Appellant, a national hank, claiming that chapter 22, Laws of 19-30 of the State of Mississippi, exempting the surplus of state hanks from taxation, operated in connection with the general taxing acts to impose taxes on its shares at a greater rate than was imposed on other moneyed capital in competition with it, section 5219, R. S. U. S. (12 USCA § 548), brought these suits to enjoin the collection of taxes assessed against it. Until March 11, 1930, national hanks had no complaint to make of the taxing system of the state; section 3138 of the 1930 Code, under which all hanks were taxed, making identical provision for state and national banks. That section, after providing for the assessment of state hanks, continued: “Provided, nevertheless, in case of such bank or banking association existing under the laws of the United Slates a precisely similar amount shall be. assessed upon and collected from the shareholders thereof at the domicile of the bank as would have been assessed upon and collected from the said bank had it been created under the laws of the state of Mississippi; hut each said hank and hanking association shall, nevertheless, he liable to pay any taxes as the agent of each of its shareholders, and may pay the same out of their individual profit account, or charge the same to their expense account, or to the account of such shareholder in proportion to their ownership.”
On March 11, the Legislature, in contemplation of the troubled state of its bank guaranty fund, enacted the law complained of. This among other things suspended the operation of the Bank Guaranty Acts of 1914 (chapter 124) as amended until outstanding guaranty certificates were paid. In addition to making provision for assessment upo-n and the regulation and control of state banks and their practices, it provided for the exemption from taxation of their surplus to the amount of their capital, and for an assessment of 3 per cent, upon the exempted surplus for the purpose of creating a depositors’ protection fund. The act also provided that when national banks complied with the provisions of the act they should have the same exemption. This act has been upheld by the Supremo Court of Mississippi, both generally and as applied to national hanks; that court (Capital National Bank v. City of Jackson,
The appellant bank made no attempt to comply with the act, and it was assessed with - out exemption. The statutes of Mississippi, section 3179, Code 1930, allow an appeal from the action of the hoard of supervisors to the circuit court, and a trial de novo in that court, with an appeal from that court to the Supreme Court of the state. Appellant took the appeal thus allowed, and was pursuing this remedy in the circuit court when it decided to file these suits.
The taxing authorities, by cross-appeal, renewing their contentions against the jurisdiction, insist that the decree should be reversed and the bill dismissed. They also vigorously contend that on the merits no case of discrimination was made. They argue that the Mississippi court having, in the Capital Bank Case supra, held that since a national bank may avail itself of the tax exemption by compliance alone with those provisions of the state law which are applicable to it, there is no discrimination. First Nat. Bank v. La. Tax Comm.,
We do not find it necessary to consi~ler or determine where the right of this contention lies, for it is clear to us that no case for the exercise of federal equity jurisdiction is made out. If the assessment complained of here were a final one, plaintiff, having an adequate remedy at law to pay the tax and sut to recover it back, could not enjoin its collec tion. Stratton v. St. L. & S. W. Ry.,
Besides, we think that plaintiff may not maintain these suits for the further reason that at the time they were brought the assessments had not become final, but were in process of settlement in the Mississippi courts in a proceeding which though partly judicial was also essentially administrative in character. Sections 51, 62, 3179 and 3180 Mississippi Code 1930, provide, as a part of assessment proceedings, a fully remedial review in the courts. In those proceedings plainti~ may- present every question which it now seeks to litigate, advance every federal right which it now asserts. Board of Supervisors Lauderdale County v. Citizens' Nat. Bank
Plaintiff’s suit then being not only premature, because the administrative remedies not having been exhausted the tax has not become final, but one which plaintiff cannot ever maintain, because it has a plain and adequate remedy at law, the judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the bill.
Notes
Appellant seeks to avoid the effect of this deci. sion by the contention which the District Court sus~ tamed, that the Supreme Court of the United State~ did not correctly apprehend the effect of the Mississippi decisions, and by invoking as conclusivE of its right to resort to equity. Cummings v Merchants' Nat. Bank,
