Mr. Dayton (the Speaker) did not think that this proposition precluded the provision of a commutation. He was in favor of taxing bank notes, but he wished also to hold out a commutation, and such a one as should induce all the banks to embrace it; for, if this were not the case, they would not be taxed equally, as the notes of banks did not bear a just proportion to the amount of their dividends. This clause would not, therefore, preclude the commutation, but render it proper, and a clause could be brought in excusing such banks from the duty as came into the proposed plan.
Mr. Gallatin said, his ideas corresponded exactly with those of the gentleman who had just spoken. The scheme suggested by the gentleman from Massachusetts, of not taxing the notes at present in circulation, would excuse bank notes from all tax, as, according to his own account, only about one-fifth of the notes issued came in in the course of a year, so that it would be five years before a new tax could operate upon all their notes, and it was probable the bill might not pass for more than three or four. That gentleman supposed that bankers' notes ought not to be charged more than others; if this were the case, they might be reckoned to run for four or five years, while those of individuals were at six and twelve months. The note of an individual, for fifty dollars, was to pay ten cents; he calculated a bank note, therefore, for a like sum, which he supposed, upon an average, to run four years, thirty cents.
With respect to the notes at present in circulation, Mr. G. said, they ought all to be called in before a certain time, and after that day no note should be negotiable which was not stamped.
The gentleman from Massachusetts was not correct when he said that this tax would amount to one per cent. upon the capital employed in banks. The calculation of the amount of the tax upon a bank which he had made, would amount to $10,000 a year, whereas one per cent. upon the capital of the Bank of the United States would amount to $200,000; but he said (as he had before stated) that the notes issued by a bank were not equal to its capital, or any thing like it. He could not, indeed, say what the amount of the notes of the Bank of the United States might be which were received for duty, from one end of the United States to the other; but he knew banks in general, in large cities, did not employ more than two-fifths of their capital in this way. He knew it to be a fact with respect to a bank of the largest property in the United States, except the Bank of the United States. He thought of proposing the commutation to be one per cent. upon the amount of the dividend paid by each bank, which he supposed would be deemed a reasonable sum.
Mr. Otis explained.
Mr. Sewall thought the observation of the gentleman from Connecticut yesterday, as to the nature of bank notes, had weight. He agreed with him that they were very different from the notes of individuals, as they were always obliged to keep cash in readiness to take up their notes, while individuals, knowing exactly the time when the money for theirs would be wanted, could make use of it in the mean time. Therefore, if they taxed bank notes, they ought not to tax them in the same proportion with those of individuals at a certain date. Notes of individuals, under twenty dollars, were to be exempt from duty, while every note issued by a bank was proposed to be taxed.
Every banker's note of fifty dollars was to be charged with thirty cents, while those of individuals, which might run for two or three years, were charged only with ten cents. Every three or four years they would have to pay this sum. If a fair commutation were to be made, they should first fix the tax upon just principles.
Mr. Nicholas thought if there was no objection to the commutation, there could not reasonably be any made to the tax, because if the commutation were reasonable they would not choose to pay the tax; but, if they should choose to pay the tax, instead of the commutation, it would be evidence that the tax was too low.
Mr. W. Smith did not see the force of the argument of the gentleman last up. As the commutation was to bear some proportion to the rates of duty, it became necessary to fix the rates upon a fair basis. If the rates were fixed too high, they ought to reduce them. He did not see the propriety of selecting moneyed corporations for the purpose of laying a high duty upon them. He moved to strike out the three cents for every five dollars, and leave it a blank.
Mr. Dayton hoped this proposition would be agreed to, as by a vote upon the question in blank they would fix the principle whether or not bank notes were to be taxed, and the scale could be afterwards fixed. If there was the difference alleged between bank notes and the notes of individuals, it would be sufficiently considered in the commutation. He should not, indeed, be willing to agree to any scale without a commutation, for the reason he had before mentioned. For, said he, take the Bank of the United States and the Bank of North America, and the notes issued by them bear no sort of proportion to their respective capitals. If the tax were to be laid upon the notes issued, the Bank of the United States would pay a much larger sum than the other in duty.