7 F. 152 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1881
The complainant moves for a preliminary injunction to restrain the defendants from the collection of taxes assessed against its several shareholders, on the ground ’ —First, that the laws of this state impose one rule of assessment and taxation upon shareholders in corporations other than banking associations, and another upon banks, whereby a higher taxation incidentally rests upon the latter, and as to the shareholders of national banking associations thereby violates the rule of uniformity prescribed by section 5219, Kev.
Upon the first ground on which the motion is predicated, some remarks in the opinion in Albany City Bank v. Maher
It was the object of the act of congress to permit the stato, which creates corporations, or allows them to exercise their franchises within its limits, to tax them as its own policy may dictate, and by its system to foster them by light taxation, or discourage them by onerous taxation, without thereby establishing a rule to control its taxation of the shares held by its citizens in national banks. The states have no power to tax the capital of national banking associations, but are granted the power to tax the moneyed capital of its citizens invested in such shares to the same extent as though it remained uninvested therein. The citizens of a state may invest their moneyed capital as they choose, and must accept the measure of taxation which is imposed by the state on the character of the investment they have selected. If they choose to invest it in corporations or joint-stock companies, they must submit to have it taxed upon the principles which the state has adopted or may adopt for the taxation of such corporations or joint-stock companies. As the policy of the state may dictate different modes and measures of taxation for different classes of corporations, it would be difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain the measure of taxation for national bank shares by that prescribed for capital invested in other corporations. Thus, while life insurance companies are taxed by a franchise tax, and taxation of the shares exempted, other corporations are taxed upon their capital stock; while in others still the shareholders are taxed upon their shares. Which class of corporations would furnish the rule for taxation of shareholders in national banks ? The section should be so construed as to obviate this difficulty, and prescribe a rule capable of practical application.
In People v. Commissioners, 4 Wall. 244, a deduction or allowance was made under the laws of the state in assessments against individuals and insurance companies on account of investments in the securities of the United States, while none was made in assessing the relator upon his shares in a national bank, and the tax was sustained. In Gorgas’ Appeal, 79 Pa. St. 149, the state laws exempted all mortgages, judgments, recognizances, or moneys owing upon articles, of agreement for the sale of real estate, and it was held that such exemption did not preclude the state from taxing national bank shares to the same extent that moneyed capital other than of the character exempted was taxed. In Hepburn v. The School Directors, 23 Wall. 480, the precise question presented in Gorgas’ Appeal .was ruled in the same way. When an exemption or deduction is allowed by the laws of the 'state, which is of such general operation as to affect all classes of taxable property, it must be allowed in assessing shares in national banks, because it necessarily is the rule of assessment. The deduction was of this character in Albany Exchange National Bank v. Hills
Moneyed capital cannot be said to be exempt from taxation by the laws of this state because that portion of it which is invested in the shares of various classes of corporations is exempt. Not only does the state tax moneyed capital generally, but the capital invested in these corporations is taxed in the hands of corporations. If thereby any inequal
In Limberger v. Rouse, 9 Wall. 468, it is stated that the-enactment was intended to place national banks on an equality with state banks as to the taxation of their shares by the state. In Hepburn v. School Directors, 23 Wall. 484, it is said that moneyed capital, as used in the section, signifies something more than money lent out at interest, and comprehends investments in stocks and securities. In Adams v. Mayor of Nashville, 95 U. S. 19, the opinion is that “the act was not intended to curtail the state power on the subject of taxation. It simply required that capital invested in national ■ banks should not be taxed at a greater rate than like property similarly invested.”
It would seem that the term “moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens” more aptly describes ready money, or capital invested in private banking, than it does capital invested in manufacturing corporations, insurance companies, and the like. As originally used in the national banking, act, (section 41,) it signified something different from capital invested in state banking corporations, because it was provided originally that the taxation ‘by the states should not exceed that imposed on moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens, or that imposed “upon the shares in any of the banks organized under authority of the state.” 13 St. at Large, 112. It is hardly appropriate to call shares in manufacturing or insurance corporations “moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens;” and if it had been intended to include all capital thus invested, it would have been easy to do so under some such comprehensive term as personal property. It seems more reasonable to believe that while congress was legislating to place national bank shares on an equality
.. As to the second ground upon which the motion rests, as the collector is a ministerial officer, who must obey the mandate in his hands for the eolloction of the tax, the complainant cannot succeed, unless the tax is void, because illegal, as distinguished from irregular. The assessment roll and warrant annexed for the collection of the taxes constitute the mandate of the officer, and the legality of his proceedings under them may he determined by the principles which apply to the case of an officer acting under a judgment and execution.
The rule in this stated in Erskine v. Hohnback, 14 Wall. 613:
“If an officer or tribunal possess jurisdiction over the subject-matter upon which judgment is passed, with power to issue an order or process for the enforcement of such judgment, and the order or process issued thereon to a ministerial officer is regular on its face, showing no departure from the law or defect of jurisdiction over the person or property affected, then, and in such cases, the order or process will give full and entire protection to the ministerial officer against any prosecution which the party-aggrieved may institute against him, although serious errors may have been committed by the officer or tribunal in reaching the conclusion or judgment upon which the order or process issued.”
Tested by this rule, the collector in the present case is protected by his warrant in collecting the tax.
Doubtless the fair construction of the Revised Statutes and the charter of the city of Utica requires that when the assessment roll for a given ward is delivered by the board of supervisors to the treasurer of the city of Utica, the amount of the tax paid by each tax payer shall have been extended and shall appear upon the roll. But everything had been done
The complainant cannot succeed upon either branch of its ease. Motion for injunction denied.
6 Fed. Rep. 417
See 5 Fed. Rep. 248.
See 6 Fed. Rep. 417.