14 N.E.2d 476 | Ill. | 1938
A decree of the circuit court of Cook county permanently enjoined the defendant, the county treasurer and ex-officio collector, from enforcing the collection of $585.36, the portion of the capital stock tax for the year 1934 extended against the plaintiff, the Price Flavoring Extract Company, allocable to securities of the Federal government held by it. The single issue presented for decision in the trial court and on this appeal, prosecuted by the defendant, is the propriety of the county assessor's inclusion of obligations of the United States among the assets of a domestic corporation in ascertaining the fair cash value of its capital stock for assessment and taxation purposes.
It is elemental that those agencies of a State or the United States through which either government immediately and directly exercises its sovereign powers are immune from the exercise of the power of taxation by the other. (Collector *452
v. Day, 11 Wall. 113; McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316.) In particular, Federal obligations sold to raise public funds, whether held by corporations or individuals, are so intimately connected with the necessary functions of government as to fall within the established exemption from taxation by the States, or their subdivisions, for any purpose. (McCallen Co. v.Massachusetts,
Since the taxing power of the State, or its subdivisions, does not extend to the Federal securities, instrumentalities of the Federal government, owned by the plaintiff, as objects of taxation, (McCulloch v. Maryland, supra,) the issue here is narrowed to the determination of whether the State has actually taxed them. Defendant insists that the assessment of these Federal securities was proper because it was made merely as a part of plaintiff's capital stock assessment and not eo nomine
under column 14 of the personal property tax schedule entitled "Taxable stocks and bonds." The words "capital stock," as employed in paragraph 4 of section *453
1 of our Revenue act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, p. 2620) are intended to designate the property of a corporation subject to assessment and consequent taxation. (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Carr,
Defendant invokes the rule that in assessing shares in national and State banks for taxation to the stockholders, no deduction need be made on account of securities of the United States exempt from State taxation, comprising a part of the assets of the bank by which the value of the shares is measured. (Des Moines Nat.Bank v. Fairweather,
In Plummer v. Coler,
The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed. *455