Court Opinion

ID: 7114437
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:30:15.169968+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:51.203361
License: Public Domain

Sherwin, C. J.
J, — The foregoing statement of the-case *679and the first and second divisions of this opinion are adopted from the opinion of'Mr. Justice Ladd on the original submission of this appeal.
appeal: ' jurisdiction. I. .No transcript of the assessment of omitted property certified by the county treasurer was filed with the clerk of the district court. As this was not essential to jurisdiction, an appeal having been taken, the court did not err in hearing the appeal. In White v. City of Marion, 139 Iowa, 479, the taxpayer recited the facts in a petition to which a demurrer was filed and a stipulation that the exemption was claimed . and denied by the city and this was held sufficient; it being said: “All required is that the complaint before the board, its decision thereon, and the appeal to be sfcown in order that the court before whom the case is to be tried may know the issue, ■ and that there is some decision to be reviewed.” In Murrow v. Heath, 146 Iowa, 347, an official demand of payment of taxes assessed with interest by the county treasurer reciting the assessment as made was held to be showing enough to exact a hearing. All essential is that the transcript of the assessment by the board of review or treasurer be officially authenticated by certificate, or agreement of parties, • or the facts b.e admitted by demurrer of such body or official or agreed upon, so that it appear that complaint or objection was made to the assessing body or officer and the decision made thereon which is to be reviewed. Anything to the contrary in Peterson v. Board of Equalization, 138 Iowa, 717, is to regarded as dicta, for there was nothing in the record therein showing that an appeal had been taken. In the case at bar objections to the several assessments were filed with the treasurer, and, notwithstanding these, Ihe assessment complained of was made. The court rightly heard the appeal.
*6802. Same: foreign corporations: taxation of stock: exemption: statutes. *679II. The county treasurer assessed sixteen shares of preferred stock and ten shares of common stock in the "United States Gypsum Company to Charles Morril as hav*680ing been omitted from taxation in the years 1896, 1897, and 1898; the aggregate amount of taxes with interest being $139.86. The company was a corporation organized in New Jersey, and, unless the shares were exempt from taxation under section 1319 of the Code, they were assessable. Judy v. Beckwith, 137 Iowa, 24. If any doubt as to this was suggested in First National Bank of Albia v. City Council, 86 Iowa, 28, it was removed by the above decision. To the same effect, see Cook v. City of Burlington, 59 Iowa, 251. The corporation was engaged in manufacturing plaster in this and other states. Its' capital stock consisted of $3,666,300 of preferred stock and $2,249,600 of common stock of the par value of $100 per share issued in payment of properties acquired of several .smaller concerns. It owned land in the state valued at $73,896.16 and buildings, machinery, and the like worth $137,724.93. Four thousand, one hundred and forty-four shares of its preferred and two thousand, four hundred and eighty-seven shares of its common stock were owned by residents of the state, but the assessed value of these was less than that of the company’s real and personal property therein. The section of the statute under which exemption is claimed provides that:
Any firm or corporation who purchases, receives or holds property of any description for the purpose of adding to the value thereof by any process of manufacturing, packing of meats, refining, purifying, or by the combination of different materials, with a view of making gain or profit by so doing, and selling the same, shall be held a manufacturer for the purpose of this title, and he. shall list for taxation such property in his hands, but the average value thereof to be ascertained as in the preceding section, ■ whether manufactured or unmanufactured, shall be estimated upon those materials only which enter into its combination or manufacture. Machinery used in manufacturing establishments shall, for the purpose of taxation, be *681regarded as real estate. Corporations organized under the laws, of this state for pecuniary profit and engaged in manufacturing as defined in this section, and which- have their capital represented by shares of stock shall, through their proper accounting officers, list their real estate, personal property and moneys and credits in the same manner as required of individuals. The owners of capital stock of manufacturing companies as herein provided for, having listed their property as above directed, shall be exempt from assessment and taxation on such shares of capital stock.
It will be noted that this sections defines (1) a manufacturer; (2) directs that the average value of materials entering into the product shall be the assessable value and that machinery shall be assessed as real estate; (3) that certain corporations organized under the laws of this state “which have their capital stock represented by shares of stock” shall list their property like individuals, and the only doubt is whether the last sentence refers to 'the companies just previously mentioned or to corporations generally. The portions defining manufacturer and how assessable value shall be ascertained, and directing that machinery be treated as part of the realty, are quite as applicable to foreign as to domestic corporations, but, unless the remainder relates to domestic corporations, the restriction thereto in next to the last sentence is meaningless. If the shares of all the manufacturing corporations were intended-to be exempt, why direct how the property of a particular class of corporations shall be listed? The property of foreign corporations is made assessable by the Constitution the same as that of individuals (article 8, section 2), and sectiqn 1312 provides for listing the same. Section 1323 of the Code relates solely to corporations organized under the laws of this state, so that the portion authorizing the - deduction of the value of real estate is not applicable to corporations organized elsewhere. Section 1327 of the Code has refer*682ence to real estate of domestic corporations as it relates to real estate returned in the statement of the corporations as part of their assets, and no statement of assets is exacted from foreign corporations, save of specified classes. Section 1323 provides that the shares of stock in every such corporation (organized under the laws of the state) except when otherwise provided shall be assessed to the owners thereof at its principal place of business, and section 1325 declares the corporations liable for the taxes levied thereon.
But for the exemption of the shares in section 1319 quoted and a different assessment being exacted the general mode of reaching the property of domestic corporations as prescribed in the above sections must have obtained. The evident design of the lawmakers was to provide a different scheme of assessment for domestic' manufacturing corporations, and this, as we think, clearly appears from the language employed. Exemption of the shares of the stock is allowed only to (1) “owners of capital stock of manufacturing companies as herein provided for,” and (2) which have “listed their property as above directed.” The only companies “provided for” in the section are those organized “under the laws of this state,” and these only are directed as to the manner of listing their property. Exemptions from taxation should be expressed in unmistakable terms. They are not to be inferred or implied from doubtful or ambiguous language. The presumption is that all property is'taxable. Lacy v. Davis, 112 Iowa, 106; In re Dille, 119 Iowa, 575; Sturges v. Carter, 114 U. S. 511 (5 Sup. Ct. 1014, 29 L. Ed. 240). In the last,case shares in a foreign corporation were held to be assessable notwithstanding those in domestic corporations were exempt from taxation. See, also, Commonwealth v. Lovell, 125 Ky. 491 (101 S. W. 970). In Judy v. Beckwith, 137 Iowa, 29, stock in a foreign manufacturing corporation was held to have been rightly *683assessed; the court saying: “Without taking time for further reference to the statue, we. feel entirely safe in the assertion that there is no existing legislation in this state which expressly or by implication excepts from the category of taxable property the shares of capital stock' owned or held by residents of the state in a foreign corporation.” The circumstance that such corporations are expressly authorized without unseemly restrictions to do business in this state does not militate against this conclusion. See sections 1638, 1639. Foreign corporations, not manufacturers, are admitted on precisely the same terms, and there is no apparent reason for discriminating between them and those engaged in manufacturing unless done within the state, and no such limitation is to be found in the statutes. Nor is there anything in the argument based on the comity between states; for, in the absence of proof to the contrary, the. laws of the state where the company was organized are presumed to he like those of this state. The contention that the construction adopted would result in discrimination between domestic and foreign corporations engaged as manufacturers is unfounded. Because of the statute, the property of each is assessed to it in precisely, the same manner. If there is discrimination, it is between respective shareholders, and that was disposed of in Judy v. Beckwith, supra, as was the argument that such taxation would be unjust. We are of the opinion' that the shares of stock were not exempt from taxation under section 1319 of the Code, and that the district court erred in setting aside the assessments of the county treasurer.
c 3. Same: corporva1ue^ck: evidence. III. The preferred stock provides' for seven percent annual dividends, payable semiannually, which are cumulative. A dividend of three and three-fourths percent was paid in 1906, and five percent dividends were paid in the years 1907 and' 1908, The only evidence offered by the plaintiff *684as to the value of the stock was the testimony of a witness, who said that it had no market value, and that he knew nothing about its value farther than the fact that he had been offered therefor a certain amount per share by Chicago brokers. In so far as his knowledge of the value of the stock was based solely on the offers that he had received for it, we think -there was an entire failure of proof. It is not competent to prove value by offers made by prospective purchasers alone. While an offer to sell may in some cases be an indication of value, we' know of no cases holding that an offer to buy at a certain price is competent evidence of value. The general rule seems to be directly the reverse. Drury v. Railway Co., 127 Mass. 571; Watson v. Milwaukee Ry. Co., 57 Wis. 332 (15 N. W. 468) ; City v. Harland, 99 Cal. 538 (34 Pac. 224) ; Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Le Blanc, 74 Miss. 626 (21 South. 748) ; Railway Co. v. Pearson, 35 Cal. 247; Railway Transfer Co. v. Gluek, 45 Minn. 463 (48 N. W. 194) ; Stewart v. James, 1 Neb. (Unof.) 507 (95 N. W. 778); Railway Co. v. Cleary, 125 Pa. St. 442 (17 Atl. 468, 11 Am. St. Rep. 913) ; Railway Co. v. Keith, 53 Ga. 178. Many other cases announcing the same rule might be cited, but it seems unnecessary. This court has held that the actual price for which a commodity has been sold may be shown on the question of value, but we have never gone so far as to hold mere offers on the part of a prospective purchaser competent. Such a rule would open the door for' the introduction of easily manufactured proof, and would be exceedingly dangerous. We are not willing to adopt it.
4 Same- • treasurer:by presumption. The witness having based his estimate of value solely on an incompetent foundation, it was entitled to no weight, and, ” law presuming that the treasurer acted upon sufficient evidence, his valuation mus^ be sustained. Bank v. City, 136 Iowa, 208; Frost v. Board, 114 Iowa, 103; Gibson v. Cooley, *685129 Iowa, 529. As to the common stock, we think the trial court warranted in finding its value to be $5 per share.
5' of corporate011 deduction of ‘ debts: statutes. IV. The treasurer refused to deduct from the value of the plaintiff’s stock his debts. The trial court also found as a matter of law that the shares of stock in question did not constitute credits within the meaning of the statute, and that the plaintiff’s debts could not be deducted from their value. The plaintiffs have appealed from such finding. The question presented requires us to determine the meaning of the term “credit” as .used in the taxation statute, and it also calls for a consideration of some of the prior decisions of this court. Code, section 1309, is in the following language: “The term ‘credit,’ as used in this chapter, includes every claim or demand due or to become due for money, labor or other valuable thing, every annuity or sum of money receivable at stated periods, and all money or property of any kind ■ secured by deed, title bond, mortgage or otherwise, but pensions of the United States or any of them, or salaries, or payments expected for services to be rendered, are not included in the above term.” The plaintiffs contend that this section is broad enough to include shares of corporation stock within the méaning of the term “credit,” and that, being credits, they are entitled to have deducted from the value thereof their just debts as provided in section 1311. It is manifest that section 1309 should not be considered alone in determining whether the Legislature intended to therein designate corporation shares of 'stock as credits. It is a familiar rule that, in arriving at the legislative intent relative to a particular matter, the court should look to the entire legislation on the subject. We go then at once to a consideration of the several enactments, which we deem material to a proper construction of the term “credit” as used, keeping in mind the rule that all property not *686specifically exempted therefrom is subject to taxation. It is of first importance in our judgment to note the classification of property subject to taxation as fixed by the law. In the Code of 1851, section 456, it was provided: “All other property, real and personal, within this state, is subject to taxation in the manner herein directed,” and this section is intended to embrace “lands . . . ferry franchises . . . which for the purposes of this chapter shall be considered real property; horses and neat cattle; mules and asses; sheep and swine; money; whether in possession, on deposit, and including bank bills; money, property, or labor, . . . and whether within this state or not; mortgages and other like securities, and accounts bearing interest; stocks or shares in any bank or company, incorporated or otherwise, whether incorporated by this or any other state, and whether situated in this state Or not; . . . and all other property not above exempted, although not herein specified.” Section 712 of the Bevision of 1860 and section 801 of the Code of 1873 contained substantially the same provisions,. so far as they related to moneys, credits, and corporation stock. The Code of 1897, section 1308, provides: “All other property, real or personal, is subject to taxation in the manner prescribed, and this section is also intended to embrace: ferry franchises and toll bridges, which, for the purpose of this chapter are considered real property; horses, cattle, mules and asses over one year of age; sheep and swine over six months of age; money whether in possession or on deposit; and credits, including bank bills, government currency, property or labor due from solvent debtors on contract or judgment, mortgages or other like securities, accounts bearing interest, property situated in this state belonging to any bank or company, incorporated or otherwise, whether incorporated in this or any other state; corporation shares or stocks not otherwise assessed .or excepted.”
*687It will be noticed that this section is a substantial reenactment of previous ones on the subject, and that in all of the statutes there is a specific, separate classification of moneys, credits, and corporation shares of stock; the latter being in all instances classified entirely separate from and clearly independent of credits. In the Code of 1851, section 457, the term “credit” was defined as follows, so far as material here: “The term ‘credit,’ as used in this title, includes every claim and demand for money, labor or other valuable thing.” The same enactment appears in the Revision of 1860 and in the Code of. 1873, and section 1309 of the present Code is the same in effect; the changes therein being only minor ones not affecting the meaning of the term “credit.” Again, the Code of 1851, section 471, provided for the manner of classification and assessment as follows, so far as material: “The list shall contain; first, his lands; second, his personal property by the following particulars: . . . amount of moneys and credits; . . . amount in stock or shares of any corporation or company.” By the Revision of 1860, section 732, the board of supervisors was required to furnish each assessor a suitable book “properly ruled and headed, in which to enter the following items: . . . personal property as follows: . . ' . amount of moneys and credits: . . . amount of stocks or shares in any corporation or company, not required by law to be otherwise listed and taxed. . . ‘The same classification of personal property for assessment was required in the Code of 1873, section 821. Section 1360 of the present Code requires an assessment roll which shall show the moneys and credits, but which says nothing about corporate shares of stock. But in view of the consistent requirement for a separate classification thereof up to the enactment of section 1360 and the enactment of chapter 30, Acts of Twenty-seventh General Assembly, Code Supp. 1907, sec.tion 1360, which again includes corporation stocks in the *688roll, in addition to moneys and credits, it is evident that its omission in the Code of 1897 was an oversight. However, the only material part of the matter is that the separate classification of corporation stock is at present a part of the requirement of the statute. The enactment is in our judgment a definite legislative recognition of a distinction between the term “credit,” as used in section 1309, and corporation stock. This distinction is further manifested in still other sections of the past and present statutes. Section 466 of the Code of 1851 provided for the valuation of personal property as follows: “Depreciated bank notes and depreciated stocks or shares in corporations or companies may be listed at their current value and rate; credits shall be listed at such sum as the person listing them believes will be received or can be collected. . . Substantially the same provisions were contained in the Revision and in the Code of 1873. The Code of 1897, section 1310, provides: “Moneys, credits and corporation shares of stock, except as otherwise provided, . . . and corporation shares of stock not otherwise taxed in kind, . . . shall be assessed as provided in this chapter.” Code 1897, section 1311, provides that “in making up the amount of money or credits which any person is required to list, or have listed or assessed, including actual value of any building and loan shares, he will be entitled to deduct from the actual value thereof the gross amount of all debts in good faith owing by him.” Excepting the inclusion therein of building and loan shares as a part of the credits, this is the same statute that has been in force since 1851. In the opinion of the writer a careful study of these various exactments will convince any candid mind that the statute never intended to include in the term “credit” corporation shares or stocks. It does not do so specifically, and the other enactments relating thereto in my judgment remove all opportunity for including such stocks therein by implication.
*689The Legislature has steadfastly adhered to the policy of specifically classifying corporation stocks as a separate and distinct kind of personal property, and has just as distinctly always given moneys and credits another classification. To hold that such stocks are included in the general term “credit,” as used in section 1309, would be to disregard the most elementary rules of construction, and to say that the Legislature did not mean what its language plainly expresses. If corporation stock is not classed as credits by section 1309, it is clear that it should not he so classified by the court. Stock does not represent a demand due or to become due for money, labor, or other valuable thing. It does not represent any kind of just demand, so long, at least, as the corporation is a going concern. It represents nothing that the corporation is hound either legally or morally to pay. If perchance, the corporation is making money, the stockholder may be entitled to dividends, but he has no right to any part or parcel of the corporation property, nor is the corporation indebted to him unless it be for an already declared dividend, and whether a dividend be declared or not depends wholly upon the financial prosperity of the corporation. We look now to the authorities on the above proposition.
In Bridgman v. City of Keokuk, 72 Iowa, 42, the question was whether shares of stock in a building and loan association were credits within the meaning of the statute, and it was said: “We must therefore inquire whether stock in corporations is to be classed as 'credits.’ Stock in corporations ordinarily — and there is nothing to show that the stock of plaintiff in question is subject to a different rule — is not a credit. It is not an' indebtedness to its owner, but, on the contrary, is' an interest in the property of the corporation. Its owner holds an equitable interest in the property of the corporation, which is repre-' sented hy the term 'stock’ and the extent of his interests is described by the term 'shares.’ The expression 'shares *690of stock,’ when qualified by words indicating number and ownership, express the extent of the owner’s interest in the corporation property. The interest is equitable, and does not give him the right of ownership of specific property of the corporation. But he does own the specific stock held in his name, and under the rules .of law the property of the corporation is held by the corporation in trust for the stockholders. It will be readily seen that a share of stock is a thing owned by the stockholder. It is in no sense a debt owing to the stockholder. It is not therefore a credit. Our statutes so recognize it. See Code, pages 802, 813, 818.” In re Kauffman’s Estate, 104 Iowa, 639; Investment Co. v. Ft. Dodge, 125 Iowa, 148, and Murrow v. Heath, 146 Iowa, 347, also follow this rule. The rule there announced is undoubtedly correct, and is sustained by the great weight of authority. See 4 Thompson on Corporations, sections 3411, 3468, and decisions cited; 1 Cook on Corporations, section 12; Bank v. Chambers, 21 Utah, 324 (61 Pac. 560, 56 L. R. A. 346); Chapman v. Bank, 56 Ohio St. 310 (47 N. E. 54); Primm v. Fort, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 605 (57 S. W. 89, 972); Dutton v. Bank, 53 Kan. 440 (36 Pac. 719); Niles v. Shaw, 50 Ohio St. 370 (34 N. E. 162) ; Bank v. Chambers, 182 U. S. 556 (21 Sup. Ct. 863, 45 L. Ed. 1227) ; Williams v. Weaver, 75 N. Y. 30; Ins. Co. v. Brown, 142 Mass. 403 (8 N. E. 134). Many other cases to the same effect might be cited. A debt is generally defined as a sum of money due by certain and express agreement. It is founded upon an express or implied contract to pay a certain amount at a certain time. 22 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 580; Merriwether v. Garrett, 102 U. S. 472 (26 L. Ed. 197) ; Bailes v. Des Moines, 127 Iowa, 126. We are in trouble with some of our own eases, however, notwithstanding the plain intent of the statute as it appears to us. Within a year after the filing of the opinion in the Bridgman case, an opinion in Equitable Life Ins.
*691Co. v. Des Moines, 74 Iowa, 178, was filed in which it was held, without referring to the Bridgman case, that the outstanding shares of. stock of the insurance company constituted debts within the meaning of the law, and should be deducted from its moneys and credits, and this decision was followed without discussion in Ins. Co. v. Board, 75 Iowa, 770. We think no just distinction can be made between the term “debts,” as used in that opinion, and the term “credits,” as used in the statute and herein. If any distinction in principle can be made, it must be based on the fact that in the Equitable case there was a reserve fund in the hands of the company, which was required by law, but we think that fund only enlarged the property of the corporation and did not change the character of its stock. See in this connection Ins. Co. v. Board of Review, 131 Iowa, 254. In Bank of Albia v. City Council, 86 Iowa, 28, it was held that shares of stock in a national bank were credits within the meaning of section 802 of the Code of 1873, as construed in the Equitable Life Ins. case, supra, and under the terms of the United States statutes. It was said in the opinion, however, referring to some of the other sections of the statute which we have quoted: “If these sections were alone to be considered, we should be inclined to hold that shares of stock were not ‘credits’ within the meaning of the statute.” It is worthy of note here that the Supreme Court of the United States does not agree with the decision in the Bank of Albia case in so far as it was based on the federal statutes. Bank of Garnett v. Ayers, 160 U. S. 660 (16 Sup. Ct. 412, 40 L. Ed. 573); Bank v. Chapman, 173 U. S. 205 (19 Sup. Ct. 407, 43 L. Ed. 669). Our own later decisions follow the Bridgman case, and in effect overrule the Equitable Life Ins. case and the decisions based thereon, in so far as they affect the question under consideration. It is further to be noted that in 1897 in enacting section 1311 of the Code, *692the Legislature amended section 814 of the Code of 1873 by expressly providing that building and loan shares of stock should be classed as credits. It is evident, therefore, that it was the legislative understanding that the Bridgman case established the rule governing the matter, and that the amendment was made to except from its operation building and loan shares. It was a legislative declaration that no shares of stock other than building and loan shares should be considered as credits in applying the statute. See, also, as throwing light on the question, Code, sections 1322, 1323, 1324. It is evident that our own decisions are not in harmony on the question under consideration, and, such being the case, we should without hesitation give the statutes controlling the matter their proper construction. We conclude, therefore, that the several decrees setting aside the assessments made by the treasurer must be reversed.
On plaintiffs’ appeal the judgment must be affirmed. Reversed on defendant’s appeal and remanded for a decree in harmony therewith. — Affirmed on plaintiffs’ appeal.