Veazie Bank v. Fenno
Veazie Bank v. Fenno
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The necessity of adequate provision for the financial exigencies created by the late rebellion, suggested to the administrative and legislative departments of the government important changes in the systems of currency and taxation which had hitherto prevailed. These changes, more or less distinctly shown in administrative recommendations, took form and substance in legislative acts. Ve have now to consider, within a'limited range, those which relate to circulating notes and the taxation of circulation.
At the beginning of the rebellion the circulating medium consisted almost entirely of bank notes issued by numerous independent corporations variously organized under State legislation, of various degrees of credit, and very unequal resources, administered often with great, and not unfrequently, with little skill, prudence, and integrity. The acts of Congress, then in force, prohibiting the receipt or dis
The first act authorizing the emission of notes by the Treasury Department for circulation was that of July 17th, 1861.
On the 31st of December, 1861, the State banks suspended specie payment. .Until this time the expenses of the war had been paid in coin, or in the demand.notes just referred to; and, for some time afterwards, they continued to be phid in these notes, which, if not. redeemed in coin, were received as coin in the payment of duties.
Subsequently, on the 25th of February, 1862,
This currency, issued directly by the government for the disbursement of the war and other expenditures, could not, obviously, be a proper object of taxation.
But on the 25th of February, 1863, the act authorizing National banking associations
Both acts also imposed taxes on capital and deposits, which need not be noticed here.
At a later date, by the act of June 3d, 1864,
It can hardly be doubted that the object of this provision was to inform the proper authorities of the exact amount of paper money in circulation, with a view to its regulation by law.
The same provision was re-enacted, with a more extended application, on the 13th of July, 1866, in these words: “ Every National banking association, State bank, or State banking association, shall pay a tax of ton per centum on the amount of notes of kny person, State bank, or State banking association used for circulation, and paid out by them after the first day of August, 1866, and such tax shall be assessed and paid in such manner as shall be prescribed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.”
The constitutionality of this last provision is now drawn in question, and this brief statement of the recent legislation of Congress has been made for the purpose of placing in a clear light its scope and bearing, especially as developed in the provisions just cited. It will be seen that when the policy of taxing bank circulation was first' adopted in 1863, Congress was inclined to discriminate for, rather than against, the circulation of the State banks; but that when the couutry had been sufficiently furnished with a National currency by the issues of United States notes and of National bank notes, the discrimination was turned, and very decidedly turned, in the opposite direction.
The general question now before us is, whether or not the tax of ten per cent., imposed on State banks or National banks paying out the notes of individuals or State banks
In support of the position that the act of Congress, so far as it provides for the levy and collection of this tax, is repugnant to the Constitution, two propositions have been argued with much force and earnestness.
The first is that the tax in question is a direct tax, and has not been apportioned among the States agreeably to the Constitution.
The second is that the act imposing the tax impairs a franchise granted by the State, and that Congress has no power to pass any law with that intent or effect.
The first of these propositions will be first examined.
The difficulty of defining with accuracy the terms used in the clause of the Constitution which confers the power of taxation upon Congress, was felt in the Convention which framed that instrument, and has always been experienced by courts when called upon to determine their meaning.
The general intent of the Constitution, however, seems plain. The General Government, administered, by the Congress of the Confederation, had been reduced to the verge of impotency by the necessity of relying for revenue upoii requisitions on the States, and it was a leading object in the adoption of the Constitution to relieve the government, to be organized under it, from this necessity, and confer upon it ample power to provide revenue by the taxation of persons and property. And nothiug is clearer, from the discussions in the Convention and the discussions which preceded final ratification by the necessary number of States, than the purpose to give this power to Congress, as to the taxation of everything except exports, in its fullest extent.
This purpose is apparent, also, from the terms in which the taxing power is granted. The power is “ to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to pay the debt and provide for the common defence and general welfare of the United States.” More comprehensive words could not have been used. Exports only are by another provision excluded from its application.
And there are directions as to the mode of exercising the power. If Congress sees fit to impose a capitation, or other direct tax, it must be laid in proportion to the census; if Congress determines to impose duties, imposts, and excises, they must be uniform throughout the United States, These are not strictly limitations of power. They are rules prescribing the mode in which it shall be exercised. It still extends to every object of taxation, except exports, and may be applied to every object of taxation, to which it extends, in such measure as Congress may determine.
The comprehensiveness of the power, thus given to Congress, may serve to explain, at least, the absence of any attempt by members of the Convention to define, even in debate, the terms of the grant. The words used certainly describe the whole power, and it was the intention of the Convention that the whole power should be conferred. The definition of particular words, therefore, became unimportant.
It may be said, indeed, that this observation, however just in its application to the general, grant of power, cannot be applied to the rules by which different descriptions of taxes are directed to be laid and collected.
Direct taxes must be laid and collected by the rule of apportionment; duties, imposts, and excises must be laid and collected under the i*ule of uniformity.
Much diversity of opinion has always prevailed upon the question, what are direct taxes? Attempts to answer it by reference to the definitions of political economists have been frequently made, but without satisfactory results. The enumeration of the different kinds of taxes which Congress was
We are obliged, therefore, to resort to historical evidence, and to seek the meaning of the words in the use and in the opinion of those whose relations to the government, and means of knowledge, warranted them in speaking with authority.
And, considered in this light, the meaning and application of the rule, as to direct taxes, appears to us quite clear.
It is, as we thiuk, distinctly shown in every act of Congress on the subject.
In each of these acts, a gross sum was laid upon the United States, and the total amount was apportioned to the several States, according to their respective numbers of inhabitants, as ascertained by the last preceding census. Having been apportioned, provision was made for the imposition of the tax upon the subjects specified in the act, fixing its total sum.
In 1798, when the first direct tax was imposed, the total amount was fixed at two millions of dollars;
This review shows that personal property, contracts, occupations, and the like, have never been regarded by Congress as proper subjects of direct tax. It has been supposed that slaves must be considered as an exception to this observation. But the exception is rather apparent than real. As persons, slaves were proper subjects of a capitation tax, which is described in the Constitution as a direct tax; as property they were, by the laws of some, if not most of the States, classed as real property, descendible to heirs. Under the first view, they would be subject to the tax of 1798, as a capitation tax; under -the latter, they would be subject to the taxation of the other years as realty. That the latter view was that taken by the framers of the acts after 1798, becomes highly probable, when it is considered, that in the States where slaves were held, much of the value which would otherwise have attached to land passed into the slaves. If, indeed, the land only had been valued without the slaves, the land would have been subject to much heavier proportional imposition in those States than in States where there were no slaves; for the proportion of tax imposed on each State was determined by population, without reference to the subjects on which it was to be assessed.
The fact, then, that slaves were valued, under the acts referred to, far from showing, as some have supposed, that Congress regarded personal property as a proper object of
.It may be rightly affirmed, therefore, that in the practical construction of the Constitution by Congress, direct taxes have been limited to taxes on land and appurtenances, and taxes on polls, or capitation taxes.
And this construction' is entitled to great consideration, especially in the absence of anything adverse to it in the discussions of the Convention which framed" and of the conventions which ratified, the Constitution.
What does appear in those discussions, on the contrary, supports the construction. Mr. Madison informs us,
This view received the sanction of this court two years before the enactment of the first law imposing direct taxes eo nomine.
During the February Term, 1796, the constitutionality of .the act of 1794, imposing a duty on carriages-, came under consideration in the case of Hylton v. The United States.
The case was one of great expectation, and a general interest was felt in its determination. It was argued, in support of the tax, by Lee, Attorney-General, and Hamilton, recently Secretary of the Treasury; in opposition to the tax, by Campbell, Attorney for the Virginia District, and Ingersoll, Attorney-General of Pennsylvania.
Of the justices who then filled this bench, Ellsworth, Paterson, and Wilson had been members, aipd conspicuous members, of the Constitutional Convention, and each of the three had taken part in the discussions relating to direct taxation. Ellsworth, the Chief Justice, sworn into office that morning, not having heard the whole argument, declined taking part in the decision. Cushing, senior Associate Justice, having been prevented, by indisposition, from attending to the argument, also refrained from expressing an opinion. The other judges delivered their opinions in succession, the youngest in commission delivering the first, and the oldest the last.
They all held that the tax on carriages was not a direct tax, within the meaning of the Constitution. Chase, Justice, was inclined to think that the direct taxes contemplated by the Constitution, are only two: a capitation or poll tax, and a tax on land. He doubted whether a tax by a general assessment of personal property can be included within the term direct tax. Paterson, who had taken a leading part in the Constitutional Convention, went more fully into the sense in which the words, giving the power of taxation, were used by that body. In the course of this examination he said:
“ Whether direct taxes, in the sense of the Constitution, comprehend any other tax than a capitation tax, and tax on
Iredell, J., delivering his opinion at length, concurred generally in the views of Justices Chase and Paterson. Wilson bad expressed his opinion to the same general effect, when giving the. decision upon the circuit, and did not now repeat them. Neither Chief Justice Ellsworth nor Justice Cushing expressed any dissent; and it cannot be supposed if, in a case so important, their judgments had differed from those announced, that an opportunity would not have been given them by an order for reargument to participate in the decision.
It may be safely assumed, therefore, as the unanimous judgment of the court, that a tax on carriages is uot a direct tax. And it may further be taken as established upon the testimony of Paterson, that the words direct taxes, as used in the Constitution, comprehended only capitation taxes, and taxes on land, and perhaps taxes on personal property by general valuation and assessment of the various descriptions possessed within the several States.
It follows necessarily that the power to tax without apportionment extends to all other objects. Taxes on other objects are included under the heads of taxes not direct, duties, imposts, and excises, and must be laid and collected by the rule of uniformity. The tax under consideration is a tax on bank
Is it, then, a tax on a franchise granted by a State, which Congress, upon any principle exempting the reserved powers of the States from impairment by’taxation, must be held to have no authority to lay and collect?
Wo do not say that there may not be such a tax. It may be admitted that the reserved lights of the States, such as the right to pass law’s, to give effect to laws through executive action, to administer justice through the courts, and to employ all necessary agencies for legitimate purposes of State government, are not proper subjects of the taxing pow'er of Congress. But it cannot be admitted that franchises granted by a State are necessarily exempt from taxation ; for franchises are property, often very valuable and productive property; and wdien not conferred for the purpose of giving effect to some reserved power of a State, seem to be its properly objects of taxation as any other property.
But in the case before us the object of taxation is not the franchise of the bank, but property created, or contracts made and issued under the franchise, or power to issue bank bills. A railroad company, in the exorcise of its corporate franchises, issues freight receipts, bills of lading, and passenger tickets; and it cannot be doubted that the organization of railroads is quite as important to the State as the organization of banks. But it will hardly be questioned that these contracts of the company are objects of taxation within the powers of Congress, and not exempted by any relation to the State which granted the charter of the railroad. And it seems difficult to distinguish the taxation of notes issued for circulation from the taxation of these railroad contracts.' Both descriptions of contracts are means
It is insisted, however, that the tax in the case before us is excessive, and so excessive as to indicate a purpose on the part of Congress to destroy the franchise of the bank, and is, therefore, beyond the constitutional power of Congress.
The first answer to this is that the judicial cannot prescribe to. the legislative departments of the government limitations upon the exercise of its acknowledged powers. The power to tax may be exercised oppressively upon persons, but the responsibility of the legislature is not to the courts, but to the people by whom its members are elected. So if a particular tax bears heavily upon a corporation, or a class of corporations, it cannot, for that reason only, be pronounced contrary to the Constitution.
But there is another answer which vindicates equally the wisdom and the power of Congress.
It cannot be doubted that under the Constitution the power to provide a circulation of coin is given to Congress. And it is settled by the uniform practice of the government and by repeated decisions, that Congress may constitutionally authorize the emission of bills of credit. It is not important here, to decide whether the quality of legal tender, in payment of debts, can be constitutionally imparted to these bills; it is enough to say, that there cán be no question of the power ofthe government to eimt them;, to make them receivable in payment of debts to itself; to fit them for use by those who see fit to use them in all the transactions of commerce; to provide for their redemption; to make them a currency, uniform in value and description, and convenient and useful, for circulation. These powers, until recently, were ' only partially and occasionally exercised. Lately, however, they have been called, into full, activity, arid Congress has undertaken to' supply a currency for the entire country.
The methods adopted for the supply of this currency were briefly explained in the first part of this opinion. It now.
Having thus, in the exercise of undisputed constitutional powers, undertaken to provide a currency for the whole country, it cannot be questioned that Congress may, constitutionally, secure the benefit of it to the people by appropriate legislation.' To this end, Congress has denied;the quality of legal tender to foreign coins, and has provided by law against the imposition of counterfeit and base coin on the community. To the same end, Congress may restrain, by suitable enactments, the circulation as money of any notes not issued under its own' authority. Without this power, indeed, its attempts to secure, a sound and uniform, currency for the country must be futile.
Viewed in this light, as well as in the other light of a duty on contracts or property, we cannot doubt the constitutionality of the tax under consideration.
The three questions certified from the Circuit Court of the District of Maine'must, therefore, be answered
Affirmatively.
See the act of December 27th, 1854, to suppress small notes in the District of Columbia, 10 Stat. at Large, 599.
12 Stat. at Large, 259.
Ib. 338.
Ib. 345.
Act of July 11th, 1862, Ib. 532; act of March 3d, 1863, Ib. 710.
Act of March 3d, 1863, 12 Stat. at Large, 670.
Id. 712.
13 Ib. 111.
Id. 277.
Act of March 3d, 1863, 12 Stat. at Large, 592.
13 Ib. 484.
14 Id. 146.
Lane County v. Oregon, 7 Wallace, 73.
Act of July 14th, 1798, 1 Stat. at Large, 697.
Act of August 2d, 1813, 3 Ib. 53.
Act of July 9th, 1815, Id. 164.
Act of March 5th, 1816, Id. 255.
Act of August 5th, 1861, 12 Ib. 294.
Act of July 9th, 1798, 1 Stat. at Large, 586.
Act of July 22d, 1813, 3 Ib. 26.
Id. 166.
Id. 255.
3 Madison Papers, 1337.
3 Dallas, 171.
3 Dallas, 177.
7 Wallace, 434.
Dissenting Opinion
with whom concurred Mr. Justice DAVIS, dissenting.
I am unable to concur in the opinion of a majority of the court in this case. •
The Yeazie Bank was incorporated by. the legislature of the State of Maine, in 1848, with a capital of $200,000, and was invested with the customary powers of a banking institution ; and, among others, the power of receiving deposits,
The tenth amendment to the Constitution is as follows: “ The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” On looking into the Constitution, it will be found that there is no clause or provision which either expressly, or by reasonable implication, delegates this power to the Federal Government, which origiually belonged to the States, nor which prohibits it to them. In the discussions on the subject of the creation of the first Bank of the United States, in the first Congress, and in the Cabinet of Washington, in 1790 and 1791, no question was made as to the constitutionality of the State banks. The only doubt that existed, and which divided the opinion of the most eminent statesmen of the day, many of whom had just largely participated in the formation of the Constitution, the government under which they wore then engaged in organizing, was, whether or not Congress possessed a concurrent power to incorporate a banking institution of the United States?
Mr. Hamilton, in his celebrated report on a National bank to the House of Representatives, discusses at some length the question, whether or not it would be expedient to substitute the Bank of North America, located in Philadelphia, and which had accepted a charter from the legislature of Pennsylvania, in the place of organizing a new bank. And, although he finally came to the conclusion to organize a new one, there is not a suggestion, or intimation, as to the illegality or unconstitutionality of this State bank.
The act incorporating this bank, passed February 25th, 1791, prohibited the establishment of any other by Congress, during its charter, but said nothing as to the State banks. A like prohibition is contained in the act incorporating the Bank of theUnited States of 1816. The constitutionality of a
The constitutionality of the Bank of the United States.was again discussed, and decided in the ease of Osborn v. United States Bank.
The court held in both cases that it had. Since the adoption of the Constitution, down to the present act of Congress, and the case now before us, the question in Congress and in the courts has been, not whether the State banks were constitutional institutions, but whether Congress had the power conferred on it by the States, to establish a National bank. As we have said, that question was closed by the judgment of this court in McCulloch v. The State of Maryland. At the time of the adoption of the Constitution, there were four State banks in existence and in operation — one in each of the States of Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts, and Maryland. The one in Philadelphia had been originally chartered by the Confederation, but subsequently took a charter under the State of Pennsylvania. The framers of the Constitution were, therefore, familiar with these State banks, and the circulation of their paper as money; and were also familiar with the practice of the States, that was so common, to issue bills of credit, which were bills issued by the State, exclusively on its owu credit, and intended to circulate as currency, redeemable at a future day. They guarded the people against the evils of this practice of the State governments
It was no longer an irredeemable currency, as the banks were under obligation, including, frequently, that of its stockholders, to redeem their paper in circulation, in gold or silver, at the counter. The State banks were left in this condition by the Constitution, untouched by any other provision. As a consequence, they were gradually established in most or all of the States, and had not been encroached upon or legislated against, or in any other way interfered with, by acts of -Congress, for more than three-quarters of a century — from 1787 to 1864.
But, in addition to the above recognition of the State banks, the question of their constitutionality came directly before this court in the case of Briscoe v. The Bank of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
The case was most elaborately discussed, both by counsel and the court. The court, after the fullest consideration, held that the States possessed the power to grant charters to State banks; that the power was incident to sovereignty; and that there was no limitation in the Federal Constitution on its exercise by the States. The cotirt observed that-the Bank of North America and of Massachusetts, and some others, were in operation at the time o'f the adoption of the Constitution, and that it could'not be supposed the notes of these banks were intended to be inhibited by that instrument, or, that
Chancellor Kent observes, that Mr. Justice Story, in his Commentaries on the Constitution,
In the case of Briscoe v. The Bank of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, he observes, that this question was put at rest by the opinion of the court, that there was no limitation in the Constitution on the power of the States to incorporate banks, and their notes were not intended nor were considered as bills of credit.
The constitutional power of the States, being thus estab
The act of Congress, July 13th, 1866,
• The imposition upon the banks cannot be upheld as a tax upon property; neither could it have been so intended. It is, simply, a mode by which the powers or faculties of the States, to incorporate, banks, are subjected to taxation, and, which, if maintainable, may annihilate those powers.
. As we have seen, in the forepart of this opinion, the power to incorporate banks was not surrendered to the Federal Government, but reserved to the States; and it follows that the Constitution itself protects them, or should protect them, from any encroachment upon this right. As to the powers thus reserved, the States are as supreme as before they entered into the Union, and are entitled to the unrestrained exercise of them. The question as to the taxation of the powers and faculties belonging to governments is not new in this court. The bonds of the Federal Government have been held to be exempt from State taxation. Why? Because they wore issued under the power in the Constitution to borrow money, and the tax would bo a tax upon this power; and, as there can be no limitation to the extent of the tax, the power to borrow might be destroyed. So, in the instance of the United States notes, or legal tenders, as they are called, issued under a constructive power to issue bills of credit, as no express power is given in the Constitution, they are exempt from State taxation for a like reason as in the case of government bonds; and, we learn from the opinion of the court in this case, that one step further is taken, and that is, that the notes of the National banks are to be regarded as bills of credit, issued indirectly by the government; and it follows, of course, from this, that the banks used as instruments to issue and put in circulation
It is true, that the present decision strikes only at the power to create banks, but no person can fail to see that the principle involved affects the power to create any'other description of corporations, such as railroads, turnpikes, manufacturing companies, and others.
This taxation,of the powers and faculties of the "State governments, which are esseutial to their sovereignty, and to the efficient and independent management and administration of their internal affairs, is, for the first time, advanced as an attribute of Federal authority. It finds no support or countenance in the early history of the government, or in the opinions of the illustrious statesmen who founded it. These statesmen scrupulously abstained from any encroachment upon the reserved rights of the States; and, within these limits, sustained and supported them as sovereign States.
We say nothing, as to the purpose of this heavy tax of some sixteen per centum upon the banks, ten of which we cannot but regard as imposed upon the power of the States to create them. Indeed, the purpose is scarcely concealed, in the opinion of the court, namely, to encourage the National banks. It is sufficient to add, that the burden of the tax, while it has encouraged these banks, has proved fatal to those of the States; and, if we are at liberty to judge of the purpose of an act, from the consequences that have followed, it is not, perhaps, going too far to say,, that these consequences were intended.
4 Wheaton, 316.
9 Id. 738.
Ib. 804, 904.
11 Peters, 257.
10 Howard, 205.
13 Id. 12.
15 Id. 317.
Vol. 3, p. 19,
1 Kent’s Commentaries, p. 409, marg. note A, 10th ed.
14 Stat. at Large, 146, § 9.
Ib. 277, § 110.
13 Id. p. 283, § 120.
Reference
- Cited By
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- Syllabus
- 1. The 9th section of the act of July 13th, 1866, amendatory of prior internal revenue acts, and which provides that every National banking association, State bank, or State banking association, shall pay a tax of ten per centum on the amounts of the notes of any State bank, or State banking association, paid out by them after the 1st day of August, 1866, does not lay a direct tax within the meaning of that clause of the Constitution which ordains that “ direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several States, according to their respective numbers.” 2. Congress having undertaken, in the exercise of undisputed constitutional power, to provide a currency for the whole country, may constitutionally secure the benefit of it to the people by appropriate legislation, and to that end may restrain, by suitable enactments, the circulation of any notes, not issued under its own authority. 8. The tax of ten per centum imposed by the act of July 13th, 1806, on the notes of State banks paid out after the 1st of August, 1866, is warranted by the Constitution.