Petition of the Union Five Cents Savings Bank

36 A. 17, 68 N.H. 384
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 A. 17 (Petition of the Union Five Cents Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of the Union Five Cents Savings Bank, 36 A. 17, 68 N.H. 384 (N.H. 1895).

Opinion

Chase, J.

The first special provision for the taxation of money deposited in savings banks is found in the act of January 4, 1833 (Laws 1833, c. 108), which required the assessors of the several towns to assess the public taxes in part upon “ money at interest, more than the owner pays interest for, including . . . all deposits in any savings bank or institution where the whole amount of deposits exceeds one hundred dollars.” At that time only seven savings banks had been incorporated, the two oldest of which (the Portsmouth Savings Bank and the Strafford *385 County Savings Bank) had been in existence less than ten years. If deposits in them were previously taxed, it must have been as money on hand or at interest. Under the statute cited, depositors were not regarded as creditors of the bank, but as the beneficial owners of the fund in its possession,— the bank being their trustee. Each one’s share of the common fund was taxable directly to him in the town in which he resided, if a resident of the state, in the same manner and at the same rate as was his other taxable property. Beal estate in which the deposits were invested was taxable to the bank in the town where it was situated, under other provisions of the statute. This exception to the general rule was necessary in order to give the town containing the real estate the benefit of the tax upon it; and to avoid double taxation, depositors were entitled to a proportional reduction of their taxes. Nashua Savings Bank v. Nashua, 46 N. H. 389, 395, 396, 399; Rockingham Ten Cent Savings Bank v. Portsmouth, 52 N. H. 17, 27; Cogswell v. Bank, 59 N. H. 43; Hall v. Paris, 59 N. H. 71, 72; Berry v. Windham, 59 N. H. 288, 289; Francestown Bank Case, 63 N. H. 138; Savings Bank v. Albee, 63 N. H. 152, 162.

This method of taxing savings-bank deposits continued in force until 1864. All prior laws on the subject were then repealed, and in place of them it was provided that treasurers of savings banks should return to the secretary of state annually, on or before May 1, “a statement under oath, of the whole amount of deposits and accumulations due from such savings banks to each depositor on the first day of April next preceding; together with the name and residence of each depositor residing in the state ”; and should pay to the state treasurer, on or before the first day of July, “three fourths of one per cent on the amount of such deposits and accumulations,” to be in full of all taxes upon the property of the bank and upon the depositors’ interests therein ; and that the state treasurer should pay the several towns, on or before October 1, their proportion of such tax “ according to the amount of the deposits and accumulations held in said savings banks by the residents of said towns.” Laws 1864, c. 4028. The general plan of taxation thus introduced has continued to the present time. G. S., c. 58, ss. 12, 13,14; G. L., c. 65, ss. 6, 7, 8, 9; P. 8., c. 65, ss. 4, 5,6. The rate was changed to one per cent in 1869 (Laws 1869, c. 4, s. 2), and to three fourths of one per cent upon general deposits and one per cent upon special deposits in 1895. Laws 1895, c. 108, s. 1. Prior to 1872, the tax w'as assessed upon the amount of the bank’s deposits and accumulations without deducting the value of real estate in which any portion of them may have been invested; and such real estate was not taxable in the town where it was situated. Rockingham Ten Cent Savings Bank v. Portsmouth, 52 N. H. 17. In *386 tha't year the law was changed so as to require the assessment to he made upon the remainder of the deposits and accumulations after deducting the value of the bank’s real estate, leaving that to be taxed in the same manner as' the real estate of other parties. Laws 1872, c. 17, s. 2; G. L., c. 65, s. 7; Laws 1881, e. 103, s. 5; P. S., c. 65, s. 5; Laws 1895, c. 108, s. 1. From the record of assessments in the office of the state treasurer, it appears that the words “ deposits and accumulations” in the statute of 1864 and subsequent statutes were understood to mean the “ general and special deposits on which the corporation pays interest” (P. S., •c. 65, ss. 4, 5), or the sums due depositors, including dividends already declared and payable. Accumulations that had not been passed to the credit of depositors were not taxed: The guaranty fund created by the act of 1874 (Laws 1874, c. 71; s. 5) is not taxable, because it forms no part of the sums standing to the «credit of depositors.

Although the tax is assessed and collected by the state treasurer, none of it is retained by the state! The portion laid upon the deposits of residents is distributed to the towns where they reside, and the balance is. distributed among all the towns of the state as a part of the literary fund. P. S., c. 65, s. 6 ; c. 88, ss. 9, 10. The tax is, in fact, a municipal tax laid upon the property of the depositors and paid out of it by their incorporated trustee. Bartlett v. Carter, 59 N. H. 105. It differs from the tax that was assessed upon deposits prior to 1864 in the manner of -assessment and collection, and in the rate. Under the earlier statutes, as has been seen, the deposits were taxed directly to the depositors in the same manner and at the same rate as their other property ; while now, they are taxed to the depositors’ trustee at a fixed rate which is lower' than the rate upon other prop«erty in most towns. Under the former statutes, the only inequality between the taxation of this and other kinds of property was caused by the exemption from taxation of small deposits (sums of $100 or $300 and less) and undivided profits; while under the existing statutes there is an inequality in the rate of taxation, besides an exemption from taxation of surplus and guaranty funds, amounting to a large sum, now nearly or quite three million dollars.

The present tax, differing in these respects from that upon other property, “is an anomaly, resting upon peculiar grounds of public policy, and is universally understood to have acquired the position of an exception to the constitutional rule of equality.” B., C. & M. R. R. v. State, 62 N. H. 648, 649.

The petitioners do not object to the tax assessed against them on the ground that it is less than the tax upon other property, but on the ground that it is greater relatively than the tax of ■savings banks which have a larger percentage of untaxed prop *387 erty in tbeir guaranty and surplus funds. Inequality in taxation is a result of every exemption. The case under consideration is not the only example afforded by the law. “Much property always has been and still is untaxed.” 64 N. H. 162, 195.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A. 17, 68 N.H. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-the-union-five-cents-savings-bank-nh-1895.