Court Opinion

ID: 3612119
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:55:59.152706+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:07:32.017834
License: Public Domain

The relator resides in the sixth ward of the city of Albany. The National Commercial Bank, in which he owns eleven hundred and four shares of stock, of the value of $20 each, is located in the fourth ward of the same city. Under the act of the legislature of this State, passed April 23, 1866, the relator was assessed $22,800 as the par valuation of his bank shares. The defendants are the board of assessors of the city of Albany. On the 24th of September, 1866, the relator presented to the said defendants an affidavit, in which he stated "that the value of the personal estate owned by him, does not exceed the sum of one dollar, after deducting his just debts, and his property invested in the stocks of corporations, liable to be taxed therefor," and claimed that the assessment should be reduced in accordance therewith to the sum of one dollar.
The defendants refused to reduce the assessment, and the relator moved at Special Term for a mandamus directing them to make such deduction. This motion was granted, *Page 60 
and upon appeal by the defendants to the General Term of the third district, the order was affirmed. The defendants now bring their appeal to this court.
The respondents claim that the assessment and taxation upon bank shares, authorized by the act of April 23d 1866, stand upon the same basis as all other taxation of personal property, under the laws of this State; that the relator was entitled to deduct from such assessment, his personal indebtedness, and that he was subject to taxation upon the balance only. The appellants claim that there was intended to be established a distinct system of taxation in reference to shares of bank stock, by which they were to be assessed and taxed upon their actual value, independent of the condition or circumstances of the owner.
By the general tax law of the State, each individual is assessable in the town or ward in which he resides, and not elsewhere, for all personal estate owned by him. Between the first days of May and July the assessors of each town are required to ascertain by diligent inquiry, the names of the taxable inhabitants, and the taxable property, real or personal, in their respective towns. In the fourth column of the assessment roll to be prepared by them, it is directed that the assessors shall set down "the full value of all the taxable personal property owned by such person, after deducting the just debts owing by him." (1 R.S., 391.) It is the duty of the assessors to meet at a time appointed to hear complaints and make corrections of their rolls. It was at the time thus appointed that the relator made the affidavit before set forth, and it is conceded that in regard to taxation for personal property generally, it was sufficient to entitle him to the deduction claimed.
The legislation upon the subject of the taxation of banks, has been heretofore regulated upon a plan by itself, and a reference to this system will aid us in reaching a correct conclusion upon the question before us. The general system of legislation upon the subject-matter of a statute, may be taken into view, to aid the construction of a particular statute, relating to the same subject. (Holbrook v. Holbrook, 1 Pick., *Page 61 
248, 254; Mendon v. Worcester, 10 id., 241.) The first statute, of this State that imposed a tax upon bank stock, as such, was that of 1823 (Sess. Laws 1823, p. 390), which enacted "that all goods, chattels, bonds * * bank stock * * shall be subject to taxation under the meaning of this act." By section fourteen the officers were required to deliver to the assessors a statement of their real estate, and the amount of their capital stock paid in or secured to be paid in, and the assessors were directed to insert in the roll "the amount of such real and personal property." It was further provided, that it should be the duty of the cashier or treasurer to pay the amount of such tax "and to deduct the same from the dividends of the stockholders, in proportion to the amount of stock held by them respectively, except the stock held by the State or by literary or charitable institutions, from which no deductions shall be made." (§ 15.) The companies were further authorized to commute for such taxes, by the payment of ten per cent upon the amount of their dividends or income. The imposition of this tax was made upon the recommendation of the then Comptroller of the State, and was the subject of complaint on the part of the banks. It continued, however, to be the law of the State, until the adoption of the Revised Statutes. By the Revised Statutes of 1828 it was provided that all moneyed or stock corporations, deriving an income or profit from their capital or otherwise, should be liable to taxation on their capital. (1 R.S., 414.) The assessment of such corporations was made: 1. Upon the real estate owned by them if any, and 2, upon the capital stock actually paid in, and secured to be paid in, excepting therefrom the sums paid for real estate, and the amount of such capital stock held by the State, and by any incorporated literary or charitable institutions. The safety fund banking system, which came into operation in the year 1829, required that the capital of all banks should be fully paid in. At this time then, banks, as such, were taxable upon the amount of their capital stock paid in, with the two exceptions stated, to wit: of stock held by the State, and by literary or charitable institutions. It was thus taxable, *Page 62 
whatever might be the diminished value of its shares, unless is was able to show that it was not in the receipt of any income or profits whatever. (Id. 416.) So on the other hand, it was subject to no greater taxation, however valuable its shares might become. (Bank of Utica v. The City of Utica, 4 Paige, 399.) Its nominal capital was the standard of taxation, although its shares might be reduced below that value, or might be greatly above it.
By the act of December 7, 1847 (4 R.S. [Edmonds' ed.], 151) it was enacted that all individual bankers and all banking associations, "shall be subject to taxation on the full amount of actual capital paid in, or secured to be paid in, as such capital, by them severally, at the actual market value of such securities, to be estimated by the Comptroller, without any deduction for the debts of such individual banker or banking association."
It was also enacted that taxes upon incorporated companies should be demanded from the president of the company, and that the same should "be paid out of the funds of the company, and be ratably deducted from the dividends of those stockholders whose stock was taxed, or shall be charged upon such stock, if no dividends be afterward declared." (1 R.S. [Edmonds' ed.], 377, § 18).
In the year 1853 this system was amended by providing that the assessment upon incorporated companies should be upon their real estate, upon the amount of their capital stock paid in, or secured to be paid in, together with the amount of all surplus or secured funds, exceeding ten per cent of their capital, but deducting as before, the amount of said stock that should be held by the State, or by any literary or charitable institution. (1 R.S. [Edmonds' ed.], 375.) And again in the year 1857 (Sess. Laws 1857, 2d vol., p. 1), the legislature enacted that this assessment, with the exception aforesaid, should be upon the capital stock together with its surplus profits exceeding ten per cent, "at its actual value," thus substituting the principle of ascertaining the value of the stock to be assessed, instead of taxing upon its nominal amount. *Page 63 
The law continued in this form, without alteration, with the exception of the invalid law of 1864, hereafter noticed, until the year 1865. The national bank system had then become established, and the State banks were rapidly organizing themselves under that authority. The legislature in that year passed an act (Laws 1865, ch. 97, p. 172) legalizing and facilitating such transfers. In section 10 of the act, they enacted, that all the shares in any of the said banking associations held by any person or body corporate, should be included in the valuation of the personal property of such person or body corporate, in the assessment of taxes in the town or ward where such banking association is located, and not elsewhere. This act having been declared, by the Supreme Court of the United States, to be illegal, on a ground not here material, another act was passed by the legislature of New York, on the 23d day of April, 1866, (Laws 1866, p. 1647), being the act under which the present question arises. By the first section of this act it is provided that hereafter no tax shall be assessed upon the capital of any bank, * * but the stockholders in such bank shall be assessed and taxed on the value of their shares of stock therein. The assessment is to be made in the place where the bank is located, and not elsewhere, and the proportionate value of the real estate of the bank is to be deducted from the stock of each shareholder.
We thus see that for a period of nearly fifty years, the policy of the legislature in regard to the taxation of bank capital and bank shares, has been uniform. The stock has been taxed at its nominal value, without deduction for debts or charge for surplus, or, as more recently, at its actual value. We see that, as to individual bankers, it was expressly enacted that the capital employed by them should be taxed at the market value of their securities employed, and without deduction for their individual debts. We see again that the taxation of the capital was considered as the taxation of the shares, when the legislature enact that such taxes shall be deducted from the dividends of the shareholders, or be charged against dividends subsequently to be made. In all of *Page 64 
these statutes, the assessment and taxation were based upon the value of the stock of the incorporation. The debits and credits and actual funds of the bank established the subject of taxation, and the condition or circumstances of the individual owning the shares did not enter into the account.
We come then to the inquiry whether under the acts of 1865 and 1866 the same system is carried out, and the shares are to be assessed and taxed at their value, without regard to the condition of the owner, or whether that system was then abandoned.
It will be borne in mind that the present question is upon the intention of the legislature, and not upon its power. The power of the legislature to say that the taxation shall be enforced without regard to the circumstances of the owner, is not disputed. Prior to the organization of the National banking system, the State banks paying taxes upon their capital to the State and to the municipal authorities, possessed an aggregate capital of more than a hundred millions of dollars. Nearly all of these banks have transferred themselves to the United States organization. The State possesses the same power of taxation upon the shareholders (with certain qualifications not here important to be noticed) that it formerly had upon the banks. It has exercised this power, has preserved the forms and manner of bank taxation, so far as they were appropriate, and has given no evidence of any intention to abandon the large field of taxation, so long used by it, or to embarrass and reduce it by allowing the circumstances of the shareholders to form an element in the case. The statute, on the other hand, apparently intends to preserve, as fully as possible, all the connections before existing on this subject. It says that "no tax shall hereafter be assessed upon the capital of any bank or any banking association organized under the authority of this State or of the United States, but the stockholders in such banks and banking associations shall be assessed and taxed on the value of their shares of stock therein." It is quite unusual for the legislature to enact what they do not intend to tax, or what they do not intend to do in any respect. This preliminary statement, as *Page 65 
here embodied, shows that the legislature wished to preserve the connection and the identity as far as possible between these two subjects of taxation. It is as if they had said, we cannot now tax the National banks, as we have been accustomed to do; but instead thereof we will tax their shareholders, and we will apply to them, the system of taxation that we have hertofore imposed upon the banks, so far as it is lawful to do so. If such had not been their intention it would have been very easy to have said, that shares in banks shall be taxed like other personal property, in the same manner, and subject to the same rules. On the contrary, they adopt a special system of taxation for those shares, in close resemblance to the mode of taxing bank capital, and declare that such shareholders shall be "assessed and taxed on the value of their shares." In the general statute which I have before quoted, the assessors are directed to assess to the person named "the full value of all the personal property owned by such person, after deducting the just debts owing by him." (1 R.S., 391.) Upon the balance the tax is to be imposed. Under the present statute, no such deduction is referred to, but the person is to be "assessed" not only, but "taxed on the value of their shares of stock therein." The difference is significant.
The direction of the assessors to deduct from the value of the shares of each person a proportionate sum for the real estate owned by the corporation, is significant also. It is so not only upon the principle of expressio unius, but as indicating the design of the framers of the statute. No such direction is contained in the general tax law, but real estate is there assessed and taxed in one column, and the residue of personal estate, after deducting debts, in another. By the statutes of the United States, the real estate owned by a bank is taxable under the State authority, directly against the bank, and the revenue on that subject of taxation, is obtained as formerly. When the assessment is made upon the shares, the proportionate value of the real estate is deducted; and the State thus obtains from the bank and the shareholder together, as it did before from the bank alone, a tax upon the *Page 66 
full value of both its real and its personal estate. There are still other provisions of this statute which are evidence of the legislative intention to arrange a system of taxation of this kind of property which should be separate from the general system. Thus, by section 5, an action is given to the county treasurer "to collect the tax from the avails of the sale of his shares of stock, and the tax on such shares of stock shall be and remain a lien thereon till the payment of the said tax." No such provision for sale of choses in action, is declared by the general tax law, and no such lien is declared in any other part of the tax law of this State upon the property assessed. The sixth section also contains the unusual provision, that it shall be the duty of the bank to retain so much of the dividends belonging to such stockholder, as shall be necessary to pay the taxes assessed in pursuance of this act. No such provision was ever introduced into the general tax law of this State, or now exists under the general system. These unusual provisions and directions concur with the previous legislation in indicating the statutory intent, to establish for bank shares a system of taxation peculiar to itself, and independent of the general system of taxation in existence in the State. The act of April, 1863, chapter 240, is also strongly indicative of the same intention.
By that act, the legislature evidently intended to tax the whole available interest in the bank or in its shares. They there provided that a tax should be laid upon "a valuation" equal to the amount of their capital stock paid in and the surplus earnings, less ten per cent, without any deduction. This act was declared void by the Supreme Court of the United States, as laying a tax on the property of the bank, which property, in whole or in part, consisted of stocks of the Federal government. Immediately after this act was declared invalid, the acts of 1865 and of 1866, already cited, were passed by the legislature.
It is argued in behalf of the respondents that, inasmuch as the statute directs the assessment of the bank shares to be included in "the valuation of the personal property of such stockholder," it subjects it to the operation of the general law *Page 67 
in regard to assessments. It is to be observed, however, that this valuation is directed to be thus made in the ward where the bank is located and not elsewhere, whether the stockholder reside in said ward or not. It was the case with this relator, as it must be with many others, that he did not reside in the ward where the bank was located. It thus, by its terms, becomes at once distinguished from the general tax law, which requires this valuation to be made in all cases at the residence of the stockholder, and the indication is given that this valuation was intended to be a part of the special system, which I have already discussed. I have endeavored to show that such was the intention, and this provision is not in conflict with that idea, but forms a convenient portion of the machinery to accomplish it.
It is said that the expression "but not at a greater rate than is assessed upon other moneyed capital in the hands of individuals in this State," aids the argument of the respondent. It is argued that an individual owing a bond and mortgage for $1,000, and being indebted $500, could, by the general law, claim to have the $500 deducted from the value of his bond and mortgage, and that his assessment and taxation should be upon the remaining $500 only; and that the refusal of a like deduction in favor of the shareholder of $1,000, would subject him to taxation upon twice as large an amount as was imposed upon the individual. This, it is said, would be imposing a greater rate of taxation upon the shareholder. The "rate," or "ratio," is the percentage merely; the "proportion," the "degree." (Webster; Worcester.) If the State imposes a tax of five mills upon the dollar on all the real and personal property of the State, five mills on the dollar is the "rate," the degree, the proportion, the percentage of taxation. This is distinct from the question of exemption. Almshouses and institutions of learning, and the estates of clergymen, to a limited extent, are exempt from taxation. This exemption may compel the payment of a larger amount by the remaining tax payers, in an indirect manner, for the reason that so large a sum does not come into the treasury of the State as if there were no *Page 68 
exemptions. If so, it is not because the rate is altered, but because there is less material upon which the tax may attach itself. Rate and exemptions are in no way connected. In their nature, they have no necessary relation to each other. The one directs how much shall be raised upon certain valuations, while the other directs what property shall be subject to taxation, and what shall be exempt. The possession of United States securities by a State bank exempts so much of its capital, as is thus invested, from State taxation, but the possession by a National bank of the like securities, does not relieve its shareholders to the like amount. Both of these propositions were decided by this court in The City of Utica v. Churchill (33 N.Y., 161), andVan Alen v. The Assessors, before cited (2 Wall., 200); BankTax Case (2 Black, 620). The same question was decided by this court, in October last. (The People, ex rel. Kennedy, v. TheCommissioners of New York.) The fact, therefore, that the same percentage will not produce the same amount of tax when imposed upon a State bank, with a capital of $100,000, that it does when imposed upon National shareholders to that amount, does not affect the legality of the tax, and as a corollary, does not impose a different rate of taxation. If it imposed a different rate, the tax would be invalid. The case of The People ex rel. v. The Commissioners of New York, I understand to be decisive against the argument now under consideration. (See opinion of DAVIES, Ch. J., pp 15, 19, 20.)
In Van Alen v. The Assessors (supra), the Supreme Court of the United States say "upon the whole, after the maturest consideration we have been able to give that case, we are satisfied that the States possess the power to tax the whole of the interest of the shareholder, in the shares held by him in these associations, within the limit prescribed by the act authorizing their organization." This proposition was asserted in denial of a claim that the interest of shareholders should be subject to taxation so far only as the capital of the bank was not invested in United States securities, exempt by law from taxation. I think it is correct in its application to the present case. The assessors did right in refusing to make the *Page 69 
deduction claimed, and the order appealed from should be reversed, with costs.
All the judges concurred in the foregoing opinion, except PORTER and BOCKES, JJ., who dissented.