State v. Haight

31 N.J.L. 399
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 N.J.L. 399 (State v. Haight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Haight, 31 N.J.L. 399 (N.J. 1866).

Opinion

[402]*402The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beasley, Chief Justice.

The principal and highly important question involved in this case is, whether the shares of stock held by individuals in a national banking association,, created by the act of congress which provides for the organization of those institutions, can be taxed under the laws of a state ?

There are certain particulars comprehended in this legal problem, which have been so repeatedly recognized and solemnly adjudged by that high tribunal whose decisions, on questions of this character, must be considered final except to itself, that they are to be assumed as postulates in any argument on the subject. That the congress of the United States is possessed, by force of the federal constitution, of the authority to place on foot these banking associations as the fiscal agents-of the government; that as such agents they are beyond the sphere of all acts of state sovereignty which-tend to hinder, embarrass, or defeat their operations; and that, consequently, a law imposing a tax on the business or transactions of such institutions is unconstitutional, was decided in the case of so much celebrity, of McCullough v. State of Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316. And, in the same authoritative form, the adjudication in, Weston v. The City Council of Charleston, 2 Pet. 449, established the no less important proposition, that a tax upon the stock of the United States in the hands of a citizen, is a tax on the power vested in congress to borrow money on the credit of the United States, which cannot be levied by or under the authority of a state, consistently with the constitution. The truth, therefore, of these three propositions, and which form the basis of the discussion which follows, is assumed as incontestable — first, that congress was clothed with the power to authorize the formation of the corporations in question; second, that the several states cannot, by taxation or otherwise, retard, impede, burthen, or in any manner control the operations of such corporations; and third, that a tax levied by the simple force of state sovereignty, on a loan made to the United States, is void. On the present occasion it is only with the [403]*403application of these admitted principles that we have any concern.

From the admissions contained in the statement of facts agreed upon by the parties in the present case, it appears that only a part of the capital of some of the banks, the stock of which has been assessed in the hands of the plaintiffs’ in certiorari, is invested in the securities of the United States, and the first point of inquiry which, consequently, is presented is, whether so much of this capital as does not exist in the form of such securities can be taxed by force of state sovereignty.

The only argument which was, or which perhaps can be urged against the exercise of this prerogative by a state is, that a national bank is one of the means employed to carry into effect the powers constitutionally inherent in the federal government; and that a tax by a state, to any extent on the property of such institution must, of necessity, affect such means, and thus tend to embarrass the administration of public affairs. It is clear, upon the principles already admitted, that if a tax of the kind supposed will have the effect attributed to it, the right to levy such tax does not exist, and that, as a consequence, an assessment of any part of the property of a national bank under the law of a state, though the part so assessed be not invested in exempted securities, would be nugatory. Whether, therefore, the state in its own right can tax that portion of the property of one of these banks, which in its own nature has no claim to immunity from taxation, must depend altogether on the solution of the question, whether the taxation of such property tends to embarrass or impede the operation of the bank, considered as an instrument of government.

It has been already remarked that an express decision of the Supreme Court of the United States exists, to the effect that a tax under state authority on the operations of a governmental bank, is unconstitutional. Such is the doctrine of McCullough v. State of Maryland. In that case it appeared that the state of Maryland had passed an act prohibiting all [404]*404banks riot chartered by the state from issuing notes, except of certain specified denominations, which were required to be on stamped paper, to be furnished by the state at certain prices. This tax fell directly on the business of one of the branch banks of the United States, established in that state. The impost was special in its character, for it did not, in any manner whatever, affect the institutions of the state, and the consequence was, it discriminated, in its apportionment of the burthens of taxation, against institutions which had been erected to subserve the legitimate purposes of government. Such a tax was obviously illegal, as its direct and certain effect was to obstruct the movements of the public machine. But can it be said that a tax upon the shares of the capital stock of the bank as the property of private persons, will produce the same result? This is the precise point to be decided.

In the consideration of this subject it should be borne in mind that these banking associations are, in the nature of things, possessed of a dual character. They are instruments of government, but they are something more; they are agencies of commerce and private business. They receive the moneys of individuals on deposit; they loan their funds to private borrowers, and their notes, guaranteed by no public authority, form the basis of the bulk of commercial affairs. And so, in like manner, the capital of these institutions is not a public concern, but it is owned by individuals; and viewed in the light of such ownership, it is difficult to understand why it is not subject to the ordinary incidents and liabilities of property. That it is possessed of most of the rights and faculties of property, cannot be disputed. The capital of these banks, derived from the wealth of individuals, becomes represented in the hands of such individuals, by the shares of stock held by them, and these shares can be sold like any other chose in action or personal chattel. They can be pledged or mortgaged for private debt, or they can be sold, by hostile process, on execution. Why, then, shall they not be liable to the debt, which beoomes due from their owner to the community in the form of a tax, for the protection [405]*405which is extended over hint and his possessions ? And if the private alienation of the stock or its seizure and sale on execution, is not an interference with the free operations of the bank in its public capacities, bow can it be justly said that the taxation of such stock will have that effect? The mere fact that government makes use, incidentally, of the property of the citizen in reaching its ends, does not, necessarily, invest such property with a public character for all purposes, nor absolve it from the regulations and incidents of ordinary proprietorship. There can be no doubt that private property employed in the use of the government would be protected, so far as might be necessary to prevent any hindrance to the performance of their legitimate functions by the public authorities, but beyond such limit, the necessity for protection ceasing, there would be no protection.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.J.L. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haight-nj-1866.