84 So. 481 | La. | 1920
The defendant bank appeals from a judgment ordering the payment of an annual license tax of $150.
The question presented is whether the tax should be $150 or only $75. And that depends upon the question whether the expression, “the declared or nominal capital and surplus,” in paragraph 2 of section 3 of Act 171 of 1898 (page 389), which determines the sum that shall form the basis of the annual license tax imposed upon every banking business, includes undivided profits.
The sum of the capital and surplus of the defendant bank is more than $50,000 and less than $100,000. Therefore, if the undivided
Acting upon instructions from the supervis- or of public accounts, and upon his opinion that undivided profits were not to be regarded as a part of a bank’s surplus, within the meaning of paragraph 2 of section 3 of the Act 171 of 1898, the tax collector demanded and collected from the bank a license tax of $75. Thereafter the supervisor of public accounts asked the Attorney General for an expression of opinion or interpretation of the statute; and the latter advised that the term “surplus,” as used in paragraph 2 of section 3 of the statute did include undivided profits.
Thereupon the supervisor of public accounts-instructed the tax collector to collect a license tax of $150; and, on the bank’s refusal to pay the balance of $75, this suit was brought.
Article 15 of the Civil Code, under the heading, Of the Application and Construction of Laws, furnishes a strict rule for interpretation of laws pertaining to a particular trade or profession, viz.:
“ * * * Technical terms and phrases are to be interpreted according to their received meaning and- acceptation with ' the learned in the * * * trade or profession to which they refer.”
Article 17, under the same heading, furnishes another rule, viz. that laws upon the same subject-matter must be construed with reference to each other, and what is clear in one statute may aid in explaining what would otherwise be doubtful in another. Applying that rule, we observe that Act 170 of 1898, levying an annual ad valorem tax upon all taxable property in tbe state, and Act 171 of the same year, levying an annual license tax upon every trade, business, calling, or profession, were prepared by one and the same committee, having the same member of the General Assembly as its chairman. In section 27 of Act 170 of 1898, the committee adopted as the basis of assessment of the ad valorem tax upon shares of bank stock, “their actual value as shown by the books of the bank,” which, of course, includes the undivided profits of the hank. On the other hand, In paragraph 2 of section 3 of the Act 171 of 1898, the same committee adopted, as a basis for tbe license tax to be paid by every bank, “the declared or nominal capital and surplus,” which term, as understood by persons learned in the banking profession, does not include undivided profits.
The record discloses — and perhaps the disclosure explains why the court has not heretofore had occasion to pass upon the question now presented — th$it the auditing department and the bank examining department of the state government have heretofore consistently interpreted the expression in paragraph 2 of section 3 of Act 171 of 1898, “the declared or nominal capital and surplus,” as not including undivided profits. If that interpretation had not been in accord with the intent and meaning of the legislators who framed and enacted the law, the phrase.would have been changed, so as to include undivided profits, at one of the many sessions of the Legislature held during the past 32 years.
It may be, as the Attorney General suggests, that, under the interpretation which has heretofore been put upon this Statute, the banks can evade the payment of license taxes by deferring indefinitely the transfer of undivided profits to their surplus account. But that is a matter to be considered by the Legislature; and we have no reason to doubt that it was duly considered when the statute was prepared.
The judgment appealed from is annulled, and the state’s demand is rejected, and_the suit dismissed.