Natl. Union Bank of Rock Hill v. Neil

90 S.E. 745 | S.C. | 1916

Lead Opinion

October 14, 1916. The opinion of the Court en banc was delivered by These actions were brought under section 461, vol. I, Civil Code 1912, to recover certain taxes which plaintiffs allege were illegally assessed against the shares of the stockholders of the banks, and were paid under protest. The plaintiff, Ira B. Dunlap, is a stockholder of both banks, and joins in the action as a plaintiff in behalf of himself and all other *176 stockholders thereof. The facts and applicable law of the two cases are so nearly alike that the decision in the first case will control the second. Therefore, for convenience, only the first will be considered in detail.

Chapter XIV, vol. I, Civil Code 1912, treats of "The Assessment of Taxes." Article VIII of that chapter provides "Special Rules as to Banks and Bank Stock," etc. Section 341, found in article VIII, reads:

"All shares of the stockholders in any bank or banking association, located in the State, whether now or hereafter incorporated or organized under the laws of this State, or of the United States, shall be listed at their true value in money, and taxed in the city, ward, town or incorporated village where such bank is located, and not elsewhere: Provided, That the words `true value in money,' as used in this section, shall be so construed as to mean and include all surplus or extra moneys, capital and every species of personal property of value owned or in the possession of any such bank."

The other pertinent provisions of article VIII are that the real estate of banks shall be taxed where located, the same as that of individuals (section 343); that the president and cashier of each bank shall annually, between January 1st and February 20th, make out and return, under oath, to the county auditor, a full statement of the names and residences of its stockholders, with the number of shares held by each, and the actual value in money of such shares, with a description of its real estate (section 344); that on receiving such return, the auditor shall deduct from the total value of all the shares the value of the bank's real estate, as assessed on his duplicate, and the remainder of the total value of the shares shall be entered on his duplicate in the names of the owners thereof in amounts proportioned to the number of shares owned by each, and be charged with taxes at the same rate as charged upon the value of other personal property at the same place (section 345); that the bank may pay the *177 taxes so assessed and deduct the same from any dividend due or to become due on such shares (section 347); that if the return required by section 344 is not made, the auditor shall examine the books of the bank, and any of its officers or agents, under oath, together with such other persons as he may deem necessary, and make out the statement required and enter the value of the shares on his duplicate for taxation against the shareholders. Any officer of the bank failing to make the return, or wilfully making a false return, is liable to fine, not exceeding $1,000.

In compliance with these provisions of the statute, the president and cashier of the plaintiff bank made their return in 1913, giving the names and residences of the shareholders and number of shares held by each. The return did not state the total value of the shares in a lump sum, or the value of each share, but gave the data from which the value was to be determined as follows:

"The actual value thereof in money, including all surplus or extra moneys, capital, and every species of personal property, of value, in possession of this bank or banking association, as follows: Capital paid up, $250,000; surplus, $75,000; undivided profits, $281.13; every other species of personal property, none."

At the end of the return, the bank officers making it appended the following note: "Capital, $250,000; sur. and un. profits, $75,281.13-$325,281.13; less 50 per cent., $162,640.56-$162,640.57; less S.C. bonds, $25,000; less York Co. bonds, $7,000; less U.S. bonds not held for circulation, $25,000-$57,000. Amount liable for taxation, $105,640.57.

"We have not taken credit for U.S. bonds held for circulation, amounting to $200,000. If the other national banks of York Co. are allowed an exemption for bonds of this class, we wish credit for ours also."

Upon the return appears the following note made by the Comptroller General of the State: *178

"If the market value of the shares cannot be ascertained, you will take, as the value of the shares, the capital, surplus and undivided profits, viz.: Capital, $250,000; surplus, $75,000; un. profits, $281; total value of shares, $325,281; less redemption Brown bonds and stocks, $25,000; amt. of full value of shares subject to taxation, $300,281; less 50 per cent., $150,140; amt. liable for taxation to the 2,500 shareholders in proportion to the number of shares held by each, $150,140.

"Any exemption of bonds of any nature other than redemption Brown consol bonds and stocks issued under the act of 1892 should not be allowed, and would be an illegal exemption."

In accordance with this direction of the Comptroller General, the auditor entered and charged reassessment on his duplicate to the shareholders of the bank in proportion to the number of shares held by each, disallowing the contention of the officers of the bank that, in ascertaining the value of its shares for taxation in the hands of the shareholders, $25,000 of United States bonds held by it, but not for circulation, and $7,000 of Ebenezer township (York county) bonds, which, by the terms of the statute under which they were issued (27 Stat. 346), are "exempt from all State, county and municipal taxes," should be deducted from the total value of its shares. This was done in September, 1913, and no notice thereof was given the bank.

The plaintiffs contend: First, that, as the return was accepted by the auditor without objection, passed by the township board of assessors, and the county board of equalization, the auditor was without jurisdiction or authority thereafter to increase the amount of the return, as made by the officers of the bank without notice and an opportunity to be heard, as required by statute in other cases where the valuation of property returned for taxation as made by a taxpayer is increased, and, also, that the direction of the Comptroller General was without authority of law. They *179 contend: Second, that, even if the action of the auditor, under the direction of the Comptroller General, was in accordance with law and valid, in so far as the right to notice and a hearing is concerned, nevertheless, the exemption which they claimed should have been allowed. The Circuit Court sustained their first contention, and gave judgment in their favor, but overruled their second contention. From this judgment both sides appealed.

The Court erred in sustaining plaintiffs' first contention. The decision was rested on the authority of Bank v.Cromer, 35 S.C. 213, 14 S.E. 493. But that case is easily and clearly distinguished from this. In that case, the return fixed the value of all the personal property of the bank at $150,000, and did not give the data upon which that valuation was based. The valuation was, therefore, an exercise of judgment on the part of the officers of the bank upon undisclosed facts, and when it was accepted by the auditor and passed in turn by the local board of assessors and the county board of equalization, it was held that it could not be increased by the auditor on his own initiative, or by direction of the Comptroller General, without notice and an opportunity to be heard, as required by the statute (G.S., sec. 239, now section 399, vol. I, Civ. Code 1912). In such cases, the statute (G.S., sec. 229, now section 386, vol. I, Civ. Code 1912) says the auditor shall state, in the column for remarks opposite each taxpayer's name, in the return made by him, any amount which he thinks ought to be added to the valuation made by the taxpayer, but he shall not increase the return, except by authority of the board of assessors. So that, as the law then stood, the action of the auditor in increasing the valuation put upon its property by the bank was clearly illegal.

But the return in this case did not fix the value of the property of the bank or of its shares, except as it was left to be inferred from the statement of its capital stock, surplus, *180 and undivided profits. It was, therefore, merely a matter of calculation, which did not involve the exercise of any judgment as to value, but followed, as matter of law, from the facts stated. The note at the end of the return stated what, in the opinion of the officers of the bank, should be deducted in determining the value of the shares. It was as if a taxpayer should return his property at the valuation of $500, and then add in a footnote that it was mortgaged to secure a debt of $300, and, therefore, the amount liable for taxation is $200 — an unwarranted conclusion of law, not binding upon the auditor, who would, of course, list the property for taxation at $500. In such a case no notice would be necessary, as the valuation made by the taxpayer would not be increased.

The statute (section 399) requires the auditor to give notice to the taxpayer in the following cases: Where he suspects or is informed that the making of a return has been evaded; or that the return made is not full, or is false, or the valuation made is too low. The reading of the section shows that the object of requiring notice was to allow the production of evidence on the question at issue. This case does not fall under either of the conditions specified, and no amount of evidence could have affected the issue, for it is one of law and not one of fact.

Besides this, the effect of the decision in Bank v. Cromer has been modified by statute. That decision was filed in February, 1892. At its next session, in December, 1892, the legislature passed an act, which provides that sections 239 to 244 of the General Statutes (now sections 399 to 403, vol. I. Civ. Code) — the same that were construed in Bank v.Cromer — shall be construed — "as giving full and complete power to the county auditor, independent of any right conferred upon county boards of assessors or other officers, as to securing a full and complete return of property for taxation in all cases as expressed in said sections, whether fraudulently *181 or otherwise improperly or incompletely made." 21 Stat. 81, now section 404, vol. I, Civ. Code.

By the terms of this section, the fact that the return made by plaintiffs had been passed by the boards of assessors and equalization did not preclude subsequent action by the auditor.

The fact that the auditor was directed by the Comptroller General in the matter is of no consequence. He might have acted of his own head. But section 411, vol. I, Civ. Code, makes it the duty of the Comptroller General to give the auditor such instructions as he may deem necessary to carry out the provisions of the tax laws, and to decide all questions arising thereunder, or in relation to the duty of any officer under the same, and his rulings are made binding upon all county and municipal officers. Of course, it is not meant that they would be effective, if contrary to law, but merely that under officers must obey them, until they are overruled by competent authority.

The Court was right in its conclusion upon the plaintiffs' second contention. The rule and the reason upon which it is rested are clearly stated in the note to In re First Nat.Bank, L.R.A. 1915c, 386, 389, as follows: "It is quite generally held that in assessing the value of corporate stock for purposes of taxation a deduction should be made of the amount invested in national securities and other property owned by the corporation that is exempt from taxation when the tax is upon the corporation, but when the tax is upon the shares in the hands of the stockholders, or is assessed against the corporation as agent of the shareholder, to be deducted from the dividends, no deduction is to be made. The distinction is based upon the doctrine that capital stock or property and assets of the corporation, and the shares of stock in the hands of individual stockholders, are separate properties for the purpose of taxation. In fixing the value of shares of stock of a national *182 bank or other corporation for purposes of taxation, no deduction is made on account of the capital of the corporation invested in United States bonds, State bonds, and other securities which are exempt from taxation."

The authorities cited fully sustain the proposition stated, and show that the other contentions of plaintiffs are untenable.

The exemption of State bonds in ascertaining the value of shares in the hands of shareholders of the bank is not an unlawful discrimination, either against Federal securities or other State and municipal bonds not so exempted. Chester v. White, 70 S.C. 433,50 S.E. 28; Mercantile Bank v. New York, 121 U.S. 138,7 Sup. Ct. 826, 30 L.Ed. 895.

It is argued that the legislature intended that the township bonds should be exempted just as the State bonds are. It is significant that it has not said so in plain and unmistakable terms, as it has with reference to State bonds. No doubt the legislature intended that the township bonds should be exempted from taxation directly levied upon them, either as the property of a corporation or an individual. It has plainly said so. But we have seen that a tax upon the value of the shares of a corporation in the hands of the shareholders is not a tax upon the property of the corporation. They are separate and distinct properties. The presumption is against any surrender of the taxing power. Therefore, when the legislature has said, with regard to State bonds, that their value shall be deducted from the value of the assets of the corporation in ascertaining the value of its shares for taxation in the hands of the shareholders, and has not so said with reference to any other bonds issued by its authority, the conclusion is inevitable that it was not intended that other bonds should be exempted to the same extent — especially is this true in view of the well settled rule of construction hereinbefore stated, which *183 the legislature is presumed to have known and had in contemplation when these acts were passed.

The judgment is reversed, and complaint dismissed in both cases.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY, MR. JUSTICE FRASER and CIRCUIT JUDGES MEMMINGER, BOWMAN, SHIPP, MOORE, SEASE, SMITH, WILSON, DeVORE and GARY concur in the opinion of the Court announced by MR. JUSTICE HYDRICK.






Dissenting Opinion

I cannot concur in the opinion of Mr. Justice Hydrick. I think that the plaintiffs' exceptions should be sustained.

Under the law all returns are required to be filed with the auditor between the 1st day of January and the 20th day of February. It is not contested but that the banks performed this duty, and that the returns were acted upon by the county board and turned over to the auditor, and thereby became under section 345 a permanent record for the tax of that year. When the return was accepted by the auditor without objection and passed by the township board of assessors and the county board of equalization, the auditor, or any one else, was without authority or jurisdiction thereafter to increase the return, and to arbitrarily order the increase without a hearing in the manner it was done was an illegal imposition of excessive taxes without authority, and verging on tyranny. The auditor had no authority, neither had the Comptroller General any authority, to change the returns made and accepted in accordance with law in this case.

The second contention of the plaintiffs should also be sustained. The legislature exempted the county bonds from taxation in no uncertain terms, for it provides:

"Said bonds shall be exempt from all taxes. State, county, and municipal taxes." *184

Could any language be plainer or more comprehensive? The object unquestionably was that the bonds would bring a better price being exempted from taxes, and no doubt they did. The county selling the bonds got a higher price as intended, and the plain intent of the legislature was that they be exempt of all taxes in whosesoever hands they might pass to, and in order that they might be taxed, it was left to the astute mind of some lawyer to suggest the refined difference between the bonds being owned by a corporation or individual and to have the Court to write in the plain words of an act of the legislature this refined distinction. The bonds in question belong to the shareholders of the bank. All the assets of the bank belong to its stockholders and shareholders. The bonds in question by act of legislature are exempt from taxes; it clearly was the intention of the legislature to exempt them whether owned by the individual or a corporation.

If a bank in South Carolina cannot own bonds, issued under the authority of its legislature, exempt from taxation without paying taxes thereon, notwithstanding this plain exemption, then the result will be that the banks of this State cannot afford to compete with banks outside of the State in purchasing bonds, and the bonds will be owned by nonresident owners and escape taxation. No one ever heard of a nonresident paying any taxes on any bond held outside of the State.

If the tax department would display the same zeal in getting on the tax books the invisible and intangible property in the State that escapes taxation as it does in collecting the visible and tangible property, such as real estate, banks, factories, railroads, and other corporations, then it would not be put to the necessity of claiming the refined difference, as is made in this case, between an individual owning the bonds escaping taxation and the bank corporation required to pay.

To require the bank to pay on these bonds, in view of the *185 act of the legislature exempting them, is a great hardship, and for an individual to act under such circumstances as developed herein, he would be met with a charge of sharp practice and attempt to overreach the purchaser of the bonds, acting in good faith, thinking he was purchasing a bond, which was, what it purported to be, exempt by an act of the legislature "from all taxes, State, county, and municipal taxes."

For these reasons I think the plaintiffs were right in their contentions.

MR. JUSTICE GAGE concurs in the dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE WATTS.

CIRCUIT JUDGE PEURIFOY concurs in the result.

CIRCUIT JUDGES RICE and MAULDIN concur in the result as to the bonds issued under act of legislature.

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