128 F. 262 | 2d Cir. | 1904
The plaintiff in error was the plaintiff in the court below, and brings this writ of error to review a judgment for the defendant entered upon sustaining a demurrer to the complaint. It appears by the complaint that in February, 1902, the defendant, in assessing the plaintiff the amount of a tax upon its capital, included as part of its capital the sum of $77,796, which, according to the cqmplaint, was standing on the books of the plaintiff under the profit and loss account,, and “represented the undivided profits of the plaintiff as the same existed at the end of the preceding fiscal year.” The complaint stated the .facts with reference to the sum in question as follows: “Instead of paying out to the holders of the capital stock of the plaintiff all the profits from year to year and at the expiration of each fiscal year, the plaintiff reserved a portion thereof, and pássed the same to the , credit of 'profit and loss,’ holding the amount so reserved subject to.the application of the same in payment of any dividends which might be declared from the said profits whenever the business condition of the plaintiff warranted, and as a protection against losses which might arise, thereby diminishing and depreciating the surplus fund already reserved and carried on the books of the plaintiff. The said sum of $77,796, so reserved, constituted in part
The case thus presents the question whether the profits of a banking corporation which accrue from its earnings, after deducting all expenses and dividends, and which are thereafter carried on its books as a distinct fund, sometimes called “profit and loss,” but .usually “undivided profits,” are liable to taxation under section 2 of the act of Congress of June 13, 1898. That section reads as follows:
“Sec. 2. That from and after July first, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, special taxes shall be, and hereby are, imposed annually as follows, that is to say:
•‘(1) Bankers using or employing a capital not exceeding the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, shall pay fifty dollars; when using or employing a caj)-ilal exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars, for every additional thousand dollars in excess of twenty-five thousand dollars, two dollars, and in estimating capital surplus shall be included. The amount of such annual tax shall in all cases be computed on the basis of the capital and surplus of the preceding fiscal year. Every person, firm or company, and every incorporated or other bank, having a place of business where credits ¡ire opened by the deposit or collection of money or currency, subject to be paid or remitted upon draft, check, or order, or whore money is advanced or loaned on stocks, bonds, bullion, bills of exchange, or promissory notes, or where stocks, bonds, bullion, bills of exchange, or promissory notes are received for discount or sale, shall be a banker under this Act.” War Revenue Law of June 13, 1898, c. 448, § 2, 30 Slat. 448 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2286].
The argument at the bar has been largely directed to the question whether the undivided profits are “surplus” within the meaning of.the statute. The provision for including “surplus in estimating capital” was probably inserted to remove the doubt created by a decision of Air. Justice Nelson in construing a former statute which imposed a tax upon capital as taxing only the share capital of a bankiug corporation. Bank v. Townsend, 5 Blatchf. 315, Fed. Cas. No. 9,381. The provision would seem to have been unnecessary, as without it, when a statute, as this does, levies a tax upon the capital used or employed by bankers generally, firms and individuals as well as corporations, the meaning is to tax all the money and assets invested in the business as the basis of profits (Bailey v. Clark, 21 Wall. 284, 22 L. Ed. 651), not only the original investment, but also the additions and accretions. Mutual Insurance Co. v. Supervisors of Erie, 4 N. Y. 442; People v. New York, 23 N. Y. 219; Wetherbee v. Baker, 35 N. J. Eq. 501; Tradesman's Pub. Co. v. Car Wheel Co., 95 Tenn. 654, 32 S. W. 1097, 31 L. R. A. 593, 49 Am. St. Rep. 943; Hannibal R. Co. v. Shacklett, 30 Mo. 558; Martin v. Zellerbach, 38 Cal. 300, 99 Am. Dec. 365; Security Co. v. Hartford, 61 Conn. 89, 23 Atl. 699. The term “surplus,” as used in the nomenclature of bankers, does not include undivided profits, such as are now in controversy. Such profits may be surplus in the sense that they are a constituent of capital, but they are not surplus in the commonly accepted sense. It is quite usual, upon the or
The argument for the plaintiff in error, if carried to its logical conclusion, would enable a banking corporation to escape the tax at its volition, merely by refraining from making any distinct appropriation of the undivided profits. The tax reaches whatever has become substantially a part of the capital of the corporation, without regard to bookkeeping. Upon the facts set forth in the complaint, there is nothing to distinguish the undivided profits in controversy from the fund which many banking associations carry for years under that name, and which, though not technically surplus or theoretically capital, are actually a part of the capital of the bank. There is nothing in the. circumstance that they were considered by the bank as a fund applicable to extra dividends, and to unexpected losses, and to depreciation of assets, to distinguish such accumulations from the technical surplus fund of the bank. Extra dividends are not infrequently declared by banking corporations out of that fund, and that fund is of course applicable to the payment of losses, and, so far as it serves to offset depreciation of assets, it replaces diminished capital. í
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.