Mayor of Westminster v. Westminster Savings Bank

48 A. 34, 92 Md. 62, 1900 Md. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 7, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 A. 34 (Mayor of Westminster v. Westminster Savings Bank) 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 Westminster v. Westminster Savings Bank, 48 A. 34, 92 Md. 62, 1900 Md. LEXIS 5 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The appellant is a municipal corporation having power under its charter to tax for municipal purposes all property, within its corporate limits, which is subject to assessment for State and county taxes. In the attempted exercise of this power the appellant levied a tax for the years 1896, 1897 and 1898 upon the real estate of the appellee, which is a savings bank, and also upon its securities consisting of stocks, bonds, bills receivable and j udgments in its favor.

The appellee, having paid the tax of one-fourth of one per cent on the total amount of its deposits imposed on it by sec. 86 of Art. 81 of the Code, also paid the municipal tax on its real estate, but refused to pay that levied upon its securities. The appellant thereupon brought the present suit to recover the municipal tax levied upon the securities.

The appellee demurred to the declaration and, its demurrer having been overruled, it set up by pleas as a defense to the action the payment by it of the tax of one-fourth of one per cent on its deposits and of the municipal tax on its real estate, and in its pleas averred that the securities which the appellant sought to tax consisted of investments purchased with the deposits on which it had already paid the tax of one-fourth of one per cent. To these pleas the appellant demurred and, its demurrer haviug been overruled, it filed replications asserting that the levy of the taxes sued for was not based or made upon the amount of deposits in the appellee’s custody or upon such deposits invested, and denying that the securities assessed represented solely investments of deposits, but insisting that a portion of the securities assessed represented investments of $10,000 of capital stock and $16,514 of surplus. The appellee demurred to these replications, and the Court sustained the demurrer and this appeal was taken from the order sustaining the demurrer.

*64 The main question presented by the record is whether the payment by the appellee of the tax of one-fourth of one per cent on its total deposits, relieved it from liability to taxation upon the securities in which these deposits were invested.

Sec. 86 of Art. 81 of the Code requires every savings bank to pay annually what is there designated as a franchise tax “ to the amount of one-fourth of one per centum on the total amount of deposits held by such savings bank,” and declares in unequivocal language that “ no other tax shall be laid on stick bank institution or corporation in respect to such deposits’’ but provides that its real estate shall be liable to assessment and taxation. Sec. 86A of Art. 8i, which is the Act of 1890, ch. 491, contains the provision that “ Nothing in sec. 86 of this Article relating to savings banks or savings institutions or corporations, shall be construed as granting exemption from taxation to the shares of any bank or other corporation, or to any other property taxable under the laws of this State by reason or on account of its ownership by a savings bank, institution or corporation of this State.” No such provision appeared in the law prior to the passage of the Act of 1890.

Sec. 86 of Art. 81 originated in the Act of 1847, ch- 266, and ever since the date of that Act the State has pursued the uniform policy of accepting the total amount of interest-bearing 'deposits held by savings banks as the true measure of value of the property, exclusive of real estate, on which it has required those institutions to pay taxes. During all that long period the law, with some variation in its details, has required the savings banks to annually report to an appropriate State officer their total deposits and the amount so reported has been treated as an assessment and the tax levied thereon.

This method of taxation of savings banks received the careful consideration of this Court in the case of the State v. Sterling 20 Md. 502, and it was upheld and declared to be in conformity with both the letter and spirit of the 13 th Article of the Declaration of Rights. In that case, in an able and exhaustive opinion, it was held that this system of taxation *65 “proceeds upon the theory that deposits in a savings bank, for which interest-bearing certificates have been issued, without regard to the character or form they may have assumed by investment, belong to the depositors” * * * * * and that the law “in providing for the taxation of that species of property necessarily assumes such deposits and the investments from the revenue of which the interest is payable, to be one and the same thing.” Sterlings case has been cited and relied upon in several more recent decisions.

A savings bank does not permanently retain its deposits in the form in which they are received but it invests them, for the purpose of producing a revenue with which to pay interest to its depositors, and thereafter the securities in which the investments have been made represent the deposits. When, therefore, a tax, such as the one now under consideration, is levied upon the securities so purchased by the savings bank it is in substance and essence a tax upon its deposits and falls obviously within the description “tax in respect to deposits” as used in sec. 86.

In the State v. Central Savings Bank, 67 Md. 292, the majority of the Court inclined to the view that the tax of one-fourth of one per cent of gross deposits imposed on savings banks was to be regarded as a franchise tax rather than as one upon the property in which the deposits were invested. After the decision in that case was made public, sec. 86 was so amended by the Act of 1888, ch. 242, as to call that tax a franchise tax but it is apparent that the Legislature still regarded it as a tax in respect to deposits, for the same Act introduced for the first time in sec. 86, the proviso that no other tax in respect to deposits should be laid upon savings banks. It thus becomes apparent that, whether the tax of one-fourth of one per cent on the deposits is to be regarded in the strict sense as imposed upon the deposits, the franchise or the investments, it also is a tax in respect to the deposits within the meaning of sec. 86. It therefore follows that to permit the appellant to collect from the appellee the tax now in question which was levied upon the securities in which its deposits are *66 invested would amount to a violation of the proviso contained in section 86 that no other tax shall be laid on savings banks “in respect to such deposits."

Prior to the Act of 1888, ch. 242, which designated the tax of one-fourth per cent on the deposits as a franchise tax, it had been the practice, in ascertaining the amount of deposits of savings banks to be taxed, to allow to the bank a deduction from the gross amount of deposits equal to the portion thereof invested in non-taxable securities, and the propriety of making such deduction under the law as it .then stood was upheld by both Sterling's case and that of the Central Savings Bank. The Legislature passed the Act of 1890, ch. 491, now sec.

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Related

Mayor of Baltimore v. State
65 A. 369 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1906)
Fidelity Savings Bank v. State
63 A. 484 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
48 A. 34, 92 Md. 62, 1900 Md. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-westminster-v-westminster-savings-bank-md-1900.