23 Minn. 280 | Minn. | 1877
Is real property, lawfully owned and used as a place for the transaction of its business by a bank created and -existing under the national banking law, taxable eo nomine against the bank, under Laws 1874, c. 1, it being conceded that the specific provisions of that statute require the assessment and taxation of all the shares comprising the entire capital stock of the association in the name of the respective shareholders, and at their actual cash value, without any deduction on account of the real property so held by the bank, and in which a portion of its capital is invested ? This is the sole question for consideration in this case, and its determination depends upon the character and effect of that statute.
The general policy of the law is to avoid duplicate taxation. No one subject of taxation ought to be required to contribute more than once to the same public burden, while .other subjects of taxation, belonging to the same class, are required to contribute but once. In the exposition of any
The aggregate capital stock of any corporation is but the representative of its entire property, including the corporate franchise, and the actual cash value of the former depends wholty upon the productive character and real cash value of the latter. Intrinsically it possesses no value, and can have none, as separate and distinct from the corporate property it represents; nor is the property, character, or value of such stock increased, or in any way affected, by its division into a given number of shares, unless the proposition be conceded that all the parts are greater or less than the whole. Each share but represents a proportional interest in the corporate property, determined by the exact ratio existing between it and the entire stock, and it possesses a like corresponding value. Sever the connection between: the stock and the shares comprising it, on the one hand, and the corporation and its property, on the other, and nothing-remains to the former but a mere shadow, to which no real
Any legislation, therefore, which requires, for the purpose of taxation, an ad valorem assessment of all the shares of stock in a bank, as property, without allowing any deduction on account of the value imparted to them as the representatives of the corporate property and franchise of the bank, and also a like assessment Of the corporate property itself under its own proper designation, necessarily provides for double taxation, and, in order to give the statute under consideration that effect, it must clearly appear to have been intended by some express provision or necessary implication.
The law under consideration (Laws 1874, c. 1) contains specific provisions for listing and assessing the property of every incorporated and unincorporated company or association, (§ 28,) and of “every bank, whether of issue or deposit, (other than a national bank,)” and of “every banker, broker, or stock-jobber.” § 29. It is not disputed that these specific provisions are so far exclusive in their character that other clauses of the statute, relating generally to the assessment and taxation of real and personal property, can have no application whatever to cases clearly falling within the purview of these sections, unless made applicable by express reference or necessary implication; and, that there might be no doubt as to the legislative intent, it is expressly declared that the taxation of banking corporations ‘ ‘ is specifically provided for in this act.” § 28. That the phrase, “ banking corporations,” as here used, is to be understood as including not only every corporate body doing a general banking business, whether under state or national authority, but also all property employed in bank
It is obvious from these provisions that the entire corporate property and franchises of these institutions are subjected to assessment and taxation once in respect to every public burden or matter of taxation. This is manifestly just, as respects both the state and the stockholders of the
Reference was made, in the argument, to section 1 of the statute, as indicating an intention to require the assessment and taxation of all real estate eo nomine. The evident purpose of this section was to declare, in general terms, that all property, both real and personal, within the jurisdiction of the state, unless specially exempted, should be subject to taxation. It does not, however, require the listing and assessment of the property in specie. Its language is : ££ Such property, or the value thereof, shall be entered in the list of taxable property for that purpose, in the manner prescribed by this act.” The mode and manner in which this is to be done is to be sought for, therefore, in the subsequent provisions of the statute. An assessment of corporate pi’operty, made by assessing its capital stock, or its shares of stock, upon a valuation fixed with reference to the actual value of the entire corporate property, would not lie repugnant to anything contained in this section.
It is further objected, by respondent, that § 3, art. 9, of the constitution requires the legislature to pass laws “ taxing all moneys, credits, investments in bonds, stocks, joint-stock companies, or otherwise, and also all real and personal property, according to its true value in money ;” that this means the enactment of laws providing for the taxation of these items of property in specie or eo nomine, and, as it must be presumed that the legislature intended to conform to this constitutional requirement, the statute in question must receive a corresponding construction. This section must be construed in connection with sections 1 and 4 of the same article, and also in view of the condition of things existing at the time of the adoption of the constitution. Section 1 declares that ££ all taxes to be raised in this state shall be as nearly equal as may be, and all property on-which taxes are to be levied shall have a cash valuation,
Though a distinction seems to have been made between the kinds of property mentioned in section 3 and that referred to in section 4, it is obviously not one founded upon the idea of any discrimination to be exercised between them in the imposition of taxes; for the like rules of equality and cash valuation are clearly recognized as necessary to be observed as to each. It seems rather to have been the result of an abundance of caution, and an apprehension on the part of the framers of that instrument that the banking capital of the state might possibly, through the oversight or inadvertence of the legislature, escape its just and equal share of taxation, unless guarded against by some specific provision particularly directing the attention of the law-making power to the subject. To this end section 4 makes it the special duty of the legislature to provide by law for the taxation of all property, of every description, of all banks and of all bankers, “ so that all property employed in banking shall always be subject to a taxation equal to
As to national banks, they were unknown at the time of the adoption of the constitution. They have been brought into existence since, under federal authority, partly to serve the purpose of the national government, as convenient fiscal agents, and partly to promote the same ends, and accomplish the same objects, intended to be subserved by the state banks. In this latter character they have nearly succeeded in replacing all the state institutions, and in absorbing the entire banking capital and business of the country, so that they represent, in fact, the principal property interests which were intended to bo affected by § 4, art. 9, of the constitution, and to this extent they fall within the spirit, though not perhaps the letter, of its provisions. Inasmuch, however, as the agencies created and established by the federal government, to assist in the execution of its powers, are exempt from state taxation save as allowed by congress, the state can only exercise its taxing powers over the national banks, and the capital they employ and repre
As equality in taxation is the constitutional policy of this state, no scheme of taxation can be presumed to have been intended by the legislature, which necessarily involves, in its practical results, the imposition of a greater proportionate share of its burdens upon moneyed capital, invested in the business of banking under national laws, than is imposed upon capital similarly employed under state authority. The laiv under consideration provides for the assessment of the real property of the state banks eo nomine, but does not authorize its assessment in any other form. Capital thus invested is, therefore, subjected to taxation but once for any one object. If a like mode of assessment - had been intended in respect to the real property of the national banks, it must be presumed that some provision would have been made for deducting the value of such property from the total value of the shares, in order to fix upon a correct valuation of the latter for the purpose of taxation. The omission of any such provision was manifestly intentional, as the shares are required to be assessed at their true and full value, without any deduction whatever; and in this way the real property belonging to these associations is always subjected to its proper share of taxation.
The decision of the district court, sustaining the assessment and tax in question, is reversed, and judgment ordered in accordance with the prayer contained in the answer of the bank.