37 F. Supp. 931 | Ct. Cl. | 1941
delivered the opinion of the court:
The question presented in this case is whether plaintiff is entitled to a refund of the stamp tax paid by it on 20,000 shares of its preferred stock which it issued to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The tax was collected under section 800 of the revenue act of 1926 and that act as amended by section 722 of the revenue act of 1932, by which sections a stamp tax at a specified rate was imposed on the original issue of shares of corporate stock. (47 Stat. 169,272.)
The parties are agreed that the tax in question was properly collected unless the plaintiff was exempted from the provisions of that act by the act of March 20,1936, 49 Stat. 1185, by reason of the fact that plaintiff’s stock was issued to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. That statute reads in part as follows:
Notwithstanding any other provision of law or any privilege or consent to tax expressly or impliedly granted thereby, the shares of preferred stock of national banking associations, and the shares of preferred stock, capital notes, and debentures of State banks and trust companies, heretofore or hereafter acquired by Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and the dividends or interest derived therefrom by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, shall not, so long as Reconstruction Finance Corporation shall continue to own the same, be subject to any taxation by the United States, by any Territory, dependency, or possession thereof, or the District of Columbia, or by any State, county, municipality, or local taxing-authority, whether now, heretofore, or hereafter imposed, levied, or assessed, and whether for a past, present, or future taxing period.
At the outset it should be observed that the tax in question was not levied against or collected from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation; the tax was collected from the plaintiff, a national bank, on account of the issuance of its stock to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Apparently the only manner in which the tax could even indirectly have affected the Reconstruction Finance Corporation was that the tax would constitute an expense of plaintiff and therefore would reduce the income which would otherwise be available for
This exempting statute was enacted by reason of a court decision which held that stock of a national bank when held by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation was subject to state and municipal taxes (Baltimore National Bank v. State Tax Commission of Maryland, 297 U. S. 209, affirming a decision by the Court of Appeals of Maryland, 169 Md. 66, 180 Atl. 260). In that case the State Tax Commission of Maryland was seeking to collect a direct tax from a national bank on account of the bank’s stock which the Reconstruction Finance Corporation owned, and while the bank was being required to pay the tax the right of reimbursement existed on ■the part of the bank from its stockholders, in that instance the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Stock of state banks was not similarly taxed in the State of Maryland where the case arose, and in many states stock of national banks was ■either not taxed at all or was taxed at varying rates. As will appear from the report of the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, the exempting statute was enacted in order to remove not only the inequality of treatment as between state ' and national bank stocks but also because of the varying rates of' tax levied by the several states. A further consideration was that taxes of that nature levied by a state or municipality on the stock of a national bank, collected from the bank, and deducted from the funds otherwise payable to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, might well wipe out the small margin of profit which the Reconstruction Finance Corporation would receive from making such an investment (Senate Report No. 1545, 74th Congress, 2d Session).
Clearly the case with which we are concerned is vastly different from that which gave rise to the exempting statute