Bank of Republic v. County of Hamilton

Caton, C. J.

Two principal questions are raised by the appellant in this case, which have demanded our careful consideration. The first is, whether the bank can object to the change made by the law of 1857, in ascertaining the value of the property of the bank, on which it is to be assessed, from that provided by the general banking law, under which this bank was organized ; and, second, whether the bonds deposited with the auditor to secure the issues of the bank, are taxable, or rather, whether the bank is taxable to the amount of these bonds, as capital paid in, or secured to be paid in.

The tenth section of the general banking law of 1857, says: “ Taxes shall be levied on and paid by the corporation, and not upon the individual stockholders; the value of the property to be ascertained annually by the bank commissioners herein provided for, and the rate of taxation shall be the same as that required to be levied on other taxable property, by the revenue laws of the State.” This was the provision of the original banking law, approved by the vote of the people, and under which this bank was organized. The sixth section of the amendment of 1857 is this : “ The capital stock of every bank or banking association, paid in or secured to be paid in, except so much thereof as is invested in real estate, which shall be taxed as real estate, as herein provided, together with its surplus profits or reserved fund, and also the real estate of such company, shall be listed by the president or cashier thereof, and assessed and taxed in the same manner as other personal and real estate of the county and towns in which such bank or banking association is located.” This is the change in the law to which the bank makes objection as a violation of its chartered rights ; and also as a violation of this provision of the constitution—“ No act of the General Assembly, authorizing corporations or associations with banking powers, shall go into, or in any manner be in force, unless the same shall be submitted to the people at the general election next succeeding the passage of the same, and be approved by a majority of all the votes cast at such election for and against such law.”

The objection that this change in the mode of ascertaining the value of the taxable property of the bank from the valuation of the bank commissioners to that of the president or cashier of the institution, implies that by this provision in the general banking law the State has entered into a solemn contract with all the banks which should be ever thereafter organized under that law, that that mode and none other should ever be adopted for ascertaining the value of the taxable property of the bank; and this very objection implies that all banks and all other corporations are above and independent of, all laws except only their charters. That no general law affecting the revenues, or the police, or in any way the general good government of the State, can be passed unless its charter so provides.

Corporations are artificial persons endowed with limited powers and capacities, and are subject to the general laws and legislation of the State, the same as natural persons. The natural man is born with sovereign power and unlimited rights, if he be beyond the limits of governments and societies ; upon entering these, a portion of his rights are sacrificed, against his consent if he objects, either to a greater or less extent, as good government may be deemed to require. It would be absurd to suppose that the powers of government are greater over the rights of the being endowed by the Creator, than over the one spoke into existence by human laws. Government may enter into contracts with either, and by these contracts it must be bound, but no more so when the contract is entered into with a person of its own creation, than with a natural person. This obligation imposed upon government to observe and be bound by its contracts, is imposed by our federal and state constitutions, and these constitutional provisions were inserted in order that we might be relieved from the oppressions of an absolute government. An absolute government may deprive all its subjects, whether natural or artificial, of all rights, and even of being. To this very day the absolute power is claimed and exercised by the British parliament, and there is no compact existing between the people and the government in that free and enlightened country, protecting the subject against the concentrated powers of the state. Society here might have been organized conferring upon government the same absolute powers over the citizen or subject, but happily, restrictions were adopted, curtailing these absolute powers, which experience has shown, left the hands of power sufficiently strong to govern this people.

The trouble has been in considering what the legislature may and may not do with corporations of its own creation, that we have too much lost sight of the distinction between those powers which are secured to them by contract and those which are mere endowments of existence. The former are their property, of which they cannot be deprived without just compensation; the latter are elements of existence, imparted to them by the law of their being, and are held by them like the natural rights of the natural person, subject to be controlled and modified by the legislature, the same as it may control and modify the natural endowments of the natural person. It may not be easy at all times to distinguish between those rights which are secured by the contract contained in their charter, and those powers which are conferred upon them as capacities or elements of their being. Indeed the judicial mind has not to any great extent been led to inquire into this distinction, but it has been mostly occupied in defending and maintaining those rights which are secured by what is called this legislative contract, and it has required all the weight of the judicial department of the government to protect these rights against the encroachments which have been sometimes attempted by the strong arm of the legislature. While we must be unyielding in resistance to such encroachments whenever attempted, we must not forget that these artificial beings must be subject to government and subordinate to legislation, precisely the same as an individual or natural person.

If in a law creating an artificial being, "rights or powers are conferred upon it, which, by the express terms of the act or by reasonable intendment, shall not be taken away or modified by a subsequent law without the consent of the corporation, that becomes what has been termed a charter contract, and becomes a property in the hands of the corporation, and is protected by those constitutional provisions referred to ; but unless there be such express provision or reasonable intendment that such right or faculty shall not be touched by subsequent legislation, it is held in the same subordination to governmental control to which the rights and faculties existing in natural persons are subject. Suppose an act passed creating a corporation and conferring upon it the same powers, faculties and capacities of natural persons, and there stops. We cannot conceive of greater powers than would be conferred on that corporation, and yet as there would be no express or implied contract that it should be above legislative interference, the law-making power could subject it to the same control that it could a natural person. So again, should a law be passed declaring that a certain individual should enjoy a right exclusively, which he had formerly possessed in common with all men, or should thereafter enjoy a right of which he had, in common with others, been deprived, and the law, in express terms, or by fair intendment, should guarantee the enjoyment of such right, perpetually, that would be a contract with the legislature which would vest in him a property in such right, in which he would be protected to the same extent and in the same way that the same right secured in the same manner to a corporation would be protected. Whenever, therefore, a property is asserted in a right, whether it be a right inherent in a natural person or conferred by law upon an artificial person, the first inquiry presented is, has the legislature renounced the power to legislate further upon such right, or subject it to further legislative control ? If so, then a property is secured ; if not, it is a naked right, which is subject to governmental regulation, the same as all other rights, which may be dealt with by the law-making power, as the public good may require.

Having thus stated some of the fundamental principles by which we must be governed in the present inquiry, let us return to the immediate question before us, and to which we must apply them. We have already quoted the provisions of the law of 1851, and the change made in the mode of determining the value of the taxable property of the bank, by the law of 1857. There it nothing in the former showing that the legislature intended to bind itself never to change the mode there provided for assessing the bank. The insertion of that provision in this law is no more indicative of an intention by the legislature to abandon the right to fix by law the mode of assessment, than as if the same provision had been inserted in another law. It has nothing to do with the powers or privileges of the banks to be incorporated under it. It is but a revenue measure, and of all other subjects we must presume that the legislature will barter away last, the right to regulate the mode of assessing and collecting the public revenue. The existence of the State depends upon her revenues, and the most vital interests of the community require that the legislature retain its power over the means and mode of raising its revenues ; and we cannot and ought not to presume that this right has been thrown away and abandoned, or relinquished beyond recovery by the legislature, unless the language of the law clearly indicates such intention.

The language of the law of 1851, is, “ The value of the property to be ascertained annually by the bank commissioners herein provided for.” From this is it to be inferred that the legislature contracted and agreed with the banks that no other mode should be adopted for the assessment of the property of the banks in all time to come ? We are not to presume that such was the intention of the legislature. The language conveys no such idea, and the subject matter at once forbids it. That the legislature might bind itself to a corporation or an individual to assess property in a particular mode consistently with the injunctions of the constitution, we will not deny, but in order to do so, negative words should be used, forbidding any other mode, or some consideration should be provided for the relinquishment of so important a right, or it should appear from some provision of the act, that it was the intention to grant the right to the party to have the value ascertained by that and in no other mode. This is a question of the construction of a statute, the object being to find out the real meaning of the legislature, which must be governed by the rules of construction applicable in such cases. The presumption is against the intention to abandon the right of the legislature to regulate by law the mode of assessing and collecting the revenue, and to overcome this presumption, we must find something in the law indicating such intention. There is nothing of that kind appearing in this law, and we hold that the legislature had and has the right to provide for the taxation of bank property the same as any and all other property.

The fact that the officers of. the bank reported the list in conformity to the requirements of the act of 1857, shows that the bank had adopted its provisions as an amendment to its charter, and could not afterwards object to it as a violation of its chartered rights ; serves as another answer to this objection; but we chose to consider the question of power in the legislature, and to vindicate that power upon what we believe to be sound and correct principles.

There is another objection, which is, that it is an amendment to the law of 1851, which was by the constitution required to be submitted to a vote of the people for their approval, before it could take effect, and it having been thus approved, it cannot be touched by the legislature alone. That it can only be altered or repealed by the same power, and through the same channel, which imparted to it vitality; which made it a law. We have already quoted the provision of the constitution upon which this provision is based. On the one hand, it is contended that by the adoption of this provision of the fundamental law, it was the intention of the people to reserve to themselves the right, not only to decide the question whether or not there should be any banks in the State, but also that they should determine what kind of banks they would have, the principles upon which they should be established, and the mode of their organization. In short, that the only power which they delegated to the legislature on the subject of banks, was to propose measures on this subject to the people, for them to adopt or reject,—that the people retained in their own hands a portion of the legislative authority, and constituted themselves a branch of the legislature upon this subject. On the other hand, it is contended that this law of 1851, when it received the sanction of the popular vote, became a law the same as any other law, subject to be amended or repealed by the legislature, as much so as if it had not been required to be submitted to a vote of the people, but had been passed by the General Assembly alone, in the ordinary way. That when the vote was once taken and the law approved, the office of that provision of the constitution was fulfilled, and as to that law at least; became a dead letter.

Without stopping to examine how far either of these positions may be maintained, we are clearly of opinion that some of the provisions of this law which was submitted to the people, are subject to legislative interference and,control, and among them is the one in question. We may safely say, that the constitution did not require that the mode of assessing the property of the bank for the purposes of taxation, should be submitted to the people, and its submission to them was a work of supererogation. Had the bank law been silent on this question, and the same provision inserted in another law, it would have been as validly passed as it was after the vote in its favor. That vote gave to this clause no additional sanction. The subject of taxation and the revenue, are, by the constitution, placed in the hands of the legislature alone. Upon this subject they have complete jurisdiction to legislate independently of the popular vote, and such vote in approval 'of laws which might take effect without it, could not place the law beyond or above the jurisdiction of the General Assembly; so that we may safely assume that any provision in that law which might have been enacted by the General Assembly alone, is still subject to legislative control, without reference to a vote of the people. Such is the provision now under consideration.

There is one remaining question to be considered, and that is, whether the amount of bonds deposited with the auditor to secure the redemption of the issues of the bank, is subject to taxation. Upon the power of the legislature to declare all rights and interests held within the State, property, and subject to taxation, we have fully expressed our views in the case of The People v. Worthington, post, and we shall not repeat them here. Of the authority of the legislature to impose the tax, we have no doubt, and the only real question is, have they done so ? The passage from the law of 1857, has been already quoted. It says, the capital stock “ paid in, or secured to be paid in,” shall be assessed and taxed. The second section of the general banking law provides, that when any person or association shall transfer to, and deposit with the auditor, certain specified public stock, the auditor shall deliver to him or them an amount of bank notes, in blank, to an amount equal to the value of the bonds, to be issued by the bank for and as in lieu of money. The stocks thus deposited with the auditor are presented to him as the property of the bank, either purchased by the bank with its cash or credit, or that of the owners, and constitute the basis of its currency, and the fund from which its issues are ultimately to be redeemed, in case the bank does not voluntarily redeem them with other funds. It is not the business of the auditor, or of the State, to inquire whether the bonds were purchased with cash or on credit. That circumstance could not affect the title of the bank to the bonds when presented to the auditor, and at that moment they are the proper subject of taxation, as bonds. When they are transferred and delivered to the auditor, they constitute so much bank capital paid in. The title of the bonds is then vested in the auditor, for the trusts declared in the law. They then cease to be taxable as bonds, but the amount of their value becomes taxable as bank capital paid in. What is bank capital ? It is a fund contributed, or to be contributed, by the shareholders or proprietors of the bank, and transferred by each to the aggregate association, upon and with which it is to transact business. It may be either loaned to its customers in specie, or deposited either in its own vaults or in some other place, where it may remain as a basis or security for the redemption of the bank bills which it may issue, and these bills are loaned to its customers or otherwise used, as and for money. If this law had required coin to be deposited and kept in the vaults of the bank instead of bonds in the hands of the auditor, to secure the redemption of the bills issued by the bank, would any one deny that the coin thus deposited was so much capital paid in ? And if coin thus deposited in the vaults of the bank would be so much capital of the bank, it would be none the less so if deposited with the auditor, or in any other hands ; and when stocks are substituted for coin, we are unable to appreciate any reason why they are not equally capital paid in. It seems to us that neither ingenuity nor sophistry can avoid this conclusion. At least, we can comprehend no reason why it is not so. We might go on with a tedious review of various provisions of this and the subsequent laws on the subject, showing that it was the manifest intention of the legislature that the bonds deposited with the auditor should be considered as so much capital paid in, as a basis for the banking operations of the institution, but we deem it entirely unnecessary. To us it seems so plain as to admit of neither question nor cavil.

We are of opinion that the judgment must be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.