Bartlett v. Carter
This text of 59 N.H. 105 (Bartlett v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
A method of taxation is sometimes sustained by calling a property tax an excise on a franchise, or a price paid for a privilege of corporate agency. Com. v. P. Savings-Bank, 5 Allen 428; Oliver v. W. Mills, 11 Allen 268; Com. v. L. Gas-Light Co., 12 Allen 75; Com. v. H. M. Co., 12 Allen 298; S. C., 6 Wall. 632; Com. v. P. Inst. for Savings, 12 Allen 312; S. C., 6 Wall. 611; Coite v. Society for Savings, 32 Conn. 173; S. C., 6 Wall. 594; Coite v. C. M. L. Ins. Co., 36 Conn. 512; M. Ins. Co. v. Loud, 99 Mass. 146; Att'y-Gen. v. B. S. M. Co., 99 Mass. 148; M. C. Savings-Bank v. Rochester, 37 N. Y. 365. The tax held to be an excise may, by implication, be discontinued during tbe process of winding up tbe agency on an assignment in insolvency. Com. v. L. Savings-Bank, 123 Mass. 493; Com. v. B. Savings-Bank, 126 Mass. 526. But tbe one per cent, tax claimed by the state in this case, like tbe tax of the deposits invested in real estate, is a property tax. G. L., c. 65, ss. 6, 8; R. Savings-Bank v. Portsmouth, 52 N. H. 17, 27, 28. It is laid upon tbe property of the depositors, and is paid out of their property by tbeir incorporated agent and trustee. It is not compensation paid by them for the difference between tbe agency of a corporation and the agency of a partnership or such unincorporated trustees as were defendants in Davis v. Bradford, 58 N. H. 476. Formerly tbe deposits were assessed *106 •directly to tbe depositors, as money at interest. Rev. St., e. 39, s. ■3. And when the corporate agent'was substituted for the depositors in the assessment, the tax was declared to be in full for all taxes imposed upon the deposits, or on the depositors on account of the deposits. Laws of 1864, c. 4028, s. 1. If an additional and full tax were assessed to them, upon their deposits as money at interest, the case would be instantly recognized as one of double taxation. On that point there would be, in this state, no difference •of opinion.
■ If the savings-bank tax, being constitutional, were not a property “tax, it would be such an impost as the legislature could levy in addition to a full property tax of the deposits separately appraised. The depositors’ privilege of employing the corporation, instead of :an unincorporated body of trustees, as their agent in the investment of their common property, may be of some value to them. But it is not supposed to be worth to each' depositor one per cent, ■annually of his share of the common personal property. And an assessment of all- the common property at its full value as property, and a further assessment of one per cent, of the common personal property, as' a tax upon the corporate privilege, would not be an exercise of the power of making an equal division of the public expense. In an equal division a corporate franchise is taxed, like •other property, at its value. The fact that the value of the franchise is often included in the appraisal of other property assessed at its full value to the equitable owners or their .corporate agent, may not be material in jurisdictions where double and unequal taxation is maintained upon nominal distinctions, in disregard of the substance of equkl right.
The assignment, and the substitution of the assignees as unincorporated trustees in place of the incorporated one, did not change the equitable title of the depositors. Simpson v. Savings-Bank, 56 N. H. 466. And the tax is due as if there had been no change of trustee.
<Jase discharged.
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