124 Wis. 15 | Wis. | 1905
Congress having expressly consented that the states may, if they choose, tax the shares of stock in national banks, with certain limitations, and may also tax the real estate of the banking association (sec. 5219, R. S. of U. S. [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3502]), 'the present tax finds no obstacle in the federal origin of the appellant corporation, and we have only to consider whether the law of Wisconsin,, as it existed in 1901, authorized it.
See. 1034:, Stats. 1898, under title XIII, “Taxation,” commands that taxes “be levied on all property in this state except such as is exempted therefrom.” Confessedly, see. 1038,. Stats. 1898, prescribing exemptions, does not include suchi property as that now involved. However, in the banking act adopted in 1866 (ch. 102, see. 1), we find the further provision, “No tax shall hereafter be assessed upon the capital of any bank or banking association organized under the authority of this state,” made applicable by sec. 2 to national banks within the state. Here, if anywhere, must be found the exemption claimed by appellant. The question obviously crystallizes into the inquiry whether the capital of a banking as
The words “capital” and “capital stock,” often used interchangeably, are found in tax laws to- be applied to one or an-' other of three different mental conceptions: first, to the shares or interest which the stockholders have in a corporation; secondly, to the money or property which the incorporators contribute and transfer to the corporation as capital, and which thus becomes its property; and, thirdly, the word is often used as a mere measure of size of the corporation as a test for graduating taxes, usually by way of license. Beyond doubt the word is used in this law in the second sense, for the first is clearly distinguished in the same section by use of the phrase “shares of stock,” and the third is obviously not contemplated.
The capital of a corporation is defined as “the funds paid in by the stockholders to be used and managed by the association for banking purposes.” State Bank v. Milwaukee, 18 Wis. 281, 284. A distinguishing feature is that it becomes the property of the corporation, as differentiated from the component stockholders. It may originally consist of money or specific property, but with banks, as with most other business corporations, money paid in as capital never remains m specie for any considerable time. It almost at once becomes converted into some form of property — bonds, securities, or real estate. If, therefore, the exemption of the capital so industriously proclaimed by the law of 1866 was intended to apply only to the specific funds received from the original contributors while retained in the original form, it would be of so slight practical value or importance as to be not worth the effort of enactment. A further consideration, persuasive though not conclusive, is that intent to impose taxation which is double even from an economic viewpoint is not to be ascribed to legislation in absence of clear and unambiguous expression. People v. Roberts, 32 App. Div. 113, 52 N. Y. Supp. 859; Toll-Bridge Co. v. Osborn, 35 Conn. 7, 20; Ten
The probability to the contrary is, however, rendered almost a certainty by examination of the conditions and statutes sought to be modified in 1866. Sec. 20, ch. 71, R. S. 1858, required that every banking association, not the shareholders, should pay one and one half per cent, on the amount at par of its capital stock, and provided that “said capital stock shall be exempt from all other taxes except on that portion of said capital stock which shall consist of and include the real property.” “Capital stock” was there used in the same sense as “capital,” for the shareholders’ interest was discriminated and exempted by another clause. There can, of course, be
So far as this court has spoken, its utterances tend to confirm exemption of the property of banks acquired with their capital. State Bank v. Milwaukee, supra, under the old law, has already been mentioned. In Second Ward Savings Bank v. Milwaukee, 94 Wis. 587, 69 N. W. 359, taxability of tire plaintiff’s real estate was sustained only by holding that it had been acquired with and constituted part of the surplus, apparently conceding that it must be exempt if it represented capital. Again, in Hamacker v. Commercial Bank, 95 Wis. 359, 362, 70 N. W. 295, it was said the bank had no personal
In many other jurisdictions has been declared identity between the capital of a corporation and the specific property into which the money capital had been transformed. The supreme court of the United States has settled for the whole country that an act of Congress exempting United States bonds is disobeyed by a law taxing the capital of a corporation when that capital has become invested in such bonds. Bank Tax Cases, 2 Wall. 200; Van Allen v. Assessors, 3 Wall. 573; Nat. Bank v. Comm. 9 Wall. 353; Cleveland T. Co. v. Lander, 184 U. S. 111, 22 Sup. Ct. 394. Other cases of interest are Tennessee v. Whitworth, 117 U. S. 129, 6 Sup. Ct. 645; Railroad Cos. v. Gaines, 97 U. S. 697, 707; Lackawanna Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 94 Pa. St. 221; Comm’rs v. Citizens’ Nat. Bank, 23 Minn. 280, 288; Hannibal & St. J. R. Co. v. Shacklett, 30 Mo. 550; State, North Ward Nat. Bank v. Newark, 39 N. J. Law, 380; State v. St. Paul U. D. Co. 42 Minn. 142, 43 N. W. 840.
The foregoing considerations constrain us to the conclu- j sion that the legislation in question must be construed as ex-: empting such of the property of a banking association as can! be clearly proved to have been acquired with, and to constitute part of, its capital. We appreciate the difficulties that' may arise in ascertaining whether given items of personalty or realty have been acquired by investment of the capital as distinguished from the surplus or moneys on deposit; but they are not greater than attend many other questions of fact which are cast upon Various tribunals for solution. Doubtless the burden must rest on the association to prove clearly the exempt character of the property, and to show an appro
Respondents further urge that, although the tax in question be invalid, plaintiff cannot be heard to complain because, as they assert, the assessors valued the shares of capital stock which were assessed to the owners thereof for the year 1901 at less than their true value, and in estimating their value did not include the real estate in question. It is certainly too late at the present time to try the validity or correctness of an assessment upon other property to other owners; nor is such fact at all relevant to plaintiff’s contention. It is thoroughly established that the stockholders, as individuals, are different entities, for the purposes of taxation, from the corporation in which they hold stock, and that their stock interest therein is a wholly distinct property from either the capital owned by the bank or any other of its property. Second Ward S. Bank v. Milwaukee, 94 Wis. 587, 69 N. W. 359; State ex rel. Batz v. Lewis, 118 Wis. 432, 95 N. W. 388; Van Allen v. Assessors, 3 Wall. 573; Nat. Bank v. Comm. 9 Wall. 353. The plaintiff corporation has a right to insist that its exempt property shall not be taxed, whether other property owned by other people has been sufficiently or insufficiently taxed.
It is still further urged by respondents that, in effect, the bank itself purchased this certificate, and that this action cannot be maintained, because it is established that Mark Paine, who nominally holds it, holds subject to the direction of the bank, and no decree of a court of equity is necessary to- cancel his rights, and because, in purchasing the certificate, the bank, in effect, paid its tax voluntarily and cannot now sustain the'
The property being exempt, the tax laid upon it, as also the tax certificate, is void, and plaintiff has a right to judgment to that effect. Also, as against the county, Mark Paine has right to return of the money paid for the certificate by virtue of his legal title thereto. Whether by reason of some trust he may be accountable to Mr. Fuse for that money, is wholly immaterial.
By the Court.- — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to render judgment in accordance with the prayer of the complaint.