Sims v. Fletcher Savings & Trust Co.

142 N.E. 121, 194 Ind. 93, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 14
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1924
DocketNo. 24,541
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 142 N.E. 121 (Sims v. Fletcher Savings & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sims v. Fletcher Savings & Trust Co., 142 N.E. 121, 194 Ind. 93, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 14 (Ind. 1924).

Opinion

Willoughby, J.

The appellee is a trust company organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Indiana, and in this action seeks to have certain deductions made from the total assessed value for taxation of its capital or capital stock, which was denied by appellants, who constitute the State Board of Tax Commissioners of Indiana.

The. complaint is in substance as follows: “The plaintiff is a trust company incorporated under the laws [95]*95of the State of Indiana and that it exists, operates and does business as such trust company under and pursuant to the laws of the State of Indiana in the city of Indianapolis, Marion county, in said state.

“That defendants are the duly appointed, qualified and acting members of the State Board of Tax Commissioners of Indiana and, as such members, constitute said board by virtue of their said appointment pursuant to the provisions of the' statutes of the State of Indiana, embodied in an act of the General Assembly of said state, approved March 11, 1919, and entitled ‘An Act concerning taxation, repealing all laws in conflict therewith and declaring an emergency.’”

That under the provisions of said tax law said defendants as such Board of Tax Commissioners are charged with the duty of valuing and assessing for taxation the capital or capital stock of plaintiff and other trust companies of said state according to certain rules and regulations by said law provided and specified.

That to aid and enable said defendants to so value and assess the capital or capital stock of plaintiff, said law required of plaintiff that it should, between the first day of March and the first day of April of each year, make out a statement under oath, in duplicate, amongst other things, showing the true cash value of the entire capital stock of such plaintiff trust company as of the first day of March of the. current year and deliver the said statement to the auditor of the county wherein said plaintiff trust company is located, which said statement said auditor was by said law required to forward to said State Board of Tax Commissioners.

The plaintiff did, pursuant to said tax law and to §76 (Acts 1919 p. 198, §10139y2 Burns’ Supp. 1921) thereof, between the first day of March and the first day of April, 1919, make its said statement under oath as aforesaid, showing, amongst other things required [96]*96by said, statute, the amount of its entire capital stock and the true cash value thereof, as of the first day of March of said .year, and did deliver the same to the auditor of. Marion county, Indiana, wherein plaintiff is’ located as aforesaid; that such statement was by said auditor duly transmitted to said State Board of Tax Commissioners so constituted as aforesaid for the assessment thereon by said state board of plaintiff for taxation for said year; that said statement showed the gross value of the entire capital stock of said plaintiff trust company as represented by and comprising capital, surplus, undivided profits, current profits and reserves for contingencies, rent, interest and taxes to be the sum of $2,094,410.87; that said statement further showed a bona fide debt and liability against said gross value for accrued interest on deposits set forth therein as- a reserve for interest in the sum of $112,435.16, and in the further sum of $21,972.31 set forth therein as a reserve for taxes, which items of bona fide indebtedness did, in fact, then and there exist; that said statement further showed that plaintiff trust company had acquired an ownership in real estate, namely, its bank building in which it transacts its business, by the investment therein of the sum of $639,135.92, which statement in said particular was true; that plaintiff holds a leasehold title to the real estate on which its banking house is situated, at the northwest corner of Market and Pennsylvania Streets in the city of Indianapolis, under which plaintiff has the exclusive right of possession, use, enjoyment and disposition for a period of ninety-nine years, with the privilege of renewal for a further term of ninety-nine years; that, on said real estate, plaintiff has caused to be erected and maintains and occupies a banking house, in the erection of which banking house, it has invested the aforesaid part of its capital, namely, $639,135.92; .that said building is as[97]*97sessed for taxation by the taxing officers of Marion county in the sum of $625,000, and said real estate in the sum of $530,000.

That said tax law and said §76 (Acts 1919 p. 198, supra) thereof provide that, in arriving at the true cash value of the entire capital stock of a trust company for the purpose of assessment for taxation, credit shall be given and the bona fide indebtedness of such trust company shall be deducted from aforesaid gross value; that by reason of such provision in said law, it became and was the imperative duty of defendants, as such State Board of Tax Commissioners, at its first annual session for the current year of 1919 begun and held on the first Monday of April for the purpose of making original assessments of the property of certain classes of persons and corporations including trust companies, to value and assess for taxation the capital or capital stock of plaintiff as shown by the statement hereinabove referred to, together with such other evidence as might be before said board in the premises; and it became and was then and there the imperative duty of defendants as such board under said law in finding the true cash value for assessment for taxation of plaintiff’s capital or capital stock to deduct from the gross cash value thereof the bona fide indebtedness of said trust company as shown by said statement as hereinabove set out, and to deduct from said gross cash value, the investment of plaintiff in its bank building hereinabove set forth.

That defendants, as such State Board of Tax Commissioners, at its said first session for the current year of 1919 did consider the aforesaid statement of plaintiff and the matter of the assessment of its capital or capital stock and did find the gross value thereof to be the sum of $2,094,400; that, at said first session, said de[98]*98fendants, as such board, contrary to the express mandate of said tax law and §76 thereof did fail and refuse to deduct from said gross value of plaintiff’s capital or capital stock the bona fide indebtedness hereinabove averred, namely, the sum of $112,435.16 for accrued interest and the sum óf $21,072.31 for taxes for 1918 accrued and payable; and that, at said first session, said defendants as such board contrary to the express mandate of said tax law and §76 thereof, did fail and refuse to deduct from said gross value of plaintiff’s capital or capital stock the sum of $639,135.92 thereof invested in its said bank building as hereinabove set forth; but that said defendants, as such board, did, at its said first session, contrary to the express intent and purpose of said tax law, value and assess for taxation the capital or capital stock of plaintiff at said gross sum of $2,094,400.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 N.E. 121, 194 Ind. 93, 1924 Ind. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-fletcher-savings-trust-co-ind-1924.