Lead Opinion
after stating the' case, .delivered the opinion of the court.
The-contention of the plaintiff in error is that the .tax in question was levied upon its capital stock, and therefore invalid so far as the bonds of the United States constitute a part of that stock. If .that contention were well founded there would be no question as to the invalidity of - the tax.
Nor can this inhibition upon the States be evaded by any change in the mode or form of the taxation, provided the same result is effected — tjiat is, an impediment is thereby interposed to the exercise of a power of the United States. That which cannot be accomplished directly cannot be accomplished indirectly. Through all such attempts the court will look to the end sought to be reached, and if that would trench upon a power of the government, the law creating it will be. set aside or its enforcement restrained. Thus in Henderson v. Mayor of New York,
To the same purport is the familiar case of Brown v. Maryland,
Looking now at the tax in this case upon the plaintiff-in error, we are unable to perceive that it falls within the doctrines of any of the cases cited, to which we fully assent, not doubting their correctness in any particular. It is not a tax in terms upon the capital stock of the company, nor upon any bonds of the United States composing a part of that stock. The statute designates it a tax .upon the “ corporate franchise or business ” of the company, and reference is only made to its capital stock and dividends for the purpose of determining the amount of the tax to be exacted each year.
By the term “ corporate franchise or business,” as here used, we understand is meant (not referring to corporations sole, which are not usually created for commercial business)-the right or privilege given by the State to two or more persons of being a corporation, that is, of doing business in a corporate-capacity, and not the privilege or franchise which, when incorporated, the company may exercise. ’The right or privilege to be a corporation, or to do business as such body, is one generally deemed of value to the corporators, or it would not be sought in such numbers as at present. It is a right or privilege by which several individuals may unite themselves under
The tax in the present case would not be affected if the nature of the property in which the whole capital stock is invested were changed and put into real property or bonds of New York, or of other States. From the very nature of the tax, being laid upon a franchise given by the State, and revocable at pleasure, it cannot be affected-in any way by the character of the property in which its- capital stock is invested. The power of the State over the corporate franchise and the conditions upon which it shall be exercised, is as ample and plenary in the one case as in the other..
In some States the franchises and privileges of a corporation are declared to be personal property. Such was the case in New York with reference to the privileges and franchises of savings banks. They .were so declared by a law passed in 1866, and made liable to taxation to an amount not exceeding the gross sum of the surplus earned and in the possession of the banks. ' The law was sustained by the Court of Appeals of the State in Monroe Savings Bank v. City of Rochester,
This doctrine, of the taxability of the franchises of a corporation without reference tp the character of the property in which its capital stock or its deposits are invested is sustained, by the judgments in Society for Savings v. Coite,
It was contended in that case .that the deposits in the bank were subjected to taxation from the fact that the extent of the tax was determined by their amount. But the court said: “ Reference is evidently made to the total amount of deposits on the day named, not as the subject matter for assessment, but as the basis for computing the tax required to be paid by the corporation defendants. They enjoy important privileges, and it is just that they should contribute to the public burdens. Yiews of the defendants are, that the sums' required to be paid to the treasury of the State is a tax 'on the assets of the institution, but there is not á word in the provision which gives any satisfactory support to that proposition. Different modes of taxation are adopted in different States, and even in the same State at different periods ’ of their history. Fixed sums are in some instances required to be1 annually paid .into the treasury of the Statej and in others a prescribed percentage is levied on the stock, assets or property owned or held by the corporation, while in others the sum required to be. paid is left indefinite, to be ascertained in some mode by the amount of business which the "corporation shall transact ■within a defined period. Experience shows that the latter mode is better calculated to effect justice among the corpora
In the second case mentioned, Provident Institution v. Massachusetts, it appeared that the statute of Massachusetts, passed in 1862, levying taxes on certain insurance companies and depositors in savings banks, provided that every institution for savings incorporated under its laws should pay to the commonwealth a tax of one-half of one per cent per annum on the amount of its deposits, to be assessed one-half of said annual tax on the average amount of its deposits for the six months preceding the 1st day óf May, and the. other half on the average amount of its - deposits for .the six months preceding the 1st .day of November. • The Provident Institution for Savings in that State was authorized to invest its deposits in securities of the United States. Its average amount of deposits for'the. six months preceding the 1st'day of May, 1865, was over eight millions, of which over one million was invested in-such, securities. It paid all the taxes demanded except on the portion which was thus invested. Upon that it declined to pay the tax. .In a suit brought by the commorn wealth to recover the same, the Supreme Judicial Court of the State held that the tax was one on the franchise of the company and not on property, and therefore gave judgment for the commonwealth. The case being brought here, the judgment was affirmed. In deciding the case, this court said, referring to a section of the statute under which.the tax was levied : “ Deposits, as the word is employed in' that section, are the sums received by the institution from .depositors, without regard to the nature of the funds. They are not capital stock in any sense, nor are they even investments, as the word is there used, which simply means the sums received wholly irrespective of the disposition made of' the same, or their market value.” And speaking of the difference existing' be
The court also referred to a'.decision made by the Supreme Court of the State to the effect that the assessment imposed was to be regarded as an excise or duty on the privilege or franchise of the corporation, not as a tax on the moneys in its hands belonging to the depositors. It was the corporation, it said, that was to make the payment, and if it failed to do so it was liable not only to an action for the amount of the tax, but might also be enjoined from the future exercise of its franchise until all taxes should be fully paid. Commonwealth v. People's Savings Bank,
And the court held that the valuation of the property had nothing to do with determining the amount of the tax, but that the amount depended on thej average amount of deposits for the six months preceding the respective days named, and, that" there was ■ no necessary relation between the average amount of the deposits and the amount of property owned by the institution; and, not being a property tax, it was to be considered as a franchise tax laid upon the corporation for the privileges conferred by its charter, which by all the authorities it was competent for the State to tax irrespective of what disposition the institution had made of its funds, or in what manner they had been invested..
In Hamilton Company v. Massachusetts,
In this case we hold, as well upon general principles as upon the authority of th§ first two cases cited from 6th Wallace, that the tax for which the suit is brought is not a tax on the capital stock or property of the company, but upon its corporate franchise, and is not therefore subject to the objection stated by counsel, because a portion of its capital stock is invested in securities of the United States.
Nor is the objection tenable that the statute, in imposing such tax, conflicts with the last clause- of the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, declaring that no State shall deprive any person within its jurisdiction of the equal protection of the laws. It is conceded that corporations are persons within the meaning of this Amendment. It has been so decided by this court. Pembina Cons. Silver Co. v. Pennsylvania,
Dissenting Opinion
, (with whom concurred Me. Justice. HaelaN) dissenting.
Me. Justice HaelaN and myself dissent from the judgment in this case, because we think that, notwithstanding the peculiar language of the statute of New York, the tax in 'controversy is, in effect, a tax upon bonds of the United States held by the insurance company.'.
