Western Assurance Co. v. Halliday

126 F. 257, 1 Ohio Law Rep. 643
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 3, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 126 F. 257 (Western Assurance Co. v. Halliday) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Assurance Co. v. Halliday, 126 F. 257, 1 Ohio Law Rep. 643 (6th Cir. 1903).

Opinion

Heard on appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Ohio.

This is a bill to restrain an alleged illegal and wrongful assessment of property owned by the complainant, a fire insurance company - incorporated under the laws of the Dominion of Canada.

Under Section 3660, Bevised Statutes of Ohio, as amended in 1894 (91 O. L., p. 40), the company, in 1895, deposited witty [644]*644tbe Superintendent oí Insurance of tbe State of Ohio, $100,000 par value of Ohio municipal bonds, which have been registered under Section 2711-20 Revised Statutes of Ohio, in the name of the said superintendent.

These bonds were delivered to him at his office in Franklin county, Ohio, and were by him deposited in the safe of the State Treasurer in the same county and have so remained on deposit until withdrawn in 1902.

The defendant Halliday, as auditor of Franklin county, Ohio, has caused these bonds to be assessed to the said complainant for the years 1895 to 1900 both inclusive.

The only object of this bill is to restrain the collection of the tax so assessed. To this bill the defendants demurred. The demurrer was sustained and the bill'dismissed.

The bonds sought to be taxed as having a situs in Ohio were deposited under Section 3660, Revised Statutes, which provides, that every foreign fire insurance company shall “deposit with the superintendent of insurance, for the. benefit and security of the policy-holders residing in this state, a sum not less than $100,000.00 in stocks or bonds of the United States, or the state of Ohio or any municipality or county thereof, which shall not be received by the superintendent at any rate above their par value; the stock and securities so deposited may be exchanged from time to time for other like securities; so long as the company so depositing continues solvent and. complies with the laws of this state, it shall be permitted by the superintendent to collect interest or dividends on such deposits.”

The trust is not different from that in reference to domestic life insurance companies required by Revised Statutes, 3593-3595, to make a like deposit with-the same official. After the rights of policy-holders under the law referred to were satisfied it was held that the bonds were subject to the claims- of the company and of the makers of the securities, so deposited, against the company. Falkenbach v. Patterson, 43 O. S., 360.

The trust in behalf of the policy-holders is one to be administered by the superintendent, hence the bonds can not be recovered from him by an assignee under the insolvent laws “without first showing that such company is no longer liable to any of its policy-holders.” State, ex rel, v. Matthews, 64 Ohio, 419.

[645]*645Subject to tbe claims of Ohio policy-holders, bonds so deposited constitute a part of the capital of the depositing company, invested in bonds, and by the express terms of Section 3660 “may be exchanged from time to time for other like securities,” and, “so long as the company continues solvent and complies with the laws of this state, it shall be permitted by the superintendent to collect interest or dividends on the deposit. ’ ’

Are municipal bonds so owned by a foreign insurance company doing business in Ohio, and so held on deposit subject to taxation under the laws of Ohio ?

That the jurisdiction of Ohio'for taxing purposes does not extend to subjects outside of the state is indisputable. There must be jurisdiction of either the property taxed or of its owner.

The complainant as a corporation, organized under the laws of the Dominion of Canada, according to the familiar fiction of the law, can dwell only in the place of its creation., Its legal domicile is therefore the Dominion of Canada. According to another fiction of the law, having its origin mainly in the necessity of uniformity in the law of succession to or distribution of personal estates of decedents, personal property is regarded as having only the domicile of the owner. But this, like most other fictions of law, is never permitted to stand in the face of the facts of an actual situation which' requires a different policy under the law of the actual situs.

It is, therefore, a well recognized exception to the maxim of mobilia sequunter personam, that for purposes of taxation it is entirely competent for the local' law to disregard the domicile of the owner and subject to taxation all movables, according to their situs.

Neither has the sovereign taxing power been content to confine itself to the taxation of things having an actual situs within the state, for it is not an unusual spectacle to find laws which are based upon the doctrine mobilia sequunter personam, subjecting to taxation such property as negotiable public securities, corporate stocks, etc., which have an actual situs outside of the state, upon the ground that the owner is a resident of the state, and his domicile the situs of such obligations, while at the same time disregarding the fiction in respect to like securities actually [646]*646within the state which are owned by residents of other states.

This exercise of the power of taxation according to both the actual fact of the situs and according to the fiction of the domicile of the owner, though inconsistent and seemingly unjust does not infringe the constitutional authority of the state, for in the one case it attains its end through its power over the property itself and in the other through its authority over the owner.

The books are full of cases sustaining such laws, a few of which now suffice for reference.

State Tax on Foreign Reid Bonds, 15 Wall., 300; Grant v. Jones, 39 Ohio State, 506; Walker v. Jack, 31 C. C. A., 462; Street Rd. Co. v. Morrow, 87 Tenn., 407; Judson on Taxation, Sec. 393-4; Savings Society v. Multnomah County, 169 U. S., 421, 428; New Orleans v. Stempel, 175 U. S., 309; Blackstone v. Miller, 171 N. Y., 682; and 188 U. S., 189, 206; Grundy County v. Tenn. Coal Co., 94 Tenn., 296; People v. Insurance Co., 29 Cal., 534; State v. Board of Assessors, 47 La. Ann., 1544; Matter of Whiting, 154 N. Y., 27; Hubbard v. Brush, 61 Ohio State, 252.

A distinction has been sometimes regarded both in legislation and judicial opinion between such intagibles as mere debts and the interest upon bonds held and owned outside the state, and such securities as public bonds and other negotiable instruments. “Bonds and negotiable instruments,” said Justice Holmes, speaking for the court in Blackstone v. Miller, cited heretofore, ‘ ‘ are more than mere evidence of debt. The debt is inseparable from the paper which declares and constitutes it by a tradition which comes down from more archaic conditions. Bacon v. Hooker, 171 Mass., 335, 337. Therefore, considering only the place of the property, it was held that bonds held out of the state could not be reached.” Referring to the foreign bonds case cited above, the justice added, ‘ ‘ The decision has been cut down to its precise point by later cases.”

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Bluebook (online)
126 F. 257, 1 Ohio Law Rep. 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-assurance-co-v-halliday-ca6-1903.