237 Mo. 310 | Mo. | 1911
Appellant, as revenue collector of the city of St. Louis, sued respondents to recover the amount of certain bills for taxes assessed against them as executors of the will of Julius Lesser, deceased.
The -petition alleges that defendants were the owners and had charge and management of “taxable personal property in the city of St. Louis of the aggregate value of $89,300, on which taxes had been regularly assessed and the tax bills placed in the hands of the plaintiff as collector, who had used all lawful means to collect, but was unable to do so,” etc. The amount of the tax bills was $1982.46, for which judgment with interest and costs was asked.
The defendants answered showing that the alleged “taxable personal property in the city of St. Louis” consisted of shares of stock in foreign corporations, all of which have their assets in other States and pay
We do not understand appellant as claiming that-there is any statute which in express terms subjects shares of stock in all corporations in general, or in foreign corporations in particular, to taxation. But his contention is that shares of stock are personal property and are comprehended in the term “property” as used in the last line of section 11384, Revised ■Statutes 1909, and he also relies on the definitions of the terms “property” and “personal property” given in section 11519, Revised Statutes 1909. Tracing-the history of our revenue laws through the cases that have come to this court one will see that there have been many disputes between the assessor and collector of taxes on the one hand and corporations and the holder of shares of stock on the other, concerning the meaning of our revenue statutes in relation to the taxing of shares of stock and the property of corporations; yet, although the statutes relied on by appellant are substantially now as they have been for thirty years or more, this ease affords' the first instance in which it has been claimed that those statutes are to be so interpreted as to mean that shares of stock held by a resident in this State in foreign corporations that own no property here are to be assessed for taxation against the shareholder. If such were the plain
Section 11348 requires the assessor to furnish the person to be assessed a printed or written blank, prepared for that purpose, containing a list of all the kinds of personal property that he is to return for taxation. The statute has carefully enumerated all things on which the tax is to be levied, and the fist is designed to be so explicit that every taxpayer may understand what is required of him. The taxpayer is required to fill out the blanks showing how much if any of each item specified he owns, and the list so made out is to be signed and sworn to by him, and if it is false he is hable to the pains and penalties of perjury. No one can read that section of the statute without
That clause begins with the general term “all other property not above enumerated” and ends with the even more general term “every other species of property not exempt by law from taxation.” If by those two general terms the lawmaker intended to say that everything that a person might own or have any interest in, either direct or indirect, here or elsewhere, was to be listed for taxation, what was the use of specifying items either in that clause or in the preceding pine clauses? If shares of stock in a foreign
Section 11519, on which appellant relies to sustain his contention that shares of stock In a foreign corporation are comprehended under the general terms “property” and “personal property,” defines the term “property” “wherever used in this chapter,” to mean and include every tangible or intangible thing being the subject of ownership, whether animate or inanimate, real or personal. If the General Assembly had intended by that definition to say that the taxpayer should fist for' taxation, not only his property in this State, including the items specified in section 11348, but also everything else on the face of the earth in which he had any interest, either within or without the State, it would require him to fist not only the personal property, but also the real estate outside the State, which he might own or have an interest in. The reasonable construction of that clause of the statute is that it was intended to mean property in this State. That intention also appears in the definition in that section given the term “personal property.” The definition is very comprehensive, and specifies stocks and bonds and many other things tangible and intangible, but it nowhere says of any of the items mentioned that they are included whether in this State or elsewhere, until it comes to “ships, vessels or other boats,” and of them it says, whether “within the jurisdiction of this State or elsewhere.” If it was intended to mean that all the personal property enumerated or interest therein, here or elsewhere, was included, why did it specify boats here or elsewhere? The distinction in this particular drawn between
Appellant refers also to section 11334, Revised Statutes 1909: “For the support of the government of the State, the payment of the public debt, and the advancement of the public interest, taxes shall be levied on all property, real and personal, except as stated in the next section.” The next section relates only to property exempt from taxation by the Constitution. Here again we have the general term “all property real and personal,” and there is in that section no more authority for saying that it includes personal property outside of the State than that it includes real estate beyond our borders; if it includes one it includes both. It will be noticed that there is no tax levied by that section, it is only a declaration that taxes shall be levied, the imposing of the taxes comes later, in section 11415, to wit: “There shall be annually levied, assessed and collected on the assessed value of all the real estate and personal property subject by law to taxation in this State fifteen cents on each hundred dollars valuation for state revenue,” etc. By the terms of that section there must be an assessment before there can be a levy. Provisions for the assessment are made in subsequent sections. By the terms of that section the property to be taxed is not all the real and personal property a man may own, but all that is “subject by law to taxation in this State,” that is, property which is not exempt from taxation and which is designated by statute to be assessed for taxation. No property is taxable but that which is required by law to be assessed for taxation.
If the terms “property” and “personal property,” standing alone, are to be understood as including property or interests in property, outside of this State, under the definitions of those terms given in section
In 1857 there was a general revenue law passed (Laws 1857, p. 75) the first section of which contained specifications of the items of property to be taxed, among which -was “shares of stock in incorporated companies at their cash value, excepting manufacturing companies, the property of which alone shall be taxed.” So the law stood until 1866 (Laws 1865-6, p. 125), when a new general revenue statute was enacted, which omitted all specification of items, declaring in section 1 that taxes should be levied on all property, real and personal, except as stated in the next section. And by section 7 the tax was imposed “on lands and other property, real and personal, made taxable by law, forty cents on the hundred dollars of the assessed value thereof.” The significance of that change in the law,' in the particular we are now considering, is that it
• In 1872 a new revenue law was passed (Laws 1872, p. 80). Section 7 of that act, without specifications, provided that: “There shall be annually levied, assessed and collected on the assessed value of all the real estate and personal property subject by law to taxation in this State, one-fifth of one per centum for state revenue, and one-fourth of one per centum for the payment of all state indebtedness.” In that act, for the first time, the terms “property” and “personal property” were defined; the definitions being substantially as now given in section 11519, Revised Statutes 1909. In the definition of the term “personal property” there given, shares of stock in corporations are included. In section 57 it is specified that, “No person shall be required to include in his statement any portion of the capital stock or property of any company or corporation, where such company or corporation is required by this act to list or return both its capital stock and property for taxation in this State, except in such eases as may be specifically otherwise provided for in this act.” Therefore it would seem that the framers of that statute understood that shares of stock, except as there excepted, were to be returned in the list for taxation under the term personal property. The reference in that section to corporations that are required by that act to list or return both their capital stock and ^property for taxation, is to banks and insurance compames as provided in section 35 of the act, in which case the corporation was required to pay the tax and reimburse itself by collecting the amount from its shareholders, as provided in section 36.
In 1877 the revenue law was again altered and amended (Laws 1877, p. 376). The Legislature then returned to the former method, which had existed until
In the retrospect of our revenue statute which we have just taken we find that at one time, and for a long while, the law required of the taxpayer that he include in his fist for taxation shares- of stock in corporations owned by him, but there is no express inelusion of foreign corporations in that requirement nor are they included therein by necessary implication
The law as it now is does not by express terms impose a tax on shares of stock in any corporation except' in banks, or concerns that do a banking business, insurance companies, concerns owning steamboats or other water craft, and building associations; the property of all other corporations is taxed like property of persons. Banks and insurance companies pay taxes only on their real estate, their personal property is taxed indirectly by taxing the shares of stock. The reason for that .system of taxation is that national banks usually have a large part of their capital invested in Government bonds which are not subject to taxation, but an act of Congress authorizes the State to tax the stock of the bank according to its real value, which includes in its estimate the non-taxable bonds, and the General Assembly, to avail itself of that act, put state banks and insurance companies on a plain with national banks. [State ex rel. v. Shryack, 179 Mo. 424.] The peculiar character of steamboats, here to-day and beyond reach to-morrow, is the reason for requiring the resident owner of such stock to include it in his list to be returned to the assessor, and the peculiar nature of interests in building association also furnishes a good reason for making an exception as to such stock.
The reason for making exceptions of banks, insurance companies, steamboat companies and building association is the difficulty ’ in reaching the tangible
Appellant relies on the case of Ogden v. City of St. Joseph, 90 Mo. 522, but tfie decision in tfiat ease was based on a clause in tfie charter of cities of tfie second class wMcfi is not in tMs ease. The only authority tfie city of St. Louis has for levying taxes is section 1, article Y, of its charter, wherein authority is given to “annually levy and collect taxes on all subjects and objects of taxation, and all property witMn tfie city made taxable by law for state purposes.”
We do not pass judgment on tfie proposition stated in tfie briefs of respondent tfiat an act of tfie General Assembly essaying to tax shares of stock in foreign corporations would be unconstitutional, ^because tfie General Assembly has not enacted -such a statute.
We hold tfiat there is notMng in our statutes intended to render subject to taxation shares of stock field by a resident of tMs State in a foreign corporation whose property is not in tMs State. Tfiat is tfie view of tfie law taken by tfie learned trial judge in tMs case. Tfie judgment is affirmed.