59 Kan. 410 | Kan. | 1898
Willis Brown, J. C. Snodgrass and F. A. Brode, were stockholders in the First National
The liability of the Bank’s property to levy and sale for the payment of the taxes assessed against the stockholders in respect of their ownership of stock, is the question for decision. The material provisions of the statute bearing upon this question are contained in the General Statutes of 1897, ch. 158, and are as follows:
“ Sec. 60. Stockholders in banks and banking associations and loan and investment companies organized under the laws of this State or the United States shall be assessed and taxed on the true value of their shares of stock in the city or township where such banks, banking associations, loan or investment companies are located ; and the president, cashier or other managing officer thereof shall under oath return to the assessor oh demand a list of the names of the stockholders and the amount and value of stock held by each, together with the value of any undivided profit or surplus ; and said banks, banking associations, loan and invest*412 ment companies shall pay the tax assessed upon said stock and undivided profits or surplus, and shall have a lien thereon until the same is satisfied.”
“ Sec. 61. If from any causes the taxes levied upon the stock of any banking association, loan or investment company shall not be paid by said corporation, the property of the individual stockholders shall be held liable therefor.”
“Sec. 144. All taxes on personal property that shall remain due and unpaid on the first day of January, or the first day of July, shall be collected in the following manner: The county treasurer shall, between the tenth and fifteenth days of January and July, respectively, issue a warrant under his hand directed to the sheriff of the county commanding him to levy the amount of such unpaid taxes and the penalty thereon, together with his fees for collecting the same, of the goods and chattels of the person to whom such taxes were assessed ; thereupon said sheriff shall proceed to collect said taxes the same as upon execution, and after collecting the said taxes pay the same to the county treasurer, and return such warrant within sixty days from the date thereof.”
An essential feature of a statute which undertakes to lay obligations upon the citizen is the vindicatory part. “It is but lost labor to say, do this or avoid that, unless we also declare this shall be the consequence of your non-compliance. We must, therefore, observe, that the main strength and force of a law consists in the penalty annexed to it.” Blackstone’s Commentaries, *57. There is no penalty annexed to that part of section 60 which declares that banks shall pay the taxes assessed against their stockholders ; that is, no penalty is imposed upon the banks for their non-compliance. Their non-compliance constitutes no ground for action against them in the courts. It was so held in Commissioners of Stafford Co. v. National Bank (48 Kan. 561, 30 Pac. 22). Indeed, the unquestioned rule is that taxes are not collectable by judicial process unless statutory pro
“A general rule in the interpretation of all statutes, levying taxes or duties upon subjects or citizens, is not to extend their provisions by implication beyond the clear import of the language used, or to enlarge their operation so as to embrace matters not specifically pointed out, although standing in close analogy. . . . In every case, therefore, of doubt, such statutes are construed most strongly against the Government, and in favor of the subjects or citizens, because burdens are not to be imposed, nor presumed to be imposed, beyond what the statutes expressly and clearly import. Revenue laws are in no -just sense either remedial laws or laws founded upon public policy, and therefore are not to be liberally construed.”
The rationale of the statutes under consideration,
The judgment of the Court of Appeals was wrong, and that of the District court was right. The one is reversed and the other affirmed.