29 Cal. 533 | Cal. | 1866
The Home Insurance Company is a foreign corporation created by, and existing under the laws of the State of New York, engaged in the business of insuring against loss by fire. Said company has an agency established at the City of San Francisco, under the management of Bigelow & Brother, who are duly authorized to act for the company in the ordinary business of the corporation transacted in the State of California. All the acts required by the Act of 1862, “ To tax and regulate foreign insurance companies doing business in this State,” as amended by the Act of 1864, have been performed. In pursuance of the provisions of the Act of 1864, the company made a special deposit with Wells, Fargo & Company,
Bonds of this State kept here but owned abroad are liable to taxation here.
Whatever the legal fiction may be as to the situs of personal property, such as horses, coin and other things of a corporeal nature, they have an actual situs which subjects them to the j urisdiction of the Government where that actual situs is ; and the same is equally true of things incorporeal. Whether tangible or intangible, the rule is, or may be, the same. Debts, whether evidenced by writing or not, may be reached by process of attachment and garnishment under the laws of the domicil of the debtor, and they may also be thus reached under statutory provisions for the purposes of taxation. In the language of Mr. Chief Justice Lourie, in Finley v. the City of Philadelphia, 32 Pa. St. R. 381: “ There is nothing poetical about tax laws. Wherever they find property, they claim a contribution for its protection, without any special respect to the owner or his occupation.” Whether we consider the subject of taxation in this case as “ money at interest, or loaned,” or “ solvent debts,” and the bonds as the mere evidence of indebtedness and of no intrinsic value in themselves, or whether they are to be regarded as “ capital stock,” or, for the purposes of taxation, as in themselves a species of prop
In the case now under consideration the securities are separated from the owner and his domicil, and in the hands of an agent in this State, and in the character of property, by the express provisions of the Act requiring the deposit, subjected to the jurisdiction of the State. The case of Catlin v. Hull, 21 Vt., is cited by the learned Judge in Hoyt v. Commissioners of Taxes with approbation. The case of Wilson v. Mayor of New York, cited by the Home Insurance Company, is also referred to and disapproved, (page 236.) The other cases cited from the New York Reports by the Home Insurance Company depend upon peculiar statutory provisions, and have no application ; and it is clearly shown in the case of Hoyt v. Commissioners of Taxes, that, whenever property of foreign corporations of the class in question has escaped taxation under the laws of New York, it has resulted, not from the fact that the bonds or property itself were not “ property within the State,” within the meaning of the statute, but from defects in the details of the machinery for assessing and collecting the tax.
But there seems to be a still stronger reason for regarding State bonds as a species of property within themselves, than in the case of notes and other evidences of debt. They are given for moneys due from the State, it is true, and in a legal sense are evidences of debt. But they are treated in business transactions as other articles of personal property—bought and sold in the market daily at the Stock Board—have a regular market value at all commercial centres, which varies, or may vary from day to day, like other staple articles of commerce. They are purchased for investment, as a man purchases land, and really form a separate and distinct species of estates. So bank
Bonds kept by an insurance company are part of its capital stock.
But these bonds are really a part of the capital stock of the corporation invested in its business. Bonds of the City of Buffalo deposited with the Controller of New York by a for- ' eign insurance company under a law similar to our own, were held to be included in the terms personal estate under the statute of New York, relating to taxation, in the British Com. Ins. Co. v. Com. of Taxes, 18 Abbott, 130 ; and it was further held that they constituted a part of its capital stock used in its business. The Court say (p. 130): “ The other question is, whether the plaintiffs are liable to be taxed upon the bonds of the City of Buffalo deposited with the Controller. There can be no doubt but that those bonds are included under the term ‘ personal estate,’ as used in the statute; and the only question which can arise is whether it is property invested in any manner in the business which they carry on. Upon this point there can'be but little doubt. The statute prohibits any foreign corporation from carrying on the business of life insurance until such company has deposited with the Controller securities to the amount of one hundred thousand dollars for the benefit of the policy holders of the company. (Laws of 1853, Ch. 463, Sec. 15.) The deposit with the Controller is necessarily made in connection with the business of the company—without it they can do no business; and it is so deposited as to be security to those who may hold policies of the company. It is, therefore, used in the business of the company, and, in fact, forms its capital in this State, which is liable to the creditors, and comes within the definition of capital, as defined in The Mutual Insurance Company v. Supervisors
There does not appear to be any force in the argument that this property cannot be taxed because the owner is not an inhabitant of some county in the State. ' This is attempted to be inferred from the provision that real estate may be assessed to unknown owners, while it is claimed that there is no such provision as to taxing personal property irrespective of ownership. If there is any defect in this respect, it is not because the property is not taxable, but because there is some defect in the details of the machinery by which the tax is to be apportioned and collected, and we think there is no defect in this respect. The law itself levies the State tax and authorizes the Board of Supervisors to levy the county tax, and directs the tax to be collected. The tax having attached by virtue of the law, the rest relates to apportionment and col
We do not see why this detailed mode of proceeding does not fully cover the case. No good reason is apparent for not assessing it, under this provision to the real owner, when known, although a non-resident. But there is no necessity of assessing it as non-resident estate, and personal property is not usually so assessed. In Hoyt v. The Commissioners of Taxes, 23 N. Y. 232, it is further said : “Again. I have observed that personal property is not in any case taxed as ‘non-resident’ estate. But it does not follow that such property may not be assessed here, although the true owner resides elsewhere. The posssession of chattels is never vacant, as may be the case in respect to lands. Where it is not in the hands of the owner, it is usually held by some one else, under some agency or trust, and the statutes which have been referred to are comprehensive enough to reach it in most cases when
In this case the statute certainly provides for assessing the property to the person or firm, etc.-, having it in possession or under control, and he is the “ inhabitant” mentioned in the statute, if an inhabitant be necessary. And it further provides that the assessment of personal, as well as real property, may be assessed to “ all owners and claimants,” etc., “ and that no error in regard to such owner, or claimant, shall in any way affect the validity of such assessment.” The property, in this instance, was assessed to both the owner and Bigelow Brothers, as their agents having the control of the property. We think that there is no force in the objection that, if liable to be assessed, the bonds should have been assessed to Wells, Fargo & Co. Possibly they might have been so assessed, but it does not therefore follow that they must be. That firm was simply a depositary, having no powers over the bonds except to keep them as a “ special deposit.” Except so far as the purposes of security are concerned, the bonds were, through its own agents, still under the control of the company owning them. It was to be permitted “ to collect the interest or dividends on its bonds or stock so deposited, and from time to time withdraw any of such securities, on depositing with such banker, or bankers, etc., other like securities, or stock, the value of which shall be equal to the value of such as may be withdrawn.” (Act to regulate foreign insurance companies, etc., Section 8, as amended in 1864.) The substantial control, then, ■ for all purposes not inconsistent with the
Whether the property might have been classed under any one, or all of the heads, “ money loaned,” “ solvent debts,” “ capital stock of a corporation, etc., doing business or having an office in this State,” or “ other property not real estate,” we think it was sufficiently described in the assessment as “ money and bonds deposited as per statute.” Money is not a very apt term by which to designate the property. But the object of the description is simply to identify the property assessed with reasonable certainty. The whole description pointed directly and in terms that could not be misapprehended by Bigelow Brothers, to the precise property intended.
But one other question remains for consideration. It is insisted that the percentage on premiums, etc., required to be paid by the Act under which the company is doing business in this State, is intended to be a substitute for, and in full of, all taxation. We do not think so. There is nothing in the Act to indicate any such intention. If the company should, for the purposes of its business, purchase a lot and erect a costly building thereon, to be used so far as required as an office, and the rest to be rented, it would hardly be claimed that such real estate would be exempt from taxation under the provisions of the Act. Besides, it is manifest from the provisions of the Act that it was not contemplated that the bonds of this State required to be deposited should be exempt from taxation ; for section seven, 'in express terms, says, that they shall be stocks of this State “ that are not exempt from State taxation.'’'1 We can see no substantial reason for requiring that class of stocks, if it was not contemplated that they should be subject to taxation.
The judgment is affirmed.