Jefferson Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Goldberg

626 S.W.2d 640, 1982 Mo. LEXIS 361
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 12, 1982
DocketNo. 62712
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 626 S.W.2d 640 (Jefferson Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Goldberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Goldberg, 626 S.W.2d 640, 1982 Mo. LEXIS 361 (Mo. 1982).

Opinions

SEILER, Judge.

This is a declaratory judgment action brought by more than ninety savings and loan associations1 and four individual account or deposit holders for a declaration as to the constitutionality of the intangible [641]*641property tax assessed on holders of accounts in savings and loan associations. Section 148.480, RSMo 1978. The plaintiffs include both federally and state chartered associations and deposit and account type associations. The trial court found the tax constitutional. Plaintiffs appealed to this court, which has jurisdiction because the validity of a statute of this state and construction of a revenue law are involved. Mo.Const. art. V, § 3.

Mo.Const. art. X, § 4(b) provides as follows:

Property in classes 1 [real property] and 2 [tangible personal property] and subclasses of class 2, shall be assessed for tax purposes at its value or such percentage of its value as may be fixed by law for each class and for each subclass of class 2. Property in class 3 [intangible personal property] and its subclasses shall be taxed only to the extent authorized and at the rate fixed by law for each class and subclass, and the tax shall be based on the annual yield and shall not exceed eight per cent thereof. (Emphasis added.)

As a preliminary observation, we note that class 1 and class 2 property may be assessed on a percentage of value as well as full value, but that a sharp distinction is drawn in this regard as to intangible personal property. The tax on intangible personal property is to be based only on the annual yield.

Sections 148.470-.530 provide for the taxation of accounts in savings and loan associations.2 These statutes were first adopted in 1945. H.B. 869, 1945 Mo.Laws 1919. In 1969, after savings and loan associations were authorized to accept deposits, H.B. 293, 1969 Mo.Laws 509, the legislature amended §§ 148.480, .490, and .520 slightly to define earnings as including interest (from deposits) as well as dividends (from accounts). The prior statute, § 148.480 RSMo 1959, had referred only to “dividends”.

Section 148.480 now reads:

There is hereby imposed upon each person either natural or corporate, holding personally or in trust, an account in an association, an annual tax of two percent of the taxable portion of the earnings, including dividends and interest, paid or credited by such association to such account in the preceding year. The “taxable portion” of such earnings shall be that proportion thereof which shall equal the proportion of the gross income of such association for the year derived from its intangible property, other than obligations of or guaranteed by the United States, to its entire gross income.

(Emphasis added.)

Under this statute, as respondent concedes and as the statute states, the tax is imposed on the holders, natural or corporate, of accounts or deposits in savings and loan associations and is assessed on the taxable portion of the earnings credited to the accounts. The association, however, is required to compute, withhold, and pay to the director of revenue the amounts of all taxes imposed on its members and, at the association’s option, may absorb and pay the tax without charging the same to the particular accounts of its holders. Section 148.500.1. From the record it appears that all savings and loan associations in Missouri have, since the statute was enacted, elected to absorb the tax rather than pass it on to the account holders.

Section 148.520 classifies accounts in savings and loan associations as intangible property, defines the earnings paid or credited to an account as the annual yield, and provides that the tax imposed by § 148.480 is, with certain exceptions, in lieu of all other taxes on associations.

Section 148.480, set out above, details the mechanics for computing the intangible property tax. It is assessed not on the earnings actually paid or credited to the account but only on the taxable portion of those earnings. The taxable portion is [642]*642based on a percentage which is determined by reference to the sources of the association’s income rather than to the holder’s earnings. The two percent tax rate is then applied to the taxable portion. What is being taxed are the holders’ accounts, but this tax is based on how each association earns its money.

Under the formula, the accounts will never be taxed on the basis of their annual yield. This is because the formula will inevitably produce a fraction or ratio which is less than 100%. As is shown by the exhibits in the record of some ninety associations, the gross income for the year from intangibles is always less than the entire gross income of the association. This is true because the associations have forms of income other than from intangibles which enter into the makeup of their entire gross income, such as loan fees, service fees, rentals, commissions, appraisal fees and penalties for early withdrawals. The result is, therefore, that in no instance will the tax base be the annual yield, which is defined in § 148.520 as the full amount of the earnings paid or credited to the amounts, but will instead be the product of a proper fraction applied to the annual yield.

In addition to the foregoing diminution of the tax base to less than the annual yield of the intangible property being taxed, the formula has another built in reducing effect. Depending upon whether an association has income from United States government obligations, two different formulas are used to determine the taxable portion of earnings.

Where the association does have income from United States government obligations, the formula is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
626 S.W.2d 640, 1982 Mo. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-savings-loan-assn-v-goldberg-mo-1982.