People Ex Rel. Morris Plan Co. v. Burke

170 N.E. 502, 253 N.Y. 85, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 803
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 11, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 170 N.E. 502 (People Ex Rel. Morris Plan Co. v. Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Morris Plan Co. v. Burke, 170 N.E. 502, 253 N.Y. 85, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 803 (N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

Cbane, J.

The State of New York for years has attempted to tax the shares of National banks in accordance with section 5219 of the United States Revised Statutes (Mason’s U. S. Code, title 12, ch. 4, § 548), which permits such taxation by the State where the bank is located, subject to the restriction that the taxation “ shall not be at a greater rate than is assessed upon other moneyed capital in the hands of individual citizens of such state coming into competition with the business of national banks.” In seeking to reach this equality of taxation, the State has met with repeated difficulty. (People ex rel. Hanover Nat. Bank v. *87 Goldfogle, 234 N. Y. 345; People ex rel. Pratt v. Goldfogle, 242 N. Y. 277; People ex rel. Broderick v. Goldfogle, 242 N. Y. 540, and similar cases, pp. 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546.) The State is between cross-fires.' Taxes are not welcomed. The National banks oppose the tax on the ground that other competing moneyed capital is favored. Corporations and investors other than National banks fight the tax on the ground that their capital does not compete with such banks, and thus whichever position the State takes, it is confronted with objections.

By the Tax Law (Laws of 1923, ch. 897; Cons. Laws, ch. 60), in force in the years 1923-1926 (§ 14), the State provided for a tax upon moneyed capital competing with National banks so that it might validate its attempt to tax the shares of National banks. Unless it taxed this moneyed capital .to the same extent that it taxed the shares of National banks, the latter tax would be illegal under the provisions of the United States Revised Statutes, above referred to. Such was our holding in the Hanover Bank case. Section 14 reads as follows:

§ 14. Owners or holders of moneyed capital other than shares of banks and trust companies taxable on such moneyed capital. Every individual banker and private banker, every investor and every person and every association or corporation, other than banks or trust companies, owning, or * * * holding moneyed capital coming into competition with the business of national banks except * * * bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness in the hands of individual citizens not employed or engaged in the banking or investment business and representing merely personal investments not made in competition with such business, shall be assessed and taxed on the actual value of such moneyed capital in the tax district where such owner or holder resides * *

Under this provision the assessors of the city of Buffalo assessed the Morris Plan Company of Buffalo for each of *88 the years 1923 to 1926, inclusive, in the sum of $250,000, as the actual value of moneyed capital employed by it in competition with the business of National banks. Upon review of the assessments, taken pursuant to section 290 et seq. of the Tax Law, the Special Term held that the company was not assessable. The Appellate Division, upon the same facts, came to the opposite conclusion, and it rests with us to say which of these decisions is correct. The query is: Does the Morris Plan- Company of Buffalo, organized as an investment company under article 7 of the Banking Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 2), hold moneyed capital coming into competition with the business of National banks, and thus become hable to a tax of one per cent, fixed pursuant to the statute? What is the yardstick by which we are to measure the facts?

The appellant says that the company does not carry on the business of banking in any true sense; that it has no authority to receive deposits or buy or sell coin or bullion; that it cannot put forth circulating notes or loans on bonds and mortgages; that it has never qualified with the Superintendent of Banks so as to enable it to accept deposits, and that it has no deposits. On the other hand, it is alleged by appellant that all its loans are paid back in weekly or monthly installments within the period of one year, and are made on investment certificates in connection with each transaction providing for installment payments. This, says the appellant, is not and cannot be done by National banks.

These facts, when conceded, do not answer the question presented. The business conducted by the relator and the money which it loans may, nevertheless, come in competition with the business of the National banks. We must look to the United States authorities for our guide upon this proposition. What is competition with the business of National banks? The latest expression is to be found in First National Bank v. City of Hartford (273 U. S. 548), where it was said: “The restriction *89 applies as well where the competition exists only with respect to particular features of the business of national banks or where moneyed capital1 is employed, substantially as in the loan and investment features of banking, in making investments byway of loan, discount or otherwise, in notes, bonds or other securities, with a view to sale or repayment and reinvestment.’ ” (Citing First National Bank v. Anderson, 269 U. S. 341, 348, and Mercantile Bank v. New York, 121 U. S. 138.)

Further, the court said: “ Competition may exist between other moneyed capital and capital invested in national banks, serious in character and therefore well within the purpose of § 5219, even though the competition be with some but not all phases of the business of national banks. * * * Competition in the sense intended arises not from the character of the business of those who compete but from the manner of the employment of the capital at their command.”

Again: Our conclusion is that § 5219 is violated wherever capital, substantial in amount when compared with the capitalization of national banks, is employed either in a business or by private investors in the same sort of transactions as those in which national banks engage and in the same locality in which they do business.”

The competition found as a fact in that case was the loaning of money on the security of notes, bonds and mortgages and the buying and selling of securities, all involving the investment and reinvestment by individuals, firms and corporations and their customers.

What is the business of the relator? It is stated fully in the findings of the trial court, with which there is no disagreement.

The principal business of the Morris Plan Company of Buffalo was the lending of money. For the years covered by the assessment, the loans were made upon promissory notes running for one year, bearing interest at six per *90

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Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 502, 253 N.Y. 85, 1930 N.Y. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-morris-plan-co-v-burke-ny-1930.