24 N.E.2d 854 | NY | 1939
The plaintiff is a savings and loan association, organized under the provisions of article X of the Banking Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 2). By section 386 (now § 380, subd. 5) of that article it is required to record immediately every mortgage taken by it. The Register of the County of Queens, the recording officer of that county, refused to accept four mortgages tendered to him by the plaintiff for record unless the plaintiff paid to him the amount of the "recording tax," which the Legislature had attempted to impose upon each mortgage recorded after the 1st day of July, 1906. (Tax Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 60], § 253.) The plaintiff claimed that under the Constitution of the State of New York and the Constitution of the United States, the tax could not lawfully be imposed, but paid the tax under protest. The controversy has been submitted to the Appellate Division of the Third Department upon an agreed *82 statement of facts and that court has sustained the validity of the tax.
The Legislature for more than a century has made provision for recording instruments affecting real property. (Laws of 1810, ch. 175; Revised Laws of 1813, ch. 97. Cf. Felix v. Devlin,
In 1906 the Legislature passed a statute (Laws of 1906, ch. 532), which, the court has said, provided "a different scheme of mortgage taxation * * * to take effect July 1st of that year, and applicable to mortgages recorded on or after that date. It prescribed a recording tax of fifty cents on each hundred dollars in lieu of the annual property tax prescribed by the statute of 1905." (Italics are new.) (People v. Trust Companyof America,
Many of the provisions of the statute of 1906 now part of the Tax Law were contained, also, in chapter 729 of the Laws of 1905, which was supplanted by the later statutes. For the taxpayer the significant difference was that under the earlier statute the tax was payable annually; under the later statute, the tax is payable only once — at the time the mortgage is recorded. Upon payment of the tax the owner of the mortgage might secure the benefit of the recording acts. Until the tax was paid, the use of the mortgage was subject to the drastic restrictions upon its use which were imposed by the Tax Law. The "recording tax" was unquestionably intended as a substitute for the property tax previously imposed on mortgages as a species of personal property. It has been referred to as "a remnant of the old system of taxing personal property," and argument has been made that with the passing of all taxes on personal property this "remnant" of an abandoned system should be cast aside by the Legislatures. (Cf. Report of the New York State Commission for the Revision of the Tax Laws, Legislative Document [1932], vol. 18, No. 77, p. 219; Report of the Joint Legislative Committee on State *84 Fiscal Policies, Legislative Document [1938], No. 41, p. 222.) The Legislature has not been moved by such arguments. Article 11 of the Tax Law is unrepealed. When the Legislature enacted the statute imposing a "recording tax" on mortgages, the label or classification of the tax could not affect the power of the Legislature to enact it. In 1938 article XVI, entitled "Taxation," was added to the Constitution of the State and placed restrictions upon the taxing power exercised by the Legislature. In section 3 of that article it was provided, among other things, that "Intangible personal property shall not be taxed advalorem nor shall any excise tax be levied solely because of the ownership or possession thereof, except that the income therefrom may be taken into consideration in computing any excise tax measured by income generally." Now the validity of the tax depends upon whether it is properly labelled or classified as a "recording tax," which is not levied solely because of the ownership or possession of a mortgage or, is, as the plaintiff maintains, an ad valorem tax on property, within the meaning of the constitutional provision.
The substantial rights of a taxpayer are ordinarily not affected by the form of a tax or by the characterization of the tax by the Legislature or the court. "The name by which the tax is described in the statute is, of course, immaterial. Its character must be determined by its incidents." (Dawson v.Kentucky Distilleries Warehouse Co.,
To determine whether a tax should be placed in the class of taxes on property or in the class of excise taxes, there must be a definition of the line which divides the classes. We might without difficulty formulate a definition of a tax on property and a definition of an excise tax, but when we try to determine whether a particular tax falls in one class or another, difficulty must often arise, for the Legislature in adopting a system of taxation is, ordinarily, not concerned with the question whether a tax falls within a class which has been defined with scientific accuracy but is concerned with the question whether the tax in operation and effect will be fair to the taxpayer and produce a return satisfactory to the State. "The problems of government are practical ones and may justify, if they do not require, rough accommodations — illogical, it may be, and unscientific" (Metropolis Theatre Co. v. City of Chicago,
The problem which we must solve is not whether scientifically and logically the tax on mortgages should be described as an advalorem tax on one species of personal property or whether it should be described as an excise tax which is not levied solely because of ownership or possession of personal property but rather how the tax should be characterized for the very practical purpose of determining whether the tax falls within the class of taxes, described in the Constitution, which may not be imposed in this State. We have pointed out that this court has inPeople v. Trust Company of America (supra) contrasted the system of taxation of mortgages under the statute of 1905 and the system of taxation of mortgages under the statute of 1906, which has not been materially changed. Though in many features the taxes are similar, yet because of other differing features this court has characterized the later tax as a "recording tax" which has been prescribed in lieu of the "annual property tax" prescribed by the statute of 1905. By emphasis on the feature that the tax is not an annual tax but is a tax payable only when a mortgage is recorded to obtain the benefit of the recording acts or to rid the mortgage or its owner from the penalties and drastic restrictions resulting from failure to record, the court in effect has placed one tax in the class of ad valorem taxes on property and the other in the class of excise taxes not levied solely because of the ownership or possession of the mortgage.
We are told that what was there said is dictum and is not legally sound. Decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States are cited where similar statutes of other States have been described and classified in other manner. (Federal Land Bank v.Crosland,
We may assume, arguendo, that what we said in People v.Trust Company of America (
In deciding whether the tax on mortgages falls within one class or the other as defined in the Constitution, we cannot ignore the fact that judicial characterization or classification of the mortgage tax had been made previously and had not been challenged here. The language of the Constitution must be read in the light of that circumstance. We conclude that the court below has correctly decided that the prohibited class of taxes as defined by the Legislature was never intended to include a tax which might reasonably be excluded from that class and which this court has said falls into another class.
We have passed upon the claim that article 11 of the Tax Law conflicts also with section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and we have rejected the claim.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
CRANE, Ch. J., LOUGHRAN and FINCH, JJ., concur; HUBBS and RIPPEY, JJ., dissent; O'BRIEN, J., taking no part.
Judgment affirmed. *88