People ex rel. National Broadway Bank v. Hoffman
People ex rel. National Broadway Bank v. Hoffman
Opinion of the Court
On the 30tb April, 1866, the Legislature passed an act authorizing and directing the Board of Supervisors of the county of New York to refund to any bank which may have paid taxes in that county, for the years 1863 or 1864, such an amount of said tax as was imposed or levied upon said bank in respect to any portion of its capital stock invested in securities of the Bnited States, by law exempt from taxation; and for this purpose to cause to be issued county bonds, signed, sealed, and attested, as thereby required, for the amount of the claim of such bank, after it should have been audited and allowed by said board, and approved by the Mayor» and Corporation Counsel (Laws 1866, vol. 2, page 1996).
The Broadway Bank having paid such tax, presented its claim to the board, and the same was audited and allowed at the sum of $63,132.31, as of May 1st, 1866, and such auditing and allowance was approved by the Mayor and Corporation Counsel, and bonds for that amount were ordered by the board to be issued to said bank.
In pursuance of an ordinance of the said board, passed January 7th, 1867, county bonds in the form prescribed by the said act of
■The ground of this refusal is, that a portion of the capital stock of the Broadway Bank, on which the aforesaid taxes of 1863 and 1864 were levied, was invested in certificates of indebtedness, issued under the act of Congress of March 1st, 1862; and the Defendants claim that such certificates 'are not securities of the United States by law exempt from taxation, and that it had been so adjudged by a branch of the Supreme Court since the decision of the Board of Supervisors. The General Term of the First District held that the certificates were liable to taxation. The Plaintiffs appealed from that judgment to this Court. Certificates of indebtedness under the act of Congress of March 17th, 1862, were held by other banks, and were presented for decision in the same judgment.
Certain evidences of debt against the United States are author • ized by the U. S. statutes, to which I will presently refer, which it is claimed are exempt from taxation by State authority.
The exemption is claimed on two grounds: first, of the express-declarations of the United States statutes to that effect; secondly, that they are instrumentalities of the United States government, necessary to the administration of its affairs, and for that reason not liable to taxation by the authority of 'the State.
The statutes in question are those of March 1st, 1862 (vol. 12, p. 352, U. S. Statutes at Large), and March 17th, 1862 (p. 370, same vol). By the act of March 1st the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized “to cause to be issued to any public creditor who may be desirous to receive the same, upon requisition of the head of the proper department, in satisfaction of audited and settled demands against the United States, certificates for the whole amount due, or part thereof, not less than one thousand dollars; which certificate shall be payable in one year from date, or earlier, at the option of the Government, and shall bear interest at the rate of six per centum per annum.”- ■
This act is entitled, “To authorize the Secretary of the
The latter act possesses the same elements, and no others, than the one before referred to; simply extending the authority to issue the certificates to a different class of creditors — those who held checks drawn by disbursing officers. The Secretary is authorized by these acts, in the event that certain public creditors shall desire it, to issue to them certificates that the government is so indebted to them; which certificates, it is enacted, shall bear an interest of six per cent., and shall entitle the government to a credit of one year or less, at the option of the government.
I will now refer to those statutes which declare that the bonds and other securities of the United States shall be exempt from State taxation, under which exemption is claimed for their certificates. These declarations commenced with the act of Feb. 25th, 1862 (vol. 12, p. 345, § 2), and, so far as I am able to discover, end with the act of March 3d, 1865. As we know from historical information, as well as by a reference to the statutes of the United States, the government has been a borrower of money, at intervals, from its organization. But without going further back, I have now before me the statute of July 12th, 1841, authorizing a loau
Tbe next declaration of exemption is found in the act of March 3d, 1861 (vol. 13, p. 13), authorizing the issue of $200,000,000 of five-forty bonds, bearing an interest of five per cent., where it is declared that “ all bonds issued under this act shall be exempt from taxation by or under State or municipal authority.”
And again on the 30th of June, 1861 (vol. 13, p. 218), the Secretary was authorized to borrow four hundred millions of dollars; to issue therefor bonds, bearing an interest of six per cent.; and it was declared that “ all bonds, treasury notes, and other obligations of the United States, shall be exempt from taxation, by or under State or municipal authority.”
And again, by the act of January 28th, 1865, the act last mentioned was amended, by authorizing, in lieu of the bonds authorized by the first section of that act, treasury notes of the description authorized in the second section thereof; and after making certain provisions for the disposal of the same, it was enacted that “ such notes shall be exempt from taxation by or under State or municipal authority.”
The only remaining declaration is found in the act of March 3d, 1865, by which the Secretary was authorized to borrow $600,000,000, and to issue therefor bonds, or treasury notes, in such form as ho may prescribe, bearing an interest not exceeding six per cent. The second section prescribes the manner in which the “ bonds or other obligations issued under this act ” shall be disposed of, and concludes in these words: “ and all bonds or other obligations issued under this act shall be exempt from taxation by or under State or municipal authority.”
Before commenting upon these statutes, a reference to the principles upon which the bonds of the United States have been adjudged to be exempt from State taxation will be advantageous. McCulloch v. The State of Maryland (4 Wheat. R. 316) is among the earliest on the subject. The Snpreme Court of the United States there decided that Congress had the power to incorporate a
In Osborn v. The United States Bank (9 Wheat. R. 738), the Supreme Court of the United States Avas asked to reconsider its opinion in the case of McCulloch v. The State of Maryland (supra), so far as it decided that the States had no rightful power to tax the Bank of the United States.
Upon such reconsideration the former decision'was sustained, and upon the same general grounds as before set forth.
In Weston v. The City of Charleston (2 Peters’ R. 449), the city of Charleston had imposed a direct tax of twenty-five cents upon the hundred dollars, on the six and seven per cent, stock of the United States. An injunction was obtained against its collection, and the question of the legality of the tax was presented to the Supreme Court of the United States. The Court held the tax to be unconstitutional, saying: “ The tax on government stock is thought by this Court to be a tax on the contract, a tax
In Dobbins v. The Commissioners of Erie County (16 Peters’ E. 435), the Plaintiff was assessed by the State authorities upon his office of captain of a revenue cutter of the United States, and the question was submitted to the Court upon the legality - of such taxation. The statute of Pennsylvania authorized an assessment “ upon all offices and posts of profit.”
The Court held the taxation to be illegal, upon the ground that the officer, like the vessel he commanded, was “ a means to carry into effect the object of the government,” and no. more liable to taxation than the vessel.
In the Bank of Commerce v. New York City (2 Black, 620), the doctrine of Weston v. The City of Charleston was reiterated and affirmed; and it was held that “ a State tax on the loans of the Federal government is a restriction upon the constitutional power of the United States to borrow money,” and thus unconstitutional.
It is evident from these cases that a stock or bond of the United States, issued upon a loan of money to the government, is none the more exempt from taxation on account of a declaration to that effect in the act of Congress authorizing the issue. The exemption is constitutional, and not legislative.
Whatever the Constitution exempts is exempt, although the act of Congress is silent upon that point. Whatever the Constitution does not make exempt, it is beyond the power of Congress to* exempt, however numerous or explicit may be its declarations. Thus the stocks declared to be exempt in Weston v. The City of Charleston contained no express clause of exemption. The same is true of the stocks which are the subject of inquiry in what are called the tax cases (The People v. Commissioners of Taxes, 23 N. Y. 197; 2 Black, 620). So of the United States Bank and its branches, and so of the salary of the revenue officer. In each case the exemption is placed upon the express ground that the subject taxed was a means or power of the United States, necessary or useful in carrying on the operations of
“ It is so ample that it may be exercised on the objects to which it is applicable, to the utmost extent to which the government may choose to carry it.” “ There is no limit in the exercise of the right, no guard against the abuse of power, but in the structure of the government, and the discretion of the representatives
Nor do I consider it by any means certain that the declaration of exemption was intended to apply to the certificates in question. The very frequency of its repetition, and the generality of its terms, afford evidence to the contrary. Thus, in the act of February 25, 1862, authorizing the issue of $150,000,000 of treasury notes, and of $500,000,000 of bonds to fund the treasury notes, it is declared that “ all stocks, bonds, and other securities of the United States, held by individuals, corporations, or associations within the United States, shall be exempt from taxation by or under State authority.”
This is claimed to cover the certificates now under consideration, although they were issued afterward. Upon the same argument, .however, it would protect all the bonds, and security of every kind, afterward provided for by Congress. 'W'hy, then, should the six separate declarations of exemption which I have quoted have been made in the acts of Congress ? Upon this construction they are simply absurd; while upon the legal principle that, although general terms are used in a contract or a statute, they are to be restricted in their application to the subject-matter in hand, the repetition is sensible and intelligible. This idea is sustained by the difference of language in the different statutes. Thus, the language last quoted is general, while in the act of March 3d, 1863, it is declared that “the bonds, treasury notes, and United States notes, issued under the provisions of this act,” shall be
I think this language is to be applied, in each case, to the issues authorized by the acts in which it is found. It will be observed that the act authorizing the issue of the certificates now under consideration contains no declaration of exemption; and unless they are to be exempt upon the ground that they are the means and instruments of the general government, necessary to its operations, they must come within the general scope of State taxation. I do not think they are such. The money or materials, or whatever may have been the original consideration of the indebtedness in question, had been previously received by the government. The certificates were not issued to obtain either money or materials, but were to be issued as a means of payment, at a subsequent day, for what had already been received and spent by the government. They cannot come under the head of “borrowing-money,” which was the theory upon which the constitutional exemption was declared by the Supreme Court of the United States; nor can they be deemed a means necessary to the operations of the government, like ships, a bank, the mail, the custom-house, and the like. They are simply claims of a creditor against a debtor, and against a debtor who is not liable to prosecution, and who could not, like an individual, be embarrassed by a seizure of his property. The certificates do not show upon their face what was the consideration of the original indebtedness, nor is there any evidence upon that subject. They simply show an indebtedness, which has been audited and allowed, and which the government has promised to pay.
This Court should acquiesce fully in the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States upon questions .arising under the laws and Constitution of the United States.
"While I do this cheerfully, I am of the opinion that exemptions
There is no particular virtue in the written statement or certificate. It simply affords ready proof of the debt, but does not alter its character. And yet it would hardly be contended that if the government had years before purchased property of an individual, for which it yet owed the purchase-money, but had given no certificate or evidence of the debt, that this should not, for the purposes of taxation, be deemed a part of the estate or effects of the seller, and liable to taxation, as much as if the purchase had been made and the money owed by an individual. The present case is in legal effect the same.
I see no reasonable ground upon which the exemption under consideration can be claimed; and, considering the enormous taxation to which the people of this State are subject, and must continue to be subjected, it would be unwise, if we could do so, to exempt from its power of taxation any property upon which it has a legal hold.
The Courts have no such power. Their duty is merely to declare the law.
Affirmed.
JOEL TIFFANY, State Reporter.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE PEOPLE ex rel. THE NATIONAL BROADWAY BANK v. JOHN T. HOFFMAN, Mayor, &c., and Others
- Status
- Published