Com. v. BUTLER COUNTY NAT. BK.
This text of 101 A.2d 699 (Com. v. BUTLER COUNTY NAT. BK.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Commonwealth
v.
Butler County National Bank, Appellant.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
*67 Before STERN, C.J., STEARNE, JONES, BELL, MUSMANNO and ARNOLD, JJ.
Charles E. Kenworthey, with him Roy J. Keefer, Joseph G. Robinson, Hull, Leiby & Metzger, and Reed, Smith, Shaw & McClay, for appellant.
George W. Keitel, Deputy Attorney General, for appellee.
OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE JONES, January 12, 1954:
The question presented by this appeal is whether unrealized appreciation on securities held for investment purposes should be used in determining the actual value of the capital shares of banks for taxation purposes under the provisions of the Act of July 15, 1897, P.L. 292, as amended, 72 PS § 1931. The question was answered in the affirmative by the learned court below which upheld the refusal of the Board of Finance and Revenue to review a settlement made by the Department of Revenue, and approved by the Auditor General, of the taxes owing by the appellant, The Butler County National Bank, for the year 1945.
*68 Section 1 of the Act of 1897 imposes an annual tax of four mills on the "actual value" of the shares of capital stock of banks or savings institutions incorporated under any law of the Commonwealth or of the United States and located within the Commonwealth. A similar tax on actual value of capital shares ascertained in exactly the same manner is imposed by the Act of June 13, 1907, P.L. 640, as amended, 72 PS § 1991, on corporations doing a trust business within the Commonwealth. Since the method for computing the actual value of the shares of both the banking and trust companies is precisely the same (see Commonwealth v. Mortgage Trust Company of Pennsylvania, 227 Pa. 163, 76 A. 5), decisions under the Act of 1907 are equally pertinent to the present question.
The appellant is a corporation organized under the laws of the United States and engaged in the banking business within Pennsylvania. In its share-tax report for the year 1945, filed in compliance with the Act of 1897, the appellant claimed a total valuation for its capital stock, surplus and undivided profits of $1,661,059 for a value of $276.84 per share. The Department of Revenue, however, determined that the total valuation should be $2,640,585 or $440.09 per share and resettled the report and tax accordingly. This upward adjustment was arrived at by adding $979,526 to the valuation as reported by the bank. Of this additional sum, $293,951 represented unallocated valuation reserves and the balance ($685,575) represented the amount of the unrealized appreciation on securities held by the bank for investment. In other words, the $685,575 was the difference between the aggregate cost of such securities, as reflected by the books of the bank, and the aggregate market value of the same securities as of December 31, 1945. It is this added valuation of $685,575 which this appeal questions.
*69 It is the appellant's contention that the legislature, by the Act of 1897, intended that the fiscal officers of the Commonwealth should determine "the amount of capital stock paid in, the surplus and undivided profits" from the books of the bank, provided the books are kept in accordance with proper accounting procedures which do not permit banks to consider and reflect on their books unrealized appreciation of assets. The appellant bases this contention on the Act's provision that "the actual value of each share of stock [shall] 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", and reminds us that the statutory language is to be construed in accordance with the accepted meaning of the words employed and that a tax Act is to be construed strictly, citing Statutory Construction Act of 1937, P.L. 1019, Secs. 33 and 58, 46 PS §§ 533 and 558.
There is, however, a further cardinal rule of statutory construction which the appellant apparently overlooks and that is that "Every law shall be construed, if possible, to give effect to all its provisions": Statutory Construction Act, supra, Sec. 51, 46 PS § 551. Here, the Act lays the tax on the "actual value" of the bank shares. That provision, the appellant entirely disregards and asserts that the capital stock paid in, the surplus and undivided profits of a bank are to be determined according to the books of the bank and that the share valuation, so ascertained, is what the Act was intended to tax. The appellant deduces this argument from the fact that in the field of accounting a corporation's capital stock paid in, surplus and undivided profits added together and divided by the number of corporate shares outstanding gives the book value of the *70 shares. That, of course, is true. But the Act does not restrict the Commonwealth's fiscal officers to what the bank's books show nor does it prohibit them from ascertaining independently what the capital stock paid in, the surplus and undivided profits of a taxpayer bank actually amount to. It may readily be conceded that the appellant bank used the most approved accounting practices in carrying on its books its investment securities at cost (with an allowance for possible losses), but the fact still remains that the appraisal of such investments at their market value contributes to a more truly actual valuation of the bank's capital shares. And, that is what the Act expressly taxes. Sound corporate accounting practices (especially for banking institutions) are not designed to show the actual worth of a bank's shares but rather their rock-bottom value, in short, the most conservative estimate possible.
In support of the contention that it is the book value of a bank's shares that the tax statute contemplates, the appellant relies upon an inference which it draws from this court's decision in Commonwealth v. Mortgage Trust Company of Pennsylvania, supra. In that case, the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County had held the Act of June 13, 1907, P.L. 640, which imposes the tax on the shares of corporations doing a trust business, unconstitutional because of a supposed lack of the uniformity required by Art. IX, Sec. 1, of the Pennsylvania Constitution. On appeal, this court unanimously reversed and remitted the record "with directions to the court below to hear the parties and determine the actual value of the shares of stock . . . ." Because the opinion limited its discussion to the constitutional question involved and made no mention of the lower court's conclusion that actual value of shares, as used in the Act, meant book value, the appellant infers that we thereby approved the lower court's immaterial *71 conclusion as to the taxable basis. As the learned court below pertinently observed in the instant case, "If there ever were any doubts concerning the method of valuation of shares arising from the reported decisions of Commonwealth v. Mortgage Trust Co. such doubts were dispelled and laid to rest by the later decision of Commonwealth v. Union Trust Co., 237 Pa. 353" as indeed they were.
While the Union Trust Company case, supra, was concerned with the Act of 1907, what was there said with respect to the meaning of the term "actual value" is, as we have already seen, equally germane here where the Act of 1897 is involved. In that case, Mr. Justice ELKIN, in speaking for a unanimous court, said (pp.
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101 A.2d 699, 376 Pa. 66, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-v-butler-county-nat-bk-pa-1954.