A federal court is not required to give a judgment in a state
court any greater weight than is awarded to it in the courts of the
state in which it was rendered. As it is the settled rule in
Kentucky that an adjudication in a suit for taxes is not an
estoppel between the parties as to taxes of any other year, even
though such adjudication involves the finding of an exemption by
contract, not only as to taxes involved in the suit, but also as to
all taxes that might be levied under the contract, the
Page 198 U. S. 101
federal courts will not enjoin the collection of taxes for
subsequent years on the ground that their invalidity was
adjudicated by such a judgment.
The statute of Kentucky of March 21, 1900, taxing shares of
national banks, from the years 1893 to 1900 and thereafter,
held void and in conflict with § 5219, Rev.Stat., as
to those portions which are retroactive as imposing a burden on the
bank not borne by other moneyed corporations of the state, and
valid and not in conflict with § 5219 as to taxes imposed
thereafter.
A difference in methods in assessing shares of national banks
from that of taxing state banks does not necessarily amount to a
discrimination, rendering the act invalid under § 5219, and
justify the judicial interference of courts for the protection of
the shareholders, unless it appears that the difference in method
actually results in imposing a greater burden on the national banks
than is imposed on other moneyed capital in the state.
This case was here upon a former appeal, which was dismissed for
want of final decree in the court below.
Covington v. Covington
First National Bank, 185 U. S. 270.
The original action was brought to enjoin the assessment or
collection of taxes on certain shares of capital stock of the First
National Bank of Covington for the years from 1893 to 1900,
inclusive, and to enjoin the arrest of the president and cashier of
the bank for not listing such shares, and for a decree adjudicating
the same not liable to taxation up to the time of the expiration of
the charter of the bank on November 17, 1904.
The principal grounds alleged and relied upon are that, by
reason of the acceptance of the terms of the act of the General
Assembly of Kentucky, passed in 1886, known as the Hewitt Law, an
irrevocable contract had been made between the bank and the state
whereby the former was to pay to the state taxes at a certain rate
on its stock, surplus, and undivided profits, which, when paid,
were to be in full of all other state, county, or municipal taxes,
except those levied on the bank's real estate. It was averred that
complainant had regularly paid such taxes up to and including those
due July 1, 1900. That the fact that the bank had such irrevocable
contract had been adjudicated and finally determined by a decision
in the
Page 198 U. S. 102
Court of Appeals of Kentucky in a litigation wherein the state
and the City of Covington and the bank were parties. The bill
further set up that an attempt was being made to compel the
complainant to list for taxation its shares of stock under an act
of the State of Kentucky, passed March 21, 1900 (Session Acts 1900,
p. 65). The act under which the taxes were assessed is given in the
margin of the opinion in the case of
Covington v. First
National Bank, 185 U. S. 270, and
for convenience of reference is also inserted in the margin here.
* It was also
averred in the bill that the Act of March 21,
Page 198 U. S. 103
1900, which undertakes to impose taxes for the years 1893 and
following, is unconstitutional and void, and operates to
discriminate against the complainant, in violation of § 5219
of the Revised Statutes of the United States. The defendants having
filed a plea to the jurisdiction and a general demurrer to the
bill, upon motion for a temporary injunction, attempt to enforce
taxes levied or assessed upon the shares of capital stock at any
time previous to March 21, 1900, were enjoined. 103 F. 523.
December 17, 1900, a decree was entered, but, not being final,
the writ of error was dismissed.
185 U. S. 270.
After the case was sent back to the circuit court the prior
decision in that court was followed, and it was further held that
the judgment of the state court was not a bar to the right to
collect taxes for other years than the year directly involved in
the judgment set up, and that, as the Hewitt Law and its acceptance
by the bank had been conclusively held not to constitute an
irrevocable contract as to taxes between the state and the
complainant, and as the law was valid as to future taxation, the
injunction could not be granted as to taxes assessed under the law
of March 21, 1900, after its passage. A decree was therefore
entered, dismissing the complainant's bill as to taxes levied after
said date and permitting the former
Page 198 U. S. 104
decree enjoining the assessment and levying of taxes before the
passage of the law to stand. 129 F. 792.
From so much of the decree as enjoined the taxes assessed prior
to March 21, 1900, the city appealed; from so much thereof as
refused the injunction and dismissed the bill as to taxes assessed
after that date, the bank appealed. Both appeals are now before
this Court.
Page 198 U. S. 107
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
That the acceptance of the provisions of the so-called Hewitt
Law did not constitute an irrevocable contract, releasing the bank
from taxes upon compliance with its terms, has been settled.
Bank Tax Cases, 102 Ky. 174;
Citizens' Savings Bank v.
Owensboro, 173 U. S. 636.
Reference is made to the various cases leading up to this result in
Deposit Bank v. Frankfort, 191 U.
S. 499,
191 U. S. 508.
We are therefore left upon this branch of the case to consider the
effect of the judgment of the state court of Kentucky, set up in
the complainant's bill as an adjudication of the rights of the
parties and a final determination that the acceptance of the Hewitt
Law had the effect of a valid contract. When this case was before
the circuit court for the second time, 129 F. 792, Judge Cochran,
after an elaborate review of the Kentucky cases, reached the
conclusion that, as the taxes involved in the case in which the
adjudication was had were for a different year than those involved
in this suit, the former judgment did not have the effect of an
estoppel between the parties, being only conclusive, under the
Kentucky decisions, as to taxes in the years involved in the suit
in which the judgment was rendered. We do not doubt that this is
the settled law of the Supreme Court of Kentucky. Nor does it make
any difference, in the view which that court takes of the matter,
that the adjudication as to the right to collect the taxes involved
the finding of an exemption by contract, which included, not only
the taxes for the years in suit, but all taxes which might be
levied under the authority of the contract. The ground upon which
the court based its decision with reference to the effect of such
adjudication is stated in the case of
Newport v.
Commonwealth, 106 Ky. 444, as follows:
"The only question remaining for decision is upon the plea of
res judicata. The plea in this case avers that the subject
matter of the
Page 198 U. S. 108
former suit was identical with that involved in this action, and
that the facts were the same in both actions, except that the
former action attempted to collect a tax for the year 1893, and the
present action was attempting to collect a tax for the year 1894. .
. ."
"The authorities seem to hold that, when a court of competent
jurisdiction has, upon a proper issue, decided that a contract, out
of which several distinct promises to pay money arose, has been
adjudged invalid in a suit upon one of those promises, the judgment
is an estoppel to a suit upon another promise founded on the same
contract. But taxes do not arise out of contract. They are imposed
in invitum. The taxpayer does not agree to pay, but is
forced to pay, and the right to litigate the legality of a tax upon
all grounds must of necessity exist, regardless of former
adjudications as to the validity of a different tax."
It is unnecessary to cite the cases; they will be found in Judge
Cochran's opinion. It is sufficient to say that, if this case had
been decided in the state court in Kentucky, the adjudication
pleaded herein, not involving taxes for the same years as those now
in controversy, would not avail as an estoppel between the parties.
It is true that a different rule prevails in the courts of the
United States. The reasons therefor were stated in an opinion by
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, speaking for the Court, in the case of
New
Orleans v. Citizens' Bank, 167 U. S. 371, and
in cases arising in a federal jurisdiction the doctrine therein
announced will doubtless be adhered to. The learned counsel for the
plaintiff in error refer to the decision of this Court in
Deposit Bank v. Frankfort, 191 U.
S. 499, as authority for the doctrine that, where a
contract right has been adjudicated which involves an exemption
from all taxation, such adjudication will conclude the parties as
to the right to legally tax for other years, although the
particular year was not directly involved in the suit in which the
adjudication was made. But in that case, the Court was dealing with
the effect to be given to a judgment of a federal court in which
such
Page 198 U. S. 109
contract right had been adjudicated, when the federal judgment
was set up in a state court, and in that case it was recognized, in
the opinion of the court as well as in the dissenting opinion, that
the courts of Kentucky, in giving effect to the judgments of their
own courts, were guided by a different rule, and in that state an
adjudication involving taxes for one year cannot be pleaded as an
estoppel in suits involving taxes for other years.
191 U. S. 191
U.S. 514,
191 U. S.
524.
The case of
Deposit Bank v. Frankfort was only
concerned with the effect to be given to a federal judgment
adjudicating a contract right, when pleaded in a state court. We
are now dealing with the weight to be attached to a state judgment
when pleaded as
res judicata in a federal court. That was
the very question decided by this Court in the case of
Union
& Planters' Bank v. Memphis, 189 U. S.
71, wherein it was held that the federal courts were not
required to give to such judgments any greater force or effect than
was awarded to them by the courts of the state where they were
rendered. Upon this branch of the case, the question then is, what
effect is given in the courts of Kentucky to such pleas of
estoppel? As we have seen, it is there settled that the judgment
would not be effectual to protect the alleged contract rights of
the complainant as to the taxes involved for years other than the
one directly involved in the adjudication set up. We therefore find
no error in the judgment of the circuit court refusing an
injunction upon the ground of an estoppel by judgment.
As to the taxes for the years prior to the passage of the Act of
March 21, 1900, it is argued by the bank that to give this
retroactive effect to the law will be to deprive it and its
stockholders of their property without due process of law, and will
be in violation of § 5219 of the Revised Statutes, prohibiting
discrimination against national banks and their stockholders. The
Act of March 21, 1900, as stated in the preamble, was passed
because of a decision of this Court holding prior legislation of
the state undertaking to tax the property of national banks
unconstitutional.
Owensboro National Bank
v.
Page 198 U. S. 110
Owensboro, 173 U. S. 664. In
the
Owensboro case, it was held that § 5219,
Rev.Stat., was the measure of the power of the state to tax
national banks, their property, or franchises, which power was
confined to the taxing of the stock in the name of the shareholders
and the assessment of the real estate of the banks, and that
taxation under the laws of the State of Kentucky upon the franchise
of the bank was not within the purview of the authority conferred
by the act of Congress, and was therefore illegal. Section 5219 of
the Revised Statutes of the United States is as follows:
"SEC. 5219. Nothing herein shall prevent all the shares in any
association from being included in the valuation of the personal
property of the owner or holder of such shares, in assessing taxes
imposed by authority of the state within which the association is
located; but the legislature of each state may determine and direct
the manner and place of taxing all the shares of national banking
associations located within the state, subject only to the two
restrictions, that the taxation shall not be at a greater rate than
is assessed upon other moneyed capital in the hands of individual
citizens of such state, and that the shares of any national banking
association owned by nonresidents of any state shall be taxed in
the city or town where the bank is located, and not elsewhere.
Nothing herein shall be construed to exempt the real property of
associations from either state, county, or municipal taxes, to the
same extent, according to its value, as other real property is
taxed."
Under the new taxing law, Act of March 21, 1900, it is declared
to be the purpose to require the bank to return the shares of stock
for the years prior to 1900, and since the adoption of the revenue
law of 1892, with the privileges and deductions stated in section 3
of the act. Notwithstanding the prior revenue law had been held
invalid, and there was no statute specifically taxing these shares
of national bank stock on the statute books of Kentucky prior to
the passage of the Act of March 21, 1900, the Supreme Court of
Kentucky, in the case of
Page 198 U. S. 111
Scobee v. Bean, 109 Ky. 526, has held that there was
ample statute law in that state for the taxing of shares in
national banks under the laws of that state providing for the
taxation of real and personal property of every kind, and that the
provision that the individual shareholder in a corporation shall
not be required to list his property therein so long as the
corporation pays the taxes on its property of every kind, impliedly
requires the individual to list his shares and pay the tax in the
absence of the return required by law of the corporation. In that
case, the court held that there was nothing in its decisions
running counter to § 5219. These views were further enforced
in
Commonwealth v. Citizens' National Bank, 25 Ky. 2100;
London v. Hope, 26 Ky. 112;
Citizens' National Bank v.
Commonwealth, 25 Ky. 2254. Following the state court in the
interpretation of its own statutes, it may be said that, as to
shareholders residing in Kentucky and over whom the state has
jurisdiction, the supreme court of that state has construed its
statutes as requiring shareholders in national banks for the years
1893 to 1900, inclusive, to return their shares for taxation, and
if they did not make the return the duty was required of the
corporation. In this view of the law it may be that, as to local
shareholders, the Act of March 21, 1900, as held by the Supreme
Court of Kentucky, created no new right of taxation, but gave
simply a new remedy, which by the law, is operative to enforce
preexisting obligations. It may be admitted that § 5219
permits the state to require the bank to pay the tax for the
shareholders.
First National Bank v.
Kentucky, 9 Wall. 353;
Van Slyke v.
Wisconsin, 154 U. S. 581;
First National Bank v. Chehalis County, 166 U.
S. 440.
But there is nothing in the general statutes of Kentucky before
the Act of March 23, 1900, specifically requiring national banks to
return shares of stock in the corporation when such shares are held
by persons domiciled beyond the state. This situs of shares of
foreign-held stock in an incorporated company, in the absence of
legislation imposing a duty upon the
Page 198 U. S. 112
company to return the stock within the state as the agent of the
owner, is at the domicil of the owner. Cooley on Taxation 16. It is
true that the state may require its own corporations to return the
foreign-held shares for the owner for the purposes of taxation.
Corry v. Baltimore, 196 U. S. 466.
Section 5219, Rev.Stat., authorizes the state to tax all the shares
of a national banking association, including those owned by
nonresidents, as well as those owned in the state, in the city or
town where the bank is located; but this section does not itself
impose the tax; it is authority for state legislation to thus tax
national bank shareholders. And this statute is express authority
to the state by appropriate legislation to make the bank the agent
of the shareholders for the purpose of returning the shares and
paying the taxes thereon.
In
Commonwealth v. Citizens' National Bank, 80 S.W.
158, the Kentucky Court of Appeals seems to have held that a
national bank might be required, under § 4241, Kentucky
Statutes of 1903, to return the shares held in it for the years
1893 to 1900, inclusive, as omitted property. In that case, it is
said:
"It was held under the previous statute that the shares of stock
in national banks might be assessed to the shareholder by the
assessor, and should be given in by the shareholder in the list of
his personal property.
Scobee v. Bean, 109 Ky. 526, 59
S.W. 860. The Act of March 21, 1900, did not [it was held]
therefore make that taxable which was not taxable before, but
simply provided another mode for the assessment of the shares of
stock and the payment of the taxes. It was the duty of the assessor
to make the assessment. It was also the duty of the president and
cashier of the bank to list the shares of stock with the assessor;
but when the assessment was not made the property was simply
omitted from the tax list, and the sheriff is authorized by section
4241, Ky.Stat., 1903, to institute the proceeding to have any
omitted property assessed."
And the court further held the bank liable for the penalty
imposed for not listing taxable property. The ground
Page 198 U. S. 113
upon which this judgment rests is that shareholders were bound
to return the shares in the years from 1893 to 1900 under the then
existing state law, and the act of 1900 made the bank the agent of
the shareholders, and did not require a new duty, but only imposed
the duty upon the agent as a means of making effectual the former
obligation of the shareholders. None of the Kentucky cases deals
with the effect of the requirement under the act of 1900, that the
bank return the shares of stock held by foreign stockholders, who
clearly were not required, under the previous laws of that state,
to return shares of stock when neither the shares nor the owners
were within the state.
Section 5219 requires that a state, in taxing national banks,
shall be subject to the restriction that the taxation shall not be
at a greater rate than is assessed upon other capital in the hands
of the individual citizen. Neither this section nor § 5210 of
the Revised Statutes, requiring a list of the shareholders to be
kept by the bank, has the effect to levy taxes. It is a limitation
upon the right of the state, and the state must not discriminate
against national banks by the use of methods of taxation differing
from those in use in taxing other moneyed capital in the hands of
individual citizens.
It is averred in the amended bill, and, the answer having been
stricken from the files and the case submitted upon the plea to the
jurisdiction and general demurrer, it must be taken as true,
"that, during said years [1893 to 1900], many of its
shareholders were nonresidents of the State of Kentucky, who, in
many instances, have sold and transferred their shares of stock
during said time."
The statutes of the State of Kentucky, which have been construed
by the Supreme Court of that state in the cases cited, to require
the payment of taxes by the shareholders or by the bank for its
shareholders can have reference only to shareholders within the
jurisdiction of the state. Whether the system operates as a
discrimination against national banks within the prohibition of
§ 5219, involving, as it does, a
Page 198 U. S. 114
right of federal creation, must be ultimately determined in this
Court. The Act of March 21, 1900, imposes upon the bank a liability
for taxes assessed upon its shareholders, whether within or without
the state. This liability did not exist before the passage of the
act, and in
Commonwealth v. Citizens' National Bank,
supra, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky held that the statutes
of the state made the bank liable for a penalty of twenty percent
for the years 1893 to 1900, inclusive. It seems to us that to
permit the statute to require the bank to return the shares of such
foreign-held stock, and be subjected to a penalty in addition, is
imposing upon national banks a burden not borne by other moneyed
capital within the state. In support of the equivalency of
taxation, which it is the purpose of § 5219 to require, this
Court said, in
Owensboro National Bank v. Owensboro,
173 U. S. 664,
173 U. S.
676:
"The alleged equivalency, in order to be of any cogency, must of
necessity contain two distinct and essential elements --
equivalency in law and equivalency in fact."
Without considering the question of constitutional power to tax
nonresident shareholders by means of this retroactive law, it seems
to us that, in imposing upon the bank the liability for the past
years, for taxes and penalty, upon stock held without the state,
and which before the taking effect of the act under consideration
it was not required to return, there has been imposed upon national
banks in this retroactive feature of the law a burden not borne by
other moneyed capital in the state. This law makes a bank liable
for taxes upon property beyond the jurisdiction of the state, not
required to be returned by the bank as agent for the shareholders,
by a statute passed in pursuance of the authority delegated in
§ 5219, thus imposing a burden not borne by other moneyed
capital within the state.
We think the circuit court was right in that part of the decree
which enjoined the collection of taxes against the bank for the
years 1893 to 1900, inclusive.
As to the alleged discrimination against shareholders in
Page 198 U. S. 115
national banks because the assessment of the property of state
banks is upon the franchise, and not upon the shares of stock,
there is nothing in the bill to show that this difference in method
operates to discriminate against national bank shareholders by
assessing their property at higher rates than are imposed upon
capital invested in state banks. And, as to the deduction of the
value of real estate and other deductions allowed to state banks,
the Supreme Court of Kentucky has held that all deductions allowed
to state banks must be allowed in like manner in assessing the
property of shareholders in national banks.
Commonwealth v.
Citizens' National Bank, 80 S.W. 158. Nor does the allegation
that in cities of the first, second, and third class state banks
are assessed upon their shares for city taxation, but upon their
franchises and property for state and county taxation, in the
absence of averments of fact showing that thereby a heavier burden
of taxation is imposed upon national than state banks in such
cities, warrant judicial interference for the protection of
shareholders in national banks.
Davenport National Bank v.
Davenport Board of Equalization, 123 U. S.
83.
Judgment affirmed.
*
"An Act Relating to the Taxation of the Shares of Stock of
National Banks."
"Whereas, the Supreme Court of the United States has lately
decided that article three (3), chapter one hundred and three
(103), of the acts of 1891, 1892, and 1893 is void and of no effect
insofar as the same provides for the taxation of the franchise of
national banks. in consequence of which decision there is not now,
and has not been since adoption of said article in 1892, any
adequate mode of taxing national banks, while state banks are now,
and have been ever since 1892, taxable for all purposes, state and
local; therefore:"
"
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the
Kentucky:"
"SECTION 1. That the shares of stock in each national bank of
this state shall be subject to taxation for all state purposes, and
shall be subject to taxation for the purposes of each county, city,
town, and taxing district in which the bank is located."
"SEC. 2. For purposes of the taxation provided for by the next
preceding section, it shall be the duty of the president and the
cashier of the bank to list the said shares of stock with the
assessing officers authorized to assess real estate for taxation,
and the bank shall be and remain liable to the state, county, city,
town, and district for the taxes upon said shares of stock."
"SEC. 3. When any of said shares of stock have not been listed
for taxation for any of said purposes under levy or levies of any
year or years since the adoption of the revenue law of 1892, it
shall be the duty of the president and cashier to list the same for
taxation under said levy or levies:
Provided, That where
any national bank has heretofore, for any year or years paid taxes
upon its franchise as provided in article three (3) of the revenue
law of 1892, said bank shall be excepted from the operation of this
section as to said year or years:
And provided further,
That where any national bank has heretofore, for any year or years,
paid state taxes under the Hewitt bill in excess of the state taxes
required by this act for the same year or years, said bank shall be
entitled to credit by said excess upon its state taxes required by
this act."
"SEC. 4. All assessments of shares of stock contemplated by this
act shall be entered upon the assessor's books, certified, and
reported by the assessing officers as assessments of real estate
are entered, certified, and reported, and the same shall be
certified to the proper collecting officers for collection as
assessments of real estate are certified for collection of taxes
thereon."
"SEC. 5. The assessments of said shares of stock and collection
of taxes thereon, as contemplated by this act, may be enforced as
assessments of real estate, and collection of taxes thereon may be
enforced."
"SEC. 6. The purpose of this act is to place national banks of
this state, with respect to taxation, upon the same footing as
state banks as nearly as may be consistently with said article
three (3) of the revenue law and said decision of the supreme
court."
"SEC. 7. Whereas, it is important that state banks and national
banks should be taxed equally for all purposes, an emergency
exists, and this act shall take effect and be in force from and
after its passage."
Approved March 21, 1900.