New Orleans Securities Co. v. City of New Orleans

139 So. 635, 173 La. 1097, 1932 La. LEXIS 1602
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 4, 1932
DocketNo. 31442.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 139 So. 635 (New Orleans Securities Co. v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Orleans Securities Co. v. City of New Orleans, 139 So. 635, 173 La. 1097, 1932 La. LEXIS 1602 (La. 1932).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

There appears on the tax rolls of the state and of the city of New Orleans, as a basis for the taxes of 1930, an assessment against plaintiff, described as credits, bills receivable, judgments, etc., amounting to $355,000. The purpose of this suit is to cancel the assessment on both rolls as illegal.

In the year named, plaintiff filed with the Louisiana tax commission a report showing credits, consisting of bills and accounts receivable, amounting to $436,190, and bills and aceo'unts payable, amounting to $875,993. It is obvious that the bills payable are more than sufficient to offset the bills and accounts receivable. Plaintiff attached a copy of the re'port to its return to the board of assessors of the parish of Orleans. This was done on February 18, 1930. Of the bills payable, approximately the sum of $772,000 was payable to the New Orleans Bank & Trust Company for loans made by it to plaintiff, and approximately $100,000 for a loan made to plaintiff by a New York bank.

The Louisiana tax commission refused to authorize the offset of the bills receivable by the bills payable, because the bills pay-, able to the New Orleans and New York banks were not subject to taxation and were not-assessed, and therefore to permit the offset would be granting, in effect, an exemption, from taxation, not authorized, but rather prohibited, by the Constitution of this state.

The assessment is governed by Act No. 24 of 1918 (Ex. Sess.), page 35, in connection with which must be considered section 4 of article 10 of the Constitution of 1921, as amended in 1926, the amendment appearing at the close of the acts of 1926, on page 17 of the constitutional amendments of 1926. There must also be considered, in connection with the act of 1918, article 230 of the Constitution of 1913, under which the act of 1918 was passed, and incidentally Act -No. 14 of 1917 (Ex. Sess.). Act No. 24 of 1918, Ex. Sess., omitting the repealing clause, reads as follows, to wit:

“All credits, including open accounts, bills receivable, judgments and all promissory notes not exempt from taxation shall be as-. sessed in the same manner as all other personal property, but shall be off-set and lessened by the actual bona fide accounts payable, bills payable and other liabilities of a similar character and which are not exempt from taxation, of the corporation, partnership, firm or individual in whose name the said credits are assessed, provided, that any indebtedness due by branch houses or subsidiary corporations to the parent company *1101 or corporation, or by corporations, the majority of whose capital stock is owned and controlled by another corporation, or by its stockholders, engaged in the same business, due to that other corporation so owning its capital stock, shall not be so deducted, and, provided further that the provisions of this act shall not apply to the assessment of banks and trust companies.” (Italics ours.)

The section of the Constitution of 1921, which must be considered in connection with Act No. 24 of 1918 (Ex. Sess.), namely, section 4 of article 10, as amended in 1926, contains many exemptions from taxation. That part of the section, which has any bearing whatever on the assessment reads as follows:

“The following property, and no other, shall be exempt from taxation: * * *
“Cash on hand or on deposit; loans or other obligations secured by mortgage on property located exclusively in the State of Louisiana, and the notes or other evidence thereof ; loans by life insurance companies to policyholders, secured solely by their policies; loans by homestead associations to their members, secured solely by stock of such associations; debts duel for merchandise or other articles of commerce or for services; obligations of the State or its political subdivisions. * * *”

The act of 1918 must also be considered in connection with the Constitution of 1913, for it was under that Constitution that the act was passed. The Constitution of 1913 contains an article, namely, article 230, which, as far as pertinent, reads:

“The following shall be exempt from taxation, and no other, viz.: * * * There shall also be exempt, from taxation, loans made upon the security of mortgages granted upon real estate situated in this State, as well as the mortgages granted to secure said loans, and the notes, bonds or other written instruments evidencing the said loans, whether in the hands of the mortgagee, or his or their transferees; and all loans made by life insurance companies to their policyholders, upon the sole security of policies held by the borrower in the company making the loans, as well as all notes or other written instruments, evidencing such loans; provided, that in the case of loans upon policies of life insurance, as aforesaid, the rate of - interest charged upon such loans does not exceed five per cent (5%) per annum discount.”

By Act No. 52 of 1914, adopted by the people, as a constitutional amendment in November of that year, there was also added to these exemptions all money in hand or on deposit, and loans made by homestead associations or societies to their members, secured by stock of the association or societies. Long’s Compilation of Constitutions of Louisiana, p. 344.

It is obvious that, since the Constitution of 1913, under which the act of 1918 was passed, specifically names the property that shall be exempt from taxation, and expressly excludes all other property from exemption, the act so far as it may conflict with that instrument was unconstitutional when passed, and, if it does so conflict, is still unconstitutional. For a similar reason, it is obvious that, if the act, in any respect, conflicts with the Constitution of 1921, it is to that extent repealed by that instrument, provided the conflict is as to a provision of the Constitution not requiring legislation to enforce it. Const. 1921, § 1, art. 22. The Constitution of 1913, as does that of 1921, prohibits the Legislature from adding to the exemptions granted.

The clause in the first part of "the act, reading, “all credits, including open accounts, bills receivable, judgments, and all *1103 promissory notes not exempt from taxation,” meant, when passed, all such property, not exempt from taxation, under the Constitution of 1913, which was then in force. The clause, following later on in the act, which reads, “but shall be off-set and lessened by the actual bona fide accounts payable, bills payable and other liabilities of a similar character and which are not exempt from taxation,” meant, when the act was passed, such indebtedness, not exempt from taxation, under the Constitution of 1913, as credits of those to whom the indebtedness is due. Therefore, there is no conflict, as to these clauses; between the act, and the Constitution, and hence the act appears to be constitütiónai. By force of the Constitution of 1921, which, so far as relates to exemptions, is self-acting, the act now means, as relates to exemptions in both instances, the exemptions which exist under the Constitution of 1921.

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 635, 173 La. 1097, 1932 La. LEXIS 1602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-securities-co-v-city-of-new-orleans-la-1932.