Ohio assessed a property tax against a mutual savings bank and a
federal savings and loan association in their own names. The tax
was measured by the amount of each bank's capital, surplus or
reserve and undivided profits, without deduction of the value of
obligations of the Federal Government owned by it. Neither bank had
any capital stock or shareholders, each was owned by its
depositors, and there was no provision for reimbursement of the
bank by its depositors for the tax.
Held: the tax is void as a tax upon obligations of the
Federal Government. Pp.
349 U. S.
144-155.
(a) In determining the validity of the tax under federal law,
this Court is not bound by the conclusion of the Supreme Court of
Ohio that the tax is imposed on the depositors, rather than on the
banks. P.
349 U. S.
151.
(b) In the circumstances of this case, the tax must be regarded
for federal purposes as one imposed on the banks, rather than on
the depositors. Pp.
349 U. S.
151-154.
(c) Without provisions protecting the banks against the burdens
of the tax, it cannot be assumed that the operation of the tax
statute will not infringe on the immunity of the federal
obligations held by them. P.
349 U. S.
154.
161 Ohio St. 122, 118 N.E.2d 651, and 161 Ohio St. 149, 118 N.E
2d 667, reversed.
Page 349 U. S. 144
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1829, this Court decided in
Weston v.
City Council of Charleston, 2 Pet. 449, that
obligations of the Federal Government are immune from state
taxation. This rule, aimed at protecting the borrowing power of the
United States from state encroachment, was derived from the
"Borrowing" and "Supremacy" Clauses of the Constitution, [
Footnote 1] and the constitutional
doctrines announced in
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316. It was subsequently
embodied in a succession of federal statutes, the existing statute
being R.S. §3701, 31 U.S.C. § 742. [
Footnote 2] The rule has been carried forward to
embrace indirect taxation of such obligations through their
inclusion in a tax imposed on all the property of a taxpayer. It is
quite immaterial that the state tax does not discriminate against
the federal obligations.
New York ex rel. Bank of
Commerce v. Commissioners of Taxes, 2 Black 620
(1863);
In re Bank Tax
Case, 2 Wall. 200 (1865);
Farmers and Mechanics
Savings Bank v. Minnesota, 232 U. S. 516
(1914);
New Jersey Realty Title Ins. Co. v. Division of Tax
Appeals, 338 U. S. 665
(1950).
The two cases now before us involve the application of that
rule, in a somewhat novel situation. Society for Savings in the
City of Cleveland and First Federal Savings
Page 349 U. S. 145
and Loan Association of Warren, [
Footnote 3] two mutual savings banks having no capital
stock or shareholders, and located in Ohio, attack the validity of
an Ohio property tax, as assessed against them, on the ground that
they were required to include in the property values upon which the
tax was computed United States bonds held in their security
portfolios. Had these bonds been excluded, the entire tax would
have been wiped out in both instances. [
Footnote 4] The Ohio Tax Commissioner thought these
government bonds were not excludable. The Ohio Board of Tax Appeals
reversed. The Supreme Court of Ohio sustained the Commissioner in
each instance. The two banks are here by appeal from the judgment
of the Ohio Supreme Court in each case. [
Footnote 5] The cases were argued together, and are so
treated in this opinion.
The tax in question was assessed in the names of these banks
under §§ 5408, 5412 and 5638-1 of the Ohio General Code,
[
Footnote 6] upon the book
value of their "capital employed,
Page 349 U. S. 146
or the property representing it," § 5408, "at the aggregate
amount of the capital, the surplus or reserve fund and the
undivided profits," § 5412. The tax was at the rate of two
mills on the dollar, § 5638-1. No claim is made that the taxes
constituted a franchise tax or some other kind of privilege tax.
Cf. Educational Films Corp. v. Ward, 282 U.
S. 379 (1931).
The Supreme Court of Ohio recognized that this tax, based as it
was upon the inclusion of federal obligations, would have to fall
if directed against the banks.
New York ex rel. Bank of
Commerce v. Commissioners of
Page 349 U. S. 147
Texas, supra; Bank Tax Case, supra. This tax, though,
was not considered to be against the banks. Holding that the
depositors of a mutual savings bank have an interest similar to
that of shareholders of other banks, the Ohio court found, instead,
that the tax was imposed upon the "intangible property interests"
of the depositors as the owners of each bank. The banks' capital,
surplus fund, and undivided profits, which we will refer to as
their surplus, were regarded as not themselves the subject matter
of the tax, but as simply the measure of the tax against the
depositors, and the banks were treated as tax collecting agents,
rather than as taxpayers.
In so deciding, the Ohio court relied upon a gloss on the rule
of immunity stated above. It has been held that a state may impose
a tax upon the stockholders' interests in a corporation, measured
by corporate asset values, without making any deduction on account
of United States securities held by the corporation. This doctrine
had its origin in cases involving national bank stock. There,
congressional consent to state taxation of the stock of national
banks, upon certain conditions, was held, over strong dissent, to
permit such taxes to be assessed without the exclusion of federal
obligations owned by the banks.
Van Allen
v. Assessors, 3 Wall. 573 (1866);
National
Bank v. Commonwealth, 9 Wall. 353 (1870);
Des
Moines National Bank v. Fairweather, 263 U.
S. 103 (1923). This result was reached in part on the
theory that the stockholders' interests in a corporation represent
a separate property interest from the corporation's ownership of
its assets, so that a tax on the stockholders' interests is not a
tax on the federal obligations which are included in the corporate
property. This rationale has been carried over to cases involving
stock of state-created banks, and thus a tax on their shareholders,
though measured by corporate assets which include federal
obligations, is held
Page 349 U. S. 148
not to offend the rule immunizing such obligations from state
taxation.
Cleveland Trust Co. v. Lander, 184 U.
S. 111 (1902). Further, in levying a tax on
shareholders, a state may require its payment by the corporation,
as a collecting agent.
Corry v. Baltimore, 196 U.
S. 466 (1905). The result is that when, as is usually
the case, the shareholder tax is measured solely by corporate asset
values, such a tax is difficult to distinguish from a tax imposed
upon the corporation itself, so far as the practical impact of the
two types of taxes upon corporate-owned federal obligations is
concerned. Nevertheless, this exception to the general rule of
immunity is firmly embedded in the law.
The focal point of these appeals is thus whether we are to
regard this tax as imposed on the banks or, as the Ohio court held
the legislature intended, on their depositors. Were we free to
construe Ohio's statute
de novo, we might have difficulty
in reaching the conclusion which the Ohio court did. Suffice it to
say at this point: the statute is barren of any language expressly
imposing this tax on the depositors, and contains no provision
giving the bank any right to recover the tax from the depositors,
as might be expected if the bank had been regarded as a mere
tax-collecting agent. By contrast, the taxes laid by the Ohio
General Code on (a) the shares of incorporated financial
institutions whose capital is divided into shares, (b) the shares
of unincorporated institutions whose capital is divided into
shares, and (c) deposits, are imposed on the shares "of the
stockholders," § 5408, and on the deposits "as taxable
property of its depositors." § 5673-2. [
Footnote 7] In the case of those taxes, not here
involved, the bank is given full rights of reimbursement from the
stockholders or depositors, as the case may be, and it is clear
Page 349 U. S. 149
that the institution, in paying such taxes, is acting only as a
collection agent. Ohio Gen.Code §§ 5672, 5673, 5673-1,
5673-2. [
Footnote 8]
And, beyond these considerations, one might not have expected
the legislature to tax the ownership interests of the depositors of
these banks on the same basis as stockholders
Page 349 U. S. 150
are taxed. The asserted interest of the depositors is in the
surplus of the bank, which is primarily a reserve against losses
and secondarily a repository of undivided earnings. So long as the
bank remains solvent, depositors receive a return on this fund only
as an element of the interest paid on their deposits. To maintain
their intangible ownership interest, they must maintain their
deposits. If a depositor withdraws from the bank, he receives only
his deposits and interest. If he continues, his only chance of
getting anything more would be in the unlikely event of a solvent
liquidation, a possibility that hardly rises to the level of an
expectancy. It stretches the imagination very far to attribute any
real value to such a remote contingency, and, when coupled with the
fact that it represents nothing which the depositor can readily
transfer, any theoretical value reduces almost to the vanishing
point.
Cf. Collett v. Springfield Savings Society, 13 Ohio
Cir.Ct.Rep. 131,
aff'd, 56 Ohio St. 776, 49 N.E. 1109
(1897).
Page 349 U. S. 151
The Ohio court, however, has held that this tax is imposed on
the depositors. [
Footnote 9]
But that does not end the matter for us. We must judge the true
nature of this tax in terms of the rights and liabilities which the
statute, as construed, creates. In assessing the validity of the
tax under federal law, we are not bound by the state's conclusion
that the tax is imposed on the depositors, even though we would be
bound by the state court's decision as to what rights and
liabilities this statute establishes under state law. The court's
mere conclusion that the tax is imposed on the depositors is no
more than a characterization of the tax.
"Where a federal right is concerned, we are not bound by the
characterization given to a state tax by state courts or
Legislatures, or relieved by it from the duty of considering the
real nature of the tax and its effect upon the federal right
asserted.
Carpenter v. Shaw, 280 U. S.
363,
280 U. S. 367 (1930).
See also New Jersey Realty Title Ins. Co. v. Division of Tax
Appeals, supra, at
338 U. S. 674;
Educational Films Corp. v. Ward, supra, at
282 U. S.
387."
"Neither ingenuity in calculation nor form of words in state
enactments can deprive the owner of the tax exemption established
for the benefit of the United States."
Missouri ex rel. Missouri Ins. Co. v. Gehner,
281 U. S. 313,
281 U. S. 321
(1930). Therefore, we proceed to examine what rights and
liabilities the statute creates.
We note, first, that should the bank be unable to pay the tax,
after it has been assessed, there is no provision entitling the
Ohio to collect it from the depositors. A tax against the
depositors which is recoverable only from the bank looks like a tax
against the bank. And if the tax is in fact against the bank, it
does not matter
Page 349 U. S. 152
whether the ultimate economic impact is passed on to the
depositors.
Home Savings Bank v. Des Moines, 205 U.
S. 503,
205 U. S. 519
(1907).
Next, it appears that the statute does not relieve the bank from
having to pay the tax on the "intangible property interest" of a
depositor who had an account with the bank on the assessment date
of the tax, but has withdrawn his account before the collection
date. And if the bank is required to pay on the former depositor's
account, there is no provision entitling the bank to reimbursement
from him. It should be observed that, in the case of the deposit
tax, the statute does contain provisions protecting the bank in
such a situation. §§ 5412, 5673-1, 5673-2. [
Footnote 10]
Finally, and perhaps most important, if this tax is on the
depositors, we must find somewhere a right in the bank to make
itself whole from the depositors for the taxes paid on their
account. In all the cases upholding state taxes against
shareholders, without the exclusion of federal obligations owned by
the corporation, an express or implied right of reimbursement was
presupposed.
See Van Allen and other cases at p.
349 U. S. 147,
supra. As already observed, in the case of the Ohio taxes
on shares and deposits, the statute contains such a right,
§§ 5673,
Page 349 U. S. 153
5673-2. [
Footnote 11] In
the present cases, we can find no such right. It may be true that,
where the tax paid by the bank is less than the interest which the
bank
contemplates paying the depositors, no such right of
reimbursement is necessary. If, for example, a bank has $100,000 of
undivided profits, intends to pay its depositors $75,000 interest
on their deposits, and has an obligation for this tax of $10,000,
it perhaps makes no difference whether the bank pays $65,000 to its
depositors, without recovering anything back from them, or pays
them $75,000, but later recovers back the $10,000 tax paid for
their account. Under either method, the bank comes out whole, and
the depositors receive the same net interest payment. [
Footnote 12] But if the bank has
declared the $75,000 interest payment before the tax is due, we can
find nothing in the statute which would give the bank the right
either to deduct the $10,000 tax from the interest payment or to
recover it back from the depositors. And conceivably the tax might
exceed the interest payable to the depositors, in which
event the bank would be left short, absent a right to recover the
excess from the depositors.
The Ohio court thought that, in charging the tax to surplus, the
bank in reality would be reducing the depositors' interest in the
surplus, which it described as being "owned" by them, and that
therefore in no circumstance was a right of reimbursement
necessary. But there are difficulties with this proposition. If
this means that the corporate fiction should be disregarded, the
result would be that the government bonds would have to be
excluded, since, on this hypothesis, such securities should then be
treated as the property of the depositors. On the other
Page 349 U. S. 154
hand, if the Ohio court was referring to the depositors'
equitable interest in the surplus, as seems more likely, then,
without a right of recoupment, the bank as well as the depositors
bears the impact of the tax.
Without provisions protecting the bank against the burdens of
the tax, we cannot assume that the statute's operation will not
infringe on the immunity of the federal obligations held by the
banks. It is not adequate merely to suggest that a bank may be
entitled to make itself whole from the depositors under Ohio common
law. For no such common law right has been called to our attention.
Rather, the Ohio court's opinion indicates that the bank may be
left without any right of reimbursement. [
Footnote 13]
We conclude that this tax is on the depositors in name only, and
that, for federal purposes, it must be held to be on the banks
themselves. Accordingly, the judgments in both cases are
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON took no part in the consideration or decision
of these cases.
* Together with No. 220,
First Federal Savings and Loan
Association of Warren v. Bowers, Tax Commissioner of Ohio, on
appeal from the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
Art. I, § 8, cl. 2; Art. VI, cl. 2.
[
Footnote 2]
"Except as otherwise provided by law, all stocks, bonds,
Treasury notes, and other obligations of the United States, shall
be exempt from taxation by or under State or municipal or local
authority."
[
Footnote 3]
Society for Savings was incorporated under Ohio law, and First
Federal under the Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933, as amended, 48
Stat. 128, 12 U.S.C. § 1461
et seq. Nothing turns
here on the difference in their origins.
[
Footnote 4]
In the view we take of this case, it is unnecessary to consider
the taxable status of certain Federal Home Loan Bank stock owned by
First Federal, which is also claimed to be exempt.
[
Footnote 5]
161 Ohio St. 122, 118 N.E.2d 651; 161 Ohio St. 149, 118 N.E.2d
667 (1954). We noted probable jurisdiction, 348 U.S. 807.
[
Footnote 6]
"Sec. 5408. . . . All the shares of the stockholders in a
financial institution, located in this state, incorporated or
organized under the laws of the state or of the United States, the
capital stock of which is divided into shares, excepting such as
are defined as 'deposits' in section 5324 of the General Code, and
all the shares of the stockholders in an unincorporated financial
institution, located in this state, the capital stock of which is
divided into shares held by the owners of such financial
institution, and the capital employed, or the property representing
it, in a financial institution the capital of which is not divided
into shares, or which has no capital stock, located in this state,
shall be listed and assessed at the book value thereof, and taxed
in the manner provided in this chapter."
"Sec. 5412. . . . Upon receiving such report, the tax
commissioner shall ascertain and assess all the taxable shares of
such financial institution, or the value of the property
representing the capital employed by such financial institution,
not divided into shares at the aggregate amount of the capital, the
surplus or reserve fund and the undivided profits as shown in such
report, and the amount of taxable deposits of such institution in
each county in which the institution maintained an office or
offices for the receipt of deposits. Such amounts shall be assessed
in the name of such financial institution excepting that the
amounts of the taxable deposits wholly withdrawn from each such
institution within the times mentioned in section 5411-2 of the
General Code and separately set forth in such report shall be
subtracted from the amount of taxable deposits so assessed and
separately assessed in the names of such respective depositors. In
the case of an incorporated financial institution all of whose
shares constitute deposits as defined in section 5324 of the
General Code, such assessment of shares shall exclude the capital
stock thereof as so shown, but shall include the surplus or reserve
and undivided profits so shown."
"Sec. 5638-1. Annual taxes are hereby levied on the kinds and
classes of intangible property, hereinafter enumerated, on the
intangible property tax list in the office of the auditor of state
and duplicate thereof in the office of treasurer of state at the
following rates, to-wit: . . . deposits, two mills on the dollar;
shares in and capital employed by financial institutions, two mills
on the dollar; . . ."
[
Footnote 7]
See note 8
infra.
[
Footnote 8]
"Sec. 5672. . . . Taxes assessed on nonwithdrawable shares of
stock, of a financial institution, shall be a lien on such shares
from the first day of January in each year until they are
paid."
"It shall be the duty of every financial institution to collect
the taxes due upon its shares of stock from the several owners of
such shares, and to pay the same to the treasurer of state and any
financial institution failing to pay the said taxes as herein
provided, shall be liable by way of penalty for the gross amount of
the taxes due from all the owners of the shares of stock, and for
an additional amount of one hundred dollars for every day of delay
in the payment of said taxes."
"Sec. 5673. . . . Such financial institution paying to the
treasurer of state the taxes assessed upon its shares, in the hands
of its shareholders respectively, as provided in the next preceding
section, may deduct the amount thereof from dividends that are due
or thereafter become due on such shares, and shall have a lien upon
the shares of stock and on all funds in its possession belonging to
such shareholders, or which may at any time come into its
possession, 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."
"Sec. 5673-1. . . . Taxes assessed on deposits in a financial
institution in this state shall be a lien on the deposit of each
person as of the day fixed by the tax commission of Ohio for the
listing of such deposits. Taxes assessed on the shares of stock of
such an institution, all of whose shares are withdrawable and
defined as deposits in chapter four of this title, shall be a lien
on such shares so defined as deposits as of the day so fixed. It
shall be the duty of every financial institution to pay the taxes
on the amount of such deposits and/or withdrawable shares assessed
in its name to the treasurer of state and any such institution
failing to pay such taxes as herein provided shall be liable by way
of penalty for the gross amount of the taxes due on and with
respect to all its deposits and withdrawable shares assessed in its
name and for an additional amount of one hundred dollars for every
day of delay in the payment of such taxes."
"Sec. 5673-2. . . . A financial institution so required to pay
to the treasurer of state the taxes assessed upon its deposit
accounts, as taxable property of its depositors, and/or upon its
withdrawable shares as taxable property of its shareholders
respectively, as provided in the next preceding section, may, upon
receipt of notice of the day fixed for the listing of such
deposits, charge the amount thereof to and deduct the same from the
deposit of each depositor, or from the interest that is due or
thereafter becomes due thereon, or from the dividends that are due
or thereafter become due thereon, as the case may be, and shall
have a lien upon such deposit, interest and/or dividends and on all
funds in its possession belonging to such depositor or shareholder,
or which may at any time come into its possession, for
reimbursement of the taxes so payable, with legal interest. Such
lien may be enforced in any appropriate manner at any time within
six months after the payment of the taxes to the treasurer."
[
Footnote 9]
As construed by the state court, the "intangible property tax"
on depositors applied to different property than did the "deposit"
tax also imposed on them, involving, as we see it, no question of
duplication or overlapping between the two taxes.
[
Footnote 10]
Section 5412 provides in part:
"Upon receiving such report, the tax commissioner shall
ascertain and assess . . . the amount of taxable deposits of such
institution in each county in which the institution maintained an
office or offices for the receipt of deposits. Such amounts shall
be assessed in the name of such financial institution excepting
that the amounts of the taxable deposits wholly withdrawn from each
such institution within the times mentioned in section 5411-2 of
the General Code [that is, between the date of assessment and the
bank's receipt of the notice of such date, or if no notice is
received, the next January 1] and separately set forth in such
report shall be subtracted from the amount of taxable deposits so
assessed and separately assessed in the names of such respective
depositors."
For §§ 5673-1 and 5673-2,
see note 8 supra.
[
Footnote 11]
See note 8
supra.
[
Footnote 12]
Even so, if a comparable situation arose in connection with the
tax on shareholders, the bank would have a right of reimbursement
under the provisions of the Ohio statute.
See 349 U.
S. supra.
[
Footnote 13]
The Ohio court stated:
"In our opinion, such a provision [an express right of
reimbursement] is not necessary to enable such a financial
institution to secure such reimbursement."
161 Ohio St. at 136, 118 N.E.2d at 659. It is clear that, by
this statement, the court did not mean that an implied right of
reimbursement existed under Ohio law, for it then went on to hold
that
"the financial institution, which pays the tax on [the
depositors'] property interests in the corporation, will always be
able to reimburse itself by reducing the ultimate value of the
property interests of those who are the only ones who can have any
claim to benefit from the ownership interests taxed."
Id., 161 Ohio St. at 137, 118 N.E.2d at 659-660. This
is, of course, not reimbursement in any proper sense of the
term.