The Constitution has conferred upon the government power to
borrow money on the credit of the United States and that power
cannot be
Page 205 U. S. 504
burdened, impeded, or in any way affected by the action of any
state.
Weston v.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 449.
The tax upon the property of a bank in which United States
securities are included is beyond the power of the state, and is
also within the prohibition of § 3701, Rev.Stat., and other
acts of Congress.
While the tax on an individual in respect to his shares in a
corporation is not a tax on the corporation, and the value of the
shares may be assessed without regard to the fact that the assets
of the corporation include government securities, if the tax is
actually on the corporation although nominally on the shares such
securities may not be included in assessing the value of the shares
for taxation.
If a state has not the power to levy a tax, it will not be
sustained merely because another tax which it might lawfully impose
would have the same ultimate incidence.
The substantial effect of § 1332 of the Code of Iowa,
providing that shares of stock of state and savings banks and loan
and trust companies shall be assessed to such banks and companies
and not to the individual stockholders, and that, in fixing the
value of the shares, capital, surplus and undivided earnings shall
be taken into account, as the law has been construed by the highest
court of the state, is to tax the property of the bank, and not the
shares of stock, and an assessment which includes government bonds
owned by the bank in fixing the valuation of its shares is illegal,
and beyond the power of the state.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 205 U. S. 508
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases raise the same federal question. The plaintiffs in
error were banking institutions incorporated under the laws of the
State of Iowa. Upon each of them a tax was levied under a law of
that state, which provided that
"shares of stock of state and savings banks and loan and trust
companies shall be assessed to such banks and loan and trust
companies, and not to the individual stockholders."
The material sections of the Code are printed in the
margin.{1}
Page 205 U. S. 509
Each bank owned at the time to which the assessment related
United States bonds, the value of which they insisted should be
deducted from the valuation of the property assessed to them. The
taxing authorities refused to make that deduction, and their action
was sustained by the supreme court of the state, whose judgment has
been brought here by writs of error for review.
These banks were corporations created by the State of Iowa. In
imposing burdens upon them, their property, or their shares, the
state does not, as in the case of national banks, require any
authority from the United States. Its own governmental power is
sufficient for the imposition of such taxes, assessed by such
methods, and under such standards of valuation, as it may choose,
unless something is done which violates some provision of the
federal Constitution, or of a federal law which, by that
Constitution, is made supreme. The only claim of violation of
federal right which need be considered here is that bonds of the
United States have been taxed. It is conceded, and cannot be
disputed, that these securities are beyond the taxing power of the
state, and the only question therefore is whether, in point of
fact, the state
Page 205 U. S. 510
has taxed them. The first step useful in the solution of this
question is to ascertain with precision the nature of the tax in
controversy, and upon what property it was levied, and that step
must be taken by an examination of the taxing law as interpreted by
the supreme court of the state. A superficial reading of the law
would lead to the conclusion that the tax authorized by it is a tax
upon the shares of stock. The assessment is expressed to be upon
"shares of stock of state and savings banks and loan and trust
companies." But the true interpretation of the law cannot rest upon
a single phrase in it. All its parts must be considered in the
manner pursued by this Court in
New Orleans v. Houston,
119 U. S. 265,
119 U. S. 278,
and
Home Insurance Co. v. New York, 134 U.
S. 594, with the view of determining the end
accomplished by the taxation, and its actual and substantial
purpose and effect. We must inquire whether the law really imposes
a tax upon the shares of stock as the property of their owners, or
merely adopts the value of those shares as the measure of valuation
of the property of the corporation, and by that standard taxes that
property itself. The result of this inquiry is of vital importance,
because there may be a tax upon the shares of a corporation, which
are property distinct from that owned by the corporation, and with
a different owner, without an allowance of the exemption due to the
property of the corporation itself, while, if the tax is upon the
corporation's property, all exemptions due it must be allowed.
Looking, then, further into the law, it appears that the shares are
to be "assessed to such banks . . . and not to the individual
stockholders." When this is read, the doubt instantly arises
whether the law intended to tax the corporation for property which
it does not own, but which, on the contrary, is owned by the
stockholders. Certainly such a purpose, against common justice and
of doubtful constitutionality, ought not to be attributed to the
law if any other fair construction is possible. With respect to
taxation, usually, if not necessarily, property and its owners are
inseparable. Taxes are assessed against persons upon
Page 205 U. S. 511
the property which they own, not upon property which others own.
We should be reluctant to suppose that there has been any departure
from this principle in this law. It, however, is not an uncommon,
and is an entirely legitimate, method of collecting taxes, to
require a corporation, as the agent of its shareholders, to pay in
the first instance the taxes upon shares, as the property of their
owners, and look to the shareholders for reimbursement. In this
very law we have an example of this method. By § 1322,
national bank shares are assessed to the stockholders, and by
§ 1325 the corporations are made liable to pay the tax and are
secured by a lien on the stock and dividends, which may be enforced
by sale. The state banking corporations are excluded
ex
industria from this statutory right of reimbursement by
confining it to the cases of "taxes assessed to the stockholders of
such corporation." This cannot include the case of state bank
shares, which are not so assessed. Nor can the corporations in the
case at bar have, by any possibility, a common law right to recover
the tax paid from the shareholders. The law imposes no obligation
on the shareholder. In paying the tax, the corporation has paid its
own debt, and not that of others, and there is nothing in such a
payment from which the law can imply a promise of reimbursement.
These taxes therefore are not to be paid by the banks as agents of
their stockholders, but as their own debt, and, unless it is
supposed that the law requires them to pay taxes upon property
which they do not own, the taxes must be regarded as taxes upon the
property of the banks. The fair interpretation of the law is that
the taxes are upon the property of the banks. In the valuation for
taxation, the assessor is required to "take into account the
capital, surplus, and undivided earnings," must be furnished with
"a verified statement of all matters provided by the preceding
section," which, by reference, is seen to be a detailed statement
showing the assets of the bank (§ 1321).{2} It is true that
the assessor
Page 205 U. S. 512
may resort to "other information he can obtain," but, although
capital, surplus, and undivided earnings are expressly named,
nothing is said of the franchise and goodwill, essential factors of
the value of the shares, though not of the value of the assets of
the bank.
See People v. Coleman, 126 N.Y. 433. Moreover,
the section closes with the words, "and the property of such
corporation shall not be otherwise assessed," which plainly implies
that the assessment already provided for is, in substance, an
assessment upon the property of the corporation. That the law was
administered upon the theory that the tax was upon the property of
the corporation is signally illustrated by the proceedings in these
cases. The valuation was first made on the exact figures of the
capital, surplus, and undivided earnings, deducting the holdings of
United States securities. Then, upon being advised that the
deductions was erroneous, the assessor corrected the valuation
Page 205 U. S. 513
by adding the value of the securities deducted. We therefore
conclude that the substantial effect of the law is to require
taxation upon the property, not including the franchise, of the
banks, and that the value of the shares, ascertained in a manner
appropriate to determine the value of the assets, is only the
standard or measure by which the taxable valuation of that property
is determined. This we think is consistent with the interpretation
of the law by the Supreme Court of Iowa, which sustained the
taxation upon grounds which will be presently considered.
The next question is whether such taxation violates any
provision of the federal Constitution or of any paramount federal
law. The state cannot, by any form of taxation, impose any burden
upon any part of the national public debt. The Constitution has
conferred upon the government power to borrow money on the credit
of the United States, and that power cannot be burdened or impeded
or in any way affected by the action of any state. This principle
was announced in
Weston v.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 449, where it was held that
taxes upon the stock of the United States, levied by one of the
municipal corporations of South Carolina, were invalid. From that
time, no one has questioned the immunity of national securities
from state taxation. It may well be doubted whether Congress has
the power to confer upon the state the right to tax obligations of
the United States. However this may be, Congress has never yet
attempted to confer such a right. Until the time of the Civil War,
it was not thought to be necessary to express the constitutional
prohibition in an act of Congress. But, on the occasion of
authorizing the issue of Treasury notes, it was enacted that
"all stocks, bonds, and other securities of the United States
held by individuals, corporations, or associations within the
United States shall be exempt from taxation by or under state
authority."
Act of February 25, 1862, 12 Stat. 346, c. 33. The substance of
this enactment is embodied in § 3701 of the Revised Statutes,
and has usually, if not
Page 205 U. S. 514
invariably, since 1862, been inserted in acts authorizing the
issue of bonds. That the tax upon the property of a bank in which
United States securities are included is beyond the power of the
state, and, what perhaps is of lesser moment, within the
prohibition of the statutory law, hardly needs to be proved by
authority. But the authority is clear and conclusive. With the
beginning of the Civil War, large amounts of the national
securities began to be issued. So important it was to sustain the
national credit that, as we have seen, Congress for the first time
began the practice of accompanying the authority for their sale
with an express prohibition of their taxation by the states. The
state banks often invested a large part or the whole of their
resources in these securities, and the question of their liability
to state taxation on their capital and surplus thus invested at
once arose. The Bank of Commerce, incorporated under the laws of
New York, invested all its capital, except its investment in real
estate, in United States bonds. Under the authority of a law
requiring that the capital stock should be assessed at its actual
value a tax was levied. The Court of Appeals of New York sustained
the tax so far as it applied to securities issued before the act of
1862, expressly declaring their exemption, and annulled it so far
as it applied to securities thereafter issued. The case came here
on a writ of error.
Bank of Commerce v. New York
City, 2 Black 620. This Court held the tax invalid
on all securities, without even alluding to the act of 1862, but
basing the decision entirely upon the constitutional inability of a
state to affect, by taxation, the exercise of the sovereign power
of the nation in borrowing money on its credit. This was the rule
specifically declared in
Weston v. Charleston as an
application of the general rule of the immunity from state control
of the operations of the federal government in the region of its
supremacy. To the argument, which was strenuously urged, that the
tax was not upon the securities, but upon the capital of the bank,
and that thereby the case was
Page 205 U. S. 515
distinguished from
Weston v. Charleston, the Court, by
Mr. Justice Nelson, replied: "We cannot yield our assent to the
soundness of the distinction."
The State of New York then amended its law, and enacted that
banks should be "liable to taxation on a valuation equal to the
amount of capital stock paid in, or secured to be paid in, and
their surplus earnings." The validity of taxation under the amended
law was considered in the
Bank Tax Case,
2 Wall. 200. There, it was insisted that the tax was imposed upon
the corporation, and not its property, and that the statute only
prescribed a measure of the amount annually to be paid for the
franchises. But the Court held that the amendment simply changed
the method of fixing the amount of capital, and that the tax was
upon the capital, which, so far as invested in national securities,
was beyond the power of the state.
The case at bar cannot be distinguished in principle from these
cases. In the first case, the tax was on the capital stock at its
actual value; in the second case, on the amount of the capital
stock and the surplus earnings; and, in the case at bar, on the
shares of the stock, taking into account the capital, surplus, and
undivided earnings. It would be difficult for the most ingenious
mind and the most accomplished pen to state any distinction between
these three laws, except in the manner by which they all sought the
same end -- the taxation of the property of the bank. The slight
concealment afforded by the omission of the property
eo
nomine is not sufficient to disguise the fact that, in effect,
it is the property which is taxed. If, included in that property,
it is discovered that there is some which is entitled by federal
right to an immunity, it is the duty of this Court to see that the
immunity is respected.
It is, however, contended that, although these cases have not
been overruled, distinctions have been drawn in later cases which
are applicable here, and withdraw the cases before the court from
their authority. These later cases must therefore be considered and
their exact affect determined. We
Page 205 U. S. 516
may quickly put out of view those not relied upon here, in which
it has been held that the state may levy a tax upon the value of
the franchise of corporations created by it, or upon the right of
succession to property on the death of its owner, without first
deducting the amount of United States securities owned by the
corporation whose franchise is taxed, or by the estate transmitted
under the inheritance laws of the state.
Society
for Savings v. Coite, 6 Wall. 594;
Provident
Institution v. Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 611;
Hamilton Company v.
Massachusetts, 6 Wall. 632;
Home Insurance
Company v. New York, 134 U. S. 594;
Plummer v. Coler, 178 U. S. 115. The
theory of all these cases is that the taxes are not imposed upon
the assets of the corporation or the property of the decedent, but,
in the one case, upon the franchise granted by the state, and, in
the other case, upon the right of succession to property on the
death of the owner which is conferred by the state.
But another line of cases cannot so easily be dismissed. They
were relied upon by the Supreme Court of Iowa, and the respect due
to the opinion of that court demands that the reasons why we think
those cases do not apply to the case at bar should be fully stated.
These cases relate to the right of the state to tax at their full
value shares of stock as the property of the shareholders. Although
the states may not, in any form, levy a tax upon United States
securities, they may tax, as the property of their owners, the
shares of banks and other corporations whose assets consist in
whole or in part of such securities, and, in valuing the shares for
the purposes of taxation, is not necessary to deduct the value of
the national securities held by the corporation whose shares are
taxed. The right to tax the shares of national banks arises by
congressional authority, but the right to tax shares of state banks
exists independently of any such authority, for the state requires
no leave to tax the holdings in its own corporations. The right of
such taxation rests upon the theory that shares in corporations are
property entirely distinct and independent from the property of the
corporation.
Page 205 U. S. 517
The tax on an individual in respect to his shares in a
corporation is not regarded as a tax upon the corporation itself.
This distinction, now settled beyond dispute, was mentioned in
M'Culloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, where, in the opinion of
Chief Justice Marshall declaring a tax upon the circulation of a
branch bank of the United States beyond the power of the State of
Maryland, it was said that the opinion did not extend
"to a tax imposed on the interest which the citizens of Maryland
may hold in this institution, in common with other property of the
same description throughout the state."
The distinction appears, however, to have been first made the
basis of a decision in
Van Allen v.
Assessors, 3 Wall. 573. The National Bank Act, as
amended in 1864, Rev.Stat. § 5219, permitted the states to
include in the valuation of personal property for taxation the
shares of national banks "held by any person or body corporate"
under certain conditions not necessary here to be stated. Acting
under the authority of this law, the State of New York assessed the
shares of Van Allen in the First National Bank of Albany. At that
time, all the capital of the bank was invested in United States
securities, and it was asserted that a tax upon the individual in
respect of the shares he held in the bank was, unless the holdings
in United States securities were deducted, a tax upon the
securities themselves. But a majority of the Court held otherwise,
saying by Mr. Justice Nelson:
"The tax on the shares is not a tax on the capital of the bank.
The corporation is the legal owner of all the property of the bank,
real and personal; and, within the powers conferred upon it by the
charter, and for the purposes for which it was created, can deal
with the corporate property as absolutely as a private individual
can deal with his own . . . The interest of the shareholder
entitles him to participate in the net profits earned by the bank
in the employment of its capital, during the existence of its
charter, in proportion to the number of his shares, and, upon its
dissolution or termination, to his proportion of the property that
may remain of the corporation
Page 205 U. S. 518
after the payment of its debts. This is a distinct, independent
interest or property, held by the shareholder like any other
property that may belong to him. Now it is this interest which the
act of Congress has left subject to taxation by the states, under
the limitations prescribed."
In an opinion in which Justices Wayne and Swayne joined, Chief
Justice Chase dissented from the judgment upon the ground that
taxation of the shareholders of a corporation in respect of their
shares was an actual though an indirect tax on the property of the
corporation itself. But the distinction between a tax upon
shareholders and one on the corporate property, although
established over dissent, has come to be inextricably mingled with
all taxing systems, and cannot be disregarded without bringing them
into confusion which would be little short of chaos.
The
Van Allen case has settled the law that a tax upon
the owners of shares of stock in corporations, in respect of that
stock, is not a tax upon United States securities which the
corporations own. Accordingly, such taxes have been sustained by
this Court, whether levied upon the shares of national banks by
virtue of the congressional permission, or upon shares of state
corporations by virtue of the power inherent in the state to tax
the shares of such corporation. The tax assessed to shareholders
may be required by law to be paid in the first instance by the
corporations themselves, as the debt and in behalf of the
shareholder, leaving to the corporation the right to reimbursement
for the tax paid from their shareholders, either under some express
statutory authority for their recovery or under the general
principle of law that one who pays the debt of another at his
request, can recover the amount from him.
National
Bank v. Commonwealth, 9 Wall. 353;
Lionberger
v. Rouse, 9 Wall. 468;
Aberdeen Bank v.
Chehalis County, 166 U. S. 440;
Merchants Bank v. Pennsylvania, 167 U.
S. 461;
Cleveland Trust Company v. Lander,
184 U. S. 111. The
theory sustaining these cases is that the tax was not upon the
corporations' holdings of bonds, but on
Page 205 U. S. 519
the shareholders' holdings of stock, and an examination of them
shows that in every case the tax was assessed upon the property of
the shareholders, and not upon the property of the corporation.{3}
There is nothing in them which justifies the tax under
consideration here, levied, as has been shown, on the corporate
property. Without further review of the authorities, it is safe to
say that the distinction established in the
Van Allen case
has always been observed by this Court, and that, although taxes by
states have been permitted which might indirectly affect United
States securities, they have never been permitted in any case
except where the taxation has been levied upon property which is
entirely distinct and independent from these securities. On the
other hand, whenever, as in these cases, the tax has been upon the
property of the corporation, so far as that property has consisted
of such securities, it has been held void.
One other consideration only needs to be noticed. It is said
that, where a tax is levied upon a corporation, measured by the
value of the shares in it, it is equivalent in its effect to a tax
(clearly valid) upon the shareholders in respect of their shares,
because, being paid by the bank, the burden falls eventually upon
the shareholders in proportion to their holdings. It was upon this
view that the lower court rested its opinion. But the two kinds of
taxes are not equivalent in law, because the state has the power to
levy one and has not the power to levy the other. The question here
is one of power, and not of economics. If the state has not the
power to levy this tax, we will not inquire whether another tax,
which it might lawfully impose, would have the same ultimate
incidence. Precisely the same argument was made and rejected in
Owensboro National Bank v. Owensboro, 173 U.
S. 664. There, it appeared that a tax upon the
intangible property of a national bank had been levied under the
name of a franchise tax. Such a tax upon one of the agencies of
the
Page 205 U. S. 520
national government is beyond the power of the state. But it was
contended that, although the tax was not in form upon shares in the
hands of shareholders (a tax lawful by the permission Congress has
given), it was the equivalent of such a tax. To this contention the
court, by Mr. Justice White, replied:
"To be equivalent in law involves the proposition that a tax on
the franchise and property of a bank or corporation is the
equivalent of a tax on the shares of stock in the names of the
shareholders. But this proposition has been frequently denied by
this Court as to national banks, and has been overruled to such an
extent in many other cases relating to exemptions from taxation, or
to the power of the states to tax, that to maintain it now would
have the effect to annihilate the authority to tax in a multitude
of cases, and as to vast sums of property upon which the taxing
power is exerted in virtue of the decisions of this Court holding
that a tax on a corporation or its property is not the legal
equivalent of a tax on the stock, in the names of the stockholders.
. . . If the mere coincidence of the sum of the taxation is to be
allowed to frustrate the provisions of the act of Congress, then
that act becomes meaningless and the power to enforce it in any
given case will not exist. . . . The argument that public policy
exacts that, where there is an equality in amount between an
unlawful tax and a lawful one, the unlawful tax should be held
valid, does not strike us as worthy of serious consideration."
These words apply with equal force to the case at bar. Moreover,
it may be said that, if given the effect claimed, the consideration
that the ultimate burden of the tax is distributed upon the
shareholders in proportion to their holdings would have saved the
taxes condemned in the
Bank of Commerce case and the
Bank Tax case, and, indeed, all taxes assessed upon the
property of corporations, and the immunity from state tax of United
States bonds owned by corporations would indirectly be absolutely
destroyed.
We regret that we are constrained to differ with the supreme
Page 205 U. S. 521
court of the state on a question relating to its law. But,
holding the opinion that the law directly taxes national
securities, our duty is clear. If, by the simple device of adopting
the with this opinion. of the taxation of the property of the
corporation, that property loses the immunities which the supreme
law gives to it, then national securities may easily be taxed
whenever they are owned by a corporation, and the national credit
has no defense against a serious wound.
Judgments reversed, and cases remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM
dissent.
"Sec. 1322. Shares of stock of national banks shall be assessed
to the individual stockholders at the place where the bank is
located. Shares of stock of state and savings banks and loan and
trust companies, shall be assessed to such banks and loan and trust
companies, and not to the individual stockholders. At the time the
assessment is made, the officers of national banks shall furnish
the assessor with a list of all the stockholders and the number of
shares owned by each, and he shall list to each stockholder, under
the head of corporation stock, the total value of such shares. To
aid the assessor in fixing the value of such shares, the
corporations shall furnish him a verified statement of all the
matters provided in the preceding section, which shall also show
separately the amount of capital stock and the surplus and
undivided earnings, and the assessor, from such statement and other
information he can obtain, including any statement furnished to and
information obtained by the auditor of state, which shall be
furnished him on request, shall fix the value of such stock, taking
into account the capital, surplus, and undivided earnings. In
arriving at the total value of the shares of stock of such
corporations, the amount of their capital actually invested in real
estate, owned by them, shall be deducted from the real value of
such shares, and such real estate shall be assessed as other real
estate, and the property of such corporations shall not be
otherwise assessed."
"SEC. 1325. The corporations described in the preceding sections
shall be liable for the payment of
the taxes assessed to the
stockholders of such corporations, and such tax shall be
payable by the corporation in the same manner and under the same
penalties as in case of taxes due from an individual taxpayer, and
may be collected in the same manner as other taxes, or by action in
the name of the county. Such corporations may recover from each
stockholder his proportion of the taxes so paid, and shall have a
lien on his stock and unpaid dividends therefor. If the unpaid
dividends are not sufficient to pay such tax, the corporation may
enforce such lien on the stock by public sale of the same, to be
made by the sheriff at the principal office of such corporation in
this state, after giving the stockholders thirty days' notice of
the amount of such tax and the time and place of sale, such notices
to be by registered letter, addressed to the stockholder at his
post office address, as the same appears upon the books of the
company, or is known by its secretary."
"SEC. 1321. Private bankers. Private banks or bankers, or any
persons other than corporations hereinafter specified, a part of
whose business is the receiving of deposits subject to check, on
certificates, receipts, or otherwise, or the selling of exchange,
shall prepare and furnish to the assessor a sworn statement showing
the assets, aside from real estate, and liabilities of such bank or
banker on January 1st of the current year, as follows:"
"1. The amount of moneys, specifying separately the amount of
moneys on hand or in transit, the funds in the hands of other
banks, bankers, brokers, or other persons or corporations, and the
amount of checks or other cash items not included in either of the
preceding items;"
"2. The actual value of credits, consisting of bills receivable
owned by them and other credits due or to become due;"
"3. The amount of all deposits made with them by others, and
also the amount of bills payable;"
"4. The actual value of bonds and stocks of every kind and
shares of capital stock or joint stock of other corporations or
companies, held as an investment, or in any way representing
assets, and the specific kinds and descriptions thereof exempt from
taxation;"
"5. All other property pertaining to said business, including
real estate, which shall be specially listed and valued by the
usual description thereof;"
"The aggregate actual value of moneys and credits, after
deducting therefrom the amount of deposits and of debts owing by
such bank, as provided in this chapter, and the aggregate actual
value of bonds and stocks after deducting the portion thereof,
exempt or otherwise, taxed in this state, and also the other
property pertaining to the business, shall be assessed at
twenty-five percent of the actual value of the same, not including
real estate, which shall be listed and assessed as other real
estate."
This fact, assumed, but not stated, in
Cleveland Trust Co.
v. Lander, is shown by the record to exist.