Central Trust Co. v. Howard

175 N.E. 461, 275 Mass. 153, 1931 Mass. LEXIS 1356
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 175 N.E. 461 (Central Trust Co. v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Trust Co. v. Howard, 175 N.E. 461, 275 Mass. 153, 1931 Mass. LEXIS 1356 (Mass. 1931).

Opinion

Rugo, C.J.

The plaintiff seeks by this suit in equity to enjoin the collection of additional excise taxes by the sale of certain of its bonds seized by the defendant as constable under warrants issued to him by the commissioner of corporations and taxation. Because the net income of the plaintiff as returned to the Federal government has been increased for the several years in question, these taxes for those years were assessed on October 15, 1929, under G. L. c. 63, § 36, on that increased income. Demand was made for the payment of these additional taxes on, or about June 18, 1930. The plaintiff did not pay them. On July 11, 1930, the warrants were- issued on which the bonds were seized. On July 14, 1930, St. 1930, c. 214, became operative. That act is entitled "An Act providing for the refunding of certain illegal or excessive bank taxes.” The provisions of said c. 214 material to this decision are: "Any bank, . . . which, within thirty days after this act takes effect . . . shall have filed a waiver ... of any right which it may have to the abatement or recovery of any taxes, assessed upon it with respect to its income returnable under the provisions of” G. L. c. 63, in 1926, 1927, 1928 and 1929, "and paid by it, shall be entitled to have refunded to it, in the manner hereinafter provided, a sum equal to that part of the tax assessed and paid by it, which was upon or measured by so much of its income returnable in the year nineteen hundred and twenty-nine as was derived from interest upon bonds, notes or certificates of indebtedness of the United States or of the commonwealth of Massachusetts or its political subdivisions, or of any federal instrumentality, which would not be taxable under chapter sixty-two of the General Laws if received by an individual inhabitant of the commonwealth, with interest thereon . . . and no further taxes under said chapter sixty-three or under any laws revived under section thirteen of chapter three hundred [155]*155and forty-three of the acts of nineteen hundred and twenty-five, as amended by chapter two hundred and twenty-two of the acts of nineteen hundred and twenty-six, shall be assessed against or collected from any .such bank with respect to the years for which it shall have filed a waiver as herein provided. The amount of refund so certified to each bank shall be applied by said commissioner to the payment of its tax to be assessed under said chapter sixty-three in the year nineteen hundred and thirty, and any excess of such refund over the amount of said tax shall be paid out of the treasury of the commonwealth, without appropriation.”

The plaintiff filed a waiver under this statute. The date of such filing does not appear, but it must have been after the effective date of the statute and before July 16, 1930, when the present suit was instituted. The plaintiff contends that thereby there sprang into existence a contract between it and the Commonwealth that it would waive all rights to contest the validity of taxes paid by it for the years in question, and in return for that waiver no additional taxes were to be either assessed to it or even collected from it, if already assessed, by the Commonwealth, and that the only adequate relief open to it is by the present suit. The defendant contends that there is no jurisdiction in equity to prevent the collection of the tax and that the statute rightly construed does not prevent the collection of taxes already assessed but not paid.

The meaning of said c. 214 is to be ascertained in the light of certain matters of general legislative and judicial'knowledge. The tax laws of the Commonwealth touching national banks and trust companies had given rise to considerable litigation and had led to- the enactment of new tax laws designed to adjust differences and to afford a sound basis for future taxation. Collector of Taxes of Boston v. National Shawmut Bank of Boston, 259 Mass. 14. Macallen Co. v. Commonwealth, 264 Mass. 396, 411. One of the statutes enacted to that end was held to be cpntrary to provisions of the Federal Constitution in Macallen Co. v. Massachusetts, 279 U. S. 620. That decision affected provisions of the tax [156]*156law in their operation upon corporations of the class to which the plaintiff belongs. The precise extent of the havoc of our tax laws wrought by that decision has never been authoritatively decided, although an advisory opinion upon some aspects was given in Opinion of the Justices, 269 Mass. 611. In any event, revision of those provisions of the tax law appeared to be highly desirable, if not necessary. One step among others in that direction was the enactment of said c. 214. It was in part designed to avert controversy, to stem litigation, and to assure the stability of the finances of the Commonwealth by agreement with the interested taxpayers as to taxes already collected.

It is assumed in favor of the plaintiff for the purposes of thiá decision that the terms of said c. 214 are couched in'the phrase of a contract, that, according to its words, when the plaintiff filed the waiver, it thereby became “entitled tó have” certain refunds credited to it to be applied to the payment of its 1930 excise taxes, to receive the balance, if any, in cash and to be free as specified from further taxation for those years; that the controversies thereby to be settled were substantial and not fanciful, and therefore constituted sufficient consideration for a binding contract, Silver v. Graves, 210 Mass. 26, and that the General Court under the Constitution is clothed with power to make a contract of such nature, in the public interests touching public rights and public property, between the Commonwealth and any person with whom it has relations. See Boston & Lowell Railroad v. Salem & Lowell Railroad, 2 Gray, 1, 32; Boston v. Treasurer & Receiver General, 237 Mass. 403,416; Opinion of the Justices, 261 Mass. 523, 551, 552.

After making those assumptions in favor of the plaintiff, the question is presented as to* the interpretation of the contract thus made, with special reference to the contention of the plaintiff that, although it has not paid the additional excise taxes already assessed, the Commonwealth has barred itself by the terms of the statute from collecting that additional assessment. It is to be observed that the offer of the statute is to those banks which file the required waiver as to “any taxes, assessed upon it . . . and paid [157]*157by it” with respect to the years specified. The implication of this language is that all taxes actually assessed shall have been paid in order that the bank may bring itself within the scope of the offer. A part of the correlative obligation of the Commonwealth is that "no further taxes . . . shall be assessed against or collected from any such bank” for the years in question. The whole basis of the statute is that all the taxes, as to which the waiver by the bank is effective and the obligation is assumed by the Commonwealth, shall have been paid. It is the duty of everybody to pay the taxes duly assessed upon him. Most people perform that duty with reasonable promptness; otherwise government would be impeded for want of money. It may be presumed that financial institutions such as banks enjoying privileges under governmental regulation would be alert to see that their obligations to government would be met as and when due.

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Bluebook (online)
175 N.E. 461, 275 Mass. 153, 1931 Mass. LEXIS 1356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-co-v-howard-mass-1931.