Mercantile Bank National Ass'n v. Berra

796 S.W.2d 22, 1990 Mo. LEXIS 88, 1990 WL 132058
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 11, 1990
DocketNo. 72350
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 796 S.W.2d 22 (Mercantile Bank National Ass'n v. Berra) 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
Mercantile Bank National Ass'n v. Berra, 796 S.W.2d 22, 1990 Mo. LEXIS 88, 1990 WL 132058 (Mo. 1990).

Opinion

RENDLEN, Judge.

Appellants challenge the constitutionality of § 148.110, RSMo 1986, which provides that the Banking Institutions Tax shall be a substitute for the former bank shares tax and “for all taxes on all tangible and intangible personal property of all banking institutions subject to the provisions of sections 148.010 to 148.110.” The trial court found the statute valid as measured against the specifically enumerated exemptions from property taxation in Mo. Const, art. X, § 6. Because the issues involve the constitutionality of the statute, as well as the construction of the revenue laws, the cause falls within our original appellate jurisdiction. Mo. Const, art. V, § 3. We affirm.

[23]*23In January 1988, the Assessor for the City of St. Louis notified Mercantile of his intention to add to the tax rolls Mercantile’s tangible personal property not held for lease or rental to others. On May 16 of that year, the City Board of Equalization notified Mercantile of the assessment of its tangible personal property located at each of its St. Louis offices, and on May 25, Mercantile appeared to contest that assessment. The Board determined Mercantile’s property would be taxed as assessed and Mercantile, submitting a tax return under protest for its $396,857.88 liability, then filed a petition for review in the circuit court of the City of St. Louis, naming as defendants the Board, the city, the Assessor and the Collector of Revenue. The trial court reversed the order of assessment, accepting Mercantile’s claim that it was exempted from personal property taxation by § 148.110.

To place the issues in perspective, we briefly review the history of Missouri bank taxing laws. In 1835, Missouri banks both state and national were taxed by means of a share tax, Revenue Act of 1835, art. I, § 1, RSMo 1835 at 529. National banks then enjoyed immunity from state taxation, and the share tax, which operated upon the shareholder though collected by the banks, was the only permissible means of reaching them. See Third National Bank of Louisville v. Stone, 174 U.S. 432, 434, 19 S.Ct. 759, 760, 43 L.Ed. 1035 (1899). Because Missouri consistently maintained a policy of taxing state banks in the same manner as those operating under national charters, thus maintaining tax parity between the two, see State ex rel. Miller v. Shryack, 179 Mo. 424, 78 S.W. 808, 812 (1904), the share tax also operated upon state banks, which were otherwise spared taxation. That the state banks, like the national banks, were exempted from personal property taxation is demonstrated by the following excerpt from the statutes of 1899:

Sec. 9152. Personal property of business and manufacturing corporations, assessed where. All personal property of business and manufacturing corporations shall be taxable in the county in which such property may be situated on the 1st day of June of the year for which such taxes may be . assessed ... This section shall not apply to railroad or banking corporations.

§ 9152, RSMo 1899 (emphasis added.)1 The restrictions on national bank taxation were gradually relaxed over the years and the state taxation plan was amended accordingly (for example, taxation of banks’ real property was permitted). In State ex rel. United States Bank v. Gehner, 319 Mo. 1048, 5 S.W.2d 40, 43 (1928), the bank taxation mechanism was aptly described in this manner:

Under the scheme, or system, of taxation in effect in this state, banks (whether they be domestic or national) pay taxes only upon the assessed value of the real estate corporately owned by them. All personal property, of whatsoever kind or nature, corporately owned by banks, domestic or national, located in this state, is not taxed directly, but is taxed indirectly by levying a tax against the shares of the capital stock of each bank.

See also State ex rel. Koeln v. Lesser, 237 Mo. 310, 141 S.W. 888, 892 (1911). Changes in federal regulation of national bank taxation and in the state property tax system prompted the framers of the 1945 Constitution to promulgate art. X § 4(c), which provided that the General Assembly could substitute another form of taxation for the tax on bank shares. The text of art. X, § 4(c) reads as follows:

Section 4(c). Assessment, levy, collection and distribution of tax on intangibles. All taxes on property in class 3 [intangible personal property] and its subclasses, and the tax under any other form of taxation substituted by the general assembly for the tax on bank shares, shall be assessed, levied and collected by the state and returned as provided by law, less two percent for collection, to the counties and other political subdivisions of their origin, in proportion to the respective local rates of levy.

(Emphasis added.)

[24]*24At that time federal law allowed, in addition to an ad valorem tax on realty, four modes of state taxation on national banks, including (1) share tax, (2) inclusion of stock dividends in the taxable income of the shareholder, (3) income tax on the earnings of the bank, and (4) franchise tax based upon the bank’s income. Against this backdrop, art. X, § 4(c) was adopted in the Constitution of 1945 as part of an overhaul of the state’s personal property tax structure. The legislature promptly responded with the adoption of the Bank Tax Law of 1946, codified at § 148.030, RSMo, which provided for a franchise tax to be exacted on each bank at a rate fixed at seven percent of its net income, minus the greater of twenty-five dollars or one-twentieth of one percent of the par value of the taxpayer’s shares and surplus employed in this state. Section 148.110 specifically provided:

It is the purpose and intent of the general assembly to substitute the tax provided by sections 148.010 to 148.110 for the tax on bank shares which was imposed by section 10959, RSMo 1939, and for all taxes on all tangible and intangible personal property of all banking institutions subject to the provisions of sections 148.010 to 148.110.

Although the constitutionality of § 148.110 has not previously been challenged, the dicta in our cases indicate its validity has been tacitly assumed. In General American Life Insurance Co. v. Bates, 363 Mo. 143, 249 S.W.2d 458 (banc 1952), we held that the premium tax on insurance companies imposed “in lieu of” all other taxes on their intangible personal property, § 148.370, RSMo 1949, was an unconstitutional exemption from property taxation. There the taxing authorities sought to bolster their argument by referring to the substitution clause of Mo. Const, art. 10, § 4(c) (“the tax under any other form of taxation substituted by the general assembly for the tax on bank shares”), arguing that the legislature was empowered to enact laws providing substitutes for intangible personal property tax. The Bates Court noted that art. 10, § 4(c) was adopted in light of the history of the taxation of state and national banks and was “not an assumption of the existence of general authority in the lawmakers to enact substitute tax legislation in contravention of specific constitutional limitations.” Id. 249 S.W.2d at 465.

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796 S.W.2d 22, 1990 Mo. LEXIS 88, 1990 WL 132058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-bank-national-assn-v-berra-mo-1990.