2 Gill 487 | Md. | 1845
delivered the opinion of this court.
We deem it unnecessary to decide a number of questions, argued with great ability, by the counsel of both parties; because, from the view we have taken of the record before us, they do not arise in this case.
According to our interpretation of the act of Assembly in question, the legislature have not attempted to exercise some of the powers so vehemently complained of, on the part of the defendant.
The act of March session 1841, c. 23, having provided for a general assessment of all the real and personal property.within the State, directed, that the capital stock of the several banks, and other incorporated institutions of this State, should be assessed at its cash value. And all the property of such banks, and incorporated institutions, the stock of which was thus assessed and taxed, being exempted from taxation, as far as concerns the present controversy, the taxation of such stock, was decided to be a constitutional tax, both by the Supreme Court of this State, and of the United States. Difficulties having arisen from the mode provided, for the collection of the tax on said stock; and the peculiarly fluctuating ownership of such property, frequently rendering it a matter of controversy, by whom the tax ought to be paid, to remedy such evil; and to relieve the owners of stock, who might sell the same, from the inconvenient necessity of going to the county town, to attend a meeting of the justices of the levy courts, commissioners of the tax, or county commissioners, (as the case may be,) and furnishing proof of the sale and transfer of the stock, that it might be deducted from the amount, standing against them on the books of assessment; and to relieve the stockholders, as well as the other tax payers of the counties, city and district, from the payment of a levy of from three to ten per cent., on the amount of tax levied on such stock; and with a view, to provide a far more just, convenient and safe mode of collecting the public revenue, arising from the capital stock of banks, and other incorporated institutions in the State, the legislature, by the first section of the act of 1843, chap. 289, enacted, “that it shall
To the provisions of the first section of the said act of Assembly, a great variety of objections have been taken, and elaborately and ingeniously pressed upon the court.
First it is insisted, that the defendant, from the nature of the duty imposed on him, is created a slate officer, a collector of the taxes, due by the stockholders of the bank. To this proposition, we cannot yield our assent. Neither the design, nor operation of the law, will warrant such an interpretation of it. Its object was, not to require the officer of the bank, to collect taxes due to the State; but to command him, he being already in possession thereof, to pay to the treasurer, the amount of state taxes in his hands; which, under the act of 1843, he had no authority to pay to any other person. By the act of March 1841, c. 23, the stock of the banks, owned by residents of the State, was assessed to the individual stockholders; and the tax thereon, was to be collected from them, in the counties, city or district in which they respectively resided. But, under
The next objection taken to this act of Assembly is, that it is in violation of the sixth article of the Bill of Rights, which declares, “that the legislative, executive, and judicial powers of the government, ought to be forever separate and distinct from each other:” and of the twenty-first article of the same instrument, which provides, “that no free man ought to be taken or imprisoned, or disseized of his freehold, liberties, or privileges, or outlawed or exiled, or in any manner destroyed, or deprived of his life, liberty or property, but by the judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land.”
According to the argument in behalf of the defendant, if carried out to its legitimate extent, the legislature may cause an assessment to be made, and prescribe the rate of taxation, but there its powers upon the subject cease. It must be left to some judicial tribunal of the State, to ascertain the amount of indebtedness of the individual tax payers; and when thus ascertained, the payment of taxes, can only be enforced by a resort to the judicial tribunals of the State, in the same manner that debts are recov
It has been contended, that the tax, for the recovery of which the present proceedings were instituted, has never been levied ; and, therefore, the officer of the bank is neither authorised nor bound to pay it to the treasurer. The answer to this suggestion is, that the acts of Assembly have made the levy. The assessment of the stock having been made, and the rate of taxation prescribed, and the obligation for its payment being imposed on the bank officer; every thing has been
It is also contended, that a Mandamus ought not to issue in this case, because the officer of the bank, to whom it will be directed, is ignorant of, and has no means of ascertaining the amount of the tax to which the State is entitled; the stock of the bank being assessed at different values, in the different portions of the State, where the stockholders reside. If this could, in any case, (considering the facility with which the requisite information could be obtained,) furnish a ground for refusing to comply with the requisitions of the act of 1843; it certainly has no application to the case now before us. Here all the facts stated in the petition are admitted to be true; and the petition expressly states, that all the stock of the bank was duly valued, by the proper assessors, at $ 19.50 per share, so that the same rate of tax is chargeable in respect to each and every share of the stock of the bank. There is, therefore, in this case, no pretence for the alleged inability of the officer of the bank, to comply with the requirement of the act of Assembly, by reason of any diversity in the assessed value of the shares of bank stock. And there is still less reason, in the refusal of the proper bank officer to pay the State tax, on
It is further said, that the act of 1843, if complied with, would render taxation unequal, by compelling the tax of the stockholders to be paid in cash, whilst other tax payers possess the power of paying in coupons. Such was not the design, nor is it the practical operation of that act of Assembly. The legislature, by it, neither intended to increase nor diminish the amount of the tax levied upon bank stock. And the treasurer of the State receives, from the officers of the banks, coupons in payment of such taxes, in the same manner that they are received in payment of taxes due by the citizens of the State.
Neither is the objection to the act of 1843 well founded, that it compels the officer of the bank to pay the tax upon the whole capital stock of the bank, although portions of it might be exempt from taxation, as being owned by other banks or incorporated institutions, (the stock of which was taxed,) or as being owned in such manner, as to be exempt from taxation under the first section of the act of March 1841, chapter 23. All transfers of bank stock, and the names of its owners, appear upon the books of the bank, and should any of its stock be exempt from taxation, as above mentioned, the officer of the bank is not bound to pay the tax upon it, nor would the treasurer of the State insist upon its payment. But the conclusive answer to such an objection, in this case, is this, that the petition states, and its statements are admitted to be true, the assessment and tax of the stock in 1843, and its then and continued liability to such assessment, up to the time of the filing of the petition now before the court.
It has been urged, too, as an obstacle to the issuing of a Mandamus in this case, that the board of directors may have forbidden the payment of the tax by the officer of the bank. The record presents no such fact to the court, and we would very reluctantly credit its existence. Had such a prohibition been made apparent to the court, we feel assured it would have lent a willing ear to an application of the attorney general, for the interposition of the court in removing the difficulty.
The only remaining ground on which the officer of the bank places his refusal to comply with the mandates of the law, is that a compliance would subject him to “additional labor, trouble and expense.” To what extent, or in what way such “additional labor, trouble and expense” would be incurred, is left wholly unexplained. A citizen is not necessarily discharged from the obligation to perform a duty, enjoined by law, for the public good, because it imposes on him some additional labor, trouble and expense. The law requires a certain portion of its citizens to perform militia duty, by attending public musters on certain days in the year, which subjects them to much more labor, trouble and expense, than that imposed upon the officer of the bank in the discharge of the duty, now the subject of our consideration. The law requires every voter to go to the polls and vote at the election of public officers. It also enjoins upon every taxable inhabitant of the State, the duty of furnishing to assessors, a true and detailed statement of all his property liable to taxation, and of all such property in his possession, though belonging to other persons. A duty, in many instances, attended with far more labor,
The defendant having failed to inform us how, or to what extent, the duty imposed on him by the act of 1843, has subjected him to “additional labor, trouble and expense,” let us inquire whether this “additional labor, trouble and expense” be so unreasonable, unjust and onerous, that this court, in the
The agreement of the counsel filed, in this cause, renders it unnecessary for us to say any thing, as to the propriety of applying for a Mandamus against the president, instead of some other officer of the bank.
The only remaining question to be considered, (if indeed a question it can be called,) is whether, in the case before us, a Mandamus is the appropriate remedy, to restore the State to those rights, which are illegally and unjustly withheld from it. For the recovery of the tax on the stock of the bank, the Slate has no lien on the stock; it can maintain no action at law against the stockholder; nor against the bank; nor against any officer of the bank in his official character. Nor can it maintain an action for money had and received, against any officer of the bank, in his individual character. Yet, under the act of 1843, we are of opinion, that it has a clear and unquestionable right, a legal right, to be paid out of the dividends declared, the amount of the tax imposed on the assessed value of the slock of the bank. And for the assertion of this right, it has no appropriate legal remedy. According then to all the authorities, a Mandamus is the proper remedy; and it would be a reproach to our system of jurisprudence, if it were denied to the State on the present occasion.
The proforma judgment of the county court is reversed, with costs, and a procedendo awarded.
JUDGMENT REVERSED AND HROCEDENDO AWARDED.