People Ex Rel. Newburgh Savings Bank v. Peck

51 N.E. 413, 157 N.Y. 51, 11 E.H. Smith 51, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 558
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 51 N.E. 413 (People Ex Rel. Newburgh Savings Bank v. Peck) 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. Newburgh Savings Bank v. Peck, 51 N.E. 413, 157 N.Y. 51, 11 E.H. Smith 51, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 558 (N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

Heat, J.

The important question, which this appeal brings up for our consideration and which, if decided in *54 accordance with the view taken in the court below, will dispose of the whole case, is whether the surplus fund held by a savings bank in this state is liable to taxation, or not. The opinion of Mr. Justice Hirschberg, at Special Term, upon which the justices of the Appellate Division have, in the main, rested their affirmance of this order, very fully and satisfactorily covers the ground of discussion; but, because of the importance of the case, I think that our reasons for affirming the order should be stated. It is quite apparent that the question is of very considerable importance; inasmuch as the aggregate of the amounts of surplus funds held by the savings banks of this state is upwards of one hundred millions of dollars and their exemption from taxation, necessarily, affects, materially, the body of taxpayers. Its decision turns upon the construction to be given to the provisions of the statute under which exemption from liability is claimed: That construction is not to be influenced by considerations other than those which may tend to elucidate the purpose of the law and which bear upon its just interpretation. All property, by the “ Tax Law ” of this state, is made liable to taxation; except so far as it is expressly exempted by law. That is the general rule and, in order that any property shall be taken out of its operation, the legislative enactment depended upon for exemption must be in unmistakable terms. No person, or property, is impliedly7 exempt from taxation and it is the rule that where exemption is claimed the statute is to be strictly construed against the claimant.

With the rule in view, which is applicable to the construction of the statute in question, let us consider the provision for exemption. It was, originally, contained in section 4 of chapter 456 of the Laws of 1857, and is now embodied in subdivision 14 of section 4 of chapter 908 of the Laws of 1896, which is known as the “Tax Law.” The exemption clause reads as follows: “ The deposits in any bank for savings which are due depositors, the accumulations in any domestic life insurance corporation, held for the exclusive benefit of the insured, other than real estate and stocks, now *55 liable for taxation; and the accumulations of any incorporated co-operative loan association upon the shares of such association held by any persoti.” Does this language warrant the view that the legislature, by the language, “ the deposits in any bank for savings which are due depositors,” intended the exemption to apply to only such amounts as were credited on the books of the bank to depositors and which were immediately demandable by them ? Did it intend, thereby, that the. surplus fund held by the bank should be the subject of local-taxation 1 Referring to those provisions of the Banking Law, which govern savings banks, we will ascertain what is the status under the law of a savings bank and what are its obligations to its depositors. Section 105 of the Banking Law, (Chap. 689 of the Laws of 1892), authorizes the corporation to receive deposits of money, to invest the same and to declare dividends thereon, and to prosecute the business of a savings, bank only as provided in the statute. By section 113, it is. provided that the sums deposited, together with the dividends,, or interest, credited thereto, shall be repaid to the depositors,, after demand, under regulations to be prescribed by the board of trustees. Section 123 provides that the trustees shall regulate the rate of interest, or dividends, not to exceed five per centum upon the deposits, “in such manner that depositors shall receive as nearly as may be, all the profits of such corporation, after deducting necessary expenses and reserving such amounts as the trustees may deem expedient as a surplus fund for the security of the depositors, which, to the amount of fifteen per cent of its deposits, the trustees of any such corporation may gradually accumulate and hold, to meet any contingency or loss in its business from the depreciation of its securities or otherwise.” It is further therein provided that, “ the trustees of any such corporation whose surplus amounts to fifteen per cent of its deposits, at least'once in three years, shall divide equitably the accumulation beyond such authorized surplus as an extra dividend to depositors, in excess of the regular dividends authorized.” Further, by other provisions, in the event of the dissolution of the corporation, *56 (Secs. 133, 134, 135), the moneys not paid to depositors must be paid to the superintendent of banks, to be by him distributed, under direction of the Supreme Court. These provisions seem to make it clear that every interest in the properties held by a savings bank is vested in the depositors and that the bank can acquire no interest therein. I think that section 123 can only be regarded as declaratory of the ownership of all the funds by the depositors. They are to receive all the profits; except that expenses are to be deducted and that there may be accumulated a surplus for their security. Such a corporation has neither capital nor shareholders, and its only resources are the moneys of depositors and the income which may be received from investments. The bank, necessarily from the statutory provisions, must be deemed to hold what property it has for the benefit of depositors only. It manages the same through its trustees and officers, and under no circumstances, and in no event, does it, or do its trustees, acquire any interest therein.

The assessment in this case, necessarily, proceeded upon the theory that the surplus fund belonged to the bank itself and that what was due to its depositors was only the aggregate of the sums credited to them on their pass books. That is the position of the 'appellants and they endeavor to support it by the argument that, as the depositors’ accounts can be closed at any time and as they can only demand that which stands to their credit on the books, it must, therefore, follow that as to the surplus fund the bank is not their debtor. This argument depends upon a narrow reading of the exemption clause and fails to take into consideration the legal status of the savings bank and of its depositors. The bank neither earns, nor holds, anything for itself, or for its trustees; but holds everything for the depositors. The fact that the surplus represents accumulations, and may not be immediately paid out, cannot affect the question of the ownership of the property. The word “ deposits,” used in the statute of exemption, means, by a just interpretation, the total amount received for which the bank is accountable and not merely the identical moneys received *57 from particular depositors. The surplus, which has accumulated, is a part of a fund which represents the original deposits and its creation is authorized in contemplation that it may be needed to be used to repay the depositors the amounts put in by them. (Lewis v. Lynn Institution for Savings, 148 Mass. 235; Matter of Suffolk Savings Bank, 149 ib. 1; Huntington v. Savings Bank, 96 U. S. 388.) These cases, to which the learned counsel for the respondent refers us, clearly sustain these propositions.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E. 413, 157 N.Y. 51, 11 E.H. Smith 51, 1898 N.Y. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-newburgh-savings-bank-v-peck-ny-1898.