The provisions in the tax law of New York, c. 62, Laws of 1909,
imposing a flat rate on shares of all banks, both state and
national, without the right of exemption in case of indebtedness of
the owners, does not discriminate against national banks, and is
not invalid under § 5219, Rev.Stat.
People v. Weaver,
100 U. S. 539,
distinguished.
Page 231 U. S. 374
Mercantile Bank v. New York, 121 U.
S. 138, followed as to what constitutes moneyed capital
within the meaning of § 5219, Rev.Stat. The state is not
obliged to apply the same system to the taxation of national banks
that it use in the taxation of other property, provided no
injustice, inequality, or unfriendly discrimination is inflicted
upon them.
Bridgeport Sangs Bank. v. Feitner, 191 N.Y. 88,
approved. The federal courts will not overthrow a system of state
taxation as discriminatory against national banks under §
5219, Rev.Stat., unless such discrimination is affirmatively
shown.
Section 5219, Rev.Stat., deal with shareholders of national
banks as a class, and not as individuals, and a scheme of taxation
that is fair to the class will not be held invalid because of a
particular case arising from circumstances personal to the
individual affected.
18 N.Y. 503 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity of certain taxes imposed
by the taxing officers of New York City upon shares of stock in
national banks located in that city and which shares were owned by
nonresidents of New York, are stated in the opinion.
Page 231 U. S. 376
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented is the validity of certain taxes imposed
in the year 1908 by the taxing officers of New York City upon some
shares of stock in certain national banking associations located in
that city, which shares were owned by the relator, a New Hampshire
corporation doing business in its home state. The taxable value of
the shares was ascertained by the Commissioners of Taxes and
Assessments in accordance with the provisions of the law of the
State of New York by adding together the capital, surplus, and
undivided profits of each bank and dividing the amount by the
number of outstanding shares. It is admitted that, at the time of
the making of this assessment, the relator owed just debts
exceeding the value of its gross personal estate, including its
bank shares, after deducting therefrom the value of its property
taxable elsewhere and the value of its property not taxable
anywhere; that no portion of such debts had been deducted from the
assessment of any of its personal property other than the bank
shares, and that no portion of the indebtedness was contracted in
the purchase of nontaxable property or securities, or for the
purpose of evading taxation. Relator made application to the
Commissioners of Taxes and Assessments for the cancellation of the
assessment upon the ground that it was entitled to have its
indebtedness deducted from the assessed valuation of the bank
shares. This application was denied, a proceeding by certiorari
taken to review the determination of the Commissioners was
dismissed at the Special Term of the Supreme Court of New York; the
appellate division affirmed the dismissal (134 App.Div. 966), upon
the authority of
People ex Rel. Bridgeport Sav. Bank v.
Feitner, 191 N.Y. 88, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the
order of the appellate division upon the same authority, 198 N.Y.
503. The case comes here by writ of error under § 709,
Rev.Stat.
Page 231 U. S. 377
(Judicial Code, § 237), upon the ground that the taxation
imposed is in violation of the rights of the relator under §
5219, Rev.Stat. [
Footnote
1]
The contention of the plaintiff in error, made in the state
tribunals and reiterated here, is that the taxes are invalid
because made without allowing any deduction for relator's debts, as
alleged to be allowed by the laws of New York in the case of other
moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens of that state,
it being insisted that, inasmuch as the debts of relator exceeded
the valuation of the bank shares, the assessment should be wholly
cancelled.
The taxing laws in force at the time the assessment was made
were, in the following year, consolidated and reenacted as the "Tax
Law" (L., 1909, c. 62; in effect February 17, 1909, Cons.Laws, c.
60). Those sections that are deemed in any wise pertinent to the
matter in issue are set forth in full in the margin. [
Footnote 2]
Page 231 U. S. 378
Section 21 provides for the preparation of the assessment roll,
and requires that it shall contain separate columns in which the
assessing officers shall set down the pertinent items, and, among
others,
"4. In the fourth column, the full value of all the taxable
personal property owned by
Page 231 U. S. 379
each person respectively, after deducting the just debts owing
by him."
This provision is held to apply equally to corporations and
individuals (
People ex Rel. Cornell Steamboat Co. v.
Dederick, 161 N.Y.195), and has the effect of allowing a
deduction of the amount of the debts of the
Page 231 U. S. 380
taxpayer from the valuation of his general personal estate, not,
however, including bank shares, which are dealt with in other
sections. Section 23 requires the chief fiscal officer of every
bank or banking association organized under the laws of the state
or of the United States to furnish annually,
Page 231 U. S. 381
on or before July first, to the assessors of the tax district in
which its principal office is located, a sworn statement of the
condition of the bank on the first day of June next preceding,
stating the amount of its capital stock, surplus, and undivided
profits, the number of shares,
Page 231 U. S. 382
and the names and residences of the stockholders, with the
number of shares held by each. Sections 13 and 24 relate to the
taxation of these shares, stockholders in state and in national
banks being treated alike. Section 13 takes the place of § 13
of the tax law of 1896 (L. 1896, c. 908, p. 802). Section 24 of the
latter act was amended by L. 1901, c. 550, L. 1902, c. 126, L.
1903, c. 267, L. 1907,
Page 231 U. S. 383
c. 739, and in its final form became § 24 of the Tax Law of
1909. In this form, § 24 is evidently a more recent enactment
than § 13, and, so far as inconsistent, impliedly repeals it.
The provision of § 13 for taxing bank shares in the district
where the bank is located remains in force. It will be observed
that § 24 declares (in obedience to
Page 231 U. S. 384
§ 5219, Rev.Stat.) that
"the assessment and taxation shall not be at a greater rate than
is made or assessed upon other moneyed capital in the hands of
individual citizens of this state,"
that the valuation of the shares of going concerns is to be
ascertained by dividing the amount of capital stock, surplus, and
undivided profits by the number of shares, the valuation, in the
case of banks in liquidation, to be fixed by dividing the actual
assets by the number of shares; that a fixed rate of tax equal to
one percentum upon the value thus ascertained is imposed without
deduction because of the personal indebtedness of the owners, or
for any other reason; that the tax is in lieu of all other state
taxation upon the choses in action and personal property held by
the bank whose value enters into the valuation of its shares of
stock; that this section is not to be construed as an exemption of
the real estate of the banks from taxation, and that no share of
stock of such banks, by whomsoever ever held, is to be exempt from
the tax imposed. In construing § 24, the Court of Appeals of
New York had held (
People ex Rel. Bridgeport Savings Bank v.
Feitner, 191 N.Y. 88, 96) that the effect of introducing into
the section the limitation prescribed by § 5219, Rev.Stat., is
such that, if any bank is located in a tax district where the rate
is less than one percentum, its stockholders are entitled to a
reduction to conform to the local rate.
Respecting other moneyed capital, trust companies, by §
188, are subjected to an annual franchise tax "equal to one
percentum, on the amount of its capital stock, surplus, and
undivided profits." The practical burden of such a tax (which, of
course, falls eventually upon the stockholder) is presumably not
materially different from the burden of a tax at the same rate,
imposed upon the individual stockholder on a valuation of his
shares, arrived at by taking into consideration the same elements
of capital stock, surplus, and undivided profits. And, of course,
the stockholder
Page 231 U. S. 385
has no relief from such a franchise tax because of his
individual debts. By § 189, savings banks are subjected to a
franchise tax of one percentum on the par value of the surplus and
undivided earnings. These institutions are thus apparently taxed
upon the basis of what they possess over and above what they owe to
their depositors. The individual banker, by §§ 14 and 25,
is taxed at the place where his business is located upon he "amount
of capital invested in his banking business."
It is not insisted that this tax law discriminates against
national banks or the stockholders thereof as compared particularly
with individual bankers, trust companies, or savings banks. The
ground of complaint is that § 24, in providing that owners of
bank stock (state or national) shall not be entitled to deduction
from the taxable value of their shares because of their personal
indebtedness, is contrary to the restriction contained in §
5219, Rev.Stat, that the shares of national banks shall not be
taxed "at a greater rate than is assessed upon other moneyed
capital in the hands of individual citizens of such state,"
because, under § 21 of the tax law, all persons are permitted
to deduct their debts from their other taxable personal property in
general, including, as is claimed, other moneyed capital.
Plaintiff in error relies chiefly upon the decision of this
Court in
People v. Weaver, 100 U.
S. 539. That case was in effect a review of the decision
of the Court of Appeals of New York in
People v. Dolan, 36
N.Y. 59. The question was as to the validity of an assessment and
taxation of national bank shares in the City of Albany under the
state law of April 23, 1866 (N.Y.Laws 1866, p. 1647), without
deduction because of the indebtedness of the taxpayer, in view of
the fact that, under other laws, the owners of other kinds of
personal property were entitled to have the amount of their debts
deducted from the valuation for the purposes of taxation. The state
court in the
Dolan
Page 231 U. S. 386
case had justified the method adopted in taxing the bank shares,
upon reasoning that assumed
"that, while Congress limited the state authorities in reference
to the ratio or percentage levied on the value of these shares,
which could not be greater than on other moneyed capital invested
in the state, it left the matter of the relative valuation of the
shares and of other moneyed capital wholly to the control of state
regulation."
This Court held that the clause in § 5219 -- "that the
taxation shall not be at a greater rate than is assessed upon other
moneyed capital," etc., meant that the taxation upon shares should
not be greater than on other moneyed capital, taking into
consideration both the rate of assessment and the valuation. In
other words, that the restriction contained in the Act of Congress
had to do with the actual incidence and practical burden of the tax
upon the taxpayer.
This decision was followed by several others to the same effect.
In
Albany County v. Stanley, 105 U.
S. 305, it was pointed out that the decision in the
Weaver case had not the effect of declaring the New York
Act of 1866 void, but only of deciding that the tax there in
question was void because the taxpayer had been refused the same
deduction for his debts that was allowed to other taxpayers having
moneyed capital otherwise invested.
Hills v. Exchange
Bank, 105 U. S. 319, and
Evansville Bank v. Britton, 105 U.
S. 322, applied the same principle.
But the pertinent statutes in the
Weaver case differed
from those now before us, and the authority of that decision is not
controlling. The Act of 1866 is quoted in full in the report, 100
U.S. at p.
100 U. S. 540.
And in that case, as the opinion shows (pp.
100 U. S.
542-543), it was not disputed
"that the effect of the state law is to permit a citizen of New
York, who has money capital invested otherwise than in banks, to
deduct from that capital the sum of all his debts, leaving the
remainder alone subject to taxation, while he whose money is
invested in shares of bank stocks can make
Page 231 U. S. 387
no such deduction. Nor, inasmuch as nearly all the banks in that
state and in all others are national banks, can it be denied that
the owner of such shares who owes debts is subjected to a heavier
tax on account of those shares than the owner of moneyed capital
otherwise invested, who also is in debt, because the latter can
diminish the amount of his tax by the amount of his indebtedness,
while the former cannot. That this works a discrimination against
the national bank shares as subjects of taxation, unfavorable to
the owners of such shares, is also free from doubt."
The tax law of New York now in question is materially different.
As already shown, moneyed capital is dealt with for the purposes of
taxation upon lines different from those upon which the taxation of
other personal property proceeds. By §§ 13 and 24, state
bank shares and national bank shares are both dealt with, and they
are treated alike, being assessed not upon the basis of market
values, but upon a valuation determined by a consideration of the
capital stock, surplus, and undivided profits (yielding what is
commonly known as "book value"), and leaving out of consideration
other elements, such as good will and the like, which enter into
the determination of the actual market value of such shares. On the
other hand, personal property in general is by § 21 to be
assessed at its full value, which presumably means market value.
Section 24, instead of subjecting the owners of bank shares to
taxation at the rate locally obtaining for other personal property,
imposes a "flat rate" of one percentum upon the valuation, with the
proviso, as held in the
Feitner case,
supra, that
if the local rate be less than one percentum, the owners of shares
in the bank have the benefit of it.
Enough has been said to show that the decision in the
Weaver case, which had to do with a tax assessed upon bank
stock on the basis of the same method of valuation and the same
rate of assessment as personal property in
Page 231 U. S. 388
general, including other moneyed capital, but without allowance
for the indebtedness of the taxpayer, although such allowance was
made to the owners of personal property in general, including other
moneyed capital, is not to be deemed conclusive upon the present
controversy, in view of the differences in the taxing laws.
The
Weaver case, however, and others that followed it,
did establish that the question whether an owner of national bank
shares has been subjected to a state tax in excess of the
limitation imposed by § 5219, Rev.Stat., is a practical
question, to be determined by considering whether he is actually
discriminated against in favor of other moneyed capital in the
hands of individual citizens of the state. And the meaning of the
term "other moneyed capital" has been elucidated by several
decisions, of which the leading one is
Mercantile Bank v. New
York, 121 U. S. 138.
This was a suit brought by a national bank to restrain the
collection of taxes assessed upon its stockholders under New York
Laws 1882, c. 409, § 312 -- an enactment that followed the
general lines of the Act of 1866, dealt with in the
Weaver
case, and quoted in the opinion of the Court therein, except that,
in obedience to that decision, the Act of 1882 required that,
"in the assessment of said shares, each stockholder shall be
allowed all the deductions and exceptions allowed by law in
assessing the value of other taxable personal property owned by
individual citizens of this state."
The contention was that the state had not complied with the
condition contained in § 5219 of the Revised Statutes, because
it had, by its legislation, expressly exempted from all taxes in
the hands of individual citizens numerous species of moneyed
capital, while subjecting national bank shares and state bank
shares in the hands of individual holders to taxation upon their
full actual value, less only a proportionate amount of the real
estate owned by the bank. The Court (speaking by Mr. Justice
Matthews), in examining and
Page 231 U. S. 389
disposing of this contention, after reviewing the previous
decisions of this Court bearing upon the subject, proceeded to
expound the true intent and meaning of § 5219 of the Revised
Statutes as follows (p.
121 U. S.
153):
"It follows, as a deduction from these decisions, that 'moneyed
capital in the hands of individual citizens' does not necessarily
embrace shares of stock held by them in all corporations whose
capital is employed, according to their respective corporate powers
and privileges, in business carried on for the pecuniary profit of
shareholders, although shares in some corporations, according to
the nature of their business, may be such moneyed capital. . . .
The key to the proper interpretation of the Act of Congress is its
policy and purpose. The object of the law was to establish a system
of national banking institutions in order to provide a uniform and
secure currency for the people and to facilitate the operations of
the Treasury of the United States. The capital of each of the banks
in this system was to be furnished entirely by private individuals,
but, for the protection of the government and the people, it was
required that this capital, so far as it was the security for its
circulating notes, should be invested in the bonds of the United
States. These bonds were not subjects of taxation, and neither the
banks themselves nor their capital, however invested, nor the
shares of stock therein held by individuals, could be taxed by the
states in which they were located without the consent of Congress,
being exempted from the power of the states in this respect,
because these banks were means and agencies established by Congress
in execution of the powers of the government of the United States.
It was deemed consistent, however, with these national uses, and
otherwise expedient, to grant to the states the authority to tax
them within the limits of a rule prescribed by the law. In fixing
those limits, it became necessary to prohibit the states from
imposing such a burden as would prevent
Page 231 U. S. 390
the capital of individuals from freely seeking investment in
institutions which it was the express object of the law to
establish and promote. The business of banking, including all the
operations which distinguish it, might be carried on under state
laws, either by corporations or private persons, and capital in the
form of money might be invested and employed by individual citizens
in many single and separate operations forming substantial parts of
the business of banking. A tax upon the money of individuals,
invested in the form of shares of stock in national banks, would
diminish their value as an investment and drive the capital so
invested from this employment if, at the same time, similar
investments and similar employments under the authority of state
laws were exempt from an equal burden. The main purpose, therefore,
of Congress in fixing limits to state taxation on investments in
the shares of national banks was to render it impossible for the
state, in levying such a tax, to create and foster an unequal and
unfriendly competition by favoring institutions or individuals
carrying on a similar business and operations and investments of a
like character. The language of the Act of Congress is to be read
in the light of this policy."
And again (p.
121 U. S.
157):
"The terms of the Act of Congress therefore include shares of
stock or other interests owned by individuals in all enterprises in
which the capital employed in carrying on its business is money,
where the object of the business is the making of profit by its use
as money. The moneyed capital thus employed is invested for that
purpose in securities by way of loan, discount, or otherwise, which
are from time to time, according to the rules of the business,
reduced again to money and reinvested. It includes money in the
hands of individuals, employed in a similar way, invested in loans,
or in securities for the payment of money, either as an investment
of a permanent character, or temporarily, with a view to sale
Page 231 U. S. 391
or repayment and reinvestment. In this way, the moneyed capital
in the hands of individuals is distinguished from what is known
generally as personal property. Accordingly, it was said in
Evansville Nat. Bank v. Britton, 105 U. S.
322:"
"The act of Congress does not make the tax on personal property
the measure of the tax on the bank shares in the state, but the tax
on moneyed capital in the hands of the individual citizens.
Credits, money loaned at interest, and demands against persons or
corporations, are more purely representative of moneyed capital
than personal property, so far as they can be said to differ.
Undoubtedly there may be said to be much personal property exempt
from taxation without giving bank shares a right to similar
exemption, because personal property is not necessarily moneyed
capital. But the rights, credits, demands, and money at interest
mentioned in the Indiana statute, from which
bona fide
debts may be deducted, all mean moneyed capital invested in that
way."
"This definition of moneyed capital in the hands of individuals
seems to us to be the idea of the law, and ample enough to embrace
and secure its whole purpose and policy."
The rule of construction thus laid down has been since
consistently adhered to by this Court.
Palmer v. McMahon,
133 U. S. 660,
133 U. S. 667;
Aberdeen Bank v. Chehalis County, 166 U.
S. 440,
166 U. S. 454;
First Nat. Bank v. Chapman 173 U.
S. 205,
173 U. S. 214;
National Bank of Wellington v. Chambers, 182 U.
S. 556,
182 U. S. 560;
Jenkins v. Neff, 186 U. S. 230.
According to this practical test, it seems to us that the scheme
adopted by the State of New York for taxing shares in national
banks cannot upon this record be denounced as violative of the
limitations prescribed by § 5219, Rev.Stat. The holders of
shares in state banks are subjected to precisely the same taxation,
and with respect to other competitive institutions, such as trust
companies, the franchise taxes imposed upon them apparently result
in a substantially similar burden upon the
Page 231 U. S. 392
shareholder. Nor is there any discrimination in favor of savings
banks. With respect to individual bankers, there is a difference,
they being apparently subject to the local rate of taxation, and
entitled to the privilege of deduction for personal debts; but, as
they are taxable upon the amount of the capital invested in the
banking business, which is normally only such as remains after the
deduction of debts, it is not plain that they possess any valuable
privilege of reducing the tax assessment by deducting debts.
Foreign bankers are separately treated, for reasons sufficiently
obvious; but no criticism is made of this. If there be other forms
of "moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens" of the
state employed in a banking or
quasi-banking business in
competition with the national banks, and which are subjected to a
more favorable rule of taxation, our attention is not called to
them. Moreover, we agree with what was said by the Court of Appeals
of New York in the
Feitner case, 191 N.Y. 88, that
"the state is not obliged to apply the same system to the
taxation of national banks that it uses in the taxation of other
property, provided no injustice, inequality, or unfriendly
discrimination is inflicted upon them."
The Court there took note of the fact that the flat rate of one
percentum assessed upon national bank shares was more favorable to
the relator than the general tax rate for the same year in the
Borough of Manhattan, where the banks were located. That local rate
(for the year 1901) was 2.31733 percentum. In the present case, it
is stipulated that the general tax rate locally applicable for the
year 1908 to personal property, not including bank shares, was
1.61407 percentum. There are other considerations to be weighed in
determining the actual burden of the tax, one of which is the mode
of valuing bank shares -- by adopting "book values" -- which may be
more or less favorable than the method adopted in valuing other
kinds of personal property. As against the owner of bank shares
Page 231 U. S. 393
who, by alleging discrimination, assumes the burden of proving
it, and who fails to show that the method of valuation is
unfavorable to him, it may be assumed to be advantageous.
Plaintiff in error contends that the statement of the New York
court that,
"when all things are considered, the rate, even without the
privilege of deducting debts, is not greater than that applied to
other moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens of the
state,"
is based upon no facts of experience or investigation, and
amounts to a pure surmise. We do not think it is to be so lightly
treated; but, if it were, it still remains to be said that it was
incumbent upon plaintiff in error to show affirmatively that the
New York taxation system discriminates in fact against the holders
of shares in the national banks before calling upon the courts to
overthrow it, and no such showing has been made.
Nor can we say that the taxing scheme contravenes the limits
prescribed by § 5219, Rev.Stat., merely because, in individual
cases, it may result that an owner of shares of national bank stock
who is indebted may sustain a heavier tax than another, likewise
indebted, who has invested his money otherwise. Such is, in effect,
the objection urged by plaintiff in error to the position taken by
the Court of Appeals of New York. In other words, it is insisted
that § 5219 deals with the burden of the tax upon the
individual shareholder, rather than upon shareholders as a class.
We think this argument is sufficiently answered by reference to the
language of § 5219. The declaration is 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
this restriction is imposed upon a grant of authority to tax "all
the shares of national banking associations located within the
state." The language clearly prohibits discrimination against
shareholders in national banks, and in favor of the
shareholders
Page 231 U. S. 394
of competing institutions, but it does not require that the
scheme of taxation shall be so arranged that the burden shall fall
upon each and every shareholder alike, without distinction arising
from circumstances personal to the individual.
Judgment affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
"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."
[
Footnote 2]
EXTRACTS FROM NEW YORK TAX LAW.
SECTION 7:
"§ 7.
When Property of Nonresidents is Taxable.
Subdivision 1. Nonresidents of the state, doing business in the
state, either as principals or partners, shall be taxed on the
invested in such business, as personal property at the place where
such business is carried on, to the same extent as if they were
residents of the state."
SECTIONS 14 and 25:
"§ 14.
Place of Taxation of Individual Bank
Capital. -- Every individual banker shall be taxable upon the
amount of capital invested in his banking business in the tax
district where the place of such business is located, and shall,
for that purpose, be deemed a resident of such tax district."
"§ 25.
Individual banker, how assessed. -- Every
individual banker doing business under the laws of this state must
report before the fifteenth day of June under oath to the assessors
of the tax district in which any of the capital invested in such
banking business is taxable the amount of capital invested in such
banking business in such tax district on the first day of June
preceding. Such capital shall be assessed as personal property to
the banker in whose name such business is carried on."
SECTION 21:
"§ 21.
Preparation of assessment roll. -- They
shall prepare an assessment roll containing nine separate columns,
and shall, according to the best information in their power, set
down:"
"1. In the first column, the names of all the taxable persons in
the tax district."
"2. In the second column, the quantity of real property taxable
to each person, with a statement thereof in such form as the
Commissioners of taxes shall prescribe."
"3. In the third column, the full value of such real
property."
"4. In the fourth column, the full value of all the taxable
personal property owned by each person respectively after deducting
the just debts owing by him. . . ."
SECTION 13:
"§ 13.
Stockholders of bank taxable on shares. --
The stockholders of every bank or banking association organized
under the authority of this state, or of the United States, shall
be assessed and taxed on the value of their shares of stock
therein; said shares shall be included in the valuation of the
personal property of such stockholders in the assessment of taxes
in the tax district where such bank or banking association is
located, and not elsewhere, whether the said stockholders reside in
said tax district or not."
SECTION 23:
"§ 23.
Banks to Make Report. -- The chief fiscal
officer of every bank or banking association organized under the
authority of this state, or of the United States, shall, on or
before the first day of July, in each year, furnish the assessors
of the tax district in which its principal office is located a
statement under oath of the condition of such bank or banking
association on the first day of June next preceding, stating the
amount of its authorized capital stock, the number of shares, and
the par value of the shares thereof, the amount of stock paid in,
the amount of its surplus and of its undivided profits, if any, a
complete list of the names and residences of its stockholders, and
the number of shares held by each. . . . The list of stockholders
furnished by such bank or banking association shall be deemed to
contain the names of the owners of such shares as are set opposite
them, respectively, for the purpose of assessment and
taxation."
SECTION 24:
"§ 24.
Bank shares, how assessed. -- In assessing
the shares of stock of banks or banking associations organized
under the authority of this state or the United States, the
assessment and taxation shall not be at a greater rate than is made
or assessed upon other moneyed capital in the hands of individual
citizens of this state. The value of each share of stock of each
bank and banking association, except such as are in liquidation,
shall be ascertained and fixed by adding together the amount of the
capital stock, surplus, and undivided profits of such bank or
banking association, and by dividing the result by the number of
outstanding shares of such bank or banking association. The value
of each share of stock in each bank or banking association in
liquidation shall be ascertained and fixed by dividing the actual
assets of such bank or banking association by the number of
outstanding shares of such bank or banking association. The rate of
tax upon the shares of stock of banks and banking associations
shall be one percentum upon the value thereof, as ascertained and
fixed in the manner hereinbefore provided, and the owners of the
stock of banks and banking associations shall be entitled to no
deduction from the taxable value of their shares because of the
personal indebtedness of such owners, or for any other reason
whatsoever. Complaints in relation to the assessments of the shares
of stock of banks and banking associations, made under the
provisions of this article, shall be heard and determined as
provided in section thirty-seven of this chapter. The said tax
shall be in lieu of all other taxes whatsoever for state, county,
or local purposes upon the said shares of stock, and mortgages,
judgments, and other choses in action, and personal property held
or owned by banks or banking associations, the value of which
enters into the value of said shares of stock, shall also be exempt
from all other state, county, or local taxation. The tax herein
imposed shall be levied in the following manner: the board of
supervisors of the several counties shall, on or before the
fifteenth day of December in each year, ascertain from an
inspection of the assessment rolls in their respective counties,
the number of shares of stock of banks and banking associations in
each town, city, village, school, and other tax district in their
several counties, respectively, in which such shares of stock are
taxable, the names of the banks issuing the same, respectively, and
assessed value of such shares, as ascertained in the manner
provided in this article and entered upon the said assessment
rolls, and shall forthwith mail to the president or cashier of each
of said banks or banking associations a statement setting forth the
amount of its capital stock, surplus, and undivided profits, the
number of outstanding shares thereof, the value of each share of
stock taxable in said county, as ascertained in the manner herein
provided, and the aggregate amount of tax to be collected and paid
by such bank and banking association under the provisions of this
article. A certified copy of each of said statements shall be sent
to the county treasurer. It shall be the duty of every bank or
banking association to collect the tax due upon its shares of stock
from the several owners of such shares, and to pay the same to the
treasurer of the county wherein said bank or banking association is
located, and in the City of New York to the receiver of taxes
thereof on or before the thirty-first day of December in said year,
and any bank or banking association failing to pay the said tax as
herein provided shall be liable by way of penalty for the gross
amount of taxes due from all the owners of the shares of stock, and
for an additional amount of $100 for every day of delay in the
payment of said tax. Every bank or banking association so paying
the taxes due upon the shares of its stock shall have a lien on the
shares of stock, and on all property of the several share owners in
its hands, or which may at any time come into its hands, for
reimbursement of the taxes so paid on account of the several
shareholders, with legal interest, and such lien may be enforced in
any appropriate manner. The tax hereby imposed shall be distributed
in the following manner: the board of supervisors of the several
counties shall ascertain the tax rate of each of the several town,
city, village, school, and other tax districts in their counties,
respectively, in which the shares of stock of banks and banking
associations shall be taxable, which tax rates shall include the
proportion of state and county taxes levied in such districts,
respectively, for the year for which the tax is imposed, and the
proportion of the tax on bank stock to which each of said districts
shall be respectively entitled shall be ascertained by taking such
proportion of the tax upon the shares of stock of banks and banking
associations, taxable in such districts, respectively, under the
provisions of this chapter, as the tax rate of such tax district
shall bear to the aggregate tax rates of all the tax districts in
which said shares of stock shall be taxable. The clerks of the
several cities, villages, and school districts to which any portion
of the tax on shares of stock of banks and banking associations is
to be distributed under this section shall, in writing and under
oath, annually report to the board of supervisors of their
respective counties, during the first week of the annual session of
such board, the tax rate of such city, village, and school district
for the year prior to the meeting of each such board. The said
board of supervisors shall issue their warrant or order to the
county treasurer on or before the fifteenth day of December in each
year, setting forth the number of shares of bank stock taxable in
each town, city, village, school, and other tax district in said
county, in which said shares of stock shall be taxable, the tax
rate of each of said tax districts for said year, the proportion of
the tax imposed by this chapter to which each of said tax districts
is entitled, under the provisions hereof, and commanding him to
collect same, and to pay to the proper officer in each of such
districts the proportion of such tax to which it is entitled under
the provisions of this chapter. The said county treasurer shall
have the same powers to enforce the collection and payment of said
tax as are possessed by the officers now charged by law with the
collection of taxes, and the said county treasurer shall be
entitled to a commission of one percentum for collecting and paying
out said moneys, which commission shall be deducted from the gross
amount of said taxes before the same is distributed. In issuing
their warrants to the collectors of taxes, the board of supervisors
shall omit therefrom assessments of and taxes upon the shares of
stock of banks and banking associations.
Provided, that,
in the City of New York, the statement of the bank assessment and
tax herein provided for shall be made by the Board of Tax
Commissioners of said city on or before the fifteenth day of
December in each year, and by them forthwith mailed to the
respective banks and banking associations located in said city, and
a certified copy thereof sent to the receiver of taxes of said
city. The tax shall be paid by the respective banks in said city to
the said receiver of taxes on or before the thirty-first day of
December in said year, and said tax shall be collected by the said
receiver of taxes, and shall be by him paid into the treasury of
said city to the credit of the general fund thereof. This section
is not to be construed as an exemption of the real estate of banks
or banking associations from taxation. No shares of stock of such
banks and banking associations, by whomsoever held, shall be exempt
from the tax hereby imposed."
SECTION 188:
"§ 188.
Franchise Tax on Trust Companies. -- Every
trust company incorporated, organized, or formed under, by, or
pursuant to a law of this state and any company authorized to do a
trust company's business solely or in connection with any other
business under a general or special law of this state shall pay to
the state annually for the privilege of exercising its corporate
franchise or carrying on its business in such corporate or
organized capacity, an annual tax which shall be equal to one
percentum on the amount of its capital stock, surplus, and
undivided profits."
SECTION 189:
"§ 189.
Franchise Tax on Savings Banks. -- Every
savings bank incorporated, organized, or formed under, by, or
pursuant to a law of this state shall pay to the state annually for
the privilege of exercising its corporate franchise or carrying on
its business in such corporate or organized capacity, an annual tax
which shall be equal to one percentum on the par value of its
surplus and undivided earnings."
SECTION 191:
"§ 191.
Tax upon Foreign Bankers. -- Every foreign
banker doing business in this state shall annually pay to the
treasurer a tax of five percentum on the amount of interest or
compensation of any kind earned and collected by him on money
loaned, used, or employed in this state by such banker. The term,
'doing a banking business,' as used in this section, means doing
such business as a corporation may be created to do under article
three of the banking law, or doing any business which a corporation
is authorized by such article to do. The term 'foreign banker doing
a banking business in this state,' as used in this section,
includes:"
"1. Every foreign corporation doing a banking business in this
state, except a national bank."
"2. Every unincorporated company, partnership, or association of
two or more individuals, organized under or pursuant to the laws of
another state or country, doing a banking business in this
state."
"3. Every other incorporated company, partnership, or
association, of two or more individuals, doing a banking business
in this state, if the members thereof, owning more than a majority
interest therein, or entitled to more than one half of the profits
thereof, or who would, if it were dissolved, be entitled to more
than one half of the net assets thereof, are not residents of this
state."
"4. Every nonresident of this state, doing a banking business in
this state, in his own name and right only."