Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Md. v. Pennsylvania

Supreme Court of the United States | 1916-02-21

36 S. Ct. 298,60 L. Ed. 664,240 U.S. 319,1916 U.S. LEXIS 1453
*320 Mr. Justice McReynolds

delivered the opinion of the court.

We are asked to reverse a judgment of the Supreme Court of Pénnsylvania' which' denied plaintiff in error’s claim that in becoming surety upon bonds required by the United States it acted as a Federal .instrumentality and was not subject to taxation on the. premiums received. 244 Pa, St. 67.

Incorporated under the laws of Maryland, the Fidelity & Deposit Company is empowered by its charter to act as surety. It was.duly licensed to transact business in Pennsylvania In pursuance of the Act of Congress referred to below, the Attorney General grantéd it authority to enter into obligations required ,by laws of the United States. . . .

. Contracting within Pennsylvánia, the company became'sürety; during 1909, on bonds in the following matters: “Internal Revenue, customs, United States government officials, United States government contracts and banks for United States deposits, bonds given in Courts of the United States in litigation there pending.” Gross premiums thereon amounting to $17,.646.86'were collected. Within the same périod it also became party to other bond's and received therefor $198,199.19. The State demanded two per eéntum of such total receipts, basing its claim on the proviso in § 1, Act of Assembly, June 28, 1895, P. L. 408, which declares: “That hereafter the annual tax upon premiums of insurance companies of other States or foreign governments shall be at the rate of two per centum upon the gross premiums Of every character and description received from business doné within this Commonwealth ■within the entire calendar year preceding.” The amount demanded because of premiumson bonds not authorized or required by the United States, was paid; but liability for $352.92 assessed in respect of those , so authorized, *321 was denied, and to enforce it the present suit was instituted in the Common Pleas Court, Dauphin County.

The Act of Congress entitled “An Act Relative to recognizances, stipulations, bonds, and undertakings, and to allow certain corporations to be accepted ás surety thereon,” approved August 13,1894 (c. 282, 28 Stat. 279), provided:

Sec. 1. “That whenever any recognizance, stipulation, bond or undertaking conditioned for the faithful, performance of any duty, or for doing or refraining from doing anything in such recognizance, stipulation, bond, or under-; taking specified, is by the laws of the United States required or permitted to be given with one surety or-with-two or more sureties, - the execution of the same or the guaranteeing of the performance of the condition thereof shall be sufficient when executed or guaranteed solely by a corporation incorporated' under the laws of the. United States, or of any State' haying power to guarantee the fidelity of persons holding positions of public or private' trust, and to execute and guarantee bonds and undertakings in judicial proceedings: Provided, That such recognizance, stipulation, bond, or undertaking be approved by the head of department, court, judge, officer, board, or body executive, legislative, or judicial required to approve or accept the . same. But no officer or person having the approval of any bond shall exact that it shall be furnished by a guarantee company or by any particular guarantee company.” ■ " , '
' Sec. 2, that “no such company shall do business under the provisions of this Act beyond the limits of the State" or Territory under whose laws it was incorporated and in which its principal office is located . . . until.it shall by a written power of attorney appoint some person residing within'the jurisdiction of the court for the-.judicial district wherein such suretyship is to be undertaken, . . .. as its agent, upon whom may be served *322 all lawful process against such company, . . ,” -Section 3, that every company before transacting business under the Act shall deposit with .the Attorney General of the United States 'a copy of'its" charter and a statement showing assets and liabilities, and “if the said Attorney General shall be satisfied that such company has authority under its charter to do the business provided for in this Act, and that it has a paid up capital of not less than $250,000 in cash or its equivalent, and is able to keep and perform its contracts, he shall grant aüthority in writing to such company to do business under this Act.” Section 4, that quarterly statements shall-be filed with the Attorney General, who shall have power to revoke the authority of any company “whenever in his judgment súch company is not solvent or is conducting its business in violation óf this Act.” Section 5, that “any surety company doing business under the provisions of this Act may be sued in respect thereof in any court of the United States” which has jurisdiction, in the district in which the instrument was made or guaranteed or the principal office of the company is located. Section 6, that “all right to do business under this Act” shall be forfeited upon failure to pay a final judgment against it. Section 7, that a company having executed any instrument under the act shall be estopped to deny its corporate power to execute same. Section 8, that penalties therein prescribed for failure to comply with the provisions of the Act shall be recovered by suit.

The Court of Common Pleas held the tax “is a charge for the privilege of' transacting business in the State, measured by the amount of the business done;” there is “nothing in the Act of Congress to support the proposition that the defendant was authorized by it to transact its business in the State of Pennsylvania;” and-in executing the specified bonds the surety company “was in no sense an instrumentality, of. Government.” Judgment was ac *323 cordingly rendered for the State; and, on appeal, this was affirmed upon findings and opinion below.

In behalf, of plaintiff in error, counsel maintain that the taxing power of the State has been so exercised as to collide'with operations of the. Federal Government; that under the Act of Congress the surety company became a Federal instrumentality with power to execute bonds within the State and consequently could riot be subjected to a privilege tax therefor..

That the challenged tax “is an exaction for the privilege of doing business,” seems plain (Equitable Life Ass. Soc. v. Pennsylvania, 238 U. S. 143); and undoubtedly a State may not directly and materially hinder exercise of constitutional powers of the United States by demanding in opposition to the will of Congress that a Federal instrumentality pay a' tax for the privilege of performing its functions. Farmers’ Bank v. Minnesota, 232 U. S. 516; Choctaw & Gulf R. R. v. Harrison, 235 U. S. 292. But mere contracts between private corporations and the United States do not necessarily render the former essential governmental agencies and confer freedom frorq state control. Baltimore Ship Building Co. v. Baltimore, 195 U. S. 375. Moreover, whatever may be their status, if the pertinent statute discloses the intention of Congress that such corporations contracting under it with the Federal Government shall not be exempt from state regulation and taxation, they must shbmit thereto. National Bank v. Commonwealth, 9 Wall. 353, 362; Van Allen v. Assessors, 3 Wall. 573, 585; Cooley on Taxation, 3d ed., pp. 130, 131.

As revealed by its title, the purpose of the Act of 1894 is “to allow certain corporations to be accepted as surety, etc.” It does not undertake to endow any corporatiori with power, but only to permit those complying -with specified conditions to exercise their lawful powers, derived from other sources, by contracting with the Govern *324 ment under, official approval. “Power to guarantee,” required by § 1, is not the same thing as “authority under its charter,” referred to in § 3; and we think the clear intent was that existence of the former should be determined by the laws in force at place of contract. Neither circumstances nor language of the act indicate design or necessity to limit application by the several States of a well-established system of licensing and taxing bonding companies not incorporated under their own statutes. Plaintiff in error’s right to carry on business in Pennsylvania depended upon compliance with its laws.

We find no error in the judgment of the court below and it is

Affirmed.


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