Schley v. Lee

67 A. 252, 106 Md. 390, 1907 Md. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 67 A. 252 (Schley v. Lee) 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
Schley v. Lee, 67 A. 252, 106 Md. 390, 1907 Md. LEXIS 89 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal and the following one of the present appellant vs. the County Commissioners of Montgomery County, No. 40 of the present docket, were heard together. The cases in which the two appeals were taken were instituted at the same time, on the equity side of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, for the same purpose and the two records present the same state of pleadings. The only practical difference between the cases is that the present one was instituted by the appellant, Blair Lee, on behalf of himself and the other tax *392 payers of Montgomery County, and No. 40 was instituted by the County Commissioners of Montgomery County.

The common purpose of the two suits was to have the appellant as State Tax Commissioner restrained from making the assessment for the year 1907 under sec. 159 of Art. 81 of the Code, of the shares of stock of two national banks and the assets of one fire insurance company, in the method which he has heretofore pursued and which he'declares it to be his purpose to continue to pursue and to require him to make the assessments in the manner alleged by the bills to be the correct one. The bills of complaint, allege his methods to be erroneous and unlawful both in ascertaining the value of the shares of the banks and of the assets of the insurance company and also in making certain deductions therefrom in arriving at their final or assessment valuations. We will consider in this opinion the legality of the deductions which the appellant as Tax Commissioner proposes to make from the value of the shares of stock of the banks and the assets of the insurance company, and will reserve for the opinion in the County Commissioners case the question of his proposed method of ascertaining the respective values from which to make the deductions.

Upon the filing the respective bills with their exhibits the Court below passed in each case an orderfor a preliminary injunction in accordance with the first and second prayers of the bill. The defendant having first demurred to the bill appealed from the order.

The bill in this case alleges that the plaintiff is a citizen of this State and a resident and taxpayer in Mongomery County and that the defendant is the State Tax Commissioner having his office at Annapolis in Anne Arundel County, and that the three corporations hereinafter mentioned have their principal places of business in Montgomery County. The substance of the further averments of the bill is as follows:

That shares of the capital stock of the Montgomery County National Bank and the First National Bank of Gaithersburg owned by residents of Montgomery County and by non-residents of this State constitute property taxable in said county, *393 as do also the property and assets of the Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Montgomery County which has no capital stock divided into shares. The Montgomery Co. National Bank owns real estate assessed for taxation at $30,000, and also $118,200 of the stock or funded debt of Baltimore City on which that city has agreed to pay the State taxes, and the First National Bank of Gaithersburg owns real estate assessed for taxation at $3,200 and also $10,000 of Baltimore City stock of the character aforesaid, and that certain of the stockholders of each of said banks reside in Montgomery County and others are non-residents of this State. The said Fire Insurance Company owns $96,500 of the same character of Baltimore City stock and also $13,000 of Montgomery County bonds exempt from county and municipal taxation, but subject to taxation for State purposes.

The bill further avers that the appellant admits that he, as State Tax Commissioner, is required by law to return to the County Commissioners for county and municipal taxation the identical assessment of the stock of the said corporations that he returns to the State Comptroller for State taxation, and he has informed the appellee that he intends, in making said assessment for the year 1907, to deduct, from the value of the capital stock of each of the said two banks, not only the assessed value of the real estate held by it but also the face value of the Baltimore City stock owned by it, and to deduct from the property and assets of the said Fire Insurance Company the face value of its Baltimore City stock and also of its Montgomery County bonds. That the assessment which the Tax Commissioner has thus announced his purpose to make will be unlawful and contrary to the duty imposed upon him by the existing law of this State which requires him to ascertain the assessable value of the shares of capital stock of said banks, by deducting only the assessed value af the real estate held by each of them from the aggregate true value of all of the shares of its capital stock and dividing the remainder by the number of the shares, and provides that the quotient thus obtained shall be the taxable value of each share of the stock *394 for State, county and municipal taxation. That the law also requires him to ascertain the assessable value of the property and assets of said Fire Insurance Company by deducting from their true value only the assessed value of the real estate, if any, owned by it. That the appellant has construed and persists in construing sec. 160, of Art. 81 of the Code, which relates only to credits to be allowed to corporations in the “Settlement of taxes,” as forming part of the law relating to the assessment by the Tax Commissioner of the shares of their capital stock for the purpose of taxation; and that his plan of assessing the shares in question results in the practical exemption of the shares of stock of such corporations, to the extent of the value of said Baltimore City stock from all taxation for county and municipal purposes, as the County Commissioners are required by law to accept his assessment of the said shares for purposes of süch taxation. That under the laws of the United States the said Baltimore City stock while held by the said national banks are not subject to assessment or taxation for State, county or municipal purposes, that no State tax has in fact been paid thereon and that therefore such stocks so held cannot be lawfully regarded as tax paying investments or used as credits in the settlement of State, county or municipal taxes. The bill insists that it is therefore beyond the power ■of the Tax Commissioner to assess the shares of capital stock of the said corporations in the manner proposed by him. With the bill were filed, as exhibits, copies of letters which passed between the plaintiff and the Tax Commissioner, prior to the institution of this suit on the subject of the assessment of the shares of the corporation, about to be made by the commissioner.

The bill then further alleges that the proposed action by the . Tax Commissioner will, if not prevented, be in violation of the laws of the State and will inflict serious injury upon the plaintiff and the other taxpayers of Montgomery County and that, as the law allows them no appeal from the assessment which will be made in the manner aforesaid, unless prevented by the order of this Court, they are without remedy at law to prevent' the wrongs complained of.

*395

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 A. 252, 106 Md. 390, 1907 Md. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schley-v-lee-md-1907.