45 So. 604 | La. | 1908
Plaintiffs in this suit are the owners, respectively, of one share of the capital stock of the New Orleans Stock Exchange, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Louisiana, and they sue to cancel the assessment of said shares for taxation for the year 1906. Plaintiffs represent that said assessment is null and void for the reasons and on the grounds (1) that under the laws of the state of Louisiana shares of stock in corporations, other than banking corporations, are not liable to assessment and taxation, and (2) that, if such shares are assessable for taxation, then the assessment of the shareholders of the New Orleans Stock Exchange is a denial to petitioners of the equal protection of the laws, and deprives them of their property without due process of law, in violation of the Constitution of the state of Louisiana and the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States, because the shareholders of .all other corporations in the state, except banking corporations, were not assessed for taxation for the year 1906.
The defendants pleaded the general issue, the cause was tried, and there was judgment rejecting plaintiffs’ demand. They have appealed.
The first contention of plaintiffs is that the shares of no corporation, except banking concerns, are assessable for taxation under the
Under section 27 the assessment of the capital stock of banking corporations is forbidden, and such institutions are taxable only on their real estate. The same section, provides that the shares in such corporations shall be assessed to the shareholders at their actual value as shown by the books of the bank. The same section further provides that:
“All real estate owned by the bank * * * shall be assessed directly to the bank, and the pro rata of such direct property taxed, proportioned to each share of capital stock, shall be deducted from the amount of taxes assessed to that share under this section.”
Section 28 provides:
“That all other corporations, save those enumerated in section 27 of this act, shall be assessed directly upon all property owned by such corporations, which is taxable under section 1 of this act.”
Section 1 (page 346) provides for the levying of taxes on the “assessed valuation of all property situated within the state of Louisiana, except such as is expressly exempted by law,” and enumerates at great length the different classes of things which are included in the meaning of the term “property.” It is to be noted that no shares of stock, except of banking corporations, are included in this enumeration.
Section 29 of the act provides for the assessment of the physical properties, movable and immovable, of railroad and other transportation corporations.
These sections show radical differences between the assessment of banking corporations and that of all other corporations. In the first place, an incorporated bank is not taxed on its assets, other than real estate, while all other corporations are taxed on all their property, movable and immovable, corporeal and incorporeal. In the second place, the shares in banks are taxed against the individual shareholders, while no mention is made of shares in the sections providing for the taxation of other corporations.
Defendants’ theory that the revenue act of 1898 provides for the assessment and taxation of all property not specially exempted by the Constitution of 1898 would nullify section 27 as to the nonassessment of the assets of banking corporations, and would read into sections 28 and 29 the additional requirement that all shares of stock in other corporations should be assessed against the shareholders.
That the revenue act in question does not contemplate the assessment of the assets of banking corporations, other than is provided in section 27, is manifest from the following extract from section 1:
“The above enumeration of assessable property is in no wise intended to apply to the assets of banking companies or associations whose shares of stock are assessed in lieu thereof under section 27, save in so far as is declared in said section 27.”
We must either conclude that the lawmaker intended to apply this rule of equivalents to all corporations or that he intended to unjustly discriminate in favor of the incorporated banks of the state. The subsequent sections of the act show that the lawmaker has taxed corporations in accordance with the rule announced in section 1. Thus in section 27 the shares of banking corporations are taxed, and the assets of the corporations exempted. The single exception of real estate proves the intent of the lawmaker not to tax the shareholders and the corporation on the same values, because provision is made for the deduction of the assessed value of real estate from the assessed value of the shares. In sections 28 and 29 all the property of other corporations is directly taxed, and no provision is made for the taxation of shares. Whether right or wrong from the standpoint of constitutional requirements, the Legislature of this state has
It is therefore ordered that the judgment appealed from be reversed, and it is now ordered that there be judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, canceling from the assessment rolls of the year 1906 and decreeing null and void the assessment of each of the plaintiffs’ share or seat in the New Orleans Stock Exchange; and it is further ordered that the defendants pay costs in both courts.