Rutland Savings Bank v. Town of Rutland
Rutland Savings Bank v. Town of Rutland
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The character and purpose of the plaintiff bank are shown by its charter, and the other legislation on the subject of and affecting such banks, and the depositors therein, and the officers thereof.
It is not a business corporation, operating for its own emolument, or for that of the corporators. It has no stockholders. It
The statute cited means, in reference to investment of deposits in bank stock, the same as in reference to investments in anything else, or on any other securities. It is not claimed that any other investments are taxable. And the ground on which it is claimed that this investment is taxable to the plaintiff bank, is the provision of the statutes. Gen. Sts. c. 83, s. 18, viz., “ Any bank or other corporation owning shares of its own stock, or of any other corporation, shall be listed and assessed thereon in the town where the corporation owning such stock is situated.” It is obvious from the nature of the case, and from practical construction, that savings banks are not meant by the terms “ banks and other corporations ” in that statute. The investment contemplated by said act of 1850, does not mean the owning of shares in the sense of said section 18, c. 83, Gen. Sts. We have no doubt that the Legislature intended to leave the subject of taxing deposits solely and exclusively on the statute as to deposits of over $250, with no intention to subject the bank or the depositors, through and in the name of the bank, to any further or other taxation on the score of the deposits held by the bank. If any further taxation of deposits was contemplated, it was left to be done under the general provisions of the statutes for the assessment and taxation of individuals in their own names for money on hand or at interest. It is needless to extend into details the various considerations and reasons which lead us all by the same processes to the same result in this case.
It is amply within legislative power in the matter of taxation, to say that on sums of money less than $250 persons shall be exempt from taxation, on the score of public policy, as related to the purpose for which savings banks were created. It is equally competent to let the aggregate amount of deposits of smaller sums
Then again, it occurs to suggest that by such taxation of the bank stock, persons who are taxed in other towns for all their money deposited in the plaintiff bank, would be compelled to pay an additional tax to the town of Rutland on the score of the same money ; and persons who are not taxed or taxable at all in other towns where they reside on the score of deposits less than $250, would still have to pay taxes to the town of Rutland, in which they do not reside, on the score of the same deposits pro rata with other depositors. Upon the subject of double taxation, and the presumption against such intent, see Cooley Taxation, 165; 1 Abbott Corp. Dig. 834-849; Angell & Ames Corp. s. 460-1.
The tax paid being not warranted by law and paid under protest, is recoverable in this action.
Judgment is reversed, and judgment rendered for plaintiff to recover the money paid as stated in the agreed facts, with interest from the time of payment.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.