance, which has application here, is the proceeds received by the insurer (1) after paying total loss or amount of valuation in a valued policy, out of the property, the subject matter of the insurance contract, or (2) after paying total or partial loss, out of the claim that passes to the insurer by virtue of the right of subrogation and not as an incident to the property in the subject matter of the insurance contract, citing Richards on Insurance, 3d ed., sec. 196; Phoenix Insurance Co. v. Erie & Western Transportation Co., 117 U. S. 312, 320; and St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Commercial Union Insurance Co., 139 U. S. 223, 235. It is further contended that clearly the awards were not received out of the subject matter of the insurance contracts and that it is equally apparent that the principal of the awards was not received out of the claims that passed to the taxpayer as an insurer by virtue of the right of subrogation, since the assured had no claims agáinst the German Government by whose order the boats were sunk, for the reason that under the rules of international law a belligerent has the right to capture, confiscate, and destroy enemy property on the high seas and no right of indemnification accrues to the enemy whose property has been captured or destroyed, citing United States v. White Dental Mfg. Co., 274 U. S. 398, 402; that since the awards received from the Mixed Claims Commission were received neither out of the property which was the subject matter of the insurance contract nor by virtue of the right of subrogation, the principal of the awards does not come under the definition of the term “salvage ”, and is, therefore, not brought within the classification of underwriting income in section 204.

We agree with petitioner that the term “ salvage ” as used in section 204 has the meaning ascribed to it, but we do not agree that taxpayer did not receive the awards by virtue of its right of subrogation to the claims of the assured whose boats were sunk or captured by Germany. Cf. Marine Transport Co. v. Commissioner, 77 Fed. (2d) 177.

In the instant case the taxpayer, as a marine insurer, was called upon to pay and did pay substantial amounts on policies written by it because the property insured had been seized or destroyed by the [742]*742German Government during the years 1914 to 1918, inclusive. A marine insurer is entitled to be subrogated pro tambo to the claims of the insured against a third person primarily liable for the losses and it was by virtue of its right of subrogation that the taxpayer received the awards in question. In Phoenix Insurance Co. v. Erie & Western Transportation Co., supra, one of the cases cited by petitioner, the Supreme Court said:

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Van Schaick v. Commissioner
32 B.T.A. 736 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
32 B.T.A. 736, 1935 BTA LEXIS 897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-schaick-v-commissioner-bta-1935.