First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Langton

251 A.2d 170, 105 R.I. 236, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 745
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 13, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 251 A.2d 170 (First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Langton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Langton, 251 A.2d 170, 105 R.I. 236, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 745 (R.I. 1969).

Opinion

Roberts, C. J.

This is a petition brought in the superior court by the plaintiff First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Providence, hereinafter referred to as First Federal, for judicial review of an order of the defendant tax administrator of the state of Rhode Island pursuant to the provisions of G. L. 1956, §44-15-5-J, as amended. It therein seeks a refund with interest of a tax paid under protest to the defendant administrator. The tax was assessed as of June 30, 1963, and thereafter First Federal under the provisions of §44-15-5-1, as amended, sought a hearing before the administrator on the ground that it had been aggrieved by his order assessing such tax. After the hearing, on December 10, 1963, the administrator ordered First Federal to pay the tax with accrued interest. Thereupon First Federal paid the tax under protest and instituted in the superior court this action for a refund.

In superior court First Federal urged that the statute under which the tax was assessed was unconstitutional. The case was tried before a justice of that court sitting without a jury, who thereafter entered judgment for First Federal, sustaining its challenge to the statute and declaring it unconstitutional on the ground that it failed to exempt specifically obligations of the United States from the coverage thereof. Several other contentions urged by First Federal as grounds for holding the statute unconstitutional were rejected by the superior court. The administrator prosecuted an appeal from the judgment to this court, while First Federal prosecuted a cross appeal from the action of the superior court in rejecting other grounds advanced as establishing the invalidity of the statute.

The trial justice found the statute unconstitutional in [238]*238that it * by failing to exempt obligations of the United States is itself void. All assessments made under it must be void.” He' then went on to declare the whole statute to be void as to this plaintiff because it was unconstitutional and contrary to the express statute law of the United States. This is not a case raising an issue whether a state, in an exercise of its taxing power, exempts particular properties therefrom. The controlling consideration here is the well-settled rule that the properties of the federal government are immune from and beyond the taxing power of the several states.

In Society for Savings in the City of Cleveland v. Bowers, 349 U. S. 143, 99 L.Ed. 950, 75 S.Ct. 607, the Supreme Court made clear the immunity of federal obligations from state taxation. The court therein said at 144, 99 L.Ed. 955, 75 S.Ct. 608: “This rule, aimed at protecting the borrowing power of the United States from state encroachment, was derived from the ‘Borrowing’ and ‘Supremacy’ Clauses of the Constitution, and the constitutional doctrines announced in McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316 (1819). It was subsequently embodied in a succession of federal statutes, the existing statute being R. S. §3701, 31 U. S. C. §742.” It is conceded that the statute here under consideration does not in its express terms provide for the exclusion of federal obligations from its coverage.

The conclusion of the trial justice, as we understand it, is that the failure to exclude federal obligations in express terms from the coverage of tax legislation renders that legislation unconstitutional on its face. We are unable to agree with so broad a proposition. In our opinion, the question of whether a state taxing statute includes federal obligations within its coverage is a matter of legislative intent, and where the pertinent terms of the statute obscure the intent, it is to be determined by well-established rules of statutory construction. In this court First Federal [239]*239so argues, its basic contention being that the failure to expressly exclude federal obligations from the coverage of the act discloses a legislative intent, at least by implication, to include such federal obligations within its coverage and to direct that they be taxed. On this basis it argues that the pertinent statute is rendered unconstitutional because of an implied inclusion within its coverage of federal obligations.

Our attention is directed by First Federal to §44-15-2, as amended, wherein the legislature imposed an annual tax on every banking institution as defined in the act at the rate of 40 cents for each $100 of deposits with such banking institution on the last business day of June. The act in express terms then excludes from its coverage certain properties, namely, the stocks of state banks and trust companies organized under the laws of this state; the stocks of national banking associations located within the limits of this state; real property located in Rhode Island owned by such banking institutions; and mortgages on real property in Rhode Island.

The prime thrust of First Federal’s contention that the statute is unconstitutional rests upon its argument that the legislature in the exclusions clearly demonstrates its intention to enumerate those properties that would be excluded from the coverage of the act and that its failure to specifically exclude federal obligations owned by the bank therein discloses its intention to include such federal obligations within the scope of the act. With this we are unable to agree. We consider as significant the fact that each of the particular properties enumerated in the exclusions set out in the act is property within the taxing power of the state, and, therefore, the legislature was exempting such properties from the scope of the act.

However, federal obligations are not within the taxing power of the state, and it is our opinion that had the leg[240]*240islature included federal obligations within the list of exemptions, its action would have been meaningless, such properties being beyond the taxing power of the state. In Macallen Co. v. Massachusetts, 279 U. S. 620, 73 L.Ed. 874, 49 S.Ct. 432, the statute then under consideration, in its definition as to what would constitute net income, expressly excluded therefrom all interest received upon bonds, notes, and certificates of indebtedness of the United States. The court at page 624, 73 L.Ed. 878, 49 S.Ct. 433, commenting on the statute and the exemption, noted: “Of course, in respect of United States securities, the statutory exemption is superfluous.”

First Federal refers to the Bowers case, arguing that therein the Supreme Court of the United States held an Ohio statute unconstitutional on the ground that it had failed to expressly exclude from its coverage federal obligations held by the involved banks. We have examined that case closely, and nowhere therein do we find any reference by the court to the effect of a failure to specifically exclude from a state taxing statute property which is beyond the taxing power of the state. It held only that the Ohio court had erred in finding that the tax being considered therein was not one upon the banks but upon the depositors thereof so that the tax was in fact levied on the interest of the depositors and shareholders of the banks. The court based its ruling on its inability to agree with the Ohio court’s characterization of the tax as one upon the banks’ depositors rather than on the banks themselves. See Annot., 99 L.Ed. 961.

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FIRST FEDERAL SAV. & L. ASS'N OF PROVIDENCE v. Langton
251 A.2d 170 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
251 A.2d 170, 105 R.I. 236, 1969 R.I. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-federal-savings-loan-assn-v-langton-ri-1969.