*837 CREDIT FOR FOREIGN TAX. - Tax upon premiums imposed upon insurance companies under the Canadian Special War Revenue Act is not an income tax within the meaning of section 131(a)(1) of the Revenue Act of 1934.
*541 OPINION.
MURDOCK: The Commissioner determined the following deficiencies in income tax for 1934:
Petitioner | Docket No. | Year | Amount |
Continental Insurance Co | 92569 | 1934 | $5,765.35 |
First American Fire Insurance Co | 92570 | 1934 | 446.22 |
Fidelity-Phenix Fire Insurance Co. of New York | 92571 | 1934 | 3,084.99 |
Niagara Fire Insurance Co | 92572 | 1934 | 1,329.65 |
Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York | 92573 | 1935 | 2,283.79 |
Maryland Insurance Co | 92574 | 1935 | 516.54 |
The issue presented is whether the petitioners are entitled to credits for taxes paid to the Dominion of Canada. The facts in each case have been stipulated and are hereby found as stipulated.
Each case has in it exactly the same question that was decided for the taxpayer in *838
That disposes of all of the cases except the first and the last, in which payments of premium tax under the Canadian Special War Revenue Act exceeded the amount due under the Canadian Income War Tax Act. The Continental Insurance Co. paid $66.84 more as premium tax under the Canadian Special War Revenue Act than it owed as income tax under the Canadian Income War Tax Act. A similar excess in the case of the Maryland Insurance Co. was $646.94. These two proceedings present, on account of these excesses, the question of whether the Canadian Special War Revenue Act, in imposing a tax upon annual premiums on Canadian business in the case of certain insurance companies, imposed an income tax. This question was not decided in the Queen Insurance Co. case and was conceded by the Government in favor of the taxpayer in the case of *839
The tax is tested by our standards of an income tax.
Decisions will be entered under Rule 50.
Footnotes
1. Proceedings of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: First American Fire Insurance Company; Fidelity-Phenix Fire Insurance Company of New York; Niagara Fire Insurance Company; Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York; and Maryland Insurance Company. ↩