Preston Kean & Co. v. Ayers

Tuley, J.:—

In the year 1878 the complainants, as private brokers, made a return to William A. Rice, collector of the town of South Chicago, of their personal property liable to taxation. The “return” not being satisfactory to the collector, he gave them due notice that he would review their assessment on the 12th day of August.'

Kean, one of the complainants, appeared before the assessor upon the day fixed. There is some evidence going to show that he refused to be sworn, but there is evidence that either then or before that date, he did submit to a lengthy examination by the assessor and his attorney as to the business and property of the firm,. The assessor added $50,000 to the amount of taxable property returned by complainants, making a total of $52,500, and gave them due notice thereof.

They applied to the board of county commissioners for an abatement of the amount added by the assessor, but although the committee of the board at one time appear to have been favorably inclined to recommend a reduction or abatement of a portion of the assessment, it failed to do so, but reported against any change, and the report was concurred in by the board.

Thereupon the complainants file this bill, offering to pay the tax due on $2,500 worth of personal property, being the amount returned by them as liable to taxation, and praying a permanent injunction against the remainder of the tax of $2,435.99, levied upon the assessment as increased by the assessor.

I shall dispose of the constitutional point urged by complainants counsel, to-wit: that the revenue law as to the mode of arriving at the property of private bankers and the amount of tax they shall pay, is void, because it singles them out as a class, and prescribes a different rule from that prescribed for listing and taxing the property of other private citizens, with the remark, that it is not so clearly and palpably repugnant to the constitution as to justify this court and the setting aside an act of the legislature.

The sworn statement or return required to be made to the assessor by section 30 of the revenue law was made as of May 1st, 1878, by complainants as follows:

1. Money on hand or in transit...'............ $..........

2. Funds in the hands of other banks, bankers and persons.....................................

3. Checks and cash items not included in foregoing ..........................................

4. Amount bills receivable and other credits due or to become due, including accounts receivable and accrued interest............ 438,971 04

5. Amount bonds and stock of every'kind, shares of stock of other corporations or companies, held as an investment or representing assets ................................ 134,600 00

6. All other property appertaining to business, not including real estate................ 2,500 00

7. Amount of all deposits made.with them by other parties.......................... 655,073 55

8. Amount of all accounts payable, other than current deposits.................................

9. Amount of bonds or other securities exempt by law from taxation, specifying the amount and kind of each, the same being included in 5th item, and legal tenders... 144,750 00

By the statute the aggregate of the 7th and 8th items, to-wit: $655,073.55 was to be deducted from 4th item, $438,-971.04. The 9th item, $134,600 was to be deducted from 5th item, which was also $134,600.

It will be perceived that these deductions being made there was left of all this property the paltry sum of $2,500, which was the estimated cash value of the office furniture and fixtures.,

Upon the same date, to-wit, May 1st, 1878, Preston Kean and Co. made a report to the Chicago Clearing House' of the condition of their business on the close of business on that date, as follows:

The amount of deposits reported was the same as reported to the assessor.

The amount of bonds and stocks, 5th item, the same.

As to items 1, 2 and 3 in the return to the assessor, they report none on hand, but in their report to the clearing house, they report as to same matters,—

1. Cash on hand, legal tenders, $40,000, national bank notes, $98,181..................... $138,181 00

2. As due from banks and bankers............ 120,151 48

3. As checks for clearings.................... 44,088 81

The return to the collector and that from the clearing house were both made from the same balance sheet. It appears that to the clearing house among the resources they reported:

Bill and notes.............................. $279,917 98

Call loans on cash collaterals.................. 38,901 58

and when they came to make their return- to the assessor, instead of making return of the amount of money in hands of banks and bankers, they took the amount, $120,151.48 and added it to the above items, bill and notes, and call loans', making a total of $438,971.04, which they returned to the assessors as bills receivable, etc., under the 5th item.

Mr. Kean, when on the stand, was asked how it happened that he returned to the clearing house $138,181 cash and $120,151.48 “due from banks and bankers,” and in his return reported to the assessor not one dollar cash on hand, nor a single dollar of funds in the hands of banks and bankers. His answer was, in substance, “that the capital of the firm, $100,000, and the surplus was all invested in government bonds and treasury notes, and the money on hand and the' money in the hands of New York and other bankers, subject to our draft, was the money of our depositors and not our own money.” That the firm was advised by their attorney that they could not be made to pay taxes on moneys deposited with them, therefore they made no return of such moneys on hand or with other banks and bankers.

This is the contention of the complainants and raises the question, whether private bankers are required to return such moneys for taxation? Are deposits in the hands of private" bankers taxable to the bankers ?

It will be perceived that the Revenue law, sec. 30, while requiring private bankers to return “the amount of all deposits made with them by other parties” authorizes the amount of such deposits, 7th item, together with accounts payable, 8th item, to be deducted from the 4th item, i. e. bills receivable and other credits. If, however, there are no accounts payable and the only item to be deducted is deposits and the deposits are not all invested in “bills receivable and other credits,” but remain partly in the money deposited by other parties, must such part of the deposits remaining in money be returned by the private banker as money on hand and be taxed to him as such ?

Section 6 of the revenue law requires every person to list, among other things, for taxation, “all moneys deposited by him, subject to his order, check or draft.” Section 25, in the schedule given, there appears “moneys” among articles of property to be listed. By section 27 every person is entitled to have deducted from the gross amount of credits the amount of all bona fide debts owing by such person.

Section 295 defines credits to be “every claim or demand for money, labor * * * due or to become due, not including money on deposit,” and the same section defines “moneys” to be “gold, silver, coin, paper and other currency * * * and every deposit which the person owning * * * is entitled to withdraw in money.”

From these provisions it is clearly the intent of the law maker that the person making the deposit with the private banker shall make return, list for taxation, and pay taxes upon all such moneys so deposited.

Does the law contemplate that the banker with whom the money is deposited shall also pay a tax on the same moneys f If it does, then it is clear that the same thing, the same money, pays taxes twice in the same year. It is double taxation of that money.

As before stated, the general words of section 30 “money on hand” would seem to require the banker to make return of it for taxation. I cannot believe that such was the intention of the law makers. Double taxation is destructive of that principle of equality and uniformity of taxation so imperatively demanded by the constitution and which pervades, or should pervade, all our revenue laws.

Says Justice Cooley: “Where it is once decided that any kind or class of property is liable to be taxed under one provision of the statutes, it has been held to follow, as a legal conclusion, that the legislature could not have intended the same property should be subject to another tax, though there be general words in the law which would seem to imply that it may be taxed a second time. ’ ’

Cooley Tax. 165, 166, citing Savings Bank v. Nashua, 46 N. H. 389; State v. Sterling, 20 Md. 502, and other cases.

In Massachusetts where a provision of the statute required the personal property of manufacturing corporations to be taxed in the town where the main factory was located, and by another provision the owner of every share of the stock of a manufacturing corporation was required to list such share for taxation, it was held that as the shares of stock represented the property of the corporation, the personal property could not be taxed and that taxation must be confined to the shares of the stock. The court held that a construction of the law was not to be adopted which would subject the same property to be taxed twice. In that case a literal rendering of the law would have clearly required the property to be twice taxed, but the court nevertheless so construed the law, in the interest of equality, fairness and right, as to prevent the same property being taxed twice. Salem Iron, etc., Co. v. Danvers, 10 Mass. 514.

I am of the opinion that the requirement of the law that the banker make return of money on hand or in transit must be held to mean money of the banker (other than deposits) on hand. I do not, in making this construction of the law, ignore the decisions which hold that the relation between the banker and depositor is that of debtor and creditor; and that the money, when deposited, becomes the property of the banker and which may be attached or seized for his debts, but in this case the law is so positive in its requirement that the depositor must list and pay taxes on his moneys on deposit, the presumption of law is so strong against an intent to have the same property twice taxed; it would be so manifestly unfair and unjust that it should be twice taxed, it would be so opposed to the requirement of equality and uniformity of taxation, that I feel compelled to the conclusion that such moneys cannot be taxed in the hands of the banker so long as it retains its character of “money on deposit.”

When, however, the banker converts this money into promissory notes, bills receivable or other credits, it no longer remains money on deposit, but becomes taxable to the banker. When so converted it becomes a different species of property from tangible property; it becomes intangible; instead of remaining money on deposit, it becomes “credits.”

In People v. Worthington, 21 Ill. 171, 173, Justice Catón says: “The constitution means as it declares that each shall pay a tax in proportion to the property which he has, whether that property consists in farms or mortgages; of visible substances, or choses in action * * * and it may be true in one sense to say that it is double taxation to tax the horse which is sold and also the note which is given for the purchase money; and so it is to tax the note which is given for $100 borrowed money and also the money which is borrowed. ’ ’

A man’s entire fortune may consist in intangible property or choses in action and the law contemplates its taxation as much as it does that of tangible property. Perfect equality or singleness of taxation* in its strictest sense is an impossibility. All that can be done is to approximate as near as we can to equality of taxation. The entire system or theory of taxation of personal property is extremely vicious and faulty and results in the grossest inequality and injustice.

Of the thirty odd millions.of money on deposit by citizens of Chicago with banks and bankers, I do not believe from all that I can learn, that there is $50,000 of it returned for taxation, and of the entire personal property, including therein taxable choses in action, not to exceed one-tenth pays any tax of any nature or kind.

This case is not a bad illustration as to how a certain kind of personal property escapes taxation. This wealthy and well-known banking firm, handling millions of dollars yearly and undoubtedly earning a handsome annual income for its several members, a firm whose business could not be carried on for a week without police protection; is unwilling to pay as much annual taxes as is paid by every person in the community who owns a homestead exceeding twenty-five hundred dollars in value. This attempt to evade this tax — which is really not one-half what it should have been — cannot be expected to commend itself to a court of conscience, one of whose favorite maxims is that “equality is equity.”

This firm had in the hands of banks, bankers and others, subject to draft on May 1st, 1878, the sum of $120,151.48, which it was clearly their duty to return for taxation. This money, although it may have been placed on deposit with them, had been taken from their vaults, sent to New York and other places and placed in the hands of other bankers. It became in law the money, the property of such other bankers. It could be seized for their debts and on their bankruptcy would become a part of a general fund for their creditors. It is absurd to call it the money of Preston Kean & Co.’s depositors. It it not money on deposit, subject to the order or draft of the persons who made the deposits with Preston Kean & Co.

The supreme court o£ this state in 1867 or 1868, in a case where this hanking house was contesting a tax, decided in substance, that this bank, having kept.its capital sto.ck and surplus invested in government bonds, although they dealt in bonds and the bonds were changing from day to day, in amount and identity, was not liable to taxation on such capital and surplus. The assessor was bound to follow this decision.

If this case goes up, as it probably will, it is to be hoped that the supreme court may consider whether or not the spirit of the law which exempts capital invested in U. S. government securities from taxation,'does not require that such investment should be a permanent investment, made as an investment and not a mere trading and temporary investment, as practiced by this concern.

The question raised as to the jurisdiction of a court of chancery in cases of this nature, is an important one and worthy of notice.

“When a tax is assessed as a personal charge against the party taxed, or against his personal property, it is difficult,’7 says Judge Gooley, “to suggest any ground of equitable jurisdiction. Presumptively the remedy at law is adequate. If the tax is illegal and the party makes payment, he is entitled to recover back the amount. The illegality alone furnishes no ground of equitable interference.” Cooley on Taxation, p. 538.

In the case of a tax against real estate, where the tax may ultimately ripen into a deed, a court of equity takes jurisdiction to prevent or remove a cloud from the title, the prevention and removal of clouds from title to real estate being a recognized subject of jurisdiction of a court of chancery. But where the tax is merely personal, the remedy at law to recover it back adequate, when arises the jurisdiction of equity ? In fact in the later case a party is not injured until he is forced to pay the tax. When he pays the law gives him an ample remedy to recover back his money and interest, and equity should not interfere by injunction and cripple or retard the state in its effort to collect its revenue remedy by restraining the exercise of powers perverted to a fraudulent or oppressive purpose (see Drake v. Phillips, 40 Ill. 388), and jurisdiction has been taken in cases where the tax was purely a personal tax, but in my opinion it is time to call a halt in this matter of judicial interference with the government in the collection of its revenues.

In this case the act of the assessor was a conscientious and just one, and there can be no pretense of any fraud and certainly none that the act of the assessor was oppressive.

Independent of the question of the jurisdiction of a court •of chancery in this class of cases, and independent of the question of the legality of the tax, the complainants cannot have a decree in their favor on the case as made by the proofs.

After the assessor had raised their assessment from $2,500 to $52,500 the complainants applied to the county board for an abatement of the assessment. It is true, as argued by the county attorney, if the assessment that was made is to be treated as an overvaluation of the complainants’ property, the decision of the county board, which was vested with power to review the assessment, would under our decisions be final and conclusive. Courts are not vested with power to make valuations or assessments. This must be done by the town assessors, subject only to review by the town board of equalisation, or the county board, as the ease may be.

This cannot, however, be treated merely as a case of overvaluation of property liable to assessment. The complaint is not that the assessor over-valued the office furniture, but that he included in his assessment property not liable to taxation, and that to the amount of $50,000. This being the contention, it is argued that chancery has jurisdiction. Our supreme court has' decided that chancery has jurisdiction to afford preventive relief by injunction in all cases where property exempt from taxation is attempted to be taxed. And while it is true that when property exempt from taxation is assessed, the owner is not bound to apply to the statutory board — in this case the county board — for relief, but may wait until the attempt is made to collect the tax and then go into chancery for his injunction; yet if he does seek relief from the statutory tribunal and does not obtain it, can the owner afterwards have a standing in a court of equity and obtain the relief which was denied him by the statutory tribunal? I am clearly of the opinion that he can not.

The assessment of taxes is a legislative act. It is for that body to determine the necessity, the policy of a tax and to make necessary rules and regulations for its assessment and collection. It has full power to say what officer, board or tribunal shall review the assessment and decide all questions connected with the making of such assessments. The tribunal or board to which this power was given in this case is the county board.

By section 97 of the revenue law the county board is authorized to hear and determine the complaint of any person “that he is assessed on property claimed to be exempt from taxation.” If the board decides against the complaint, then the person making the complaint has the right to appeal to the state auditor, and by the same section it is made the duty of the state auditor to present the question as to the property being exempt to the supreme court.

After the adverse decision of the county board, the complainants instead of taking their appeal to the state auditor, abandoned the pursuit of the statutory remedy and filed their bill in this court. Having abandoned their right to appeal to the state auditor and thence to the supreme court, the decision of the county board, the statutory tribunal, became final and conclusive. The question became res ad judicata, and beyond the power of this court or any other court to review.

The law does not give the county board exclusive jurisdiction to determine such questions, but does give it jurisdiction to do so, and the complainant having appealed to that jurisdiction was bound by its decision and could only have it reviewed in the manner and by the officer or court named in the statute. He is concluded by the decision of the tribunal to which he elected to make his complaint, and cannot after an adverse decision seek the forum of a court of equity for relief. Weaver v. State, 39 Ala. 535; Commonwealth v. Cary Improvement Co., 98 Mass. 19; Kimber v. Schuylkill County, 20 Pa. St. 366.

For the reasons given, let the injunction be dissolved and the bill be dismissed! at complainant’s costs for the want of equity.