84 A.D. 168 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The relator challenges the legality of the assessment of the par value of its surplus and undivided earnings made by the respondent upon the grounds that he improperly included therein, first, interest accrued upon investments, but not due or payable on June 30, 1901; second, a valuation at par of certain stocks and bonds owned by it when their market value was $296,500 less than such par value, and, third, an overvaluation of its banking house and lot of $350,000.- It is also urged that the law authorizing the tax is unconstitutional.
The law under which the tax was imposed upon the relator, which is a savings bank organized pursuant to a law of this State, is section 187b of the Tax Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 908), and was added thereto by Laws of 1901, chapter 117. The section is as follows:
“ § 187b. Franchise tax on savings banks.— Every savings bank incorporated, organized or formed under, by or pursuant to a law of this State, shall pay to the State annually for the privilege of*170 exercising its corporate franchise or carrying on its business in such corporate or organized capacity, an annual tax which shall be equal to one per centum on the par value of its surplus and undivided earnings.”
The objections urged against the validity of the tax will be considered in the order above mentioned.
. First. The Comptroller, in my opinion, correctly included in the assessment the amount of interest accrued upon investments, although not yet due. The law requires the assessment to be upon the “ par value ” of the surplus and undivided earnings of the bank. The term “ par value ”' has such a well-known meaning, not only in commercial and financial circles, but as applied to ordinary and everyday business affairs, that resort to the authorities for a definition would appear to be needless. It is sufficient for the purposes of this case to mention the following authorities which hold that in determining “ par value ” the interest accrued up to the time of fixing the value must be includéd with the principal: Village of Fort Edward v. Fish (156 N. Y. 363); State of Illinois v. Delafield (8 Paige, 527; affd. sub nom. Delafield v. State of Illinois, 26 Wend. 192; 2 Hill, 159); Hogg's Appeal (22 Penn. St. 479).
The accrued interest is an asset of the bank as well as the principal of the loan upon which the interest has been earned. The Banking Law (Laws of 1892, chap. 689, § 20, as amd. by Laws of 1898, chap. 333) requires banking institutions, in making reports of their condition to the Superintendent of Banks, to state the whole amount of “interest or profits received or earned.” That is equivalent to saying that the amount of interest accrued should be included in such report up to the date for which it is made. On the other hand, said section requires the amount of dividends credited to depositors to be stated. In arriving at the surplus and undivided earnings, the Comptroller, following the method provided by law with respect to these reports, included in the assets the interest accrued upon investments up to June 30, 1901, and on the other hand included in the liabilities the dividend or interest on deposits declared June 12 and payable July 1,1901. The difference between the assets and the liabilities, without so including both these items, would not have been a truthful statement of the surplus and undivided earnings of the relator upon June 30, 1901, the date of
Second. It is urged that because section 124 of the Banking Law provides that in determining the per cent of surplus held by a savings bank its interest-paying stocks and bonds shall not be estimated above their par value or above their market value, if below par, the Comptroller erroneously included in the assessment $296,500, the difference between the market and the par value of certain of its stocks and bonds. But that section has no relation to the question presented here, for it simply provides the method of determining when the authorized surplus amounts to fifteen per cent of the bank’s deposits so as to require under section 123 of the law an extra dividend to depositors. Section 187b of the Tax Law in question here provides in express terms that the tax shall be charged on the par value of the surplus and undivided earnings, and the Comptroller, therefore, properly took that as the basis for the tax instead of the market value. Nor would the relator probably care to have the tax assessed upon the market instead of the par value, in view of the fact that out "of investments in stocks and bonds held by it amounting at par on June 30,1901, to $39,311,000, only $3,900,000 of them had a market value less than their face or par value.
Third. The Comptroller included the banking house and lot of the relator in his assessment at a valuation of $750,000. The relator insists that the real value thereof was only $400,000, and that consequently there was an overvaluation of $350,000. The property is situated at the southwest corner of Fourth avenue and Twenty-second street in the borough of Manhattan. It has a frontage on Fourth avenue of ninety-eight feet nine inches and on Twenty-second street of one hundred and thirty-two feet. The building, which is of steel and marble, was completed in 1894. It is one story about sixty feet in height and covers the entire plot of ground except ten feet on the Twenty-second street side. It was constructed with special reference to the needs of the relator and is suitable only for the purposes of a banking house. The lot. cost $333,000 in 1892, and the building, including all the furnishings, vaults and fixtures, cost upwards of $400,000, making the total cost of the property $751,301.06. On January 1, 1895, the relator
The witnesses on both sides put the value of the property much below its cost, yet the Comptroller has assessed it practically at cost. While it is proper to' give due weight to the element of cost in fixing the Value, that should not control against proof showing a less value. It is well known that a building, especially one constructed for a special purpose, is rarely worth in the market what it has cost to erect it. That appears to be the case here if the evidence on both sides on that question is to be regarded, and the bank, therefore, not desiring to inflate its assets, carried the property upon its books at what its officers considered to be its value. The Comptroller, however, was not bound to take their estimate of its value. But 1 think he was in error under the circumstances presented here in assessing the property at its cost for in doing so he must have disregarded the testimony on both sides that it was of much less value than. that. In fact outside of the proof as to the cost there is no evidence justifying the inclusion of the property in the assessment at the value which was placed upon it by the Comptroller. The opinion of the expert called by the relator was that the lot Was worth' $334,000 and the lot and building $434,000. He fixed $100,000 as the value of the building for old material and not as its value to the bank as a going, concern. The expert called by the' State testified that land in that neighborhood had increased in value since the bank purchased the property and gave it as his opinion that the- lot was worth $890,000 and that the building, was worth. $200,000 for the purposes of a bank. Manifestly the value of the building as old material should have little weight in fixing the actual value of the property as it existed at the date of the assessment, and when all the evidence in the case on this subject is considered I think such value has fairly been shown to be the stim of $590,000, and that the valuation of the lot and building cannot be sustained on the proof here at a higher sum than that. This involves a reduction in the assessment made by the' Comptroller of ■ $160,000.
Again, this franchise tax is laid upon the surplus and undivided earnings of all savings banks alike, and for that reason there is no discrimination in the tax. Nor does the requirement of equality and uniformity preclude exemption from taxation. (25 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [1st ed.], 61, and cases cited.)
A franchise tax upon the surplus of savings banks was upheld by
If I am correct in the views expresséd it results that the Comptroller should have revised .and resettled the assessment by reducing it from $4,610,252.92 to $4,450,252.92, and by reducing the tax from $46,102.53 to $44,502.53.- ; .
The assessment and tax should be modified accordingly, and as: so modified should be confirmed., with fifty dollars costs and disburse- - ments to the relator.
All concurred.
Determination of the Comptroller modified as per opinion, and as--so modified confirmed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements,-to> the relator. ■