First National Bank v. Smith

65 Ill. 44
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 65 Ill. 44 (First National Bank v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court 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. Smith, 65 Ill. 44 (Ill. 1872).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAllister

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity exhibited in the circuit court of La Salle county, by the First National Bank of Mendota, against the tax collector of the township of Mendota, in which the bank was situated, to restrain the collection of the taxes assessed for the year 1871, against the stockholders of the bánk, upon their respective shares of stock. The defendant demurred to the bill. The court" sustained the demurrer, and no amendment of the bill being proposed, it was dismissed. The complainant appealed to this court.

The ground upon which the bill seeks to restrain the collection of these taxes is, that the taxes are levied in La Salle county against all the shareholders, while only a part of them reside in that county, and the others reside in Bureau county. The position taken is, that there is no power to levy the tax against the shareholders residing in Bureau county, because their shares must be considered as having their situs only in the county where the holders reside. Therefore the taxes, as respected all that class, were illegal and void, and being illegal and void as to them, they were likewise as to stockholders residing in the county where the bank is located, by operation of the rule of the constitution requiring uniformity. For these reasons, and because the bank is trustee of all the stockholders, it is insisted that upon the ground of avoiding multiplicity of suits, the bill can be maintained by the bank.

The propositions upon which this bill is based, when specifically stated, are briefly these : (1) That in order to a valid tax the legislature must have power or jurisdiction over the person or property in the county where the tax is authorized to be levied. (2) That, inasmuch as a portion of the owners resided out of the county, though in the State, and the situs of their shares was at their domicile, the legislature was powerless to change that situs, so that there could be no jurisdiction of either the person or property in the county of the bank, and, therefore, as to all that class of owners, the tax was void. And, lastly, inasmuch as the tax was void in respect to owners of shares who did not reside in La Salle county, the tax was likewise, under the constitutional rule of the State requiring uniformity and equality, void in respect to those who did reside in that county.

The 41st section of the act of congress passed in 1864, expressly recognizes the right of the States to tax all shares in the stock of national banks. Notwithstanding this recognition, the right was soon denied by the banks; and the question first came before this court in the ease of the People v. Bradley, 39 Ill. 130. It was there held that the stock was taxable, as had previously been held by the court of appeals in the cases of the City of Utica v. Churchill, and Van Allen v. Supervisors, 33 N. Y. 162.

In Bradley’s case, as in the New York cases, the tax was levied upon the capital stock of the bank in the aggregate, and not upon the individual shareholders. These cases- were taken to the Supreme Court of the United States, and reversed upon the sole ground that the tax must, under the act of ■Congress, be levied upon the individual shareholders. 3 Wallace, 572; 4, ib. 459. In this mode, it was held the shares could be taxed.

In obedience to this decision of that court, our legislature, in 1867, passed an act requiring the taxes to be assessed upon the individual shareholders “ in the county, town or district where such bank or banking association is located, and not elsewhere, whether such stockholders reside in such county, town or district or not.”

Having successfully resisted the attempt to tax the stock of the bank as a corporation, as appears by the cases referred to, it is now sought to prevent taxation of the stockholders upon their shares. This language is considerately employed, and it is believed to be not too broad; because, as will be -presently seen, if the grounds now taken on behalf of the stockholders are maintainable, it will only be necessary that the stock of the various national banks in the State shall be held in the name of non-residents, in order to withdraw the shares altogether from the reach of State legislation for taxation.

Before proceeding further in this case, it should be observed, that the question involved depends entirely upon the laws of this State, and is in no manner embarrassed by any act of congress.

The 41st section of the act of congress above referred to, under which these banks are organized, required State taxes to be imposed “ at the place where the bank is located, and not elsewhere.” But by an act of Feb. 1868, congress declared these words—“place where such bank is located, etc.,” to mean “ the State in which the bank is located and not elsewhere.”

This provision places the shares in such banks under the taxing power of the State wherein the bank is located, and prohibits their being subject to State taxation elsewhere. This limitation, with the further ones that the taxation imposed should not be at a greater rate than upon other moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens of the State where made; and that the tax so imposed, under the laws of any State, upon the shares of the association authorized by that act, should not exceed the rate imposed upon the shares of any of the banks organized under the authority of the State where such association is located, constitute the only limitations by congress on the taxing power of the State where the bank is located, none of which have any application to this case. Our legislature was therefore left at liberty to impose the same tax upon the value of shares in national banks located here, which it could upon any other moneyed capital of our citizens, and fix the sities of such shares in its discretion, unless restrained by our.own constitution. We have made this reference to the acts of congress in order to show that the questions involved depend solely upon the laws of the State, and are in no respect embarrassed by any laws of congress.

We will now consider the validity of the arguments urged in favor of the exemption of stockholders of such banks located within this State, from State taxation, under the act of 1867.

The counsel for appellant cite as authority the case of the Union National Bank v. The City of Chicago, decided in 1871 in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois. We have been furnished with a copy of the opinion delivered in that case, and have given it a very careful examination. The same question now under consideration was presented there, and was decided adversely to the right of taxation upon the same grounds which are urged by counsel for appellant in the case before us. While we have great respect for the opinion of the learned district judge who decided that case, we find ourselves unable to concur either in his reasoning upon the question or the conclusion at which he arrives.

In order that the position of the court in that case, and that of the counsel for the appellant in the case before us, may be fairly stated and understood, we quote the language of the court, whose reasoning the counsel for appellant adopt as the principal foundation for their argument.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Ill. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-smith-ill-1872.