102 A. 644 | Conn. | 1917
The only question is whether the city of Bridgeport has power, under our statutes, to tax the plaintiff corporation on its New York bank credit.
The material parts of the statutes are as follows: Section 2323 of the General Statutes, in defining taxable property, includes "moneys, credits, choses in action," and excludes "money or property actually invested in merchandise or manufacturing carried on out of this State." Section 2328 provides that "the whole property in this State of every corporation organized under the laws of this State" — with exceptions not now material — "shall be set in its list and liable to taxation in the same manner as the property of individuals." Section 2329, as amended by Chapter 184 of the Public Acts of 1907 and Chapter 153 of the Public Acts of 1915, after dealing with real and personal property located in other towns in this State, provides that "all other personal property of such corporation shall be set in the list of the town in which such corporation has its principal place of business, or exercises its corporate powers."
Plaintiff claims that the words "in this State," in § 2328, impose a special limitation on the power to tax corporations; but, in view of the general policy of our law and the above-quoted portions of the statutes, it is impossible to attribute such an intent to the General Assembly. The plain meaning of § 2328 is that the whole property of such corporations within the taxing jurisdiction of this State shall be taxed.
Pope v. Hartford,
The familiar rule as to the situs of personal property for taxation is stated in State Board of Assessors v.Comptoir National D'Escompte,
No facts appear on this record which take the case out of the general rule above stated. There is no suggestion *320 that the credit in question is actually invested in merchandise or manufacturing carried on out of this State. On the contrary, the necessary inference from the agreed statement of facts is that it is to be employed for the corporate purposes of the plaintiff in connection with its Bridgeport business. That being so, it was properly taxed at the plaintiff's residence in Bridgeport.
A general deposit in a commercial bank creates the relation of creditor and debtor. Lippitt v. ThamesLoan Trust Co.,
The undoubted rule is that, for the purposes of taxation, a debt is property at the residence or domicile of the creditor. Kirtland v. Hotchkiss,
So in this case, the right of the State of Connecticut to tax the resident plaintiff corporation on a New York bank credit which represents capital employed, or to be employed, in a business carried on here, is not affected by the possibility that the State of New York may use its control over the debtor as a means of compelling *322 the plaintiff to pay a second tax on the same credit.
This conclusion does not rest wholly on the so-called fiction that movable follow the person of the owner, which when applied to a purely intangible credit still remains a necessity rather than a fiction. It rests also on the protection which this State affords to the plaintiff's corporate privileges and business. "The debt is property in his hands constituting a portion of his wealth, from which he is under the highest obligation, in common with his fellow-citizens of the same State, to contribute for the support of the government whose protection he enjoys." Kirtland v.Hotchkiss,
The question reserved for our advice is answered in the affirmative, and the Superior Court is advised to render judgment accordingly; costs in this court to be taxed in favor of the defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.