Salisbury Permanent Building & Loan Ass'n v. County Commissioners of Wicomico County

39 A. 425, 86 Md. 615, 1898 Md. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 4, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 A. 425 (Salisbury Permanent Building & Loan Ass'n v. County Commissioners of Wicomico County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salisbury Permanent Building & Loan Ass'n v. County Commissioners of Wicomico County, 39 A. 425, 86 Md. 615, 1898 Md. LEXIS 14 (Md. 1898).

Opinion

Bryan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Salisbury Permanent Building and Loan Association filed a bill in equity against the County Commissioners of Wicomico County, and John W. Farlow, Collector of Taxes. The object of the suit was to obtain an injunction forbidding the Collector to collect certain taxes according to the assess[617]*617ment and valuation made by the State Board of Appeals. A preliminary injunction was granted, but on the filing of the answer it was dissolved and the bill dismissed. The complainant has appealed.

The corporation was duly formed and organized under the general laws of Maryland as a Building and Loan Association in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-seven. It is located in the town of Salisbury. The Legislature by the Act of 1892, chapter 171, amended its charter, and greatly enlarged its powers and corporate capacities. It was enacted by the fifth section among other things that its capital stock and accumulated funds should be invested in fee-simple real estate, and leaseholds, mortgages, bonds, &c., &c., or in such other property as the corporation might deem profitable; other additional powers will be noticed hereafter. It is alleged in the bill of complaint, and not denied in the answer, that almost the entire amount of capital stock which has been subscribed has been invested in mortgages on real estate and leasehold property. It is contended, that in assessing the taxable property of the corporation the amounts invested in these mortgages should be exempted. The State Board of Appeals valued the shares of stock of the corporation and deducted from the aggregate sum so ascertained the value of its real estate, and also investments in mortgages to the amount of forty-one thousand three hundred and nine dollars and sixty-eight cents. The assessment was made for the taxes due in eighteen hundred and ninety-five, and is, of course, not affected by the tax law passed at the last session of the Legislature. The duties of the State Tax Commissioner are prescribed in Article 81 of the Code, sec. 132, and the sections immediately following. By section 132 he is required to assess for State purposes the shares of capital stock in all banks whose shares of capital stock are liable to assessment and taxation by the laws of the State. By section 141 he is required to deduct from the aggregate value of all the shares of capital stock of a corporation the assessed value [618]*618of its real estate, and to divide the remainder by the number of shares of its capital stock. The quotient is declared to be the taxable value of each share for State purposes. By section 144 the Commissioners’ valuation and assessment are made final, unless an appeal shall be taken to the State Board of Appeals; and if an appeal be taken, and both of the members of the Board of Appeals are of opinion that the decision of the Commissioner is erroneous, they are required to change it, and then their decision is final. By section 133 it is made the duty of the corporation to pay to the Public Treasurer the State tax on the shares of stock. Nothing is said in these sections relating in any way to the mortgage debts which were deducted from the assessed value of the stock. But the question of their liability to taxation depends on other portions of the Statute Law. It is not affected by the fourth section of Article 81, which enumerates the exemptions from taxation, and comprises among them mortgages when the real or leasehold estate mortgaged is subject to taxation under the laws of this State, and also mortgages on property wholly within this State, and the mortgage debts thereby secured. This question was decided in Emory v. State, 41 Md. 38. The Act of 1870, chapt. 394, contained a provision in these words : “ Nor shall any tax of any kind be assessed, levied or collected on any mortgages of any kind, or on any mortgage (or) bill of sale, upon any property in this State. ” In construing this language it was said: “ We think in passing this Act, the Legislature designed only to exempt from assessment and taxation the mortgage debt, as such. The words refer to the instrument, the mortgage, itself, and declare that it shall not be subject to taxation. The effort here is to give such a construction to this law as will exempt from taxation the capital stock of all corporations, to the extent that their loans may be secured by mortgage. The law subjecting the capital stock to taxation, makes no such exemption. And in our opinion the Act of 1870 does not apply to the case.” 41 Maryland, 58. But section ninety-[619]*619nine of Article 23 of the Code, amended by Act of 1894, chapter 321, does in express terms, exempt from taxation the shares of building associations and of all corporations for the loan of money on mortgages of real or leasehold estate to the extent of their investments in such mortgages. The one hundred and third section of the same Article enacts that the eight sections immediately preceding shall apply to corporations which had already been formed, or might thereafter be formed under the provisions of the Article for the purpose of loaning money on real or personal property, &c., &c. This Court in Emory v. State, above mentioned, decided that the original enactment of which this section is a reprint with slight changes (1868, ch. 471, section 92), had reference only to corporations formed under the General Corporation Act, and excluded those incorporated by special Acts of Assembly. The shares of stock of this latter class of corporations are not therefore exempted from taxation by this section. The appellant by virtue of its original charter had the right to purchase or redeem shares of stock from its members and to take from them mortgages to secure the payment of unpaid installments on the shares redeemed or purchased. The ninety-eighth and ninety-ninth sections of Article 23 gave this right. Let us consider the effect of the Act of 1892 upon the legal status of the appellant. An examination of the powers conferred by it will show that they are as essentially "distinct from those originally possessed, as if they had been conferred on another corporation. Besides the power to invest in mortgages which is given by the fifth section, many others were granted by the sixth section. Such as powers to receive personal property on storage or safe deposit; to purchase, invest in, and sell any kind of property, real, personal or mixed ; to receive deposits of money, securities and other property and to accumulate the same, and to issue certificates of deposit therefor, allowing interest thereon ; to loan money on promissory and negotiable notes, &c., &c., and to borrow money and to [620]*620issue therefor the obligations of the associations, with or without coupons attached.

The mortgages in which the fifth section of the Act authorized the appellant to invest its capital stock and accumulated funds were of an entirely different nature from those in which the appellant was authorized to make investments by the ninety-ninth section of Article 23, and which are there declared to be exempt from taxation. The difference between these two descriptions of securities is well known to the profession. It is clearly stated in Robertson's case in 10 Maryland, 397, and has been considered in many subsequent cases. The appellant acquired a new character by the amendment of its charter. It takes its new powers as if it were another and different corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
39 A. 425, 86 Md. 615, 1898 Md. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salisbury-permanent-building-loan-assn-v-county-commissioners-of-md-1898.