First National Bank of Binghamton v. City of Binghamton

Smith, J.:

Plaintiff here seeks to recover from the defendant the sum of $4,786.18 paid by plaintiff’s assignors upon an assessment for city taxes in the year 1901. These taxes were concededly paid under duress if their exaction was illegal, and the sole question for our determination here is whether the stockholders of the plaintiff bank were liable under the law to pay-the city tax of 1901.

Upon April 25, 1901, chapter 550 of the laws ■ of that year became effective. That act assumes to amend the Tax Law Of the State (Laws of 1-896, chap. 908, § 24) by changing the rule of taxation upon the shares of stock of banks and banking associations.. Under that act the value of the shares of stock is to be ascertained by adding together the amount of the capital stock, surplus and undivided profits, and by dividing the result by the number of outstanding shares. The rate of tax is then fixed at one per cent upon such value, and it is provided that such tax shall be in lieu of' all other taxes whatsoever for State, county or local *355purposes upon said shares of stock. It is further provided that the boards of supervisors of the several counties shall, on or before the fifteenth day of December in each year, mail to the president or cashier of said banks a statement containing the assessed value of the said shares and the aggregate amount of tax to be collected thereupon. This tax the bank is required to pay within fifteen days after the receipt of the said statement. The act further provides: “ All assessment of the shares of stock of banks and banking associations made on or after January first, nineteen hundred and one, and prior to the passage of this act, shall be null and void, and new assessments thereof shall be made agreeably to the provisions of this act.”

After the passage of the act the city tax for the fiscal year beginning the 1st day of July, 1901, was levied upon the shares of stock of the plaintiff bank and was paid under protest and duress. The defendant claims that while the taxes for State and county expenses are payable in December, and those for city purposes in July, one assessment only is made therefor, which assessment was made and completed before the 1st day of January, 1901, and that, therefore, the tax was lawfully exacted. The contention of the plaintiff is that said tax was assessed after the 1st day of January, 1901, and that, therefore, the city was unauthorized to collect the same, and tire stockholders having paid the same under duress, are entitled to its return.

■ This case is nearly akin to the' case of the Binghamton Trust Co. v. City of Binghamton (12 App. Div. 341). Reference is made to the opinion in that case. The statute here, as there, is one not of exemption, but one which, if construed as defendant desires, would result in double taxation of plaintiff. The inquiry here, as there, is to ascertain the real intent of the statute. In that case the act (Laws of 1901, chap. 132) became effective in March, before the April revision. In this case the act became a law upon the twenty-fifth of April, after the revision of the tax roll. In this act, however, is found the provision that all assessments of shares of stock made on or after January 1, 1901, and prior to the passage of the act, shall be nirll and void. The word “ assessment ”. has a double significance. It may mean the appraisement of property for-the purpose of taxation, or it may mean the apportioning of the tax to *356the taxable property.- This double significance is recognized by all lexicographers- and in the statutes. In the defendant’s charter (Laws of 1888,-chap. 214, tits. 4, 6, as amd.), as set out in the opinion in the Trust Oonypcmy case, the word is-used both in the sense of an appraisement or valuation of property for the purpose of taxation and of the apportionment to the taxable property of the tax to be assessed. Under the defendant’s charter an assessment in the sense of an apportionment of the tax to the taxable property on the roll could have been made after the April grievance day and before the passage of the act. To provide against such an assessment, as well as any other assessment which might have been made meantime, was, I think,' in contemplation of the Legislature when this provision of law was enacted. From the whole statute the scheme is apparent to substitute the new liability for the old, as of January first, and. to relieve the plaintiff’s stockholders from all liability after January first under any other law. With this scheme manifest, the statute is self-executing, and operates to take the property from the roll and avoid any assessment made.

The plaintiff claims as assignee of the several stockholders, and no question, is made of the right to recover the amount claimed under the interpretation of the statute found.

Judgment should, therefore, be ordered for the plaintiff against the defendant for the sum of $4,786.18, with costs.

All concurred.