55 Pa. 45 | Pa. | 1867
The opinion of the court was delivered, November 7th 1867, by
— The revolutionary war and its debt produced the first Bank of the United States. The war of 1812 and its debt produced the second Bank of the United States. And the late rebellion and its debt have produced the present system of national banks spread over the whole country, and controlled and governed by a bureau in the treasury department, the chief officer of which is the comptroller of the currency. The principal object of this plan was to provide a national currency secured by a pledge of United States bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redemption thereof. Associations for carrying on the business of banking were authorized, which from the date of their organization-certificates became bodies corporate for a period of twenty years.
No bank could have a capital of less than $50,000, and the whole capital must be actually paid up in six months, the first payment being 50 per cent., which must be paid in before it could be authorized to commence business, and one-third of such capital must be registered United States bonds deposited with and transferred to the treasurer of the United States, for which they may receive from the comptroller circulating notes equal in amount to 90 per cent, of such deposit, to be signed by the officers of the association using the same. The shares are to be $100 each and the stockholders are to be individually responsible for the debts of the association to the extent of their stock therein at the par value thereof in addition to the amount invested in their shares. These notes are to be received at par in all parts of the United States in payment of taxes, excises, public lands and all other dues to the United States except duties on imports, and also for all salaries and other debts and demands owing by the United States to individuals, corporations and associations within the United States, except interest on the public debt and in redemption of the national currency. These notes when presented must be redeemed at par in lawful money — that is, legal-tender notes— and every association must receive them at par for any debt or liability to such association. When the legal-tender notes are funded or withdrawn, then this national currency must be redeemed in gold and’ silver coin, which will then be the only lawful money. These associations may become depositaries and financial agents of the government, and then they shall receive and take at par all of the national currency bills, by whatever association issued, which have been paid into the government for internal revenue or for loans or stocks.
The business of these associations is described in the law to be that of banking by discounting and negotiating promissory notes, drafts, bills of exchange and other evidences of debt; by receiving deposits ; by buying and selling exchange coin and bullion; by loaning money on personal security; by obtaining, issuing and circulating notes according to the provisions of the act; and its usual business shall be transacted at an office or banking-house located in the place specified in its organization-certificate.
Such is the full and comprehensive description by Congress of the business of a national bank and which is asserted by the plaintiffs to be subject to municipal taxation under a state law.
These provisions show that the connection of the government with these associations is infinitely closer than it was with the former Banks of the United States as to capital, circulation and deposits, and that they are under the direct control and supervision of the financial department of the government. They are mere creations of the national government to whom alone they are responsible, and as entirely independent of state legislation or state interference as the army and navy, and the mint, and the judicial tribunals of the United States.
The Supreme Court of the United States decided nearly half a century ago that Congress had the power to incorporate banks, for that was the effect of their decision in McCulloch v. State of Maryland, 4 Wheat. 816, solemnly reaffirmed in Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 9 Id. 861. These cases also decided that a state could not tax it, the first case being a stamp tax on the notes of a branch, and the second a tax on one of its branches. “ When a state taxes the operations of the government of the United States, it acts upon institutions created not by their own constituents, but by people over whom they claim no control. It acts upon the measures of a government created by others, as well as themselves, for the benefit of others in common with themselves. The difference is that which always exists and always must exist between the action of the whole on a part, and the action of a part on the whole — between the laws of a government declared to be supreme, and those of a government which, when in opposition to those laws, is not supreme.”
“ The court has bestowed on this subject its most deliberate consideration. The result is, a conviction that the states have no power, by taxation or otherwise, to retard, impede, burden or in any manner control the operations of the constitutional laws enacted by Congress to carry into execution the powers vested in the general government. This is, we think, the unavoidable consequence of that supremacy which the Constitution has declared.”
“ The business of the bank constitutes its capacity to perform its functions as a machine for the money transactions of the government. Its corporate character is merely an incident which enables it to transact that business more beneficially.”
“ If the sound construction of the act be that it exempts the trade of the bank as being essential to the character of a machine necessary to the fiscal operations of the government from the control of the state, courts are as much bound to give it that construction as if the exemption has been established in direct terms.”
“ If the trade of the bank be essential to its character, as a machine for the fiscal operations of the government, that trade may be as exempt from state control as the actual conveyance of the public money. Indeed, a tax bears upon the whole machine, as well upon the faculty of collecting and transmitting the money of the nation as on that of discounting the notes of individuals. No distinction is taken between them.” “ Considering the capacity of carrying on the trade of banking is an important feature in the character of this corporation, which was necessary to make it a fit instrument for the objects for which it was created, the court adheres to its decision in the case of Mc-Culloch against The State of Maryland.”
A state cannot tax stock issued for loans made to the United States: Weston v. City of Charleston, 2 Peters 449. C. J. Marshall says, p. 467: “ The sovereignty of a state extends to everything which exists by its own authority or is introduced by its permission; but not to those means which are employed by Congress to carry into execution powers conferred upon that body by the people of the United States. The attempt to use the power of taxation on the means employed by the government of the Union in pursuance of the Constitution is itself an abuse, because it is usurpation of a power which the people of a single state cannot give.”
And in the dissenting opinion of Justice Thompson in Brown
It was held, in The People of New York ex rel. Bank of Commerce v. The Tax Commissioners, 2 Black 620, that the capital of a state bank invested in the stocks of the United States was not liable to state taxation ; and in The Bank Tax Case, 2 Wall. S. C. U. S. 200, it was held that a tax laid by a state on state banks at a valuation equal to the amount of their capital paid in or secured to be paid in is a tax on the property of the institution, and when that property consists of stocks of the National Government the law laying the tax is void.
In the case before us, the first argument was at Pittsburg on the 23d October 1865, before four judges, and a re-argument being ordered, it took place before a full bench at Philadelphia on the 28th February 1867.
In this interval three more cases have been decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, which appear to settle the question entirely in conformity with the foregoing part of this opinion written nearly two years ago. In Van Allen v. The Assessors, 3 Wall. 573, the court held that the Act of June 3d 1864, rightly construed, subjects the shares of the banking associations authorized by it, and in the hands of shareholders, to taxation by the states under certain-limitations set forth in the 41st section, and that such act thus construed is constitutional. The effect of this decision is, that taxation by the states of national banks in any other way than that excepted by the act itself is unconstitutional.
“The power of taxation under the Constitution,” says Justice Nelson, “ as a general rule, and as has been repeatedly recognised in adjudged cases in this court, is ’ a concurrent power. The qualifications of the rule are the exclusion of the states from the taxation of the means and instruments employed in the exercise of the functions of the Federal Government.” These national banks are recognised in the opinions of both the majority and minority of the court as the means and instruments employed in the exercise of the functions of the Federal Govment, and of course liable only to the limited state taxation, anowed by Congress.
By the 5th section, if the cashier of a bank fails to pay said tax, then the treasurer of the city may levy and sell the property of the corporation by a ward constable under a warrant issued by the treasurer. By an ordinance of said city, a tax was assessed upon the quarterly business of all banks and banking institutions, doing business in said-city, and the tax so assessed on the defendants for the year 1864 was $1467.67.
Without stopping to show that the Act of 1859 never could have contemplated a national bank, and that the provision for collection of the tax by a ward constable would be a singular mode of treating an institution established by the General Government, it would be .sufficient to- say that this tax is not within the terms of the 41st section, for it is not a tax on the shares of shareholders of the bank.
This law, and an ordinance under it of a similar character, was largely discussed by the present Chief Justice in The Iron City Bank v. The City of Pittsburg, 1 Wright 340.
The Chief Justice says, at p. 343: “ Lid the legislature mean to tax the capital of Pittsburg banks for city purposes? We should be glad to be able to say, as we did in respect to the general tax laws in the case of The New York and Erie Railroad Co., 2 Casey 244, that we saw no express intention to that effect, and that we would not imply the intention where another specified inode of taxation had been provided; but the. language of the Act of 1859 is too full and precise to admit of such a construction. To say that they did not intend a tax of the capital, would be to impute to the legislature ignorance of the fact that the capital of banks enters into their average quarterly business.’ That they must have known when they passed the act. It would be scandalous'-' b doubt it. Then their language is plain that ‘ the average quarterly business’ shall be taxed for city purposes, which is a plain, though not a very direct, way of saying that the capital shall be taxed for city purposes.”
It is clear, then, upon principle and authority, that this is a tax which cannot be imposed by the state directly or through the
If, therefore, this bank be considered as embraced by the provisions of the Act of 1859, then this tax is unconstitutional, whether it be a tax on the capital or on the trade and business of the institution, which the Supreme Court say is an “ instrument employed in the exercise of the functions of the Federal Government.”
It is not necessary to fortify these decisions by those of the state courts, but we shall mention them in order to show that they have not been overlooked. In New Jersey, in the case of The State v. Haight, in November Term 1865, Chief Justice Beasley delivering the opinion, the Supreme Court held the shares of stockholders in national banks were liable to state taxation,- solely by virtue of the 41st section of the Act of Congress. The cases of Wright v. Stilz, in the state of Indiana; of Frazer v. S. W. Siebern, in Ohio, are to be found in the American Law Register, vol. 6, N. S. No. 8, for June 1867, pages 471, &c., with a learned note on these and other cases cited in it by one of the editors. On the 24th July 1867, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts decided shares of shareholders in national banks are subject to state taxation, conforming to the provisions of the 41st section above mentioned, and they cite a decision of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire and an opinion given to the legislature of the state of Maine by the justices of the Supreme Court, giving a different interpretation of the proviso from theirs.
There is also a Nisi Prius decision of our brother Agnew in Markoe v. Hartranft, published in the same volume of the American Law Register, p. 487, holding that the shares of stockholders in national banks can only be taxed by .a state in strict conformity with the provisions of the National Bank Act of June 1864.
This is a very large and important question in all its bearings, involving over sixteen hundred national banks, with a national currency of three hundred millions, which, if exposed to unlimited state taxation, might be taxed out of existence, and the financial system of the government entirely destroyed. All the authorities, state and national, agree in holding a tax like the present one to be unconstitutional.
Judgment affirmed.