State v. Insurance Co.

BRIER OR G. w. PICKLE, ATTORNEY-GENERAL, ON PETITION TO REHEAR.

Statement of Case. — The effect of the Court’s decision upon the Insurance Department may be aptly illustrated by supposing- that the Attorney-general ' has been called upon to answer the following letter • from the Insurance Commis*296sioner, presenting some of tbe questions tbat must naturally arise:

INSURANCE BUREAU,

Nashville, TeNN., January 21, 1901.

JIoN. G-. W.' Pickle,

Nashville, TeNN. :

Dear Sir — Tbe Insurance Department needs and desires your opinion and advice upon tbe following questions:

Several of tbe foreign insurance companies, botb fire and life, tbat have heretofore been doing business in tbe State, and paying tbe tax of 2-J per cent, of tbeir “gross premium receipts” without question, claim tbát they are not liable for this tax under tbe recent decision of tbe Supreme Court, in tbe Connecticut Mutual Company’s case. Tbeir contention is tbat they are not doing business in tbe State, because, under tbeir methods, they do not collect or receive premiums in tbe State, but outside tbe State, -at tbeir borne office or other agencies.

1. Tbe New York Life maintains a large corps of agents in tbe State, who solicit and forward applications for insurance, receive and deliver policies to citizens, and adjust losses; but these agents do not receive or collect either initial or renewal premiums. When notes are taken for premiums, they are made payable at tbe home office, and sent direct to tbe home office by tbe makers. All premiums are ' paid direct to' tbe *297home office through mail or express agencies. The agents are paid salaries. This company insists that it receives no premiums in the State, and is not, therefore, liable for tax. Is it liable for tax. ?

2. The Mutual Benefit Life does business by a like metuhod, except that the premiums on its policies, both initial and renewal, are made payable just ten days before the date prescribed for the return of the semiannual reports of these companies to this department.

These premiums are made payable outside the State, either at the home office or other agency. This company takes the precaution to withdraw all its agents from the State, and ceases to. solicit and take new business during the periods that its premiums fall due and are paid, which likewise cover the date at which semiannual reports are required to be made. Although this company prosecutes actively and vigorously, through resident agents, a large business in the way of soliciting and taking policies and adjusting losses for eleven months of the year, it insists that it cannot be held for the 2-| per cent, tax on “gross premium receipts,” especially on renewal premiums, because it collects no premiums in the State, and had withdrawn from the State at time premiums on its old business were paid.

This company’s claim seems to have the sup*298port of the opinion, in the Connecticut Mutual case. Is it liable for taxes'?

3. The Globe Life Insurance Company, that has for many years been doing a large business in the State, was during last year excluded' from the State, its ] Ícense revoked, and renewal license refused, because its financial condition was not satisfactory, and it had been’ guilty of gross frauds. The company, at the time of its exclusion, had 10,000 policy holders' in the State, obtained while operating _ here. It claims the right to continue this business with the citizens of the State, notwithstanding its exclusion for insolvency and fraud, and to do so without even paying the tax on premiums collected. The premiums are payable and are collected at the home office.

Its business is conducted by correspondence, and premiums paid through the agency of the mails and express.

If this company is correct, it is benefited, as regards its old business, to the extent of this tax by its exclusion for fraud and insolvency. Oan this company continue this business at all, and if so, without payment of tax ?

4. The Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, emboldened ■ by its success, has established agencies at Louisville, ICy., Asheville, N. C., Dalton, Ga., Grand Junction, Miss., and perhaps at other points on the borders of Tennessee, to op*299erate in Tennessee through the mails and express companies.

It does not propose to put any private local agency in the State, but' to operate through these public agencies.

It already has several hundred policies, taken while operating in the State through resident agencies. It claims exemption from regulation and taxation, not only on its old business, but on its new, which promises to be considerable.

As other companies threaten to adopt like tactics, in order to be at no disadvantage, I wish to know if this company is liable for any taxes at all.

5. Some foreign companies, that have conducted their business without collecting premiums in the Statej claim a return of taxes paid before the recent decision. Are they entitled to return of taxes collected under the statutes declared void or ineffectual -by the recent decision?

Is the Commissioner liable personally to these companies for taxes collected under the invalidated acts ?

The importance of these questions will appear when it is known that there was realized from the tax of 24 per cent, of “gross premium receipts” of foreign insurance companies alone $141,-933.20 for 1899, and $143,263.36 for '1900, as shown by. the Treasurer’s report.

Not one of .the above named companies, except *300the Globe, pays less than $3,000 taxes per an-num to the State, and some of them as much as $11,000 per annum. If their present contention is sustained, it can be readily seen that this department will be practically . wrecked. The State will lose the large and increasing revenue derived from this source.

The department has always been conducted upon the theory (and, since 1895, upon the authority of y.our legal opinion) that insurance companies that actually do business in the State by soliciting applications, issuing policies, adjusting losses, etc., and actually receive the profits of the business, are liable for this tax, whether they do this business through private, local agencies, or through such public agencies as the mail and express companies, and that they are liable when they actually do all parts of the business, except receipt of the premiums through local agents in the State, although the premiums are sent by mail or express. In fact, it has been considered that payment by deliverey to public agencies in the State, is as much a payment in the State as a payment through private agencies in the State. It has been deemed that the tax is exacted, not for the collection of premiums merely, though fixed on the basis of premium receipts, but for the privilege of doing each and every part of the business — soliciting applications, issuing policies, adjusting losses, as well as collecting premiums.

*301In view of tbe Court’s decision, it will be necessary to readjust the affairs of this department along different lines from those prescribed by your opinion of 1895, and I shall be glad to have your suggestions at an early date. The decision seems to deny the State the power to deal adequately with foreign companies in the matter of taxation, and it may be the wisest course, in justice to domestic companies, that can be and are taxed, to abandon the effort to raise revenue from this quarter. Very truly,

Reau E. Eolic,

Insurance- Commissioner.

The above letter will sufficiently suggest and indicate the confusion and difficulties that- will attend the administration of insurance matters under the principles declared in the recent opinion of the Court. But for this' decision it would be a complete answer to all these questions and difficulties, to point to the long settled and uniform practice of the Insurance Department, which has never, in any case, been departed from, and never, except in this particular instance, challenged by any foreign company.

II. Brief and Argument. — The conclusion that defendant is not liable for the tax. sued for must rest upon one of two propositions: either

(1) That there is no statute imposing the tax upon this company, or

*302(.2) That the statutes, if there are any, are unconstitutional, or for other reasons ineffectual.

To sustain the latter proposition would leave the State without power to impose this tax at all — a very serious situation.

I am firmly convinced that the construction of' the statutes and of the powers of the Legislature-is too narrow, and will practically wreck ■ the Insurance Department, which shall hold that this-tax of 2-|- per cent, on “gross premium receipts” laid upon foreign insurance companies does not ' attach unless the premiums are collected or received by local agents of the company within the borders' of the State, even though the policies, on which such premiums are paid were originally solicited, issued, and delivered through local agents, operating in the State, and the premiums upon which the tax is reckoned were paid through the-agencies of the mails and express companies.

This construction admits foreign insurance -companies to solicit, issue, and deliver policies and. to adjust losses through local agents or agencies in the State without payment of any taxes, if' they shall arrange to have the premiums sent by-mail or express direct to the home office or other-agency outside of the State — an evasion of the-law so obvious and easy as to make it optional with the foreign companies whether they will observe it. No such construction of a statute- is-admissible if any other is reasonable or possible-

*303It is to make the statute say to foreign companies: “Bay this tax if you want to, but if it is objectionable to you, simply have premiums sent to the home office and continue business in Tennessee, in competition with other taxpaying companies, without paying any taxes.”

The language, as well as the manifest policy of the statutes, forbids such construction.

The Insurance Acts impose the payment of this ■tax as a condition to the admission of foreign companies into the State to engage in business, and forbid them to do business without its .payment, and authorize revocation of their license for failure for sixty' days to pay same.

The Revenue Acts declare certain privileges, and tax same. Among these are “insurance companies,” the tax upon which is measured by a per cent, of “gross premium receipts.” This is not a tax laid specifically upon the collection of premiums. That makes a sieve of the statute, and leaves it no vitality or force. It is a tax, in terms, upon insurance companies. That is the name given to the privilege.

This means, obviously, the vocation or business of insurance — the doing of insurance. It does not mean to tax a mere name or existence. The business of “insurance companies” consists, not merely in ‘collecting premiums, but largely and chiefly in soliciting, issuing, and delivering policies, and in adjusting losses. It is upon this entire business, *304and upon every part of it, that tbe tax is laid. Tbe defendant consented to pay tbis tax as one of tbe conditions' of its admission.

It is not essential that it shall do every part of insurance business to render it liable for tax. It is enough if it does any part of it.

It is liable if it solicits alone, or if it delivers policies alone or if it collects premiums alone, in tbe State. Any other construction would make nonsense of our entire system of privilege taxation. What privilege is exercised to its full extent, or in all its parts ? If to omit to exercise tbe whole business avoids tbe tax, what privilege tax cannot be evaded ?

Tbe revenue statutes specially provide that privilege taxes shall attach, if any thing is done in tbe particular line of business, “whether they make a business of it or not.” To hold that this tax attaches alone to the collection of premiums, leaving all other insurance business free, is like taxing a merchant on the value of his yardstick, and leaving the value of his goods free.

That the practices suggested by the above letter have not hitherto prevailed is attributable to the fact that they have been supposed to be illegal, forbidden, and unavailing, and have been repressed by the insurance department* with a strong hand.

That defendant, in the face of these discouragements, has been able to maintain a profitable *305business in tbe State for six years without effort, suggests wbat can be done, when, released from legal restraints, it shall pursue its ■ business _ actively through the mails. ' It has lost only about five per cent, of its ' policy holders per annum during the six years. It has maintained an average of $21,000 premium receipts.

1. There are, without question, statutes which, if valid and applicable, render this company liable for the tax sued for. These statutes are so plain that they do not admit of construction or doubt.

The agreed facts are that this company, after having done business in the State for a quarter of a century in the usual way, ceased in 1894 to solicit new business ' and withdrew its local agents.

It , had, at this date, several hundred policies which its local agents had solicited and procured while operating in the State.

It continued to collect premiums and ' adjust losses upon these policies, but did it in the State by the use of public agencies, such as the mails and express companies, instead, as formerly, by its own private and local agencies. It collected-an average of over $21,000 per annum on these policies, and it is for the- tax measured by these “gross premium receipts” that the State seeks to recover.

*306The Revenue Acts of 189Y and 1899, in connection with, the imposition upon foreign insurance companies of a privilege tax of “2^ percent. of gross premium receipts, payable semiannually, January and July,” -provide that “life corporations of other States and foreign countries, ceasing to transact new business in this State, shall'continue to pay the taxes herein provided on business in force, and until the same be terminated" Acts 189Y, Oh. 2; Acts 1899, Oh. 432.

These provisions embrace and tax the premiums, collected by this company after its so-called withdrawal, if it be possible to do so.

Thus, it appears unquestionably that the Revenue Acts of 189Y and 1899 provide for the taxation of this company after its so-called withdrawal.

It is settled in this State, and by an overwhelming preponderance of judicial opinion elsewhere that life policies are not contracts from year to year, but entire and continuing contracts-that terminate only with the death. of the assured,. or his failure to pay stipulated premiums. Ins. Co. v. Heidel, 8 Lea, 498; Ins. Co. v. Stathan,. 93 U. S., 30; 2 Joyce on Ins., Sec. 1102; 49 Me., 200; 59 Ill., 128; 19 N. Y. Supp., 481; 78 N. Y., 114.

Nor can this company evade the force of this-statute by the insistence that it had withdrawn. from the State before its passage. It had not; *307withdrawn as to these policies, but was receiving from them precisely the same premiums by public agencies as it would have received by its private agencies. If this business had not been previously taxed (which is not admitted), it' was competent for the Legislature to tax it. The Legislature has absolute, uncontrolled discretion over foreign corporations. They have no vested rights to have the tax laws remain unchanged. Even .domestic corporations and citizens have no such right. As well might a nonresident, citizen, or corporation, purchasing land in the State, contend that the rate of taxation can never be raised over that existing at date of' the purchase. It .was, as we shall elsewhere see, a condition of this company’s admission that it would pay taxes, imposed on its business. The Court will not seriously entertain the proposition that a foreign insurance company, that has been the guest of the State for a time, may leave, taking part' of the valuables of its host, and that the State has no power to prevent such result.

But other provisions of the Eevenue and Insurance Acts taxed this company upon the basis of its “gross premium receipts,” after its' so-called withdrawal, without the aid of said direct and specific provisions of the Eevenue Acts of 1897 and 1899 on the subject.

The “Insurance Act of 1895” declares it “unlawful for any company to make any contract of *308insurance upon or concerning any property or interests or lives in this State or ivith any resident thereof ,” except upon the terms prescribed in that Act. Acts 1895, Oh. 160, Sec. 2.

Among the terms and conditions prescribed for ■ the doing of business bv foreign corporations, is: Semiannual reports — July and J anuary — of premium receipts, and payment of a tax of 2J per cent, thereof, • under penalty of forfeiture of license if same is not paid within sixty days. (Sec. 19.)

The Revenue Acts levy a privilege tax upon foreign insurance companies, of “2|‘ per cent, of gross premium receipts, payable semiannually, January and July.” Acts 1893, Oh. 89.

It will be observed this tax is laid upon the companies, not upon the premiums, though measured by the latter. Acts 1897, Ch. 2.

And that Act further provides “that any and all parties, firms, or corporations exercising any of the foregoing privileges must pay the taxes as set forth in this Act for the exercise of said privileges, whether they make a business of it or not; and this Act shall not be so' construed as to exempt any person, firm, or corporation whatever exercising any ,of the foregoing privileges from payment of the taxes herein prescribed for the exercise of said privileges.” Acts 1897, Oh. 2, Sec: 14.

The same provision will be found in the other *309revenue Acts. Among tbe privileges enumerated and taxed by these Acts' is “insurance companies” —tbe privilege of doing insurance business. Tbis tax is measured by premium receipts.

These provisions do not admit of tbe construction that tbe Legislature intended to exempt foreign insurance companies from tbis tax, measured by tbe gross premium. receipts, in any case where it bad .power to impose it.

It imputes extreme folly to tbe Legislature to suppose that it intended ■ to exempt foreign ' insurance companies from a tax that it laid upon domestic companies.

The statutes have therefore laid tbe tax sued for, and tbe State is entitled to recover unless these statutes are, for some reason, invalid or in-, effectual.

Revenue statutes are not penal in their character, and are not strictly but fairly construed.

2. The statutes, above cited> which make the defendant company liable for the privilege tax of 2-J- per cent, of its “gross premium receipts’3 collected on its old business after it had ceased to take. new business and had withdrawn ■ its agents from the State, are not unconstitutional, or for any other reason invalid.

These statutes are not obnoxious to tbe State Constitution.

It provides that “tbe Legislature shall have power to tax merchants, peddlers, and privileges *310ill suck manner as they may from time to time direct.” (Art. II., Sec. 28.)

This clause has been construed to give unlimited discretion to .the Legislature in the creation and taxation of privileges. 86 Tenn., 136; 3 Head, 414; 8 Heis., 456, 544; 92 Tenn., 369.

These statutes are not in conflict with the Federal Constitution.

The assumption and payment of this tax is one of the terms and conditions upon which foreign insurance companies are permitted to enter the State and to continue business' therein. Acts 1895, Oh. 160, Sec. 19.

And it is a valid condition, even if foreign insurance companies are required to pay a greater tax than domestic companies engaged in the same business.

Foreign corporations are not citizens within the clause of the Federal Constitution providing that “the citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens' in the several States.” Paul v. Va., 8 Wall., 168; Bank v. Earle, 13 Pet., 538; Ducat v. Chicago, 10 Wall., 410; Mining Co. v. Penn., 125 U. S., 181; 1 Joyce on Ins., § 328; 1 Thomp. on. Corp., §12; 6 Thomp. on Corp., §7928; 13 Am. & Eng. Enc. L., 845.

The business of a foreign insurance company is not interstate commerce. Paul v. Va., 8 Wall., *311168; Hooper v. Cal., 155 U. S., 648; 1 Joyce on Ins., § 328.

Foreign corporations are “persons” within that clause of the XIV. Amendment which provides that “no State shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws,” but this clause does not affect the power of the State to exclude foreign corporations from the State, or to prescribe any conditions it may choose for their admission. 13 Am. & Eng. Ene. L., 840; 119 IJ. S., 110; 118 TJ. S., 394; 125 TJ. S., 181.

The reason is that foreign corporations are not “within its jurisdiction” until they have performed the conditions upon which they are entitled to admission into the State.

“Any other construction of this clause would entitle foreign corporations to the same privileges as domestic corporations, and, as has been seen, it is within the power of the State to exclude foreign corporations entirely.” 13 Am. & Eng. Ene. L., p. 846; 119 IJ. S'., 110.'

“There is nothing in the Federal Constitution that prevents a State from prescribing the terms on which foreign corporations shall come within its borders and carry on business with its citizens. The whole matter . of admitting foreign corporations to do business in a State rests absolutely in the discretion of the Legislature of the State. The terms it imposes may be reasonable or *312unreasonable. Tbe comity ordinarily extended is accompanied by no legal sanction. It is never extended when the existence of the' corporation, or the exercise of its powers, is prejudicial to the interests of the State, or repugnant to its policy; and although it has been extended, it may at any time be recalled.” 13 Am. & Eng. Enc. L., 860, 861; Dugger v. Ins. Co., 95 Tenn., 245; State v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 92 Tenn., 431; 119 U. S., 110; 136 Mo., 391.

The constitutional provisions are designed to protect rights; they take no cognizance of matters of mere comity. ,

The statutes in direct terms impose the tax sued for, and these statutes are valid.

The conclusion is inevitable that the State is entitled to recover.

If there could be any doubt, even a serious one, as to the validity of these statutes under the Federal Constitution, the State Court should sustain the statutes, in order that the matter could reach the Federal .Supreme Court. The State has no appeal, while the other party has appeal.

Devices to evade State taxation do not meet with favor, or even toleration, in the United States Supreme- Court. Mitchell v. County, 91 U. S., 206; Bristol v. County, 177 U. S., 143; see, also, 174 U. S., 70.

3. In answer to some of the arguments made in *313support of defendant’s contention, we submit tbe following propositions:

(1) That the defendant’s policies, upon which premiums were collected after its so-called ' withdrawal in 1894, are the identical policies talcen by its local agents operating and doing business in the State prior to that time. Life policies are entire and continuing contracts, not mere contracts from year to year. To continue a business, established tuhile defendant was in the State, even to wind it up, is to do business in the State.

In tbe case of Ins. Co. v. Stathan, 93 U. S., 30, Mr. Justice Bradley, passing upon tbis yery question, says:

“That the contract (an ordinary life policy with forfeiture clause for nonpayment of premiums) is not an assurance for a single year, with a privilege of renewal from year to year by paying tbe annual premiums, but that it is an entire contract of assurance for life, subject to discontinuance and forfeiture for nonpayment of any of the stipulated premiums. Such is tbe form of tbe contract, and such is its character. . . . Such installment is, in fact, part consideration of tbe entire insurance for life. It is the same thing when tbe annual premiums are spread over tbe whole life. Tbe value of assurance for one year of a man’s life, when he .is young, strong, and healthy, is manifestly not the same as when he is old and decrepit.

*314“There is no proper relation between the annual premiums and the risk of assurance for the year in which it is paid.

"This idea of insurance from year to year is the suggestion of ingenious counsel.

“The annual premiums are an annuity, the present value of which is calculated to correspond with the. present value of the amount assured, a reasonable percentage being added to the premiums to cover expenses and contingencies.

“The whole premiums are balanced against the whole insurance

In Insurance Co. v. Heidel, 8 Lea, 498, Judge Cooper, passing upon this question, cited the above case with approval, and said:

“The contract is not an assurance for a single year, with the privilege of renewal from year to year by paying the annual premiums, but it is an entire contract of assurance for life, subject to discontinuance or forfeiture for nonpayment of any. of the stipulated premiums.”

The same doctrine is held in 49 Me., 200; 59 Ill., 123; 19 N. Y. Supp., 481; 78 N. Y., 114. And has the approval of Mr. Joyce. 2 Joyce' on Ins., Sec. 1102. It likewise has the sanction of sound reason.

• The policy on its face purports to be a continuing contract.

The parties contemplate its continuance, certainly; for. the real benefit of the contract does not, *315accrue to tbe beneficiary until after tbe assured’s death. ’ ■

Tbe company’s liability does not accrue until after tbe assured’s death.

If the premiums are paid no new or renewal policy issues. Tbe old one remains outstanding. Tbe premiums are paid on tbe old contract and according to its terms. A new policy.. would not issue for tbe same premium, as tbe assured is a little older.

Tbe State, in fixing as a condition for defendant’s admission, a tax measured -by a per cent, of its premium collections, instead of a gross annual sum, or round charge for each application, or each policy, or each adjustment, must have bad in view this peculiar feature of tbe insurance contract, which bad been declared by decision of this Court, by which tbe company would be required to pay tax during tbe life of each policy. Otherwise a severer tax would probably have been imposed: Say upon applications, issuance of policies, or adjustment of losses, or upon all. But, instead, tbe equitable tax which ran with tbe life of tbe policy was imposed for tbe privilege of conducting tbe insurance business.

These contracts were made in Tennessee, under an agreement on tbe part of tbe defendant company, by which it obtained admission into ' tbe State, that it would pay tbe tax measured by *316the premium receipts from the policies so long as they continued in existence. •

If these premiums were not paid on the old policies, then defendant was engaged in taking new business in the State through , public, instead of private, agencies.

(2) Premiums collected, through the agency of the mails or express companies, on policies talcen by. the defendant before its so-called withdrawal from the Stale, are to be treated as received within the State. The mails and express companies became the insurer’s agents.

Inasmuch as the tax is levied for .the privilege of doing the entire business of insurance, and attaches if any part of that business is done, it is, perhaps, not material whether the premiums were received in the State, if the applications were taken and the policies issued in the State on which the premiums accrued. Though measured by a per cent, of premiums received, the tax is not one on premiums; but on the companies for the privilege of engaging in the insurance business or some part of it. Companies are liable if they do anything, “whether they make a business of it or not.”

If this • were not true, small revenue could be realized from privileges, as few persons exercise any privilege to the fullest extent possible or in all its parts.

*317But not only were the defendant’s policies solicited and issued in the State, but it also collected the premiums thereon within the State.*

.The premiums were sent, by letter or express.

The law applicable in such case is thus stated by Mr.' Joyce: .

“If the premium is authorized to be paid through the mail, it is paid by depositing a prepaid letter, properly addressed, in the postoffice containing the remittance, and the party has ■ done all that can be required in order that it should reach the other party in due course of time. . . . And it is held that depositing a letter, properly addressed, in the post office, postage prepaid, operates as a payment at that time, when payment of premiums by mail is authorized by the insurer.” (2 Joyce on Ins., Sec. 1163.)

*318And delivery of premiums to an express company operates as payment from date of sucb delivery, although, the same may be stolen by an agent of the express company. Id., Sec. 1165.

Delivery of a bill or note to the postman is sufficient. 1 Daniel, Neg. Inst., Sec. 61; Kirkman v. Bank, 2 Cold., 403-408.

It is familiar law that a common carrier is agent of the consignee, and that, ordinarily, delivery to it is delivery to the consignee.

So, delivery of letter into post office is delivery to the addressee, and entitles him to it at once as against the sender.

Even the premiums áre collected in Tennessee.

If this is not true, then the receipts for premiums are delivered in Tennessee, being sent by mail.

(3) By coming into the State and taking policies, and continuing to collect premiums thereon, the defendant agreed, and assumed to comply with all terms and conditions imposed by statute upon foreign insurance companies, including compliance with tax laws.

The State had absolute discretion in the matter of admitting or excluding the defendant, and in prescribing terms for its admission.

We have already noted the conditions imposed as regards taxation.

The defendant engaged to comply with these terms and conditions by accepting the State’s comity.

*319The defendant bad no business in tbe State before its admission. It bad no right to any.

What it acquired and did while operating in the State was by the State’s comity. Its permission was limited to do business while in the State, not after. It was no part of the State’s consent or the defendant’s license- to take from the State, on leaving, anything more,- in the way of business opportunities, than it brought with it.

Is it a fair construction of the transaction by which defendant, as a matter of comity, was permitted to enter the State and engage in business with our citizens, to hold that it may at will, after securing large business advantages, throw oft' all its obligations to the State, refuse to pay taxes, withdraw from supervision of the Insurance Commissioner, and at the same time take the profits of such business ? To permit defendant to compete in this way with domestic companies, without payment of taxes, would bring it within the category of companies to which comity is never extended. It is said that comity is “never extended when the existence of the corporation or the exercise of its powers is prejudicial to the interests of the State or repugnant to its policy.”

Would not such a contract be a severe arraignment of the Legislature for folly, as it had full powers to prevent such result ?

Under defendant’s contention this company can *320take all tbe policies it can get for a six months and then go over the border and collect the premiums, and thereby evade taxes on the business it does in competition with taxpaying companies. It can repeat this experiment as often as it chooses.

Its act, ' in such case, would be legal though savoring of the moral' quality that attaches to that of a guest who .takes, on leaving, the valuables of ' his host.

This, is not a reasonable construction of the statutes under which the State extends its comity to foreign corporations, and one which they cannot, with any degree of fairness, insist upon.

(4) It is sufficient, to give the State jurisdiction to taoc and regulate defendant’s business, if any part of it,, however slight, transpires within the State. It is not essential that defendant should be in the State, by \private or local agents.

The statutes, as we have seen, are broad enough in their . provisions to reach this company after its so-called withdrawal.

The power of the State to pass these statutes is the matter now under consideration.

The State has jurisdiction even in criminal matters, in such cases.

“Where a man, standing beyond the outer line of our territory, by discharging a ball over • the line kills another within it; or¿ himself being abroad, circulates libels here; or in like manner *321obtains here ' goods by false pretenses; or does any other crime in our locality against our laws, he is punishable, though absent, the same as if he were present.” 1 Bish. Or. L. (New), Sec. 110.

“If a material part of any crime is committed on our soil, though it is the lighter part, legislation, with us, may properly provide for the punishment of the whole of it here — at least where no jurisdiction abroad has, in fact, been taken.” (Id., Sec. 116.)

“If the offer (to bribe) is made by letter through the post office, the writer commits a complete offense at the place where he deposits the letter, as well as at the place where it is received.” (Id. (1), Sec. 88.)

Our criminal statutes and decisions recognize the same principle. Code (M. & V.), § 5802; Williams v. State, 92 Tenn., 275.

It is not essential that a party be in the State in order to do business in the State.

“Although the contract is made and dated in one State, but is to be binding only on delivery, the laws of the State where the insured is a resident, and where it is delivered to him, govern the contract.

“And, as a general rule, the delivery of the policy to the insured in the State in which he resides, and the payment by him of the first premium in that State,_ renders the contract sub*322ject to tbe laws of snob State.” t Joyce, See. 230, citing 58 Fed. Rep., 541; 1 C. C. App., 359; 160 Mass., 414.

Foreign corporations cannot withdraw themselves-from a State into which they have entered, by a provision in their policies. 1 Biddle on Ins.,. Sec. 84; 13 Fed. Hep., 526.

So of other corporations seeking to withdraw from the jurisdiction to tax them. 177 U. S., 143; 174 U. S., 70; 91 U. S., 206.

This company has been held, upon the facts of' this record, to have been doing business within the State from 1870 to 1894. Ins. Co. v. Spratley, 112 U. S., 611; Ins. Co. v. Spratley, 99 Tenn., 334.

True that was a different statute, but its provisions are not so strict as those of the statutes • now under consideration.

Insurance companies are held to be doing busi- ■ ness in the State, without having local agents • therein, in these cases: 7 Mo., 388; 65 Ill. App., 355; 73 Miss., 321, 330; 89 Wis., 545 (S. C., 46 Am. St. Rep,, 855).

The authority of the Allgyer and Norton cases - cited by defendant is not controverted.

The former involved the right of a citizen to • take insurance in another State in a foreign com- • pany. Foreign corporations are not citizens, nor ■ entitled to the rights of citizens.

The Norton case was under the noncompliance - *323Act, wbicb is construed with great strictness to prevent hardship. These cases ar§ clearly distinguishable from the one at bar.

“The distinction,” says Mr. Thompson, “is between the case where the company procures -a risk within the foreign State by its own affirmative action or where it allows a broker to procure a risk for it for his own pecuniary gain, and the case where a resident of a foreign State,, of his own volition, solicits the writing . of a policy upon his own life or property.” 6 Thompson on Corporations, Sec. 7937.

The defendant solicited its policies in the State originally.

It obtained and holds them by its own affirmative action. That is the test, ' even where the company has never been in the State by its. agents.

The defendant put into its policies such forfeiture clauses as compelled their continuance or severe loss to the policy holder.

This defendant took its policies in Tennessee by local agents originally, 'but even if this were not true they were renewed under stress applied —the affirmative action of the defendant.

(5) The supposed injustice resulting to foreign insurance companies from want, or supposed want, of power to withdraw from the State is imaginary.

The terms or conditions upon which foreign *324corporations are permitted to enter the State may be reasonable or unreasonable at the discretion of the Legislature, which has the power of absolute exclusion. The corporation accepts these terms and conditions voluntarily if at all.

It would have no right to complain if one of these prescribed conditions which it accepted denied it the right of withdrawal. It could not complain of injustice or hardship.

But . the law does not deny good faith withdrawal.

Undoubtedly a foreign company may stipulate with its policy holders for the contingency of its withdrawal if it chooses.

It may reinsure all its risks and go out.

What it is forbidden to do is to withdraw from burdens without withdrawing from benefits. It is forbidden to go out to avoid taxes and, at the same time, stay in to- reap profits.

It is not permitted to take an unfair and dishonest advantage of the ' comity that the State has extended to it, and place itself in a position, by reason thereof, to compete, without payment of taxes, with the taxpaying companies of the State.

The guest who has robbed his host, has just as much right to complain that the host objects to the operation.

"What are all of our insurance laws for the protection of citizens against insolvent and unreliable companies worth, if these companies may *325defy the State's authority and do business with the citizens ?

No company wanting to go out of the State in good faith and in fact, not merely in .form, will meet any serious obstacles. This, however, is not a controlling fact in the case.

(6) The supposition . that Tennessee policy holders are to suffer loss, and that foreign insurers are to get great gain from the Court’s sustaining the Stale’s contention tho.t such companies are not permitted to maintain an old business in the State without payment of taxes, is a very clever invention of ingenious counsel.

This objection comes from an insurance company, not from a policy holder. This fact discredits it.

It is assumed that a foreign insurance company that has had its license revoked for its own fault —e. g., fraud or insolvency — and is thereby forced to quit the State, or has voluntarily abandoned its business because of its unwillingness to pay taxes or otherwise comply with the conditions upon which it was admitted into the State, can, in some way, acquire an advantage, on that account, over its Tennessee policy holders.

It is difficult to conceive what it is the insured can lose to the insurer in such case.

The insurance company that from fault or choice refuses to qualify itself to carry out its contracts, *326is in no situation to take advantage of its policy holders.

It is a condition of every policy that the company is qualified to do business, and will remain .'so. Surely, it is no part of the insured’s 'busi--n.ess to look after tbe qualification of the insurer. If the insurer makes default, it is liable in damages.

The Court will ’find some difficulty in defining what it is that the insured loses to the insurer by the demand of the State, made in behalf of fair dealing and the safety of the citizens, that the insurer shall pay legitimate tases and submit itself to such supervision as the law deems essential to the safety of those insured.

The company, in paying this tax and submitting to supervision, does no more than is required of the safe and solvent companies, foreign and domestic, that do a legitimate business in the State.

Suppose a company having policy holders in the State has become insolvent and unable to qualify under our laws to continue business, can it set up the plea that it will injure these policy holders to enable it to continue business in violation of law ? Has a company that wilfully 'declines to comply with tax. and other laws any .stronger claim ?

(Y) An insurance ‘policy, with forfeiture clause for nonpayment of annual premiums, is not an *327unilateral contract binding the insurance company but not obligating the insured.

It has already been shown that these policies are not mere contracts from year to year, but entire and continuing contracts. If the contract of the policy is unilateral, it is wanting in mutuality, and void.

“The reason of this is that a promise is not a good consideration for a promise unless there is an absolute mutuality of engagement, so that each party has the right at- once to hold the ■other to a positive agreement.” 1 Ear. Gout., pp. 448, 449, and notes.

Defendant would hardly admit that it has been engaged in issuing this sort of policies. It is true each party has not the same kind of remedy for breach of the contract, but each has a remedy.

The insured must obtain his remedy by suit. The insurer has provided a summary remedy for its indemnity for breach, to wit, forfeiture of . all premiums that it has received.

The matter is a little one-sided, but the one-sidedness is in favor of the insurer. He perhaps reaps as much benefit, probably more, from breach than from performance of the contract by the assured.

In conclusion, this is a contest for the life of a young, prosperous, revenue yielding department ■of the State government.

The contest is . between the State and foreign *328insurance companies, whom it had the right to exclude entirely or to admit on harsh or impossible terms. If this company succeeds, then all foreign companies can withdraw, and through the mails, by a little effort, keep up that business in the State, which yielded last year over $143,-000 revenue to the State, without paying one dollar taxes. This company has succeeded in keeping up for six years, without . effort, a very valuable business. Cannot others do the same? Nearly the entire life insurance of • the State is done by foreign companies. Gr. W. Pickle,

Attorney-general.

ADDITIONAL BltlEE SuBjVIITTED BY Gr. W. PlCKLE.

I. There is no escaping the conclusion that the statutes do tax this company, and since 1897 in terms so direct and specific as to admit no dodging the conclusion. Acts 1897, Ch. 2; Acts 1899, Oh. 432.

The tax is imposed whether it be a condition or not. But it is a condition, and so made by both the Acts of 1875 and 1895. '

The Acts of 1875, Oh. 66, provides that no foreign insurance company shall “transact any business of life insurance in this State without first obtaining a license therefor from the Bureau of Insurance and a certificate of authority for each agent employed.” Sec. 1.

And that the Commissioner is required to issue “a *329license to transact the business of life insurance within the limits of the State upon the terms and conditions set forth in this section (§3) and those herinafter provided.” Sec. 3.

By Sec. 5 the payment of tax is required “on gross premium receipts, payable on the first days of January and July of each year, on sworn siatement of the president and secretary of the company.” Sec. 5.

And sworn statement of income- is made a condition under Sec. 2 of this . Act.

The supposition that subsequent Act of 1895 was materially different on this part is a mistake. It was a mere collation of older Acts in the main. That Act, however, makes it absolutely clear that the payment of this tax is a condition, though that is not material.

Under Sec. 19 of that Act a foreign company, failing to pay this tax is “debarred from transacting any business of insurance in this State until said taxes' and penalties are fully paid, and the Insurance Commissioner shall revoke the certificate of authority -granted to the agent or agents of that company to transact business in the State,” Compare Sec. 2 of the Act.

The defendant company cannot evade the effect of statutes passed subsequent to its so-called withdrawal. If the State could have made payment of this tax a term or condition of admission, or imposed it at that time, then the State could *330make it a term or condition of tlie company’s continuance in the State, or impose it at any time it chooses.

It is imposed and binding on defendant, if it can be made so at all.

Defendant has no vested right in the status of the insurance laws existing at date of its admission. This is clear.

The State’s right to recall a company’s license and exclude it from the State is just as absolute as its right to 'admit or exclude originally. Any terms may be imposed for the privilege of remaining in the State. (See former .brief.)

But- the Act of 1895 provides for this very thing thus: “That nothing contained in this Act shall be so construed as to prevent the repeal or amendment of the same or any section thereof by the present or any future’ General Assembly of this State.”

The defendant entered the State with this provision in the law.

The question comes to this: Can the State tax a company in the situation of this company at all; if it can, it has done so. If it has not done so, then it cannot do it at all.

II. It is clear this company has not withdrawn from the State or complied with the terms upon- which it is permitted to do so.

It was required by Act of 1875, and subsequent Acts, to make certain deposits for the benefit ’of *331policy holders it might obtain in the State. Acts 1875. Ch. 66, Sec. 3; Acts 1877, Oh. 108; Acts 1895, Oh. 160, Sec. 9.

Also, to file power of attorney for acknowledgment of service of process.

In regard to this deposit, Sec. 24, Acts of 1895, Oh. 160, makes this subsequent provision: “Arid he [the Commissioner] may return to the trustees or other representatives authorized for that purpose, of a foreign insurance company, any deposit made by such company, when it shall appear that such company has ceased to do business in the State and is under no obligation to policy holders or other persons in the State, or in the United States, for whose benefit such deposit was made.’’

There is no other method prescribed1' for withdrawal from the State except to wind up its entire business and cancel every liability to citizens of the State, and we insist to the State as well. Defendant came or remained in the State on these terms.

Tke proposition that delivery to a common carrier is delivery to the consignee was twice decided by oral opinions at the December term, 1900, of the Supreme Court at Nashville.

In the case of Harris & Filson v. State the appellants had been convicted of selling liquor without license in Trousdale County. The facts were these ¡.Harris <& Pilson were duly licensed as retail liquor dealers in Sumner County, and had a saloon in that county. Curtis West, living and being at the time in Trousdale County, ordered from them by telephone one and one-half gallons of liquor. They filled the order, delivering the jug of liquor to an express company in Sumner County, directed to West in Trousdale County. It was sent c. o. d.

The Court held, upon these facts, that the delivery of the goods to the carrier, c. o. d., in Sumner County, addressed to West in Trousdale County, was a delivery to West in Sumner County, and that the sale was made and completed in Sumner County, and that the appellants, having license in Sumner County, were guilty of no offense. The authorities upon which this decision was made are: 43 Ark., 353; 71 Ala., 568; 73 Maine, 278 ; 96 Penn., 449 ; 22 W. Va., 743 (S. C., 22 L. R. A., 430); 97 Mass., 89.

The other case was that of Duncan v. State. Duncan was convicted of selling liquor without license in Hickman County. The facts were that Duncan, as traveling salesman of B. W. Hooper <& Co., who were duly licehsed wholesale liquor dealers at Nashville, took an order to his principals, but subject to their approval or rejection in Hickman County, for one gallon of liquor, lie forwarded the order to the firm at Nashville, who accepted it, and the liquor was shipped to the purchaser. Neither Duncan nor his principals had license to sell liquor in Hickman County. The Court 'held that the sale was made and completed in Davidson County; that it was a sale by Hooper <fe Co., and not by Duncan, and that delivery to the carrier was delivery to the purchaser in Davidson County. The case was reversed.

The first of above cases was decided by the Chief Justice and the other by Judge Beard. — Reporter.