Foster v. Stevens

63 Vt. 175
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 63 Vt. 175 (Foster v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Stevens, 63 Vt. 175 (Vt. 1890).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

TYLER, J.

The most important question that arises in the case is whether or not the plaintiffs Eastern Townships Bank stock is taxable in this State. R. L. 267 requires that all real and personal estate shall, except as otherwise provided, be set in the list at one per cent of its value in money on the first day of April of the year of its appraisal. Section 283 provides that shares of [180]*180stock in banks shall be set in the list like other personal estate to the owner thereof, in the town where he resides, if he resides in 'this State. Therefore, this property should bear its proportion of the burden of taxation, unless it falls within the exemption of the second division of section 270, R. L., which is as follows: “Shares ■of stock in a corporation situated in another state, when all the stock of such 'corporation is taxed in such state, to the holders, whether residing within or without such state, or when the corporation is taxed in such state for all its stock.”

It appears by the agreed statement that the plaintiff’s shares of stock were not taxed in Canada. The law of the Province of Quebec imposes a direct tax upon banks and certain other corporations and takes no notice of the individual shareholders for the purpose of taxation. Act 45 Victoria, Cap. 22, is entitled, “An act to impose certain direct taxes on certain commercial corporations.” Section one enumerates the corporations which shall annually pay the several taxes specified in section three, in order to provide for the exigencies of the public service, and includes banks in the enumeration. Section three reads: “The annual taxes, imposed upon and payable by the commercial corporations mentioned and specified in section one of this act, shall be as follows:

I. BANKS.

(a) “ Five hundred dollars when the paid up capital of the bank is five hundred thousand dollars or less than that sum; one thousand dollars when the paid up capital is from five hundred thousand dollars to one million dollars ; and an additional sum of two hundred dollars for each million or fraction of a million dollars of the paid up capital from one million dollars to three million dollars; and a further additional sum of one hundred dollars for each million or fraction of a million dollars of the paid up capital over three million dollars.

{!>) “An additional tax of one hundred dollars for each office or place of business in the cities of Montreal or Quebec,'and of twenty dollars for each office or place of business in every other place.”

[181]*181The above act was passed by the legislature of the Province of Quebec, May 27, 1882, and was operative upon the Eastern Townships Bank, which was located in Sherbrooke, in that Province, and doing business there with a capital of one million five hundred thousand dollars. This bank has been taxed and paid its taxes each year since the passage of the act, in compliance with its requirements.

No question can now be raised but that the legislature had authority to pass the act. It derived its power to legislate from the British North American Act of 1867, by which the Dominion of Canada was formed. That act provides that in each Province the legislature may exclusively make laws in relation to matters coming within the classes of subjects enumerated, that is to say, Direct taxation within the Province in order to the raising of a revenue for Provincial purposes.”

This authority of the legislature and the right -of the government to collect taxes under the act was contested by certain banks and other corporations in several suits, which finally passed by appeal to the Privy Council of England, where it was held, sustaining the decree of the Queen’s Bench, that the tax imposed was not a tax upon any commodity which the banks dealt in and could sell at an enhanced price to their customers; that it was not a tax on their profits nor on their several transactions ; but that it was a tax of a direct lump sum, assessed by simple reference to their paid up capital and their place of business.

The plaintiff, in the year 1888, was a resident and taxpayer in the town of Derby, in this State, and the owner of one hum dred shares of stock in this bank, which the listers of that town set to him with his other personal estate in the grand list, so that the same was assessed for taxes that year. The question is, whether the payment of the annual tax by the bank to the Canadian government brings the case within the exemption provided by our R. L. 270, above quoted.

There are but three kinds of taxation to which corporations [182]*182•can be subjected, namely, upon their real and personal property, upon their franchises and upon their capital stock. A reference to the Canadian statute shows that this tax was imposed upon corporations without any reference to the amount or value of their property, or its use, capacity or productiveness. It is almost equally clear that it was not designed as a franchise tax, a tax upon the privilege of carrying on business under corporate organizations within the Province. Generally when the latter tax is imposed means are adopted to ascertain the value of the franchise as indicated by the amount of business done by the corporation taxed. In this case the Provincial Legislature graduated its taxation. of corporations, not according to the value of their corporate franchise, nor the amount of their business, but solely according to the amount of their paid up capital.

Capital and capital stock are in legal intentment synonymous, and are used in legislative acts as equivalent terms, though strictly not of the same meaning. It is said in 1 Desty on Taxation, 353, that capital and capital stock are in legal intentment synonymous, and are used in legislative acts as equivalent terms, though strictly not of the same meaning ; that capital stock means, not shares of stock either separately or in the aggregate, but it is intended to designate the property of the corporation subject to taxation, not in separate parcels, but in a homogeneous unity. In Tennessee v. Whitworth, 117 U. S. 129, somewhat different language is used. ■ Chief Justice Waite speaks of the money paid in by subscribers for the shares of the capital stock as constituting the capital of the corporation, although the stock created by such subscription and payment was the property of the several holders of the shares; also of the aggregate of the subscriptions making the aggregate of the stock, and each subscriber owning that part of the stock which his shares represent. He says that as capital it belongs to the corporation, but as stock it belongs to the holders of the' shares into which the capital is divided. In that case the capital stock of the railroad company was exempt by its charter [183]*183from taxation, and it was lieid tliat the shares were for that reason also exempt.

Courts and law-writers doubtless mean the same thing; they only differ in forms of expression. Though the capital stock of a corporation is produced by the payment of subscriptions for shares, the aggregate of shares and capital stock are not identical. When the capital is divided into shares and sold the corporation ceases to be the owner of them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Vt. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-stevens-vt-1890.