National Bank of N.J. v. Division of Tax Appeals

67 A.2d 458, 2 N.J. 570, 1949 N.J. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 30, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 67 A.2d 458 (National Bank of N.J. v. Division of Tax Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of N.J. v. Division of Tax Appeals, 67 A.2d 458, 2 N.J. 570, 1949 N.J. LEXIS 289 (N.J. 1949).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

The primary question is the interpretation to be given R. S. 54:9-4 as amended by chapter 69, P. L. 1940. The secondary question is whether an appeal lies.

The controversy is about the valuation placed upon the common stock of the National Bank of New Jersey by the Middlesex County Board of Taxation for the purpose of assessing those shares, for taxation and arises out of the fact that the retirable value of the preferred stock of the bank is double the par value of that stock. In arriving at the value of the common stock it was necessary, as will presently be more explicitly stated, to deduct from the assets of the bank the value of the preferred stock. The assessing authorities made the deduction by using the par value of the preferred stock, a method of calculation which was approved in the judgment under appeal. It is the contention of the appellant that the deduction should have been at the retirable value.

Pertinent portions of the controlling statute follows:

“54:9-2. The shares of the common capital stock * * * shall be assessed and taxed according to their true value, to be determined in accordance with the provisions of sections 54:9-4 and 54:9-9 of this title. * * *
' “54:9-4. The value of each share of common stock of each bank shall be ascertained and determined by adding the amount of its capital, surplus and undivided profits and deducting therefrom the' assessed value of its real property, including in such deduction the assessed value of all real property owned by a corporation all the stock of which corporation is owned by such bank, and also deducting therefrom an amount equal to the aggregate par or retireable value ' of all classes of the issued and outstanding preferred stock of such bank, and by dividing the result by the number of its shares of common stock outstanding, it being the intention that the shares of preferred stock and the capital represented thereby shall not be assessed or taxed; nor shall there be assessed or taxed any stock issued to former unpaid depositors of the bank while held to evidence their right to repayment under any plan of reopening or rehabitation approved by the Commissioner of Banking and Insurance. No deduc *573 tion oi’ exemption shall be allowed or made from the value determined as provided in this section.
“54:9-9. Each county board of taxation shall * * * ascertain * * * . * * :¡: >¡s # * *
“(h) The true value of a single common share of each (bank), determined in accordance with the provisions of section 54:9-4 of this title; and
“(i) The amount of tax levied upon the common capital stock of each at the uniform rate.”

There were two classes of preferred stock, “A” and “B,” issued under agreement with the Eeconstruction Finance Corporation following the national bank holiday of 1933. The Eeconstruction Finance Corporation subscribed for the issue of preferred stock “A” consisting of 500,000 shares with an original par value, which was also its retirable value, of $15 each, amounting to a total of $750,000. Others, presumably directors of the bank, subscribed for 10,000 shares of preferred stock “B,” each share having an original par value, which was also its retirable value, of $50, amounting to a total of $500,000. Thus, on the completion of those steps, preferred Class “A” stock had a par and retirable value of $15, and Class “B” preferred stock had a par and retirable value of $50; and all of that stock represented money actually paid to the bank in the same amount as consideration for the issue. In 1937, the Comptroller of the Currency suggested that the bank charge off its books certain assets which had resulted in losses. Thereupon, with the consent of Eeconstruction Finance Corporation, the Articles of Association of the bank were amended so that the .par value of preferred stock “A” was reduced from $15 a share to $7.50 a share and the par value of preferred stock “B" from $50 a share to $25 a share, biit the retirable value of both classes of preferred stock was retained as theretofore, not only as the amount to be paid on the call of the stock for retirement but also as a priority over the common stock in the event of liquidation, dissolution or winding up. The reduction of the par value of the stock did not alter the fact that twice the new par value had been paid in actual money to the bank for the stock and that the holders of the preferred stock retained their priority in the *574 capital moneys of the bank, in the full amount of the sum paid, over the holders of the common stock. Inter sese, prior rights were lodged with those who, in the bank crisis, came in with fresh capital; in this instance, the holders of preferred stock. They were, and are, entitled to the first cut from the loaf; and since there is but one loaf, it stands to reason that what the common stockholders are entitled to receive from the capital assets is reduced by that much. The banking authorities considered it essential to sound banking practice that a changed front should be presented to bank customers, but at the same time that the equities as between the classes of those who were the bank Owners should be preserved. It is to be remembered that the disputed assessment is upon the common stock, not upon the bank and specifically not upon the preferred stock or the capital represented thereby. This is so notwithstanding the bank may, R. S. 54:9-14, and did in this case, request that the assessment be made to and in the name of the bank instead of to and in the names of the individual shareholders. The obligation upon the bank is optional with the bank; failing that optional assumption, the assessment is against the individual shares and is a lien thereon.

Thus the aggregate retirable value of both classes of the preferred stock became equal to double the par value thereof. Thereafter there were reductions in the outstanding stock of both classes to the extent that on December 31, 1945, the aggregate par value of outstanding class “A” stock amount to $150,000 and of class “B” stock amounted to $168,750, accomplished by retiring certain blocks of the preferred stock on payment of its retirable value, that is, double its par value. On January 4, 1946, the appellant bank, in compliance with R. S. 54:9-5, filed with the Middlesex County Board of Taxation its annual statement disclosing the bank’s capital structure. The Board of Taxation calculated from the figures shown thereon that the value of the common stock was $689,705.14. The appellant bank contends that the last named figure should have been $370,955.14. The difference is due to the varying methods of computation already explained.

*575 The source of R. S. 54:9—2 et seq., was chapter 265, P. L. 1918. Section

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Bluebook (online)
67 A.2d 458, 2 N.J. 570, 1949 N.J. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-nj-v-division-of-tax-appeals-nj-1949.