Territory of New Mexico v. Co-operative Building & Loan Ass'n

10 N.M. 337, 10 Gild. 337
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 23, 1900
Docket814
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 N.M. 337 (Territory of New Mexico v. Co-operative Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory of New Mexico v. Co-operative Building & Loan Ass'n, 10 N.M. 337, 10 Gild. 337 (N.M. 1900).

Opinion

McFIE, J.

Taxation: mortgages.

Taxation: Shares of stock: assessed how. The decision of the court below, ifi effect was, that the Building and Loan Association of Albuquerque was taxable only upon its real estate and personal property in the nature of office fixtures, furnitures, books and blanks, the value of which amounted to $5,335.00, notwithstanding the fact as shown by the record and the action of the assessing officers and the board of equalization that the corporation held at the time of the assessment securities in the nature of mortgages to the value of $96,000.00, and that its shares of capital stock were of the value of $166,378.93. If, therefore, the securities in the nature of mortgages, which the records of Bernalillo county disclosed to be owned by the corporation, were property subject to taxation, or if the shares of capital stock were subject to taxation, and were properly assessed, the judgment of the court below must be reversed. Proceeding then to the consideration of the question whether or not the mortgages and notes held and owned by the corporation as securities for the money loaned were at the time of their assessment subject to taxation, the first question to be determined is, whether or not these securities in the hands of the building and loan association were at the time personal property of the corporation. Mortgages held as securities for loans by private individuals and corporations generally are undoubtedly personal property and are subject to taxation under the laws of this Territory, and if building and loan associations in this Territory are subject to the same laws as to taxation that other corporations are, these securities were taxable to the appellee corporation. Section 4018, Compiled Laws of 1897, provides that: “All property in this Territory not exempt by law shall be subject to taxation.” Sub-division third of section 4019, Compiled Laws of 1897, defines the term personal property as follows: “The term personal property includes everything which is subject of ownership, not included within the term, real estate.” From these provisions of the statute, mortgages and other instruments given as security for money loaned are clearly embraced within the term personal property, and if so, section 4018 above referred to, specifically declares that all property in this Territory not exempt by law shall be subject to taxation. This matter has been before the courts of the country very frequently and unless there is a specific exemption of such securities from tax under the law, the courts uniformly hold that such securities as notes, mortgages and deeds of trust are subjects of taxation. A mortgage is a security for a loan of money. It is an instrument of value. It may be foreclosed and the value expressed upon its face recovered by decree of the court, and the real estate may be sold under such decree and the title of the real estafe secured by the mortgage become the property of the mortgagee, or the cash value of the judgment may be obtained in lieu of the property. It is a source of income, and in every view which may reasonably be taken of such securities, they are property. In the case of the State v. Carson City Savings Bank, 30 Pacific, 703, the Supreme Court of Nevada said: “The proposition that that a security demand is property is too self-evident to require argument or authority. It is thus considered and treated by every writer upon political economy, by all law writers, by all courts, by the whole commercial world.” The Supreme Court of Utah, in the case of Judge vs. Spencer, collector, 48 Pacific, 1077, said: “It is clear that notes and mortgages constitute property within the meaning of the revenue act, and, not being included within the property exempt, the manifest intention of the Legislature was to subject them to the burdens of taxation.” People ex rel. Attorney-General, v. Board of Supervisors, 38 N. W., 639; Peoples’ L. & H. Association of Joliet v. Keith, 39 N. E., 1072; Mercantile National Bank, etc., v. Mayor, etc., of New York, 28 Federal, 776. In State v. Redwood Falls Building and Loan Association, 47 N. W., 540, the Supreme Court of Minnesota, in passing upon this question under a statute of that state in relation to taxation very similar to the statute of this Territory and involving mortgages held by building and loan associations as in this case, says: “The defendant is a corporation of the peculiar character generally known by such‘names as mutual building associations, or building and loan associations. It was organized under the general laws of the state. On the first day of May, 1888, the association held and owned mortgages on real estate upon which the amount due the defendant in the aggregate was the sum of $9,600.00 as appears by the finding of the district court. These mortgages represented payments for stock of the association made by share holders and nothing else. The association had no other property than that represented by such mortgages, and its stock was not taxed otherwise than by the tax on these mortgages. The assessor of the village where the association had its place of business, for the purpose of taxation, assessed these mortgages as the property of the association^ assessing all the property to the value above stated. The association defended against such taxation. The district court having sustained the tax has certified the matter to this court under the statute for review. The mortgages which were taxed as the property of this association were, as we understand the findings of the court, securities taken by the association for loans of its corporate funds to its members that secure the payment to the association of the sum of $9,600.” The court then proceeds in its opinion to hold the mortgages assessed the subject of taxation and sustains the assessment of them. It is entirely unnecessary to further cite authorities as to the taxation of securities such as mortgages, for there is a general concurrence of authority that they are taxable, and the doctrine as announced in the last ■case cited is sustained by the courts of various other states wherein mortgages held by building and loan associations and other kindred associations are taxable the same as those held by private individuals and corporations, unless the same are specifically exempt by statute. An examination of the law creating the building and loan associations in this Territory under which the appellee corporation was organized, makes no provision either as to the taxation of ■property of building and loan associations or exemptions from taxation'. Indeed, there is no contention in this case that the law under which the association was organized makes any exemption. The general laws of the Territory as to taxation, therefore, apply to these corporations the same as to other corporations. Section 4018 above referred to requires the taxation of all property in the Territory, unless the same is exempt. We find on an examination of the general statutes in this Territory that the property of building and loan, associations is not exempt from taxation by any statutory provision, nor has counsel cited any provision of the statute of this Territory under which the property of such associations are exempt from taxation. In some states there is a constitutional provision against exempting the property of building and loan associations from taxation. Either the capital stock in the hands of an association or its members, or the mortgage securities representing the value of that stock, is deemed by the Legislature subject .

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.M. 337, 10 Gild. 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-new-mexico-v-co-operative-building-loan-assn-nm-1900.