259 Mass. 124 | Mass. | 1927
These are petitions brought under G. L. c. 63, § 77, by savings banks, duly organized and doing business in this Commonwealth, for the recovery of a portion of a tax alleged to have been unlawfully assessed against them severally under G. L. c. 63, §§ 11-16, inclusive. The cases were reserved upon petition and general demurrer for determination by this court. As the question of law presented for decision is the same in each, the first case only need be con-in detail.
G. L. c. 63, § 11, as amended by Sts. 1922, c. 520, § 2; 1923, c. 378, § 3, provides that “Every savings bank and every trust company having a savings department . . . shall pay to the commissioner, on account of its depositors, an annual tax of one half of one per cent, which shall be levied on the amount of the deposits in the savings bank, and on the amount of the deposits in the savings department of a trust company, to be assessed and paid as follows: one fourth of one per cent shall be assessed by the commissioner upon the average amount of such deposits for the six months preceding May first, and paid on or before May twenty-fifth; and a like percentage shall be assessed upon the average amount of such deposits for the six months preceding November first, and paid on or before November twenty-fifth.” Section 12 provides that “So much of said deposits shall be exempt from taxation under the preceding section as is invested in any of the following”; then follows an enumeration of seven kinds or classes of investments of deposits, including “Real estate used for banking purposes.”
The return of the petitioner, filed November 8, 1926, stated that the average amount of its deposits for the six months preceding November 1, 1926, was $86,932,920.96, In this return was included a schedule showing the average amount of the guaranty fund for such six months as $4,350,-184.21, and the average amount of all other profits and income accounts as $1,838,851.13. The return showed the total average of the amounts invested during the same period in the items referred to in § 12 to be $53,409,216.18;
In assessing the tax due from the petitioner on account of the six months’ period ending November 1, 1926, the commissioner adopted for the first time a new method. He deducted from the $86,932,920.96 (the average amount of its deposits) the sum of $716,050, which was the full amount invested in real estate used for banking purposes; but he declined to deduct the full amount of the remaining items exempt under § 12, as had been the method pursued by the taxing authorities for many years previously; and ruled that in assessing this tax the petitioner and all other savings banks were entitled to a deduction only of such proportion of the remaining items mentioned in § 12 as the total average deposits of the bank for the period bore to the total obtained by adding to the total average deposits the average amount for the period of the guaranty fund and the average amount of all profits and income accounts. Acting upon this method of assessing the tax due from the petitioner, after deducting the item of real estate used for banking purposes, he deducted only such proportion of the other items in the schedule as the sum of the average deposits bore to $93,121,-956.30 — the total of deposits, guaranty fund, profits and income accounts. This computation resulted in a deduction of $49,191,002, instead of the full amount exempt under § 12, and in an assessment for the period in question of $92,268.79. This assessment was paid by the petitioner on November 20, 1926. If the full amount of all items exempt under § 12 had been deducted, as the petitioner contends should have been done, the tax assessed would have been $83,513.61, a decrease of $8,755.18, which is the sum it seeks to recover in this proceeding.
The tax in question is not a property tax upon the petitioner but is an excise imposed upon the privilege of using its franchise. It is a tax upon the right to conduct its business. Commonwealth v. People’s Five Cents Savings Bank, 5 Allen, 428. Greenfield Savings Bank v. Commonwealth, 211 Mass. 207. Provident Institution v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 611.
The result of the decisions in Suffolk Savings Bank, petitioner, 149 Mass. 1; S. C. 151 Mass. 103, as applied to the case at bar, is that in levying the tax under § 11, the amount with which the bank stands charged on its books as received from its depositors is to be used, and in calculating the exemptions under § 12 all investments of the bank described in a to g inclusive, however denominated on its books, are to be deducted. The guaranty fund and undivided profits are divisions of assets of the bank required by the statute, which have no relation to the assessment of the excise tax. It therefore follows that, in the return of the Provident Institution for Savings, the average amount of deposits which forms the basis of the computation is $86,932,920.96, from which is to be deducted $53,409,216.18, and that the excise tax is to be assessed on the remainder.
To follow the construction of the statute contended for by the Commonwealth would be a substitution of a complicated, unsatisfactory and cumbersome method, in place of a long established, simple, direct and practical way of determining the tax. The commissioner in assessing the tax in these cases should have done so in conformity with the statutes as construed in the cases above referred to, by deducting from the average amount of deposits the full amount of all the items included in § 12. It follows that in each case the
Decrees accordingly.