82 Md. 132 | Md. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellee sued the appellant for State taxes levied and assessed on the latter’s capital stock. The tax was laid on four thousand shares of stock assessed at twenty-five dollars per share. At the trial the defendant proved that there
We are therefore called on to decide whether the State Tax Commissioner can lawfully assess unissued stock of a corporation. If he can, that will end the controversy, but if we reach the contrary conclusion we must then determine whether the defendant can set up that defence in a proceeding of this character.
Section 132 of Art. 81 of the Code of Public General Laws requires the Tax Commissioner to assess for State purposes on or before the 15th day of May in each year “ the shares of capital stock in all the banks, State or National, banking associations or other incorporated institutions or companies, incorporated under the authority of this State, or located or doing business therein, whose shares of capital stock are liable to assessment and taxation by the laws of this State,” and he has broad powers given him to enable him to obtain information concerning the same.
Section 138 of that Article requires the president or other proper officer of banks or other incorporated institutions, to furnish annually, on or before the 1st day of March, to the County Commissioners of each county, and the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City, in which any of its stockholders may reside, a list of the said stockholders, together with the number of shares held by each, and also to make out and deliver to the County Commissioners of the county, or Appeal Tax Court, where said corporation is situate, an account of the number of shares of stock in such corporation held by persons not residents of this State, and provides that the same shall be valued at its actual cash value to and n the names of such stockholders respectively. That sec
Section 141 provides for the assessment of the real estate of corporations, by the County Commissioners and the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City, and for the payment by the company of State, county or city taxes thereon, in the same manner as the same are levied upon and paid by individual owners of real property. It then prescribes the method of ascertaining the value of the shares of stock of corporations by the Tax Commissioner, who is to deduct the assessed value of the real property belonging to the company from the aggregate value of all the shares of such company, and divide the residuum by the number of shares of capital stock, “ and the quotient shall be the taxable value of such respective shares for State purposes.” The Tax Commissioner is then required to certify to the County Commissioners of each county where any of the stockholders reside, and to the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City, if any reside there, the assessed taxable value of such respective shares of stock so ascertained; and the taxable value of such shares of stock owned by residents of this State and taxable within this State shall, for county and municipal purposes, be valued to the owners thereof in the counties or city in which they respectively reside, but the taxes so assessed are to be paid by the company and charged to the respective stockholders.
Section 131 determines where the stock shall be deemed to be situate for the purpose of valuing stock held by nonresidents.
Taking all these sections together, it would seem to be perfectly clear that the Tax Commissioner is not authorized to assess unissued shares of stock, and any other construction might very materially affect the taxable value of stock for the purposes of county or municipal taxation. Take for example a corporation of an authorized capital of one hundred thousand dollars — one thousand shares of the par value of $100 each. Suppose five hundred shares are subscribed
But by section 144 of Art. 81, the State Tax Commissioner is required as soon as' he has valued and assessed the shares of stock in the corporations in this State, to certify and return the said valuation to the Comptroller of the Treasury, who must at once notify the president, cashier or other proper officer of such corporations of the said valuation and assessment of their shares. If no appeal be taken within thirty days, “the said valuation and assessment shall be final,” but if an appeal is taken within that time to the Comptroller and Treasurer, they are required to consider the same, “and if the Comptroller and Treasurer shall both be of the opinion that such valuation and assessment so made by the State Tax Commissioner is erroneous, and ought to be changed, they shall change the same accordingly, and the valuation and assessment so agreed upon by the Comptroller and Treasurer shall be final; but if either the Comptroller or Treasurer shall agree with the State Tax Commissioner as to the correctness of the valuation so made by him, then such appeal shall be dismissed, and the original valuation shall be and remain as the true valuation of such shares.”
It is therefore contended by the State, that as the' assessment and valuation by the Tax Commissioner are made final unless changed on appeal to the Comptroller and Treasurer, they cannot be attacked collaterally, and as no appeal was taken in this case to those officers the appellant is without remedy. We might perhaps rest our decision on the language of the statute itself, as it seems to contemplate a review by the Comptroller and Treasurer of the valuation alone. It says such corporation may “appeal from such valuation.” It is true it does authorize the Comptroller and Treasurer to change the “valuation and assessment',’ if they think they ought to be changed, but it further provides that “if either the Comptroller or Treasurer shall agree with
The duties of the Tax Commissioner are well defined and *^tty are limited to the powers granted to him by statute. He is authorized “ to assess for State purposes the shares of capital stock on all banks, State or National, banking associations, or other incorporated institutions or companies incorporated under the authority of this State,” etc., and from the valuation so to be made by him, an appeal is allowed, as already stated, to the Comptroller and Treasurer, but as he has no authority to assess unissued stock the Comptroller and Treasurer have no authority to review his assessment of it and their action on such an appeal to them would have been nugatory and of no avail.
This case is clearly distinguishable from those cited on behalf of the State, such as Jackson v. Bennett, 80 Md. 77; Smith v. Goldsborough, 80 Md. 63; County Commissioners v. Union Mining Co., 61 Md. 545; Mayor, etc., of Baltimore v. Canton Co., 63 Md. 237, and others referred to. So long as tribunals, with special and limited statutory powers, act within the scope of such powers their action, is ordinarily conclusive and final unless appeal be given specially to some other tribunal, but they must not exceed the jurisdiction conferred on them, as we hold the Tax Commissioner did in undertaking to assess this unissued stock.
It follows from what we have said that the testimony of the defendant was relevant and material and the prayer of the plaintiff ought not to have been granted. The judgment must therefore be reversed.
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded, zvith costs to the appellant.