A municipal corporation is not necessarily bound by the decree
in a suit against another municipality because officers of the
state were parties thereto.
The relation of the state board of valuation to the counties and
other municipalities is a matter of state regulation.
In Kentucky, neither a sheriff nor assessor nor the board of
valuation has control of the fiscal affairs of the county, and a
judgment against them does not bind the county.
A judgment against a county of Kentucky and the members of the
state board of valuation restraining the collection of taxes of
that county as impairing the obligation of a contract created by a
law of the state and within the protection of the federal
Constitution is not, because such state officers were parties,
res judicata as to the validity of taxes imposed by
another county, nor is such other county privy to the judgment.
It is competent for the legislature of a state to change the day
that a bank shall report its property for assessment and to provide
that the lien of the assessment shall follow the property in the
hands of a vendee.
94 S.W. 620 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the liability of certain banks in
Kentucky to be assessed for back taxes under the revenue law of the
Kentucky, are stated in the opinion.
Page 207 U. S. 261
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the liability of plaintiffs in error, Bank of
Kentucky and National Bank of Kentucky, to be assessed for certain
back taxes under the revenue law of the State of
Page 207 U. S. 262
Kentucky. That law makes it the duty of
"auditor's agent to cause to be listed for taxation all property
omitted or any portion of property omitted by the assessor, board
of supervisors, board of valuation and assessment, or railroad
commission, for any year or years."
§ 4241, Ky.Stats. (Carroll's Compilation, 1903).
In pursuance of other provisions of the section, this suit was
brought. There is no dispute about the facts. The Bank of Kentucky
was chartered by the Legislature of Kentucky in 1834. Its charter
was subsequently twice extended, but was repealed by an act
approved March 22, 1900. On that day, the National Bank of Kentucky
was organized and took over its assets.
The purpose of the suit is to subject these assets to assessment
for taxes for Jefferson County for the years 1898, 1899, and
1899-1900, and for the state for the year 1899-1900. Against the
assessment for county taxes plaintiffs in error pleaded a judgment
of the circuit court of the United States, which, it is contended,
established that it had been adjudged that the Bank of Kentucky was
only taxable under a law of the state, called the Hewitt Law, and
that such law constituted an inviolable contract between the bank
and the state. And, against the state taxes, it was urged that the
bank had ceased to exist by the repeal of its charter before
liability under the Hewitt Law attached.
1. By its original charter, the Bank of Kentucky was required to
pay twenty-five cents on each share of its stock in lieu of all
other taxation. By an exercise of a power reserved the legislature
increased this to fifty cents. By the Hewitt Law, it was provided
that the banks in the commonwealth should pay to the state
seventy-five cents on each share of their capital stock
outstanding, and the ordinary rate of state taxation on the amount
of its profits, less ten percent thereof. The tax was to be in lieu
of all local taxation except upon the real estate occupied by the
bank for the purpose of its business. It was provided that banks
organized prior to its passage might accept
Page 207 U. S. 263
the terms of the law. If they failed to do so, they were to be
taxed as other corporations were taxed, and also should be subject
to local taxation. The Bank of Kentucky accepted the terms and paid
the taxes required. In 1891, Kentucky adopted a new Constitution,
which provided that all property of individuals and corporations
should be taxed according to its value. In 1892, to enforce the
provision of the Constitution, the legislature passed a general
revenue bill. Under the terms of the bill, banks, as well as other
corporations, are subject to taxation, and it is provided that
their property at its fair cash value
"shall be assessed and valued as of the 15th of September in the
year listed, and the person owning or possessing the same on that
day shall list it with the assessor, and remain bound for the tax,
notwithstanding he may have sold or parted with the same."
Corporations are also required to pay a tax on their franchise
to the state and to the locality where the franchise is exercised,
to be levied by a board denominated the "board of valuation and
assessment," constituted of the auditor, treasurer, and secretary.
It is the duty of the board to determine the apportionment of the
tax where more than one jurisdiction is entitled to a share of the
tax, and fix the place of its payment. The auditor is chairman of
the board, and it is made his duty at the expiration of thirty days
after the final determination of such values, to certify to the
county clerks the amount liable for local tax, who in turn
certifies it to the local tax officer.
The judgment relied on as
res judicata was entered in a
suit brought by the Bank of Kentucky in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Kentucky, wherein it impleaded
Samuel H. Stone as the auditor of public accounts of the State of
Kentucky, Charles Fenley as the secretary of state, and George W.
Long as the treasurer of state, the City of Louisville as a
municipal corporation, the County of Franklin as a municipal
corporation, and the board of councilmen of the City of Frankfort
as a municipal corporation.
The bill alleged the rights of the bank under the Hewitt Law as
a contract between it and the state, its exemption from
taxation
Page 207 U. S. 264
except under that law, the invalidity as to it of the Act of
November 11, 1892. The bill also set forth various litigations
which the bank had theretofore conducted, and in which, it
insisted, it had been adjudged that it could not be taxed otherwise
than under the Hewitt Law. And it was alleged that the defendants
would proceed to value the franchise of the bank in the manner set
forth in the Act of November 11 for the years 1895, 1896, and 1897,
and certify such value to the clerk of Jefferson County, and that
those assessments would be illegal.
The bill prayed that Stone, Fenley, and Long be perpetually
enjoined from assessing the value of the bank's capital stock under
the Act of November 11 for the years mentioned; that Stone be
enjoined from certifying such valuation to the said several
municipalities, and that such municipalities be enjoined and
restrained from collecting any tax upon such valuation; that the
bank's contract be fully established; that it be declared that,
upon conforming to the same by making the payments under the Hewitt
Law or under its charter, no other or further taxes should be
exacted from it under any form or by any authority. Issue was
joined and the court decreed, among other things, as follows:
"It is further adjudged, ordered, and decreed, by reason of the
several pleas of
res judicata, relied on by complainant in
this bill and as shown by the exhibits therewith, complainant has
an established contract with the Commonwealth of Kentucky, under
the provisions of Article 2 of the act of the General Assembly of
the State of Kentucky, entitled 'An Act to Amend the Revenue Laws
of the Kentucky,' approved May 17, 1886, and the acceptance of the
same by the complainant, the terms of which contract the
Commonwealth of Kentucky cannot alter or change without the consent
of the complainant; that, by the terms of this contract, the
complainant and its shares of stock cannot, during its corporate
existence, be assessed for taxation for state purposes in a
different mode or at a greater rate of taxation than as prescribed
in said act, and can be assessed for taxation and taxed for
Page 207 U. S. 265
county and municipal purposes only upon its real estate used by
it in conducting its business; that the provisions of the present
Constitution of the Commonwealth of Kentucky and the Act of
November 11, 1892, insofar as they are intended to provide or do
provide for any assessment or taxation of the complainant's
property, rights of property, or franchise or shares of stock,
except to the extent and in the manner provided by §§ 1,
2, and 3 of Article 2 of the said act, approved May 17, 1886, and
except to assess a tax for county and municipal purposes upon its
real estate used in conducting its business, are in violation of
and repugnant to the federal Constitution and void."
It is insisted that this decree
"decided that the Bank of Kentucky had a full and binding
contract under the Hewitt Law -- a contract which the Commonwealth
of Kentucky could not alter or change --"
and that, by the terms of that contract, its property was only
subject to taxation under that law. It is further insisted that the
extent of the decree is not limited by the reasons given for it,
and
Deposit Bank v. Frankfort, 191 U.
S. 499, is cited.
The important consideration is, upon whom is the decree binding?
Meeting the inquiry, the bank contends "that the County of
Jefferson is clearly bound by this decree as privy thereto,"
notwithstanding it was not a party to the suit in which the decree
was rendered, and deduces this from the dependence of the power of
the county to collect taxes upon the assessment by the board of
valuation of the value of the franchise of the bank and the
certification of the proportion thereof that was subject to county
taxation. It is hence further deduced that a judgment against the
state board of valuation determines the rights of all the local
communities claiming under a valuation and apportionment made by
the board and the auditor.
The action of the Bank of Kentucky is inconsistent with this
contention. In its litigation it made the local communities
parties, and in the suit the decree in which is pleaded in
Page 207 U. S. 266
the case at bar as establishing its exemption from taxation,
except under the Hewitt Law, it secured an injunction against the
board of valuation and assessment by reason of a decree obtained
against Franklin County in a suit to which the board was not a
party. The court decided, and it was required to decide in order to
give the bank the benefit of the decree, that the state board of
valuation was the agent of the municipalities, county and city,
and, as a consequence, that judgment rendered against the County of
Franklin in the courts of the state, adjudging the Hewitt Law a
contract between the bank and the state, was binding upon the board
of valuation. "Nor can there be any doubt," the court said,
"that the parties to the former litigation and this litigation
are the same. The real parties in interest in this cause among the
defendants are Franklin County, the City of Frankfort, and the City
of Louisville. It is for them that the board of valuation and
assessment are about to apportion the estimated value of the
franchise, and to certify it to them for the collection of taxes.
The members of the board of valuation are nothing but their agents,
created under the law for the purpose of assessing this tax. If the
parties in interest in whose favor the tax is to be assessed are
bound by the prior litigation, certainly the agencies acting for
them under the law are equally bound. In this light, the board of
valuation and assessment is, in respect to the former judgments,
privy to the City of Louisville and County of Franklin, and the
City of Frankfort."
Bank of Kentucky v. Stone, 88 F. 383. And, on account
of this agency and consequent privity with those municipalities,
the board of valuation was enjoined from action against the
contract, determined to exist by the judgment set up and to which
the board was not a party by name. The reason given for the
decision is now opposed by plaintiffs in error and a decree
obtained on account of it is asserted to be independent of it. The
vicarious character of the board, as declared by the court, is
attempted to be put out of view, and a decree made against it
because, and only because, it was the agent of certain
municipalities, is
Page 207 U. S. 267
sought to be made an instrument to bind all others without power
of question or resistance on their part. This attempt is not
justified by
Deposit Bank v. Frankfort, and, as was said
by the circuit court in another case, "would be extending the
doctrine of
res judicata further than any authority will
justify."
Northern Bank v. Stone, 88 F. 415.
The Northern Bank of Kentucky had obtained a judgment against
Bourbon County and its sheriff, adjudging that, under the Hewitt
Law, it had an irrevocable contract, and the bank sought to use the
judgment as an estoppel against other counties and municipalities
as well as against Bourbon County. It was sustained as to the
latter, but rejected as to the other, municipalities. The argument
was that Bourbon County was a municipal corporation under the state
government, and that the state was bound by the litigation against
it, and therefore every other municipality was bound. The court
rejected the contention, making the remarks we have quoted. The
relation of the board of valuation to the counties of the state was
again decided to be that expressed in
Bank of Kentucky v.
Stone. The latter case was affirmed by this Court by a
division of its members. 174 U.S. 799.
There is another answer to the contention of plaintiffs in
error. The relation of the board of valuation to the counties and
other municipalities of the state is necessarily a matter of state
regulation.
The Court of Appeals of Kentucky, in the case at bar, answering
the contention based on the effect of the judgment pleaded as
res judicata, quoted with approval the views expressed by
the Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky in the
Northern
Bank case, of the relation of the state to its counties and
cities, and pronounced those views conclusive of "the duty of the
Bank of Kentucky to pay its taxes for the years in question." And
the court applied the doctrine of the case of
Henderson County
v. Henderson Bridge Co., 116 Ky. 164, and declared that the
question there considered was substantially the
Page 207 U. S. 268
same as involved in the case at bar. Quoting that doctrine, the
court said:
"A person or municipality is not bound by former litigation,
unless it was a party, either actually or by its representative.
Under our statute, the fiscal court has control of the affairs of
the county, and the sheriff is only a tax collector, in no wise a
representative of the county in the management of its affairs, and
the county is not therefore bound by any adjudication to which it
was not a party."
In other words, the court held that neither a sheriff nor an
assessor had control of the affairs of the county, and a judgment
against either did not bind the county. Applying this, the court
further said:
"The board of assessment and valuation did not have control of
the fiscal affairs of Jefferson County, and, in our opinion, the
judgment did not bind Jefferson County."
2. To support the contention that there is no liability to the
state for the tax of 1900, it is contended that the property of the
Bank of Kentucky was only assessable under the Hewitt Law, and
before the property was required to be returned for assessment
under that law, the Bank of Kentucky had ceased to exist, and its
property passed to the National Bank of Kentucky, free from any
lien.
A brief recapitulation of the facts will make the contention
clear. Under the Hewitt Law, the stock and assets of banks were
ascertained as of July 1, and the tax paid thereon. On May 1, 1900,
as we have seen, by not accepting the conditions imposed upon it by
the legislature, the charter of the Bank of Kentucky was repealed.
On that day, the National Bank of Kentucky was organized and the
property of the Bank of Kentucky transferred to it. Under the
general laws of the state, all taxable property was required to be
assessed and valued as of the fifteenth of September in the year
listed, and the owner or possessor is required to list it with the
assessor on that day, and remains bound for the taxes,
notwithstanding he may have sold or parted with it. Section 4052.
Under the act of 1892, which repealed the Hewitt Law, banks were
required to make reports on or before the first of March of each
year as
Page 207 U. S. 269
of the preceding thirty-first of December. This provision fixed
the time the property of banks should be assessed. The Court of
Appeals held that this law was applicable to the Bank of Kentucky
and fixed a lien on its property, which continued, notwithstanding
the repeal of the charter of the bank and the transfer of the
property to the National Bank of Kentucky. This result followed,
the Court of Appeals further said, even viewing the Hewitt Law as
an irrevocable contract. In other words, it was decided that either
one or the other of the two dates was the day of assessment and the
commencement of the lien. That of December 31, if the Hewitt Law
should be regarded as repealed by the act of 1892, and the court
decided that it was repealed. That of September 15, if the Hewitt
Law was not repealed, because the provision for the assessment of
property as of the fifteenth of September was a part of the law.
The court said:
"If, under the Hewitt Law, banks were assessed at the same time
the taxes were due and payable, then the assessment did not take
place until the day after the close of the fiscal year for which
the assessment was made and the taxes were paid. The act does not
say that the assessment shall take place on July 1, nor does it say
that it is assessed as of that date. The bank is required to make a
report and pay on that day. The Hewitt Law provides that the holder
of the legal title, and the holder of the equitable title, and the
claimant or bailee in possession of the property on the fifteenth
of September of the year the assessment is made, shall be liable
for the taxes thereon. Hewitt Law, § 6, Art. 1, Gen.Stats.
1888, ed. p. 1035."
It was further decided that the only right which the bank
secured was to pay taxes upon the property as designated by the
Hewitt Law. "When the right to do this is maintained," the court
observed, "every right it [the Bank of Kentucky] had under its
irrevocable charter has been respected."
The conclusions of the court are contested by plaintiffs in
error, and it is insisted that the day of assessment was not
Page 207 U. S. 270
September 15 or December 31, but July 1, the day the bank was
required to make its report, and that a lien for taxes could not
attach until that day, and before that day the Bank of Kentucky had
ceased to exist. But we have seen that the Court of Appeals of
Kentucky, construing the laws of the state, made the fifteenth of
September the day of assessment under the Hewitt Law; in other
words, distinguished between the day of assessment and the day that
bank was required to make its report. We are not prepared to say
that the conclusion is not justified. But passing that, we concur
with the Court of Appeals of Kentucky that it was competent for the
legislature to change the day the bank should report its property
for assessment, and that the lien of assessment would follow the
property in the possession of its vendee, the National Bank of
Kentucky.
Judgment affirmed.