1. The taxation of national bank shares by the statute of
Indiana, without permitting the owner of them to deduct from their
assessed value the amount of his
bona fide indebtedness,
as he may in the case of other investments of moneyed capital, is a
discrimination forbidden by the act of Congress.
2.
Supervisors v. Stanley, supra, p.
105 U. S. 306,
and
Hills v. Exchange Bank, supra, p.
105 U. S. 319,
cited and the rulings there made approved.
3. The points of difference between the New York statute there
considered and the Indiana statute applicable to this case pointed
out.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are cross-appeals from a decree rendered in a suit in
chancery in which the Evansville National Bank was complainant and
Britton, as Treasurer of Vanderburgh County, Indiana, was
defendant.
The case is in all essential points analogous to that of
Hills v. Exchange Bank, supra, p.
105 U. S. 319,
just decided.
The principal question of law is the same as that discussed
Page 105 U. S. 323
and decided in
Supervisors v. Stanley, supra, p.
105 U. S. 305. In
fact, the three cases were advanced out of their order and heard
consecutively, because they involved important questions concerning
taxation by state statutes of the shares of national banks; and the
argument, able and exhaustive throughout, has been almost wholly
directed on the part of the banks to establish the proposition that
where the law of the state either makes or permits a discrimination
operating only against a particular class of holders of national
bank shares, in the manner of assessing those shares as regards
other moneyed capital in the state, all the laws for such
assessments are void, and all such assessments are absolutely void,
and no tax on national bank shares can be collected in the
state.
The brief of counsel in this case in various forms repeats the
idea that the bill was brought not so much to assert the rights of
stockholders who may have been injured by the enforcement of the
statute as to obtain a judicial declaration of this Court that the
act is void and the attempt to tax the shares of the bank equally
so.
Having in
Supervisors v. Stanley rejected this
proposition and given our reasons for it, we shall not repeat them
here.
The objection made to the Indiana statute is the same as that
made against the New York statute -- namely that it permits the
taxpayer to deduct from the sum of his credits, money at interest,
or other demands, the amount of his
bona fide
indebtedness, leaving the remainder as the sum to be taxed, while
it denies the same right of deduction from the cash value of bank
shares.
A distinction is attempted to be drawn between the Indiana
statute and the New York statute because the former permitted the
deduction of the taxpayer's indebtedness to be made from the
valuation of his personal property, while in Indiana he can only
deduct it from his credits. And undoubtedly there is such a
difference in the laws of the two states. But if one of them is
more directly in conflict with the act of Congress than the other,
it is the Indiana statute. In its schedule, the subject of taxation
from which the taxpayer may deduct his
bona fide
indebtedness is placed under two heads, as follows:
Page 105 U. S. 324
"1. Credits or money at interest, either within or without the
state, at par value."
"2. All other demands against persons or bodies corporate,
either within or without this state."
"Total amount of all credits."
The act of Congress does not make the tax on personal property
the measure of the tax on 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 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.
It is unnecessary to repeat the argument in
People v.
Weaver, 100 U. S. 539, on
this point. We are of opinion that the taxation of bank shares by
the Indiana statute, without permitting the shareholder to deduct
from their assessed value the amount of his
bona fide
indebtedness as in the case of other investments of moneyed
capital, is a discrimination forbidden by the act of Congress.
There is in the bill of complaint in this case the usual
allegation, apart from the special matters we have just considered,
that the assessing officers habitually and intentionally assess the
shares of the national banks higher in proportion to their actual
value than other property generally, and especially shares in other
corporations. It is denied in the answer and unsupported by
proof.
It is also alleged that the bank is taxed a considerable sum for
its real estate, and that in assessing the value of the shares, no
deduction is made on that account. The positive testimony of the
assessor shows that such deduction was made.
It is alleged that the capital of the bank is almost entirely
invested in the bonds and treasury notes of the United states, and
the shares only represent this untaxable investment.
Van
Page 105 U. S. 325
Allen v. The Assessors, 3 Wall. 573, settles the
principle that under certain limitations, the shares of the
national banks are taxable with exclusive reference to their value
and without regard to the nature of the property held by the bank
as a corporation. The very point here made was expressly overruled
in that case.
Acting upon these principles, the circuit court decreed a
perpetual injunction as to those shareholders who had proved in the
case that at the time of the assessment they owed debts which
should rightfully have been deducted. These were four in number,
and the appeal of the collector, Britton, is from this injunction.
The decree in that respect was right, and must be
Affirmed.
The bank appeals from that part of the decree which dismissed
the bill as to all the other shares. This was because no evidence
was given that any other shareholders except the four above
referred to owed any debts which could have been deducted from the
value of the shares. In the case of
Hills v. Exchange
Bank, we authorized the court on return of the case to permit
the bank to show what shareholders had such indebtedness in some
appropriate form. It is not necessary to consider whether this case
ought to be reversed at the instance of the bank to enable that to
be done now, for it is stated by the counsel of the bank in their
printed brief that the offer was made to them to have a reference
to a master to take testimony on this point before final decree,
and they declined to accept the privilege. That branch of the
decree is, on the appeal of the bank,
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE, MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, and MR. JUSTICE
GRAY dissented.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE
GRAY.
I cannot agree to so much of the judgment in this case as
affirms that part of the decree below appealed from by Britton, the
treasurer. "Credits" are but
Page 105 U. S. 326
one of a number of kinds of moneyed capital. They represent, in
the classification of taxable property, the ordinary debts due to a
person; and it has been common for so long a time in the states to
measure their taxable value by their excess over like debts owing
to the same person in the same right that I cannot believe it was
the intention of Congress in its limitation on the power of taxing
national bank shares to require a deduction of debts from the value
of shares, when such a deduction was only allowed to other persons
from this one kind of moneyed capital. The law of Indiana expressly
prohibits deductions from the value of any other property than
credits. Ample provision is made for the taxation of all other
moneyed capital at its value without deduction, the same as
national bank shares. In
Hepburn v. The School
Directors, 23 Wall. 480, this Court said "it could
not have been the intention of Congress to exempt bank shares from
taxation because some moneyed capital was exempt." In that case, a
tax on bank shares was sustained when, by law, mortgages,
judgments, recognizances, and moneys owing on articles of agreement
for the sale of lands were not taxable. I am unable to distinguish
this case in principle from that. The exemption here is partial
only, as it was there.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY.
I dissent from the judgment of the Court in these and the two
preceding cases for the reason that, in my opinion, the state laws
authorizing the capital stock of national banks to be taxed without
allowing any deduction for the debts of the stockholders where such
deduction is allowed in relation to other moneyed capital are void
in toto so far as relates to national banks. To hold the
laws valid except as to those who are actually indebted, and
actually claim the benefit of the deduction, and actually set it up
in a suit brought by the bank for relief, is practically to render
the condition of the act of Congress nugatory and to deprive of its
protection the national banks and their stockholders. The tax,
though laid on the stockholders, is required to be paid by the bank
itself, which must pay without deduction unless the shareholders
give the bank notice of the amount of their debts. This is a most
ingenious expedient to avoid such deductions altogether. The
Page 105 U. S. 327
probability that not one in ten of the shareholders will ever
have notice of the assessment in time to make the claim, and the
natural reluctance they would have (if they had notice) to lay the
amount of their debts before a board of bank officers, will
effectually secure the state from claims for deduction. And that
was, no doubt, the object of the law. But this unequal operation of
it, in its practical effect, might not be sufficient to render it
void. It is void, in my judgment, because it makes no exception,
but is general in its terms, subjecting to taxation the capital
stock of national banks without the privilege of deducting debts.
Denying to it operation and effect as to those who desire to claim
the benefit of the deduction, and giving it effect as to all
others, is to tear a portion of the law out by the roots.
It is
not like the case where a portion of a law, which may be separated
from the rest, can be declared invalid without affecting the
remainder of the law, nor like the case of a general law which the
legislature has power to make, but from the operation of which some
individuals may have a legal or constitutional exemption, which
they can plead in their defense; but it is wrong in form,
wrong
in toto. The legislature had no authority or power
to make the capital of national banks taxable except in the same
manner as other moneyed capital of the state. The practical
iniquity of the law is seen in this, that it affects the value of
all the stock, whoever holds it. As the law stands, it acts as a
prohibition against the purchase of the stock by those who owe
debts, and they constitute a considerable portion of every
community. It does not help the validity of the law for us to
declare that it is
pro tanto void and, in fact, make a new
law for the state. Its validity must be decided by its actual form
and terms. If these cannot stand, the law is void.