People ex rel. Newburgh Savings Bank v. Peck

22 Misc. 477, 50 N.Y.S. 820
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Misc. 477 (People ex rel. Newburgh Savings Bank v. Peck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court 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, 22 Misc. 477, 50 N.Y.S. 820 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Hirschberg, J.

This is a trial of the.issues raised by the respondents’ return-to. a writ of certiorari granted for the purpose ■of reviewing an assessment of the relator’s personal property in the sum of $414,849.01. It appears that the assessor of the city ■of Newburgh in July, 1897, assessed the relator as the owner of personal property of the value of $1,176,849.01, basing his action •upon the contents of the report made by the relator to- the .■superintendent of banks as of January 1st of that year. In this report the resources of the relator were stated to be

Bonds and mortgages..................... $2,516,000 00

Stock investments (pai; value, $3,339,191.37),

market value........................ . ;. . 3*800,702 37

Banking-house (cost, $115,527.16),present value, 50,000 00

'Other real estate (cost, $15,000), present value. . .16,531 82

Cash on deposit.............. $421,461 77

Cash on hand .•...... . . ...... 34,582 86

Accrued interest 97,011 91

456,044 63

Total resources.......................• $6,936,290 73

and its- liabilities to be

Principal due depositors..... $5,653,540 66

Interest credited to depositors. . 105,901 06

-— 5,759,441 72

. Showing an apparent surplus-of......... $1,176,849 01

In August, following, the board of review, on complaint of the relator, reduced the assessment as above indicated, by deducting the sum of $762,000, such deduction being the aggregate of two items, viz.: $712,000 as the market value of United States bonds, included in the amount of stock investments, embraced in the report, and $50,000, the value of the banking-house. ' .

On-the trial, the relator contended, first, that its surplus fund was •exempted from taxation by law, and second, that if such fund were taxable there were various deductions to which it Was entitled other ■than those allowed by the board of review. A determination of the first claim in favor of the relator renders the examination of the second one unnecessary.

[479]*479By section 3 of the Tax Law (chap. 908 of the Laws of 1896) it is provided that “ All real property within this state, and all personal property, situated or owned within this state, is taxable unless exempt from taxation by law.”' Section 4 of the same act enumerates.the exemptions, among which is subdivision 14, which exempts “ 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 liable for taxation; and the accumulations of any incorporated co-operative loan association upon the shares of such association held by any person.” This subdivision groups three distinct exemptions, two of which are in terms “ accumulations,” and the relator contends that the deposits referred to are designed to include not only the sums charged against the bank in its depositors’ pass-books, but also the surplus fund accumulated by "it under section 123 of the Banking Law (chap. 689 of the Laws of 1892), and which is accumulated, as stated in the act, for the security of such depositors, and “ to meet any contingency or loss in its business from the depreciation of its securities or otherwise.” This contention is in effect that the fóiuteenth subdivision deals with accumulations, which are for the -exclusive benefit of the insured, of the shareholders in co-operative loan associations, and of the depositors in savings banks, all being akin in character, and the-accumulations in the latter case being regarded . as within the spirit .and equity of the exemption of the specific deposits from which such accumulations arise.

The respondents .appear to have been largely influenced, if not" controlled, in making the assessment, by the decision of the Court of Appeals in the case of People ex rel. Savings Bank of New London v. Coleman, 135 N. Y. 231.

In that case the question before the court was whether.a foreign savings bank was taxable upon its surplus invested in' this state-. .’The court assumed that such a bank was to- be treated precisely as if it were a domestic corporation and consequently entitled to all the exemptions of the tax laws of this state. The exemption was claimed under the terms of chapter 456 of the Laws of 1857, which are substantially the same as in the existing Tax Law. The ■court held that such exemption applied only to the deposits for which the bank was then liable, and did not extend to the surplus. Chief Judge Earl, writing the opinion of the court, held that the •exemption of the deposits was only in favor of the bank, and that [480]*480such deposits were, notwithstanding the exemption, still taxable as against the depositors. Judge Finch concurred in the opinion, but the other five judges concurred only in the result “ on the ground that the shares of stock assessed were part of the bank’s surplus,” but expressed “no opinion as to the taxation of depositors on account of their deposits in savings banks.” The court was,-therefore, apparently unanimous in holding that under the exemption in the act of 1857, substantially similar in terms to the exemption now under consideration, a domestic savings bank was taxable upon its surplus fund, and that a foreign savings bank, while. allowed all the exemptions which were conferred upon domestic institutions, was, nevertheless, properly taxable upon so much of its surplus fund as was invested in this state.

Following this decision, the Appellate Division of the first department, in the case of People, ex rel. Groton Savings Bank v. Barker, 19 App. Div. 64, upheld an assessment of a foreign savings bank on bank stocks held by it in this state. That case, however, was unanimously reversed by the Court of Appeals in October, 1897 (154 N. Y. 122), and- the authority of the prior decision was limited to the facts contained in the record in that case, and to the questions of law raised on its submission. It is to be noted that both cases related to savings banks organized under the laws of the state of Connecticut, and that Judge O’Brien •who writes for the court in the later case was one of the judges, who concurred only in the result in the former one. Referring in the opinion written in the Groton Bank case, to the decision in the Eew London Bank case he said: “The result in that case very evidently- proceeded upon the assumption that the surplus of a savings institution is not in' any sense an' obligation due to the- - depositors. So far as appears, there was nothing .in that case to show that the depositors had any interest whatever in the surplus, or that they could ever be entitled to any part of "it. It was treated as a part of the property of the corporation itself, quite independent of any interest in the depositors. By the fourth section of chapter 456 of the Laws of 1857, ‘ the deposits in any bank for savings which are due to depositors, and the accumulations of any life insúrance company organized under the laws of this state, so far as the said accumulations are held for the exclusive benefit of the assured, shall not be liable to- taxation, other than the real estate and stocks which may be owned by such bank or company, and which.are now liable to taxation under the laws [481]*481of the state/ Under this statute it was held in the case referred to, that the deposits in savings hanks were exempt from taxation against the bank.

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Related

People v. Mechanics & Traders' Savings Institution
92 N.Y. 7 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
People Ex Rel. Savings Bank of New London v. Coleman
31 N.E. 1022 (New York Court of Appeals, 1892)
People Ex Rel. Groton Savings Bank v. Barker
47 N.E. 1103 (New York Court of Appeals, 1897)
People ex rel. Groton Savings Bank v. Barker
19 A.D. 64 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 477, 50 N.Y.S. 820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-newburgh-savings-bank-v-peck-nysupct-1898.