A county treasurer accepting that part of the tax which a party
assessed admits to be due is not thereby estopped to demand
more,
Equity will not interfere to stop an assessing officer from
performing his statutory duty for fear he may perform it
wrongfully; the earliest moment is when an assessment has actually
been made, and in this case
held that the court would not,
at the instance of a national bank, enjoin assessors in advance
from making an assessment on a basis alleged to be threatened and
which, if made, would be invalid under § 5219, Rev.Stat.
86 P. 548 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 208 U. S. 551
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a complaint or bill against the Assessor, the Treasurer
and
ex officio Collector, and the District Attorney of the
County of Bernalillo, New Mexico, to enjoin the reassessment of a
tax on stock and real estate for the year 1903 upon the plaintiff
bank, which the plaintiff is informed and believes the defendants
will attempt. The bill alleges that the plaintiff gave the assessor
a list in which capital stock, surplus, and real estate were lumped
in a single item with a single valuation of $90,000. Thereupon the
assessor made a different valuation, lumping the capital stock and
valuing it at sixty percent of its par value, and giving separate
figures for the surplus and the several parcels of real estate, the
total being $150,542. This was affirmed by the territorial board of
equalization on appeal. Afterwards the plaintiff paid the amount
admitted by it to be due, and was sued for the residue, but the
suit was dismissed, the district attorney giving out that a new
assessment would be made. It is alleged that the assessor, in 1903,
announced as his method of valuation that all property except bank
property and bank shares would be assessed at one-third of its real
value, but that he would assess banks at sixty percent of the
capital stock and surplus in addition to their real estate; that he
did as he announced, and also assessed the real estate without
deducting the value "from the valuation of other property assessed
against said banks." Beside the prayer for an injunction.
Page 208 U. S. 552
there is another that the treasurer and
ex officio
collector be ordered to cancel the above-mentioned assessment upon
his books. There was a demurrer, which was overruled below but
sustained by the supreme court of the territory, with directions to
dismiss the complaint.
The complaint admits that the plaintiff's return was not in
accordance with the law, and the supreme court of the territory
says that both that and the assessment were bad, and that a
reassessment is authorized by local law. We see no reason to
reverse its decision upon that point. If a reassessment is made,
that now on the treasurer's books will be disposed of and will be
no cloud upon the plaintiff's title, so that the whole question is
whether a reassessment shall be made. The plaintiff's objection is
not the technical one that no reassessment is authorized by
statute, but the substantial apprehension that the shares will be
taxed "at a greater rate than is assessed upon other moneyed
capital in the hands of individual citizens," contrary to the words
of Rev.Stat. § 5219, and that the value of real estate
separately assessed and taxed will not be deducted from the
valuation of shares, as it is thought to be implied by that section
and required by the territorial laws of 1891, c. 40, Compiled Laws,
1897, § 259, that it should be.
We assume that such an assessment of shares as is apprehended
would be invalid under Rev.Stat. § 5219.
First National
Bank of Wellington v. Chapman, 173 U.
S. 205,
173 U. S.
219-220. We assume that it would be invalid nonetheless
if disguised as a tax on 60 percent of the par value, if other
moneyed capital was uniformly had intentionally assessed at one
third of its actual value and if sixty percent of the par value of
the bank shares was more than one third of their actual value.
Accidental inequality is one thing, intentional and systematic
discrimination another.
See further Raymond v. Chicago Traction
Co., 207 U. S. 20. We
agree with the plaintiff that the only taxes contemplated by §
5219 are taxes on the shares of stock and taxes on the real estate.
Owensboro
Nat.
Page 208 U. S. 553
Bank v. Owensboro, 173 U. S. 664,
173 U. S. 669.
Hence, while the law does not consider the nature of the bank's
investments not taxed in fixing the value of its stock,
Palmer
v. McMahon, 133 U. S. 660, it
may be argued consistently with the decisions that real estate
taxed to the bank, and land out of the territory, which could not
be taxed by it at all,
Union Refrigerator Transit Co. v.
Kentucky, 199 U. S. 194, are
meant to be deducted by Rev.Stat. § 5219, and are required to
be by the territorial law. But we agree with the supreme court of
the territory that the time for deciding these and other questions
has not come.
The acceptance of what was admitted to be due created no
estoppel to demand more. There are no such precise averments in the
complaint as would warrant our assuming that no assessment could be
made for a further amount, still less that none in any form could
be made, when there is no valid one upon the books. We cannot tell,
and much more positive averments of intent than those before us
would not warrant a court in prejudging, what the assessing officer
will do. It is not for a court to stop an officer of this kind from
performing his statutory duty for fear he should perform it
wrongly. The earliest moment for equity to interfere is when an
assessment has been made. Probably it will be made with caution
after this case.
Judgment affirmed.