20 A. 202 | R.I. | 1890
The action is brought to recover back the sum of $7,109.63 paid by the plaintiff bank to the defendant, as collector of taxes of the city of Providence, under protest, said sum being the amount of a tax assessed against it by the city assessors at their last assessment. The bank is a savings bank incorporated to receive deposits of money, which it is required to use and improve to the best advantage, dividing the profits among the depositors in just proportion, with such reasonable deductions as the management of its affairs may require, the principal of the deposits with the accrued dividends thereon being subject to withdrawal by the depositors at such times and in such manner as the bank may direct. The general management is conferred on a board of trustees, who, the treasurer excepted, are required to serve without compensation, and who may at any time, by vote of a majority of their whole number, "divide the whole property among the depositors in proportion to their respective interests therein, upon giving three months' notice thereof." Said tax was assessed on personal estate in the keeping of the bank to the amount of $457,800, consisting wholly of reserved profits. The claim of the bank is that, under its charter, said reserved profits belong to the depositors and are taxable to them, not to the bank. The claim of the city is, that said reserved profits are the personal estate of the bank, and are taxable to it as such, the depositors having no interest in it.
We consider it settled by the carefully considered decision of this court in The American Bank v. Mumford,
The defendant contends that the plaintiff bank cannot maintain this action because, as is admitted, it did not make any return of its ratable property to the assessors, and the statute provides that whoever neglects to make such return shall have no remedy if overtaxed. Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 43, §§ 6, 7. The same defence was set up in The American Bank v. Mumford, supra, but in that case the court decided that, inasmuch as the bank was not liable *80 to taxation for personal estate, the case was one, not of over-taxation merely, but of void taxation, and that the action would lie. For the same reason the defence cannot here prevail.