United States v. Bank of Montreal

21 F. 236, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2361
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 21 F. 236 (United States v. Bank of Montreal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bank of Montreal, 21 F. 236, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2361 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

This is a suit to recover internal revenue taxes [237]*237claimed to be due from defendant on tlie capital employed by defendant in the business of banking from tho first of November, 1871, to the first of December, 1879. The defendant is a corporation created and existing under the law's of tho dominion of Canada, having its principal placo of business in the city of Montreal. Its chartered capital is $12,000,000, fully paid up, and it has a reserved fund of $5,000,000, and average deposits of about $17,000,000. On the first of November, 1871, it established a branch or agency in the city of Ciiicago, which has been continued to the present time. At the time this branch or agency was established here, its manager was informed that the sum of $100,000 had been assigned to Ms agency as capital. Tho business here has been the receiving of deposits to be paid out on draft or check of the depositors, buying and selling of domestic and foreign exchange, and the loaning of money on warehouse receipts for grain and provisions as collateral security,—the deposits averaging about $2,000,000 per month, and the profits on the business transacted here amounting to about $ 10,000,000. The $100,000 assigned as capital has been treated and known upon the books of the agency as “fixed ■capital,” and the internal revenue regularly paid thereon. In June, 1881, an examination was had by F. J. Kinney, agent of the internal revenue bureau, of tho books and accounts of the agency, from which it was ascertained that a much larger amount of money had been used in the business of this agency than tho $100,000 capital allotted to it, and he reported the amount due for tax on capital, under the second paragraph of section 3408 of the Eevisod Statutes, which imposed a tax of one twenty-fourth of 1 per cent, per month upon the ■capital employed in banking, to bo $83,775.56. After this report was received, an assessment was made and warrant issued for the collection of the portion of said tax which had accrued within two years, amounting to $24,543.88, and the amount of this assessment paid under protest. This suit is now brought to recover the balance of $59,229.68 of the tax so ascertained to be due, or reported to be due, by tho examiner Kinney, and which it is claimed accrued between tho establishment of the bank, December 1, 1871, and December 1,1879. Several defenses to the right to recover this money are interposed: (1) That this Chicago agency is a branch of the parent bank in Montreal, and as such only liable to pay internal revenue taxes on the capital allotted to it by the parent bank, under the last clause of the third paragraph of section 3408; (2) that the funds used and loaned here cannot be considered capital of this bank, as they are sent here for temporary use, and liable to be withdrawn for use elsewhere at the will of the home management; (3) that the funds used here are not a part of the capital of the parent bank, but are part of its surplus funds, made up in part, at least, of the profits of this agency or branch; (4) that most of the funds by this branch are not employed in tho business of banking, as defined in section 3407, Eev. St.

[238]*238The assistant manager of this branch or agency, who was called as a witness on the trial, explained the course of business by saying, “When we see a chance to loan money here to good advantage, we notify the home office at Montreal, and they send it to us if they have it.;”.,and his testimony shows that the average amount of money used for the first five months after this branch was established was over $400,000 per month; and from the time the agency was established there was a steady increase in the business, so that the amount of money employed in the business for the 12 months ending the thirty-first of May, 1879, was $1,496,635 per month. It will thus be seen that a large sum of money belonging to the parent bank was constantly employed in its business here.. Whether the profits made in the business here were retained and used here, or whether those profits were remitted to Montreal as fast as made, and the money to be used here was sent from Montreal as wanted, does not seem to be material.

Section 3407 defines a bank and banker as follows:

Sec. 3407. “Every incorporated or other bank, and every person, firm, or company, having a place of business where credits are opened by the deposit or collection of money or currency, subject to be paid or remitted upon draft, check, or order, or where money is advanced or loaned on stocks, bonds, bullion, bills of exchange, or promissory notes, or where stocks, bonds, bullion, bills of exchange, or promissory notes are received for discount or for sale, shall be regarded as a bank, or as a banker. ”

Certainly, the business carried on by the defendant here must be held to be a banking business within this definition. It had a “place of business” where credits were opened by the deposit of money, subject to be paid or remitted upon draft, check, or order, and where bills of exchange were issued and sold. The last clause of the third paragraph of section 3408 reads as follows:

“In the case of banks with branches, the tax herein provided shall be assessed upon the circulation of each branch severally, and the amount of capital of each branch shall be considered to be the amount allotted to it.”

It is contended that the defendant is a bank with branches, within the meaning of the provision, and that only the sum of $100,000 capital .was allotted to this branch by the parent bank. At the time the internal revenue system was adopted, in 1861, there were no national or United States banks, but in several of the states there existed what were called state banks, with power to establish branches. As I now recall the facts from memory, such banks existed in Ohio, Indiana, Missouri, and Iowa; and in the charters of these state banks there was a provision for establishing branches, and allotting or determining the amount of the capital of such branches; and I am of opinion that this provision as to the taxation of branch banks had special reference to the then-existing state banks and their branches, although the language used is comprehensive enough to apply to any future institutions of the same character, whether state or national. The .'evident meaning and intent of the whole section 3408 was to assume [239]*239that the active moneys employed by an incorporated banK was represented by its capital, and that the capital of a branch bank was the amount which was allotted to it, or which it was permitted to use, and the branch for the purpose of this tax on capital was deemed a separate entity. Ordinarily, what is known as the capital of a bank is the fund paid in by its shareholders on their capital stock, and this forms the basis upon which the business of the bank is conducted. The banks loan this money, or uso it in the discount of commercial paper, in the purchase and sale of exchange, or, in the cases of hanks of circulation, for the purpose of rodoeming or securing their current notes; the profits of the business are, as a rule, after payment of expenses, distributed as dividends to shareholders. If, for any reason, all or part of the profits are retained by the bank, such retention may be only temporary, and are liable to be paid out in dividends at any time. So, as a basis of this internal revenue tax, the paid-up capital, as a fixed fund, was taken,—assuming that, as a rule, the capital represented the moneys which the hank used in its business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. 236, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bank-of-montreal-uscirct-1884.