DocketNumber: 19405
Citation Numbers: 258 S.C. 272, 188 S.E.2d 374, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 334
Judges: Brailsford, Bussey
Filed Date: 4/24/1972
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
We are convinced that the order of the Circuit Court, as reported herewith, correctly disposes of the issues raised by the appellant. The exceptions are overruled and the judgment below is,
Affirmed.
ORDER OF JUDGE GRIMBALL
This action was instituted by Plaintiff on January 18, 1971, pursuant to Sections 10-2001 et seq. of the Code, for the purpose of obtaining a declaratory judgment regarding a question in actual controversy between Plaintiff and Defendant. The facts are not in dispute.
Plaintiff has the duty of collecting license fees imposed on foreign insurers by Sections 37-121 et seq. of the Code. Defendant is a foreign insurer organized under the laws of Mississippi which is licensed to transact insurance in this State. Section 37-124 imposes an additional and graded license fee of 2% of net premium income from the State. Section 37-125 provides that such fee shall be reduced if the insurer makes certain investments in the securities named in Section 37-123, to wit: notes or bonds of this State or of counties or municipalities of this State or subdivisions
The evidence discloses that Defendant has made substantial investments in States which do not have an investment credit statute such as Sections 37-123 and 37-125 — for example, in Arkansas which imposes a tax of only 2%. Defendant acknowledges that good will and diversification enter into the decision of making investments and that diversification requires Defendant to make investments in States in which it does not operate. Therefore it seems clear that the possibility of license tax investment credit is only one of the factors considered by an insurer in determining which investments should be made by the insurer.
There are insurers chartered by South Carolina which have agencies in Mississippi. Mississippi imposes a tax on a South Carolina insurer of 3% of its premium income from Missisippi which cannot be reduced as a result of its investments in Mississippi notes, bonds, etc. Additionally, Mississippi imposes a tax of only 1%% on Mississippi insurers and it gives its insurers certain credit for retaliatory taxes imposed on them by other States. Sections 9537-01 and 9537-04 of the Mississippi Statutes.
Section 37-132 of the Code provides as follows:
“§ 37-132. Increase of fees, etc., to those charged by other states. — Whenever the laws of any other state of the United
Plaintiff’s position is that Defendant is required by Section 37-132 to pay an additional amount to Plaintiff, to wit: 1% of its net premium income from South Carolina, so that Defendant will pay South Carolina the same amount which a South Carolina insurer is required to pay Mississippi, to wit: 3% of its net premium income from Missississippi. Defendant’s position is that Section 37-132 is not applicable here and that to give Section 37-132 the interpretation sought by Plaintiff would defeat the legislative intention of Sections 37-123 and 37-125 to encourage foreign insurers to invest in South Carolina securities or property.
Section 37-132 is usually referred to as the retaliatory law. It was derived from Act No. 793 of 1934 which is entitled as follows:
“An Act to Require Insurance Companies Organized Under the Laws of the States Other Than South Carolina to Pay to the State of South Carolina Not Less than the Same Amount for Penalties, Certificates of Authority, License Fees, Filing Fees or Otherwise as is Required by Such State to be Paid in Such State by Insurance Companies Incorporated Under the Laws of South Carolina.”
Our Supreme Court has not considered the nature of Section 37-132. It is similar to retaliatory laws of other States. One of the more recent decisions involving retaliatory laws is Republic Insurance Company v. Commissioner of Taxctrtion, 272 Minn. 325, 329, 138 N. W. (2d) 776, 779 (1965).
There the Court stated as follows:
“Certain preliminary observations may be made with reference to the general subject of retaliatory insurance laws. It may be said generally that states have enacted these laws to protect their own insurance companies doing business in other states. The theory of the state is that foreign insurance companies doing business in the taxing state should be subject to the same burdens as domestic insurance companies doing business in any foreign state. These statutes are primarily regulatory, the taxing feature being regarded as incidental. In some instances, statutes of various states so compliment each other as to achieve an equalization on the basis of reciprocity. But in the absence of such an accommodation, the application of retaliatory sanctions results.”
It has been held that retaliatory laws are penal in nature and therefore should be strictly construed. Nevertheless, the law should not be construed so as to defeat its purpose.
Sections 37-123 and 37-125 were recently considered in State v. Life Insurance Company of Georgia, 254 S. C. 286, 175 S. E. (2d) 203 (1970). In my view Sections 37-123 and 37-125 are subject to the provisions of Section 37-132. If similar investment credit is authorized by the foreign State, then South Carolina could not retaliate since the taxes imposed by the foreign State on a South
The Texas retaliatory law has a special provision, quoted in Republic, supra, which recognizes a reduction such as is authorized under Sections 37-123 and 37-125. This special provision prevents retaliation in a case such as is involved here. It is quoted in the Republic case as follows:
“ * * wherever under any law of this State the basic rate of taxation of any insurance company of another state * * * is reduced if any such insurance company has made investments in Texas securities then in computing the aggregate Texas premium tax burdens of any such insurance company of any other state * * * each shall for purpose of comparison with the premium tax laws of their home states be considered to have assumed and paid an aggregate premium tax burden equal to the basic rate * * (Italics supplied.)”
Had the Legislature intended the result authorized by the Texas special provision quoted above it could have said so very easily by inserting a similar provision in Section 37-132. I feel the Court should not read such a provision into Section 37-132.
In my view the question here is not whether it would be fair and equitable to conclude that Defendant has assumed and paid an aggregate premium tax burden equal to the basic rate — 3%—, in view of its ownership of South Carolina securities, but whether such conclusion is currently authorized by Section 37-132. I feel that it is not so authorized.
Defendant argues, in substance, that Plaintiff’s position would defeat the purpose of Sections 37-123 and 37-125, to wit: to encourage foreign insurers to invest in South
Defendant has called my attention to the decision in Williams v. Thomas Jefferson Insurance Company, 215 Tenn. 356, 385 S. W. (2d) 908 (1965). There the foreign insurer invested in certain Tennessee securities. The Tennessee statute provided for a credit upon the foreign insurer’s gross premium tax for its investments in Tennessee property and securities. The foreign insurer’s domiciliary State did not give such a credit to a Tennessee insurer doing business therein. The Tennessee Court held that retaliation was not required.
A Review of the Thomas Jefferson decision will disclose that there are certain differences between Tennessee and South Carolina. First, the Tennessee Court gave consider
The Texas investment statute, like Sections 37-123 and 37-125, is a partial exemption statute, Life Insurance Company of Georgia, supra; however, as earlier noted, the Texas retaliatory law has a special provision which prevents retaliation in a case such as is involved here. Section 37-132 does not contain a similar provision.