Owensboro National Bank v. Department of Revenue

394 S.W.2d 461, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 183
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 24, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 394 S.W.2d 461 (Owensboro National Bank v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owensboro National Bank v. Department of Revenue, 394 S.W.2d 461, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 183 (Ky. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

DAVIS, Commissioner.

The appellant bank challenges the legality of the formula used in evaluating the bank’s stock for ad valorem tax purposes. KRS 136.280(2). The assessment involved is for the tax year 1963, so that all matters arose and were adjudicated below prior to our decision in Russman v. Luckett, Ky., 391 S.W.2d 694.

Fundamentally, two challenges of the evaluation process were made by appellant: (1) It was not appropriate for the assessor to compute the aggregate value of the bank’s assets by including the 100% cash value of its real estate among the gross assets, followed by adjustment of the gross value of all assets by subtraction of the lower assessed value of the real estate, and (2) the value of the shares (after deducting the 100% value of the real estate) should have been equalized with all tangible property in Daviess County by using only 35% of its true value. The trial court determined these points adversely to appellant, hence this appeal.

Determination of the issues requires construction of KRS 136.270, 136.280, and certain other related statutory provisions.

KRS 136.270(1) imposes an “annual tax of fifty cents on each one hundred dollars of their fair cash value” on the shares of stock of state and national banks doing business in Kentucky. The statute requires that the tax shall be paid by the bank “on behalf of the owners of the shares of stock.” Other subsections of KRS 136.270 provide for local taxes on such stock at a rate of twenty cents for the county and city, respectively, and at a rate of forty cents for the school district in which the bank is located. Before us is the levy as respects the state and county taxes, or an aggregate of seventy cents per hundred dollars of evaluation. It has been adjudicated, and the parties recognize, that the tax is one upon the stockholders, not on the bank. Board of Supervisors of City of Frankfort v. State National Bank of Frankfort, 300 Ky. 620, 189 S.W.2d 942.

KRS 136.280(1) requires each bank to make an annual- report to the Department of Revenue and to the assessing officer of the county, city or taxing district in which it is located. The statute enumerates the details of information required to be furnished in the report- Among the matters to be reported is the value of all tangible property located in this state.

KRS 136.280(2) provides that the assessing officer- of the county, city or taxing district in which the bank is situated shall assess its shares for taxation for state, county, city and taxing district purposes. This section further provides: “Each bank and trust company may have deducted from the total valuation placed on its shares the assessed value of its tangible property in this state.”

KRS 136.280(3) requires the bank to list its tangible property with the assessing officer, who is then to “make out and return the assessment to the proper authorities of the county and city” in- the manner and at the time provided for the returns of assessments for personal property therein.

KRS 136.280(4) provides:

“The equalization, collection, penalties and laws relating thereto provided for other personal property in the county, city or taxing district shall apply to the collection of the taxes provided' for in this section. Any county, city or taxing district may collect such taxes by suit.!’

The appellant insists that the rationale of Luckett v. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., Ky., 331 S.W.2d 879, controls this case and impels, a result contrary to that reached below. We are unable to accept this contention. In Luckett it was held that for purposes of a franchise tax, on the corporation — as opposed to an ad valorem tax on the bank stock in this case — the [464]*464100% value of tangible property must be deducted from the 100% value of the al-locable capital stock. The true basis for that opinion rests in the fact that use of the “assessed” value (less than 100% cash value) for the tangible property, when subtracting the tangible value from the al-locable stock value, resulted in imposing more than 100% value on the allocable stock.

But the reasons for the Luckett decision are not present in the case at bar. Here the tax is not on the bank, but on the stockholders. We think there may be no doubt that the legislature could have imposed a tax on the bank stock at its fair cash value, without any provision for deducting anything for the value of the bank’s tangible property. Indeed, the tax as imposed by KRS 136.270 is a tax on the “fair cash value” of the shares of stock. The assessing officer is directed to assess the shares of the bank, and, we think as a matter of grace only, it is provided that the “assessed” value of the tangible property of the bank may be deducted from the total valuation placed on all the shares.

See Board of Sup’rs of City of Frankfort v. State National Bank of Frankfort, 300 Ky. 620, 189 S.W.2d 942, for a full discussion of the factors to be considered in determining the fair cash value of bank stock under KRS 136.270(1). It is to be observed that the determination of the fair cash value in the present case was based upon a formula, in which various factors were considered. But as is pointed out in the State National Bank of Frankfort opinion, just mentioned, it is appropriate to determine the fair cash value of the bank stock on actual sales of the stock, coupled with considerations of other elements entering into fair market value of the shares. In the cited case,, the “book” value, according to the assessing officer, was $228.62 per share, but the court found that the fair cash value was only $120 per share. It is apparent, therefore, that the fair cash value of bank stock is not controlled by mere addition of the value of the bank’s assets — whether they be the 100% cash value of tangible property, or various other assets, including good will, et cetera.

Thus, we return to consider the meaning of KRS 136.280

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394 S.W.2d 461, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owensboro-national-bank-v-department-of-revenue-kyctapp-1965.