Commonwealth v. Lancaster Savings Bank

Endicott, J.

The Constitution of the Commonwealth provides, that the Legislature may impose and levy reasonable duties and excises upon any produce, goods, wares, merchandise and commodities whatsoever, brought into, produced, manufactured or being within the state. Const. Mass. o. 1, § 1, art. 4. A duty or excise may thus be exacted not merely upon certain articles produced or brought into the state, but also upon any commodities whatsoever. “Commodity ” is a general term, and includes the privilege and convenience of transacting a particular business; and, upon persons carrying on such business, it has never been questioned that the Legislature may levy an excise, or provide that a license must be obtained in order to transact it. See Gen. Sts. o. 50. And, when a number of persons are incorporated by the Legislature for a special purpose, or, being incorporated by another state, have an office or place of business within the Commonwealth, upon the franchise thus conferred or exercised, an excise may be laid. Portland Bank v. Apthorp, 12 Mass. 252. Attorney General v. Bay State Mining Co. 99 Mass. 148. It is not a tax upon property, though the amount of the capital stock, or the extent of the business transacted, may properly afford the means of computing the amount of the tax. It was said by Mr. Justice Wells, in Attorney General v. Bay State *496Mining Co.: “In case of domestic corporations, it is based upon a valuation which involves an estimate of all the advantages, present and prospective, which the stock is supposed to derive from the combination of capital and the exercise of all the rights and privileg.cs enjoyed by the corporation in the conduct of its business.” Being a tax upon the privilege of transacting a particular business, it would seem necessarily to follow that if, at the time when the tax is to be assessed and is declared to accrue, the corporation has for the purpose of transacting its business practically ceased to exist and can no longer enjoy the privilege, then no tax is to be exacted.

By the statutes of this Commonwealth, savings banks' are required to pay a tax of three quarters of one per cent, upon their deposits, to be assessed one half on the average amount of their deposits for the six months preceding the first day of May, and the other half in like manner preceding the first day of November of each year, and their officers are required to make return of the same on or before the second Mondays of those months. Sts. 1862, e. 224, §§ 4, 5, 8, 9, 11, 12; 1868, c. 315. The St. of 1862, was passed April 30 of that year, and the power of the Legislature to impose such a tax upon the franchise of savings banks, and the right to assess it on the average amount of deposits for the six months preceding the first day of May of that year, were upheld in Commonwealth v. People’s Five Cents Savings Bank, 5 Allen, 428. The grounds upon which that decision was based are in the opinion of the court decisive of this case. It was there held that the excise was not laid on the property of the bank, or its depositors, or the business which, the bank transacted during a given period, but upon the value of the franchise on the first day of May, or in other words, on its capacity to transact business on that day; and that the extent of its capacity on that day could properly be determined by the amount of its business during the preceding six months. That amount would disclose its capacity and the value of the privilege and benefit it enjoyed under its charter on the day when the tax was assessed. See Commonwealth v. Provident Institution for Savings, 12 Allen, 312. In the case at bar, the Lancaster Savings Bank was, by the decrees of this court, in December, 1875, placed in the hands of receivers, and perpetually prohibited *497from transacting the business for which it was incorporated, and deprived of the right to exercise its franchise, and of the profit and benefit to be derived therefrom. The receivers proceeded at once to wind up the affairs of the bank, and the organization of the bank existed only for the purpose of executing such deeds and papers as might be necessary to enable the receivers to perform their duties. Without considering the question whether the franchise could be said to exist on the first day of May following, it is very clear that as a privilege to transact business on that day it did not exist. Its officers could not be required to make return, and no tax could be levied as of May 1, 1876, under the existing provisions and law. See Jones v. Winthrop Savings Bank, 66 Maine, 242. If in December, 1875, there had been no statute imposing a tax on the franchise of savings banks, and in April, 187 6, a statute similar to the St. of 1862, had been enacted, it would hardly be contended that it could apply to a bank then in the hands of receivers and perpetually enjoined from the transaction of all business. And yet it is impossible, under the authorities cited, to distinguish such a case from the case at bar.

Other provisions of the St. of 1862, e. 224, confirm this construction. When a savings bank fails to pay the taxes imposed by that act, the treasurer of the Commonwealth may bring an action for their recovery, and it may also be liable to an injunction restraining it from prosecuting its business until the taxes are paid. § 11. See also St. 1867, o. 52. It is clearly to be inferred from these provisions, that the corporations, upon which taxes are to be imposed by the statute, are those which are in the exercise of their corporate powers, and against which the proceedings and penalties provided may be enforced; and not those in the hands of receivers and perpetually enjoined from transacting business. Columbian Book Co. v. De Golyer, 115 Mass. 67, 69.

We are of opinion that the decree of the Chief Justice was correct in directing the receivers that the claim of the Commonwealth to recover a tax as of May 1, 1876, was invalid.

Decree affirmed.