First National Bank v. Moon

170 P. 33, 102 Kan. 334, 1918 Kan. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1918
DocketNo. 21,603; No. 21,218
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 170 P. 33 (First National Bank v. Moon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Moon, 170 P. 33, 102 Kan. 334, 1918 Kan. LEXIS 41 (kan 1918).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

These actions involve controversies between state banks, national banks, and a loan company, on one side, and taxing officials on.the other. The controversies relate to the assessment of shares of stock of the institutions named, and the deductions to be made from such assessments on account of investments in real estate in Kansas and other states. With the exception of some minor matters, the questions "presented must be solved by an interpretation of the tax laws of the state, considered in connection with other laws, including statutes of the United States. The questions are of such char-' acter that they may be apprehended without a résumé of the pleadings. An abstract of the pertinent laws is appended to this opinion. For convenience in reference, numbers in brackets have been prefixed to each subdivision of section 11236 of the General Statutes of 1915 which relates to a distinct subject. This section will be designated, for brevity, the tax law.

The first question to be determined is: What is the precise subject of taxation reached by the tax law?

The first subdivision of the tax law provides that “stockholders” of state and national banks and of loan or investment companies shall be assessed and taxed “on the true value of their shares of stock.” The second subdivision requires a return to be made, by a designated officer of the corporation, of “the amount and value of stock” held by each stockholder, together with “the value of any undivided profit or surplus.” The third subdivision requires the corporation to pay the tax “assessed upon said stock and undivided profits or surplus,” and gives the bank a “lien thereon,” but reserves a remedy against the stockholder. The fourth subdivision authorizes a deduction on account of “capital stock” invested in real estate, to be [337]*337made “from the original assessment of the paid-up capital stock.” The fifth subdivision provides that bank stock and investment or loan company “stock or capital” shall not be as-sessed at a higher rate than other property. The sixth subdivision makes the act applicable to certain mutual insurance companies. The’ seventh subdivision provides that the assets, moneys, and credits of mutual insurance companies shall be subject to assessment and taxation. The first five subdivisions refer to state banks, national banks, and loan companies. The sixth and seventh subdivisions refer to mutual insurance companies, and in what follows, the sixth and seventh subdivisions will be omitted from consideration, unless specifically mentioned.

It is not strange that this Joseph’s coat piece of legislation should be confusing to taxing officers, especially those to whom the invisible, intangible entity called a corporation is still an enigma, and should be confusing to corporate officers and stockholders. It affords fine opportunity for legal dialectics and discursion. The fact is, the statute was the product of necessity, which limited the subject of taxation to shares of stock as the property of stockholders.

In the case of state banks, capital stock is the fund contributed by the stockholders to start the bank. It must not be less than a prescribed sum. It must be fully subscribed before a charter can be taken out, and the subscriptions must be paid in cash before a certificate authorizing the bank to engage in business can be obtained from the bank commissioner. The fund is divided into shares of one hundred dollars each. Each stockholder’s subscription is of a certain number of shares, and certificates, called certificates of stock, are issued to stockholders to evidence ownership of their shares. The original fund, called capital stock, can neither be increased nOr diminished, except under prescribed conditions and according to prescribed formalities. When paid in by the stockholders, the money belongs to the bank. On the books of the bank the cash account is debited, and the money is the property of the corporation, the same as if the corporation were a natural person. The bank is managed and controlled by a board of directors, and the stockholders have no voice in its business affairs. [338]*338When the corporation begins doing business it has no money or property except the cash paid in on subscriptions to capital stock. The corporation buys a banking house with some of the money. The banking house is not capital stock. It is simply property purchased with money of the bank. The corporation proceeds to do a general banking business, and acquires notes and other instruments representing loans, acquires bonds, stocks, mortgages and other securities, and acquires real estate and various other kinds of property. All this property belongs to the bank. The stockholders have no proprietorship in it or proprietary dominion over it. The property thus acquired, credits of various kinds, and cash and cash items in the vault, constitute the bank’s assets or resources, sometimes spoken of in an economic way as its capital. They have all been acquired through the uses to which the original capital stock and its products have been put, but they are not capital stock. Capital stock is still and always the original fund subscribed by the stockholders at the inception of the organization, and stands as a liability on the books of the bank, instead of as an asset. The bank makes some money. Profits belong to the corporation, and can be disposed of by the board of directors only; not by the stockholders. The stockholders have no property in profits until the directors have declared a dividend. In order to create a fund to meet unforeseen contingencies and unusual losses, the bank does not distribute all the profits among the stockholders, but retains some of them. The fund so created is designated surplus. Profits not set aside as surplus or distributed in dividends are undivided profits. Surplus and undivided profits are the property of the bank. As the names indicate, they are not capital stock, but are something besides capital stock. After paying 'for the number of shares of capital stock which he has subscribed, the stockholder’s right to claim money or property from the bank and its business is limited to sharing in such dividends as may be declared by the board of directors out of profits, and to sharing in the distribution of the assets of the bank when it winds up its affairs, after depositors and all other creditors have been satisfied. This right attaches to and is proportionate to the number of shares of capital stock which the stockholder owns. His shares are his personal property,' and they may be bought and sold as other personal prop[339]*339erty, by the observance of certain formalities. They may be willed away, and in case of intestacy pass to his administrator as a part of his personal estate. He cannot sell or will away any part of the money or property which -belongs to the corporation.

The foregoing explanation will serve quite as well for national banks and loan companies as for state banks.. It is as simple and. as elementary as it can be made, so much so that it seems extraneous to a judicial opinion. It may be helpful, however, to inexperienced assessors, county clerks, and county boards of equalization, and perhaps others. There are indications that the legislative mind was not perfectly clear on the subject.

The state was admitted into the Union before the national bank act was passed by congress.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 P. 33, 102 Kan. 334, 1918 Kan. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-moon-kan-1918.