200 S.E. 845 | W. Va. | 1938
Lead Opinion
The Charleston Federal Savings Loan Association and two other organizations of like nature were, on June 2, 1938, granted an injunction by the Circuit Court of Kanawha County restraining Ernest K. James, State Tax Commissioner, and J. H. Abbott, Assessor of Kanawha County, "from assessing for taxation purposes the intangible and personal property of plaintiffs, as if they were ordinary business corporations, under the provisions of Sections 12 and 13, Article 3, Chapter 11 of the Code of West Virginia, as last amended, which said sections provide for the assessment of corporate property in this State; * * *." On June 24, 1938, upon the intervening petition of Farmers' Building Loan Association, a West Virginia corporation, a similar injunction order was entered as to it. The appeals from both orders were granted by this Court upon the application of the State Tax Commissioner.
The respondents demurred to both the bill of complaint and the intervening petition and filed a verified answer to each. The question of law, the decision of which resulted *783
in the court's overruling both demurrers and holding that the answers did not set up a sufficient defense to the allegations of the bill of complaint, was whether or not state building and loan associations are to be classified as ordinary business corporations and are taxable as such. The Federal Statute (12 U.S.C.A., section 1464 [h]) provides, in effect, that federal building and loan associations shall not be subjected to taxation by the local taxing authorities except to the extent that state building and loan associations are taxed. Therefore, a solution of the question of whether or not the state building and loan associations are taxable as ordinary business corporations under Code,
The law of West Virginia has been assumed to be in conflict with the law of nearly every other state where the question has arisen since 1896 when this Court decided the case of OhioValley Building Loan Association v. County Court,
In the opinion handed down by this Court in Ohio ValleyBuilding Loan Association v. County Court,
In 1900, the Supreme Court of New Mexico, in the case ofTerritory v. Co-operative Building Loan Association ofAlbuquerque,
The New Jersey Supreme Court, in the case of State,Washington B. L. Association, Pros. v. Creveling, Collector,etc.,
In Turco Paint Varnish Company v. Kalodner (1936),
In a somewhat exhaustive opinion, the Wyoming Supreme Court, in Albany Mutual Building Association v. City of Laramie
(1901),
The Supreme Court of Alabama also laid down the principle that a building and loan association is to be regarded as a "domestic" corporation, regardless of the privilege of its shareholders to withdraw their contributions at any time on notice, and held further that a constitutional provision forbidding the exemption of corporations from taxation rendered it impossible for building and loan associations to be exempted by the legislature. State v. Guaranty Savings Building LoanAssociation,
In addition to this Court's decision in Ohio Valley Building Loan Association v. County Court,
For the foregoing reasons, we are of the opinion that a state building and loan association is an incorporated company within the meaning of that term as used in Code,
Reversed; bill and petition dismissed.
Dissenting Opinion
As pointed out by the court in Ohio Valley Building LoanAssociation v. County Court,
Such funds belong to the members in the several amounts determined by the number of shares of stock they own, respectively. That is as true today as when the opinion in the above case was written. With other corporations the capital funds are corporately owned. This fundamental differentiation between savings organizations and ordinary corporations remains unimpaired by legislation.
In my judgment, this basic fact should require that we adhere to the taxation principle promulgated in the cited case and which has been followed by the taxing authorities of the state since the decision in 1896. That decision, sound in principle, as I see it, and supplemented by forty years of administrative acquiescence and effectuation, should not, in my opinion, be supplanted by a different theory obtaining in some of the other states. In my view a change of base is not warranted.
Therefore, I would affirm the trial chancellor's decree.
With regret, I dissent from the decision of my brethren. *788