Tennessee v. Bank of Commerce

53 F. 735
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee
DecidedMarch 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 F. 735 (Tennessee v. Bank of Commerce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee v. Bank of Commerce, 53 F. 735 (circtwdtn 1892).

Opinion

HAMMOND, J.

The charter of the defendant bank contains this clause:

“Said institution shall have a lien on the stock for debts due it by the stockholders before and in preference to other creditors, except the state for taxes, and shall pay to the state an annual tax of one half of one per cent, on each share of capital stock, which shall be in lieu of all other taxes.”

This bill is filed to collect taxes for the years 1887 to 1891, inclusive, amounting in the aggregate to $46,068.75. The taxes are assessed under acts of the legislature, which provide, among other things, as follows:

“And in cases in which, by the terms or legal effect of the charter, the shares of stock in any corporation are wholly or partially exempt from taxation, or in which a rate of taxation on the shares of stock is fixed and prescribed and declared to be in lieu of all other taxes, taxes for state, county, and municipal purposes shall be assessed and levied at a rate uniform with the rate levied upon other taxable property upon the capital stock of said corporation, the value of which capital stock shall be fixed and returned by the assessor as being equal to the aggregate market value of all the shares of stock in said corporation, including the net surplus.”

The bill sets out historically the legislation concerning the taxation of the bank, previous attempts to collect taxes thereunder, certain litigation arising concerning those attempts, and generally so states the facts that by the demurrer which the defendant has filed the question is presented whether or not the assessment sought to be enforced is valid in relation to the claim made by the bank that the legislation violates the obligation of the charter contract, and is void under the constitution of the United States. A federal question being thus at issue, the case was removed to this court from the state chancery court, wherein the bill was originally filed.

Apart from any embarrassments arising out of the adjudications that have concerned this charter, and others precisely like it, in respect of the subject of taxation, I conceive that the ordinary use of the phrase, “in lieu of all other taxes,” as distinguished from any technicalities whatsoever, always imports that none other than the tax specified, however described, can be demanded. Nor, so apart, should I conceive that it was at all material by what designation [737]*737the sum to be paid “in lien” of oilier sums might be called, whether a tax, a bonus, a price paid for the privilege or a debt or obligation of any designation whatsoever; nor whether the sum, however called, should he absolutely fixed, should he ascertainable by some self-adjusting standard, or some scheme or method so devised that the amount could be readily known; nor whether the second parties to the contract should have the sum to pay individually, or in some aggregate capacity, or that it should he paid by some one else, or in any way designated in the contract. If this were an ordinary contract between individuals, all these varying conditions would he absolutely open to any arrangements the parties might; choose to make. So they were to the state of Tennessee and Samuel R. McCamy, James Whitesides, John L. M. French, Edwin Harsh, and James 0. Warner, “their associates and successors,” when they set about tbe business of constructing “an institution,” which has developed into the Bank of Commerce. It is altogether true that in and about that business, and in drawing up the “contract” in the form of a “charter” to manifest the agreement of the parties, the state will not he presumed to have curtailed its powers of taxation further than the words of the instrument shall plainly express, or by necessary implication shall he plainly indicated, hut otherwise all the conditions above suggested were open to those parties absolutely. The same rale of plain expression or necessary implication applies in the construction of all contracts, not more to charters than to others, except that the courts, perhaps, are more careful in dealing with such cases than others for obvious reasons of public benefit, though in strictness the courts should not less carefully deal with any contract whatever.

It is an exaggeration of this carefulness, however, to suppose that the words of a contract about the taxation of a bank are to be differently construed than the same words about any oilier subject to which they would fitly apply, merely because they are applied to a matter of taxation of a corporation with an irrepealable contract of exemption. The same carefulness of construction about any other subject would produce the same result. If, for example, these citizens had made a contract with the state to build the capitol, and it had been provided that they should pay to the state from time to time a tax of one half of 1 per cent, on each installment of the money paid out by them for the wojk. “w'hich shall be in lien of ail other taxes,” could it he said that these words w'ould receive any other construction than they do when they are applied to the taxation of a corporation or its stock? Or that, because the power of the state was supreme in the premises, and it might, in addition to this tax, have levied a tax upon these citizens individually, each for himself, or upon the whole in the aggregate, a further sum for the privilege of having had the contract awarded to them, or a, further tax upon the property used in the cons traction of the capitol, — so much for the stone, so much for the iron, and so on, if you please, — can it be that these circumstances would change, in any respect, the meaning of the words? A habit of doing business in this regard by the state, and of levying the tax in a particular manner, would aid a court in [738]*738arriving at the meaning of the contract undoubtedly; but, after all, the words would stand out as expressing that intention to have been just what they import to a fair intelligence, unobscured by any subtleties of meaning developed to accomplish a particular purpose of evading their force and mitigating the unpleasant or undesirable results of their use. It were better that the courts should boldly overrule the decisions which have shackled the sovereign power of the state over taxation than to resort to mere subtleties of construction that shall break down the plain meaning of plain words to the plain people who invest their money upon the understanding that plain people have of such words.

Another fact to be remembered while reading this statutory contract is that it is not a revenue law; it is not a statute concerned with the exercise of a taxing power, except incidentally, as it were. The power of the state in the matter of selecting the subjects of taxation,' and in dividing and subdividing those subjects at pleasure, is quite absolute, whether in relation to banks or other corporations and their corporate property, or to the property of citizens. Naturally, corporate property, by its very character, suggests a somewhat uniform classification or subdivision for taxing purposes, but, as will be presently shown, there is no fixed or always uniform classification from which so much can be implied as has been urged in argument here. Ordinarily we say that there is — First, the franchise; second, the capital stock; third, the shares of stock, which, in the strictest sense, however, are not corporate property at all, but the property of the individual holder, unless there be confusion in the use of the term; and, fourth, the other property, not included in any of the other three.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 F. 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-v-bank-of-commerce-circtwdtn-1892.