21 Ind. 261 | Ind. | 1863
The Indiana Bank is a stock bank, organized under the general banking law of Indiana, doing business
the city of Madison for the year 1862 assessed a tax against the bank on her capital stock for municipal purposes.. This action was brought to restrain the collection of said taxes, and a perpetual injunction was granted below. the city appeals. There were two grounds on which it is claimed that the taxes were not collectable: First, that the stock should have been assessed to the individual stockholders and not against the bank; and, Second, that the amount thus invested in the bonds of the United States was not taxable. "We are of opinion that the first position was well taken.
the city of Madison is governed by a special charter. Under that charter the proper mode of taxing bank ¡stock is to assess it against the individual stockholder, and not against the corporation. King v. The City of Madison, Ind. 48.
An act was passed in 1861 (1 G. & H. p. 17,) providing for the taxation of bank stock against the banks, and not the stockholders, but this act, as wre construe it, only applies to taxation for State and county purposes, and not to taxes to be collected by municipal corporations. Whether or not cities, existing under the general law for the incorporation of cities, might not assess and collect taxes against the stock banks in the manner prescribed by the act of 1861, we have not inquired; but we think it clear that the city of Madison can only assess the tax upon the stockholders.
It appears in the ease that a portion of the stockjwas owned by persons who were not inhabitants of the city, and it is
Per Curiam. — The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.