Pullen v. . Corporation Commission

68 S.E. 155, 152 N.C. 548, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 11, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 155 (Pullen v. . Corporation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pullen v. . Corporation Commission, 68 S.E. 155, 152 N.C. 548, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 317 (N.C. 1910).

Opinions

CLARK, C. J., and HOKE, J., dissenting. Omitting the merely formal parts of the submission, the facts agreed to as determining this controversy are thus stated:

1. That the Corporation Commission is a department of the State Government, created by law and charged with certain duties, among which duties is exercising the powers and duties of State Tax Commissioners; that their office is in the city of Raleigh, Wake County, N.C.

2. That the Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Company is a bank and savings institution, duly created by law, having a capital and a surplus, whose office and place of business is in the city of Raleigh, and that John T. Pullen is a stockholder therein, as shown by the books of the company, and is a citizen of Wake County.

2 (a). That the asylum or 1949 bonds, herein referred to, were sold by the State of North Carolina at a price of 103, the same bearing 4 per cent interest per annum, payable semiannually, and not due until 1 July, 1949, as expressed in said bonds, and that said bonds were sold upon the faith of the State, as pledged in the act authorizing their issue. That at the time of such sale the legal rate of interest for money loaned in North Carolina was 6 per cent per annum, all banking institutions being authorized to take interest in advance, and that at the time of such sale the outstanding bonds of the State of North Carolina bearing 4 per cent interest were sold on the financial markets at 102, such sales being below the price brought by the bonds above referred to.

3. That John T. Pullen is interested directly in the assessment of the stock, as the failure to deduct these asylum or 1949 bonds from the surplus in arriving at the assessment of the stock will directly affect to his injury and loss that amount of State, county and city taxes paid by him on said stock.

4. That on 5 March, A.D. 1909, the General Assembly of North Carolina enacted "An act to issue bonds to carry out the act of 1907, for the care of the insane of the State," which act is known as ch. 510, Laws 1909, a copy of which act is hereto attached and (550) marked "Exhibit A," said act reading in section 4 as follows:

"SEC. 4. The said bonds and coupons shall be exempt from all State, county or municipal taxation or assessment, direct or indirect, general *Page 526 or special, whether imposed for purposes of general revenue or otherwise, and the interest paid thereon shall not be subject to taxation as for income, nor shall said bonds and coupons be subject to taxation when constituting a part of the surplus of any bank, trust company or other corporation."

5. That on or about 1 July, 1909, the State of North Carolina, acting through its Governor and State Treasurer, issued five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) of asylum bonds, now known as 1949 bonds, authorized by the act just above referred to, and sold the same to various parties, both within and without the State of North Carolina.

6. That at the session of the Legislature of 1909, the General Assembly passed the Revenue and Machinery acts, known respectively as chapters 438 and 440, the same regulating the listing and collection of taxes levied and imposed for raising revenue for the State of North Carolina; the said chapter 440, among other things, providing in section 33 (in part), relative to taxation of banks, banking associations or saving institutions, as follows:

"The value of such shares shall be determined as is hereinafter in this section provided. Every bank, banking association or saving institution (whether State or National) shall list its real estate in the county, city or town in which such real estate is located, for the purpose of State, county and municipal taxation. Every such bank, banking association or savings institution shall, during the month of June, list annually with the Corporation Commission, in the name and for its shareholders, all the shares of its capital stock, whether held by residents, or nonresidents, at its market value on the first day of June, or, if it have no market value, then at its actual value on that day, from which market or actual value shall be deducted the assessed value of the real and personal property which such bank, banking association or savings institution shall have listed for taxation in the county or counties where such real and personal estate is located. The actual value of such shares, where such shares have no market value, shall be ascertained by adding together the capital stock, surplus and undivided profits and deducting therefrom the amount of real and personal property owned by said institution on which it pays tax, and dividing the net amount by the number of shares in such institution. Insolvent (551) debts due said institution may be deducted from the items of undivided profits or surplus, if itemized and sworn to, and forwarded to the Corporation Commission by the cashier of such institution. If the Corporation Commission shall have reason to believe that the market or actual value as given in is not its true value, it shall ascertain such true value by such examination and investigations as to it seems proper, and change the value as given in to such amount as it *Page 527 ascertains the true value to be, which action on the part of the Corporation Commission may be reviewed by the Superior Court, by an action brought against the Corporation Commission in its official capacity by the party aggrieved."

7. That the Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Company is a bank and savings institution, having a capital and a surplus, and that a part of said surplus is invested in the bonds issued under Laws 1909, ch. 510, commonly known as the asylum bonds or 1949 bonds, and that it bought the same upon the faith of the State of North Carolina, as pledged in chapter 510 of the Public Laws of 1909, paying for the same out of its surplus.

8. That the said Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Company has made return to the Corporation Commission, as is required in section 33 of the Machinery Act of 1909 (Laws 1909, ch. 440), for the assessing of the shares of stock held by the stockholders in said corporation, in accordance with law, which said assessment the Corporation Commission is directed to make and certify to the several counties where the stockholders reside, as the value of said stock for taxation.

9. That the Corporation Commission, in accordance with the statute providing for the assessment of capital stock of banks, have assessed and appraised the value of the shares of stock of the Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Company by adding together the capital stock, surplus and undivided profits, and deducting therefrom the real and personal property owned by said institution, on which it pays tax, and dividing the net amount by the number of shares in said institution. That the said Corporation Commission did not deduct from the surplus the asylum or 1949 bonds (those authorized by chapter 510 of the Public Laws of 1909) owned by the said Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Company, they holding that the same was not deductible, as a matter of law, in arriving at this assessment; to which assessment the said Raleigh Savings Bank and Trust Company and John T. Pullen, a stockholder of said company, have excepted and announced their intention of bringing an action against the Corporation Commission in the Superior Court of Wake County in its official capacity, to review the action (552) of the said Corporation Commission.

10. That a tender of all taxes, admitted by the aggrieved parties to be due, has been made before the submission of this controversy without action.

11.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 155, 152 N.C. 548, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullen-v-corporation-commission-nc-1910.