96 Iowa 238 | Iowa | 1895
The facts shown by the pleadings are substantially as follow®: The plaintiff is a corporation, duly organized under the laws of this state, and is engaged in the hanking business. The defendants are the county of O’Brien and its treasurer. The shares- of the capital stock of the plaintiff were, during all of the year 1891, owned by private individuals, none being owned by blue plaintiff. For the year stated, shares of the capital stock of the plaintiff wiene assessed in its name at the -sum of six thousand five hundred dollars. The assessment thus made was duly returned by the assessor, .and entered upon the tax lists of the county. Taxes to the amount of four hundred- and twenty-two dollars and fifty cent® were levied on account of the shares so assessed, one-half of which have been pa-i-cl under protest. The plaintiff asks to have the assessment declared void, and seeks to recover the amount it has paid, and to have the defendants enjoined from collecting the remainder. A temporary injunction to restrain the collection was duly issued. The ground of demurrer alleged is that the facts stated in the petition do- not entitle the plaintiff to the relief demanded.
tue of acts of congress. They are instruments of the general gover nment, designed to- aid it in thie adminisitration of a branch of the public service. The states cannot exercise control over them excepting with the consent of congress, expressed or implied, and the power of the states! to tax them is derived from that source. Bank v. Dearing, 91 U. S. 29; First Nat. Bank of Albia v. City Council of Albia, supra. They are subject to regulations and limitations of power which .have no application to- state banks, .and constitute a .class of corporations which may be properly subjected ,to> a plan of taxation different from that applied to state banks. The latter constitute another class, with -distinct powers and privileges, and subject to different restrictions', and may properly be subject to- a plan of taxation applicable only to that and -similar classes. By section 28 of chapter 60 of the Acts of the Fifteenth General Assembly, the paid-up capital of all savings banks organized and doing business under that act is taxed to the banks, and not to the stockholders; but in Davenport Nat. Bank v. Board of Equalization, 64 Iowa, 140 (19 N. W. Rep. 889), that was held not to be a discrimination against national banks, .and it was said, as a general proposition, that a state may provide for the assessment of savings-bank capital, as. well as other property, in such mode ,as it may deem, moist convenient and effective, for the collection of its revenue. In the case of Hubbard v. Board, 23 Iowa, 143, a. distinction based upon Van Allen v. Assessors, 3 Wall. 573, between taxing the capital stock and the shares of the capital stock, of a bank was recognized, but it cannot with any justice be said that inequality of taxation results from taxing the shares separately to- their owner and taxing them
The appellant insists that the case of State Bank v. Board of Revenue of Montgomery Co., 8 South Rep. (Ala.) 852, is- in point, and an authority which the courts sustain. The opinion in that case is based upon provisions of the Alabama constitution which are not found in the constitution of this state, and upon the theory that “bank shares in a. national bank and bank shares in a state bank belong to one species of moneyed capital,” and “that any attempt to draw a distinction, between them would be futile.” That theory, as we have found, is not applicable under the laws1 of this state, and we do not think that the case is fairly in point. In City of Dubuque v. Chicago, D. & M. R. Co., 47 Iowa, 196, section 2 of article 8 of the constitution of .this state was considered, and its true meaning held to be “that all property, whether owned by corporations or individuals, shall be equally burdened with taxation, and that the legislature may adopt different methods of ascertaining values, adapted to the various peculiarities of the property.” The statute in controversy is in harmony with that interpretation. By the method adopted for the taxation of shares of the capital stock of state banks, they are subject to the same rate of taxation as other property, and are required to bear their just share of the public burden, and no more. We conclude that the judgment of the district court is right and it is therefore affirmed.
Not yet officially reported.