Hager v. Citizens' Nat. Bank

105 S.W. 403, 127 Ky. 192, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 22, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 105 S.W. 403 (Hager v. Citizens' Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hager v. Citizens' Nat. Bank, 105 S.W. 403, 127 Ky. 192, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 130 (Ky. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

These two appeals, presenting the same questions, will he disposed of together. The pleadings and evidence in each case being alike, we will use and refer, in the course of this opinion, to the record in the Case of Citizens’ Bank of Lebanon.

The appellee by petition in equity sought to enjoin the appellants, who constitute the state board of valuation and assessment, from assessing its shares of stock for the year 1906 in the manner contemplated by the board, or from making any final assessment for that year, or, if that relief could not be granted, that it be enjoined from making any assessment without deducting the* value of the United States bonds held by it; the relief really sought being to require the board of valuation and assessment to deduct the value of the United States bonds held by the bank. The petition charged 'that between Sep[197]*197tember 1,1905, and March 1,1906, the bank under and pursuant to an act approved March 21, 1904, made and. delivered to the Auditor of Public Accounts of the Commonwealth a report made in conformity to the act, furnishing all the information required by it, including the amount of the United States bonds owned by the bank. It owned on September 1, 19Q5, United States bonds to the amount of $75,000, which bonds had been purchased out of its capital stock and surplus. It further averred that the act of 1904 was repealed by an act of March, 1906, which went into effect on June 11, 1906; but that the state board of valuation and assessment on June 12, 1906, the day following the date when the act of 1906 became a law, made .an assessment of the property of the bank upon its shares of stock, and, after ascertaining the value of its shares, deducted therefrom the amount of tangible property which was locally assessed by the assessing authorities of the county in which the bank was located, found the balance of its property to be $123,634. It avers that this assessment made by the board of valuation and assessment was wholly without authority in this: “(1) That it was made by the board of valuation and assessment on June 12, 1906, after it had lost all power to make any assessment under the report which had been theretofore filed on account of the repeal of the law under which the report was made. (2) If the plaintiff is mistaken in this, said report is erroneous, in that it wholly fails to credit the plaintiff by the amount of government bonds owned by it and which were shown by the report aforesaid'; ’ ’

With the petition is filed an exhibit that illustrates the method pursued by the board of valuation and [198]*198assessment in assessing the shares of stock. It reads as follows: ■

“Frankfort, Ky., .June 12, 1906.
“Citizens’ National Bank of Lebanon, Ky.
“Yon are hereby notified that the state board of valuation and assessment after due consideration of the report made to the Auditor September 1,1905, has fixed the value of the shares in your bank as follows, to-wit.:
Capital stock........ $100,000 00
Surplus ......................... 25,000 00
Undivided profits ................. 3,500 00
Total assets ..................-... 128,500 00
Number of shares................ 1,000 00
Value per share .................■ 128 00
Total value of shares............. 128,500 00
Tangible property deducted....... 5,136 00
Net amount subject to taxation.. ■.. 123,364 00
Amount of tax................... 612 82

To this petition appellants answered in two paragraphs; the first one being merely a traverse of the petition, the second averring that the assessment made by the board of valuation and assessment was duly authorized and the values fixed by it as shown in the exhibit correct. Afterwards an amended answer was filed, setting up “that the defendants, as the board of valuation and assessment, assessed and fixed the taxable value of the shares of all national banks, state banks, and trust companies in the State of Kentucky on June 12, 1906, and that said valuation so fixed and said assessment were made under an act of the General Assembly which became effective on June 11, 1906 (Laws 1903, p. 134, c. 22, subd. 2); that said board in arriving at the taxable value and assessment of the shares of all national banks and [199]*199state banks and trnst companies took the capital, surplus and undivided profits of said national banks and state banks and trust companies, and from that deducted the real estate owned by said national banks, state banks, and trust companies, and that left tbe total value of said banks and trust companies, which were assessed by the state board of valuation and assessment, and that said board used exactly the same method in the valuation and" assessment of. all shares of national banks, state banks, and trust companies in the State. ” In a reply, appellee denied that “the valuation and assessment in controversy were fixed or made under an act of the General Assembly which became effective June 11, 1906; and, further, that even if the act of 1906 was in force and operative as to the valuation and assessment for the year 1906, and it was the legislative intent that said valuation and assessment should be made under the same, yet the said act did not authorize any assess^ment or valuation of the shares of stock in the plaintiff bank, because, while said act purports to provide for an assessment of the shares of all banks and trust companies, it really, in substance and effect, provides for a system of taxation of the assets themselves of all banks and trust companies, and is therefore unconstitutional and void as to national banks as being in conflict with the provisions of the act of Congress known as the ‘National Banking Act’ (Act June 3, 1864, c. 106, 13 Stat. 99 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3454]), and states that the method of assessment which was made by the board was an assessment of the assets and property of the bank, and that, by the adoption of this method, the board assessed the plaintiff’s assets and property for taxation.” No responsive pleading was filed to this reply, [200]*200nor was it necessary there should have been, as the reply presented simply a. law question, the correct solution of which depends upon the proper construction of the act of 1906; that’is, whether it provides for the assessment of the shares of stock or the capital stock and assets of the bank.

The deposition of the Auditor of Public Accounts, who is chairman of the board of valuation and assess- • ment, was taken, and from it it appears: (1) That the board of valuation and assessment feed the taxable valuation of the shares of national banks, state banks, and trust companies for 1906 on June 12, 1906. (2) That in arriving at the taxable valuation of the shares of this bank the board took the capital, surplus, and undivided profits, and from that deducted the real estate owned and assessed by it, which left the total value of the shares which were assessed by it. (3) That exactly the same method was pursued in ascertaining the value of the shares and fixing the assessment of state banks, national banks, and trust companies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 403, 127 Ky. 192, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hager-v-citizens-nat-bank-kyctapp-1907.