Fidelity Trust Co. v. Gorman

106 A. 847, 134 Md. 332, 1919 Md. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 9, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 106 A. 847 (Fidelity Trust Co. v. Gorman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Trust Co. v. Gorman, 106 A. 847, 134 Md. 332, 1919 Md. LEXIS 81 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

*333 Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is by the Fidelity Trust Company, a Maryland corporation, from an order of the Baltimore City Court dismissing its appeal from an assessment of its stock made by the State Tax Commission.

The petition of the company in the Court below alleges., in the first paragraph thereof, that the company appeals from the action of the Commission in assessing its stock for the year 1918 in. the manner and amount set forth in the petition, and “charges and alleges” that the action of the Commission in making said assessment “is illegal because unequal and discriminatory.” The second paragraph alleges that the company, on or about the 21st of January, 1918, filed with the Commission, as required by law and on the form furnished by the Commission, a full and complete report of all information required by the Commission “together with certificates,” and that on or about the 19th day of February., 1918, the Commission made a tentative assessment of the shares of the stock of the company for 1918, and notified the company that said assessment would become final unless cause to the contrary he shown; that according to said tentative assessment the value of the shares was fixed at $308.00 per-share, and the total issue of 10,000 shares at an aggregate-value of $3,080,000.00, and that this amount., less credits to-which the company was entitled under the laws of the State,, would he the amount upon which the company would he required to pay for its stockholders State taxes, and city, county and town taxes to the several “taxing units, in the State,”' wherein the shareholders reside, or where the shares may-properly he taxed. The third paragraph charges that the-company, within the time provided, protested against the proposed assessment “in the manner and amount herein set; forth,” hut that the Commission “paid no consideration to the-protest,” and on the 10th of April, 1918, assessed the 10,000 shares at $308.00 per share, “or an aggregate of $3,080,-000.00,” and notified the company of its action. The fifth paragraph states that the company “now alleges and charges”' *334 that the action of the Commission in assessing the shares of the company in said amount per share “is illegal and void for the following! reasons”:

“That in computing the assessable value of shares of corporations subject to assessment on shares the law of Mrayland does not define the method to be used in determining the taxable value, but that the Constitution and laws of the State do set forth that all taxable property in the State shall be placed upon the assessment books and equalized between persons, films and corporations in all the cities, districts, towns and villages of the State. That in assessing shares of corporations the commission considers several methods in arriving at the assessment and that the commission assesses some corporations by one- method and some other corporations by some other method. That, as advised by the commission at the hearing, the methods which may be used are as follows:
“(a) Assessment based on the market value of shares.
“(b) Assessment based on the book or liquidation value of shares.
“(c) Assessment based on capitalization of earnings at a percentage and this percentage is determined by the commission.
“(d) Or assessment based on combination of two or more of these methods, but which means selection of one of the methods.”

The sixth paragraph of the petition avers that if the Commission assessed the shares of the company for the year 1918 according to the first of the above methods the assessment at $308.00 per share is illegal and void because the price at which the shares were sold during the year 1917 rang’ed between $312.00 and $310.00, the last sale being in October, and the market value of all securities was declining during the fall of 1917, and about the first of 1918 the bid price for said stock was $306.00, and within the first ten days of January, “shares were sold at $306.00.” The seventh para *335 graph charges that in the assessment of shares of other hanks, trust companies and corporations, “the same percentage of assessment to the market value has not heeu applied by thei’ Commission, “because it will appear that the shares of this corporation have been assessed at a basis of 99.9 per cent, and your petitioner alleges that the percentage of assessment 1o the value of shares, of other corporations is. much lower than the percentage in the assessment of this corporation”; that real estate and personal property in the counties and Baltimore City are assessed at a percentage far below tho ratio of 99.9 per cent., and that that fact is known to the Commission; that the assessment of the shares of the company at $308.00 produces gross inequality, which, inequality is unlawful under the laws of tho State, and under “the Constitution of the United States, and amendments, in that it denies to this petitioner the equal protection of law.” The eighth paragraph alleges that if the Commission based the assessment on the hook or liquidation value of the stock the assessment is illegal and void because it produces gross inequality when compared with the assessment of shares of other corporations, according to the hook or liquidation value of the shares of such other corporations, for that, according to the value of the assets of the company on or about the first of January, 1918, and the report of tho company filed with tho Commission, the book value of the shares of the company was $240.55 per share., and the assessment of $308.00 per share-“represents a percentage of assessment to value of 125 percent.,” and the same ratio of assessment to- the hook or liquidation value has not been applied by tho Commission to shares of other banks, trust companies or corporations, and that said ratio of 125 per cent, is not. the same ratio of assessment to value of the real estate and personal property in the counties, and Baltimore City, and the assessment of the shares of tho company is “far in excess of the ratio of assessment of other persons, and corporations.” The ninth paragraph charges that if the Commission adopted “the capitalization-of-earning method” in arriving at the assessment of $308.00 per share,. *336 the assessment is illegal and.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A. 847, 134 Md. 332, 1919 Md. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-trust-co-v-gorman-md-1919.