SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the
Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the
Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.)
Johnson & Johnson v. Director, Division of Taxation (A-51-19) (083612)
(NOTE: The Court did not write a plenary opinion in this case. The Court affirms
the judgment of the Appellate Division substantially for the reasons expressed in
Judge Haas’s opinion, published at 461 N.J. Super. 148 (App. Div. 2019).)
Argued October 27, 2020 -- Decided December 7, 2020
PER CURIAM
The Court considers the Appellate Division’s determination that, in light of the
Legislature’s 2011 amendment to N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64, respondent Johnson & Johnson
(J&J) was required to pay an insurance premium tax (IPT) based only upon its premium
for risks localized in New Jersey rather than upon its total United States premium.
J&J is insured through Middlesex Assurance, which it wholly owns and which
provides insurance exclusively to J&J. Middlesex is not a licensed or authorized
insurance dealer in New Jersey. As a result, J&J’s IPT requirements are governed by the
statutes regulating New Jersey’s “nonadmitted” or “unauthorized” insurance market.
The nonadmitted market is comprised of two main types of unauthorized
insurance markets, which are separate and distinct from each other: the surplus lines
market and the self-procured market. The principal difference is that surplus lines
insurance is purchased through a surplus lines agent who bears responsibility for paying
any insurance premium taxes, N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59, while the insured is responsible for
paying premium taxes on self-procured insurance, N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64.
Prior to 2011, New Jersey collected IPT on both surplus lines and self-procured
insurance that covered risks located in New Jersey. See N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 (2010)
and -6.64 (2010). If the insurance covered risks located in other states as well, those
other states could each assess IPTs based on the premium for the risk located there.
In 2011, Congress enacted the Nonadmitted and Reinsurance Reform Act
(NRRA), 15 U.S.C. §§ 8201 to 8206. Most relevant here, the NRRA provides that, in
cases where nonadmitted insurance covers multistate risks, “[n]o State other than the
home State of an insured may require any premium tax payment for nonadmitted
insurance.” 15 U.S.C. § 8201(a).
1
That new Home State Rule prompted the New Jersey Legislature to amend certain
state insurance laws. See L. 2011, c. 119. As relevant here, a sentence was added to both
N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 and -6.64: “If a surplus lines policy covers risks or exposures in this
State and other states, where this State is the home state, . . . the tax payable pursuant to
this section shall be based on the total United States premium for the applicable policy.”
Although that sentence was added to N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64, the rest of that statute
was left unchanged, including the statute’s requirements that every holder of self-
procured insurance report when it procures or continues coverage “upon a subject of
insurance resident, located or to be performed within this State, other than insurance
procured through a surplus lines agent pursuant to the surplus lines law of this State,” and
pay a five-percent IPT for such coverage.
Here, it is undisputed that J&J’s insurance is self-procured. Prior to the 2011
Amendments, J&J accordingly paid IPT based on its New Jersey-located risks. The
question here is whether, in light of the 2011 Amendments, J&J is now also required to
pay IPT to its home state of New Jersey on its nationwide coverage. In other words, did
the 2011 Amendments extend an obligation to pay IPT based on the total United States
premium solely to holders of surplus lines policies, or did they also impose that
obligation upon holders of self-procured policies, like J&J?
In the wake of the 2011 Amendments, J&J increased its IPT payments to reflect
the amount due on its nationwide insurance premiums “as a precautionary measure.” J&J
continued to make those voluntary payments until November 2015, when it filed a claim
with the Department of Banking and Insurance (DOBI) and the Director of the Division
of Taxation (Division) seeking a refund of IPT in the amount of nearly $56 million, plus
interest. The Division denied J&J’s refund claim in August 2016.
J&J then filed a complaint in the Tax Court. See 30 N.J. Tax 479, 490-91 (Tax Ct.
2018). The Tax Court found in favor of the Division and DOBI, concluding that the 2011
“amendments apply the Home State Rule to all nonadmitted insurance including self-
procured captive insurance.” Id. at 513. The court acknowledged that “the addition of a
paragraph in the self-procurement statute relating to surplus lines policies is problematic,
as is the failure to remove the original language allocating the IPT to the location of the
risk.” Ibid. “Nonetheless,” the court reasoned, “the Legislature’s intent is clear and
purposeful. By amending both N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 and -6.64, the Legislature kept
consistent its equal treatment of nonadmitted insurers, and maximized its nonadmitted
IPT revenue stream under the NRRA.” Ibid.
The Appellate Division reversed, finding that “J&J’s IPT obligation should have
continued to be based solely upon the risks it insured that were located within New
Jersey” because N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64 provided -- both before and after the 2011
Amendments -- “that IPT was to be calculated at the rate of ‘5% of the gross amount of
such premium’ paid for insurance procured ‘upon a subject of insurance resident, located
or to be performed within [New Jersey].’” 461 N.J. Super. 148, 151 (App. Div. 2019).
2
Stressing that the original plain language of N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64 “clearly limited
J&J’s tax liability to the risks it insured in New Jersey [and] was not changed in any way,
shape, or form in the 2011 amendment to” that section, the Appellate Division explained
that it was “bound to follow and apply” that language. Id. at 163. The appellate court
was not persuaded that the sentence added to both N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 and -6.64
extended the application of the Home State Rule to self-procured policies because that
added sentence “is limited by its express terms to ‘surplus lines polic[ies] cover[ing] risks
or exposures in this State and other states.’” Id. at 164 (quoting N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64).
The court reasoned that, because “J&J does not procure surplus lines coverage from
Middlesex Assurance,” that added sentence “is simply inapplicable to J&J.” Ibid.
The Appellate Division ultimately declared itself “unable to conclude that the
Legislature, by specifically stating that the Home State Rule only applied to surplus
insurance coverage obtained through surplus line agents, likewise intended to extend it to
the types of insurance coverage procured by J&J from Middlesex Assurance.” Ibid.
The Court granted certification. 241 N.J. 94 (2020).
HELD: The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed substantially for the reasons
expressed in Judge Haas’s thoughtful opinion, which rests heavily on the plain language
of N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64. 461 N.J. Super. at 162-64. The Legislature, of course, may
amend the statute if it chooses to do so.
AFFIRMED.
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA, dissenting, finds that the plain language argument
advanced here asks the Court to put on blinders and ignore the effort the Legislature has
made to achieve taxation of premiums on nationwide risks insured by entities for which
New Jersey is the home state. Stressing the primacy of legislative intent in statutory
construction, as well as the deference due the Division’s interpretation of tax statutes, the
dissent explains that the only conceivable purpose for including the new clause in
N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64 was to impose nationwide premium taxation on home-state insureds
with self-procured coverage. That purpose is further evidenced by the new provisions
allowing the State to engage in compacts with other states for the collection of taxation
under N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64 as well as -6.59. Noting that the Legislature has at times
referred to all nonadmitted insurance as surplus lines coverage, without distinguishing
between surplus lines insurance and self-procured insurance, the dissent opines that
reading the new clause in -6.64 to draw such a distinction renders the clause meaningless.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, FERNANDEZ-VINA,
SOLOMON, and PIERRE-LOUIS join in this opinion. JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
filed a dissent. JUSTICE PATTERSON did not participate.
3
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-51 September Term 2019
083612
Johnson & Johnson,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
Director, Division of Taxation, and Commissioner,
Department of Banking and Insurance,
Defendants-Appellants.
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at
461 N.J. Super. 148 (App. Div. 2019).
Argued Decided
October 27, 2020 December 7, 2020
William B. Puskas, Jr., Deputy Attorney General, argued
the cause for appellants (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney
General, of counsel, and William B. Puskas, Jr., on the
brief).
Margaret C. Wilson argued the cause for respondent
(Wilson Law Group, attorneys; Margaret C. Wilson, on
the brief).
PER CURIAM
1
The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed substantially for the
reasons expressed in Judge Haas’s thoughtful opinion, which rests heavily on
the plain language of N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64. Johnson & Johnson v. Dir., Div. of
Tax’n, 461 N.J. Super. 148, 162-64 (App. Div. 2019). The Legislature, of
course, may amend the statute if it chooses to do so.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, FERNANDEZ-VINA,
SOLOMON, and PIERRE-LOUIS join in this opinion. JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
filed a dissent. JUSTICE PATTERSON did not participate.
2
Johnson & Johnson,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
Director, Division of Taxation, and Commissioner,
Department of Banking and Insurance,
Defendants-Appellants.
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA, dissenting.
I cannot join in the majority’s affirmance of the Appellate Division’s
judgment in this matter. For the reasons expressed herein, I agree with the
judgment of the Tax Court, which upheld the tax imposed on the corporate
taxpayer in this matter. I write separately to add my reasons for believing that
the Tax Court reached the correct outcome.
I.
This appeal requires the Court to review the State’s tax treatment of
certain premiums paid by Johnson & Johnson (J&J) for insurance policies
following the Legislature’s 2011 amendments and additions to what is
commonly known as the Surplus Lines Law. In those amendments, for reasons
set forth herein, the Legislature made evident its intent to exercise its right to
1
impose insurance premium taxation on the nationwide risks of an insured that
has New Jersey as its home state, such as J&J. At stake in this interpretative
question is whether the State must reimburse J&J the approximately $56
million in insurance premium taxes it has already paid on its self-procured
insurance. In my view, J&J is not entitled to that reimbursement.
A brief recitation of the factual and procedural setting of this matter
provides sufficient context for my disagreement with the majority’s outcome
in this appeal.
J&J is an international corporation headquartered in New Brunswick,
New Jersey. J&J maintains insurance purchased through Middlesex
Assurance, a Bermuda corporation that was subsequently re-domiciled in
Vermont. Middlesex Assurance is wholly owned and controlled by J&J,
making Middlesex Assurance a single-parent captive insurance company.
Middlesex Assurance is not a licensed or authorized insurance dealer in New
Jersey.
The insurance at issue is regulated under the Surplus Lines Law,
N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.40 to -6.65. New Jersey assesses a tax of five percent on all
insurance premiums (insurance premium tax or IPT) from unauthorized foreign
or alien insurers, sometimes referred to as nonadmitted insurers. N.J.S.A.
17:22-6:59 and -6.64. Our law divides the nonadmitted insurance market into
2
two categories: surplus lines insurance and self-procured insurance. The
principal difference is that surplus lines insurance is purchased through a
surplus lines agent who bears responsibility for paying any insurance premium
taxes, while the insured is responsible for paying premium taxes on self-
procured insurance, which is obtained without an agent. Ibid.
Before 2011, federal law permitted states to assess taxes on premiums
paid to nonadmitted insurers only to the extent that those premiums covered
risks in-state. The federal Nonadmitted and Reinsurance Reform Act (NRRA)
modified that scheme to both limit and expand state powers to tax insurance.
Now, under the NRRA, nonadmitted insurance premiums may be taxed only
by the “home state” of the insured entity. 15 U.S.C. §§ 8201(a), 8206(6)(A).
But that home state may tax the whole of that insured entity’s nonadmitted
premiums -- even if some or all of the insured risks are situated out-of-state.
15 U.S.C. § 8201(a). 1
To make use of that newfound authority to tax, the New Jersey
Legislature passed S. 2930 (2011) (the 2011 Amendments) for the express
purpose of “bring[ing] the surplus lines law . . . into compliance with the
1
State taxes imposed pursuant to the NRRA are sometimes referred to as
relying on the “Home State Rule”; however, for simplicity’s sake, this dissent
shall refer to an IPT assessed upon the whole of an in-state entity’s insurance
premiums as “nationwide premium taxation” or a “nationwide IPT.”
3
[NRRA].” Sponsors’ Statement to S. 2930 7 (L. 2011, c. 119). The 2011
Amendments altered both N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59, the section imposing taxation
on surplus lines coverage, and N.J.S.A. 17:22-64, the section imposing a tax
on all other nonadmitted insurance coverage. Both sections now include an
identical clause regarding nationwide premium taxation:
If a surplus lines policy covers risks or exposures in this
State and other states, where this State is the home state,
as defined in section 7 of L. 1960, c. 32 ([N.J.S.A.]
17:22–6.41), the tax payable pursuant to this section
shall be based on the total United States premium for
the applicable policy.
[N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 and -6.64.]
J&J had historically paid the New Jersey Division of Taxation (the
Division) within the Department of the Treasury IPT on the portion of its
premiums allocable to risks in New Jersey. After the 2011 Amendments, J&J
increased its IPT payments to reflect the amount due on its nationwide
insurance premiums in what it describes “as a precautionary measure.”
However, in 2015, J&J concluded that, notwithstanding the enactment of the
2011 Amendments, it was required to pay IPT only on the portion of its
insurance premiums attributable to New Jersey-based risks. It therefore filed a
claim with the Division seeking the refund of its claimed IPT overpayment in
the amount of $55,902,070.95 plus interest.
4
J&J principally argued that the NRRA and the new statutory language
quoted above, which was inserted into N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 and -6.64 via the
2011 Amendments, changed only the tax treatment of surplus lines coverage.
Because J&J did not purchase its insurance through a surplus lines agent, J&J
claimed that it held self-procured insurance, which it argued was unimpacted
by the 2011 Amendments.
The Department of Banking & Insurance, and specifically the
Commissioner of that Department, is assigned supervisory and administrative
responsibilities in the regulatory area that includes this taxing scheme. See
generally N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.40 to -6.84.2 The Department issued a letter
rejecting J&J’s asserted basis for claiming entitlement to a refund because, in
its view, the 2011 Amendments extended to self-procured policies such as
J&J’s. Thereafter, the Division denied the claim.
2
In particular, the Commissioner is empowered to set standards for financial
integrity for nonadmitted surplus lines insurers eligible to have insurance
placed through a licensed surplus lines agent and to publish lists of such
eligible insurers, N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.45; to establish and operate “The Surplus
Lines Examining Office,” id. at -6.48; to revoke the license of a surplus lines
agent, id. at -6.61; to collect taxes levied upon premiums for other nonadmitted
insurance, which tax is required to be paid by an insured and not through a
surplus lines agent, id. at -6.64; to order production of records relating to
nonadmitted insurance policies, id. at -6.65; to enter into interstate compacts
allocating taxation authority over policies that cover multi-state risks, id.
at -6.69d; and to adopt rules and regulations governing nonadmitted insurance
policies, id. at -6.69g.
5
J&J then filed this action with the Tax Court. The matter proceeded on
the basis of cross motions for summary judgment.
In granting summary judgment for the Division and denying summary
judgment to J&J, the Tax Court held that J&J was not entitled to the
reimbursement requested. Johnson & Johnson v. Dir., Div. of Tax’n, 30 N.J.
Tax 479, 513 (Tax 2018). Although the Tax Court did not rely on the
Division’s argument that the term “surplus lines policy” in the newly added
sentence inserted into N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 and -6.64 was definitionally meant
to include both surplus lines coverage and self-procured coverage, the court
nevertheless held that the 2011 Amendments evidenced an overall legislative
intent to impose nationwide premium taxation on both surplus lines policies
and self-procured coverage. Id. at 511. The Tax Court took into account the
Legislature’s consistent pattern of treating the two types of policies equally.
Id. at 511-12. That -- when combined with the perceived clear legislative
intent to impose nationwide insurance premium taxation -- was determined to
outweigh the reference to “surplus lines policies” in the newly inserted
language in N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64, taking into consideration the identical
language in both statutes. Id. at 512-13.
J&J appealed, and the Appellate Division reversed and remanded the
matter for a determination of the amount of refund due to J&J. Johnson &
6
Johnson v. Dir., Div. of Tax’n, 461 N.J. Super. 148, 165 (App. Div. 2019).
The court held that the plain language of the new insertion into N.J.S.A. 17:22-
6.64 is limited to surplus lines coverage, which does not include self-procured
coverage. Id. at 163-64. The panel further relied on the principle that, even if
it found some ambiguity in the legislative amendment, that ambiguity would
have to be resolved in favor of the taxpayer, J&J. Id. at 165.
II.
In this matter of statutory interpretation involving a pure question of
law, our Court’s review is de novo. Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
142 N.J. 520, 539-40 (1995). The arguments take two starkly different views
of legislative intent concerning the perplexing insertion of identical language
into two provisions dealing with the taxation of insurance premiums paid by
home-state insureds with respect to two categories of nonadmitted insurers in
the wake of a change in federal law that prompted revision in the states’ taxing
of such premiums.
The Division’s arguments can be summarized as a straightforward
proposition: the Legislature’s historically parallel treatment of surplus lines
coverage and self-procured coverage, combined with the Legislature’s clear
intention that the 2011 Amendments impose nationwide IPT, should be read to
outweigh the technical language of the statutes. The Division points to further
7
evidence of legislative intent by noting the addition of a new section allowing
the Commissioner of Banking and Insurance to enter into compacts with other
states -- for administrative ease and efficiency in the collection of receipts
from entities that implicate multi-state risks -- with respect to taxes to be
collected under either N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 or -6.64. In addition, the Division
highlights legislative history discussing the State’s loss of revenue from
NRRA and expressing an intent to “maximize the tax revenue rightfully due
and owing the State.” Sponsors’ Statement to S. 2930 8 (L. 2011, c. 119). In
sum, the Division maintains that the new authority granted to the
Commissioner plainly evidences the Legislature’s intention to allow collection
through -6.64 of nationwide premium taxation on self-procured risks for home-
state insureds.
J&J, in turn, roots its argument in the asserted plain language of the
statute. J&J cites language within the Surplus Lines Law indicating that the
act does not apply to “insurance coverages which are independently procured
as provided in [N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64].” N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.40 (emphasis added).
The text of -6.64 begins by clarifying that it extends to insurance “other than
insurance procured through a surplus lines agent pursuant to the surplus lines
law.” According to J&J, while both sections were created through the same
enactment, the Surplus Lines Law clearly distinguishes self-procured insurance
8
-- which is not obtained through a surplus lines agent -- from surplus lines
coverage. J&J asserts that the new language addressing “the total United
States premium,” quoted in full above, can therefore impact only surplus lines
coverage (i.e., not self-procured insurance), even though that language was
inserted into N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64, a provision that addresses only self-procured
insurance.
III.
For me, the plain language argument asks the Court to put on blinders
and ignore the effort the Legislature has made to achieve taxation of premiums
on nationwide risks insured by entities for which New Jersey is the home state.
I cannot accept the argument.
The “overriding goal” of statutory construction “must be to determine
the Legislature’s intent.” Dep’t of Law & Pub. Safety v. Gonzalez, 142 N.J.
618, 627 (1995). We have heretofore always recognized that “when a ‘literal
interpretation of individual statutory terms or provisions’ would lead to results
‘inconsistent with the overall purpose of the statute,’ that interpretation should
be rejected.” Hubbard ex rel. Hubbard v. Reed, 168 N.J. 387, 392-93 (2001)
(quoting Cornblatt v. Barow, 153 N.J. 218, 242 (1998)). Indeed, the
Legislature has acknowledged that very principle in the statute to which we
adhere when following its direction on statutory construction: N.J.S.A. 1:1-1
9
provides that, when interpreting a law, courts should give words their plain
meaning “unless inconsistent with the manifest intent of the legislature.”
Through that language, the Legislature asks courts to opt for intended results ,
not ones that are contrary to manifest intent.
Furthermore, the Court owes deference to the Division’s interpretations
of tax statutes. The Division’s interpretation of a tax statute “is entitled to
prevail, so long as it is not plainly unreasonable.” Metromedia, Inc. v. Dir.,
Div. of Tax’n, 97 N.J. 313, 327 (1984). Such deference is especially
appropriate “when the case involves the construction of a new statute by its
implementing agency.” Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc. v. Train, 510 F.2d 692,
706 (D.C. Cir. 1974). That principle is plainly applicable here, for the
Department of Banking and Insurance has weighed in, and strongly,
concerning the intent of the adjustment to the taxing of premiums paid by
home-state insureds to nonadmitted insurers in the wake of the change in
federal law.
The only conceivable purpose for including the new clause in N.J.S.A.
17:22-6.64 was to impose nationwide premium taxation on home-state
insureds with self-procured coverage. The NRRA was specifically passed with
a future effective date to allow states to recalibrate their insurance taxation
systems. Following the passage of the NRRA, at least forty-three states
10
undertook such reforms. Insurance Oversight: Policy Implications for U.S.
Consumers, Businesses and Jobs: Hearing Before the H. Subcomm. on Ins.,
Housing, & Cmty. Opportunity, 112th Cong. 29 (2011) (statement of Letha
Heaton on behalf of the National Association of Professional Surplus Lines
Offices, Ltd.). Those reforms typically had the same, clear objective: to claim
the newly available revenue (from nationwide taxation of nonadmitted
insurance held by “at home” entities) to compensate for the revenue withdrawn
(from taxation of nonadmitted insurance on in-state risks held by out-of-state
entities). See, e.g., 78 Del. Laws c. 176 (2011) (“[P]rotecting the revenue of
this State . . . may be accomplished by facilitating the payment and collection
of premium tax on nonadmitted insurance . . . .”); Fiscal Note to S. 1096 (2011
Pa. Laws 194, No. 28) (June 26, 2011) (noting that imposing nationwide
taxation on home-state insureds would compensate for revenue loss caused by
the NRRA).
In New Jersey’s instance, as noted above, the 2011 Amendments
introduced the same clause into the sections dealing with surplus lines
coverage and self-procured coverage:
If a surplus lines policy covers risks or exposures in this
State and other states, where this State is the home state,
as defined in section 7 of L. 1960, c. 32 ([N.J.S.A.]
17:22-6.41), the tax payable pursuant to this section
shall be based on the total United States premium for
the applicable policy.
11
[N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 and -6.64 (emphasis added).]
Accepting J&J’s interpretation, that provision is not just effectively a
nullity, it is a wholly meaningless addition to N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64 because
N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.59 already adopts a rule of nationwide premium taxation for
surplus lines policies. We have said repeatedly that courts “must avoid an
interpretation that renders words in a statute surplusage.” Shelton v.
Restaurant.com, Inc., 214 N.J. 419, 440 (2013). The Court should “assume
that the Legislature purposely included every word, and[] strive to give every
word its logical effect.” Id. at 441.
The canon against surplusage weighs heavily in favor of reading
N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64 in the sensible manner that the Legislature clearly
intended, rather than rendering the Legislature’s enactment entirely
ineffectual. And the legislative history of the Surplus Lines Law provides still
more support for the Division’s position.
The history of legislative actions relating to the surplus lines section,
N.J.S.A. 17:22-6:59, and the self-procured section, N.J.S.A. 17:22-6:64,
demonstrates that the Legislature has used the term “surplus lines” as
interchangeable with “nonadmitted insurance,” i.e., to encompass both surplus
lines insurance and self-procured insurance. When the Legislature raised the
tax on nonadmitted insurers from three percent to five percent, the legislative
12
budget committee statement in the General Assembly explained that “[t]his
bill, as amended, increases the premium receipts tax for surplus lines coverage
from 3% to 5%.” Assem. Budget Comm. Statement to A. 1408 1 (June 22,
2009). But the law increased the tax rates on both surplus lines policies and
self-procured policies. L. 2009, c. 75, §§ 4, 5. Similarly, the Office of
Legislative Services estimated the revenue increase from the elevated tax on
“Surplus lines carriers” as if the adjustments to N.J.S.A. 17:22-6:59 and -6.64
impacted a singular tax. Legis. Fiscal Estimate for A. 1408 1 (June 22, 2009).
Nowhere in the legislative history of the 2009 law does there appear a
reference to self-procured insurance as being separate from surplus lines
insurance. Additionally, L. 1996, c. 69, which provided a series of technical
fixes to the Surplus Lines Law, is entitled “An act concerning surplus lines
insurers,” despite its application to both N.J.S.A. 17:22-6:59 and -6.64.
This case is a far cry from one where it can be said that a statute’s
language plainly directs its outcome, in my view. Further evidence of the lack
of a plain meaning to be attributed to the “surplus lines coverage” verbiage
used in the two clauses added in 2011 -- and specifically those words where
inserted into N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64 -- can be gleaned from review of other
relevant provisions of the Surplus Lines Law.
13
It is important to consider here that “surplus lines coverage” is not a
defined term in the Surplus Lines Law. See N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.41. However,
the law does offer a definition of “surplus lines insurer” that is quite broad:
“an unauthorized insurer in which an insurance coverage is placed or may be
placed under this surplus lines law.” N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.41(b). That broad
reference reaches all nonadmitted insurance, including self-procured insurance,
because self-procured insurance is covered by N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.64, which was
enacted as a part of the Surplus Lines Law. L. 1960, c. 32, § 30.
The interpretation advanced by the Division -- that the undefined phrase
“surplus lines coverage” in -6.59 incorporates a reference to both self-procured
polices and policies procured through a surplus lines agent -- does not make
the 2011 Amendments redundant as to -6.64. The amendatory language
needed to be separately included in -6.64 because the tax imposed through that
section is collected from the insured rather than through a surplus lines agent,
as in -6.59. Inclusion of the amendatory language solely in N.J.S.A. 17:22-
6.59 would have been insufficient to impose an IPT on the premiums for self-
procured insurance. There had to be a second inclusion in -6.64 because there
is no agent (as there is in -6.59) on whom to impose the duty to collect the tax.
Placing the reference in both statutes was necessary to effectuate the tax’s
collection. Thus, the Division’s interpretation does not render N.J.S.A. 17:22-
14
6.64’s levy of the IPT upon self-procured coverage to be without meaning or
legal effect.
On the other hand, the canon against surplusage does not work in an
opposite direction to support J&J’s position. To be sure, N.J.S.A. 17:22-6.40
states that the Surplus Lines Law -- which includes -6.64 -- does not apply
to -6.64, but that statement is not as paradoxical as it appears. As Division’s
counsel argued, there are regulatory provisions governing surplus lines agents’
procurement of surplus lines insurance that are not applicable to self-procured
insurance from unaffiliated insurers. In -6.40, in contrast to -6.59, the term
“surplus lines” is used not as a catch-all denoting all nonadmitted insurance,
but rather to refer to a specific category of nonadmitted insurance. 3
The NRRA defined its terms so as to clearly apply to “surplus lines or
independently procured insurance coverage.” See 15 U.S.C. § 8206(12)
(emphasis added). As the Division argues, the NRRA included the word “or,”
emphasizing that “[i]f Congress wanted the NRRA to apply only to surplus
lines transactions, it would have said so. It did not.” Sadly, this appeal would
3
This Court has contributed to a muddying of the two categories on occasion.
See, e.g., R.R. Roofing & Bldg. Supply Co. v. Fin. Fire & Cas. Co., 85 N.J.
384, 389 (1981) (defining “[s]urplus lines insurance [as] involv[ing] New
Jersey risks which insurance companies authorized or admitted to do business
in this State have refused to cover by reason of the nature of the risk”).
Technically, that definition describes nonadmitted insurance as a whole, which
encompasses both surplus lines coverage and self-procured insurance.
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have been much more straightforward had the amendatory language used by
the Legislature in the wake of the NRRA’s enactment been similarly clear in
expression. Rather, it appears that the Legislature has allowed itself on several
occasions in the past, and again in the 2011 Amendments, to be lulled into
referring to all nonadmitted insurance as surplus lines coverage, without
acknowledging the Surplus Lines Law’s original distinction between surplus
lines insurance and self-procured insurance. Nevertheless, the legislative
amendments enacted in 2011 to render New Jersey taxation in this area
consistent with the rules of the NRRA convey to me an unmistakable intent to
impose nationwide premium taxation on both forms of nonadmitted insurance.
Because the amendments’ structure, new compact provisions, and
legislative history reveal the Legislature’s intent to capture this revenue, I find
inapplicable the default rule provided in Fedders Financial Corp. v. Director,
Division of Taxation, 96 N.J. 376, 385-86 (1984), which resolves ambiguity in
a tax statute, after other efforts to discern legislative intent fail, in favor of the
taxpayer. That rule applies when there is no evidence of legislative intent in
the extrinsic aids available to instruct a court. I find evidence of the legislative
intent unmistakable here for the reasons expressed. Therefore, I decline to
ignore that intention and require the State to reimburse paid premiums that J&J
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has made in IPT for its nationwide insured risks covered by insurance it self -
procured through its wholly owned captive insurance company.
For all those reasons, I respectfully dissent.
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