This is an action at law to recover $7,-160.36 paid by the bank in 1928 to the Treasurer of the City and County of Denver under alleged duress, as ad valorem taxes levied in 1927. The questions presented are confined to pleading and remedy. The defendant answered, admitted some allegations, denied others and alleged that the manner in which the assessment was made, of which plaintiff complains, was done at plaintiff’s request. That is, the value of plaintiff’s capital stock was assessed to plaintiff as agent for its stockholders at plaintiff’s request. The answer embodied a demurrer to the complaint, which was sustained when the case came on, and the plaintiff has appealed.
The complaint alleges that the tax levy was invalid and illegal, and that claim is bottomed on three separate grounds, first, the manner in which the assessment was made rendered it illegal, second, that substantial sums invested in negotiable securities, such as Colorado municipal bonds and notes secured by real estate mortgages, by persons engaged in banking business or investment business and in competition with the business of plaintiff were not taxed at all, nor was the moneyed capital or shares of such banks or investment companies taxed, and, third, that the assessment here complained of was made at the full value of plaintiff’s shares while other moneyed capital in Denver was not assessed at a higher valuation than seventy-five per cent., if assessed at all. We will consider these grounds in the order stated. But before doing so the Act of Congress and the Colorado statutes on the subject should be noticed. Section 5219, R. S. U. S., as amended by the Acts of March 4, 1923 and March 25, 1926 (U. S. Code Anno., title 12, § 548), permits the legislature of each state to determine and direct the manner of taxing the shares of national banks located within such state, and the Colorado Revised Statutes (Compiled Laws, 1921, §§ 7450, 7451, 7452, and 7453) make full provision for taxing the shares. They provide that the president, cashier or other officer of any banking association, state or national, shall list for taxation the shares of such association between the first day of April and the first day of May of each year, giving the assessor the name of each person owning shares and the amount owned by each; and, if said officers fail to comply with said requirement, the association shall be liable to pay the tax upon all the shares, and its property may be dis-trained and sold with like effect as if the tax were assessed against such association; that it shall be the duty of the cashier or other officer of each national bank, state bank and trust company to make and deliver to the assessor between the dates named in each year a sworn statement of the true condition of the association as the same appears on its books on April first of each year, and at the same time make a sworn statement to the assessor of the market value of the stock of said association, or, if it had no market value, the actual book value; that each assessor shall assess the shares in any national bank in such manner as to conform to the act of Congress and its amendments. Section 7249 of the state statutes requires that all personal property in the state be listed and assessed as of April first of each year.
Relative to the first ground of illegality the complaint alleges:
“That plaintiff made and filed with the Assessor of the City and County of Denver, State of Colorado, a schedule for the year 1927 setting forth the amount of its capital stock, surplus and undivided profits as of April 1, 1927, and attached thereto a list of its loans secured by deeds of trust or*705 mortgages upon real estate withiit the State of Colorado, and likewise made and filed with said Assessor a statement of its financial condition as of April 1, 1927.”
This is all of the information that appears to have been given to the assessor by the tax schedule. It is not alleged that the bank’s officers furnished him a list of the persons and the number of shares owned by each in the bank, nor that they furnished him with a sworn statement as to the value.of the shares.
There are allegations that the assessment was made on the property of plaintiff consisting of its money, notes and credits, and other allegations that it was made on the amount of its capital stock, surplus and undivided profits. The former appear to be made arguendo. On the whole complaint we think it appears that the assessment was to the bank in solido in a sum equal to the amount of the capital stock, surplus and undivided profits, as shown by the tax schedule submitted to the assessor by the bank. The schedule furnished to the assessor gave the amount of the capital stock, surplus and undivided profits. It is not claimed that the assessor was furnished a list of the stockholders and the shares owned by each, or a statement of their value by the bank or by anyone else, or that he had or was given any information as to those facts. In First National Bank of Aberdeen v. Chehalis County,
On this point appellant seems to. rely on First National Bank v. Adams,
The Colorado statute (section 7447), on which plaintiff relies, permits recovery only when the taxes paid are thereafter “found to be erroneous or illegal.” An Arkansas statute provided that taxes paid on real or personal property “erroneously assessed” should be refunded. The Supreme Court of that state in considering the statute said in Clay County v. Brown Lumber Co.,
“It is urged by the appellee that an excessive valuation of property is an erroneous assessment thereof within the meaning of section 7180 of Kirby’s Digest, so that a remedy is here given to one, who has paid taxes under these circumstances, by having the taxes refunded; but we do not think that the term ‘erroneously assessed,’ as used in said section, refers to an overvaluation of the property. The term ‘erroneous assessment,’ as there used, refers to an assessment that deviates from the law and is therefore invalid, and is a defect that is jurisdictional in its nature, and does not refer to the judgment of the assessing officers in fixing the amount of the valuation of the property.”
Moreover the word “erroneous” in section 7447 takes color from its associate. In Singer Sewing Machine Co. v. Benedict,
“Thus it will be perceived that, if the taxes in question were illegal and void, as asserted, the company had a remedy at law. ,It could pay them, and, if the commissioners*706 refused to refund, have its aetion against the county to recover hack the money.”
In First National Bank v. Patterson,
“But apart from this, if the tax was not legally laid, plaintiff in error could, upon payment thereof, recover the same from the county under the provisions of” this section.
See, also, on the point: Boston Manuf’g, Co. v. Commonwealth,
In Stanley v. Supervisors of Albany,
“The method pursued could in no respect be considered as adopted in hostility to the national banks. It must sometimes place the estimated value of their shares below their real value; but such a result is not one of which the holders of national bank shares can complain. It must sometimes lead also to overvaluation of the shares; but, if so, no ground is thereby furnished for the recovery of the taxes collected thereon. It is only where the assessment is wholly void, or void with respect to separable portions of the property, the amount collected on which is ascertainable, or where the assessment has been set aside as invalid, that an aetion at law will lie for the taxes paid, or for a portion thereof. Overvaluation of property is not a ground of aetion at law for the excess of taxes paid beyond what should have been levied upon a just valuation. The courts cannot, in such cases, take upon themselves the functions of a revising or equalizing board.”
This was reaffirmed in Williams v. Supervisors of Albany,
In Montana National Bank v. Yellowstone County,
In Goldsmith v. Standard Chemical Co. (C. C. A.)
The other two grounds on which illegality is claimed may be considered together. As alleged they consist in omitting from taxation moneyed capital used in business in competition with the bank, and overvaluation of the shares of stock of plaintiff as compared to the valuation of other moneyed capital, “if assessed at all.”
There are two kinds of moneyed capital used in competition with the business of national banks, as alleged in the complaint, that were not taxed for the year 1927; first, notes and other evidences of indebtedness secured by deeds of trust or mortgages on real estate in the City of Denver in excess of the sum of $10,000,000. The Colorado statute, referred to in the complaint (section 7195), provides:
“That where any property within this state is mortgaged, conveyed or pledged for the security of a loan or debt then owing, the said property and the notes, mortgage, deed of trust, trust deed, contract or other conveyance, shall be assessed as a unit, and as one and the same, and as of one value and as the value of said property so mortgaged, pledged or otherwise conveyed only, and any such notes, mortgages, deeds of trust, trust deeds, contract or conveyance, shall not be otherwise returned or assessed.”
Obviously this statute requires that the whole value of the mortgaged property shall be assessed to the owner, and not simply his equity therein. Washington County v. Murray,
“The answer is, that upon a true construction of this clause of the act the meaning and intent of the law-makers were, that the rate of taxation of the shares should be the same, or not greater, than upon the moneyed capital of the individual citizen which is subject or liable to taxation. That is, no greater proportion or percentage of tax in the valuation of the shares shpuld be levied than upon other moneyed taxable capital in the hands of the citizens.
“This rule seems to be as effectual a test to prevent unjust discrimination against the shareholders as could well be devised. It embraces a class which constitutes the body politic of the State, who make its laws and provide for its taxes. They cannot be greater than the citizens impose upon themselves. It is known as sound policy that, in every well-regulated and enlightened state or government, certain descriptions of property, and also certain institutions — such as churches, hospitals, academies, cemeteries, and the like —are exempt from taxation; but these exemptions have never been regarded as disturbing the rates of taxation, even where the fundamental law had ordained that it should be uniform.”
This rale has been adhered to. In Des Moines Bank v. Fairweather,
In First National Bank of Greeley v. Weld County,
But appellant insists that under the rule in Goldsmith v. Standard Chemical Company, supra, its objections to the assessor were enough to entitle it to sue. It is alleged that prior to payment it objected in writing to the assessment and the valuation, which was overruled. We have already stated the facts in that ease. The complaint in that action showed a full compliance by the taxpayer with the requirements of the statute. The plaintiff, the Chemical Company, furnished the assessor a correct schedule of its taxable property, stating therein its full and true value, and the assessor arbitrarily increased the amounts so given as values in large sums. Here the taxpayer furnished the assessor the amount of its capital stock, surplus and undivided profits, and the total of those amounts were placed on the tax roll by the assessor. The assessor thus used the value given by the taxpayer. His action cannot be said to have been arbitrary or oppressive. Moreover, an error as to valuation of property for taxation does not go to the question of jurisdiction of the taxing officer, and even if excessive it does not render the tax illegal and void, which is necessary in order to recover in an action at law. Stanley v. Supervisors of Albany, supra.
“Undoubtedly, for merely irregular assessments, where the authorities have jurisdiction to act, the statutory remedy is also the exclusive remedy.” Ogden City v. Armstrong,
We conclude that the court below did not err in dismissing the complaint on demurrer.
Affirmed.
