20 Kan. 596 | Kan. | 1878
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question involved in this case is simply this: Are private bankers liable to taxation upon the average amount of deposits used by them in their business? The question arises under section 23, chapter 34, laws of 1876, which reads thus:
“Every private bank, banker, broker, building [and] loan and trust association, shall list and return the average amount of capital invested in such business during the year next preceding the first day of March preceding the time required for listing personal property, whether such capital is in the form of a deposit in such bank, or otherwise.”
The question must be answered in the affirmative. The language is not perhaps entirely free from doubt, and yet points strongly in that direction; and such construction harmonizes with the general policy of the tax law. Counsel for plaintiffs lays stress on the phrase “capital invested,” and says that that can only mean the capital put into the concern by the banker himself, and in consequence would limit the last clause to such capital. He would make the clause read, “whether such capital is in the form of a deposit by him in such bank, or otherwise.” We think this distorts and narrows the meaning of the statute. It aims to reach all the moneys used in the banking business, whether moneys owned by the banker before engaging in business, or borrowed by mortgage, loan, or obtained from depositors as deposits. If it aimed to reach only the banker’s original capital, or capi
“The legislature shall provide for taxing the notes and bills discounted or purchased, moneys loaned, and other property, effects, or dues of every description, (without deduction,) of all banks now existing, or hereafter to be created, and of all bankers; so that all property employed in banking*599 shall always bear a burden of taxation equal to that imposed upon the property of individuals.”
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.