Mayor of Baltimore v. Machen

132 Md. 618
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 3, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 132 Md. 618 (Mayor of Baltimore v. Machen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Baltimore v. Machen, 132 Md. 618 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Baltimore City Court affirming the action of the State Tax Commission of Maryland, vacating and annulling the assessment made hy the Appeal Tax Court of Baltimore City for the purpose of State and City taxation for the years 1913, 1914, 1915 and 1916 upon a deposit in the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, made hy appellee’s testator, Arthur W. Alachen, in his lifetime.

By the agreed statement of facts found in the record, Arthur W. Machen, deceased, on or about June 8th, 1896, deposited with the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, a, corporation incorporated under the laws of Maryland, the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) and received for such deposit the following receipt:

“Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore,
“13 South Street,
“Baltimore, June 8th, 1896.
“Received of Mr. A. W. Machen, tweniy-five thousand dollars ($25,000) on deposit, returnable on demand.
“(Signed) Francis M. Darby,
“Treasurer.”
On the back of said receipt was endorsed the following:
“$13,000 of this has been repaid to me some time ago.
“(Signed) A. M. Machen,
“Oct. 6, 1909.”

[620]*620That Arthur W. Machen in his lifetime withdrew thirteen thousand dollars ($13,000) of said deposit, ieaving a balance of twelve thousand ($12,000) on deposit at the time of his death which occurred on December 19th, 1915, and for more than four years prior thereto. That interest at varying rates was paid by said Trust Company to said testator on said deposit, but at no time at a hig’her rate than three per cent, per annum. That the receipt remained in his possession until the time of his death, and has since been in the possession of his executors. That sometime after the payment of the thirteen thousand dollars, a portion of the deposit, the testator made in pencil in his own handwriting the entry which appears on the bach of the receipt. That the whole amount of the deposit was withdrawn by his executors, the appellees, upon the death of the testator, to wit: on or about July, 1916, and was used by them in paying pecuniary legacies and expenses.

The only question presented by this appeal is whether the above mentioned deposit is taxable under the laws of this State.

The valuation and assessment was made by the Appeal Tax Court under section 214 of Article 81 of the Code of Public General Laws of this State (Code of 1912) which is as follows:

“All bonds, certificates of indebtedness or evidence of debt in whatsoever form made or issued by any public or private corporation incorporated by this State or any other State, Territory, District or foreign country, or issued by any State (except the State of Maryland), Territory, District or foreign country not exempt from taxation by the laws of this State, and owned by residents of Maryland, shall be subject to valuation and assessment to the-owners thereof in the county or city in which such owners may respectively residé, and they shall be assessed at their actual value in the market, and such upon which no interest shall be actually paid shall not be valued at all, and upon such valuation the regular rate of taxation [621]*621for State purposes shall be paid, and there shall also be paid on such valuation thirty cents (and no more) on each one hundred dollars for county, city and municipal taxation in such county or city of this State in which the owner may reside.”

The city contends that the deposit is taxable under the aforegoing section of the Code in that the aforesaid receipt is a “certificate of indebtedness or an evidence of debt” within the meaning of the provision of the statute, and as such is taxable; and as we understand the city’s contention, the deposit would be taxable—if the acknowledgment of its receipt were evidenced by the usual certificate of deposit, or by bank pass book, or by the mere entry of such deposit upon the ledger of the bank if interest is paid on such deposit. In other words, any evidence in writing of a deposit, in whatever form it might appear, is a “certificate of indebtedness or an evidence of debt” within the meaning of the statute and taxable thereunder, as contended for by the appellant.

This construction of the statute is not the one that has been placed thereon by those whose duty it has been, since the passage of the Act in 1896, more than twenty years ago, to value and assess the taxable property included within its provisions. It was not, so far as wo are informed, until 1911 sixteen years after the statute was passed, that any doubt was entertained as to the meaning of the statute in respect to the question here raised. To such time the deposits were never regarded taxable.

In 1911 this identical question was submitted to the Circuit Court for Carroll County for its decision and the arguments there made wei"e the same as those made in this Court in the case now before ns. That Court held, however, that deposits Were not taxable and no appeal was taken therefrom.

The statute has remained the same and since that time no further attempt has been made to tax bank deposits except in some instances where it had been disclosed in the settlement of estates in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City, that [622]*622the decedent had money on deposit in hank, the city authorities, without resistance, valued and assessed the same for taxation.

In Baltimore v. Johnson, 96 Md. 737, the attempt was made to value and assess, for taxable purposesj a seat in the Baltimore Stock Exchange. In speaking of the effect of the long acquiescence in the construction of the Statute, by the city’s taxing authorities, by which a seat in that body was not held taxable, the Court, speaking through Ghieb Judge Boyd, said: “That it is not necessarily conclusive of the question, but it is an important circumstance when we remember that the language now relied on is in substance the same that has been in the statutes for so many years. The value of a seat may change from year to year, but if it is property now, within the meaning'of our tax laws, it has been during all those years. If it was, not only have the owners of those seats been placed in a position, by the construction put on the law by the tax officers, by which they omitted them from their schedules of personal property, as .provided for in section 173 of Article 81, although each swore that his schedule contained “a true, full and complete list of all- real and personal property held or belonging to me,” etc.,’ but the tax officers themselves have failed to discharge their duties. Not only the original assessors were required to add any property omitted from the schedules, but the Appeal Tax Court and assessors appointed by them are required to take steps to place unassessed property on the books. * * * We certainly can assume that all of the holders of such seats would not intentionally have violated the law in making up their schedules, and We are equally positive that the tax officers throughout all those years would not have wilfully failed to discharge their duties.

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Bluebook (online)
132 Md. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-machen-md-1918.