Attorney General v. President of the Bank of Newbern

21 N.C. 216
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 21 N.C. 216 (Attorney General v. President of the Bank of Newbern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General v. President of the Bank of Newbern, 21 N.C. 216 (N.C. 1835).

Opinions

(218) The Judges not agreeing upon all the points involved in the cause, delivered separate opinions, as follows: The tax imposed on stock in the Bank of New Bern has been paid, from the year 1816 to the present time, out of the corporate funds. The information seeks to keep the sums paid to the State, and alleging that the tax was payable exclusively out of the separate interest of the private stockholders, seeks to correct the supposed error by charging to them, in the division of the capital, and giving credit to the State for, the proportion of those sums raised out of her stock.

The tax is due under a provision of the new charter of 1814 (Rev., ch. 870), by the 11th section of which it is enacted "that a tax of one per cent per annum shall be levied on all stock holden in the bank except the stock holden by the State, which shall be paid to the Treasurer by the president or cashier of said bank on 1 October in each and every year." It may here be mentioned that the printed statute book is inaccurate in substituting the work "stockholders" for the two words, "stock holden," which appear in the original roll.

The doubt is whether, on the wording of the charter, the tax is payable by the corporation out of the common fund, the number of private shares being the measure of the tax, or whether it is payable out of those private shares only, so as to make each stockholder severally contribute annually to the public treasury one dollar for each share.

I own that the language of the statute is not so clear to the contrary that I could confidently say, were the construction now to be placed on it for the first time that the one contended for on behalf of the State was not according to the intention of the Legislature. It is possible that such was the meaning. But I do not think that a strained construction is allowable of an act which levies money from the citizen. The amount of the levy, the subject of it, and the method of raising it ought to be so plainly pointed out as to avoid all danger of oppression by an erroneous interpretation, and where there is a fair (219) doubt the citizen should have the advantage of it.

Here the difficulty arises from the silence of the act as to the fund out of which the tax shall be paid. The natural construction of a charter creating a corporation, a new artificial being, is that all the privileges conferred, all the duties declared, and all the burdens imposed, relate to that being as a whole, and not to the individuals composing it. The contrary may be enacted it is true, but it ought to be clearly enacted before the corporators, as natural persons, can be affected. Here it is insisted that, as the tax is to be "levied on" the private stock, it is necessarily to be "raised on or out of" that stock. The argument is so plausible as at the first view to have much weight, *Page 177 and would be satisfactory were it not for other provisions in that section and others of the charter. The payment into the Treasury is to be made by the president or cashier in their official characters. Those terms of description are naturally to be referred to the official character, and not to the persons in their natural capacity who happened to hold those places. But what renders the meaning clear is that there is no clause of distress on any property of the several stockholders, nor any means provided of raising the tax except from funds that would be under the control of those persons as officers, and not otherwise. What fund belonging to the stockholders, as the separate property of each, is within the reach of the cashier and president? The profits annually declared and passed to the credit of the stockholder, and those only. The stock itself and all the surplus undivided is a common joint stock under the exclusive direction and power of the board of directors, and the interest of each stockholder in that fund is ideal and intangible, not accessible to the officers or to any fiscal agent of the State, except through the intervention of the corporation itself. When a dividend of profit is declared that becomes separate property, and might be appropriated under the authority of law to the satisfaction of any demand upon the owner. If the charter had said the tax of one per cent on each share should be paid out of the profit on each share declared to the stockholders, it would have been clear, and the fund thus rendered liable would have been a proper one and within (220) the reach of the officers charged to collect and account for it. It is possible, but hardly probable, that the Legislature, without closely considering the subject, might have expected a continued and certain profit and its periodical division, and therefore have intended that the tax should attach to it as soon as it was declared. But the consequence of that construction would be that unless there was a profit there would be no tax, for it could not be raised unless the fund existed out of which it was, according to the meaning of the act, to be satisfied. Perhaps that might have been the proper interpretation at first of this ambiguous statute, for it seems to be consonant to natural justice. But the contrary has been practically insisted on by the State, and is now insisted on in argument. The tax has been paid every year, whether profit were made or not; indeed it has been paid when, so far from making a profit, a large part of the capital has been sunk, as we know from the statements of the fiscal officers of the State and the proceedings of the Legislature. Besides, the words of this section of the act are that the tax "shall be paid in each and every year," which seems to overrule the implied meaning that it is payable out of the profits alone, and to require positively that the sum due for the tax, according to the measure prescribed in the act, shall be paid at all events. *Page 178

If that be admitted, then the question arises, how it is to be paid when there is no profit. I do not state the question in that shape for the purpose of determining how the money is to be raised in the two cases, when there are profits and when there are none, as if it was to be raised differently in the one or the other, but as the criterion of the proper construction as to the proper fund for raising it in every case. It has already been shown that it is payable, whether there be profits or not; and, therefore, the construction must be that it is not payable out of the profits as profits, and does not attach to them. If not attached to them after they are declared, nor to any other property of the individual stockholder, it seems to follow, as a necessary consequence, (221) that the tax is to be paid out of the corporate property, whether capital or profit, while it is a joint fund; for to that fund alone can the president and cashier have access. They are to pay the tax. Whence is it to arise? It has been shown that it is not out of the separate property assigned to each shareholder. It is impossible that it can be out of the capital share itself, because that is not tangible by those persons, either in their official or natural capacities. It must then be out of the funds in their hands, and as they are in their hands — that is, the corporate property. With respect to that fund, it is immaterial whether it consists of principal and profit, or of principal alone; for the whole effects of the corporation must answer all burdens on the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.C. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-v-president-of-the-bank-of-newbern-nc-1835.