180 A. 260 | Md. | 1935
The Baltimore National Bank appealed to the court *67 below from a ruling of the State Tax Commission denying immunity from taxation for the bank's preferred stock owned by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and upholding an assessment of it for state and municipal taxation for the year 1934. The court below reversed the ruling, and the commission now appeals to this court. Code Supp. art. 81, sec. 186 (b).
In pursuance of a plan of reorganization by stockholders of the Baltimore Trust Company, which was not able to resume business after the bank holidays of February 24th to March 4th, 1933, and is in course of liquidation, the Baltimore National Bank was incorporated on August 4th, 1933, to transact the banking business with the aid of the subscription by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to an issue of preferred stock. Act of Congress January 22d 1932, 47 Stat. 5. See U.S. Code Ann., tit. 15, secs. 601, etc. The issue was of 10,000 shares of five per cent. cumulative preferred stock, of a par value of $100 each, and all were taken by the Finance Corporation. They were assessed at their par value. Fifty thousand shares of common stock of a par value of ten dollars each were issued, all except the directors' qualifying shares being held in escrow subject to options of purchase offered in furtherance of the liquidation of the trust company. The shares of the common stock, too, were assessed at their par value.
It is questioned, first, whether the denial of the exemption for the Finance Corporation's stock can be contested for it by the bank, or by any one other than the Finance Corporation itself, which would in theory suffer the detriment. The tax on the shares under the Maryland statutes is assessed and laid on "the several owners thereof, * * * but may be collected in each case from the bank," with a right of reimbursement from the respective stockholders. Code (Supp. 1929), art. 81, sec. 15 (e). And if the bank in the first instance should be called upon to pay taxes on stock not subject to taxation, and therefore not collectible in turn from the stockholders, the bank would seem to have a grievance of its own, in a violation of the *68
statutes, for which it might properly seek relief in its own name. But it is also the settled practice for a bank or other corporation to litigate a question of taxability on behalf of its stockholders. Des Moines Nat. Bank v. Fairweather,
In argument of the case it was suggested, but not pressed, that there may be no constitutional power in the federal government through such an agency to participate with private stockholders in the ownership and conduct of a national bank. If for that reason the subscription and holding of the preferred stock should be invalid, the fact would require an affirmance of the decision appealed from, because the stock would not then be outstanding and taxable. The Finance Corporation would not be a stockholder to be taxed. As the point was not pressed, we proceed upon the assumption that the stock is validly held.
The exemption is not provided by the terms of statutes cited. The provision of the Maryland Code, exempting from state taxation any property exempted by the Constitution of the United States, or by any Act of Congress (Code [Supp. 1929], art. 81, sec. 7, subsec. 22) only refers the question to the federal law. The National Banking Act, R.S. sec. 5219, as last amended by an Act of Congress of March 25th, 1926, 44 Stat. 223, R.S. sec. 5219, U.S. Code Ann. tit. 12, sec. 548, is the source of any power to tax the shares of the banks. People of New York ex rel. Williamsv. Weaver,
An exemption of the Finance Corporation's shares would be by way of an exception to this general statutory permission to tax shares, either a statutory exception or one grounded on the constitutional principles of governmental immunity.
The only statutory provision in which it is sought is the provision in the Act of Congress creating the Finance Corporation (Act of January 22d 1932, sec. 10, 47 Stat. 5, 9, U.S. Code Ann. tit. 15, sec. 610), that "the corporation, including its franchise, its capital, reserves, and surplus, and its income shall be exempt from all taxation * * * except that any real property of the corporation shall be subject" to taxation. But this seems to be no more than the exemption applicable to federal agencies generally under the decision in McCulloch v. Maryland,
4 Wheat. 316, 4 L. Ed. 579, and although a national bank enjoys the like exemption for its property, it has been held that this does not withdraw from state taxation under section 548 of the Banking Act stock which one national bank may hold in another.Nat. Bank of Redemption v. Boston,
Could the exception to the Banking Act provision for state taxation of all shares be established by construing that provision to refer only to shares which represent investments ultimately of private funds? This is a question suggested by the fact that at the time of the original enactment of the provision the capital of national banks was expected to be derived only from private sources. "The capital of each of the banks in this system was to *70
be furnished entirely by private individuals." Mercantile Nat.Bank v. New York,
"Two provisions in apparent conflict were adopted. First, the absolute exclusion of power in the states to tax the banks, the national agencies created, so as to prevent all interference with their operations, the integrity of their assets, or the administrative governmental control over their affairs. Second, preservation of the taxing power of the several states so as to prevent any impairment thereof from arising from the existence of the national agencies created, to the end that the financial resources engaged in their development might not be withdrawn from the reach of state taxation, but on the contrary that every resource possessed by the banks as national agencies might in substance and effect remain liable to state taxation. The first aim was attained by the non-recognition of any power whatever in the states to tax the federal agencies, the banks, except as to real estate specially provided for, and, therefore, the exclusion of all such powers. The second was reached by a *71
recognition of the fact that, considered from the point of view of ultimate and beneficial interest, every available asset possessed or enjoyed by the banks would be owned by their stockholders and would be, therefore, reached by taxation of the stockholders as such." Bank of California v. Richardson,
The question argued is whether the immunity of the national government from state taxation does not render immune the shares owned by this particular governmental agency, and so except them from the general taxation of shares permitted by the Banking Act. It is a question of immunity attaching to a particular stockholder as distinguished from the banking corporation itself. The fact that the bank, too, is a governmental agency, and enjoys immunity for property owned by it, has now no bearing. The immunity to be considered is one which would likewise apply if the shares were those of a state bank or trust company. Exceptions to a general provision may be impressed upon a statute by force of unexpressed general principles. This court has found statutory exemptions extending beyond the letter of statutes, or subject to unexpressed limitations. Anne Arundel County v.Annapolis,
There is no precise test for the existence of an exemption by reason of intergovernmental immunity. It is an immunity of either state or national sovereignty from taxation by the other. "Just what instrumentalities of either a state or the federal government are exempt from taxation by the other cannot be stated in terms of universal application." Metcalf Eddy v. Mitchell,
The Finance Corporation, the owner of the stock in this instance, is an agency of governmental origin, one which has a close relationship to the national government as its agency for carrying out the broad purpose of upholding the industries of the country during the depression. The United States owns all its stock. The Secretary of the Treasury is a member of the board of directors; the corporation has the mailing privileges possessed by executive and other departments, and commands the aid of departments and government employees generally. Negotiable obligations which it may issue are guaranteed by the United States. It may act as a depositary of public moneys or as a financial agent of the government. It is required to make periodical reports to Congress. Its purpose and its existence are temporary; it is eventually to be liquidated by its directors, or, if liquidation should be delayed beyond the term of its existence, then *73
by the Secretary of the Treasury. It is obviously a governmental agency of great power and importance. But even so, there may be no immunity from taxation for particular property owned by the agency. A national bank is a governmental agency, the property and franchises of which are for that reason immune from state taxation, yet stock held by one national bank in another is not so exempt. Davis v. Elmira Sav. Bank,
The street railway system of the City of Boston was placed by the State of Massachusetts in the hands of a state board of trustees to manage and operate the system for a stated period on behalf of the public, and this was determined to be a proper exercise of governmental power. Boston v. Treasurer,
Immunity depends upon the nature of the activity in which the government enters its funds or property. "But whether that field of activity, in relation to a State, carries immunity from federal taxation is a question which compels consideration of the nature of the activity, apart from the mere creation of offices for conducting it, and of the fundamental reason for denying federal authority to tax. That reason, as we have frequently said, is found in the necessary protection of the independence of the national and state governments within their respective spheres under our constitutional system. * * * The principle of immunity thus has inherent limitations. * * * And one of these limitations is that the State cannot withdraw sources of revenue from the federal taxing power by engaging in businesses which constitute a departure from usual governmental functions and to which, by reason of their nature, the federal taxing power would normally extend. The fact that the State has power to undertake such enterprises, and that they are undertaken for *75
what the State conceives to be the public benefit, does not establish immunity. * * * The necessary protection of the independence of the state government is not deemed to go so far. * * * If, in the instant case, the Commonwealth had acquired the property of the company and had organized management of it in perpetuity by the state government, instead of temporarily, or had taken over all the street railways in all its cities for direct operation by the Commonwealth, there would appear to be no ground, under the principles established by the decisions we have cited, for holding that this would effect the withdrawal of the enterprise from the federal taxing power. And the fact that the State has here undertaken public management and operation for a limited time, and under the particular restrictions of the agreement with the company, cannot be said to furnish a ground for immunity." Helvering v. Powers,
"Whenever," the Supreme Court has said, "a state engages in a business of a private nature, it exercises non-governmental functions, and the business, though conducted by the state, is not immune from the exercise of the power of taxation which the Constitution vests in the Congress." Ohio v. Helvering,
The relation to the functions of government, and the scope of the part to be played by the agency in the field into which it has been entered, may make the difference between immunity for one agency and none for the other.
Congress, acting for the national government, has the power to enter a field of private activity for its constitutional purposes to such an extent, great or small, and in such manner, as it finds appropriate; and normal incidents may sometimes be assumed for what it does undertake. In deciding that interest was recoverable on the amount of government insurance of freight advances against war risks, the Supreme Court said: "When the United States went into the insurance business, issued *77
policies in familiar form and provided that in case of disagreement it might be sued, it must be assumed to have accepted the ordinary incidents of suits in such business."Standard Oil Co. v. United States,
For extending the aid to industries determined upon for the period of the depression, the national government, assuming all necessary constitutional powers, could, as pointed out in argument, have used ordinary departmental executives or officers, without creating a corporation for the work. And the aid might have been extended by gifts or loans. Loans might have been secured by pledges of stock or other property. Always the government would have stood apart, not participating in the business. But a corporation was decided upon as an agency. And instead of making direct gifts, or loans, it was authorized (U.S. Code Ann. tit. 12, sec. 51d), to subscribe to preferred stock in corporations aided, at least when under state laws such stock could be taken free of double liability. The preferred stock is taken with the incidental right to profits, and actual conduct of the business may be taken over. To a greater or less extent the Finance Corporation has been placed in the position of partner in the business aided, whatever that business may be. U.S. Code Ann. tit. 15, secs. 601, 605, 609, etc.; Continental Ill. Nat Bank Trust Co. v. Chicago, R.I. Pac. R. Co.,
There is some difference in methods of payment of taxes on shares of stock under statutes like those in Maryland. Perhaps in the greater number of instances the corporations pay the taxes as they pay any other corporate obligations. The appellant here quotes a report *78 of counsel for the Finance Corporation that the officers had been led to believe that as a general rule banks pay the taxes and make no attempt to seek reimbursement. So far as that method is adopted, the tax is practically indistinguishable from a tax on the corporation itself, and the stockholders, Finance Corporation or others, are not directly concerned in it. Exempting some of the shares would mean, not relieving the owners from collections or deductions of taxes, but favoring the corporation by relieving it in part from the common burden of the business, and of giving it an advantage in competition.
We have been unable to see that taxing these shares as usual may, because of the nature and constitution of the agency owning them, interfere with the governing function of the national sovereignty, or carry any possibility of interference. On the contrary, it seems to us that the particular agency is, in the words of the Supreme Court, "engaging in businesses which constitute a departure from usual governmental functions."Helvering v. Powers,
Our conclusion is contrary to that of two other courts; but we feel constrained to accept that conclusion, with all respect for the opposite one, and set it down with the considerations which have seemed to lead to it.
The decision of the State Tax Commission will be reinstated.
Order reversed, with costs. *79