after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
This case-involves the question whether the two'checks or orders upon which the tax was imposed are exempt from state taxation under Rev. Stat. §3701, declaring that'“all stocks, bonds, treasury notes, and other obligations of the -United States, shall be exempt from taxation by or under state or municipal or local authority.” The basis of this exemption is the. fact that a tax upon the obligations of the'United States .is virtually a tax upon the credit of the Government, and upon its power to raise money for the purpose of carrying on its civil and military operations. The efficiency of the Government' service cannot be' impaired by a taxation of the agencies which it employs for such service, and, as one of the most valuable and best known of these agencies is the borrowing of money, a tax which diminishes in the slightest' degree the valué of the- obligations issued by the Government for that, purpose impairs pro tanto their market value. .
The inability'of the States to'-tax'the official agencies Of the Federal Government, whether in the form of'banks-chartered under jits authority, Or. of obligations issued by it as a means of providing.a revenue, or for the payment of its debts, was applied in
McCulloch
v.
Maryland,
The principle, however, upon which this exemption is claimed does not apply to obligations, such as checks and warrants intended for immediate use, and designed merely to stand in the place of money, until, presented at the Treasury and the money actually drawn thereon. In such case the tax is virtually a tax upon the money which may be drawn immediately .upon presentation of the checks. As was said by Mr. Justice Miller in
National Bank
v.
Commonwealth,
In
Railroad Company
v.
Peniston,
“It is, therefore, manifest that the exemption of Federal agencies from state taxation is dependent, not upon the nature of the agents, or. upon the modo of their constitution, or upon *315 the fact that they are agents, but upon the effect of the tax; that is, upon the question whether the tax does in truth deprive them of power to serve the Government as they were intended to serve it, or does hinder the efficient exercise of their power. A tax upon their property has no such necessary effect. It leaves them free to discharge the duties they have undertaken to perform. A tax upon their operations is a direct obstruction to the exercise of Federal powers.”
Had the Government, in the absence of money for the immediate payment of interest upon its bonds, issued new obligations for the payment of this interest at a future day,' it might well be claimed that these were not taxable, as the taxation of such notes would, to the extent of the tax, impair their value and negotiability in the hands of the holder. This was practically the case in
The Banks
v.
The Mayor,
While Congress has not amended Rev. Stat. § 3701, upon which plaintiff relies in this case, it did by act approved August 13, 1894, 28 Stat. 278, declare “That circulating notes of national banking associations and United States legal tender notes and other notes and certificates of the United States payable on demand and circulating or intended to circulate as currency, . . . shall be subject to (state) taxation as money or hand or on deposit-.”
Although the cheeks in question were not intended to ■ eircu- *316 late as money, and therefore do not fall'-within the letter of the statute, the reasons that apply to that class of obligations we think apply with equal force to checks intended for immediate payment, though not intended to circulate as money. While the checks are obligations of the United States and within the letter of § 3701, they are not within its spirit, and are proper subjects of taxation.
Had the plaintiff drawn the money upon them immediately, it would have become at once a part of the general property of the bank, and the fact that the money had been derived from the United States and paid to the bank as interest on its obligations would not have prevented its becoming part of the general property of the bank, and subject to state taxation.
Affirmed.'
