City of Pittsburgh v. Allegheny Valley Bank

388 A.2d 1098, 35 Pa. Commw. 502, 1978 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1072
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 30, 1978
DocketAppeals, Nos. 293, 294, 295 and 270 C.D. 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 388 A.2d 1098 (City of Pittsburgh v. Allegheny Valley Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Pittsburgh v. Allegheny Valley Bank, 388 A.2d 1098, 35 Pa. Commw. 502, 1978 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1072 (Pa. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinions

Opinion by

President Judge Bowman,

These consolidated cross appeals1 evolve from litigation initiated by the City of Pittsburgh in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County to enforce collection of its Business Privilege Tax2 assertedly due and owing by nine banking institutions (banks), State and Federal, for the tax years 1969-73.

There is no dispute that the taxing ordinance as enacted reaches banks and would impose the tax upon them for the privilege of doing business in Pittsburgh, said tax measured by the gross receipts of banks as defined in the ordinance and supporting regulations. Bather, the banks have consistently denied liability for the tax on the theory that State law precludes the City from imposing the tax on banks, and, as to several tax years involved, the Federal banks argue that Federal legislation is also a bar to taxing them.

[505]*505In the lower court, the banks were successful except as to gross receipts derived by them from “nontraditional” banking activities which were held to be subject to the City’s tax. Hence, these cross appeals in which the City insists that neither State nor Federal law precludes imposition of its gross receipts business privilege tax upon banks, while the banks argue that there can be no distinction between traditional and nontraditional banking activities for tax purposes as all such activities are conducted and carried on with the approval of the Secretary of Banking, who enjoys the exclusive power and authority to supervise and regulate banks in the conduct of their business.

The first issue requires consideration of the provisions of a State statute imposing a State tax upon banks and the provisions of the State statute by the authority of which the City has enacted this taxing ordinance.

THE BANK SHARES TAX (SHARES TAX)3

Section 701 of the Tax Reform Code of 1971, 72 P.S. §7701, and its predecessor legislation impose an annual State tax upon the actual value of the capital stock of banks incorporated in or located within the Commonwealth. It is imposed at the rate of fifteen mills4 upon the actual value of each share of stock to be “ascertained and fixed by adding together the amount of capital stock paid in, the surplus, and undivided profits, and dividing this amount by the number of shares. ’ ’

[506]*506Of significance in these cross appeals, this same section further provides:

[S]o much of the capital and profits of such bank ... as shall not be invested in real estate, shall be exempt from local taxation under the laws of this Commonwealth; and such bank . . . having capital stock shall not be required to make any report to the local assessor or county commissioners of its personal property owned by it in its own right for purposes of taxation and shall not be required to pay any tax thereon.

The lower court concluded that this language of the Shares Tax prohibited the City from imposing its Business Privilege Tax upon banking institutions measured by gross receipts as defined in the taxing ordinance applicable to banking institutions, reasoning that gross receipts as so defined makes the tax, in reality, as one on gross profits, not gross receipts, derived for the most part upon interest received from loans and investments. Having found the local tax to be essentially an income tax as applied to banks rather than a gross receipts tax, the lower court concluded that the above language exempted banks from the attempted imposition of the local tax.

There is no doubt that the legislative history of the predecessor legislation to the present Shares Tax and the decisional law interpreting exemption language contained therein support the conclusion reached by the lower court on this issue. In Oil City v. Oil City Trust Co., 151 Pa. 454, 25 A. 124 (1892), in issue as to several of the tax years in question was whether banks subject to the then State Shares Tax which exempted them “from local taxation under the laws of this commonwealth” could be subjected to a local ordinance imposing a $50.00 license fee for general revenue purposes. The Supreme Court concluded that this exemp[507]*507tion language—also contained in the present Shares Tax—prohibited local governments from imposing a revenue-producing measure regardless of its characterization as a license fee. Prior decisions involving somewhat different language but related issues had reached the same conclusion. City of Pittsburgh v. First National Bank, 55 Pa. 45 (1867); Iron City Bank v. City of Pittsburgh, 37 Pa. 340 (1861). Since Oil City, the Shares Tax has been amended and reenacted many times and most recently reenacted by the Tax Reform Code of 1971, thus lending weight and continued precedential vitality to the construction placed upon the exemption language in issue in Oil City, notwithstanding its obvious antiquity. Section 1922(4), Statutory Construction Act of 1972, 1 Pa. C.S. §1922 (4).

The City argues, however, that these decisions are without precedential value today because of more recent decisions which, in determining one’s entitlement to an exclusion or exemption from local taxation, have placed controlling significance upon the character and nature of the local tax as compared to that of the State tax by which exclusion or exemption from local taxation is asserted. It acknowledges that the lower court recognized this rule but erred in concluding that the City’s Business Privilege Tax, as applied to banks, is, in effect, a property tax upon their income because of the definition of gross receipts found in the ordinance and regulations as applied to banks. Supportive of this argument the City cites F. J. Busse Co. v. Pittsburgh, 443 Pa. 349, 279 A.2d 14 (1971), in which the Supreme Court declared this very tax to be one on the privilege of engaging in business in Pittsburgh as measured by gross receipts, thus constituting an excise tax on this privilege and not a property tax. As such, the City would have us conclude, being an excise tax on [508]*508the privilege of doing business, the lower court could not have properly concluded that as applied to banks the City’s tax is, in effect, a tax on “profits” of the banks-—a property tax, which is the intended prohibition from local taxation contained in the Shares Tax.

F. J. Busse, however, was not concerned with the prohibiting language found in the Shares Tax but rather that contained in The Local Tax Enabling Act5 hereinafter discussed. Nor was it concerned with the City’s Business Privilege Tax as directed against banking institutions. In declaring this tax to be an excise tax on the privilege of doing business as measured by gross receipts, the Supreme Court found it not to be prohibited by The Local Tax Enabling Act as duplicating pro tanto the Commonwealth’s capital stock tax and foreign corporate franchise tax, neither of which by their own provisions speaks to local taxation.

We are not persuaded that F. J. Busse and other cases declaring as of controlling significance the differing nature and character of a State tax and the local tax negate the precedential weight of Oil City in this case, which addresses itself specifically to the very language prohibiting local taxation of banks as found in the Shares Tax today. As we read

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388 A.2d 1098, 35 Pa. Commw. 502, 1978 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pittsburgh-v-allegheny-valley-bank-pacommwct-1978.