Workmen's Compensation Commission v. Property & Casualty Insurance Guaranty Corp.

536 A.2d 714, 74 Md. App. 99, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 42
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 4, 1988
DocketNo. 645
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 536 A.2d 714 (Workmen's Compensation Commission v. Property & Casualty Insurance Guaranty Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Workmen's Compensation Commission v. Property & Casualty Insurance Guaranty Corp., 536 A.2d 714, 74 Md. App. 99, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 42 (Md. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

POLLITT, Judge.

The Property and Casualty Insurance Guaranty Corporation (PCIGC) is a private, nonprofit, nonstock corporation created by the Legislature “to provide a mechanism for the prompt payment of covered claims under certain insurance [101]*101policies and to avoid financial loss to residents of Maryland who are claimants or policyholders of an insurer, including surety, which has become insolvent....” Maryland Code (1957, 1986 Repl. Yol.), Art. 48A, § 504. All insurers writing any kind of direct insurance, except life insurance, health insurance and annuities, are required to be members of the corporation as a condition of their authority to transact insurance business in the State.1 PCIGC is “exempt from payment of all fees and all taxes levied by this State or any of its subdivisions except taxes levied on real or personal property.” Art. 48A, § 515.

Under the provisions of the Worker’s Compensation law, the Subsequent Injury Fund (SIF), Article 101, § 66, and the Uninsured Employers’ Fund (UEF), Article 101, § 90 et. seq., are partially funded by assessments levied against employers and their insurers. When an employee is granted a worker’s compensation award, the employer or insurer paying the claim is charged with SIF and UEF assessments, which are computed as percentages of the award.

After the Workmen’s Compensation Commission2 (WCC) invoiced PCIGC for SIF and UEF assessments in cases where PCIGC had paid claims of injured workers because the employer’s insurer had become insolvent, PCIGC filed a complaint for injunctive and declaratory relief against WCC [102]*102in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. That court (Jacobson, J.) determined

that the assessments required by [A]rt. 101[,] §§ 66 and 91 are such “taxes or fees” as are contemplated by [A]rt. 48A[,] § 515.... [and] that PCIGC is not liable for the payment of such assessments.

From that judgment, the Commission appeals, asserting two questions, which it states as:

1. Whether the Circuit Court erred in holding that the Article 101 assessments are fees or taxes within the meaning of Article 48A, § 515.
2. Whether the Circuit Court erred in construing Article 48A, § 515 so as to create a conflict between that provision and other provisions governing the obligations of the PCIGC, and in leaving unresolved the question of who is responsible for the payment of the Article 101 assessments after an insurer becomes insolvent.

We agree with the trial judge that the sole issue before him was whether the SIF and UEF assessments constitute “fees or taxes.” If so, under the plain language of Article 48A, § 515, PCIGC is exempt from paying them.3

As Judge Jacobson observed, a review of a multitude of authorities attempting to define “fees” and “taxes” reveals no clear rule, the definitions varying from case to case in accordance with the particular facts in controversy. We have been referred to no appellate decision specifically holding that the assessments levied to support the Subsequent Injury Fund and the Uninsured Employers’ Fund are or are not “fees or taxes.” In his dissenting opinion in Cooper v. Wicomico County, 284 Md. 576, 585, 398 A.2d 1237, 1242 (1979), Judge Eldridge characterized the SIF assessments as

[103]*103in the nature of a general tax assessed against members of a certain group to cover expenses of administering a government program involving that group.

See also Cooper v. Wicomico County, 278 Md. 596, 607, 366 A.2d 55, 62 (1976) (Eldridge, J., dissenting). Although that statement is contained in a dissenting opinion, the nature of the assessment was not the point of disagreement with the majority.

In Allied American Co. v. Comm’r, 219 Md. 607, 150 A.2d 421 (1959), insurers challenged the assessments imposed upon them to partially finance the Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund—a fund designed to “indemnify the innocent victims of financially irresponsible owners and operators of motor vehicles.” Allied, supra, 219 Md. at 612, 150 A.2d at 424.

In determining the validity of the fund, the Court addressed the power and authority of the State to create such a fund and its authority to require private entities to finance it. In upholding the State’s authority to create the fund and impose assessments on insurers, the Court stated:

We think insurers have no sound ground on which to challenge the right of the State to levy the small percentage of the Maryland premiums they are required to pay annually to the fund. It is clearly established that the State may raise funds by taxation to expend for general welfare, and it is for the Legislature and not the taxpayers or the courts to choose the methods and subjects of taxation. It is no proper objection to a scheme of taxation that the benefits paid and those to whom they are paid are unrelated to the persons taxed and the amount they pay, or that those who have to pay may not have contributed to the conditions requiring the tax and may not be benefitted by the expenditure of the tax money.

Allied, supra, 219 Md. at 616, 150 A.2d at 427.

The Court concluded that the assessments and other obligations imposed under the Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund were justified as an exercise of the State’s [104]*104taxing power and the State’s police power. Allied, supra, 219 Md. at 623, 150 A.2d at 431. The Court reasoned that

[ajutomobile liability insurers make their profits because motorists use the roads and need protection both from paying claims and from not being able to collect if they are injured or damaged. It is reasonably conceivable, therefore, that insurers should be a group to pay taxes to be used to give protection to those who use the roads— those who are their paying customers.

Allied, supra, 219 Md. at 623-24, 150 A.2d at 431.

Appellant asserts, correctly, that the Court in Allied did not say such assessments are “taxes,” but merely held them to be constitutionally valid under the State’s taxing power. Appellant relies upon State Insurance v. Nationwide, 241 Md. 108, 215 A.2d 749 (1966), in which the Court held that the Unsatisfied Claim and Judgment Fund assessment constituted an “obligation” which statutorily justified a credit on an insurer’s retaliatory tax return. The Court did not decide whether such payments are taxes, but said:

For the purposes of this opinion, we shall assume, without deciding, that the payments did not come within the purview of “taxes, fees, fines, penalties, licenses [or] deposit requirements.” (In Allied Amer. Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Comm’r, 219 Md. 607, [150 A.2d 421

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536 A.2d 714, 74 Md. App. 99, 1988 Md. App. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/workmens-compensation-commission-v-property-casualty-insurance-guaranty-mdctspecapp-1988.