*1214 The petitioner is a Virginia industrial loan association whose business during the years 1936 and 1937 consisted entirely of receiving deposits and making loans and discounts. Held, that it is a "bank" within the meaning of section 104(a) of the Revenue Act of 1936.
*1204 This is a proceeding for the redetermination of deficiencies in income tax for 1936 and 1937 of $575.24 and $1,341.34, respectively. The sole question in issue is whether the petitioner is a "bank" within the meaning of section 104(a) of the Revenue Act of 1936.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The petitioner is a Virginia corporation of Norfolk, Virginia. It was incorporated as a building and loan association on April 7, 1913. It filed its income tax returns for 1936 and 1937 with the collector at Richmond. Its articles of incorporation were amended in 1920 after the enactment by the General Assembly of Virginia of an act approved February 21, 1920, to enable it to conduct and operate an industrial loan business under the provisions of that act. Thereafter, and up to the present time, *1215 its business has consisted of receiving deposits from the public and in making loans and discounting notes.
During the taxable years 1936 and 1937 petitioner received deposits in the following several ways:
(1) In the form of money deposited with it and entered upon pass books. The moneys deposited could be withdrawn at any time by the depositors.
(2) In the form of money deposited in Christmas savings accouns.
(3) In the form of money deposited with the petitioner, or withdrawn from depositors' pass books, for which certificates of investment were issued to the depositors. The certificates of investment bore no maturity date. They provided for the payment of interest at the rate of 4 percent per annum, payable semiannually. The petitioner reserved the right to require 90 days' notice for the cashing of certificates of in vestment, but in practice no such notice has been required.
The petitioner is subject to the supervision of the Commissioner of Banking of the State of Virginia, who makes at least annual examinations *1205 of its books of account and at irregular intervals requires that the petitioner file with him statements of condition.
The petitioner*1216 was chartered and conducts its business under chapter 166-A, section 4168, of the Code of Virginia.
The petitioner is not authorized to receive deposits subject to check.
OPINION.
SMITH: The question presented by this proceeding is whether the petitioner is a bank within the purview of section 104(a) of the Revenue, act of 1936, which provides:
As used in this section the term "bank" means a bank or trust company incorporated and doing business under the laws of the United States (including laws relating to the District of Columbia), of any State, or of any Territory, a substantial part of the business of which consists of receiving deposits and making loans and discounts, or of exercising fiduciary powers similar to those permitted to national banks under section 11(k) of the Federal Reserve Act, as amended, and which is subject by law to supervision and examination by State or Federal authority having supervision over banking institutions.
In the determination of the deficiencies involved herein the respondent has held that the petitioner does not "qualify as a bank taxable under Section 104 of the Revenue Act of 1936."
*1217 The facts relative to the incorporation of petitioner and to its method of operation are admittedly not materially different from those involved in . We there held that a Virginia industrial loan association was not a "bank" within the pruview of the above quoted section of the 1936 Act. Our decision in that case was reversed by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in . It was there held that a Virginia industrial loan association, operated as the petitioner was operated during the taxable years herein involved, was a "bank" within the meaning of section 104(a), supra.In accordance with the opinion of the court in that case the action of the respondent upon the question presented is reversed.
Reviewed by the Board.
Decision will be entered under Rule 50.
HARRON, concurring: Section 104(a) of the Revenue Act of 1936 contains and prescribes a standard by which the classification of a type of corporation as a "bank" shall and may be made. The purpose of the classification*1218 is to include or exclude institutions from the surtax prescribed by section 14 and for the purpose of normal tax, as is made clear in section 104(b).
*1206 The standard set forth in section 104(a) is found in the words: "a substantial part of the business of which consists of receiving deposits and making loans and discounts", etc. In short, the definition of a "bank" contained in section 104(a) is a definition in a Federal statute, and for purposes of Federal taxation that definition is controlling, not a definition applied by a statute of a state to institutions. Conceivably a state statute may contain a definition of a "bank" which is at variance with the definition of a "bank" in the revenue acts. But in administering a Federal statute, the definition in the Federal statute is the one to be applied. Where the Federal statute does not contain language indicating that the classifications or definitions of local statutes are to be referred to for purposes of administering the Federal statute and the Federal statute itself sets forth a definition and a standard, there can be little doubt that the Federal statute's standard is determinative. From then on it is*1219 a matter of fact whether an institution is or is not the type of institution defined in the Federal statute. Cf. .
The above represents roughly the rationale of the Circuit Court's view expressed in .
The dissenting opinion in this case presents a conflict in the construction to be given to the language of section 104(a). It is not uncommon to find differences of opinion as to what the words in a statute say. But I doubt the validity of the general view of the author of the dissenting opinion as to the effect to be given the portion which is quoted of the Supreme Court's decision in , which, of course, considered another question arising under another statutory provision, namely, section 231(4) of the Revenue Act of 1918, and section 231(4) of the Revenue Act of 1921, which is the same as section 101(4) of the Revenue Act of 1936. From the sentences quoted there is drawn a generalization that the Federal statutes are to be read as defining*1220 bank as defined by state statutes. The generality demonstrates the dangers which attend the separation of particular language from an entire text. What the Supreme Court said, which is quoted in the dissent, was in answer to the Government's argument that the taxpayer, the Cambridge Loan & Building Co., used the terminology descriptive of a building and loan association as a "mask" for its real character, which the Government claimed was that of a bank. The Court pointed out that "a State is not likely to be a party to a scheme to enable a private company to avoid Federal taxation by giving it a false name." Furthermore, in the Cambridge Loan & Building Co. case, the facts showed that the company in the conduct of its business met the requirements of the Federal *1207 statute and the holdings of both the trial court, the Court of Claims, and of the appellate court, the Supreme Court, recognize such to be true. See also, , where the facts are set forth at length. It should be noted that Congress, in section 231(4) of the Revenue Act of 1918, made no prescription of a standard to apply*1221 in applying the exemption allowed by section 231(4). The statute referred merely to "Domestic building and loan associations", and the Court of Claims observed that "The law of the state in which they were created was the only law which described or defined a building and loan association, and Congress was chargeable with a knowledge of that law. Until the 1921 act Congress accepted these associations as they existed and were operated in the different states; * * *" Then in the 1921 Act Congress wrote into section 231(4) a "standard" or a limitation, which provided a basis for classifying such associations so that they came either within or without the provisions of section 231(4). Thereupon, state law was no longer to be looked to as controlling, and the portion of the Supreme Court's decision quoted in the dissenting opinion here can not be so interpreted against the background of the facts in the Cambridge case, which were that under the 1921 Act Cambridge met the standard prescribed because "substantially all of its business" in 1921 and after was with "members." The Supreme Court, over and above any dicta or the implications to be read into the dicta, recognized*1222 the Federal statute as controlling first, and found nothing in the state statutes, in addition thereto, to throw any doubt upon the matter under consideration.
I do not find in this case that the question can properly be posed as involving a conflict between state and Federal statutes, however. I think the terms of section 104(a) are clear and that the court in the Staunton case correctly construed section 104(a), and that the facts surrounding petitioner's business compel the conclusion that petitioner must be classified as a "bank" upon application of the standard found in section 104(a). Therefore, I concur, with the observation that nothing said in
DISNEY, dissenting: I must dissent from the*1223 view expressed in the majority opinion that a corporation doing an industrial loan business under the Virginia statute is comprehended within the definition *1208 of bank under section 104, Revenue Act of 1936.
In my opinion, section 104 was definitely intended to set the state or national law as to banks as a standard for those escaping, as banks, the surtax imposed by section 14 and the normal tax imposed by section 13 of the Revenue Act of 1936, and that it was never intended to include corporations unable to comply with statutory banking requirements.
*1228 *1210 I note that in , that United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit construed section 117(d), Revenue Act of 1934, as to a "bank or trust company incorporated under the laws of the United States or of any state or territory, a substantial part of whose business is the receipt of deposits" - in effect the same definition involved in section 104(a), Revenue Act of 1936, herein involved; and that inter alia the court said: "We entertain no doubt that the taxpayer is a 'trust company incorporated under the laws' of Maryland; but we do not think it can qualify under the second and equally essential [italics supplied] clause of the exempting statute: 'a substantial part of whose business is the receipt of deposits.'" This seems to me to be not only a recognition that, as above expressed, both parts of the statute are equally essential, but some recognition of the state statute as criterion.
STERNHAGEN, MURDOCK, LEECH, TURNER, HILL, and OPPER agree with this dissent.